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  • Too Many Outfielders, Another Perplexing Acquisition for the Twins


    Sherry Cerny

    It has been four weeks since the Twins traded an impact player in 2022, Gio Urshela, to the Los Angeles Angels for a pitching prospect, Alejandro Hidalgo. Now, the Twins front office has brought in free agent Joey Gallo, another outfielder and lefty when they already have several.

    Image courtesy of Peter Aiken-USA TODAY Sports

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    Getting rid of Gio Urshela was the let-down of the off-season for me. Urshela came in quietly, didn’t say much, but he let his defense and at-bats speak for themselves. He quickly became a fan favorite and had the whole stadium singing his walk up song’s chorus, “Take this world and give me GIO” with every at-bat. While Urshela had one more year of arbitration remaining, he was due for a big raise and earned it. Urshela hit .285/.338/.429 with 27 doubles and 13 home runs, Two of those homers were walk-offs. The Twins wanted to make as much room as they could to contend for shortstop, Carlos Correa, who ultimately went to the Giants. 

    Urshela’s absence will give Jose Miranda a well-deserved opportunity at third base. So the trade is not illogical. However, when Correa signed with the Giants, it made the Gio trade extremely frustrating; but now, the trade is frustrating and perplexing.  On Friday, the Twins signed Joey Gallo to a one year, $11 million contract. Why would the Twins get rid of a steady contributor to the lineup and defense only to bring in a player who really struggled with the bat in 2022? Urshela may have saved them a few bucks in the chase for Correa, but he would have been the better investment.

    Gallo certainly has talent, but he also spent 2022 between the Yankees and the Dodgers with a mortifyingly low batting average of .162 for the season. When he does hit the ball, he has power and sits in the 94th percentile for hard hit balls. If he is unable to produce at the plate, he can still provide value with his defensive play. 

    Seeing Double
    More than likely Gallo would play one of the corners of the outfield positions alongside Byron Buxton, but if there is one thing the Twins already have - it’s a lot of left-handed hitting outfielders including Nick Gordon, Alex Kirilloff, Trevor Larnach, Mark Contreras, and Matt Wallner The Twins also currently have another outfielder who plays good defense but finds his batting average near the Mendoza Line. 

    Max Kepler has been the subject of trade rumors during the offseason. Kepler struggled with the bat but was a finalist for AL Gold Glove in right field in 2022, a far cry from his breakout 2019 season. Kepler, like most of the 2022 roster, fought injuries and missed most of the season's final month. 

    Both Gallo and Kepler are often mentioned as it relates to the new shift rules coming in 2023. There is some thought that those two hitters in particular lost hits because of the shifting tendencies. Will it help? Can both be on the same roster? 

    More potential crazy trade options
    It is possible that Gallo may be a replacement for Kepler if he is traded this offseason. Another option is making one the primary DH, though it is likely Luis Arraez will get a lot of DH plate appearances and Byron Buxton will get time there too. Maybe Minnesota can be a place where Gallo can bounce back and flourish. 

    With the rest of the outfield and much younger prospects like Trevor Larnach, Alex Kirilloff, Gilberto Celestino, Royce Lewis, Nick Gordon, Matt Wallner and Mark Contreras, any one (or multiple) of them could be a part of a package deal to get more starting pitching, or any pitching period. 

    But if the Twins don’t trade Kepler, there are two outfielders with similar stats, bats and love to hit into the gaps. 

    Once again, the Twins front office leaves fans scratching their heads with confusion, too many players in the outfield, no Gio, and there is still eight weeks until pitchers and catchers report.

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    13 hours ago, Jacksson said:

    Signing Gallo is just a debt repayment to Boras for "gifting" the Twins with a disguised single year contract for Correa last year.  Now the Twins help out Gallo to rebuild his value and stay in the good graces of Boras for future "sweetheart" deals.

    And here I was thinking it was a "pre-payment" for next year when Boras deems his 9th best pitcher to sign with the Twins.  But with the Twin's luck, they'll get busted, get fined, and lose a pile of draft picks.

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    Gallo will not be DH much, his glove has too much value.  The signing of Gallo does allow to open up some more trade options for Twins.  The headline says too many Outfielders, but do we really have too many?  I mean how many have we burned through the last couple of years?  Sure they are on our roster, but 3 of them have been on the injured list several times, for long periods.  Others have spent stints on it from time to time over the last couple of years.  So unless the often injured guys actually stay healthy, which no reason to suspect that will happen, we will need like 7 OF through the full year. 

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    14 hours ago, Jacksson said:

    Signing Gallo is just a debt repayment to Boras for "gifting" the Twins with a disguised single year contract for Correa last year.  Now the Twins help out Gallo to rebuild his value and stay in the good graces of Boras for future "sweetheart" deals.

    I'm hoping you meant this as a joke. because ain't no way this is true.

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    FO just always seem to throw in a few head scratcher in their acquisitions  in the off season ....

    Adding Gallo is definitely a head scratcher  as he is left handed and the twins have a surplus of left handed hitters , right handed hitters are  needed to balance out the lineup and FO goes the opposite direction and signs a left handed hitter that will imp a ( Sano style ) and strike out 4 times a game or give you a homer or double  every once in awhile ....

    I am not looking forward to the gallo acquisition ...

    Their plan just doesn't seem to change  , they go the opposite direction everyone is thinking and if they do well they can brag they are the smartest  people in the room ...

    And if they fail , they again will not take any responsibility ...

    The front office continues to take the fun out of twins baseball  , but I'll give it another shot next season  and hope my favorite players perform ....

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    Has the ownership and management come out with a statement to the FANS on what their intent is with this team? Rebuilding? Hoping to be .500? One year away? Develop a good young pitching staff? Hit 300 homers/year?  Win the World Series in 23? NO REAL PLAN? Have I missed a possibility? 

    Lastly, after suffering through watching Sano wave his bat at out of zone pitches the last few years, it is daunting to think about watching Gallo at the plate in a Twins uniform.

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    9 hours ago, Hosken Bombo Disco said:

    Is this supposed to be a rebuttal to the opinion that the Gallo signing makes no sense? Heh.

    No, it's a rebuttal of the opinion that we have "too many outfielders." Just like that argument said.

     

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    20 hours ago, Mike Sixel said:

    Jeffers is still younger than Garver was when he first came up...... You think he's s finished product? The game has changed. You don't have to like it, but these players are so much better at the game than previous generations, it isn't close.

    Jeffers will be 26 next season. There's no more room for development with this guy, same goes for Larnach and Kirilloff. There are a lot of polished major leaguers at their ages. 

    The pitchers are much better at the game than previous generations, and there are a lot of hitters that are better as well. But insinuating that Ryan Michael Jeffers is light years better than an everyday catcher from the 70s, 80s, or 90s is borderline slander. 

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