Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • Long-Term Woes


    Nick Nelson

    This year's Minnesota Twins team is bad. Like, most losses in baseball bad. Like, less than half as many wins (25) as the Texas Rangers (51) bad. We've come to terms with this bitter reality.

    But what really stings about the ongoing setbacks here in 2016 is the long-term implications. Almost every week, it seems like a new development comes along to sap away any hope for a quick turnaround.

    Image courtesy of Rick Osentoski, USA Today

    Twins Video

    Obviously, the young players who are being relied upon as the lifeblood of a return to contention have largely scuffled. Byron Buxton looks nowhere near taking competent major-league at-bats. Tyler Duffey has a 5.59 ERA. Eddie Rosario, John Ryan Murphy, Jose Berrios and JT Chargois are in Triple-A, with nothing to show for their MLB time this season. Miguel Sano has been all right, but far from the MVP-caliber player that some dummy stupidly predicted him to be.

    The severity and consistency of these youths' struggles call into question the organization's development and coaching processes. But, at the same time, this is sort of the nature of the beast. Sometimes, it takes a while.

    What really dulls any sense of enthusiasm relating to this team is the way things are playing out with entrenched veterans.

    Joe Mauer is reaffirming his status as a mediocrity who will continue to bat third indefinitely. It's getting harder and harder to believe that will change.

    Byung Ho Park is technically a rookie, but not, in the sense that he's a 29-year-old with four guaranteed years of salary on this contract. He's batting .191 and on the verge of a demotion to the minors. (UPDATE: Park was optioned to Triple-A on Friday.)

    Glen Perkins, the only member of the bullpen who could be considered a reliable commodity at this point, is out for the year with surgery for a torn labrum, his career now in doubt.

    Phil Hughes, who is under contract longer than anyone else on the roster (through 2019), is also undergoing shoulder surgery. He is three years younger than Perkins, and his operation is somewhat less serious, but a Beyond the Box Score writer who examined the history of thoracic outlet syndrome last year concluded that "counting on a pitcher who has been through this injury is a terrifying proposition."

    Since signing the largest free agent contract in franchise history, Ervin Santana has a 4.17 ERA, an 80-game PED ban, and a continually declining strikeout rate.

    Ricky Nolasco is Ricky Nolasco. Still on the payroll through next year.

    The resurgence of Brian Dozier (and, in fairness, what a freaking resurgence) is the only remote glimmer of optimism regarding any of the team's established players who are locked in. You can bet that there will be plenty of talk about trading him as the deadline approaches, which is understandable but also a statement on just how far this team may be from a return to relevance.

    The Twins have given us very little to celebrate as we head into the summer's foremost holiday weekend. On the bright side, there is still half a baseball season remaining, and plenty of time for some positive big-picture signs to emerge.

    Boy, could we use them.

    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 you want to look at the "bright" side, I think we are witnessing an historically bad phenomena.  And I don't just mean baseball, I'm talking all of human related history. This is like Vesuvius wiping out Pompeii, or Atlantis sinking into the ocean.  It is fascinating to watch, much like it would have been interesting to have somehow lived through the meteor impact that wiped out the dinosaurs.  It's almost like the inverse of the statistically improbable set of events that occurred to create life on earth those many millions of years ago.  Cluster luck to the extreme.

     

    Who will survive?  What types of adaptations will evolve in the new super-species that is left after this debacle?

     

    Are TR and Molitor the right people to be leading the team through this calamity of biblical proportions?  I don't know.  But people laughed at and criticized Noah...

    Noah at least responded to the flood by building an Ark, not just patching the hole in his canoe! :)
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Unless you mean Bob Gibson, he's never a player who is going to be too expensive for anyone.

    Gibsons ceiling is a number 3.

    Yeah. I am not sure where all the love for Gibson stems from. Or where some think he is going to get really expensive. He was the number one guy we should extend before the season and many agreed.

     

    The reality is Gibson has a career ERA plus of 90 and is controlled through age 31. He has already had TJ and has been hurt a bit this year.

     

    With the signings of Nolasco and Ervin, and extension of Hughes I think it is time for a time out on signing pitchers into their 30's. It would not be the end of the world if the franchise understood the concept of a sunk cost. How many franchises would give a pitcher 52 starts at a 5.49 ERA (Nolasco)

    Edited by tobi0040
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    The Twins could have a better turn around, if they ever figured on how to develop our top tier minor league talent. If most major league scouts feel that Byron Buxton, Miguel Sano, Jose Berrios, and Max Kepler should be good Major Leaguers then where are the results? I mean some teams (like the Chicago Cubs) have done an excellent job in turning their star prospects into star players. The Twins stink because they can't develop any one period. If they do we will be closer to at least a .500 team.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

    It would be nice if somehow Major League Baseball could take the franchise away from the Pohlads. As long as they are in charge the future is bleak.

     

    I'd rather not bring back contraction thank you very much.

    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...