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  • The Brightening Future Of The Twins Rotation


    Nick Nelson

    In the short-term, a return to respectability for the Minnesota Twins rotation will be dependent on veteran players like Ervin Santana, Phil Hughes, Kyle Gibson and Hector Santiago performing at a high level.

    However, in the big picture, a youthful wave of upcoming impact talent will make or break the fortunes of this critical unit. Fortunately, it's some quality talent.

    Image courtesy of Patrick Gorski, USA Today

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    Presently, there are – by my estimation – four young pitchers in the Twins organization who figure to shape the success of the major-league rotation over the next five years. Each is either 21 or 22 years old, and potentially within a year of reaching the bigs.

    Let's take a look at each of them, in order of their estimated MLB arrival.

    ~~~

    Jose Berrios, RHP

    Age: 22

    ETA: Early 2017

    Obviously, Berrios has already gotten his first taste of the majors. It was nothing short of disastrous. Routinely incapable of finding any semblance of command on the mound, the rookie took a beating over 14 starts with the Twins, registering a hideous 8.04 ERA and failing to reach the sixth inning in any of his last nine turns.

    There's nowhere to go from here but up, and there are plenty of reasons to believe Berrios will ascend in a hurry following this setback. His stuff, his consistently excellent minor-league results, and his relentless work ethic all make it difficult to believe the right-hander won't figure things out to some extent.

    With that being said, the gravity of some flaws we saw on display do lessen the likelihood of him turning into a true top-of-the-rotation arm, as we optimistically hoped. His reliance on tailing, spinning pitches around the edges of the zone will make it hard for him to ever develop an efficient approach to dispatching hitters, and Berrios could still easily wind up in the bullpen. But we'll see how he looks in 2017 after an offseason of adjustments.

    Stephen Gonsalves, LHP

    Age: 22

    ETA: Late 2017

    There's no denying the exceptional numbers Gonsalves has posted. In four minor-league seasons he owns a 32-12 record and 2.13 ERA, and he's coming off his best campaign yet. He also looks the part as a big 6'5" left-hander.

    Scouts and prospect analysts have been somewhat restrained in their enthusiasm for Gonsalves despite his statistical success on the hill. Even after his tremendous 2016 campaign, which ended with an 8-1 run over 13 starts in Double-A, John Sickels of Minor League Ball had the southpaw ranked just 85th, and Gonsalves didn't even appear on Baseball America's midseason top 100. (BA did, though, peg him as the club's second-best prospect behind Nick Gordon in November, following his brilliant showing in Chattanooga) .

    The dominating pitches and pinpoint command just aren't there to confidently project mastery over big-league hitters, but of course he's still continually improving. And right now he's certainly on track to be a factor for the Twins within the next year or two.

    Tyler Jay, LHP

    Age: 22

    ETA: 2018

    I'll admit that I'm probably lower than most on Jay, as I find it rather concerning that the collegiate reliever's arm couldn't even hold up through even 100 innings in his first year as a starter. With that said, he was the sixth overall draft pick in 2016 and is currently the team's No. 1 prospect according to both MLB.com and USA Today.

    He has some work to do, but if Jay can further develop a changeup to complement his plainly fantastic fastball/slider combo, while also building the endurance to withstand 30 starts, he still has a very high ceiling. Perhaps higher than either of the two listed above.

    Fernando Romero, RHP

    Age: 21

    ETA: 2018

    Romero is the least well known among this group, since injuries have kept him out of the picture for so long, but he is also the most exciting. He made only three starts above rookie ball (with Cedar Rapids in 2014) before being shut down and missing most of the next two years due to elbow and knee surgeries.

    Despite this detour, Romero was still only 21 this season and returned with a bang, carving up Low-A and then High-A to finish with a 1.89 ERA and 0.90 WHIP over 16 starts. Brice Zimmerman, who serves as Director of Broadcasting and Media Relations for Fort Myers, tweeted recently that Romero is the best arm he's seen in his six years watching Miracle games. His awe for the young Dominican is mirrored by many others inside and outside the organization.

    With a hard mid-90s fastball, a plus cutter and good breaking stuff to go along with sharp control, Romero has the recipe for a true top-of-rotation asset. But of course, it will be difficult to feel confident in that assessment until we've seen him put in a full season against upper-minors competition.

    ~~~

    If your faith in the current assortment of veteran arms is iffy (and who could blame you), these four present a hopeful future for the Twins rotation. And I haven't touched on the likes of Adalberto Mejia or Kohl Stewart, who could quickly step into this conversation with hot starts in 2017.

    Each of these prospects borders on major-league ready, and if even a couple pan out as starters, that's a massive boost. There are these two factors to consider:

    1) With a trade sending Brian Dozier to the Dodgers still seeming likely, Jose De Leon is the name that continues to be touted as the likely headliner. De Leon is older than each of the hurlers listed above but would rank above them all on a prospect list and fits the same general timeline. That would be another premium name added to the mix.

    2) The Twins, of course, hold the No. 1 pick in next June's draft. If they take a pitcher, especially a college pitcher, it will assuredly be one of the nation's elite amateur talents, with the ability to rise fast.

    So, although the Twins are coming off one of the worst seasons ever in terms of run prevention, there is plenty of reason to expect much better things in the near future, particularly if the new baseball ops leaders are able to bolster the developmental process. An awful lot of high-caliber help is on the way.

    Giddy up.

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    Drafting Jay as high as we did and then trying to turn him into a starter is puzzling. Are we surprised that he can't handle the load?

     

    Keith Law, at the time, named Jay the #1 prospect in the draft, and absolutely said he had the best potential in the draft. I don't think he should have been expected to be further along than he has. Even his injury this year wasn't to his shoulder or arm, so I don't understand why people are so down on him.

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    Keith Law, at the time, named Jay the #1 prospect in the draft, and absolutely said he had the best potential in the draft. I don't think he should have been expected to be further along than he has. Even his injury this year wasn't to his shoulder or arm, so I don't understand why people are so down on him.

    I don't think this is all true. I don't recall anyone ranking Jay as the #1 pitching prospect, much less the #1 overall prospect. He was unanimously in the top-15 and mostly in the top-10, so it wasn't a giant reach for the Twins to pick him at #6. But it was still higher than he was ranked by most analysts. Frankly, I was surprised that they offered him the full slot value. It would have made the pick more understandable if they offered him an underslot deal and saved a few hundred thousand to spend another player or two later in the draft.

     

    http://insider.espn.com/mlb/draft/mock/?season=2015&version=1&source=Keith-Law-Big-Board
    http://www.baseballamerica.com/draft-preview/?

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    Keith Law, at the time, named Jay the #1 prospect in the draft, and absolutely said he had the best potential in the draft. I don't think he should have been expected to be further along than he has. Even his injury this year wasn't to his shoulder or arm, so I don't understand why people are so down on him.

    It was a nerve issue in his neck and shoulder. His diagnosis of neuropraxia is considered the least severe peripheral nerve injury but it's just not a great sign for a pitcher who is just getting his career started and already faced questions about handling a starter workload. 

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    Keith Law, at the time, named Jay the #1 prospect in the draft, and absolutely said he had the best potential in the draft. I don't think he should have been expected to be further along than he has. Even his injury this year wasn't to his shoulder or arm, so I don't understand why people are so down on him.

     

    Keith Law is usually wrong.  I don't mean to disparage the guy -- almost everyone is wrong about prospects about half the time -- but instead I disparage his fans who take his word as gospel. 

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    The question is not, do these guys have potential, but, do they have more potential than the top four guys in other organizations?

     

    I don't see anything here suggesting these guys are exceptional. Every team has a farm system. If the goal is to win a World Series, unless you can show me our prospects are better than most other teams' prospects, they're not a reason to think we're passing anyone in the standings.  Sure, they might work out. But so might anybody else's prospects.

     

    Doesn't mean I won't watch with interest and hope. I buy lottery tickets, too. I have a chance of winning. I just don't have a better chance than anyone else.

     

    That's how I feel about these guys leading a championship charge. Sorry.

    Edited by by jiminy
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    The question is not, do these guys have potential, but, do they have more potential than the top four guys in other organizations?

    It's a fair way to look at it. Perhaps a good idea for a future article would be comparing the top five Twins pitching prospects to the top five for other teams in the division. I tend to think Minnesota has more quality depth than most, but without De Leon they are lacking that guy with a true ace profile.  

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    Twins top prospects – 2010 (Pitchers only)

    3. Kyle Gibson
    5. Adrian Salcedo
    6. Billy Bullock
    11. Carlos Gutierrez
    13. David Bromberg
    14. B.J. Hermsen
    15. Ben Tootle
    16. Anthony Slama
    17. Matt Bashore
    18.  Tom Stuifbergen
    19. Jeff Manship,
    20. Tyler Robertson

     

    Hopefully the current crew will outpace the 2010 SP prospects.

     

    edit: source - Not the cheeriest read, but I felt I should note where I got this from.

    Edited by Oldgoat_MN
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    Twins top prospects – 2010 (Pitchers only)

    3. Kyle Gibson

    5. Adrian Salcedo

    6. Billy Bullock

    11. Carlos Gutierrez

    13. David Bromberg

    14. B.J. Hermsen

    15. Ben Tootle

    16. Anthony Slama

    17. Matt Bashore

    18. Tom Stuifbergen

    19. Jeff Manship,

    20. Tyler Robertson

     

    Hopefully the current crew will outpace the 2010 SP prospects.

     

    edit: source - Not the cheeriest read, but I felt I should note where I got this from.

    Two thought:

    1-Manship was ranked WAY too low.

    2-The positions prospects must have been amazing. (Or alternatively, "you should see the other guy!")

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    Two thought:
    1-Manship was ranked WAY too low.
    2-The positions prospects must have been amazing. (Or alternatively, "you should see the other guy!")

    Of the rest, Ramos leads the group with career 9.9 WAR (Baseball-Reference).

     

    But that's OK. We got 2 months of Matt Capps for him. (then we were able to sign him for another year!)

    Edited by Oldgoat_MN
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