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Who Should Be the Twins Leadoff Hitter in 2021?


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Leadoff hitters have evolved in recent years with team’s not being anchored to one specific player. Minnesota’s lineup will change a lot over the course of one season and these are the contenders for the leadoff spot.The Incumbent: Max Kepler

Last season, Kepler batted leadoff in 34 of the team’s 60 games and he was used there for over 100 games back in 2019. There’s a good chance he is the leader in the clubhouse to be the team’s primary leadoff hitter unless his performance struggles significantly. He hit .281/.324/.625 last year in his at-bats as the first batter in the game. That’s quite the punch for opposing pitchers to have to endure out of the gate.

 

The Contenders: Jorge Polanco, Byron Buxton, Luis Arraez, Mitch Garver

Buxton’s raw speed makes him a natural contender to be at the top of the line-up and there has been talk of him filling that role during different parts of his professional development. That being said, he’s only been used as a leadoff hitter in 15 games throughout his career. Obviously, that’s a small sample size, but he has gone 5-for-15 with two home runs and a double in the first at-bat of the game as a leadoff hitter. Overall, as the first batter, he has a .670 OPS and the Twins seem more comfortable having him serve as a second leadoff hitter at the bottom of the line-up.

 

If Polanco’s ankles are healthy, he might be able to get back to his strong hitting fans saw back in the first half of 2019. He’s seen time batting in every spot in the order, but the majority of his time has been spent as the number two hitter where he has an .823 OPS. He does have 160 plate appearances out of the leadoff spot where he has hit .284/.313/.351 with a 21 to 7 strikeout to walk ratio. Rocco Baldelli will likely slide Polanco back into the number two spot in the line-up.

 

Arraez is adjusting to a new role this spring without a specific spot in the starting line-up. That doesn’t mean that he won’t get regular at-bats and few players bring energy to the batter’s box like Arraez. So far in his young career, Arraez has been most frequently used as the number six hitter. In his 17 games batting in the leadoff spot, he has hit .354/.386/.415 with four doubles. As the first batter of the game, he has gone 5-for-13 with a .928 OPS.

 

Garver definitely doesn’t fit the traditional leadoff hitter mold, but Baldelli has loved to use Garver in this role versus left-handed starting pitchers. He’s started 30 games as the leadoff hitter, and he’s compiled some eye-popping numbers. In 141 plate appearances, he’s hit .277/.376/.630 with 12 home runs and four doubles. While those numbers are great, Garver is going to have to prove he is healthy and back to his powerful hitting ways in 2021.

 

Who would you bat leadoff? Leave a COMMENT and start the discussion.

 

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I won't defend Kepler's BA, but he's willing to take a walk, which is amplified when no one is on base. And there's nothing wrong with a leadoff guy driving himself in with one swing. He's not ideal in the leadoff role and I hope Arraez earns the choice, but Max is underrated.

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Ideally, it would be Buxton, but he's not at the point where I'd trust him there right now. Given that, Arraez would be my top choice with Polanco a relatively close second. Kepler should be dropped to at least the 2-hole given the rest of the roster composition.

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Depends on who's playing that day, who the opposing pitcher is, which Twin is hot, or cold, with the bat, what Rocco had for breakfast, the price of stadium hot dogs, etc.

 

If there's one thing we've learned about Rocco it's that he's flexible with his line-ups. Count on seeing all these guys getting a few swings at lead-off. Including La Tortuga.

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It’s an interesting question who provides the most value at leadoff. Normally you would put a high-on base hitter in that spot. Thus, Arraez or Kirilloff (not Simmons, he hits 9th). However, as you mentioned, Kepler has had a lot of success at leadoff. Although I don’t think Kepler is a leadoff hitter. Mainly because, outside of 2019, he’s been an average hitter throughout the course of his career. I’d go Arraez or Kirilloff.

 

 

On a side note, please no more La Tortuga. As I and many fans have said, he has no business being on the roster of a contending team. He’s a subpar defender wherever you put him and he can’t hit. I know PECOTA and ZiPS think he can - he can’t. Projections like that mean absolutely nothing. He should be no more than a third-string catcher or third-string infielder or third-string outfielder.

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It's an interesting question. I lean towards Polanco, which then lets you drop kepler in 4th behind Donaldson & Cruz and in front of Sano to break up the righties a bit. You could then stick Garver in 6th, with Kirilloff 7th ahead of Buxton & Simmons on days when Arraez doesn't play.

 

If you bat Kepler leadoff (and he does well at it, despite the low BA) then you're looking at a regular order of Donaldson, Cruz, Sano, Garver/Jeffers...which would scare the bejeezus out of a lefty but might be a set up for failure against the righties.

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For me it comes down to who do you want to have the most ABs during the game. There is 2 outs in 9th and 9th place batter gets on, who do you want to hit. The first batter in lineup may only lead off an inning once a game. With that said, I still take Arraez, going to see plenty of pitches leading off game and most likely to get on in other situations.

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Personally I like Arraez at leadoff, but understand why Twins have gone the non-traditional approach.  What I like about Arraez at leadoff is he normally gives you good long at-bats without giving away anything.  He gets on base at high clip.  He does lack speed, but we never steal anyways.  

 

The Kepler option gives you good chance for extra base hit, but he also loves to attack first pitches, which is not traditionally what one wants for leadoff guys.  However, times are a changing and the Twins love to buck the traditional roles with this FO and manager. 

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Personally I like Arraez at leadoff, but understand why Twins have gone the non-traditional approach.  What I like about Arraez at leadoff is he normally gives you good long at-bats without giving away anything.  He gets on base at high clip.  He does lack speed, but we never steal anyways.  

 

The Kepler option gives you good chance for extra base hit, but he also loves to attack first pitches, which is not traditionally what one wants for leadoff guys.  However, times are a changing and the Twins love to buck the traditional roles with this FO and manager. 

I kind of chuckled a bit at the thought of Arraez being the "traditional" pick.

 

He is in a sort of manner (the recent wave of thought), but to me Buxton screams more as the "traditional" pick due to his speed.

 

But yeah, I like slotting Arraez at the top of the order.  He takes pitches, works the count, and has a high OBP.

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IMO, should be Arrez when he plays. Especially if Donaldson is going to remain in the 2 spot. I like Polanco as an alternate if he's back to his old self.

 

I appreciate the BOOM Kepler can bring to the spot, but I think his LH power needs to hit lower.

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I’m firmly in the camp that says you fill the lead off spot with your best hitter, because whoever leads off gets the most plate appearances.

 

It would be unconventional for sure, but I’d like to see Cruz or Donaldson there.

What's the closest example you can think of to a team having done this?

 

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What's the closest example you can think of to a team having done this?

 

Off the top of my head it’s rare, but it looks like the Giants tried it with Willie Mays late in his career.

 

https://www.google.com/amp/s/vault.si.com/.amp/vault/1969/04/21/leading-man-wondrous-willie

 

I think it’s more of a theoretical stance than something teams have commonly done.

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Off the top of my head it’s rare, but it looks like the Giants tried it with Willie Mays late in his career.

 

https://www.google.com/amp/s/vault.si.com/.amp/vault/1969/04/21/leading-man-wondrous-willie

 

I think it’s more of a theoretical stance than something teams have commonly done.

I asked because by now it the whole topic is a sabrmetric chestnut (not just the leadoff spot), and yet not even a last-place team with a lame-duck manager has said "nothing to lose, let's stack the batting order by OPS, see if there's anything to it." The notion that you give your best hitters the most PAs doesn't seem controversial, and yet so often you see a mediocre guy batting second because of his "bat control." (If the bat control is so good, why isn't he hitting .400?)

 

Batting Cruz lead-off could have negative impact on clubhouse chemistry, I suppose, if he took the attitude "I'm a power hitter, I want men on base in front of me, no offense intended to you #8 and #9 guys." He, and other great hitters, are only human and the manager has to consider their professional pride.

 

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I asked because by now it's a sabrmetric chestnut, and yet not even a last-place team with a lame-duck manager has said "nothing to lose, let's stack the batting order by OPS, see if there's anything to it." The notion that you give your best hitters the most PAs doesn't seem controversial, and yet so often you see a mediocre guy batting second because of his "bat control." (If the bat control is so good, why isn't he hitting .400?)

 

Batting Cruz lead-off could have negative impact on clubhouse chemistry, I suppose, if he took the attitude "I'm a power hitter, I want men on base in front of me, no offense intended to the #8 and #9 guys." He, and other great hitters, are only human.

 

Yeah, like anything it would need buy in from the players. FWIW, it looks like the Cubs were going to do it with Kris Bryant last year for the reason I give in my earlier post.

 

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.chicagotribune.com/sports/cubs/ct-chicago-cubs-kris-bryant-leadoff-20200219-jvvizmn7qvcl3eifpughxneqai-story.html%3foutputType=amp

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