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Mike Bates

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  1. On the one hand, I agree and sympathize with that point. After all, no amount of realistic free agent spending would have helped from 2011-2014. It is, indeed, far too easy to pin all the team’s struggles on their refusal to spend like the team in a mid-sized market that they ultimately are. Especially since the Twins did open up their wallet in both the 2013-2014 offseason and the 2014-2015 offseason. But they only opened it wide enough for Phil Hughes, Ricky Nolasco and Ervin Santana. And as great as Hughes’s 2014 worked for all involved, I think it’s pretty safe to say that the reasonable expectation for all three starters was that they’d be acceptable mid-rotation starters at best. All told, the Twins are going to spend $34.8 million, or roughly a third of their payroll, on these three pitchers with limited upside. And they paid essentially the going rate for all three of them. Now, don’t get me wrong, signing Hughes or Santana or, hell, even Nolasco isn’t enough to hamstring even a team that pretends they can’t spend money, like the Twins. However, Minnesota stacked these signings on top of one another, reducing their flexibility this year to the point where there isn’t room for more than one of higher-upside, lower-salary guys like Tyler Duffey, Trevor May or Jose Berrios in the starting rotation (and, even then, it probably necessitates shifting Nolasco to the bullpen). The inherent problem with the Twins’ spending isn’t the lack of it. It’s the systemic problem that seems to pervade the organization: complacency. The Twins have a profound lack of ambition in virtually everything they do. Rather than doing something radical and difficult, the team invariably takes the path of least resistance. Instead of attempting to sign a single free agent starter with a higher upside at some point over the last three years (like a Jordan Zimmermann, a Jon Lester or a Johnny Cueto), and maybe a relative lottery ticket in Hughes, the Twins took small bites at the apple. Rather than attempt to bolster the club at the trade deadline last year with a big acquisition, they only acquired Kevin Jepsen (which, admittedly, worked far better than it should have). Rather than preparing themselves for another season as a contender in 2016, the Twins held pat, adding two players while leaving the bullpen almost entirely untouched. Rather than exploring the market for Trevor Plouffe, they just move Miguel Sano to a position he’s never played before. I don’t know what causes this kind of complacency. Maybe it’s having an undemanding ownership, though I certainly prefer the Pohlad’s silent leadership to Jeffrey Loria or Arte Moreno’s meddling. Maybe it’s having such a stable front office, where everyone holds onto their jobs and the only way to move up is when someone else leaves for another organization. Maybe it’s a media landscape and a fan base that’s more eager to criticize players than the leadership which doesn’t put them in a position to succeed. But ultimately, it will prevent the club from seizing opportunities available to it. Maybe that's a postseason berth in 2016, or a chance to be a World Series favorite in 2018, or the ability to stay relevant as the window of contention begins to close sometime in the distant future. Anyway, in response to Bill, I don’t feel particularly compelled to “show my work” when it’s not at all clear that the Twins are doing much of their own.
  2. If you’re a pessimist like me, you look at the PECOTA projections released by Baseball Prospectus yesterdayand you see a confirmation of everything you’ve suspected this offseason. You see a team who has done nothing to build on its surprising run in 2015 and, in turn, has slipped to the bottom of a competitive AL Central division. You think about a thoroughly mediocre starting rotation led by Ervin Santana, Phil Hughes, and Kyle Gibson and you resign yourself to falling behind early. You think about the bullpen, populated with retreads and low upside plays like Casey Fien and Fernando Abad and you shudder about holding onto leads. You see an offense with potential, but one that will struggle to reach base.My low expectations for the Twins are probably a defense mechanism, preventing me from being disappointed in a bad year, and heightening my enjoyment of a surprise run. But it’s not fun to be doom and gloom all the time. There are reasons for hope in these projections. Let’s look at them in some detail: The trade for John Ryan Murphy works out. Baseball Prospectus sees Murphy as being worth a win in 2016 while playing 60 percent of the time behind the plate. That’s not great, of course. That said, it’s light years better than Kurt Suzuki’s projection and also better than PECOTA thinks Aaron Hicks will do for the Yankees. Eddie Rosario’s playing time This is counter-intuitive, given that PECOTA thinks Rosario will hit just .250/.280/.401 and will be more than a win below replacement while playing 85 percent of the time. First, it’s important to note that this projection is entirely reasonable for a guy who struggled in the minors and who had a .289 OBP last year with a 15/118 BB/K ratio and whose slugging was inflated by 15 triples (which will be difficult to repeat). Now, Rosario could certainly outperform that quite easily with even a slight improvement in his strike zone judgment, but I don’t doubt the numbers BP came up with. However, if Rosario is only hitting .250 with a .280 OBP, there simply is no way that he keeps his job. The only reason he played as much as he did in 2015 is that he was hitting .290 at the end of July. If he doesn’t start off hot, he’ll get shuffled to Rochester like Danny Santana and Kennys Vargas did, in favor of Max Kepler. No matter what happens, Rosario’s position won’t be as bad as BP thinks it will. They're sleeping on Eduardo Escobar To put it simply, Baseball Prospectus hasn’t caught up to Escobar: He has provided league average offense and good defense at a premium position when he’s been allowed to play there over the last two years. Instead, PECOTA pegs him as a replacement level shortstop. Now, Escobar’s on-base percentage is never going to be good, but it can be just OK enough that, when paired with his defense and his mid-range pop, he is a two- or three-win player. Trevor Plouffe is not a replacement-level third baseman I have no idea what PECOTA is doing here, pegging Plouffe to be worth less than a win. By their own metrics, he’s been worth in excess of two wins in each of the last two years. Assuming he’s going to more than halve his production just when he turns 30 makes no sense to me. Where the hell is Jose Berrios? For some reason, Baseball Prospectus has projected that Ricky Nolasco is going to be part of the starting rotation and doesn’t think that Jose Berrios is going to throw any innings for the Twins in 2016. Barring injury, there’s simply no chance of that happening. Berrios will be up in June at the latest and will get in at least 100 innings for a club desperate for some upside on the mound. Depending on how he adjusts, Berrios could be worth between one and two wins for the club after he debuts, especially as he pushes a less deserving arm to the bullpen or back to Rochester. Now, it’s not all good news. PECOTA, for instance, projects Byron Buxton to be worth four and a half wins and to play 85 percent of the time in center field. I’m finding it increasingly hard to believe that the Twins will commit to Buxton out of spring training, and there’s a good chance that any kind of a slow start will exile him to Rochester until late June. If that happens, the Twins will lose a ton of value on defense, and probably on offense as well, especially if they try to make do with Danny Santana, Oswaldo Arcia, and/or Carlos Quentin in his place. Enough, probably, to give back almost everything they're going to gain from the rays of hope I outlined above. Sorry to end on such a bummer. But I did warn you; it's my nature. Click here to view the article
  3. My low expectations for the Twins are probably a defense mechanism, preventing me from being disappointed in a bad year, and heightening my enjoyment of a surprise run. But it’s not fun to be doom and gloom all the time. There are reasons for hope in these projections. Let’s look at them in some detail: The trade for John Ryan Murphy works out. Baseball Prospectus sees Murphy as being worth a win in 2016 while playing 60 percent of the time behind the plate. That’s not great, of course. That said, it’s light years better than Kurt Suzuki’s projection and also better than PECOTA thinks Aaron Hicks will do for the Yankees. Eddie Rosario’s playing time This is counter-intuitive, given that PECOTA thinks Rosario will hit just .250/.280/.401 and will be more than a win below replacement while playing 85 percent of the time. First, it’s important to note that this projection is entirely reasonable for a guy who struggled in the minors and who had a .289 OBP last year with a 15/118 BB/K ratio and whose slugging was inflated by 15 triples (which will be difficult to repeat). Now, Rosario could certainly outperform that quite easily with even a slight improvement in his strike zone judgment, but I don’t doubt the numbers BP came up with. However, if Rosario is only hitting .250 with a .280 OBP, there simply is no way that he keeps his job. The only reason he played as much as he did in 2015 is that he was hitting .290 at the end of July. If he doesn’t start off hot, he’ll get shuffled to Rochester like Danny Santana and Kennys Vargas did, in favor of Max Kepler. No matter what happens, Rosario’s position won’t be as bad as BP thinks it will. They're sleeping on Eduardo Escobar To put it simply, Baseball Prospectus hasn’t caught up to Escobar: He has provided league average offense and good defense at a premium position when he’s been allowed to play there over the last two years. Instead, PECOTA pegs him as a replacement level shortstop. Now, Escobar’s on-base percentage is never going to be good, but it can be just OK enough that, when paired with his defense and his mid-range pop, he is a two- or three-win player. Trevor Plouffe is not a replacement-level third baseman I have no idea what PECOTA is doing here, pegging Plouffe to be worth less than a win. By their own metrics, he’s been worth in excess of two wins in each of the last two years. Assuming he’s going to more than halve his production just when he turns 30 makes no sense to me. Where the hell is Jose Berrios? For some reason, Baseball Prospectus has projected that Ricky Nolasco is going to be part of the starting rotation and doesn’t think that Jose Berrios is going to throw any innings for the Twins in 2016. Barring injury, there’s simply no chance of that happening. Berrios will be up in June at the latest and will get in at least 100 innings for a club desperate for some upside on the mound. Depending on how he adjusts, Berrios could be worth between one and two wins for the club after he debuts, especially as he pushes a less deserving arm to the bullpen or back to Rochester. Now, it’s not all good news. PECOTA, for instance, projects Byron Buxton to be worth four and a half wins and to play 85 percent of the time in center field. I’m finding it increasingly hard to believe that the Twins will commit to Buxton out of spring training, and there’s a good chance that any kind of a slow start will exile him to Rochester until late June. If that happens, the Twins will lose a ton of value on defense, and probably on offense as well, especially if they try to make do with Danny Santana, Oswaldo Arcia, and/or Carlos Quentin in his place. Enough, probably, to give back almost everything they're going to gain from the rays of hope I outlined above. Sorry to end on such a bummer. But I did warn you; it's my nature.
  4. In the wake of MySpace founder Tom Anderson’s offer to pay for Tim Lincecum to return to the Giants, other celebrities have been similarly urging their hometown nines to make moves, and offering to foot the bill. We, at Twins Daily, have intercepted one such offer: Seems legit. Click here to view the article
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