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  • Why Did the Twins Sign Joey Gallo?


    Ted Schwerzler

    Earlier this offseason, the Minnesota Twins traded third basemen Gio Urshela to the Los Angeles Angels largely due to the fact that he would make roughly $9 million through arbitration. In signing left-handed slugger Joey Gallo, they’ve committed to an $11 million deal. There are a few different things they could be thinking.

     

    Image courtesy of Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports

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    First and foremost, time has passed since the Twins opted to trade Gio Urshela to the Angels. When they made that move, Derek Falvey and Thad Levine were squarely focused on their pursuit of Carlos Correa. While they ultimately fell short as he went to the San Francisco Giants, $9 million for a guy that didn’t project to be in the starting lineup seems substantial.

    From there, we can also presume that the Minnesota Twins do, in fact, intend to have Joey Gallo start most of their games in 2023. With Urshela vacating third base, talented youngster Jose Miranda will be expected to take most of the hot corner reps. He performed below average defensively last year at first, and Minnesota has maintained that third base is still his long term home.

    That means Gallo will find most of his starts on the corners for the Twins. His most traditional position has been in right field. As much as Gallo is known as a slugger, he also is a plus defender with a big arm. Rocco Baldelli’s lineup currently has Max Kepler penciled into the right field spot, but it has been consistently reported that the longtime fixture has drawn plenty of trade interest. Although Kepler wouldn’t net a ton for Minnesota, moving him has seemed like the plan all offseason.

    In doing so, Gallo would draw most of his starts in right field. That would keep Trevor Larnach and Alex Kirilloff as the main left fielders, while also allowing Kirilloff to rotate at first base with Luis Arraez. Gallo has played first in his career previously as well, and certainly can take at-bats as a designated hitter for Minnesota. In the same vein of his contract, Gallo compares to the White Sox Andrew Benintendi and the San Francisco Giants Mitch Haniger. He may have a bit more upside than both, however, and a return to 2021 form would do the trick.

    One would think it easy to assume that Gallo benefits from the shift being banned in 2023. That’s probably a fair assessment given that he’s been outspoken against it personally, and we started to see four man outfields in large part due to his batted ball profile. Eno Sarris wrote a great piece for The Athletic back in September, and Gallo (alongside Kepler) was among the names touched on.

    In the piece, MLB writer Mike Petriello notes that while Gallo may not see the same shift, he’ll almost certainly still be defended differently. For a considerable rise in batting average, he’d need to drive the ball the other way, and that would be counterproductive to his batted ball profile. Gallo stands to benefit from a strong hard hit rate, and while things may rise slightly for him, his 121 OPS+ despite a .199 batting average in 2021 suggests success even in a non-traditional way.

    Ultimately there’s a few things Minnesota likely sees in Gallo that made him a worthy acquisition. First and foremost, they now have money to spend. That wasn’t the case (at least not in the straightforward sense) when dealing Urshela, and Gallo is certainly going to start. Minnesota may still very well be operating with a plan to trade Kepler, and that opens up even more opportunity. Then there’s the positional flexibility, Gallo can play all three outfield spots, and that helps to create a more fluid lineup as well.

    There’s no denying that Gallo was a train wreck in New York last season. He isn’t just a rehashing of Chris Carter or Miguel Sano however. Minnesota is looking at an opportunity to benefit on a bounce back, and even if he doesn’t offensively, there’s arguably little downside out in the field.

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    Since 2018, Kepler has 37 OAA 5th best) and Gallo has 5 (59th best).  I not sure how Gallo can be considered close close to Kepler defensively. By way of comparison, Jake Cave had 3 OAA over this time period. 
     

    https://baseballsavant.mlb.com/leaderboard/outs_above_average?type=Fielder&startYear=2018&endYear=2022&split=no&team=&range=year&min=q&pos=of&roles=&viz=show

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    5 hours ago, Mike Sixel said:

    I'm not sure how to go from great prospect to bag of balls.....

    Sorry just meant I don't think the Twins will trade him unless they get something worthwhile back.

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    #1. Why did they sign Joey Gallo? Answer: They are sticking to the Twins way of trying to catch lightning in a bottle. The boy geniuses want to make that one deal that will make them look smarter than anyone else. Even though it hasn't happened yet with the Shoemakers, Happs, Archers, and pretty much everyone else they have acquired that doesn't mean you change what doesn't work. To them, it means you try more often. 

    For a little more than $34.6 million the Twins could have an outfield of 3 guys that hit .224, .227, and .160 in 2022 and none of the 3 played a full season. Seriously, is there anyone here that thinks that is a recipe for success? I'm not sure what stuff they are smoking because the cloud of stink coming from it gets thicker with every move they make. 

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    No Ted, in my view your view that Gallo is a good signing is way overblown.  My guess is he may start kind of hot and everyone will get rel excited thinking it was such a great deal.  But by mid season the dwindling fans in attendance will boo him mercilessly for all the strikeouts and low average and his continued poor clutch hitting.  IMO he isn't needed.  If another outfielder needed to be signed I believe better players were available.  This will go down as another one of their strange signings.  It will not make the team better.  This FO will go down as one of the worst in Twins history.  This team has very little direction.  When 2023 ends, the Twins will have played another year of boring, losing baseball.  Then it should be the end of Falvey, Lavigne, and Rocco.

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    Yaaaawn...

    It's really neither here nor there as it is not a 'move' that any team serious about a deep playoff run would make.

    Once that is established... as for the rest of the details.... yaaaaaaaaawn....

     

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    I don't get it. How is the shift ban going to benefit Gallo's whiff rate? At least Kepler's a contact hitter. I believe this was a rebound signing from missing out on Correa and in the end it's going to leave a gaping hole. Why are they so hell bent on trading Kepler (and now they have little choice but to trade him)? 

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    Signing Joey Gallo means we have to trade Kepler or else Kirilloff and Larnach will not play? 

    I understand that September was a long time ago so we may have forgotten but as a reminder I'll mention that we had Cave, Celestino and Garlick in the OF. 

    Why anyone would assume health if they took any kind of notes last season and the year before that and the year before that and the year before that. ?

    We also saw the Twins move players around and rest last year. I'm not sure why anyone assumes that we won't do the same again this year. We also have the DH position that can be provide playing time if we actually have a healthy log jam.  

    Now if the fears expressed are correct and Gallo is given every day playing time and is producing like the same Gallo as last year, while Kirilloff or Larnach sits on the bench and watches it happen. I promise that I will join you and start calling for new management. 

    We can have an honest competition for playing time between Gallo, Kepler, Kirilloff, Gordon, Larnach... let the best man win. 

    If the Twins truly commit to letting the best man win instead of who they think should win and do this not just in the OF. We could add Mancini to this roster and deepen the competition and lineup a little more and provide insurance against injuries. We could aslo add Segura to this roster and deepen the competition and lineup a little more. Those are probably the only two bats left in the market that interest me.  

    We also have the DH spot to keep players busy. 

    C

    Jeffers

    Vazquez

    1B/3B

    Mancini 

    Miranda

    Arraez 

    or 

    Miranda

    Arraez

    Kirilloff

    2B/SS

    Polanco

    Farmer

    Gordon

    or

    Polanco

    Farmer

    Segura

    OF

    Buxton

    Gallo

    Kepler

    Kirilloff

    Garlick or Larnach

    or

    Buxton

    Gallo

    Kepler

    Gordon

    Garlick or Larnach

     

    Minor League depth

    C

    Get somebody on a minor league deal

    SS/1B/2B/3B

    Lewis, Lee, Martin, Julien, 1B minor league deal Aguilar, Dom Smith, someone like that). 

    OF

    Larnach

    Wallner

    Lewis 

    Martin

    Celestino

     

     

     

     

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    Would I have signed Gallo? No .. but we have him so I'm hopping he can get back on track to the tune of .210 BA, 35 HR .340 OBP .. But more importantly I hope his ability to play centerfield allows us to keep Celestino in the minor leagues. Why Celestino, I think he's going to be a career 2.65 hitter with no power. He can cover ground in centerfield but makes too many mental errors. WE have so many outfielders who can hit and hit with power that need to play.  

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    17 hours ago, Whitey333 said:

    No Ted, in my view your view that Gallo is a good signing is way overblown.  My guess is he may start kind of hot and everyone will get rel excited thinking it was such a great deal.  But by mid season the dwindling fans in attendance will boo him mercilessly for all the strikeouts and low average and his continued poor clutch hitting.  IMO he isn't needed.  If another outfielder needed to be signed I believe better players were available.  This will go down as another one of their strange signings.  It will not make the team better.  This FO will go down as one of the worst in Twins history.  This team has very little direction.  When 2023 ends, the Twins will have played another year of boring, losing baseball.  Then it should be the end of Falvey, Lavigne, and Rocco.

    That's kinda harsh and definitely  not true.  I know the goal is the world series but...definitely not the worst FO of all time.  Offseason isn't even over.

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