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  • CJ Cron vs. Miguel Sanó: Did the Twins Swing and Miss?


    Cody Christie

    In 2019, the Twins had CJ Cron and Miguel Sanó on the same roster and a decision needed to be made. Minnesota extended Sanó and let Cron walk, but hindsight might point to that being a poor decision. 

     

    Image courtesy of Kelvin Kuo-USA TODAY Sports

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    The 2019 season was one of the most memorable Twins seasons in recent memory. After nearly a decade of irrelevancy, Minnesota’s Bomba Squad was born, with the team clubbing an MLB-record 307 home runs. Five Twins hitters combined for 30 or more home runs, and the team won over 100 games for only the second time in franchise history. 

    During the 2019 season, Miguel Sanó became a first-time member of the 30 home run club. For the season, he hit .247/.346/.576 (.923) with 34 home runs and a 139 OPS+. He set career highs in nearly every offensive category but so did a lot of other Twins players. MLB’s baseballs from that season were flying out of parks at tremendous rates, so many players accumulated hollow stats that season before the baseballs returned to normal. Following the season, the Twins signed Sanó to a three-year, $30 million contract that would keep him in Minnesota through the 2022 season. 

    Since signing his extension, Sanó has frustrated fans with his record-breaking strikeout totals and offensive inconsistencies. In 197 games, he has batted .213/.302/.459 (.761) with a 109 OPS+ and 283 strikeouts. His slow start to the 2022 season was also concerning, but fans have seen his streakiness in the past. It’s also very early into the 2022 campaign, and all of Minnesota’s hitters have struggled so far. 

    CJ Cron was another member of that Bomba Squad roster, but he fell just shy of the 30 home run plateau. In 125 games, he hit .253/.311/.496 (.780) with 25 home runs and a 104 OPS+. It was disappointing to see Cron post an OPS+ that was eight points below his career mark in a heightened offensive environment. He missed time during the season with a thumb injury, and there were concerns that the injury could linger into the 2020 campaign. Minnesota non-tendered him during the offseason, and he hit the free-agent market. 

    Since leaving the Twins, Cron has provided tremendous value when he has been on the field. A knee injury limited him to 13 games in 2020, but he posted an .894 OPS with seven extra-base hits. Cron headed to Colorado in 2021 and posted one of the best seasons of his career. In 142 games, he hit .281/.375/.530 (.905) with 31 doubles and 28 home runs. Over the last three seasons, FanGraphs ranks Cron as the 13th most valuable first baseman. Sanó is 25th on the list and ranks only ahead of three players with a minimum of 600 plate appearances. 

    Cron’s overall value comes from how much better defensively he is at first base compared to Sanó. According to SABR’s Defensive Index, Cron posted a 1.2 SDI last season, which ranked seventh in the National League. Only one AL first baseman, Bobby Dalbec, posted a lower mark than Sanó’s -5.6 SDI. Cron was also worth five more outs above average than Sanó during the 2021 season. Overall, Cron might not be elite defensively, but he is a step up compared to Sanó. 

    Many teams will look at the Cron versus Sanó situation with the same lens as the Twins. Sanó was multiple years younger and coming off a season where he had a 139 OPS+. That same winter, the Twins added Josh Donaldson to play third base, which pushed Sanó over to first. Cron was a solid player during his time in Minnesota, but he never fit into the team’s long-term plans. Now, that might look like the team took a swing and a miss.

    Do you think the Twins made the wrong choice at first base? Leave a COMMENT and start the discussion.

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    Brandon27  is right. I said  as soon as Cron was a free agent get him back. Sano is the  worst fielding first baseman. He  played a big part in us loosing to Boston with his error. I know we will be looking at pitchers but a first baseman makes sense

     

     

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    11 minutes ago, Seth Stohs said:

    Imagine the numbers Sano would put up in Colorado where the air is light and breaking pitches don't break as much. 

    Good point. Numbers aren't always created equally or evenly.

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    On 4/18/2022 at 2:40 PM, Major League Ready said:

    I would much prefer that Sano plays well enough to be traded and they move Kirilloff to 1B for the majority of games.

    That would be ideal. 

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    46 minutes ago, Seth Stohs said:

    Imagine the numbers Sano would put up in Colorado where the air is light and breaking pitches don't break as much. 

    Well Cron's OPS+ in 2021 was 131, which is park adjusted. Sano was good for 113 OPS+ last year. So...Sano's numbers would be worse than CJ Cron...?

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    7 hours ago, Twodogs said:

    I also wonder if Sano's numbers look different if he played 81 games at Coors field?

    That's why you look at park adjusted stats like OPS+ when comparing players from different teams. Especially Red Sox and Rockies players (hitters parks) but also Oakland players (pitchers park). Sano was quite a bit less valuable than Cron last year (131 OPS+ to 113 OPS+) even not considering Sano's awful defense. 

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    Presently half of cj crons hr's are away from corrs field. And the air in Colorado doesn't affect batting average and on base percentage. Sano avg. before his annual injury is .093.

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