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Week in Review: Riding the Roller Coaster


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It was a wild week for the Minnesota Twins, filled with invigorating highs, painful lows, and injury woes. One starting pitcher flirted with a no-no, as others were more of a no-go. The offense showed more glimpses, driven mainly by the Sanó show. (Yes, this is a rhyming roller coaster.)

 

By the end of the ride, the Twins found themselves in first place still, with a critical series in Cleveland on deck.

Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 8/17 through Sun, 8/23

***

Record Last Week: 5-2 (Overall: 19-10)

Run Differential Last Week: +5 (Overall: +40)

Standing: 1st Place in AL Central (1.5 GA)

Bomba Counter: 42 (Pace: 90)

It was not a great week healthwise for the Twins. Rich Hill returned from his hiatus on Wednesday but looked sluggish, allowing four earned runs on four hits and two walks in just 2⅔ innings. Homer Bailey was moved to the 45-day Injured List, confirming that his return is nowhere near. Jake Odorizzi took a line drive off the ribs in Friday's loss, and later in the same game Zack Littell exited with elbow soreness. Both landed on IL, replaced by relievers Sean Poppen and Danny Coulombe. Late in Sunday's game, Tyler Clippard took a line drive off his pitching arm, and while initial imaging came back negative, Rocco Baldelli said of Clippard after the game, "I can’t imagine he’s going to be throwing a baseball anytime in the very near future." So it'd be no surprise to see another reinforcement called in.

 

Given the offense's continued struggles to find a rhythm, losses in the lineup loom even larger than the litany of injuries plaguing the pitching staff. Luis Arráez started just two games as he continues to battle knee soreness, but the team has bigger concerns. After Wednesday's game, Byron Buxton and Mitch Garver both landed on the Injured List, subtracting two right-handed bats from a unit that has been oddly ineffective against southpaws.

 

There are silver linings with these two key cogs going on the shelf. Buxton has reportedly been bothered for some time by his surgically repaired shoulder, not to mention the foot he sprained during Summer Camp. And while there's been no indication that Garver was hampered by the intercostal muscles that left him wincing after a swing in Wednesday's game ... it would make a lot of sense, given his inexplicably extreme lack of production.

 

A spell of rest may well do them both some good. And their departures create opportunities for deserving players in Ryan Jeffers and LaMonte Wade Jr., who shuttled over from the alternate site in St. Paul. Jeffers was put quickly to work, appearing in all four games since his call-up and starting three of them. Wade Jr. got his first start of the season on Sunday and went 2-for-4 with a double.

 

HIGHLIGHTS

The week started with ageless wonder Nelson Cruz once again leaving us in awe, notching his second two-homer game of the season in 4-1 victory over Kansas City. It was merely an appetizer.

 

The following night, Kenta Maeda was pure magic. Taking his dominant start with the Twins to new levels, Maeda carried a no-hitter into the ninth inning against Milwaukee before giving up a weakly-hit single to Eric Sogard and exiting with a career-high 115 pitches. Along the way, Maeda set a franchise record by striking out eight consecutive hitters. He finished with 12 strikeouts and 21 whiffs in eight-plus innings.

 

 

In this absolute gem, Maeda posted a Game Score of 86, which stands as the highest by a Twins starter since Jose Berríos put up the same number on Opening Day of 2018, with a three-hit shutout against the Orioles.

 

Ranking seventh among major-league starters in fWAR, Maeda has embodied the ace label thus far by any definition. But speaking of Berríos, it was nice to see the rotation's presumed frontman finally look the part on Thursday, breaking off six shutout innings with nine strikeouts and only one hit allowed against Milwaukee.

 

This big step forward for Berríos, combined with the continued excellence of Maeda and consistent quality from Randy Dobnak, makes the rotation's setbacks a bit easier to stomach.

 

With all that being said, the most encouraging development over the past week from my view is Miguel Sanó's explosion at the plate. Last time in this space we pointed to his improving plate discipline as a hugely positive sign, even if the production wasn't quite showing up yet. "As he starts making more contact, Sanó is going to do immense damage."

 

Since then, Sanó has done DAMAGE. (Literally.)

 

Starting all seven games over the past week, the first baseman went 12-for-26 (.462) with eight doubles, five RBIs, and an atom bomb in KC that might've actually left a dent in the wall of Kauffman Stadium's Hall of Fame Museum:

 

 

 

At 115.8 MPH, it was the hardest hit ball of Sanó's career, the second-hardest hit home run by a Twins player in the Statcast era (c. 2015), and the highest exit velocity posted by a Twins hitter this year. Sanó dominates that list:

 

 

He's crushing the meatballs and finally starting to make things happen with those offerings that aren't straight in his wheelhouse. It is almost as noteworthy to me that Sanó reached out and made solid contact on two pitches away and outside the zone in his first two ABs Sunday – resulting in a double and single – as his obliterating a mistake from Brady Singer on Saturday.

 

To provide a sense of closure and cosmic balance, Cruz ended the week as he began it: homering off the Royals. This one, an eighth-inning solo shot off a 100-MPH fastball from Trevor Rosenthal, delivered crucial insurance in an eventual 5-4 victory.

 

LOWLIGHTS

The lineup as a whole is definitely starting to come on – they scored seven runs as many times last week (twice) as in the previous three weeks – but it's still been pretty choppy sailing for the bats.

 

Ehire Adrianza, pushed into semi-regular duty with the all the attrition, hasn't risen to the occasion. He went 2-for-14 last week and is at .186/.271/.209 on the season. Newcomer Ildemaro Vargas has quickly established himself as a more intriguing option for the same role, so one wonders how secure Adrianza's roster spot will be as injured players begin returning the fold.

 

Max Kepler went just 4-for-22 (.182) although he did draw six walks to keep the OBP pumping. He hasn't been bad by any means, but his power has conspicuously diminished; since homering his first two at-bats of the season, Kepler has a .379 slugging percentage. He's also 2-for-27 (.074) with a .272 OPS against lefties, so he's been a major contributor to the team-wide deficiency on this front.

 

Seeing a big uptick in playing time with Buxton on the shelf, Jake Cave isn't bringing a lot of juice. He delivered an empty 5-for-18 with five singles last week, and is hitting .150/.227/.175 with one RBI in 44 PAs since a good opening weekend in Chicago. It's hard to see Cave finding much success with his utter lack of discipline at the plate – he struck out six times with no walks last week, and has a 20-to-2 ratio on the season. In this regard, Wade Jr. offers a big upgrade, so I'll be curious to see whether the balance of playing time shifts in the days ahead.

 

Like the offense, the pitching staff experienced some rough patches to go along with the shining moments. Taylor Rogers swiftly sucked the energy out of Maeda's gem on Tuesday, coughing up three runs (one charged to Maeda) while blowing the save and forcing extra innings.

 

Since opening his season with four scoreless appearances, Rogers has allowed six earned runs on 13 hits in 6⅓ innings, blowing two of five save chances and flirting with disaster in Sunday's successful conversion. As I wrote a few days ago, the left-hander had developed a reputation as one of the most reliable high-leverage relievers in baseball, but actually has a negative Win Probability Added since last year's All-Star break. This begs the question: Where should he sit in the current bullpen pecking order? Almost certainly not at the top.

 

On the other end of the bullpen leverage spectrum, exploitable soft spots have begun to surface. Lewis Thorpe punched his ticket off the roster on Wednesday with a brutal outing: 4 IP, 6 H, 4 ER, 3 BB, 3 K, 2 HR. He has looked rough basically from the jump this season. So has Littell, who inflated his ERA to 9.95 while allowing another home run on Thursday before landing on IL with elbow inflammation.

 

With a key reliever still sidelined in Cody Stashak, and alternate-siters like Poppen and Coulombe now occupying spots, the bullpen will be pressed to keep getting the job done as the grind of a 21-games-in-20-days stretch marches on. Ten straight days of games still remain in the gauntlet, with six coming against Minnesota's top challengers in the AL Central.

 

TRENDING STORYLINE

The trade deadline is now just a week away, coming up on Monday the 31st. The Hot Stove started to heat up over the weekend with Philadelphia pulling the trigger on a deal to acquire Red Sox closer Brandon Workman. Will the Twins be active in these next eight days as they set themselves up for the stretch run and postseason?

 

It seems unlikely that Derek Falvey and Thad Levine will give up any big-ticket prospects for a rented difference-maker in this abbreviated season. A playoff berth is all but assured, and it's clear that the Twins' best hope for a high-impact infusion is simply getting their own banged-up players back at full capacity.

 

With that said, it wouldn't surprise me to see a lower-level or move or two as the team looks to navigate the final month at diminished strength. The move to acquire Vargas has already paid dividends, with the utility infielder playing a fairly significant role since coming from Arizona. Another pickup like that might make sense, depending on how things unfold over the next week.

 

Of course, on the day of the trade deadline, Michael Pineda is eligible to return from his suspension, which will factor into the rotation's needs.

 

LOOKING AHEAD

The Twins will open this coming week with a monumental series against the Indians, representing the only visit to Cleveland this season. It's a key opportunity for Terry Francona's club, trailing Minnesota by just a game and a half in the standings. Shane Bieber looms in Game 2.

 

From there, the Twins will head to Detroit to FINALLY see the division's weakest team. After facing them zero times in the first 32 games, Minnesota will get Ron Gardenhire and the Tigers 10 times in the final 28, accounting for roughly one-third of their remaining schedule. Theoretically this should be a very beneficial thing, but it requires capitalizing on the opportunity. The Twins will have their first chance in next weekend's four-game set.

 

MONDAY, 8/24: TWINS @ INDIANS – RHP Kenta Maeda v. RHP Aaron Civale

TUESDAY, 8/25: TWINS @ INDIANS – LHP Rich Hill v. RHP Shane Bieber

WEDNESDAY, 8/26: TWINS @ INDIANS – RHP Jose Berrios v. RHP Adam Plutko

THURSDAY, 8/27: TWINS @ TIGERS – RHP Randy Dobnak v. LHP Matthew Boyd

FRIDAY, 8/28: TWINS @ TIGERS – TBD v. LHP Tarik Skubal

SATURDAY, 8/29: TWINS @ TIGERS – RHP Kenta Maeda v. RHP Casey Mize

SUNDAY, 8/30: TWINS @ TIGERS – LHP Rich Hill v. RHP Spencer Turnbull

 

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“Buxton has reportedly been bothered for some time by his surgically repaired shoulder, not to mention the foot he sprained during Summer Camp.”

 

The surgery was 340 days ago. What’s 10 days going to do?

 

Before the deadline, Twins would do well to find a team willing to part with a true center fielder who bats right handed. Even if the bat is of AAAA caliber...AAA, for that matter.

 

Starting to feel like Gilberto Celestino can’t get here fast enough.

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I got a couple takes on the week and mostly that I myself have been ultra critical of the team and at the end of the day we are 19-10 and like percentage points involved with the best record in the league. The injuries are a little...i dont know troubling, but it seems like in a year like this everybody is dealing with that. We aren't immune to it, that's why thinking about your depth in the off season is so important. I was listening to Gleeman&TheGeek, (maybe it should be Bonnes&TheGeek), and I thought their take on Sano was right on. This is prolly the Sano we're going to get, one who takes awhile to get going and when he does WATCH OUT. That homer he hit....watching the pitcher's head snap back to see how far it was gonna go was classic! and he's taking it up the middle and hitting doubles too. He is what he is, a real power threat, good teammate, and just a pretty darn good baseball player. This is a big series coming up but what's not to like about a 5-2 week and now we're done with both of those teams. Royals and Brew Crew seem to give us fits like nobody else ever does.

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Have a roster question, Nick. I believe the 40-man roster currently shows 42 players. They moved Bailey to the 45-day IL last week covering one of the spots they are over. But that still leaves 41.

 

With all the moves don't remember exactly which one put them over last week. But we have never heard what move they made to stay at 40 and their posted roster still shows an extra player. Do you or anyone else have any information on this?

 

Was also wondering about Arraez' knee. Is that the same knee he injured a few years ago while at Fort Myers? It was a knee injury that caused him to miss a year, wasn't it?

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  On 8/24/2020 at 3:51 AM, LA VIkes Fan said:

Can Wade play CF?

This layman scout's eye says he lacks the extra gear you want in a center fielder, and you would be disappointed in the results. Watching him a couple of Fall League seasons ago, I felt surprised he didn't get to a foul fly while playing in RF - I was thinking of him as a CF candidate at that time, and decided at that moment he will be an asset on defense in a corner but not in the middle. Others' mileage may vary of course, and maybe something changed in two years, but usually speed is not a slow-developing tool.

 

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  On 8/24/2020 at 1:32 PM, rdehring said:

Have a roster question, Nick. I believe the 40-man roster currently shows 42 players. They moved Bailey to the 45-day IL last week covering one of the spots they are over. But that still leaves 41.

 

With all the moves don't remember exactly which one put them over last week. But we have never heard what move they made to stay at 40 and their posted roster still shows an extra player. Do you or anyone else have any information on this?

 

Was also wondering about Arraez' knee. Is that the same knee he injured a few years ago while at Fort Myers? It was a knee injury that caused him to miss a year, wasn't it?

Regarding the 40-man: I'm not totally positive, but I believe Nick Gordon is on the restricted list as he's been battling COVID. (For multiple months it sounds like, which is scary and concerning.) 

 

Regarding Arraez's knee: You're correct. He missed almost the entire 2017 season with a torn ACL. I dunno if that's at all related to what is going on now but it's something to keep in imnd. 

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  On 8/24/2020 at 3:06 PM, ashbury said:

This layman scout's eye says he lacks the extra gear you want in a center fielder, and you would be disappointed in the results. Watching him a couple of Fall League seasons ago, I felt surprised he didn't get to a foul fly while playing in RF - I was thinking of him as a CF candidate at that time, and decided at that moment he will be an asset on defense in a corner but not in the middle. Others' mileage may vary of course, and maybe something changed in two years, but usually speed is not a slow-developing tool.
 

According to Statcast, Wade was the third fastest player on the team last year in terms of sprint speed (28.1 ft/sec), trailing only Buxton and Polanco. Cave ranked fifth, at 27.6. I believe Wade was playing CF last season when he got injured as well. I would like to see Wade get some opportunities in CF given Cave's struggles at the plate and his below average defense in CF. I think Wade would be an upgrade in terms of OBP, but Cave still has more power.

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Whenever someone says Cave and below average defense in the same sentence, I see him making a great catch in the top 50 plays in the MLB. (This is like the 3rd time.) We see new version of the top 50 every week here in Japan. Cave's play was actually in the top 10 I believe. He robbed someone of a HR. (We are always on a bit of a delay over here so that probably happened a couple of weeks back?) I think it is ironic that's all.

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  On 8/24/2020 at 5:31 PM, Aerodeliria said:

Whenever someone says Cave and below average defense in the same sentence, I see him making a great catch in the top 50 plays in the MLB. (This is like the 3rd time.) We see new version of the top 50 every week here in Japan. Cave's play was actually in the top 10 I believe. He robbed someone of a HR. (We are always on a bit of a delay over here so that probably happened a couple of weeks back?) I think it is ironic that's all.

You are absolutely right....Im not sure he's our best center fielder and he's not too dangerous against lhp, but the dude is a good ball player. We could do a hell of a lot worse with that roster spot.
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Rocco just drew up a lineup with both Cave and Wade starting in the OF a couple games ago. He put Cave in center and Wade in the corner. That tells you where he puts them defensively, regardless of what Statcast says.

 

Still, he was willing to use Wade in center last season for a few games, and if Cave's bat continues to lag or he needs a rest, I'm guessing we would see Wade there.

 

I'm one who thinks Cave is a pretty good major league player, definitely a good 4th outfielder. All other things being equal, the Twins would be better off if the role Cave plays came from a guy with a decent right-handed bat...but that's not Cave's fault. Meanwhile, he's currently one of several players not yet very close to the offensive bar they set last year. The reserve outfielders are never extended a lot of patience, it seems. (See Robbie Grossman, the guy who is OPS'ing 1.038 right now for the Oakland A's....and playing basically full time.)

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