Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • The Natural: Brooks Lee Is Special, and the Twins Know It


    Nick Nelson

    FORT MYERS, FL—The 2022 first-round draft pick is seeing plenty of action in early spring training, and building upon the stellar impression he made during last year's pro debut. Rocco Baldelli and Carlos Correa are among those who've taken notice. 

    Image courtesy of William Parmeter

    Twins Video

    "He makes it look easy" is one of the highest compliments you can pay a person when it comes to something so immensely challenging as playing baseball at the highest level. 

    And yet, that's Brooks Lee in a nutshell. The 2022 first-round pick has handled everything thrown at him with such a sense of grace and nonchalance that it's easy to see why the Twins keep throwing more.

    Selected eighth overall out of Cal Poly, Lee impressed the organization enough with his smooth transition to the pro game that they advanced him rapidly over a two-month span. Following a brief opening stint at rookie ball, where he batted .353 in four games, Lee skipped right past Low-A and went straight to Cedar Rapids. 

    In 25 games with the Kernels, the switch-hitter slashed .289/.395/.454 with four home runs and an 18-to-16 K/BB ratio. His performance was so impressive that he received a late promotion to Double-A, where he went 11-for-26 (.423) in six contests, including four playoff games.

    This spring, the Twins are showing a ton of faith and belief in Lee. Oftentimes when a prospect drafted nine months earlier is invited to big-league camp, it's used as an opportunity to soak in the experience and acclimate to major-league surroundings. 

    Not in Lee's case. They're throwing him right into the fire. Through the first four days of spring training games, Lee made three starts and handled the assignment with aplomb, notching four hits in nine at-bats.

    "He’s clearly not overwhelmed with the situation," observed manager Rocco Baldelli after Lee went 2-for-3 against the Braves on Tuesday. 

    For his part, Lee says he wasn't quite expecting to get this much early-spring action ... not that he's disappointed. "It's pretty surprising, but I signed up for it. I'm having a lot of fun."

    For those familiar with Lee's background, his ability to take it all in stride and enjoy the moment shouldn't come as a huge shock.

    The Coach's Kid 
    The narrative about a coach's kid with supernatural baseball aptitude can be an overplayed trope, but in Lee's case it is impossible to deny. After starring for San Luis Obispo High School in California, he was considered a top name in the 2019 draft, but withdrew his name the day before, informing teams he intended to play at Cal Poly for his father Larry, who'd served as Mustangs head coach for nearly two decades. 

    A 2020 season lost to injury and COVID was followed by an excellent 2021, where he batted .342 with a 1.010 OPS, and then an even better 2022, which featured a .357/.462/.664 slash line and cemented his status as a top-10 draft pick. 

    Growing up as a coach's kid creates a deep and unique connection to the baseball field, and the fundamentals of the game. It's apparent to Lee's current manager, who himself was coached by his father as a youth. Rocco has credited Dan Baldelli with developing his love for the game, so he can relate to this special aspect of Lee's makeup.

    "He’s a very relaxed guy when he’s at the ballpark," Baldelli said. "He gives off the impression that he is a coach’s son and he spent many, many, many years of his life at a baseball field, and he knows everything that goes on at the baseball field. It doesn’t feel like there’s a ton going on here that he’s completely unfamiliar with."

    In particular, Baldelli has been impressed by Lee's ability to process information and adapt on the fly.

    "The at-bats look good. He makes really good adjustments during at-bats, he finds a way to get his barrel kind of on a good plane. Depending on what’s going on in the count, depending on the pitcher he’s facing, he’s not a one-trick pony at the plate, that’s pretty clear from watching him."

    This crucial quality helps explain why Lee emerged as a top 2022 draft prospect – MLB.com had him ranked as the fifth-best draft prospect ahead of time – and why the Twins were so delighted to get him with the No. 8 pick. 

    So far he's been everything they could've hoped, with his initial performance standing out so much that Lee managed to sneak (ever-so-slightly) past Royce Lewis to claim the No. 1 spot on our latest Twins prospect rankings. 

    Now all he has to contend with is a troubled history for those who've been in this position before.

    Breaking a Pattern of Top Prospect Letdowns
    I wrote recently about the track record for Twins prospects who've topped our rankings over the past 10 years. It's a list that includes:

    • Most recently, Royce Lewis and Alex Kirilloff, who are both grappling with potentially career-threatening health issues as we head into this season. 
    • Austin Martin, who plummeted in the rankings following a tough encore season at Double-A in 2022.
    • Fernando Romero, who fizzled out and never came close to reaching his high-end starter potential.
    • Byron Buxton, whose career thus far has epitomized the disruptive power of uncontrollable forces impacting elite athletes, even when their on-field play matches their promise.

    Can Lee break the spell? His skill set is so advanced, balanced, and resilient that it feels almost impossible to envision a Martin-esque performance drop-off. Injuries are of course less predictable, and Lee hasn't been able to totally avoid their grip – he suffered a hyperextended knee in 2020 that required surgery – but he's fully healthy and without any restriction this spring.

    That differentiates them from so many other players in camp, and has probably contributed to the number of opportunities available to him here in the first week of games.

    The natural question now, for The Natural, is what comes next.

    What's Ahead for Brooks Lee?
    I'm assuming Lee will open the year at Double-A. That's a semi-aggressive assignment on its face, but so send him back to Single-A would feel almost unfair to the pitchers there.

    Once he's settled in Wichita, Lee is instantly in range of a big-league promotion, and his showing this spring helps build confidence he'll be ready for the call whenever it comes. "Offensively, defensively, everything we’ve thrown at him, he’s handled it, done it, excelled at it, and he looks good," said Baldelli.

    Assuming he picks up where he left off in the minors, it becomes a matter of when and where Lee's opportunity will arise in the majors. The Twins are hoping it won't come anytime soon at shortstop, where Correa is penciled in for years to come. 

    The more imminent opportunity figures to come at third base, and it sort of feels like the organization is planning around such a scenario, maybe sooner than later. Playing third would be a relatively new experience for Lee, who played shortstop exclusively in college and has yet to appear anywhere else defensively as a pro. 

    He said short is his favorite position, but added, "I love third too." Maybe it's meant to be. After all, Lee was named after legendary Hall of Fame third baseman Brooks Robinson. In the past, he's set his sights on an accordingly ambitious career path.

    "Honestly, I think I should be a Hall of Famer when I grow up and be in the talk for one of the greatest of all time," Lee said back in 2021 as a redshirt freshman at Cal Poly. 

    These days, he's a little more subdued in his goal-setting. Asked what he hopes to accomplish this year: "Just be satisfied with how I did at the end of the season, that’s all I care about. Haven’t really thought about stats or anything like that, or where I’m gonna be."

    Sounds like a coach's kid. And while he doesn't have his dad in the dugout anymore, Larry is never too far away – Brooks says he talks to him "every day." Upon reaching the big leagues, Lee will have the luxury of a more contemporary mentor close at hand.

    After Correa exited his spring training debut on Wednesday, I asked for his impressions of Lee thus far. 

    "Man that kid is a stud," Correa said, with an added emphasis on the last word. "I really, really, really like this kid. I’m very high on him. Don’t be surprised if we see him up this year, he’s very, very good man. Everybody I talk to about him, it’s high praise. I don’t get impressed very easily. That was definitely a great pick by the Twins."

    Just a couple of first-round shortstops who make it look easy.

    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

    If the Twins promote on merit, Brooks Lee could be in the lineup by mid-season. A switch hitter that recognizes pitches right out of the hand. Hits for power as well as average, Relaxed, confident, reliable fielder wherever you put him. Appears to play within himself, nothing reckless about his approach. 

    This kid's floor is a top-ten MLB infielder. His ceiling is a perennial All-Star and HOF. 

    That said, Lee does present a problem...for Jose Miranda. Lee already is an excellent infielder, where Miranda is working his butt off to become adequate. Whaddaya do with Miranda (and Polanco) when Lee and Lewis both hit town? 

    Sadly, the answers may come down to injuries, which the Twins have not lacked in recent years. Baseball is very hard on knees, ankles, elbows, wrists, and fingers. And then there's foul balls off your instep, sliding head-first into a knee, crashing into walls, and pitches fouled right into your face mask. 

    Have I listed even half of the dangers? Anyway, Brooks Lee looks as much as I've ever seen like a sure bet. Fasten your seatbelt, kid.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I push back against the idea that the Twins have been “aggressive” or “moved quickly” with Lee. This is what is SUPPOSED to happen when you draft a college player projected to be a top-5 pick.

    This is his age 22 year…a very typical year for “greats” to break in whether college players or not. College juniors drafted this high…especially position guys…are going to have the expectation of breaking in at age 23 at latest. It can take longer, but there should be no reason to EXPECT it to take longer. The only thing unique here is that he’s a Twin, is healthy, and has so far solidly met those expectations. 😀

     

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    2 hours ago, Bigfork Twins Guy said:

    Brooks Lee reminds me a little of when Joe Mauer was coming up although he was not a college player.  He was a can't miss player that moved up pretty fast the way Brooks appears to be doing and we were all excited to see him.

    What other Twins prospects fit into this category?  Rod Carew maybe?  I can't think of any of others off the top of my head, but I'm sure somebody on this forum will.

    Hard to compare IMO. International signings happen at 16 years of age, HS signings at 18, and College signings typically at 21 these days. So the opportunity is different. International guy like Jorge Polanco was getting called up at 20…some of the international superstars well earlier than that. Top HS guys, (extreme outliers like Bryce Harper aside), usually don’t make it any quicker than Mauer or Correa, who made their debuts shortly before turning 21.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    This article and all the commentary focus primarily on his hitting and great background to prepare him for the big leagues.  He must be able to field short or third I am guessing so I will take that as a given. Does anyone have anything to add about his arm strength to play these positions?  Thanks

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    3 hours ago, Bigfork Twins Guy said:

    Brooks Lee reminds me a little of when Joe Mauer was coming up although he was not a college player.  He was a can't miss player that moved up pretty fast the way Brooks appears to be doing and we were all excited to see him.

    What other Twins prospects fit into this category?  Rod Carew maybe?  I can't think of any of others off the top of my head, but I'm sure somebody on this forum will.

    Blyleven

     

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    5 hours ago, Monkeypaws said:

    I remember one of the Twins 1st rounders in the late 90s, I believe it was Ryan Mills, was also the son of a manager. Didn't work out in his case.

    And the relevance of this is...?

    5 hours ago, Monkeypaws said:

    I remember one of the Twins 1st rounders in the late 90s, I believe it was Ryan Mills, was also the son of a manager. Didn't work out in his case.

     

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I think this kid is the real deal. He's probably going to end up being the Twins #3 hitter really soon. My only question...about his bat...is how much pure HR power is he going to have. Is he going to be a consistent 35-40 doubles hitter with around 20 HR per? Or will he translate 8-10 of those doubles in to HR's?

    IMO, he and Lewis are the 3B and 2B of the future, and neither is a waste of talent at either spot. Both will have the ability to be excellent defensively and All Star caliber players. Miranda should play 1B/3B/DH. Kirilloff with hopefully reach his potential. Julien will play 1B/2B/DH. This could all transpire before or during the 2024 season. The Twins would have one of the best infields in all of MLB, especially when we add Correa in to the mix. But where does it leave Polanco, who I'm not anxious to see go anywhere? 

    Wow!

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    The Twins have had their share of first round misfortune, maybe its time for us to see the other side of that wheel. A guy that fly's through the system and starts pushing other guys out of the way before he even gets here. because I don't doubt some players and coaches are looking over their shoulder and wondering what position he'll wind up at. This team in a year's time could go from maybe a possible allstar to 6 or 7 players deserving of votes. I know, wait until it gets here.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    9 hours ago, MGM4706 said:

    Great. Twins have a legit prospect and of course he has to be a SS!! Maybe spend this year learning a new position!!

    Odds are that he will play 3rd for a couple years and play SS when Correa has a dayoff and Lee will switch to SS when Correa is ready to move to 3rd.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Lee to 3rd and Miranda to 1st and let Polonco and Julian figure out 2nd ... but then there is Lewis... what great problems to have! (I have my serious doubts about Krills long term health but I hope I'm wrong).

    Lee may end up being like Moss, Jefferson, Peterson, Culpepper falling into Vikings lap.... aweseome!  

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    10 hours ago, mikelink45 said:

    I love it - let the prospect rise as quick as his talent and attitude allow.  I would love to see him at 2B with Miranda at 3B, Polanco trade bait.  Then what to do with Lewis - what a good problem.

    I’ve assumed if Lewis comes back strong, by ‘24 3rd base would be his. That left 2nd base for Lee. This doesn’t read that way at all.

    Whatever works!

    I guess he can stay at SS on the Farm and make sure Correa stays healthy this year? Gotta work at 3rd or 2nd by the latter half of the year so he can at least play some in September.

    Lee & Lewis & a healthy Kirilof in ‘24 make Miranda the extra 1B guy v. lefties……back-up at 3rd………..DH. He could be part of a trade package as well. 

    Hoping for a solid ‘23 for all 3 of them!

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    5 minutes ago, JD-TWINS said:

    Blyleven had about 70 wins by the time he was Lee’s age……,he’s the real extreme!!

    Undersold Bert - took a look, he actually had 95 wins by the end of age 24 season. Gotta be close to Top 5 for that many wins that young!!

    Hopefully, we’re celebrating Lee in a few years!

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    If Lee proves himself in minors and gets a call up to the majors this year ....

      I'd he hits and  gets on base it will take the sting  out of trading arraez ...

    The twins need productive hitters and Lee appears to be one , Julien  another and Lewis too , let the boys play  ...

    We need some exciting twin baseball and when these players start playing and producing together I think things are going to be exciting and positive  ...

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    1 hour ago, JD-TWINS said:

    I’ve assumed if Lewis comes back strong, by ‘24 3rd base would be his. That left 2nd base for Lee. This doesn’t read that way at all.

    Whatever works!

    I guess he can stay at SS on the Farm and make sure Correa stays healthy this year? Gotta work at 3rd or 2nd by the latter half of the year so he can at least play some in September.

    Lee & Lewis & a healthy Kirilof in ‘24 make Miranda the extra 1B guy v. lefties……back-up at 3rd………..DH. He could be part of a trade package as well. 

    Hoping for a solid ‘23 for all 3 of them!

    You know I I know somebody the reason I didn't write what you were expecting is because I have high hopes for Miranda. Probably more than most of the writers on these pages. So I think we have an interesting situation with Miranda Lewis and Lee and I have to see what Lewis comes back as before projecting him for anything. We also have to see what Kiriloff can do if he's healthy.

    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...