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  • State Of The Central


    Seth Stohs

    If you can't beat 'em, join 'em.

    News came out on Thursday evening that Edwin Encarnacion has signed a three year, $60 million contract with Cleveland. Encarnacion's season came to an end at the hand of Cleveland in the playoffs this year. After pushing their way into the World Series and coming up short in a Game 7 against the Cubs, Cleveland is adding a major impact bat, arguably the best bat on the free agent market.

    Image courtesy of Dan Hamilton, USA Today

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    Things have been interesting this offseason in the American League Central. Let’s check out where the four teams are and what more they might want to do.

    Might as well start with the defending AL Central and American League champions.

    CLEVELAND

    Signing Edwin Encarnacion is a big deal. Mike Napoli is a nice player and continues to show great power but Encarnacion is one of the best hitters in baseball. He has a tremendous eye. He puts the ball in play, and he can hit the ball a mile. You have to wonder if Chris Colabello knew about this signing when he agreed to a minor league deal with the team earlier in the week.

    Cleveland had been pretty quiet this offseason to this point, but they should have been. They have terrific starting pitching. Their bullpen is stacked. They have a terrific lineup that will now only be enhanced in the middle.

    Not only is Cleveland trying to defend their AL Central crown, but this is the kind of move that makes them a legit World Series contender again.

    DETROIT

    The Tigers are that team that could go in either direction. In the last couple of offseasons they have lost the two 2016 Cy Young Award winners (Max Scherzer and Rick Porcello). Justin Verlander may have deserved the American League Cy Young Award in 2016, and Jordan Zimmerman missed a lot of time in the first season of his huge contract.

    But Miguel Cabrera is still there. Ian Kinsler and Victor Martinez aren’t getting younger. They did trade Cameron Maybin right after the conclusion of the season, but they have been quiet. There were rumors of them dealing JD Martinez, but at least to this point it hasn’t happened.

    Unless they are surprisingly able to keep all of their pitching healthy, it’s hard to think they can compete with Cleveland. Are they good enough right now to be a Wild Card contender? Maybe.

    KANSAS CITY

    The Royals added outfielder Jorge Soler from the Cubs, but to do so, they traded Wade Davis, one of baseball’s best closers.

    The Royals, after representing the American League in the World Series the two previous years, went backwards in 2016, finishing 81-81. During the Winter Meetings, there were a lot of rumors about the Royals looking to make some trades involving some of their talented players that are about to get expensive.To this point, Davis is the only player they have traded.

    They haven’t done much in free agency either. They brought back Drew Butera.

    Rumors have seemed to quiet in Kansas City. Maybe they are going to spend to keep their talent. I doubt it. They’re going to have to make some tough decisions on players such as Eric Hosmer, Mike Moustakus, Lorenzo Cain and others. They do still have a strong bullpen, even with the loss of Davis.

    CHICAGO

    The White Sox were one of the biggest winners at the Winter Meetings. They were able to trade Chris Sale to Boston in exchange for baseball’s top prospect Yoan Moncada, a triple-digit throwing phenom in Michael Kopech, and two more solid prospects.

    The next day they traded outfielder Adam Eaton to the Nationals in exchange for their three top pitching prospects (Lucas Giolito, Reynaldo Lopez and Dane Dunning).

    There continue to be rumors that they are making every attempt to trade Jose Quintana (for another king’s ransom, and understandably so). Could they also trade third baseman Todd Frazier? And I’m a little surprised that they haven’t already traded closer David Robertson.

    Clearly they are not looking to compete for division titles the next couple of years, so there really is no reason for a top closer. With the closer market as it has been this offseason, Robertson should be able to bring back another nice prospect haul.

    The White Sox are punting the next couple of seasons to take a run with a new core in a couple of years. They went from one of baseball’s worst minor league systems to having one of the top ten systems in baseball.

    They also signed lefty Derek Holland to take Sale’s spot in the rotation (no, he’s obviously not replacing the production of Sale, but he can be a solid contributor.

    MINNESOTA

    So, what have the Twins done, coming off of their 103-loss season in 2016?

    Well, first they hired Cleveland’s assistant GM Derek Falvey to change the direction and lead the organization. Then he hired Thad Levine - previously the long-time assistant GM in Texas - to be the team’s new General Manager.

    The new regime went into the offseason aggressively. They targeted Jason Castro and were able to sign him. It was a clear sign that things will be different in the Twins front office. Castro hasn’t hit well the last three years, but he’s consistently been a top pitch-framer. The thought is that what he does with the bat is a bonus. However, if he can convince the home plate ump that borderline pitches are strikes instead of balls, he will help his pitching staff.

    There have been Brian Dozier trade rumors since the season came to a merciful ending, maybe even earlier. Things are pretty quiet right now. It could mean that talks have backed off. It could be that the Twins and Dodgers are giving each other the Christmas weekend to collect their thoughts. Who knows? It could be the calm before the sto… trade.

    The Twins are a few years ahead of where the White Sox are trying to get. Their high-level prospects are here. They took their lumps in 2016. You’ve heard it before, but the Twins have the talent to win ten more games in 2017 than they did in 2016 just by the progression of the likes of Miguel Sano, Byron Buxton, Max Kepler, Jorge Polanco, Jose Berrios, Ryan Pressly, JT Chargois. Over the next couple of seasons, the Twins will likely also get contributions from several of the following: Mitch Garver, Stephen Gonsalves, Tyler Jay, Nick Gordon, Fernando Romero, Felix Jorge, Kohl Stewart, Jake Reed, Nick Burdi, Trevor Hildenberger and more.

    Will they all pan out? Of course not. That’s not how it works.

    Surprisingly, there has been little talk about Ervin Santana this offseason. Teams know what they are getting in him, and the fact that Jason Hammel is currently the best free agent starting pitcher on the market, you would think there would be more interest in a quality pitcher at a reasonable rate for just two years.

    Do the Twins need to trade Brian Dozier this offseason? Absolutely not. If they don’t get a package that Falvey/Levine are thrilled with, they should hold on to him. As much as it might be fun to see a 2018 rotation including Berrios, De Leon, Romero and Gonsalves, the Twins should absolutely expect to get more than just one pitcher with four MLB games under his belt for a guy like Dozier.

    The Twins won’t compete with Cleveland in 2017, but they should be greatly improved. Short-term, it’d be far better to keep Dozier and Santana. Long-term, which is clearly the more wise, logical view that the front office should be looking at, most would say that adding a couple of top prospects to help them in 2019 and beyond is the more important goal.

    The other thing to remember for Twins fans (and for the other teams), there is still a lot of offseason to go. The White Sox are likely to trade at least one more start (Quintana, Roberton, Frazier). The Twins are still quite likely to make a trade involving established veterans for near-MLB ready talent. Detroit? They probably should start selling off ,but maybe they won’t. Kansas City could also trade some of their stars. Cleveland might be done, but they are also in the catbird seat. The Encarnacion signing certainly indicates to their fans that they’re looking to be even better than they were in 2016.

    It just feels like there is still a lot more to happen, transaction-wise, in the American League Central following the holidays. Who knows, maybe even during the holidays!

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    I disagree (slightly) with the Detroit assesment

     

    They're absolutely in contention for the division crown in 2017

     

    People forget their Rookie Hurler Workshorse Michael Fullmer (who they got from the Mets for Cespedes a few yrs back) HAD a Monster breakout campaign in 2016....People talk about Verlander possibly winning the last cy young, when in reality Fullmer is the best pitcher (and young) on their staff.

     

    Detroit has easily leap-frogged both Chi Sox and Minnesota for the next season or 3 and I personally think at this point, they're a little better then Kansas City

     

    so in 2017 Cleveland, Detroit, K. C. , Chi Sox , Minny is how i see it shaking out.

     

    Maybe our Twins finish 4th , but thats prob. a best case scenerio

     

    I think Falvey and Co. have a 2019 or 2020 contention goal right now. Not exactly 2018.

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    I don't agree the Sox are more than a year or two away....

     

    Quintana has 5 years of team control left, IIRC. He's still a long term asset (if he stays good), not some short term player. They seem to have some kind of magic with SPs, and if they can just get rid of the black holes in the field, they should be good. Their stars and scrubs strategy didn't work. I do agree they should have traded their closer for a legit hitter....

     

    The rest? Seems about right, other than if you keep Dozier, you don't exactly speed up the incredibly slow rebuild (we are on 6 years of being bad now, other than 15...).

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    I don't know if I'd call the Twins' approach to the offseason "aggressive" yet. They signed a defense-first catcher and with the Dozier trade losing steam there's a realistic possibility that ends up being the only move. If nobody gets traded we're going to have another awkward roster with a homeless Polanco, logjam at 1B/DH, Rosario entrenched at full-time LF, and a messy musical chairs rotation & bullpen that'll see regular churn as guys play their way out of jobs. 

     

    I'm not sure what they could have done better this offseason other than execute trades though. Young guys need to play. It'll be a little disheartening to see a familiar-looking disheveled opening day roster. Hopefully the kids will be better and show real progress and give this season some life and hope for the future.

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    I agree with the assessment about Dozier. I would add that if the Twins do  not get a really good package for the 2b, they should not trade him. 

     

    It feels a tiny bit like December 1986, with the Twins having a very losing record, but with good young players developing. The Twins won it all in 1987, with two top starting pitchers (Blyleven and Viola) and a closer in Reardon. 

     

    We'll see what happens 30 years after 1987.

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    I agree with the assessment about Dozier. I would add that if the Twins do not get a really good package for the 2b, they should not trade him.

     

    It feels a tiny bit like December 1986, with the Twins having a very losing record, but with good young players developing. The Twins won it all in 1987, with two top starting pitchers (Blyleven and Viola) and a closer in Reardon.

     

    We'll see what happens 30 years after 1987.

    Where are the 2 top pitchers and a closer this year to compare it to 1987?

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    At this point I think the Twins will field a team of coaches and retired player cheerleaders.  In a week it will be 2017 - lets hope that we start to see the actions that will address our roster of 1B/DHs abundance, or SS defensive hole, a starting staff and bullpen that looks like another 5 ERA season.  Things need to be sorted out and as we approach spring training I look forward to seeing the moves that start the sorting and rebuilding. 

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    I think that it is too early in the off-season to even think how the AL Central will look.

     

    Detroit has been showing mixed signals.  The have a good core rotation and position players.  They can go both ways.  If they add another arm to Verlander, Zimmerman, Fulmer, Sanchez, assuming health, their rotation might be better than Cleveland's.   Unless they starting selling, I will not write them off as buyers to compete.   The window on Verlander and Cabrera and the Martinezes is getting very small.

    Same with the Royals who are a bit of a schizophrenic team.  They can go both ways and they are just a season removed from 2 WS appearances (and a win) in a row, something that no other AL Central team has done ever.

     

    Long off-season still ahead.  Let's revisit mid-March ;)

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    Yup, we're not even the team of the future in our own division anymore.

    It's a lot easier to be considered the team of the future when your prospects have yet to endure their struggles in the major leagues.

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    Yikes! The comment about Twins winnng 10 more games next year due to current talent improving concerns me. Is the goal to win 69 games in 2017, is that progress? I would consider 69 wins a really awful year.

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    I don't know if I'd call the Twins' approach to the offseason "aggressive" yet. They signed a defense-first catcher and with the Dozier trade losing steam there's a realistic possibility that ends up being the only move. If nobody gets traded we're going to have another awkward roster with a homeless Polanco, logjam at 1B/DH, Rosario entrenched at full-time LF, and a messy musical chairs rotation & bullpen that'll see regular churn as guys play their way out of jobs. 

     

    I'm not sure what they could have done better this offseason other than execute trades though. Young guys need to play. It'll be a little disheartening to see a familiar-looking disheveled opening day roster. Hopefully the kids will be better and show real progress and give this season some life and hope for the future.

    Agree with this except for the fact that Castro is generally a poor defensive catcher who also can't hit.  He is an excellent pitch framer though.  He is below average throwing out base runners, passed balls, etc.  But....he is a hell of a pitch framer.

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