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5. Josh Donaldson (0.7 rWAR, 0.5 fWAR)
.286/.368/.469 (.838), 2 HR, 3 2B, 7 BB, 5 K
There are plenty of candidates to be on the back end of this ballot. Andrelton Simmons put together some strong numbers, but he missed time due to COVID. Taylor Rogers was a one of the lone bright spots in the bullpen, while Michael Pineda and Jose Berrios provided value in the rotation. However, Donaldson gets the nod after getting on base nearly 37% of the time and having more walks than strikeouts. His current 144 OPS+ is his highest total since the 2017 season. Many Twins fans would like to see him leading this list, but he ended the month healthy and that’s certainly a positive sign <knock on wood>.
4. J.A. Happ (0.6 rWAR, 0.2 fWAR)
2-0, 1.96 ERA, 0.83 WHIP, 13 K, 7 BB, 199 ERA+
Other pitchers rank higher than him in WAR, but Happ’s value has come from what he has meant to the rotation this year. Happ took the mound on April 23rd with the team in the middle of a stretch where they had lost nine out of ten games. He took a no-hitter into the late innings and helped the club to their first victory in over a week. Minnesota lost the next four games before Happ took the mound again and righted the ship. He’s been a steadying veteran presence when the team has needed one the most.
3. Luis Arraez (1.0 rWAR, 0.9 fWAR)
.289/.400/.373 (.773), 1 HR, 2 2B, 1 3B, 14 BB, 11 K
Arraez started the season on fire by hitting safely in six of the team’s first eight games including three multi-hit games. On April 15, he almost single-handedly brought the Twins a victory by going 4-for-5 with two RBI and a run scored. Over his last 12 games, things haven’t gone as smooth. He’s gone 10-for-40 (.250 BA) during that stretch with two extra-base hits. Defensively, he’s also being moved all over the diamond including getting accustom to playing in the outfield for the first time in his career. If Arraez would have continued his hot start, he might have been higher on this list.
2. Nelson Cruz (1.1 rWAR, 1.1 fWAR)
.321/.375/.655 (1.030), 8 HR, 2 2B, 1 3B(!!), 7 BB, 16 K
Cruz, the team’s back-to-back team MVP, is right up there in the running again. Oh yeah, he’s also 40-years-old. He’s tied for second in the league in home runs and he is quietly climbing the all-time home run list. His next two home runs will move him into the top-50 all-time. If he ends the year with 30 homers, he’d jump to 41st all-time. If he can hit 40 homers, he’d move into 38th place. Even without defensive value, he provides leadership on and off the field and that’s one of the biggest reasons the Twins wanted to bring him back for the 2021 campaign.
https://twitter.com/betsyhelfand/status/1388963798367801358?s=20
1. Byron Buxton (2.4 rWAR, 2.3 fWAR)
.408/.444/.842 (1.287), 8 HR, 9 2B, 3 BB, 17 K
By many accounts, Buxton just completed the best month in Twins’ history as his 1.363 OPS was higher than Joe Mauer’s (1.338 OPS) in 2009 and Rod Carew’s (1.313 OPS) in 1977. Good news is that Mauer and Carew would both go on to win MVPs in those seasons. Buxton might be on the same path as he leads the American League in WAR and slugging percentage. His defense continues to be otherworldly and his changes to his offensive approach look to be sustainable. Can he stay healthy? Can he play over 145 games? Those are questions that still remain to be answered.
How would your ballot look at the end of the season’s first month? Leave a COMMENT and start the discussion.
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