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  • Hildenberger (And Gee) Gets The Call


    Seth Stohs

    Twins Daily has learned and confirmed (from a person with direct knowledge) that right-hander relief pitcher Trevor Hildenberger will be called up to the Twins on Friday. When the 26-year-old gets into a game, it will be his major league debut.

    In addition, the Twins will call up RHP Dillon Gee, who they just signed on Wednesday to a minor league contract. Nik Turley was optioned to Rochester following his Thursday night outing in which he recorded just two outs. Also Ehire Adrianza was placed on the 10-day disabled list.

    UPDATE - The Twins announced the Alex Wimmers and Mason Melotakis were DFAd to make room for Gee and Hildenberger.

    The Twins head to Cleveland for a three-game series starting Friday night.

    The Twins will need to make two 40-man roster decisions to make room for Hildenberger and Gee.

    Image courtesy of Seth Stohs, Twins Daily (photo of Trevor Hildenberger)

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    Last week, the Twins called up hard-throwing Alan Busenitz from Rochester. In an article on Busenitz, we mentioned that Trevor Hildenberger was also very deserving.

    The side-arming righty was the Twins Daily choice for Minor League Relief Pitcher of the Year in 2015 and again in 2016.

    In 21 games for Rochester this season, he is 2-1 with six saves. In 30.2 innings, he has allowed 27 hits, walked eight and struck out 35.

    Following Thursday night's game, Hildenberger got the news every ballplayer wants to hear. And, he was able to share it with a couple of very important people. Hildenberger said, "It was awesome having my parents in Rochester and being able to tell them face-to-face."

    Hildenberger's story is a great one. He was the 22nd-round pick of the Twins in 2014 out of Cal-Berkeley. He was at Berkeley for five years (a redshirt year), and he barely got on the mound until his fourth year because of a change he made on the mound.

    As he told Seth in the Twins Prospect Handbook 2016, "It started back at the end of my third year at Cal-Berkeley when my teammate wore the wrong number jersey to practice. My pitching coach, Mike Neu, commented on what he pictured when he saw my teammate's number. I asked him what he pictured when he saw my number 26, and he said a sidearm pitcher because UCLA and Washington both had sidearm relief pitchers with the number 26. At that point in time, I had thrown a cumulative 12 innings in three years and was clearly not effective enough to compete. So he asked me to throw a bullpen from a lower arm angle. I obliged, not realizing it was a permanent change. He liked what he saw and sent me off to summer ball in Bend, Oregon, in the summer of 2012 to refine my new style and experience some growing pains."

    The change worked. He had a great final season at Cal, got drafted and on Thursday night, received the call that every baseball player hopes for, a call to the big leagues.

    Hildenberger is comfortable with himself now as a pitcher and what it takes for him to be successful. In that same article, he said, "I really pride myself on throwing strikes with all three of my pitches, and the ones over the top too. If I get to a 3-2 count, I have no problem throwing from side-arm, fastball, changeup or slider. I really believe I can put it in the strike zone when I need to."

    At Berkeley, Hildenberger majored in American Film and Media. It's something he has a passion for. He told us, "I'm a big movie guy. I wrote about film a lot in college. I watch films that are a bit more off the beaten path, some foreign films or independent films that are played in really small theaters.

    But it's on the pitcher's mound that Hildenberger has dominated, really since signing back in 2014. Like Busenitz, Hildenberger has earned his promotion.

    The 22nd-round pick becomes the first member of the Twins 2014 draft to reach the big leagues. If healthy, it's likely both Nick Burdi and Jake Reed would be up too, and John Curtiss is certainly a name to watch as he's dominating in AA. Nick Gordon was the team's top pick, and he's put up an all-star first half in Chattanooga.

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      On 6/23/2017 at 5:10 PM, AWOLNATION_11 said:

    I'll hold off on too much judgement for the time being.   FO was right about Park at the end of Spring despite catching grief  

    But there, they kept Park, and got the benefit of stashing him in AAA and keeping an additional 40-man spot open; here, they'll likely lose Melotakis, and the only immediate benefit is rostering Gee (who could have taken Breslow's spot instead).

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      On 6/23/2017 at 5:45 PM, spycake said:

    But there, they kept Park, and got the benefit of stashing him in AAA and keeping an additional 40-man spot open; here, they'll likely lose Melotakis, and the only immediate benefit is rostering Gee (who could have taken Breslow's spot instead).

    They were likely disappointed no one took Park and his salary off their hands.

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      On 6/23/2017 at 5:45 PM, spycake said:
    But there, they kept Park, and got the benefit of stashing him in AAA and keeping an additional 40-man spot open; here, they'll likely lose Melotakis, and the only immediate benefit is rostering Gee (who could have taken Breslow's spot instead).

     

     

    Yeah I would remove Breslow too but maybe Melo just isn't responding

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      On 6/23/2017 at 5:45 PM, spycake said:

    But there, they kept Park, and got the benefit of stashing him in AAA and keeping an additional 40-man spot open; here, they'll likely lose Melotakis, and the only immediate benefit is rostering Gee (who could have taken Breslow's spot instead).

    I'm referring to them not adding him back to the 40 & 25-man rosters for opening day as many folks were clamoring for.   AAA performance has justified the move (or non-move for that matter).

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      On 6/23/2017 at 7:17 PM, AWOLNATION_11 said:

    I'm referring to them not adding him back to the 40 & 25-man rosters for opening day as many folks were clamoring for.   AAA performance has justified the move (or non-move for that matter).

    Yes, I understood that.  But when the front office decided not to add Park back to the roster, they still kept him and kept a 40-man spot free for other use.  There was no risk of losing any players there -- actually adding Park back to the roster would have risked losing someone else. Their choice was actually the risk-averse option.

     

    That's not the case here -- Melotakis is at risk of being lost.  Might ultimately be a fine decision, but it's not really comparable to keeping Park off the roster.

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      On 6/23/2017 at 7:25 PM, spycake said:

    Yes, I understood that.  But when the front office decided not to add Park back to the roster, they still kept him and kept a 40-man spot free for other use.  There was no risk of losing any players there -- actually adding Park back to the roster would have risked losing someone else. Their choice was actually the risk-averse option.

     

    That's not the case here -- Melotakis is at risk of being lost.  Might ultimately be a fine decision, but it's not really comparable to keeping Park off the roster.

    I hear you.

    I don't even really see this as Gee/Hildenberger vs. Melotakis decision.   I see it more as a Turley vs. Melotakis decision.   Even after those three big league starts the FO is keeping Turley and DFA'ing Melotakis.   Interesting.

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      On 6/23/2017 at 7:45 PM, AWOLNATION_11 said:

    I hear you.

    I don't even really see this as Gee/Hildenberger vs. Melotakis decision. I see it more as a Turley vs. Melotakis decision. Even after those three big league starts the FO is keeping Turley and DFA'ing Melotakis. Interesting.

    Turley hits 95 as a starter. Melotakis 91 as a reliever. Pretty simple math, actually.

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    In hindsight, maybe the fact Rosario got that call-up a while back and Melo didn't should have been a harbinger.  The writing was being written on the wall.

     

    Speaking of that word, maybe that can be Hildenberger's nickname, instead of Trevor Hindenberger.  The Trevor (The Harbinger of Doom) Hildenberger.

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