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  • 5 Twins Players with Something Specific to Prove This Year


    Nick Nelson

    These five players have key questions to answer in the season ahead. I promise none of them have to do with injuries.

    Image courtesy of Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports

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    Yes, we all know that health uncertainty is the banner headline for the 2023 Twins. "If they're healthy" is the rallying cry for even the most optimistic fan. 

    As pivotal as they are, these situations just aren't very fun to analyze or talk about, because they feel so beyond anyone's control. Much of the team's outlook hinges on whether Tyler Mahle can pitch without shoulder weakness, and Alex Kirilloff can swing without pain.

    These things either will happen or they won't, and if they don't, it's not necessarily anyone's fault. The human body is fickle.

    Today I'm going to look at five critical points of uncertainty for the Twins that have nothing to do with injuries. (Well, almost nothing.) Instead, it's about these players proving they can deliver in areas where the club really needs them if they're to achieve their goals.

    1. Can Joe Ryan excel against good teams?

    Hidden in Ryan's very good overall numbers last year (13-8, 3.55 ERA in 147 innings over 27 starts) is the fact that his success was largely buoyed by beating up on horrible AL Central opponents.

    In eight starts against the Royals and Tigers, the two teams he faced more than any other, Ryan went 8-0 with a 0.94 ERA. He won every start, allowing just five earned runs on 26 hits (one homer) in 48 innings.

    Look: that's an absurd level of dominance against any major-league lineup. Ryan certainly deserves a ton of credit for being absolutely automatic in those match-ups. But the flip side is that against all other opponents, he went 5-8 with a 4.80 ERA. 

    The 26-year-old has already established himself as a solid mid-rotation starter who can take care of business against lesser lineups. But with so many question marks elsewhere in the rotation, the Twins are really leaning on him to be more. 

    Showing he can up his game against better offenses than Detroit and KC will be key, both because he'll face less of each in the rebalanced schedule, and because the Twins will (hopefully) need starters they can count on in the postseason.

    2. Can Jorge Polanco fill Luis Arraez's OBP void?

    There's no question that Arraez's ability to get on base will be deeply missed, and his departure raises questions about how a power-driven lineup will fare without his penchant for creating opportunities. There's reason to hope Polanco can make up for some of what the top of the order just lost.

    You might look at Polanco's career .334 OBP and say, eh, nothing special. Even his .346 mark last year was quite ordinary. But here's the thing: he posted it while batting a career-low .235, thanks to DOUBLING his walk rate from 2021. Polanco's 14.4% BB rate last year would've ranked fifth-best in baseball if his at-bats qualified. 

    If the newfound patience sticks and Polanco is able to sustain a similar walk rate while his batting average rebounds to somewhere in the range of his .270 career benchmark, you've got the recipe for an Arraez-like OBP, or better.

    To wit: if Polanco walked at same rate in 2021 – when he batted .269 with a .323 OBP – as he did in 2022, he would've had 92 walks and a .395 on-base percentage. 

    3. Can Nick Gordon make himself essential?

    Gordon is coming off a breakthrough season that earned him Most Improved Twin honors and saw him accrue nearly 450 plate appearances. In many cases, a campaign like that for a former first-round draft pick would open the door for a big opportunity, if not a starting role. But the circumstances of the offseason leave him in a spot where he'll be scrapping for playing time from the start, and potentially buried on the depth chart.

    He's not their top backup center fielder (that's Michael A. Taylor). He's not their best lefty-swinging backup corner OF or DH option (that's Trevor Larnach). He's not their top backup anywhere in the infield, and in fact, I'd be somewhat surprised if the Twins view him as anything more than an emergency option on the dirt.

    Injuries can of course change the equation here, but as things stand, Gordon will have a hard time finding his way off the bench with any regularity. That is, unless he can force the issue. At times last year the former light-hitting shortstop looked like a game-changing offensive force, like in August when he slashed .321/.360/.531 with three steals and 17 RBIs in 26 games. Gordon was electric.

    Bring more of that to the table, and Rocco Baldelli will find a way to get Gordon into the lineup as much as he can.

    4. Can José Miranda play third base effectively?

    The viability of Miranda's bat is not in question after a convincing rookie campaign that saw him handle everything MLB pitchers could throw at him, thanks to high-contact swing that generated power to all fields. 

    Now he needs to define his defensive future.

    If he's able to hold on as a capable third baseman, at least for a few years, as opposed to switching to 1B/DH duty, it'd be a boon for the team's planning and lineup-building. An early slide down the defensive spectrum diminished Arraez's value in the front office's eyes, but Miranda can still avoid that route.

    Thus far, I would say the signs are less than encouraging. His defense at third base checked out pretty poorly last year, by almost any measure or metric, and scouting reports were hardly glowing in the minors.

    But plenty of third basemen who looked rough as rookies went on to establish themselves  at the hot corner (calling Corey Koskie), and Miranda's still only 24. His offseason efforts to slim down have also notably resulted in a body that, per Carlos Correa, "looks sexy." We'll see if the defense can follow suit.

    5. Can Jorge Alcalá get lefties out?

    Coming off a season where he made only two appearances due to an elbow injury that ultimately required debridement surgery, Alcalá is obviously a health question mark. Can his arm hold up, much less get back to pumping the upper-90s heat that led to big results in 2020/21?

    The Twins seem to be counting on it, because they have yet to make any significant additions to their bullpen this offseason. Unless that changes, they're banking largely on Alcalá's return to provide depth in the mid-to-late innings, setting the table for Jhoan Durán and Jorge López at the back end.

    Even assuming he's healthy, Alcalá needs to turn one more corner to be the kind of weapon the Twins need him to be. He needs to overcome his susceptibility against left-handed pitchers, who have pummeled him to the tune of .275/.358/.508 in his MLB career. That .866 OPS is 354 points higher than his mark against righties.

    Baldelli will have the ability to strategically deploy Alcalá in favorable match-ups to an extent, but if the righty wants to truly be relied upon as a key late-inning weapon, he'll need to show he can handle the lefty sluggers and pinch-hitters that come his way.

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    50 minutes ago, jmlease1 said:

    He's likely to get playing time. Twins like to rotate players and ensure that guys aren't getting beat up through attrition. Gordon does have positional flexibility (even if his best position is probably LF right now, he's passable at 2b & 3b and it wouldn't surprise me to see him give Miranda a break against the occasional righty) and enough speed/baserunning ability to be a late inning sub as well. Injuries will happen (hopefully fewer serious/lengthy ones) and they'll need Gordon to play.

    I'm curious to see if the Twins are open to Gordon occasionally playing 3B. It'd be very helpful to have a LH option there in addition to Miranda/Farmer, and would be a clear path to more tread for Gordon.

    Thing is, I don't know that we really have any evidence to suggest he's "passable" there. He has made zero career starts in the majors and two in the minors. To my eye, he doesn't really have the skill set to be an asset or even an average defender there. 
     

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    1 hour ago, USNMCPO said:

    I have not heard anything about on-going pain for AK. The reports I read said he is swinging free and expecting a normal spring training.

    In an interview with The Athletic he said there is still some pain and that he's "working thru it" for now.

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    8 hours ago, Karbo said:

    how about this if, if AK can't go as expected, can Gallo play 1B and Gordon or Larnach play OF, or will they play Miranda at 1st and put Farmer at 3rd? Concerned about AK with the reports that he is still having some pain swinging.

    I may have missed some... but what I read was soreness, not pain.  Yes he was worried, but then I can't say I blame the guy.  However he isn't the first athlete, and definitely won't be the last, to doubt or not fully trust that an injury has healed enough.

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    41 minutes ago, Nine of twelve said:

    Of course this is true. But one of the things to look at is how much worse the worst performances are and how many of them there are. If very few outings have very bad results it's more reasonable to assume that they are not reliable indicators of the overall performance.

    I'm not arguing that the SD version of Joe Ryan is who he is, but if we're going to start cherry picking entire games, or explaining away his worst starts as "well the Dodgers beat up on everybody," from a sample that's 27 games, are we not skewing perception as much, if not more, than if we put too much stock in a bad outing in SD? 

    FWIW, his sample size vs. playoff teams last year was nearly identical to his KC/Detroit SS. Excluding the SD game, he finished with a 5 ERA and a slightly higher FIP against those teams, and that includes some pretty good games against Cleveland. 

    Personally I think Ryan is a 4-5 guy unless he can consistently get guys out with something other than his FB. That's still a huge W for the Twins. 

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    “I agree that Polanco is probably the key position player this season (assuming Buxton is playing 50% of the games in CF and 30% games as DH).  This team offensively could very well go the way of Polanco’s season.”

    This team as is will have a lot of difficulty scoring runs. Remember, Buxton played 1/3 of CF games last year!  Your projections are unrealistic and more than pie in the sky. 

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    IIRC Ryan was pulled from not one but two potential no hitters. The 2nd one Moran couldn't finish it up in the 9th, and Ryan had a long face afterward. Those 2 outings weren't typical of a back of the rotation starter. All pitchers will have some misfires. I admire his precise & extremely repetitive delivery. Ryan sort of reminds me of the Yankees Ron Guidry. He was a winner. And I hope that Ryan gets another crack at a no hitter someday as a Twin.

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    Gordon doesn't have the power for regular ABs in the corner OF slots. He either needs to get better an IF defense or develop HR power (unlikely). That said, it's hard to improve IF defense if you never play there.

    If he hits like last year, ABs won't be a problem. If he hits like 2021, they will be.

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    6 hours ago, Nick Nelson said:

    I'm curious to see if the Twins are open to Gordon occasionally playing 3B. It'd be very helpful to have a LH option there in addition to Miranda/Farmer, and would be a clear path to more tread for Gordon.

    Thing is, I don't know that we really have any evidence to suggest he's "passable" there. He has made zero career starts in the majors and two in the minors. To my eye, he doesn't really have the skill set to be an asset or even an average defender there. 
     

    It seems worth trying occasionally?

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    14 hours ago, Karbo said:

    how about this if, if AK can't go as expected, can Gallo play 1B and Gordon or Larnach play OF, or will they play Miranda at 1st and put Farmer at 3rd? Concerned about AK with the reports that he is still having some pain swinging.

    Pretty sure they'll deploy ALL of the above strategies to some degree or another--even if AK can go.  This regime doesn't seem terribly concerned with continuity in the lineup.

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    5 hours ago, KirbyDome89 said:

    I'm not arguing that the SD version of Joe Ryan is who he is, but if we're going to start cherry picking entire games, or explaining away his worst starts as "well the Dodgers beat up on everybody," from a sample that's 27 games, are we not skewing perception as much, if not more, than if we put too much stock in a bad outing in SD? 

    FWIW, his sample size vs. playoff teams last year was nearly identical to his KC/Detroit SS. Excluding the SD game, he finished with a 5 ERA and a slightly higher FIP against those teams, and that includes some pretty good games against Cleveland. 

    Personally I think Ryan is a 4-5 guy unless he can consistently get guys out with something other than his FB. That's still a huge W for the Twins. 

    Probably realistic. Although, I see his upside more #3-ish. The struggles against better offensive teams are a real thing (see Berrios) and those that are consistently good against those teams are legit #1-2 guys. Like you say, I don’t think Ryan necessarily needs to get THERE to warrant the value or validate the trade.

    But, I like his demeanor on the mound…seems to have the ‘good’ arrogance genes that help, IMO, break through at this level.

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    11 hours ago, MGX said:

    Good article...

    My top 5 

    1. Management understanding that Nick Gordon is an essential piece for this team to be successful. In other words he needs to get 500+ PA's

    2. Correa being Correa

    3. As you pointed out Joe Ryan pitching more effectively against better opposing lineups

    4. The young group of hitters (Miranda, Kiriloff, Larnach & Wallner) staying healthy & producing in whatever role they have.

    5. Polanco getting back to his 2021 form.

    I had Ryan - CC - Polanco - Gray - Buxton…….I’m pissed I didn’t put Gordon on this list!!

    Gordon - gained 25 lb last year and could work out for first time in pro career. Last year was his 2nd in the SHOW & he got 405 AB’s playing wherever they needed him. No previous OF experience & he started 98 games out there. 28 doubles - 41 XBH …..50 RBI in the bottom half of line-up. Going to be WAY stronger this spring.

    He has to play against RH pitching!! 80% of the starters are RH.

    80 games in LF - 50 games in CF - 575 AB’s & he hits 40 doubles this year!

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    15 hours ago, Karbo said:

    how about this if, if AK can't go as expected, can Gallo play 1B and Gordon or Larnach play OF, or will they play Miranda at 1st and put Farmer at 3rd? Concerned about AK with the reports that he is still having some pain swinging.

    IF Kiriloff can’t go the obvious choice is Gallo at 1B………I’m curious to see if they consider Gordon there? He can play ground balls and lets Gallo stay in corner OF spot.

    No matter what happens at 1B Farmer has to play 20 - 25 games each at 2B & SS. Rest! He rests Miranda another 25 games at 3B. Also, due to his solid splits v. LH pitching, he’ll start those games at 3B while bumping Miranda to 1B. That’s 100 plus starts for Farmer if the other 3 guys stay healthy.

    Larnach is the LH hitting DH…..80 games. 50 games in LF.

    I refuse to think they will play Taylor ahead of Gordon in CF for more than a handful of games v. RH pitching. Gordon is solid & Taylor weak v. RH pitching. Taylor will start in CF v. LH pitching…..that’s 30 games or so. Taylor is late inning PH v. lefty relievers - late inning base runner - late inning D replacement ……….. INSURANCE FOR INJURIES.

    Buxton, if healthy, plays CF 80 games - DH 50 games.

    Gordon in CF for 50 games & LF for 80 games.

    Gallo 30 games in LF - 50 games in RF - 30 games at 1B - 10 games at DH.

    Kepler 110 games in RF

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    2 hours ago, Shaitan said:

    Gordon doesn't have the power for regular ABs in the corner OF slots. He either needs to get better an IF defense or develop HR power (unlikely). That said, it's hard to improve IF defense if you never play there.

    If he hits like last year, ABs won't be a problem. If he hits like 2021, they will be.

    If you take Gordon’s 405 AB’s from ‘22 and normalize them for potential 575 AB’s this year it’s 13 HR - 6 triples - 40 doubles ……. pretty sure the Twins or any team would take that power for one of their corner Outfielders.

    First season since getting drafted he was healthy due to intestinal problems. Gained 25 lb last year in 6 months. He’s got good bat speed & exit velocity & he’ll get stronger. The FO can’t be blind to these facts!

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    9 hours ago, Karbo said:

    In an interview with The Athletic he said there is still some pain and that he's "working thru it" for now.

    To add to Nick's previous addition, as well as this one, he's been taking about 50-60 swings per day, as well as general workouts. 

    Reports I've read have him dealing with soreness, not pain. I hope that is accurate. ANYONE coming off any kind or surgery will deal with sorness and at least a little pain. You're breaking up scar tissue and just getting your body adjusted again to normal activity.

    The issue is when he starts taking 75-100 swings and how he responds. I'm sure the Twins will measure his workouts to make sure he doesn't overdo. But until I hear "pain" instead of soreness, I'm going to assume the surgery was a success and he just needs time to get his wrist "prepared" for normal usage.

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    Someone please help my memory, or correct me if I'm just wrong, but as I recall, I swear part of Alacala's strong 2nd half finish in 2021 was him dusting off his change, tweaking his change, working on a cutter, or something similar, to work against LH hitters.

    I'd swear I'm right on this, but can someone confirm or tell me I'm crazy?

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    As far as Gordon goes, the FO has stuck by him since they came on board, even though they had no previous allegiance to him. Do you think such a positive step forward in 2022 is going to suddenly sour them on him?

    He has to continue to develop and grow and prove his 2021 and even better 2022 was not an aberration. That's on him. But the lineup and opportunity are always fluid. Kepler may or may not be part of 2023. Gallo may or may not revert to his previous, productive "Texas" days. OR...and I hate to say this...he might end up playing some 1B if AK isn't 100% ready to go from day one. 

    This FO likes the Dogers format of having a bunch of talented guys who can play multiple spots. That's a good thing, and I applaud that approach. Gordon should have ample opportunity to play and continue to prove himself. Again, it's up to him to continue to play well, if not actually improve.

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    7 hours ago, JD-TWINS said:

    IF Kiriloff can’t go the obvious choice is Gallo at 1B………I’m curious to see if they consider Gordon there? He can play ground balls and lets Gallo stay in corner OF spot.

    No matter what happens at 1B Farmer has to play 20 - 25 games each at 2B & SS. Rest! He rests Miranda another 25 games at 3B. Also, due to his solid splits v. LH pitching, he’ll start those games at 3B while bumping Miranda to 1B. That’s 100 plus starts for Farmer if the other 3 guys stay healthy.

    Larnach is the LH hitting DH…..80 games. 50 games in LF.

    I refuse to think they will play Taylor ahead of Gordon in CF for more than a handful of games v. RH pitching. Gordon is solid & Taylor weak v. RH pitching. Taylor will start in CF v. LH pitching…..that’s 30 games or so. Taylor is late inning PH v. lefty relievers - late inning base runner - late inning D replacement ……….. INSURANCE FOR INJURIES.

    Buxton, if healthy, plays CF 80 games - DH 50 games.

    Gordon in CF for 50 games & LF for 80 games.

    Gallo 30 games in LF - 50 games in RF - 30 games at 1B - 10 games at DH.

    Kepler 110 games in RF

    That would be great to see Buxton play that many games!

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    16 hours ago, Reptevia said:

    I think you spelled Gallo, Kepler, Kiriloff, Larnach and the pitching staff wrong. There really isn’t a player on the team that doesn’t need to prove something this year. 

    I'd say Correa's pretty safe..........     The only thing he's gotta prove over the next 6 years is that he's worthy of 4 more years at a discounted rate.

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    8 hours ago, DocBauer said:

    Someone please help my memory, or correct me if I'm just wrong, but as I recall, I swear part of Alacala's strong 2nd half finish in 2021 was him dusting off his change, tweaking his change, working on a cutter, or something similar, to work against LH hitters.

    I'd swear I'm right on this, but can someone confirm or tell me I'm crazy?

    I had the same recollection Doc but it's been so long I just don't recall what he was doing differently.  Who knows what he has been working on as he prepares to return.  We will have to see what he shows in spring training.  I am very hopeful we see the best version of Alcala.  That would be a big boost.

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    17 hours ago, jkcarew said:

    Probably realistic. Although, I see his upside more #3-ish. The struggles against better offensive teams are a real thing (see Berrios) and those that are consistently good against those teams are legit #1-2 guys. Like you say, I don’t think Ryan necessarily needs to get THERE to warrant the value or validate the trade.

    But, I like his demeanor on the mound…seems to have the ‘good’ arrogance genes that help, IMO, break through at this level.

    Yep, I think the opening day start and overall lack of pitching in the organization raised expectations/hopes to a point where people are setting themselves up for disappointment. Ryan was talked about as a potential back end guy or bullpen piece at the time of the trade. Like you said, struggling against better teams is real, and that's ok, but he didn't show anything last year to suggest those results will dramatically change. If he pushes into that true 3ish range you're talking about (maybe this is all semantics) that's great. 

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