Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • How Good is the Twins Bullpen?


    Hunter McCall

    Maybe it doesn't need any more help?

    Image courtesy of © Aaron Josefczyk-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    Derek Falvey stated last week that, despite widespread speculation, the Twins weren't in the market for adding another relief pitcher in free agency. There are still a few quality names on the market, such as Andrew Chafin and the familiar Michael Fulmer, but for the time being, the Twins seem content rolling with the crew they have now out of the bullpen. Starting at the back end, what is the outlook for potential relievers for the Twins?


    Closer
    Jhoan Duran
    Like last year, I expect Rocco Baldelli to use Duran in a non-traditional closer role. This turned off many fans, but the logic is sound. Stick Duran on the opposing team's best hitters late in the game. The situation could be in the 7th, 8th, or 9th inning. Duran was as nasty as they came in 2022, mixing top-end velocity (103 mph) with filthy off-speed stuff.

    After only one season, Duran has proven himself to be one of the best in baseball. On the year, Duran had a 1.86 ERA, 89 punch-outs in 67.2 innings, and produced 2.8 WAR. Duran should continue to hold down the back of the bullpen and be among the most reliable guys to toe the rubber in high-leverage situations.


    Set-Up Guys
    Jorge Lopez
    Lopez came over from Baltimore at the deadline in 2022 and had a disappointing second half of the year in Minnesota. 2022 was Lopez's first year in the bullpen, as he was a failed starter asked to embrace a new role. In this new role, Baltimore had themselves a dominant closer who gave them 19 saves in the first half of the season, striking out 54 hitters in 48.1 innings to the tune of a 1.68 ERA.

    At the time of the trade, Lopez was considered one of the best closers in baseball. It was a small sample size, but what he did was legit. Lopez is another high-velocity guy who will hit triple digits and overwhelm hitters with his filthy stuff. His problem in Minnesota was; he just walked too many batters. In just 22.2 innings with the Twins, Lopez walked 14 batters. The good news here is that the walks weren't a problem in the first half of the season, so if the Twins can make the proper adjustments to limit the walks, Lopez should be fine. With his talent, he has all the makings of being one of the best set-up men in baseball and form a nightmare 1-2 punch with Duran.

    Caleb Thielbar
    Old-reliable himself. Overcoming some early season jitters, Thielbar went on to provide another excellent season for the Twins. The 35-year-old lefty produced a 2.42 FIP on the year, showing his ability to limit walks and home runs. Thielbar will continue to be a staple in the Twins pen, often being asked to take the ball in a spot late in games where the opposing team has a couple of left-handed hitters due up. The years may come and go, but Thielbar's ability to be productive in his role will stay the same. Thielbar will continue to be a solid and reliable arm for Rocco to call on late in games.

    Griffin Jax
    Joining Duran and Lopez as starters finding a new role in the bullpen, Jax had an excellent 2022 campaign. Jax was one of the heavier-used pitchers out of the Twins bullpen, throwing 72.1 innings and sometimes asked to eat up multiple innings. Armed with a filthy slider that produced a 36.8% whiff rate, Jax finished the season with a 3.17 FIP and struck out more than a batter per inning. The success of Jax in his new role was one of the highlights of the 2022 season, and he will look to continue his growth there in 2023.


    Middle Relievers
    Jovani Moran
    Jovani Moran was an excellent left-handed bullpen arm in 2022. Moran was so good, and it's possible by the end of 2023, he could be asked to take on more high-leverage situations. In 2022, Moran had a 1.78 FIP and struck out 54 in 40.2 innings. At the moment, Moran is a solid left-handed middle-relief option with a ton of upside.

    Trevor Megill
    On the surface, Megill's numbers could have been more inspiring in 2022. However, there was a sizeable discrepancy between Megill's ERA (4.80) and his FIP (3.29), meaning he was a little unlucky in 2022 and is a good candidate for some positive regression in 2023. The massive Megill won't be the Twins' most reliable reliever, but he has a chance to be a solid option to eat innings in the middle of games.

    Emilio Pagan
    Sit down, take deep breaths, and relax. What I suggest next may trigger you. The Twins were absolutely right to give Pagan another shot. At the start of 2022, Pagan was the Twins' closer, which is crazy when you think about it. In those high-leverage situations, Pagan imploded. As the year progressed, Pagan slid further down the pecking order. Eventually, he found his footing and put on an excellent second half of the season. Most of his late-season work went unnoticed, as his reputation was already tarnished.

    In a middle relief role, Pagan has the potential to be a valuable asset to the Minnesota Twins. Pagan was, at one time, one of the best closers in the game. At 32 years old, if he can continue to fine-tune his splitter and limit the long ball, there's no reason he can't be worth the second chance.

    Jorge Alcala
    Alcala is a true wildcard. Thought to be the favorite to take over the closer job after the Twins dealt Taylor Rogers for Chris Paddack and Emilio Pagan last spring, Alcala suffered a season-ending elbow injury after appearing in just two games. Alcala is young and very talented. If he can return to pre-injury form, he may see more high-leverage situations. There's also the chance that Alcala losses a step and struggles. When he returns, Twins fans will have to wait to see where Alcala is.

    This bullpen has loads of talent and plenty of reliable arms. If guys like Jorge Lopez and Emilio Pagan can sure a couple of things up, which I think they will, and Jorge Alcala returns to be the fireballer he was before his surgery, this bullpen has some real potential to be a top 10 bullpen in the MLB.

    What are your thoughts? Should the Twins add another arm, or is the bullpen ready to roll? Let me know! 

     

    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

    1 hour ago, jmlease1 said:

    I think there's an average amount of question marks here, so that seems about right. I'm surprised so many people think Jax is a question mark: he was more than solid last season, is in his prime, and the changes to his pitch mix and move the 'pen seems to suit him very well. I'm not too worried about Duran, Thielbar, and Jax.

    Alcala has the talent, but needs to show he can recover from injury. Lopez needs to show he's first half guy not post-trade guy. So some questions, but serious upside.

    Moran is middle relief until he shows better command/control, but he's certainly good enough to hold down that slot right now. that change-up is deadly, his splits are fine and he can pitch multiple innings. Only question is really his ceiling: middle relief if he's always this wild, higher leverage if he locks it down (and out of the league if he loses it entirely, but...that's every reliever, right?)

    Megill & Pagan have the most questions, but they're also the most fringe parts of the 'pen. Megill has shown signs, but is a little too hittable to be a consistent reliever right now. If he locks it down, he'll be a guy, if not they'll cycle him out for Sands or someone like that. Pagan has the stuff, but no one in Twins fandom has any faith in him for high leverage situations. (for good reason) In middle relief, he's probably ok, but I still wouldn't have kept him.

    the ceiling is pretty good on this group, the floor isn't bad, and Duran is the only one where it'd be particularly crushing if he flamed out/got hurt.

    This is how I see things as well! Thank you for your comment!

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    20 hours ago, Hunter McCall said:

    As the year progressed, Pagan slid further down the pecking order. Eventually, he found his footing and put on an excellent second half of the season.

    Maybe one would reach that conclusion by looking at ERA, but that's a dangerous stat for any reliever.  All stats for relievers will be small-sample, but IMO looking at the components that lead to runs scored, for example with OPS-against, is better, and from that I note that Pagan's July-October numbers were below average relative to MLB as a whole, just as his first half was.  His last month+ looked good but that followed a rather putrid August so (again on SSS grounds) I'm reluctant to let a 9-game blip (with low BABIP) convince me he suddenly turned things around once and for all.

    Hoping for the best, given that we seem to be committed to the guy to start the season.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    4 hours ago, Hunter McCall said:

    Yes, that's the point. By leaving him in that middle relief, low-leverage role, he can be a valuable asset to the team. He was effective there which is why I like that they kept him. I never suggested that I thought he would regain his closer role, just that he found a role he could be successful in last year.

    It's a fair way to look at it. I still wouldn't have kept Pagan for all the aggro he'll cause twins fans even before a pitch is thrown this season, but I can understand the logic. And I'm still concerned the team has talked themselves into his improvement being real more than it might actually be because of the sunk-cost fallacy...but as a fungible middle reliever it could work out. I hope I'm wrong and he does well and has turned the proverbial corner. But of all the players on this roster, he's the one I feel the least enthusiastic about making it work, he's the one that instinctively gives me the most heartburn.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    9 minutes ago, jmlease1 said:

    It's a fair way to look at it. I still wouldn't have kept Pagan for all the aggro he'll cause twins fans even before a pitch is thrown this season, but I can understand the logic. And I'm still concerned the team has talked themselves into his improvement being real more than it might actually be because of the sunk-cost fallacy...but as a fungible middle reliever it could work out. I hope I'm wrong and he does well and has turned the proverbial corner. But of all the players on this roster, he's the one I feel the least enthusiastic about making it work, he's the one that instinctively gives me the most heartburn.

    He can be a headache! Still, to keep him around with the experience he has to take on a lower leverage role, I think he’ll perform adequately.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    This may be more of a pitching development observation but it also directly affects the bullpen.  With young starting pitching depth we should be looking for places to get them major league experience and it doesn't have to be starting.  Just like they build up their arms for length I think its just as important for most players to get built up to handling major league hitters. 

    Sure, there will still be guys that can go straight to the rotation but unfortunately that's a huge jump that a lot of guys don't make well.  I look at it like the NFL and QBs.  Every year we see 2-6 guys drafted and thrown into the fire as some sort of savior and what happens?  Pass/Fail and Mahomes and Burrow are the outliers.  As much as I hate to say it, I expect Jordan Love to be good in Green Bay. 

    Drew Rasmussen of the Rays, who develop pitching pretty well, is a great example of this.  He did a great hour long interview with MLB radio a couple of weeks ago that got me thinking.  He was a very highly touted prospect with injury issues that bounced around a bit.  I found a short audio clip of the relevant part but the whole hour was a good listen.

    Basically he was put in the bullpen to figure things out and just developed into the rotation.  Had he stayed healthy he probably goes straight to the rotation as hes always been very talented-only 74 minor league innings.  Point is, every pitcher is figuring things out and they all develop differently.  The constant is that getting major leaguers out consistantly is hard and the gap from AAA is larger than any other gap in the path.

    I think we should be embracing throwing prospects into the major league bullpen.  Winder Ober, Varland and SWR should all be in this mix.  We know they have good enough stuff to be successful in good situations.  Rocco can get them started with favorable match ups and build confidence and technique from there.  Doing well with one inning?  Heres two, now three.  Now one in high leverage and so on.  Maybe they add a tick in velocity and can keep it as they build up to starting.  Maybe they become Duran and they are stuck there.  Maybe we find out they can't hack and we can cut bait earlier.  All good outcomes in my opinion that are even worth starting a service clock early. 

    I'm comfortable with the bullpen this year simply because the overall pitching depth is much better.  As long as the Twins are willing to use these resources to get outs regardless of what part of the game it is they will be fine. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    5 hours ago, Jocko87 said:

    This may be more of a pitching development observation but it also directly affects the bullpen.  With young starting pitching depth we should be looking for places to get them major league experience and it doesn't have to be starting.  Just like they build up their arms for length I think its just as important for most players to get built up to handling major league hitters. 

    Sure, there will still be guys that can go straight to the rotation but unfortunately that's a huge jump that a lot of guys don't make well.  I look at it like the NFL and QBs.  Every year we see 2-6 guys drafted and thrown into the fire as some sort of savior and what happens?  Pass/Fail and Mahomes and Burrow are the outliers.  As much as I hate to say it, I expect Jordan Love to be good in Green Bay. 

    Drew Rasmussen of the Rays, who develop pitching pretty well, is a great example of this.  He did a great hour long interview with MLB radio a couple of weeks ago that got me thinking.  He was a very highly touted prospect with injury issues that bounced around a bit.  I found a short audio clip of the relevant part but the whole hour was a good listen.

    Basically he was put in the bullpen to figure things out and just developed into the rotation.  Had he stayed healthy he probably goes straight to the rotation as hes always been very talented-only 74 minor league innings.  Point is, every pitcher is figuring things out and they all develop differently.  The constant is that getting major leaguers out consistantly is hard and the gap from AAA is larger than any other gap in the path.

    I think we should be embracing throwing prospects into the major league bullpen.  Winder Ober, Varland and SWR should all be in this mix.  We know they have good enough stuff to be successful in good situations.  Rocco can get them started with favorable match ups and build confidence and technique from there.  Doing well with one inning?  Heres two, now three.  Now one in high leverage and so on.  Maybe they add a tick in velocity and can keep it as they build up to starting.  Maybe they become Duran and they are stuck there.  Maybe we find out they can't hack and we can cut bait earlier.  All good outcomes in my opinion that are even worth starting a service clock early. 

    I'm comfortable with the bullpen this year simply because the overall pitching depth is much better.  As long as the Twins are willing to use these resources to get outs regardless of what part of the game it is they will be fine. 

    I like this idea, especially when rosters expand in September. Could also be possible if one of the guys you mentioned is dominant in AAA. I think we see some of those young guys out of the pen at some point this year with the intention on keeping them starters in the long run.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    If a guy, like Ober, is expected to be the next man up in the rotation, then he needs to be in St Paul working as a starter. Jacking these guys around like they did to Dobber a couple of year ago doesn't work. Now late in the year is a good time to work young starters into the pen for the stretch run. They can go back to being starters the next year. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I'm not a scout by any means and some pitchers won't be good for this model.  I most often see Ober mentioned as someone who needs to stay a starter and thats fine.  Part of the development is sorting that out.  There is only a one or two spots for doing this any given year and AAA needs starters too.  For the same reasons they should be playing other sports growing up, they should be situationally flexible as pitchers.  It develops different muscles.

    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...