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Otto von Ballpark

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Everything posted by Otto von Ballpark

  1. No way Melotakis makes the opening day roster, frankly he shouldn't get many reps in spring training with that as the goal. He may be 16 months from surgery, but as you note, he will also be 18 months from throwing a competitive pitch. And those last "competitive pitches" came in 16 innings at AA. And while good and promising before the injury, he was hardly dominant or on any kind of super fast track to MLB -- out of the bullpen in 2014, split between high-A and AA, he had a 9.0 K/9 and 3.4 BB/9 while giving up 9.0 H/9 for a 1.375 WHIP. In his age-23 season. Again, solid and promising, but the Twins would frankly be crazy to let him make the opening day roster over O'Rourke or Rogers (and probably a few RHP too), or even to give him spring training innings ahead of those guys. There's really nothing that Melotakis can do at this point in a handful of spring training innings to vault him over those guys.
  2. Given that the Angels did not even make Freese a qualifying offer, the Twins would not have been alone in anticipating a poor market for 3B.
  3. I'm not sure "messed up medicals" (short of surgery at the moment) is really any worse than messed up performance or peripherals (i.e. Friedrich, Strong, etc.). Either way, it's a long shot. In the Twins current situation in particular, I would probably prefer the higher upside. (You could also probably have a valid case for stashing Hultzen on the 60-day DL to begin the season and getting more time to evaluate him.)
  4. Friedrich is out of options which complicates things. You'd have to drop someone from the 40-man to add him right now, then you'd have to give him evaluation opportunities in spring training (presumably taking away opportunities from other relief options) before you'd have to make a decision to put him on your opening day roster or waive him again yourself. Just looking at his age and numbers, that seems like too much of a commitment right now. If he clears waivers and the Rockies outright him, you might get a crack at him as a minor league free agent after the season anyway if you are still interested.
  5. That's why I use ERA- at times in these discussions, Fangraphs lets you get those stats for starters and relievers separately. You can also easily make custom player lists there for comparison. Here's your list at Fangraphs by career relief ERA-: http://www.fangraphs.com/leaders.aspx?pos=all&stats=rel&lg=all&qual=0&type=1&season=2015&month=0&season1=2005&ind=0&team=0&rost=0&age=0&filter=&players=7441,6033,3840,10534,4301,6324,8110,2895,6475,3926&sort=14,a
  6. Teams rarely trade value for a struggling player who is out of options. There is a decent chance that Arcia will be available for pennies on the dollar in March. The Twins don't have a good comparable for Dickerson right now, which means it's very possible the Rays would have asked the Twins for more (i.e. Kepler) or just not be interested at all.
  7. When one player can cause your bullpen to be near replacement level (Twins relievers 0.3 WAR combined in the 2nd half), that's not a deep pen. That's why I wanted some insurance, another good pitcher who could help us hold steady if Perk had trouble again, or Jepsen regressed, or Fien, or May was needed for rotation duty, etc. And if those guys all came through, with another top arm you'd have a decent chance at a top 10 bullpen. Instead we backfilled, again, with Abad.
  8. I don't know, there were a lot of times when we just didn't have a pitcher we trusted late in the season. May wasn't available all the time, Jepsen was saved for ninth, etc. Didn't have a good long man, didn't always play matchups well, etc.
  9. Is it that frequent? Seems like most of the time, the injury or surgery happens before this point (Baker, Diamond, Nathan, etc.). I think pitchers get babied the next couple months. Unless someone is hiding something, I think all of our starters finished 2015 (Nolasco just barely).
  10. I have seen that logic before but I still don't buy it. A 2/12 contract to fill out your pen in modern MLB is not the time to start taking a firm stance on ROI. By thag logic, giving up prospects for the privilege of paying Jepsen a similar salary must have been a terrible move? Nobody blinks when you invest that kind of money in a starter coming back from injury, or an international guy. A reliever's potential upside is limited by his role, true, but he also often comes with a higher floor than those guys too.
  11. I don't think the Twins can stash a starter on the DL to open the season, I doubt the starter would agree to it. Unless you are predicting someone gets hurts between now and then, but how many spring training MLB SP injuries have we had? Probably less than 1 per year average, no? You are probably right on Tonkin. They repeatedly picked Stauffer among others over him last season, I don't think their opinion of him will change just because he is out of options.
  12. I agree that is probably points 1 and 2 of their plan (Perkins and Abad), but I am not so sure about #3 yet. As you note, O'Rourke was here in the 2nd half, he just wasn't used properly. They have thus far declined to use Rogers in relief despite obvious opportunity. Melotakis hasn't thrown a competitive pitch in 17 months now, and only had 16 IP at AA before then, so as much as they like him, I don't think he's competing for a spot this spring.
  13. I think the larger point stands -- the Twins bullpen was still very suspect in the 2nd half, and it's largely the same group projected here.
  14. Yes. Abad's and Nolasco's spots that should easily be in play for the kids. Tonkin and Fien too, probably -- the former has just never been trusted, and the latter is nearly priced out of his role anyway.
  15. I think Clippard has been pretty quiet. Many predicted he'd get 3 years, and he's resisted one year offers. I'd guess he'd have to settle soon for a 2 year deal for a little more than Bastardo? Or maybe he's waiting for an opportunity to close? He wasn't on top of my list this winter, but he's got to be considered as a value play now.
  16. To be fair, some of his work last year was as a reliever. Fangraphs has him at a 117 ERA- as a starter last year (with the FIP and xFIP to match), versus 54 as a reliever. (Lower is better for ERA-.) Maybe still not horrible, but closer to Kevin Correia 2014 than Kevin Correia 2013. Although one year at $7 mil for a reliever might have been nice too.
  17. Well, I will officially put my bullpen acquisition complaints on the shelf for now, and focus on what's to be done going forward. O'Rourke should already be penciled into a strict LOOGY role to open the year, he's shown enough vs LHB at all levels to deserve that, and he's almost 28 years old -- it's time to capitalize on his strengths, not work more on his weaknesses (vs RHB). I want to see Abad held to a VERY high standard in spring training. He's produced solid numbers the past 4 springs, and only produced one valuable season out of the bunch, so I want to see him dominate before he's allowed to make the roster. If he can't do that, let's move on -- we don't need him as a middling lower-leverage arm. http://m.mlb.com/player/472551/fernando-abad?year=2015&stats=career-s-pitching-mlb I also want to see our youngest options get lots of priority innings this spring. Not just Tonkin, Pressly, and Graham, who have already had a relatively decent amount of MLB opportunity, but Meyer (if not starting), Rogers, and Chargois. For that matter, 40-man roster status should not be a limiting factor, and Burdi should get strong consideration too. (Reed, Melotakis, and Williams are such extreme long shots for MLB opening day, we probably shouldn't invest many opportunities in them this spring, although they could be promoted aggressively later.) I'm resigned to the fact that Milone and/or Nolasco may make the opening day bullpen, but I'd prefer to move them aggressively. Nolasco in particular could be a candidate for release. They have usefulness as starter insurance, but their upside isn't so great as to keep them around forever waiting. May should be given consideration for any rotation openings, as should Berrios.
  18. But there is always that kind of month-to-month variation in player performance, they're not robots. Crediting those short-term variations to external factors is usually a fool's errand, especially for veterans who have long demonstrated similar variations in performance like Pelfrey and Santana.
  19. I had to look it up, but sure enough, Boyer at 47% inherited runners scored was well above league average (30%). If those "extra" inherited runners scored were added to his ERA, he'd be up to 3.32 ERA. Oh, and if he had the same percentage of "unearned" runs allowed as other Twins pitchers, he'd be up to 3.88 ERA (~107 ERA+ rather than his actual 167). Still, I don't think that's the reason Boyer is out of a job so far this winter. It's the fact that even when he has performed decently the past 2 years, his teams still haven't really trusted him in an important role for an extended period. That feels a lot like Abad's upside here too.
  20. And I have no problem with paying or even over-paying to be risk averse sometimes. Actually, signing a FA reliever this winter would have been paying to be risk averse -- there's a lot of risk to be mitigated in the current Twins 2016-2017 bullpen picture, especially for a team with legit contention aspirations. The Twins too often sit out the market waiting for a bargain, though, or are too eager to try avoiding the market entirely (Suzuki and Hughes extensions). The market can still yield valuable players on fair contracts, perhaps better than what you already have.
  21. Career 99 ERA+ starter posting a 104 (Santana), or a career 88 ERA+ starter posting a 97 (Pelfrey) doesn't need that complicated of an explanation.
  22. ERA+ is a nice shortcut, but it doesn't tell the whole story, especially for relievers. Among these three, Abad has seen the lowest leverage work, has the worst K rate, the worst performance vs LHB, etc. Sipp and Bastardo also had good seasons earlier in their career, and excellent playoff performances too. (I guess Abad did retire the only batter he faced in the 2014 wild card game. ) By ERA+ the last 3 seasons, Duensing has been 103, 118, and 98. Why not just bring him back too? There's a reason that Sipp and Bastardo got $6 mil for 2016, Duensing is still a FA, and Abad got cut instead of getting an estimated $1.5 mil in arbitration. Marginal wins are very important to teams that want to compete, which hopefully should include the Twins coming off an 83 win season in a wide open division.
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