Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • Baseball’s Best Outfield Is In Minnesota


    Ted Schwerzler

    The Minnesota Twins outfielders coined a phrase “Nothing Falls but Raindrops” a few seasons ago, and while it was fitting, none of them knew what was coming. This collection could be the best in the sport, and it may not even be close.

     

    Image courtesy of © Benny Sieu-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    Yes, gone is Eddie Rosario, and maybe Max Kepler will be jettisoned at some point as well. What stands as truth either way, however, is that Rocco Baldelli should lay claim to having baseball’s best outfield.

    As always, Byron Buxton needs to stay healthy. That has been the case forever and will continue to be as much. His 92 games last season was the most he has played since 2017, and that was the last time he won a Gold Glove. We aren’t just hoping for a guy to contribute in the field anymore either, as when Buxton is out there, he’s among the best in the game. Now having developed into a Mike Trout or Aaron Judge type on a per-game basis, Buxton represents the gold standard in centerfield.

    When the Twins brought in Joey Gallo, it immediately made more sense for them to move Kepler. With Alex Kirilloff and Trevor Larnach vying for time on the corners, and all being left handed, the glut had to be reduced somehow. Still, Kepler being parted out for nothing makes little sense. Although the offensive profile is nowhere near that of Buxton’s he contributes to a very similar level on defense. Rating highly by both defensive runs saved and outs above average, Kepler is among the premier players in right field.

    Gallo is traditionally seen as the slugging bat that is home run or bust. That simplifies his game far more than should be warranted. He is also a strong on-base contributor, and among the best outfielders in the game by his own right. Able to play any of the three spots on the grass, Gallo is quicker than you’d expect given his size, and the arm strength is notable as well. He has two Gold Glove awards to his credit, and neither are simply a byproduct of what he did on offense.

    Behind the starters is where Minnesota has also made massive strides. Rather than needing to play Jake Cave, or ask Tim Beckham to learn a new position, Michael A. Taylor represents the next man up. His bat has never been anything to write home about, but he represents a Gold Glove caliber centerfield talent, and could start on nearly any other team in baseball. With a desire to keep Buxton off his feet on occasion, filling in with that level of defensive talent is beyond impressive.

    From there the Twins could turn to either Nick Gordon, who filled in admirably last year, or Gilberto Celestino. Gordon showed a consistent level of development as he worked to acclimate himself in centerfield. His arm strength has been a question at shortstop, but his speed and closing ability played well in the outfield. Now more of a utility talent, being capable on the grass gives him plenty of opportunity. Celestino has always looked the part of a strong defender, and the growth he showed during year two in the big leagues was substantial. There is probably more to unlock with him, and Minnesota should continue to find ways to do so.

    At the end of the day there won’t be a surefire way to replace the production lost by either Buxton or Gallo if either miss time. Dealing Kepler could hurt should Minnesota need to replace injured bodies. When Spring Training commences though, it’s hard to think of another roster in baseball that can lay claim to the same level of defensive talent.

    One would hope that Royce Lewis can return this summer and play on the dirt. He found his way to the outfield last year with guys missing time and the roster needing help. The latter part should no longer be an issue, and with Target Field having an expansive amount of space to cover, Derek Falvey and Thad Levine have given their pitchers the best players to do it.

    A season ago Minnesota was a top five unit in the outfield defensively. For 2023, the focus should be 1st or bust.

    MORE FROM TWINS DAILY
    — Latest Twins coverage from our writers
    — Recent Twins discussion in our forums
    — Follow Twins Daily via Twitter, Facebook or email
    — Become a Twins Daily Caretaker

     Share


    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    And this continuous elation about having Joey Gallo in the lineup. The guy is AWFUL. A great fielder? Okay. He can't hit. Period. The Yankees tried and tried to let him break out, to no avail. The Dodgers tried and tried to let him break out, to no avail. Before them, Texas gave up, too. He cannot hit. Period. I don't care how great of a right field he plays. When a guy hits .150, .160, hey, even give him a .170, with 200 k's, he doesn't serve a spot on the roster. And $11 million? He got a raise for his complete lack of production last season? Joey should be with Sano this season, wherever that is.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    1 hour ago, MarcF said:

    And this continuous elation about having Joey Gallo in the lineup. The guy is AWFUL. A great fielder? Okay. He can't hit. Period. The Yankees tried and tried to let him break out, to no avail. The Dodgers tried and tried to let him break out, to no avail. Before them, Texas gave up, too. He cannot hit. Period. I don't care how great of a right field he plays. When a guy hits .150, .160, hey, even give him a .170, with 200 k's, he doesn't serve a spot on the roster. And $11 million? He got a raise for his complete lack of production last season? Joey should be with Sano this season, wherever that is.

    Actually between Joey & Sano, one's a .234 career hitter and one's a .199 career hitter.  Convince me we are rostering the right one.....

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    5 hours ago, MarcF said:

    And this continuous elation about having Joey Gallo in the lineup. The guy is AWFUL. A great fielder? Okay. He can't hit. Period. The Yankees tried and tried to let him break out, to no avail. The Dodgers tried and tried to let him break out, to no avail. Before them, Texas gave up, too. He cannot hit. Period. I don't care how great of a right field he plays. When a guy hits .150, .160, hey, even give him a .170, with 200 k's, he doesn't serve a spot on the roster. And $11 million? He got a raise for his complete lack of production last season? Joey should be with Sano this season, wherever that is.

    My understanding is that the author of the article was referring strictly to the best defensive outfield. The title of the thread was misleading about that, and even the article itself wasn't completely clear until the last paragraph.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    So what exactly are you wondering about?

    I guess I could have been more specific. I am, and have been concerned about our fragile Center Fielder, Byron Buxton (he would call me a bad fan), and how we consistently view this guy as our team's key. He is fragile and this is a fact. I guess that is it. No ill thoughts about Taylor or Celsetino or Gordon in CF. In my view only, he should DH where it may be safe for him. Let Celestino/Taylor/Gordon play. 

    GO TWINS! Twins Geezer .... out!

     

     

    23 hours ago, jmlease1 said:

    since this topic is about the OF, I'm going to skip over all the other stuff, but I'm unclear why you're wondering about our CF position. Buxton is an elite player when he's on the field, Taylor is an elite defender in CF and starter quality at the position (and he's the backup), they have 3 other guys on the 26 man roster right now who can play CF in Gordon, Gallo, and Kepler, and Celestino is waiting in AAA. This is the deepest CF we've had in quite a long time. So what exactly are you wondering about?

     

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    On 2/3/2023 at 5:01 PM, JD-TWINS said:

    V, LH pitching:

    Taylor CF - Buxton DH - Correa SS - Miranda 1B - Polanco 2B - Farmer 3B - Gordon LF - Jeffers C - Kepler RF

    Reserves:

    Kiriloff - Larnach - Gallo

    Vazquez has to sit for back up Catcher. He’s the only other RH hitter.

    Moving Buxton around in OF when we have 3 guys that can play RF …..………….He’s going to hopefully play CF 80 games & DH 50 games & sit 30 games. If we get this from him, it’s 13 more games than any other year in his career (117 best so far). 

     

    I suspect you are accurate about what they will do, but it may not be optimal. 

    Putting Buxton in RF means Vazquez/Jeffers can DH, which is likely a 100 basis points of OPS upgrade over any LHB you stick in RF. 200 bps over Kepler.

    Speaking of Kepler, I never want to see him have a PA against a LHP in a close game ever again. Due to injuries this may not be possible, but he is the last OFer on the 40 man that I want to see in the lineup against a LHP. I'd start Farmer in RF before Kepler. He is nearly Andrelton Simmons circa 2021 bad at the plate when it comes to LHP. 

    I like Kepler. He's a fantastic strong-side platoon role player who plays very good RF defense, but that defense is not so good that he should be in the lineup vs LHP. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites




    Join the conversation

    You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
    Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

    Guest
    Add a comment...

    ×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

      Only 75 emoji are allowed.

    ×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

    ×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

    ×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

    Loading...

×
×
  • Create New...