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  • What To Do With Phil Hughes?


    Nick Nelson

    One of the trends that I was most interested in following during spring training was the velocity readings from Phil Hughes. His drop-off in average fastball speed last year – down about 1.5 MPH from the previous season – was symptomatic of an overall reduction in effectiveness that turned him from the rotation's best contributor in 2014 to its worst in 2015.

    Unfortunately, this year Hughes is continuing to slide the wrong way in just about every regard. And that's an extremely disturbing development, given that he is under contract longer than any other player on the team.

    Image courtesy of Rick Osentoski, USA Today

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    On Tuesday night, Hughes was gritty. It was an admirable outing, without question. One day after the worst start that the Twins have seen in many years, he took the ball and gave a hell of an effort, weaving his way through six shutout innings without having much bite on any of his pitches. The veteran hurler was crafty enough to cruise through the lineup twice but warned his manager before the seventh that he was running out of gas. At this point, he hadn't thrown 70 pitches.

    This is the most pronounced and clear-cut example of something that's been noticeable for some time: for whatever reason, the right-hander's arm strength is deteriorating. He admitted to shoulder fatigue after Tuesday's game, and this isn't a particularly new development. It's a situation that needs to be monitored and handled very carefully, given how deeply the Twins have invested in him.

    Terry Ryan went all-in on Hughes following a fantastic debut in Minnesota, signing the former Yankee to a three-year extension despite the fact that two seasons remained on his original deal. It was an odd move but was reflective of the sheer excellence Hughes displayed in 2014, when he pitched like a legitimate ace, and the dire need for any kind of sustained reliability in the starting corps.

    The favorable terms of Hughes' deal made it palatable to even those who felt he was very unlikely to repeat his sterling results from that first season with the Twins. His average annual salary in the reconfigured contract was less than $12 million, which is roughly the going rate for an average mid-rotation starter in free agency. With his pinpoint command and his history of missing bats at a reasonable clip, he seemed like almost a sure bet to at least maintain at that level, even if his historically incredible strikeout-to-walk ratio was bound to normalize a bit.

    The other point of reassurance in the Hughes extension was his age. Still amidst his theoretical prime, the righty would still be 33 at the end of his renewed pact. That's the same age that fellow free agent signings Ervin Santana and Ricky Nolasco are now.

    Yet, Hughes' arm is exhibiting the signs you might expect to see from someone that age. His velocity continues to decline – the fastball is now clocking at 90.4 MPH on average after registering last year at a career-low 90.7 MPH. He told reporters that his fatigue issue dates back about four starts but a glance at the chart below from Brooks Baseball shows a downward pitch speed trend dating back much, much further – basically to the start of his Twins tenure.

    http://s32.postimg.org/b6gbe7kzp/2016_05_17_2220.png

    Unsurprisingly, this drop has coincided with worsening results. To his credit, Hughes has been holding his own, owing almost entirely to his truly elite control, but now even that isn't getting him by. On a night where he finally managed to get outs (albeit several hard-hit ones), he couldn't get through 80 pitches.

    Sticking with the status quo doesn't seem to be an option here. Hughes is going to be here through 2019 and his long-term outlook is the foremost concern. If he's going through a dead arm period it's been gradually building up for quite a long time, and that doesn't seem to be a great sign. Given the growing irrelevance of this season, it might be wisest to shut him down for a while.

    The hits keep on coming.

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    Shoulder surgery. Out for year.

    http://www.twinkietown.com/2016/6/28/12055794/phil-hughes-to-have-season-ending-shoulder-surgery

    Or, as the TwinkieTown writer aptly put it: meh, might as well.

    Just for the record the like is because I appreciate your contribution to the Twins Daily community. Not because I'm happy Hughes will be having shoulder surgery.

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    Okay so Hughes is done for the season and the Twins will stubbornly stick with the rotation they started the year with minus Hughes.

     

    Santana

    Gibson

    Nolasco

    Duffey

    Milone

     

    Berrios stays in AAA and May stays in the bullpen.  I hate it, absolutely hate it.

     

    And to think we could have drafted Giolito (who debuted yesterday for the Nats) and hung onto Ramos who is hitting .343 this year with an .948 Obs.  I think i'm going to go puke.  

    Edited by laloesch
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    Wow the procedure sounds pretty serious. Removing part of his rib bone to alleviate pain? Ouch.... Good luck to Hughes on his recovery. 

    I read that and my side instantly started to hurt.  That does not sound fun at all.  Good luck, Mr. Hughes.

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    I just can't wait for the "tweet" explaining how sorry he is for taking so much money now that he's hurt and how he never wanted to be THAT guy. Ala, Glen Perkins! LOL

     

    I do feel sorry for both of them, it's just getting comical at this point. 

     

    Remember when we had so many pitchers in spring training that there were battles to make the rotation?

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    Okay so Hughes is done for the season and the Twins will stubbornly stick with the rotation they started the year with minus Hughes.

     

    Santana

    Gibson

    Nolasco

    Duffey

    Milone

     

    Berrios stays in AAA and May stays in the bullpen.  I hate it, absolutely hate it.

     

    And to think we could have drafted Giolito (who debuted yesterday for the Nats) and hung onto Ramos who is hitting .343 this year with an .948 Obs.  I think i'm going to go puke.  

    Berrios will be up in the near future. My guess is they want to try May at closer. If it's not successful, he'll get a change to win a spot in the rotation next season.

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    Berrios will be up in the near future. My guess is they want to try May at closer. If it's not successful, he'll get a change to win a spot in the rotation next season.

    Right. Just like he got a chance to "compete" ( wink, wink) for a rotation spot this Spring?

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