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  • Polanco Suspension Brings Opportunity For Others


    Ted Schwerzler

    The Minnesota Twins had made it through 24 days of their spring training game schedule. Although Ervin Santana needed surgery, the timeline looked favorable and the organization had seen no other hiccups. Free agents were being amassed in droves, and the 2017 Wild Card team looked like it was eyeing an opportunity to close the gap in the AL Central. Then it happened; March 18th came.

    Image courtesy of © Butch Dill-USA TODAY Sports

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    If St. Patrick's Day is about luck, the day following saw Minnesota have next to none. Ervin Santana reportedly cannot yet make a fist, let alone grip a baseball. That reality puts a May 1 return to the mound in serious jeopardy. The bigger bomb came in the early evening however, as starting shortstop Jorge Polanco was popped with an 80-game suspension after testing positive for PEDs.

    When looking at the Twins 2018 outlook, it's unquestionably the loss of Polanco that impacts the club most. Despite suggesting he unknowingly ingested the banned substance Stanozolol (which coincidentally was the PED of choice for Santana back in 2015), the reality is he made a poor judgment in failing to fact check what a trainer in the Dominican may have handed him. Ideally there would've been a greater level of ownership, removing the "unknowingly" caveat, but he's decided to bypass an appeal and serve the suspension immediately. For the Twins and Paul Molitor, the question becomes where the club turns from here.

    As I profiled just last week, Polanco was set to become the first shortstop since Pedro Florimon (13/14) to start back-to-back Opening Days for Minnesota (and just the second since Cristian Guzman in 2004). Now, Molitor will likely turn the reins over to Eduardo Escobar, who last owned the job during the 2016 season.

    Escobar has played a solid utility role for the Minnesota Twins during his tenure following the swap that brought him over from the Chicago White Sox. The 1.6 fWAR a season ago was a nice rebound from the -0.6 fWAR he posted in 2016. The problem however, is that the negative number came with Escobar assuming the role of everyday shortstop.

    Across 579 innings at short in 2016, Escobar was worth -7 DRS (Defensive Runs Saved). Stretched out to a full season's worth of games (579 innings accounted for 66 starts), Escobar would be staring at a -17 DRS. Dating back to 2002 (where Fangraphs data begins), only 16 shortstops have posted a worse DRS over a full season. In fact, a -18 DRS was posted in 2012 by a 38-year-old Derek Jeter, just to provide a visual for what that may look like. In short, it's not much of a surprise why the Twins played Escobar at short in just 16 games a year ago, even with the emergence of Polanco.

    For Eduardo, his calling card with Minnesota has been and will continue to be his bat. His positional flexibility is relative, given that he can play many, but is below average (-5 DRS in 600+ innings at 3B in 2017) at all of them. Coming off a career best .758 OPS with 21 homers, it's hard not to like the idea of his bat getting more reps. What both Molitor and the front office will need to evaluate is whether or not the negative cost in the field is outweighed by the boost his bat brings.

    If not for Escobar, then Minnesota currently has three options. First would be secondary utility man, Ehire Adrianza. Profiled as relatively opposite to Escobar, Adrianza is slick with the glove and leaves something to be desired at the dish. Logging just over 200 innings at short for Minnesota last year, Adrianza was worth 1 DRS. His .707 OPS was a career best, and a massive jump from the .598 OPS he'd compiled across his first 145 career games. Having been used out of position some since joining Minnesota, Adrianza looked disinterested or lost at times while playing left field or even third base. Defensively, shortstop is his home, but his bat must prove worthy of consistent starts.

    Brought in as Miguel Sano insurance, veteran Erick Aybar is now all but guaranteed a 40-man roster spot with Minnesota. Barring a Sano suspension or injury to start the year, Aybar likely would've been looking for a new team. At 34 years old, Aybar is hardly a spring chicken, and he cuts the duo above somewhere down the middle. A .685 career OPS is reflective of a guy that's basically all average, with little boost from on-base or slugging skills.

    Unfortunately for him, 2015 is the last time his average was at .270 or above, and would need to be a relative baseline for acceptable production. With the glove, he's played at least 790 innings at short every season since 2009, but he's been no better than -3 DRS since 2012. Not the abomination Escobar is, but calling him slick with the glove would be a stretch as well.

    Rounding out the options for the Twins is a name that's not currently present. Nick Gordon isn't ready to fill in at the big league level on an every day basis yet (and there's valid concerns about him at SS anyway), and both Royce Lewis and Wander Javier are too far away. The "not currently present" designation would also need to apply to a player outside of the organization. Veteran J.J. Hardy is currently a free agent still (though he's arguably a worse option than any of the internal trio), and the trade market has any number of fits. For Derek Falvey and Thad Levine to explore that path however, it'd likely be a stopgap player with upside than some sort of drastic move that changes future projections.

    At the end of the day, my hope is that the Twins play it safe here. A lot of work has been done to increase the overall ability of the roster this season, and wavering too far on one side or the other could throw off a lineup or defense with an immense amount of talent. Escobar is a risk at a vital position, while Adrianza has all the makings of a rally killer. Start Erick Aybar, know what you've got, and inject both the utility men on a semi-regular basis. Escobar has thrived in that role before, and Adrianza was productive enough a year ago. It's not at all flashy, but if I'm Molitor, Aybar gives you the least opportunity to be exposed.

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    Escobar struggled defensively at SS in 2016 but when he played there last year he was fine. I don't think there's really much debate that Escobar gets the job until he proves he can't do it.

     

    It's not like he's replacing Andrelton Simmons, Polanco had the 2nd worst UZR among the 20 qualified SS last year and there wasn't any immediate talk about replacing him.

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    Even if Gordon is ready, keep him down long enough to earn an extra year of team control.

    Not that I advocate it for Gordon, but for those curious, it appears the magic date this season would be April 12. From that date through the end of the season (Sep. 30) is only 171 days, 1 short of the 172 days required to constitute a full season of service time. That's 11 games missed, barring rainouts. (FWIW, those thinking of applying this to the pitching side, I think we first need a 5th starter on April 11.)

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    No, it's about what is best for the Twins both in the short term and long. I think there is a valid argument that Gordon at SS for the Twins is what's best. Especially if Sano is suspended at some point.

    What’s best for Gordon is what’s best for the Twins.

     

    We’re talking about a 22 year old who faded hard against AA pitching last season. And now we want to promote him to Minnesota?

     

    It’s as if Aaron Hicks and Byron Buxton never happened.

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    Is it possible to have Adrianza and Escobar job share?    Like let Adrianza play defense and Escobar bat.    In a less than optimal situation, this is the best option

     

     

     

    I'm only kidding, of course.   (but am I?)

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    What’s best for Gordon is what’s best for the Twins.

    We’re talking about a 22 year old who faded hard against AA pitching last season. And now we want to promote him to Minnesota?

    It’s as if Aaron Hicks and Byron Buxton never happened.

    We are also talking about a kid that had a .860 OPS through half of the season. 

     

    It's as if Pedro Florimon and Chris Parmelee never happened.

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    What is the huge facination with Gordon? Slap hitting, decent at best OB guy who's glove is said to be fringy at short? He's trade bait all day if I am running this organization. Bring him up here and let him fail, now you are looking at a guy who was thought of as a top prospect now being worth little. Leave him down until the trade deadline, then package him up and get us the best reliever and starter out there to help them go on a run. 

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    Escobar struggled defensively at SS in 2016 but when he played there last year he was fine. I don't think there's really much debate that Escobar gets the job until he proves he can't do it.

     

    It's not like he's replacing Andrelton Simmons, Polanco had the 2nd worst UZR among the 20 qualified SS last year and there wasn't any immediate talk about replacing him.

    I’m not sure one can truly assess Polanco’s 2017 by looking at the raw numbers. There was such a drop, offensively AND defensively midyear when his grandfather died, that the season long numbers are meaningless IMO. We really don’t know what Polanco is yet IMO. My guess is a solid contact hitter with occasional extra base power with about average range, below average arm and about average error rate.

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    We are also talking about a kid that had a .860 OPS through half of the season. 

     

    It's as if Pedro Florimon and Chris Parmelee never happened.

    Sure, he had a great OPS the first half of last season. He also had a good OPS the first half of 2016 before crashing and burning.

     

    He's not the type of prospect you push through the system, as he has no outstanding traits. You stay the course and let him develop naturally.

     

    Besides, it's not as if Adrianza is some hack. His bat is pretty weak but his glove is good enough to hold things down while you get a better read on the situation. And I'd bet 3:1 odds that if you gave both Adrianza and Gordon 50 games at short, Adrianza would have the better numbers by a long shot. He's not going to blow you away but he should put up replacement numbers or better, and I think asking that of Gordon right now is a real stretch.

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    Disagree. The team has plenty of money to pay him....this team control thing is something we've all fallen for. Team control is code for "keep paying him less than he's worth." 

     

    That said, he's not ready, and I'm one of his biggest supporters here...

    If they keep him down for like 2 weeks or less it gets another year of control. So I have to disagree it's not about money it's years of control. Besides he is not ready.

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    The issue here is can Gordon produce for a full season.  He has to get stronger.  His first halves have been extremely good, so if Sano is suspended, give him a chance up here and let him run with it. 

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    If they keep him down for like 2 weeks or less it gets another year of control. So I have to disagree it's not about money it's years of control. Besides he is not ready.

     

    Looking at his first half or his second halves of years.  

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    What is the huge facination with Gordon? Slap hitting, decent at best OB guy who's glove is said to be fringy at short? He's trade bait all day if I am running this organization. Bring him up here and let him fail, now you are looking at a guy who was thought of as a top prospect now being worth little. Leave him down until the trade deadline, then package him up and get us the best reliever and starter out there to help them go on a run.

    If those things are true, then why would anyone trade anything decent for him?

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