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  • Week in Review: Making Big Moves


    Nick Nelson

    It was an eventful week that saw the Twins make several key additions at the trade deadline, part with multiple bullpen fixtures from the first half, and put forth a winning week on the field – dampened by a sour finish.

    Let's get caught up on all the action. 

    Image courtesy of Jordan Johnson-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    Weekly Snapshot: Mon, 8/1 through Sun, 8/7
    ***
    Record Last Week: 4-3 (Overall: 57-51)
    Run Differential Last Week: +1 (Overall: +27)
    Standing: 1st Place in AL Central (1.0 GA)

    Last Week's Game Results:

    Game 102 | MIN 5, DET 3: Miranda and Urshela Deliver in the Clutch
    Game 103 | DET 5, MIN 3: Active Deadline Day Ends in Quiet Loss
    Game 104 | MIN 4, DET 1: Newcomers Contribute in Series Clincher
    Game 105 | TOR 9, MIN 3: Bullpen Breaks Down as Blue Jays Roll
    Game 106 | MIN 6, TOR 5: Twins Walk Off Toronto in Wild Win
    Game 107 | MIN 7, TOR 3: Revamped Pen Provides 5 Strong Innings
    Game 108 | TOR 3, MIN 2: Comeback Falls Short in Controversial Finish

    NEWS & NOTES

    The Twins front office made an emphatic statement at the trade deadline, leaning into the buyer position like never before with a string of significant moves while their competitors in the division were largely quiet. 

    Here's a rundown of the prospect-for-vet deals that took place on Monday and Tuesday:

    • Acquired starting pitcher Tyler Mahle from the Reds for IF Spencer Steer, OF Christian Encarnacion-Strand, and LHP Steve Hajjar.
    • Acquired closer Jorge López from the Orioles for LHPs Cade Povich and Juan Rojas, RHPs Yennier Canó and Juan Nunez.
    • Acquired setup man Michael Fulmer from the Tigers for RHP Sawyer Gipson-Long.
    • Acquired backup catcher Sandy León from Guardians for RHP Ian Hamilton.

    Through this assertive series of trades, the Twins effectively addressed every glaring weakness on their roster, fortifying their standing in the AL Central while the two teams chasing them – Chicago and Cleveland – showed minimal initiative. 

    With a historically aggressive deadline coming on the heels of signing Carlos Correa just before the season, Derek Falvey and Thad Levine are redefining a traditionally passive franchise's mettle. The Minnesota Twins are officially swimming in the deep end, albeit perhaps struggling to stay afloat. 

    Their deadline haul came at a cost. While the Twins were able to avoid parting with any of their very best prospects, they had to give up several good ones, some of whom are sure to haunt them down the road. But that's the cost of doing business.

    Speaking of which, the business side of baseball was felt be a couple of veteran relievers supplanted by these deadline additions. Joe Smith, the team's lone MLB free agent bullpen during the past offseason, was released after posting a 9.22 ERA in his last 18 appearances. Tyler Duffey was designated for assignment, his 11.81 post-break ERA convincing the Twins there was nothing left in the tank.

    Fellow veteran pitchers Aaron Sanchez and Jharrel Cotton were also ousted from the 40-man roster, but stuck in the organization at Triple-A after clearing DFA waivers. It's good news for the Twins from a depth perspective, because Cotton's been a solid piece when called upon and Sanchez actually looked mildly intriguing in his spot start on Monday. We could see either (or both) yet again this year.

    We probably won't be seeing Miguel Sanó, who landed on the 60-day IL with a flare-up of his knee injury. And we definitely won't be seeing Jorge Alcalá, who underwent season-ending elbow debridement surgery. 

    Alex Kirilloff, sadly, is also done for the year. He's undergoing a rare surgery that involves deliberately breaking his ulna bone, shortening it, and then reconnecting it with plates and screws, in an effort to create space and reduce the painful friction impeding his swing. Needless to say it's a highly invasive procedure, of which Kirilloff said earlier this year, "I really hope it doesn't get to that."

    Well, here we are. The Twins are hopeful that Kirilloff will be ready for spring training next year, but there is no guarantee this course of action will deliver the desired results. It's rarely been done for baseball players. Hard as it is to say, this really feels like a last-ditch effort to save the 24-year-old's promising career. If it doesn't take ... then what?

    All we can do now is wait and hope, while reckoning with the reality that Minnesota will be without one of its most crucial bats the rest of the way. A colossal bummer.

    In other roster news:

    • José Godoy was claimed off waivers by Pittsburgh. He was no longer useful to the Twins following the addition of León.
    • Kyle Garlick was placed on IL due to a ribcage injury suffered in a wall collision. Gilberto Celestino returned to the roster in his stead.
    • Caleb Thielbar was activated from IL, with Jovani Moran optioned to Triple-A. Cole Sands was also recalled in place of Sanchez.
    • Max Kepler was activated on Saturday, sending Mark Contreras back to Triple-A.

    HIGHLIGHTS

    Nick Gordon stole the show in Friday night's victory over Toronto at Target Field, delivering a huge three-run homer against José Berríos early on and sliding across home with the winning run in the 10th. 

    Finally healthy after long bouts with digestive issues, Gordon is showing the power that made him a top draft pick and highly touted prospect in the low minors. While swinging at almost everything, he keeps on barreling up with amazing frequency, causing the ball to consistently jump off his bat. Starting all seven games last week, he went 10-for-30 with the homer, three doubles, five RBIs, and – most refreshingly – four walks.

    Also instrumental in Friday's victory was Fulmer, who's making his impact in the late innings felt since being acquired minutes ahead of Tuesday's deadline. After firing a scoreless inning in his first Twins appearance on Wednesday, Fulmer drew the tough assignment of pitching the 10th Friday with a runner starting on second. He worked around a walk and a single to strike out the side and set up a walk-off in the bottom half.

    The Twins found themselves needing to win in the 10th because the new closer López had experienced a blown save in the ninth. However, it wasn't the type of performance that raises alarm. Toronto was able to string together a few singles and get a run across, without much in the way of hard contact. 

    Two days earlier, in his Minnesota debut, López pitched a 1-2-3 ninth on seven pitches to secure his first save as a Twin and a series win. He followed up with a clean ninth on Saturday, despite having thrown 30 pitches the previous night. It's immediately evident the Twins see in their new closer a rubber arm that hasn't existed in their bullpen up to this point.

    While the new guys flashed their stuff, the incumbents at the back end of the bullpen made sure to remind us they're still here, and still important. 

    Jhoan Durán was his usual dominant self, tossing 3 ⅔ scoreless innings while unveiling a new intro experience at Target Field. With López (who also got a light-dimming walkout treatment) now aboard, Durán has been fully fitted into a fireman role where he can be deployed in the highest-leverage of situations at any time, without a thought to hold him back for a later tight lead. This was evident on Friday night, when he came in to pitch the eighth inning of a one-run game, and on Saturday night, when he relieved Griffin Jax amidst a threat with two on, one out, and a couple heavy hitters coming up.

    Durán leads all AL relievers in Win Probability Added and he only figures to further extend his margin in this role, so long as he can stay healthy and keep dominating. Pending the former, there is little doubt of the latter, given how Durán has managed to make us all forget about his one supposed weakness (proneness to home runs – remember that?).

    An unsung hero and emerging weapon in this bullpen is Thielbar, who came off the IL and immediately made his presence felt. The lefty tossed a scoreless seventh in Wednesday's series-clinching win over Detroit, and looked dominant while mowing down four Blue Jays hitters on Saturday. 

    Thielbar has had a few random blow-ups on the mound this year, but he's nearly two months removed from the last one and has otherwise been downright excellent. His Statcast measurables portray a guy who is throwing top-notch stuff and stifling opposing hitters.

    Finally, we can't run through the week's bright spots without once again mentioning rookie sensation José Miranda, who just keeps on cooking. Now routinely batting cleanup against lefties, Miranda's living up to that billing as a run-producing machine, with eight RBIs in an 8-for-26 week that included a double and home run. 

    Miranda has the third-highest OPS on the team, trailing only All-Stars Byron Buxton and Luis Arraez. He is 24 years old.

    LOWLIGHTS

    Even with all its upgrades, the pitching staff still has its warts. Those definitely showed through on Thursday, when Emilio Pagán, Trevor Megill, and Duffey gave up three runs apiece in relief of Sonny Gray, turning a 1-0 lead into a 9-3 blowout loss. Duffey's dud performance proved to be the final straw, as his DFA was announced the following day. 

    Subtracting from the bottom of the bullpen while adding at the top is a good way to turn around a drastically underperforming unit, but the fact remains: lower-tier guys are going to need to throw some innings and the Twins need better out of them than we saw against Toronto. 

    When you play a lot of close games, as Minnesota does, everyone's going to have to pitch in relatively high leverage at times. With Canó shipped out, and Alcalá and Danny Coulombe down for the year, reinforcements have grown thin. Pagán came out of Sunday's game after wincing on a pitch, so he might be at risk of joining the fallen.

    The long ball, which bit Pagán and Duffey on Thursday, has been an all-too-common culprit for the entire Twins staff. They've surrendered the second-most home runs in the American League. This affliction touched the newest member of the Twins rotation on Friday, when Mahle narrowed a 5-0 lead to 5-4 by giving up three homers against the Blue Jays. It was the most allowed in a start by Mahle since May 2nd of 2021 – kind of ironic given all the steam about escaping from Cincinnati's homer-happy ballpark being his ticket to the next level.

    Ultimately, it is not memories of any home runs allowed that leave the Twins and their fans shaking their heads in the wake of this eventful week. It's the way it ended: a highly controversial and game-altering overturn of an out call at home plate, after Tim Beckham threw a pea from left field that beat Whit Merrifield.

    Gary Sánchez's successful tag-out was denied on the grounds that he violated MLB's nebulous home-plate collision rule – a notion that manager Rocco Baldelli took issue with to say the least. He immediately charged on the field, whipped his hat, and exploded into an animated tirade like we've never seen from him before. In his post-game rant, the typically even-keeled Baldelli pulled no punches. I'm inclined to agree with his viewpoint.

    This sour finish to an otherwise entertaining and compelling series against one of Minnesota's key rivals in the American League leaves a bad taste as we turn the page to Monday.

    TRENDING STORYLINE

    Trevor Larnach is now officially six weeks removed from undergoing a surgery that was estimated to have a six-week recovery time. On Sunday, the Twins lumped him into a larger group of players they are "hopeful" to get back in September, which is interesting since there've been no reports of a setback (to my knowledge) and we've still got three weeks left of August.

    The Twins could certainly use Larnach's pre-injury bat because they've been thinned out significantly in the outfield with Garlick and Kirilloff both on the shelf and Buxton continuing to be limited by his knee (he's started in center field just three times since the All-Star break). 

    While outfield fill-ins like Gordon, Contreras, and Jake Cave all deserve credit for stepping up at various moments, getting back Larnach would make a huge difference. For a stretch early on, he was arguably the best hitter in the lineup, slashing .300/.375/.511 in his first 30 games before the core injury seemed to start taking its toll. If that issue is fully corrected by the surgery, and Larnach quickly returns to full strength ... look out. 

    Hopefully in the coming week we'll get a little more clarity on his specific situation and rehab timeline. 

    LOOKING AHEAD

    Another week of ample rest lies ahead, with days off on both Monday and Thursday bookending a two-game road series against the Dodgers. The Twins would be wise to savor them, because after this they won't have another scheduled break in the month of August.

    With left-handers on the docket for at least four of five games in the coming week, Garlick's bat will be missed and Gordon's offensive impact will be negated. Can guys like Celestino and Tim Beckham step up on a big West Coast road trip?

    TUESDAY, 8/9: TWINS @ DODGERS – RHP Joe Ryan v. LHP Julio Urias
    WEDNESDAY, 8/10: TWINS @ DODGERS – RHP Sonny Gray v. TBD
    FRIDAY, 8/12: TWINS @ ANGELS – RHP Tyler Mahle v. LHP Patrick Sandoval
    SATURDAY, 8/13: TWINS @ ANGELS – RHP Dylan Bundy v. LHP Reid Detmers
    SUNDAY, 8/14: TWINS @ ANGELS – RHP Chris Archer v. LHP Tucker Davidson

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    Thanks for the recap, Nick, and the video of Rocco’s opinion of that play.

    For some reason, I recall original reports saying they were expecting Larnach to have a 6-8 week recovery.  Another two weeks and then a 15-20 day trip to the minors would put him back around September 10.  Have my fingers crossed that both he and Maeda are back by then.  Would be great getting either of the other pitchers also back by the last two weeks.

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    28 minutes ago, roger said:

    Thanks for the recap, Nick, and the video of Rocco’s opinion of that play.

    For some reason, I recall original reports saying they were expecting Larnach to have a 6-8 week recovery.  Another two weeks and then a 15-20 day trip to the minors would put him back around September 10.  Have my fingers crossed that both he and Maeda are back by then.  Would be great getting either of the other pitchers also back by the last two weeks.

    Per the official MLB.com story, "The preliminary expectation is that Larnach could return to the field for the Twins in six weeks." And that wording would even suggest that a rehab stint was built into that timeline. But as Falvey said in the following paragraph, "That’s what’s been reported to us, but again, probably have to do the surgery and get on the back end and make sure we feel good about how it went."

    Maybe just a slower road back than hoped, without any setbacks necessarily. I will say that estimate seemed quite optimistic to me when I heard it, albeit without much direct knowledge of the procedure. Kyle Garlick underwent sports hernia surgery last July (which I believe to be the same thing by a different name?) and never made it back.

    One way or another, it'd be good to get a firm update on Larnach soon. 

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    Great piece. The last play was a bummer, but it doesn't overcast the week for me. The Twins made really good moves, the team should be stronger, and each of the adds has had one or more moments to shine. Cole Sands actually (finally?) looked like he might be a useful pitcher tonight, and the Twins played a possible playoff matchup quite well (something noted by the Jays TV crew) this weekend.

    Who knows how it will all shake out, but the Twins are already playing meaningful games about two months later than last year with a great chance of October baseball in Minnesota. This sort of chance is what baseball fans live for!

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    The loss of Kirilloff is devastating. Hope it doesn't derail his career. Also not very hopeful that Laranch will make it back this year. Losing 2 main pieces that were expected to make major contributions is tough to over-come. Kudos to Miranda for coming up big so far. If we had all 3 of them playing in combo with a productive and healthy Buxton and Jeffers alongside Polanco and Correa we'd have a good offensive machine. Do we have to say, "wait 'till next year" again?

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    4 minutes ago, rv78 said:

    The loss of Kirilloff is devastating. Hope it doesn't derail his career. Also not very hopeful that Laranch will make it back this year. Losing 2 main pieces that were expected to make major contributions is tough to over-come. Kudos to Miranda for coming up big so far. If we had all 3 of them playing in combo with a productive and healthy Buxton and Jeffers alongside Polanco and Correa we'd have a good offensive machine. Do we have to say, "wait 'till next year" again?

    We didn't lose two key pieces, rv78, we lost three.  Royce Lewis is also out for nearly the entire season, bah humbug!

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    Great job Nick, We have 5 highly reliable short RPs and the rest can't be trusted as you said needs to pick it up. I suggest to finally replace those short RPs that we don't trust with long RPs that we do trust. A Sanchez, who did a very good job for us, Smeltzer as well as Cotton. Sands as well as Cotton who failed at short relief has shown that they are very capable at long relief. Once Winder & Ober get well they are excellent candidates for long relief. Also a prospect like SWR, long relief would be a great way to get his feet wet some day.

    We desperately needed long relief prior to the Mahle/Lopez/Fulmer additions but like last nite game shows long relief is still needed. As always long relief is needed to releave the pressure off the SPs & short relief. To keep all pitchers healthy, refreshed and happy for the post season.

    Everyone is so concern with the OF, but I differ in opinion. Yes Larnach. Kiriloff, Garlic are down, & Kepler isn't 100% & Buxton has always been a concern with his health problems. In the past we should have been concerned about our OF because we really didn't have anyone to sub Buck and when Buck wasn't in CF odds were we lost the game. Now we have Gordon & Celestino to sub Buck, we still have a good chance to win the game if Buck isn't in the game and if we do it isn't because of CF normally. Yes we are missing some pretty good corner OF bats but if we keep Kepler or Cave out ot CF & keep Buck, Celestino and Gordon there, we'll be iust fine. 

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    7 hours ago, roger said:

    We didn't lose two key pieces, rv78, we lost three.  Royce Lewis is also out for nearly the entire season, bah humbug!

    Lewis wasn't expected to be a main piece of the puzzle this year like Larnach and Kirilloff. That is why I didn't mention him. 

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