June 6, 2011
Twins Notes: Brooms, doghouses, soldiers, reinforcements, and pain
Some notes while being thankful that the Royals are still the Royals, at least for a bit longer ...
• Trevor Plouffe may have set a record for the shortest time between replacing someone who was in the doghouse to being buried so deep in the same doghouse that the original guy was freed. Called up from Triple-A on May 3 when the Twins had seen enough of Alexi Casilla as a starting shortstop, Plouffe went 2-for-4 with a homer in his first game to get everyone's hopes up about his strong start at Rochester taking precedence over seven seasons of mediocrity.
Three weeks later he was benched and then sent back to Triple-A after hitting .200/.310/.383 with a varied assortment of defensive miscues. Plouffe struggled on both sides of the ball, but ultimately .200/.310/.383 is almost exactly the type of production you'd expect from someone with a .255/.306/.430 career mark in 307 games at Triple-A and his defense at shortstop has always drawn mixed reviews at best. He played like he should have been expected to play.
Based on Plouffe's track record he projected as a utility man, which is why he ranked just 32nd on my annual list of the Twins' prospects. That his predictable struggles when thrust into the lineup as a starting shortstop resulted in heavy public criticism from Ron Gardenhire and harsh words from the mainstream media shows just how desperate the Twins were for middle infield help and how willing people were to overlook years of mediocrity because of a good month.
• Meanwhile, after hitting .167 in April to lose his starting job Casilla has batted .329/.409/.447 in 29 games since May. Apparently he was worried that people might cease referring to him an enigma. Not only did Casilla escape from the doghouse and move back into the starting lineup, Gardenhire reversed course and resumed playing him at shortstop even when Matt Tolbert is also in the lineup.
Unfortunately we've seen hot stretches like this from Casilla before and, much like with Plouffe, there's a long enough track record of mediocrity that one strong month shouldn't change his long-term outlook. Casilla was a career .249/.306/.327 hitter going into this year and he's now hitting .262/.335/.352 this season. His recent play and the Twins' lack of alternatives certainly makes turning back to Casilla a worthwhile move, but he's still not a quality everyday player.
• To replace Plouffe on the roster the Twins called up Brian Dinkelman from Triple-A, which is interesting because in doing so they had to place him on the 40-man roster for the first time at age 27 and bypass a superior left-handed-hitting prospect in Rene Tosoni. Perhaps the Twins weren't impressed with Tosoni during his previous 13-game debut or maybe they wanted the added versatility Dinkelman has as a part-time infielder, but either way it's a surprising move.
Dinkelman has shown some flashes of potential since being a sixth-round pick in 2006, ranking 39th on my list of the Twins' prospects in 2008, but he's always been a marginal prospect and was left unprotected for multiple Rule 5 drafts. He has enough bat to possibly be an asset at second base, but his glove likely isn't good enough to play there regularly and about half of his action in the minors during the past three seasons has come as a corner outfielder.
He got the call-up after batting .296/.374/.402 in 50 games at Triple-A, but Dinkelman hit just .265/.336/.379 in 137 games at Triple-A last season and also hit just .282/.359/.413 in 181 games at Double-A. If he can play passable defense at second base and third base Dinkelman could be a moderately useful left-handed bench bat, but if he's more of a corner outfielder with emergency infield skills the odds of him hitting well enough to justify a roster spot are slim.
• Joe Mauer and Tsuyoshi Nishioka are finally nearing returns to the Twins' lineup, but in the meantime Jason Kubel and Jim Thome are the latest in a long line of regulars to land on the disabled list. Neither injury is believed to be serious, but then again initial recovery timetables have lost all meaning by now. Kubel and Thome are the only hitters on the team with an OPS above .760, which turns an awful lineup into one that might not even lead Triple-A in scoring.
Ben Revere should get a chance to play nearly every day with Kubel and Thome out, which will go a long way toward improving the outfield defense, especially if Gardenhire can talk Delmon Young into accepting starts at designated hitter. Revere's bat is a question mark, but this can give the Twins a chance to evaluate his readiness for a possible starting job in 2012. Because of his defense Revere won't have to hit a ton to be an asset while making the minimum salary.
• Overlooked in the Twins' struggles is that the never-ending injuries have sapped Rochester's depth, so they acquired Jeremy Reed from the Brewers for "future considerations" that will be about as valuable as a bucket of baseballs (give or take the bucket). Hardly huge news, but once upon a time Reed was an elite prospect. He was the White Sox's second rounder in 2002 and hit .373 with twice as many walks (70) as strikeouts (36) and 45 steals in his first full year.
Baseball America ranked Reed as the game's 25th-best prospect in 2004 and that June he was traded to the Mariners along with Miguel Olivo and Mike Morse for Freddy Garcia and Ben Davis. Reed made his MLB debut in September, hitting .397 in 18 games as a 23-year-old, and Seattle made him the Opening Day center fielder in 2005. And he hasn't hit since, batting just .245/.301/.348 in 465 games with the Mariners, Mets, Blue Jays, and Brewers.
Reed's power never developed, his speed failed to translate to base-stealing, and his contact skills were good rather than great, leaving a typical fifth outfielder. And even that's optimistic at this point, as Reed has hit just .263/.330/.390 in 123 games at Triple-A since last season. I've always liked Reed, ranking him higher than most as a prospect and suggesting in 2007 that the Twins consider him as a low-cost Torii Hunter replacement, but now he's just filler.
• Speaking of injuries sapping minor-league depth, two of the Twins' best prospects recently went under the knife. Joe Benson, who was playing well at Double-A after ranking sixth on my list, will miss a month following left knee surgery. Angel Morales' luck is even worse, as the outfielder who ranked 11th on my list won't play at all this season and could miss a chunk of 2012 after Tommy John elbow surgery that he initially tried to avoid with rest and rehab.
Benson and Morales join Aaron Hicks, Alex Wimmers, Oswaldo Arcia, and David Bromberg (plus Nishioka, technically) as preseason top-15 prospects to miss time already, which would be pretty remarkable if not for Nishioka, Kubel, Thome, Young, Mauer, Francisco Liriano, Joe Nathan, Glen Perkins, Kevin Slowey, Jose Mijares, and Jason Repko each spending time on the big-league disabled list. And we're only two months into a six-month season. Crazy.
• This year's draft is a three-day event, starting tonight with the first round and compensation round. By virtue of last season's 94-68 record the Twins' first selection is 30th overall and then they also pick 50th as compensation for losing Orlando Hudson and 55th as compensation for losing Jesse Crain. As usual I'm expecting the Twins to pick high school outfielders and college pitchers while hoping for a college middle infielder. Check back tomorrow for some analysis.
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Do you know how bad our bullpen is? Gardy let Duensing throw 113 pitches today and let Pavano throw 112 on Friday. I thought the 100 pitch rule was as sacrosanct as batting a middle infielder second.
Matt Tolbert is the latest Twin to get his average over .200. Suck it, Mario Mendoza!
As long as the Royals are in the division, you know we won’t finish last. As someone who casually follows the Brewers and has die-hard Brewer fan Wisconsin relatives, I can tell you that Ned Yost is worth an extra 10 losses per year to any team he manages.
Comment by Pedro Munoz — June 5, 2011 @ 11:33 pm
It won’t be long before you can’t count on the Royals to be the division punching bag, anymore. Like, maybe as soon as next year. Meanwhile, Bill Smith has an awful lot of challenges (and headaches) coming before him, and not much ready talent on the farm to help solve his problems.
Comment by frightwig — June 6, 2011 @ 12:41 am
“Ben Revere should get a chance to play nearly every day with Kubel and Thome out, which will go a long way toward improving the outfield defense, especially if Gardenhire can talk Delmon Young into accepting starts at designated hitter.”
It’s hard to imagine it could get much better. UZR has the Twins ranked as the fourth-best OF defense in baseball, third best in the AL.
Comment by SoCalTwinsfan — June 6, 2011 @ 1:43 am
Hi Aaron – Great work with the blog. Do you know anything about the Twins long term plans with Brian Dozier? He is playing really well (.322/.423/.472) at Fort Myers and also plays a position (shortstop or 2nd base) of need in the Twins organization. I don’t know why we don’t hear more about him in terms of possibly being a productive Twin in the future. Thanks.
Comment by Kevin Malphurs — June 6, 2011 @ 8:18 am
Now that the Twins have called up Brian Dinkleman, can Ryan Seacrast be far behind?
Comment by Tom — June 6, 2011 @ 8:28 am
While I believe he is just going to be another mediocre outfielder, it was nice to see “Babe” Dinkelman get a chance. If he is 27, can we still refer to him as the “Babe?”
Comment by Tom W. — June 6, 2011 @ 8:35 am
How funny was it Saturday with FSN finding any and every excuse to get the camera on Dinkelman’s parents (and his girlfriend in a cleavage-rocking summer dress) any chance they had? Particularly when they were jumping up and down and cheering.
Comment by TMW — June 6, 2011 @ 9:38 am
It drove me nuts to hear Gardy (and Smith) blast Plouffe and Casilla. They are not playing well but the reason the Twins suck has been the play (or lack of it) by its highest paid and most experienced players. Mauer, Morneau, Cuddyer, Young, Pavano, Nathan, and Capps. To expect the likes of Plouffe, Casilla, Butera/Holm/Revere, Tolbert, Hughes and the rest of the Rochester squad to determine your success is ludicrous. To blame them is deluded and mean. Guys have been hurt and sick so hopefully (yes, we still have it) things will improve. But we need those veterans to carry the load.
Comment by curt — June 6, 2011 @ 9:48 am
“Casilla was a career .249/.306/.327 hitter going into this year … he’s still not a quality everyday player.”
Isn’t this pretty average for a short stop? I thought the argument was made that J.J. Hardy should have been kept because he was an above-average-hitting short stop at ~.260-something.
Comment by Jeff — June 6, 2011 @ 10:13 am
Speaking of outfield defense, Baseball Reference currently has Denard Span tied for second (with Matt Joyce and Josh Beckett) in A.L. WAR, behind only Jose Bautista, due in large part to his 1.8 dWAR. Maybe he can play CF after all?
Comment by Jason w — June 6, 2011 @ 10:14 am
Great blog man! Is it past the point that they can call up Gibson without a hit against his arbitration years?
Comment by Matty Robinson — June 6, 2011 @ 10:15 am
Jeff, the median SS last year had an OPS around 700. It isn’t just batting average, but OBP and SLG. Had Casilla posted his career OPS last year, only 2 SS would have been worse than him among all qualifiers. In addition to his sub-par offense, his defense has been below Zero WAR for 4 of the 5 years he’s been in the majors (counting this year).
The OF defense is a mystery to me. Somehow, UZR has Young at a positive value for the first time in his career (not counting 2006 when he only played 30 games, which is about how many he has played this year, coincidentally).
Comment by mike wants WINS — June 6, 2011 @ 10:59 am
I’m still going to bang the ‘Casilla has value when he is not handed a starting job’ drum. He hits better when nothing is expected of him. Stress is part of the game. He can’t handle it. But the guy has the ability to hit when it’s not on him. The supporting samples from 2008, 2010, and forming in 2011 are getting bigger.
Casilla is not a major leaguer worthy of a starting job, but I’m ok with him so long as he’s properly utilized. He’s a useful guy off the bench and an injury stopgap.
Comment by TMW — June 6, 2011 @ 11:28 am
Agreed, Casilla is a fine utility player.
Comment by mike wants WINS — June 6, 2011 @ 11:54 am
That was a very odd series (with KC). Probably better offensive production than any TWO previous series, and most of it by the bench players and injury call-ups. Repko got 3 RBI on two hits after going 0 for May. It made as much sense as Dick Bremer’s frequent comments about how we are gaining on Cleveland.
Comment by Dave T — June 6, 2011 @ 1:46 pm
What if Casilla keeps hitting and playing solid defense? When Mauer and others say he has the talent to be an All-Star…maybe they know what they’re talking about,
Comment by David — June 6, 2011 @ 2:24 pm
Don’t worry, he won’t.
Comment by TMW — June 6, 2011 @ 3:36 pm
Using ‘sapping’ twice in an article? Well played Gleeman, well played
Comment by SD Dave — June 6, 2011 @ 6:50 pm