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  • Twins Add Four to their 40-Man Roster


    Seth Stohs

    With the deadline at 5:00 central time, the Minnesota Twins have made four additions to their 40-man roster. To the surprise of no one, the Twins added infielder Edouard Julien, right-handed pitchers Matt Canterino and Casey Legumina, and left-handed pitcher Brent Headrick. 

    Image courtesy of Mark J. Rebilas, USA TODAY Sports

    There were two Givens for the Twins to add to their 40-man roster. The team simply was not going to leave Edouard Julien and Matt Canterino at risk to be lost in the Rule 5 draft next month. So they were added. Here is what I wrote about them in my 40-man roster prediction column: 

    1.) 2B Edouard Julien - The 23-year-old from Quebec was the Twins 18th round pick in 2019 out of Auburn. Just this weekend, he was named the Breakout Prospect in the Arizona Fall League after he hit .400/.563/.686 (1.248) with five doubles and five home runs in 21 games. However, you could argue that he broke out during the 2022 regular season in Wichita where he hit .300/.441/.490 (.931) with 19 doubles and 17 home runs in 113 games. He even stole 19 bags. Of course, I would argue that he broke out in 2021, his professional debut after missing 2019 and 2020 due to Tommy John surgery and the Covid pandemic. He split that season between Ft. Myers and Cedar Rapids. In 112 games, he hit .267/.434/.480 (.914) with 28 doubles, 18 home runs, and 34 stolen bases. Where will he play? Well, he spent most of 2022 at second base. He has played first and third base in pro ball. Yes, he played a couple of games in left field in 2021, but that isn’t an option. Regardless, his all-around offensive game makes him a future top-of-the-lineup contributor. 

    For more Twins Daily content on Edouard Julien, click here

    2.) RHP Matt Canterino - Maybe not quite as “given” as Julien, but Canterino is absolutely a given to be added. He was the team’s second-round draft pick in 2019 out of Rice University. Since turning pro, two things have been true of the 24-year-old righty. First, when he has pitched, he has been absolutely dominant. In 11 games and 34 1/3 innings for Wichita in 2022, he posted a 1.83 ERA and struck out 50 batters. In 23 innings in 2021, he struck out 45 batters. His stuff is electric. Unfortunately, the second truth is that he has missed a lot of time with injury. He was shut down early in the 2021 season after experiencing some elbow pain. The rest-and-rehab was tried, but in 2022 at Wichita, he was limited to three innings per start and eventually four innings, but as his arm threw more, the pain continued. Finally, in mid-August, he underwent Tommy John surgery in Arlington making his availability to pitch in 2023 unlikely. But again, with this kind of talent, particularly with a pitcher, you keep him around and add him and don’t even give it a second thought. 

    For more Twins Daily content on Matt Canterino, click here

    Lefty Brent Headrick was my #3 prediction to be added, and here's what I wrote about him. 

    3.) LHP Brent Headrick - In 2022, Headrick made 15 starts in Cedar Rapids before moving up to Double-A Wichita. In 2021, he was limited in the second half with some shoulder impingement. He stayed healthy throughout the 2022 season and went 10-5 with a 3.32 ERA and a 1.08 WHIP. In 108 1/3 innings, he walked just 25 batters and struck out 136 batters. Now, his Double-A numbers don’t look as good. In 10 games, he went 2-3 with a 4.81 ERA. However, in his first Wind Surge appearance, he gave up seven runs on 10 hits (including five home runs) in 2 1/3 innings. Take away that outing, and he went 2-2 with a 3.54 ERA, and in 40 2/3 innings, he gave up just six more home runs. Headrick was the Twins seventh-round pick in 2019 out of Illinois State. 

    For more Twins Daily content on Brent Headrick, click here. 

    4th addition.) But I completely missed on Casey Legumina . He was the Twins 8th round draft pick in 2019 out of Gonzaga. He had Tommy John surgery that spring and therefore didn't make his professional debut until 2021. He was given some opportunities to star, but he has had his most success out of the bullpen. In 2022, he made three appearances in Cedar Rapids before jumping up to Wichita for 30 games. He went 2-6 with a 4.80 ERA in 33 games (16 starts). In 86 1/3 innings, he walked 36 and struck out 92 batters. He's got a closer's potential when healthy. 

    For more Twins Daily content on Casey Legumina, click here

     

    However, there are several players that were left unprotected who now could be selected by other teams. 

    Catchers, or at least guys that can catch and also play first base, that could be lost include Chris Williams and Alex Isola. Williams provided power for Wichita and St. Paul. Isola played well in Wichita but missed a couple of months with an injury. He just finished his stint in the Arizona Fall League. 

    High-upside prospects can be scary to be left unprotected. The Twins left toolsy outfielder Misael Urbina off of their 40-man roster. He probably isn't ready for the big leagues at this point, but his talent will be intriguing. Yunior Severino is a talent, and he did well in 2022 in High-A, but also in Double-A, so for the right team, he could be a bench fit for the 2023 season. DaShawn Keirsey Jr. is a little older than those two, but his athleticism, speed and defense are incredibly intriguing. He was finally healthy in 2022 and started to show what he is capable of. 

    Michael Helman could certainly be selected. His ability to play at least seven positions well would make him intriguing to teams. However, he broke out in the upper levels with 20 homers and he also had 40 stolen bases. In the same vein, Anthony Prato is another utility player, capable of playing at least four positions. He was healthy in 2022 and did well in Cedar Rapids and Wichita. Utility players are one of the areas that do often get selected in the Rule 5 draft. 

    So do relief pitchers who are, or very soon could be, big-league ready. Twins Daily's 2022 Relief Pitcher of the Year Evan Sisk was dominant in Wichita and at St. Paul. He's also left-handed and mixes pitches well with his low-90s fastball. Austin Schulfer keeps producing in whatever role the Twins have had him work in, starting or relieving. He ended the season with the Saints as well. 

    Sisk isn't the only left-hander that could be at risk either. Southpaw Kody Funderburk pitched very well in 2022 for Wichita, posting a sub-3.00 ERA. He mostly started but has worked in various roles out of the bullpen as well. 

    So, what do you think about the fourTwins additions? Which of the Twins minor leaguers left off of the roster are most at risk of being selected in the Rule 5 draft and lost? Share your thoughts in the Comments below. 

    For more Twins Daily content on other players mentioned in this article, click the links below: 
    Chris Williams, Alex Isola, Michael Helman, Anthony Prato, Evan Sisk, Austin SchulferKody Funderburk

     

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    I am not an insider in the Twins organization, so I will defer to their call on Casey Legumina, but I am assuming Sisk will get taken in rule 5 as he is near MLB ready, pen guy, lefty.  If he is not taken in rule 5 I will be shocked.  That being said, there must be some reason the team, who passes like 5 pen guys through waivers every year, did not see a need to add him to 40 man. 

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    13 hours ago, MN_ExPat said:

    Except that most other teams are in similar positions roster wise as the Twins.  Not saying that there won't be a single player taken in the V, but it will probably not be the bloodletting predicted by some :).

    Right - they have to stay on the MLB roster for the entire season. Do we really think there are 5 unprotected Twins minor leaguers that teams are itching to get and keep on their roster for the entirety of the 2023 season? If so, the various rankings of minor league systems (where the Twins are more in the middle or toward the bottom) are missing something.

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    11 hours ago, Dman said:

    The first three were no brainers to me.  Jullien is everything you want in a bat and Canterino when healthy is very to tough to hit and gets K's in bunches.  Headrick is big Lefty with starter potential who could also be a pen arm if needed.  The team is short on Lefties so I can see why Headrick was appealing.  

    I really liked what Sisk did last year.  The stat sheet looked good and there wasn't much difference in performance between AA and AAA.  He didn't give up a ton of HR's I guess I don't understand why they wouldn't make room for him?  I would prefer him over any rule V guy they decide to grab.

    Lawyerson had a really good year stat wise as well he had a serious dominant stretch but his fastball isn't that fast so he would have to be a finesse starter and or reliever.  So I can see the hesitation.  Things could fall apart for him at AAA but he looks like someone with a chance as a reliever IMO.

    If you look on MLB.com though Legumina is rated at 26 and Sisk and Lawyerson are not in the top 30. Legumina has a legit 4 pitch mix and the potential devastating slider the Twins love so I guess it makes sense they added him.  Still his stats from last year are ugly.  I hope this isn't another Strotman type pitcher taking up space.

    I know position players generally don't get taken that often in rule V because teams just can't afford to carry those players all year and Severino isn't fast, doesn't have amazing power numbers and isn't a defensive wizard.  The bat is his carrying tool but is that enough for another team to keep him on the 27 man?  I would be hard pressed to say yes.

    I think you can wave goodbye to Evan Sisk as that is a risk I can see any bottom team taking.  Possible that Lawyerson and or Funderburk get taken but I have to believe there are better arms out there to choose from but who knows.

    The power Chris Williams showed last year could get him picked by a bottom team but he had a pretty large drop off from AA to AAA. I might be alone on this but I really like Anthony Prato as a utility player and I think he could stick on a MLB roster and be valuable but that might be a reach.

    In summary I am OK with the 4 guys they chose.  I like Sisk better than Legumina but I will trust they see more potential in the righty.  As always it will be interesting to see what teams do in Rule V and I hope none of our guys get picked.

    Question, Dman.  Are they going to a 27 man roster next year?

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    Maybe Seth or someone else knows the answer.  What spot will the Twins be picking in this year's Rule 5 draft?  I don't know if their adding Leguma makes it less likely or more that they will make a pick.  Obviously, if they are picking early in the draft there may/should be some interesting prospects available.  Heck, maybe even a solid catcher.  But that may be a dumb comment as he wouldn't be experienced enough to be their 1A catcher and carrying 3 catchers for the entire year is tough.

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    44 minutes ago, Trov said:

    I am not an insider in the Twins organization, so I will defer to their call on Casey Legumina, but I am assuming Sisk will get taken in rule 5 as he is near MLB ready, pen guy, lefty.  If he is not taken in rule 5 I will be shocked.  That being said, there must be some reason the team, who passes like 5 pen guys through waivers every year, did not see a need to add him to 40 man. 

    Yeah, if Laweryson was Rule 5 eligible, he would have been the guy I would have protected over Legumina, but the FO should hopefully have better insight that me. Sisk is a guy I like, but his struggles to throw strikes is a problem. Twins may be betting on a team not being able to keep him on the 27 man all year when he walks the entire league for a couple of weeks? But he seems likely to be picked (I know if I had a team that wasn't contending I would grab him up for sure, and would probably try and grab him even if I was unless I had a massive roster crunch).

    Not sure I really want the Twins to grab anyone in the Rule 5 right now; roster spots are at a premium for us right now, so unless it's someone who can step in as a backup catcher right away or a power relief arm it doesn't look to make much sense.

    not too worried about Isola getting picked up; he didn't exactly show a lot at the plate in the AFL. If someone wants to try and carry him all season, they're welcome to it, but he's not ready to hit in MLB at all and isn't enough of a difference-maker defensively to make it worth it.

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    First three guys are not surprising, trying to make sense of Legumina and must be the potential they see out of the bullpen in the immediate future.  Appears he was out in Minnesota and Target field earlier this month for some training/testing in front of the front office, so they must of liked what they saw and his progress.  Just stat surfing through his first two years in the ORG, put up solid numbers as a SP in year one but got pretty banged up as a starter in AA, has some lingering injury issues possibly. He's also been sort of old for the levels, despite only having two professional seasons under his belt

    Last two months of AA season looks like he transitioned to the bullpen (like Enlow) and posted pretty solid numbers.

    17.2 IP over 15 appearances - 2.61 ERA, 1.27 WHIP, 26 Ks (13.6 K/9).

    I imagine this is his way forward, looks to have had some control issues comparing his Year 1 to Year 2 outputs, but could refine that and see some big gains I hope. 

     

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    16 hours ago, Doctor Gast said:

    I had 9 Rule 5 prospects I wanted the Twins to protect, Legumina was #9. Very disappointed the Twins didn't do more to protect more. I expect 5 Twins to be selected away.

    That is a big number considering the perceived generally poor condition of our minor league system at the moment. 

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    I was looking forward to Isola, but that was with the assumption that the team still thought they could make a passable (or unpassable) catcher out of him, ala Jeffers and Garver. I now assume they do not.

    With that in mind, honestly, this list has the least anxiety filled Rule V snubs I remember in a long time. Even if the players they got in return didn't pan out, moving guys like Steer and Gipson-Long made these decisions much easier. Trading from the following year's pool of Rule V adds should be an annual impetus at the trade deadline.

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    3 hours ago, roger said:

    Maybe Seth or someone else knows the answer.  What spot will the Twins be picking in this year's Rule 5 draft?  I don't know if their adding Leguma makes it less likely or more that they will make a pick.  Obviously, if they are picking early in the draft there may/should be some interesting prospects available.  Heck, maybe even a solid catcher.  But that may be a dumb comment as he wouldn't be experienced enough to be their 1A catcher and carrying 3 catchers for the entire year is tough.

    Clubs draft in reverse order of the standings from the previous season.  Twins and Red Sox tied for the thirteenth lowest winning percentage in 2022.

    https://www.mlb.com/glossary/transactions/rule-5-draft

     

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    1 hour ago, nicksaviking said:

    Trading from the following year's pool of Rule V adds should be an annual impetus at the trade deadline.

    Besides the players not added this year (Urbina at the top of that list) the list of trade bait, ahem, players who need protection are Austin Martin, Aaron Sabato, Marco Raya, Alerick Soularie and Kalai Rosario. It will be a light year for adds next winter due to the 5 round 2020 draft.

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    3 hours ago, arby58 said:

    Right - they have to stay on the MLB roster for the entire season. Do we really think there are 5 unprotected Twins minor leaguers that teams are itching to get and keep on their roster for the entirety of the 2023 season? If so, the various rankings of minor league systems (where the Twins are more in the middle or toward the bottom) are missing something.

    That wasn't meant as an indictment of the Twins talent or farm system.  Rather, this time of year, most teams are in the same position as the Twins roster space wise.  I guarantee you, that if another team/s were allowed to pluck at will, we would see a fair number of players taken.

     So, yes as to the original post I commented on, I DO think there are at least 5 MLs that other teams would love to have in their system.  Just as the Twins would love to have players from other's systems that we as fans may not know much about. 

    The biggest constraint for teams though is simply not having the room inside of their own 40 man and thus it allows a FO to take a (usually safe) gamble and leave certain players off the 40 man.

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    2 hours ago, Fire Dan Gladden said:

    That is a big number considering the perceived generally poor condition of our minor league system at the moment. 

    22.5% of the 40 man roster occupied by AAAA fringe major leaguers who took too long to progress would not bode well for a successful major league season.

    that would leave 5 players on the 40 but not on the 26 that weren’t a part of the rule 5 protection, meaning players you want on the 40 because they are actually prospects close to MLR.

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    Most teams have a full 40 man roster. There will be non tendered players between now and the draft to open up spots. There are also free agents to sign. For a prospect to be selected pretty much they have to be a better prospect than someone who was on the 40 man of some team at the end of the season and offer more of an upside, I think this year’s rule 5 will be a snooze fest 

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    8 hours ago, nicksaviking said:

    With that in mind, honestly, this list has the least anxiety filled Rule V snubs I remember in a long time. Even if the players they got in return didn't pan out, moving guys like Steer and Gipson-Long made these decisions much easier. Trading from the following year's pool of Rule V adds should be an annual impetus at the trade deadline.

    Agreed, I wouldn't lose a second of sleep if we lost Severino or Sisk. 

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    19 hours ago, MN_ExPat said:

    That wasn't meant as an indictment of the Twins talent or farm system.  Rather, this time of year, most teams are in the same position as the Twins roster space wise.  I guarantee you, that if another team/s were allowed to pluck at will, we would see a fair number of players taken.

     So, yes as to the original post I commented on, I DO think there are at least 5 MLs that other teams would love to have in their system.  Just as the Twins would love to have players from other's systems that we as fans may not know much about. 

    The biggest constraint for teams though is simply not having the room inside of their own 40 man and thus it allows a FO to take a (usually safe) gamble and leave certain players off the 40 man.

    But it's not just 'have in their system' it's keeping them on the MLB roster for the entire year. That's an even bigger restriction on 'impulse buying' especially as rosters have shrunk compared to the COVID years.

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    41 minutes ago, MGM4706 said:

    Same old thing! All the quality Pitchers are signing and Twins are nowhere in sight!! Another .500 year ahead. But they will be Profitable!!

    Question, MGM.  What does this comment have to due with the Twins adding four to their 40-man roster?

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    My crystal ball says Pagan and Contreras will be either traded or DFA'd  opening up 40 man spots.  Probably another trade or two.  Like most everyone else, I'm curious about the Legumina add, but there is no guarentee that he also could be put through waivers.  My biggest wonder is the signing of Garlick.  Says to me that the Twins will not be in the market for a FA rh outfield bat. Not a bad platoon player but kinda reminds me of a rh hitting Jake Cave with less defensive ability but a little better bat.  I will miss Caves' hustle though.

    .

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    12 hours ago, MGM4706 said:

    Same old thing! All the quality Pitchers are signing and Twins are nowhere in sight!! Another .500 year ahead. But they will be Profitable!!

    So you think Anderson is the only quality starting pitcher?

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