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  • Minnesota's Top 3 Most Underappreciated Players


    Cody Christie

    As the season winds down, it's easier to focus on some players who may be the team's secret weapons. So, who have been Minnesota's most underappreciated players in 2022?

    Image courtesy of Jesse Johnson, USA TODAY Sports

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    Last week, MLB.com attempted to name the most underappreciated player on every team. This can be a challenging exercise for a national writer who can't focus on the day-to-day of every MLB team. The Twins have players that have exceeded expectations and others that have struggled to fill their roles. Here are the team's most underappreciated players this season. 

    Gio Urshela, 3B
    MLB.com picked Urshela as the team's most underappreciated player for multiple reasons. Surprisingly, he has a higher OPS than Isiah Kiner-Falefa and Josh Donaldson. That doesn't tell the entire story with Urshela. His defense at third base has dramatically improved in the second half, which helps his overall value to the club. During the offseason, the Twins will need to decide whether or not to offer Urshela arbitration in his final year of eligibility. 

    Urshela's contributions to the team may be underappreciated because of baseball's offensive drop this season. He has an OPS near his career mark of .744, which translates to a 114 OPS+ in 2022. According to FanGraphs, Urshela has provided his second highest amount of value ($10.6 million) in any big-league season. Minnesota may consider this when deciding whether or not to bring him back for 2023. 

    Caleb Thielbar, RP
    It's easy to look at Thielbar's overall numbers for the season and not be impressed with a 3.80 ERA and a 1.18 WHIP. However, some poor appearances near the season's start cloud those numbers. Since April 30, Thielbar has posted a 2.36 ERA with a 57-to-12 strikeout to walk ratio in 42 innings. For much of the season, he has also been the team's only left-handed pitcher out of the bullpen. While others have struggled, Thielbar has been invaluable as a late-inning option. 

    Before the 2020 season, Thielbar was close to retiring from baseball as he was going to take a college coaching job. Luckily, the Twins convinced him that he had something left in the tank. Over the last three seasons, Thielbar has provided the Twins with nearly $20 million worth of value, including close to $9 million in 2022. Relievers can go through ups-and-downs with the small sample size of innings they pitch in a season, but Thielbar has continued to be consistent into his mid-30s. 

    Gilberto Celestino, OF
    In 2021, Celestino's first taste of the big leagues couldn't have gone much worse. He hit .136/.177/.288 (.466) with three doubles and two home runs in 23 games. Minnesota rushed him to the MLB level without playing at Triple-A, so the results should have been expected for a 22-year-old. He has improved significantly during the 2022 campaign, including a month when he was one of the team's best hitters. Back in May, he hit .364/.426/.418 (.844) across 19 games. With Byron Buxton getting regular rest, Celestino has been needed to fill the void in center field. 

    Celestino can't compare to Buxton's defensive prowess, but few players can be that good. Defensively, Celestino ranks in the 82nd percentile for Outs Above Average, and his sprint speed is in the 65th percentile. He is an above-average defender that has provided offensive value that impacts the line-up. Some may forget that he is only 23 years old and has played fewer than 120 games at the big-league level. Minnesota will need him to continue to fill an outfield role in the years ahead. 

    Who do you think have been the most underappreciated Twins players this season? Leave a COMMENT and start the discussion. 

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    6 hours ago, Riverbrian said:

    He probably is just a platoon guy. 

    18 AB's vs. RH's in 2019 with the Dodgers

    8 AB's in 2020 with the Phillies.

    40 AB's vs RH's in 2021 with the Twins

    Now 67 AB's vs RH's this year. 

    I would never make a declarative statement on sample sizes like those and I'm pretty sure that nobody should. 

    Someone decided that he was a Koala Bear and fed him nothing but eucalyptus for 4 years. That mold has been setting for quite some time.  

    Meanwhile... in 2022... the guy getting those left handed swings... is worse. 

     

    Did he have years  of minor league play as well, from which to form an opinion? Demonstrated 300 pt OPS differential in those 350 MLB PAs? 

    Managers and coaches watching his PAs against L and R hand pitching?

     

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    3 hours ago, USAFChief said:

    Did he have years  of minor league play as well, from which to form an opinion? Demonstrated 300 pt OPS differential in those 350 MLB PAs? 

    Managers and coaches watching his PAs against L and R hand pitching?

     

    He Did

    2019 - Oklahoma City

    vs RHP 234 AB's - 19HR - ..308/.374/.637

    vs LHP 99 AB's - 8HR - .292/.364/.708

    2018 - Tulsa/Oklahoma City

    vs RHP 297 AB's - 15HR - .259/.289/.478

    vs LHP 105 AB's - 7 HR - .257/.313/.514

    2017 - Tulsa

    vs RHP - 255 AB's - 14HR - .246/.333/.478

    vs LHP - 61 AB's - 4HR - .246/.314/.475

    There is nothing in his minor league stats that says platoon. He came up in the Dodger organization and was called up in 2019 with the following list of outfielders in front of him: 

    Cody Bellinger - OPS 1.035

    Joc Pederson -  OPS .876

    Alex Verdugo - OPS .817

    AJ Pollack - OPS. 795

    Chris Taylor - OPS .794

    Kike Hernandez - OPS .715

    Playing time was obviously tough to find and he was strictly platooned for a total of 15 games.

    In 2020 Alex Verdugo was replaced by Mookie Betts while the other 5 remained. Kyle was out of options and DFA'd... he was picked up by the Phillies and was given 22 AB's, hitting .136 and released while the minor leagues were shut down.   

    In 2021... The Twins signed him and kept platooning him despite Jake Cave bringing a hot OPS of . 541. He had been a platoon expert for 15 games with the Dodgers. Yet... Somehow Branded. 

    In 2022... The Twins kept platooning him. 

    The same eyeballs that decided he should be platooned because of some undemonstrated lack of ability to hit RHP are the same eyeballs who decided that Jake Cave could hit RHP despite a .541 OPS saying that he couldn't.   

    Same eyeballs who decided to ride with Martin Perez over Randy Dobnak in September 2019 only to pull the plug on Perez right before the playoff roster was to be set and finally commit to Dobnak in the playoffs.  

    Same eyeballs who chose half a season of Matt Belisle instead of 6 years of Nick Anderson. 

    I am pro front office... they know 200 times more than I do...  But they are not infallible. If they were infallible... we wouldn't be worried about the Guardians and White Sox right now.

    In 2022... Kepler was not good enough to keep the bat out of Garlick's Right handed hands and now we need Kyle Garlick to do something that he wasn't allowed to do.

    Why wasn't he allowed? Strict adherence to the platoon concept? Jake Cave? 

     

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