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  • What To Make Of Kennys Vargas


    Seth Stohs

    What are we to make of the 2016 season of Kennys Vargas? In 47 games, he hit .230/.333/.500 (.833) with 11 doubles and ten home runs. The slugging first baseman/designated hitter will be out of options in 2017. Can he be an everyday big league player or will he need to fit into a role of some type? Let’s dig into some of his minor league and big league numbers to see what they might tell us.

    Let’s start by looking back a bit.

    Image courtesy of Rick Osentoski, USA Today

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    The Twins signed the hefty slugger from Puerto Rico in 2009. He had not been selected in the first-year players draft, but the Twins had enough interest to sign him as a non-drafted free agent. He spent his 18- and 19-year-old seasons in the Gulf Coast League. He then spent a season in Elizabethton. Unfortunately, while playing for the E-Twins, he was suspended 50 games for using a performance enhancing drug.

    By the rules at the time, his fifty games only counted during the Elizabethton season. That meant in 2012, his season didn’t start until very late. He played just 44 games in Beloit. He spent 2013 in Ft. Myers and 2014 in New Britain, at least until the Twins called him up. He debuted August 1st, on his 24th birthday.

    He provided power that year and was the team’s Opening Day starter in 2015 but things went poorly. He was optioned twice, once to Rochester, and then once to Chattanooga where he was able to find his offense again.

    He spent most of 2016 in AAA, though he came up in early July and provided offense for a month. He struggled and a numbers situation (re: pitching issues) had him sent back to the Red Wings. He returned for September and the struggles continued.

    However, he did make a couple of significant improvements in his game in 2016 that are intriguing as we go forward.

    Let’s take a look at his numbers at each level of the minor leagues as well as each of his three big league seasons.

    Low A - 41 G, 186 PA - .318/.419/.610 (1.030) with 10 doubles, 11 homers

    High A - 125 G, 520 PA - .267/.344/.468 (.813) with 31 doubles, 19 homers

    AA - 132 G, 556 PA - .282/.376/.483 (.859) with 20 doubles, 24 homers

    AAA - 134 G, 553 PA - .246/.374/.438 (.812) with 22 doubles, 21 homers

    MLB - 158 G, 595 PA - .251/.309/.434 (.743) with 25 doubles, 24 homers

    While Vargas was never considered a prospect, he has always put up some intriguing numbers, He had 20-25 home runs potential. He took quality plate appearances and was willing to take walks. Some of the concerns were that he never really had a good glove at first base. He was very much one-dimensional and that one dimension wasn’t elite.

    Low A - BB% - 15.0%, K% - 22.0%, XBH% - 11.8%

    High A - BB% - 9.6%, K% - 20.2%, XBH% - 10.2%

    AA - BB% - 12.4%, K% - 18.0%, XBH% - 8.3%

    AAA - BB% - 16.6%, K% - 23.1%, XBH% - 8.0%

    MLB - BB% - 7.6%, K% - 29.2%, XBH% - 8.2%

    As you can see above, he has walked at every level, until he got to the big leagues. But the following chart will maybe shed some light on this.

    MLB Time Only

    2014 - BB% - 5.1%, K% - 26.9%, XBH - 8.5%

    2015 - BB% - 4.9%, K% - 29.3%, XBH - 4.9%

    2016 - BB% - 13.6%, K% - 32.2%, XBH - 11.8%

    While the 2016 MLB sample size was smaller, he improved two things. First, he greatly improved his approach at the plate and willingness to walk. Over those first two big league seasons, he walked 21 times and struck out 117 times. While he struck out at a greater percentage in 2016, he showed much more power as well. Consider this: Vargas’ 11.8% extra-base hit percentage falls just behind Brian Dozier’s 11.9% in 2016.

    So clearly maintaining a nearly 12% extra base hit rate doesn’t seem realistic, but the 8% average that he’s had in the upper levels of the minor leagues would mean 40 extra base hits over 500 plate appearances. And if he can even walk 10% of his plate appearances, that would be 50 walks.

    I think a realistic season for Vargas, playing four to five games each week, would be .250/.325/.400 (.725) with about 22 doubles and 20 homers.

    It’s a solid season, but it’s certainly not what a team would want from a DH and part-time first baseman.

    So, let’s consider another set of details, his lefty-righty splits.

    In 2016:

    Vs RHP - 125 PA - .168/.280/.374 (.654)

    Vs LHP - 52 PA - .378/.462/.800 (1.262)

    Career:

    Vs RHP - 384 PA - .223/.281/.411 (.693)

    Vs LHP - 211 PA - .302/.360/.474 (.834)

    In other words, Kennys Vargas mashes against left-handed pitchers. The Twins have a left-handed hitting first baseman who needs days off. We saw that the last couple of the months of the season. Paul Molitor did not play Joe Mauer often against left-handed pitching. It’s a strategy that makes sense for all involved, for Mauer, for Vargas and for the team.

    Just a short paragraph on Vargas’s defense. It’s OK. It’s below average, but it’s OK enough to put out there a couple of times a week. It’s a clear step, or six, down from Joe Mauer’s first base defense, but again, it’s acceptable.

    Vargas had an encouraging 2016 season after a very disappointing 2015 in Minnesota and Rochester. He did in 2016 what he was asked to do when the Twins sent him down to the minors in 2015. He had a better approach at the plate, and hit for much more power. It was a big year for him, knowing he would be out of options in 2017. Vargas showed enough to be in the plans to get some playing time next year.

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    I think it would be foolish to discard Vargas right now.  He is one of the few youngsters who is showing more displine at the plate after going through the growing pains of a sophomore slump.  I'd like to see what he could do with another full season under his belt in the role of DH/1B. If he could play almost everyday it would cue us into what our future needs might be.

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    Speaking of first base,

     

    I am eagerly awaiting our bi-annual tradition of celebrating Mauer's health!  We're probably 5 months away from that "Mauer feels like he's 19 again!" newspaper article and about 11 months from the "Mauer: I used a walker in the hallways between games but kept playing like a trooper" follow-up.

     

    Play Vargas.

     

     

    Nice way to work Mauer into this thread, too. LOL

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    A Vargas/Mauer platoon at 1st makes the most sense to me at this point. Give Kennys regular playing time and see if he puts it together. Park is always an option if he's tearing it up in AAA and Vargas struggles. 

     

     

    What would you put as a playing time percentage?  70/30 Vargas?

     

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    Agreed. I could see a role for Vargas if he mashed RHP as a LH hitter. An MLB career .693 OPS with a 30.7% K% as a LH hitter leaves very little to be desired. Add on top of that he's provides minimal defensive value... I'll take the chance on Park over Vargas.

    I've defended the Park signing since it occurred, and I still think he can mash MLB pitching, but at this point he is still almost a complete unknown. A platoon of Vargas and Mauer at 1B is a good option to start the season. If Park destroys AAA then this rotation needs to be reexamined. 

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    Vargas's swing is like Arcia's--and he will be susceptible to fastballs up. I wonder if the new administration is like the previous with respect to "he's out of options--so put him on the team"?

     I think "We burned option years and consequently have little idea of what type of MLB player they will be.....so we must put him on the team," is a little more accurate. Hopefully the new regime places more value in options and consistent playing time. 

     

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    I like Park (when healthy) over Vargas because he did play a pretty good first base.  However, unless I am misremembering (had to haul out the Clemens quote), Park didn't hit lefties worth a hoot.  So, maybe Vargas DH's against lefties, Park against righties, and they both do some subbing for Joe at 1B?  I realize that I just chewed up 3 roster spots for 3 part time players who play 1 position in the field which isn't ideal, but it also gives us a bopper bat off the bench.

    Edited by gocgo
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    Hmmm... so it seems the best fit for Vargas is as a lefties only platoon batter. Can Park hit righties well? Because then they'd form a solid combo. But I guess a Mauer-Vargas platoon wouldn't be bad either.

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    Let Vargas be the full time DH and play first when Joe's sits against lefties. That said I still think it is more likely that Vargas and Park don't turn out than both of them do turn out which seems to be what people are worried about.

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    Sometimes big guys take longer to get to their peak.  Age 28 or 29 before they have full motor control of a very large apparatus.

     

    I remember a guy named Ortiz who played pretty well for the Twins, but was oft-injured and they let him go.

    I think Ortiz was younger and better during his time with the Twins, but they let him go because he was blocked by Morneau. 

     

    P.S. - Anyone who says they predicted at the time that Ortiz would be driving off into a Cooperstown sunset while Morneau would turn into ... whatever it is he turned into, a marginal player on a bad White Sox team - is either a liar or the biggest pessimist ever.

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    I think Ortiz was younger and better during his time with the Twins, but they let him go because he was blocked by Morneau.

     

    P.S. - Anyone who says they predicted at the time that Ortiz would be driving off into a Cooperstown sunset while Morneau would turn into ... whatever it is he turned into, a marginal player on a bad White Sox team - is either a liar or the biggest pessimist ever.

    Justin Morneau had yet to play a game above AA at the time they let Ortiz go.

    Not sure how he was blocking Ortiz.

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    Neither split sample is enough to draw a conclusion about Vargas' ability to hit left and right handed batters. It takes a large sample for slash stats to become reliable - particularly those chunked over the first three years of a career.

     

    Did you know that in each of the last three years in the minors he hit better against right handed pitching than left? At Rochester last year, he had an OPS of 926 against right handed pitching and 484 against left handed pitching. Over the last three year he has been better against right handed pitching when combining majors and minors. That doesn't mean anything either except to point out the need for a large sample to make sense of situational slash stats.

     

    http://www.milb.com/player/index.jsp?player_id=573627#/splits/R/hitting/2016/MINORS

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    Neither split sample is enough to draw a conclusion about Vargas' ability to hit left and right handed batters. It takes a large sample for slash stats to become reliable - particularly those chunked over the first three years of a career.

    Did you know that in each of the last three years in the minors he hit better against right handed pitching than left? At Rochester last year, he had an OPS of 926 against right handed pitching and 484 against left handed pitching. Over the last three year he has been better against right handed pitching when combining majors and minors. That doesn't mean anything either except to point out the need for a large sample to make sense of situational slash stats.

    http://www.milb.com/player/index.jsp?player_id=573627#/splits/R/hitting/2016/MINORS

     

    Yup, let the kid hit.  If Mauer or Park has more at-bats than him next year, it's a mistake.  (Barring Vargas having an OPS below .600, if it's above that, there is no excuse for him to get less at-bats than either of them)

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