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Chi Chi Gonzalez is a 30-year-old, right-handed starting pitcher who has pitched over 260 innings as a starter (47 starts) and reliever (14 appearances) in the big leagues. He actually has ties to Twins General Manager, Thad Levine, who drafted him 23rd overall with the Texas Rangers in 2013, and made his major-league debut in 2015 with the club. He basically missed all of 2017 and 2018 recovering from Tommy John surgery but has 44 appearances (34 starts) over the last three years with the Colorado Rockies. Over 184 1/3 innings since 2019, Gonzalez had an uninspiring 6.10/5.48 ERA/FIP and a 1.66 K/BB ratio, but this signing isn’t of the same ilk as some others that Twins fans may be used to from the last couple of offseasons.
Gonzalez’s arsenal (if you want to call it that) consists of primarily three pitches: a 92 mile per hour fastball, an 86 mile per hour slider with below-average movement, and an effective 84 mile-per-hour changeup that drops off better than most. Completely speculating here, but I wonder if the Twins think they can tinker that slider to be more effective which is a huge project to take on based on his Baseball Savant profile shown below.
Over the last two offseasons, fans have grown frustrated by the one-year “show me something” type deals that have been handed out to the likes of Homer Bailey, JA Happ, Matt Shoemaker, etc. This deal quite literally has no risk or obligation to the Twins being that it’s a minor league deal. While the Twins are rumored to be involved in talks with higher impact teams and players, the fact is that right now the Twins rotation and bullpen are MAJOR works in progress. While Gonzalez might not make the big league club, he provides added competition to various young guys we have in camp. And ultimately, he becomes a depth piece should our prospects show that they need some additional seasoning in the minor leagues.
It’s not an exciting move in the least, but you shouldn’t be viewing this deal as some of the others. Realistically, this acquisition will have little to no impact on the season and the offseason should be defined by whether the Twins are able to close on any of those rumored deals.
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