RE: Players and prospects III (Full Version)

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Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/4/2016 11:53:51 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Black 47

Did they shut down Mejia? Haven't seen him in a box score lately.


I believe so, Twins-imposed innings limit.

Berrios is due to start per the probables Monday at Roch.

But he's already listed as an available player at TField today.




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/4/2016 12:20:50 PM)

FTM closed out the year today with a 5-2 win

Murray 2-4/Solo HR (4)/2RBI, Kihle 3-3/double/Solo HR(2)/2R,Perez 2-4/RBI

Steele 8-11 7IP 4H/2R/2BB/7K
Curtiss IP BB/K
Anderson IP K/Save(10)

FTM finishes 70-68 for the year.36-33 in the second half of the season, 4 games out.




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/4/2016 12:26:11 PM)

GCL Twins finished 32-29, missed the playoffs

Aaron Whitefield(OF) hit .370, had the most hits (57) and stolen bases(31) in 51 games.
Gorge Munoz(SS-3B) had 13 double
Roni Tapia had 3 HRs(LF)
Draft pick Jose Miranda the most RBIs(20)

Pitching-wise Huscar Ynoa had 51 k's in 51IP/12 walks(44 hits)
Taylor Clemensia had 47K's in 43IP/26 walks(27 hits)
Bo Hellquist had 5 wins in 10 starts, an ERA of 2.26, 49hits/7BB/46K in 52IP




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/5/2016 2:00:15 PM)

Right now the @crkernels have the Midwest League batting champion (Luis Arraez) and RBI champ (Zander Wiel). #MWL

Luis Arraez's .347 BA 2nd-highest in modern-day CR history. Howie Kendrick hit .367 in '04, tho in only 75 games. Arraez has played 114.




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/5/2016 3:09:50 PM)

Rochester falls 7-0 in the 2016 season finale. The Red Wings finish 81-63, the most wins in a season since 1997




CPAMAN -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/5/2016 5:06:14 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

Rochester falls 7-0 in the 2016 season finale. The Red Wings finish 81-63, the most wins in a season since 1997


That bodes well for the Twins next year. A lot of AAA players who can move up........




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/5/2016 6:04:45 PM)

Arraez is MWL's youngest batting champ since @MikeTrout & Wiel finished 2nd in HR (19, all in his last 90 games) #Kernels2k16




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/6/2016 9:47:07 AM)

Sunday closed out the seasons for all but 1 team

Eliz was eliminated in the playoffs, 8-6

Diaz 4-5/2doubles/SOlo HR/2R, Carrier 3-5/R/RBI, Minier 2-4/BB/R/RBI, Hamilton 2-5/triple/R, Rortvedt 2-4/BB

Beeker 4IP 11H/4R/4K
Tribby 0-1 2.1IP 3H/3R/BB/2K
Quezada 0IP 1-1 IRS 3H/R
Grogan 1.2IP H/0-2 IRS


CRapids tuned up for the playoffs with a 12-2 win

Wiel 3-4/BB/2HRs(19)/2R/7RBI(86), Davis 1-3/BB/2R HR(9)/2R, Fernandez 2-3/double/BB/2R, Silva 2-4/2R, Guzman 1-4/BB/3R/RBI

Del Rosario 2IP H/R/BB/2K
Poppe 1-1 3IP 2H/2K
Davis IP 2BB/2K
Cordy IP K
Cederoth IP 2H/UER/K
Hackimer IP H/2BB/3K


Roch ended the year with a 7-0 loss

4 hits

Hurlbut 0-2 4IP 12H/7R/4K
Ramirez 2.2IP 2H/5K 0-2 IRS
Reed 1.1IP 0-1 IRS H/K

Chatt wrapped it up with a 2-1 win

Goodrun 1-3/BB/Solo HR(6)/2R, Vielma 2-4, Hicks 1-3/BB/RBI

Jorge 3-5 9IP 7H/R/2BB/3K




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/6/2016 9:52:26 AM)

Eliz finished36-31

Hitting: Lopez .337 in 92 at bats before promotion. Dias .310 in 174 at bats Kirilloff .306 in 216ABS(came up w/sore elbow at the end)

Diaz had 15 doubles, Carrier 14
Minier had 10HRs, Blankenhorn and Diaz with 9
Diaz drove in 37 runs, Kirilloff 33 and Minier 32
Hamilton 38BB/44K in 140 at bats, Minier 24BB/62Ks in 157 at bats, Lopen 21BB/19K

Carlini had 50.1IP 63H 10BB/41K
Wells 40hits in 47.1IP 178BB/59K, Robinson, in the bullpen 33IP 91H/34BB/52K




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/6/2016 10:10:48 AM)

Roch finished 81-63

Garver hit .329 in 76 at bats, Rosario .319 in 160, Buxton .305 in 190

Tovar had 24 doubles, Walker had 22
Polanco and Kepler each had 6 triples, Walker had 5
Walker hit 27 HRs, Vargas 15, Palka 13 in 54 games
Walker drove in 75, Vargas 58
Vargas drew 66 Walks, 89Ks
Walker drew 44 walks, 202 K's in 478 at bats

Wheeler had 145IP 11-6/3.52 ERS, 137H/37BB/113K
Berrios 10-5/2.51ERA 111 IP 74H/36BB/125K


Chatt finished 75-65
Granite had a .295 average, scored 86 runs 8 triples/ stole 56 bases
DJ Hicks 27 doubles, Garver 25
Granite 8 triples, Michael 7, Corcino 6(in 50 games)
Palka hit 21 HRs(34 between AA and AAA) Garver 11
Garver drove in 66,Palka 65, Hicks 59
Harrison drew 61 walks, 126Ks, Hicks 52Bb/109K, Garver 43/86K, Palka 38BB/100K(in 300 at bats)

Slegers 145IP 10-7/3.41ERA 137H/46BB/104K
Hulrbut 136IP 161H/26BB/90K
Stewart 9-6 in 92IP 91H/44BB/47K
Gonsalves 8-1 in 13 starts, 74.1IP 1.82ERA 43H/37BB/89K

FTM finished 70-68

Wade hit .318 in 110 at bats, Gordon .291 in 461 at bats
Gordon had 23 doubles, Maloney/Vavra 17
Gordon 6 triples, Corcino 5(in 267 at bats)
Vavray 8HRs, White 7, Corcino 6
Gordon drove in 52, Vavra 40
Gordon stole 19 bases, English 10 in 33 games
Vavra 38BB/83K, Pres 31BB/41K in 69 games, Gordon 23BB/87K

Steele 132IP 8-11 137H/40BB/85K
Rosario 94IP 6-6 102H/34BB/68K
Jay 69IP 5-5 64H/21BB/68K
Gonsalves 65IP 5-4/2.33 ERA 43H/20BB/66K
Steward 51IP 3-2/2.61ERA 39H/19BB/44K


CRapids finished 78-61

Arraez led the league at .347, Molina .300
Arraez 31 doubles, Wiel 27, Fernandez 26
Wiel had 8 triples, Miller/Valera 4
Wiel hit 19 hrs, Fernandez 10
Wiel led the league with 86 rbi's, Arraez had 66

Wiel also had 55BB/125k (501 at bats), Wade had 44BB/27K in 207 at bats

Gibbons 107IP 115H/47BB/69K
Stashak 105IP 90H/30BB/80K
DRod 101IP 98H/38BB/93K




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/6/2016 10:12:46 AM)

pitcher combo season totals of note

Gonsalves 140IP 2.06ERA in 24 starts, 86H/57BB/155K

Jay 83IP 3.33ERA 77H/26BBB/77K

Romero 90.1IP 1.89ERA in 16 starts 66H/15BB/90K




CPAMAN -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/6/2016 10:21:36 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

pitcher combo season totals of note

Gonsalves 140IP 2.06ERA in 24 starts, 86H/57BB/155K

Jay 83IP 3.33ERA 77H/26BBB/77K

Romero 90.1IP 1.89ERA in 16 starts 66H/15BB/90K


Thanks Ed "again" for providing everyone with the minor league stats and updates for the 2016 season. Strange that a player depleted Rochester team ends up with a respectable W/L record while the ML team is in last place overall. [&o][&o]




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/6/2016 10:57:03 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: CPAMAN

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

pitcher combo season totals of note

Gonsalves 140IP 2.06ERA in 24 starts, 86H/57BB/155K

Jay 83IP 3.33ERA 77H/26BBB/77K

Romero 90.1IP 1.89ERA in 16 starts 66H/15BB/90K


Thanks Ed "again" for providing everyone with the minor league stats and updates for the 2016 season. Strange that a player depleted Rochester team ends up with a respectable W/L record while the ML team is in last place overall. [&o][&o]


Thanks, no problem

Was one of the busiest years for player movement in the minors. One of the bright spots in a dismal year. MN moved guys up, LOTS of guys, and lopped off some dead weight along the way.




SoMnFan -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/6/2016 1:57:17 PM)

Mandalero was right all along.
Wait, no he wasn't.
Anyway, he's happy now. [:D]




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/6/2016 1:58:25 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Mandalero was right all along.
Wait, no he wasn't.
Anyway, he's happy now. [:D]



Sure is. He is no longer the sports reporter [;)]




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/6/2016 6:58:39 PM)

Cedar Rapids Gazette:


CEDAR RAPIDS — You’d think selling cars and managing a professional baseball team would have nothing to do with each other.

You’re hawking the latest Chevy Malibu, finagling with a customer over price and trying to get them to add rust proofing. You’re deciding whether to remove your starting pitcher and what to do to get your cleanup hitter out of a slump.

It’s apples and oranges. Or maybe not.

If you talk to Jake Mauer, the former has helped him with the latter, and vice versa. The Cedar Rapids Kernels manager has hawked vehicles for years in the offseason, helping out his brother, Billy, at his dealership in the Twin Cities.

“It sounds funny, but working in the car business maybe helps me here. And my baseball mentality probably helps in the car business,” said Mauer. “The competitiveness and all that. Bargaining, talking, dealing with people. You’re not always going to agree with an umpire, you’re not always going to see eye to eye with the guys. But we’ve got to figure out a way to make it work. Different situations arise that you’ve got to be able to work through.”

Mauer’s Kernels begin the Midwest League playoffs Wednesday night at Wisconsin. The best-of-three Western Division semifinal series shifts to Cedar Rapids for Games 2 and 3, if needed, Thursday and Friday nights.

This is the fourth year the Kernels have been an affiliate of the Minnesota Twins, the fourth year Mauer has led them. The fourth year they’ve qualified for the postseason.

The 37-year-old best known by most as Twins star Joe Mauer’s big brother is carving out quite a career himself in baseball. He is the second-winningest manager in Cedar Rapids history, picking up his 300th victory in mid-August.

Mauer is 316-242 here. He, pitching coach J.P. Martinez and hitting coach Brian Dinkelman have done exemplary work with a team that isn’t rife with a bunch of big-named prospects.

Cedar Rapids finished the regular season with a 78-61 record.

“Obviously winning is more fun than losing,” Mauer said. “Off of this club, if we can get three, four or five guys to Minnesota, or just to the big leagues period, that’s what we’re here for. What we tell these guys is not everybody here is going to make it to Minnesota, but if you can do something one night and show somebody something, (maybe) you can make it with another team. That’d be a feather in your cap. You’re all here, you all have an opportunity, everybody is going to play. There’s nobody that’s not getting innings or not getting at-bats. It’s up to you with what you’re going to do with them.”

Mauer was drafted by the Twins in 2001 and played five seasons in the minor leagues. He then immediately went into coaching, assigned to his first managing gig in 2008 with the Rookie-level Gulf Coast League Twins.

Two seasons there were followed by a stint with high-A Fort Myers.

“I wanted to stay in the game, there’s no doubt. I was done at age 27, and that’s relatively young,” Mauer said. “It all kind of happened quickly. Literally, I took my stuff out of the player’s clubhouse in Fort Myers and went over to the coach’s side. I got released, and I got hired within, like, five seconds. So it was kind of a whirlwind that first year. You’re kind of quiet, just seeing what’s going on, how things operate. That was the toughest thing, not being able to do anything. You can’t grab a bat or catch a ball. That probably took a year or two to figure out.”

But he figured it out and developed his style. Mauer generally is easy going with his players (with everyone, really) and has their respect.

“I think he just keeps everyone at ease and confident,” said Kernels first baseman Zander Wiel. “He never gets down on a guy. We can tell that he believes in all of us, and he wants what’s best for us as a team and as individuals. Obviously he’s got rich baseball bloodlines. It’s been really an honor to play for him. He’s been a great manager and a great leader all year.”

“You’ve got to just prepare them and let them play,” Mauer said. “I’ll still get worked up if we’re terrible, or excited sometimes if we’re doing good. But you try to temper both feelings. We play so much, you can’t get too excited, and you can’t get too down ... Just keep your approach, maintain it, and see how things shake out.”

It will be interesting to see how things shake out moving forward. The Twins have fired General Manager Terry Ryan, and whomever is hired as his replacement, he’ll want his own guys in place.

That includes on the player development side. With his track record, it’d seem dumb for the Twins not to retain Mauer, let alone promote him.

He helps develop players, moves them on and wins games. That’s checking all the boxes.

“You learn something every night,” he said. “I’ve learned things from Brian and J.P., whether they know it or not. That’s the thing about baseball. Some of the old way of thinking, guys don’t want to change. The game has changed so much even from when I started in 2001. It is completely different now than it was. It’s like the dinosaur. The reason dinosaurs are extinct is because they couldn’t adapt. It’s the same thing with baseball. There are going to be different ideas. Are you going to buy in all the way? Well, maybe not.

“Look at our video here, for instance. We didn’t have video when I first started. We had VHS tapes, even in Double-A. There is just so much information we’ve got now. It can short circuit your brain box, you could over-expose guys to it all. But you takes bits and pieces, take bits and pieces of it here and there. You figure out which guys can maybe handle more and which guys maybe not so much.”

Even after four seasons in Cedar Rapids, Mauer remains optimistic about his future in the game. He was asked where he sees himself in five years.

It’s not managing the Kernels.

“Hopefully in the big leagues. That’d be nice,” he said. “That’s still the goal, in whatever capacity. Managing, there are only 30 of those jobs, so you’ve got to be realistic with it. What it all boils down to is I really enjoy it. I like being around the guys, and I like teaching the game of baseball. I like competing. Really, as long as my kids are happy, my wife’s doing a great job minding things at home and allowing me to chase my dream here, I’ll keep going. As long as everything is fine and (wife) Rachel is fine with everything, we’ll kind of see where the road ends up. Hopefully that’s in the big leagues.”




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/6/2016 7:00:32 PM)

Rochester paper

The 2016 International League season came to an end on Monday for the Rochester Red Wings.

Here are the top six things we learned since the first pitch on April 7:

1. Adam Brett Walker can hit a baseball very, very far. When he makes contact.

The Triple-A rookie outfielder hit 27 home runs, second most in the IL, and was named the team's most valuable player. But he also struck out 202 times, breaking the IL record of 199 set by Richmond's Dave Nicholson in 1968.

This was the first time in five minor-league seasons that Walker didn't lead his league in homers but he still flirted with 30. The question heading into 2017: Does his power translate to the majors, or will strikeouts prevent him from becoming a full-time big-leaguer?

"If he improves his discipline and makes the adjustment of not getting himself out as often, then he becomes very interesting," Wings manager Mike Quade said.

If Walker makes similar improvement at the plate as he did as a left fielder, then there is reason to believe he has a future. His throwing, a glaring deficiency in spring training, is markedly better. So much better that he had seven assists this season.

"He made that a priority," Quade said, "and he deserves so much credit."

2. Jose Berrios needs to find pinpoint control.

In Triple-A, when the hard-throwing right-hander made a mistake, he often still recorded an out. When he has missed his target and left a pitch out over the plate, or too high in the strike zone, the baseball was lashed somewhere far.

In 17 starts for the Red Wings, Berrios was 10-5 with a 2.51 ERA, stingy .191 opponent's batting average and terrific 0.99 WHIP (walks plus hits per innings pitched).

But in 10 starts for the Twins he is 2-5 with an almost unimaginable 9.21 ERA. Opponents are hitting .331 against him, and his WHIP is exactly double what it was with the Wings.

Miss in the big leagues and it means trouble. The good thing: He's only 22. Improvement is expected from the Twins' top pitching prospect.

"Berrios needs to step up and continue to get better," Quade said.

3. Pitchers can rebound.

When Jason Wheeler was demoted to Double-A Chattanooga in June of 2015, there was major questions about his ability to pitch in Triple-A or beyond. His final stats with the Red Wings last season: a 1-7 record and 6.58 ERA, and opponents were hitting a robust .324 against him.

This year he was a new pitcher, thanks to a reinvented slider and more confidence in his fastball. Called up on April 27, Wheeler went 11-6 with a 3.53 ERA and a .245 opponent's batting average. He also started for the IL in the Triple-A All-Star Game.

4. Daniel Palka also can hit a baseball very far. If he hits it.

He's in many ways the left-handed version of Walker. Palka was promoted from Double-A on July 7 and hit 13 homers in just 54 games for the Red Wings. Combined with the 21 he hit in 79 games for Chattanooga, he finished with 34 HRs in 133 games.

But he also struck out 186 times, including 86 K's in 203 Triple-A at-bats. He had at least one strikeout in 51 of his 54 games.
Now that he's had a two-month taste of Triple-A, a full season with the Wings will provide a better barometer of his potential.

5. Catcher Mitch Garver isn't MLB-ready, but he has a future behind the plate.

The Twins are in desperate need of catching help. Garver isn't ready to step in next season, but he did a credible job for the Wings following his Aug. 9 call-up from Chattanooga.

In 22 games he hit .329, had a .381 on-base percentage and an .815 OPS (on-base plus slugging). In Double-A those numbers were .257, .334, .753.

The defensive part of the game is what will make or break him.

"I think he's got a chance," Quade said. "He still has some smoothing out to do but he called a good game and blocked pretty well.

"When you think catchers, you think the guy in Kansas City, Salvador Perez, or the guy in St. Louis, Yadier Molina. He's not going to be that but he doesn't have to be."

6. Bad teams can make the IL playoffs.

The Red Wings finished 81-63 but lost the wild-card race to Lehigh Valley (85-58). Meanwhile, the Gwinnett Braves are playoff bound with a 65-78 record.

"There are no challenge flags for somebody getting in at (13) under," Quade said.




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/7/2016 10:24:21 AM)

@TheSGonsalves was also named to @BaseballAmerica's 1st Team.




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/8/2016 6:52:33 AM)

17 hits for CRapids, 16 strikeouts, 11-3 win in their playoff opener. game 2 tonight

Arraez 3-5/2triples/2RBI, Wiel 3-5/double/triple/R/RBI, Blankenhord 2-4/double/triple/R/RBI, Fernandez 2-5/double/R/2RBI, Scoggins 2-5/R/RBI/SB(1), Molina 2-5/R, Davis 1-3/2BB/R/RBI, Ibarra 1-4/BB/R, Garcia 1-4

(that's right, everyone had at least 1 hit)

Wells (19 year old Aussie) WP 5IP 4H/3R/2BB/9K
Cederoth 3IP 5K
Davis IP 2K




twinsfan -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/8/2016 8:43:47 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

17 hits for CRapids, 16 strikeouts, 11-3 win in their playoff opener. game 2 tonight

Arraez 3-5/2triples/2RBI, Wiel 3-5/double/triple/R/RBI, Blankenhord 2-4/double/triple/R/RBI, Fernandez 2-5/double/R/2RBI, Scoggins 2-5/R/RBI/SB(1), Molina 2-5/R, Davis 1-3/2BB/R/RBI, Ibarra 1-4/BB/R, Garcia 1-4

(that's right, everyone had at least 1 hit)

Wells (19 year old Aussie) WP 5IP 4H/3R/2BB/9K
Cederoth 3IP 5K
Davis IP 2K

This is the year they win it all. They've made the playoffs 4 years in a row, and they have made deeper runs each year leading into this one.




MDK -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/8/2016 9:41:12 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

Roch finished 81-63

Garver hit .329 in 76 at bats,


With JR finally getting the bulb to turn on in Rochester and his brief yet decent performance at the MLB level and Garver continued improvement, catching seems to be a lot more stable for the Twins than earlier this spring when the Murphy trade appeared to be a bust. Centeno has been fine as well. He has 154 at bats, roughly on fourth of a season for a regular position player (a half a season if you platoon catchers) and has a .253 / .294 / .364 / .658..........not great but definitely better than Butera when he was a love child of Gardy with the Twins. And Centeno has 20 rbi's as well.




Trekgeekscott -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/8/2016 9:43:56 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: MDK

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

Roch finished 81-63

Garver hit .329 in 76 at bats,


With JR finally getting the bulb to turn on in Rochester and his brief yet decent performance at the MLB level and Garver continued improvement, catching seems to be a lot more stable for the Twins than earlier this spring when the Murphy trade appeared to be a bust. Centeno has been fine as well. He has 154 at bats, roughly on fourth of a season for a regular position player (a half a season if you platoon catchers) and has a .253 / .294 / .364 / .658..........not great but definitely better than Butera when he was a love child of Gardy with the Twins. And Centeno has 20 rbi's as well.

Murphy trade was never a bust. Consider how Hicks is doing in NY...

Pretty even trade if you ask me.




Mr. Ed -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/8/2016 9:47:13 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: MDK

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

Roch finished 81-63

Garver hit .329 in 76 at bats,


With JR finally getting the bulb to turn on in Rochester and his brief yet decent performance at the MLB level and Garver continued improvement, catching seems to be a lot more stable for the Twins than earlier this spring when the Murphy trade appeared to be a bust. Centeno has been fine as well. He has 154 at bats, roughly on fourth of a season for a regular position player (a half a season if you platoon catchers) and has a .253 / .294 / .364 / .658..........not great but definitely better than Butera when he was a love child of Gardy with the Twins. And Centeno has 20 rbi's as well.


Keep working on the D>
Centeno doesn't block the best, but I'm ok with what production he's brought.




MDK -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/8/2016 9:47:14 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Trekgeekscott

quote:

ORIGINAL: MDK

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

Roch finished 81-63

Garver hit .329 in 76 at bats,


With JR finally getting the bulb to turn on in Rochester and his brief yet decent performance at the MLB level and Garver continued improvement, catching seems to be a lot more stable for the Twins than earlier this spring when the Murphy trade appeared to be a bust. Centeno has been fine as well. He has 154 at bats, roughly on fourth of a season for a regular position player (a half a season if you platoon catchers) and has a .253 / .294 / .364 / .658..........not great but definitely better than Butera when he was a love child of Gardy with the Twins. And Centeno has 20 rbi's as well.

Murphy trade was never a bust. Consider how Hicks is doing in NY...

Pretty even trade if you ask me.


It was a bust for both teams. It sure didn't give the Twins what we thought we were getting. Nor did it give the Yanks.




Trekgeekscott -> RE: Players and prospects III (9/8/2016 9:49:37 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: MDK

quote:

ORIGINAL: Trekgeekscott

quote:

ORIGINAL: MDK

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mr. Ed

Roch finished 81-63

Garver hit .329 in 76 at bats,


With JR finally getting the bulb to turn on in Rochester and his brief yet decent performance at the MLB level and Garver continued improvement, catching seems to be a lot more stable for the Twins than earlier this spring when the Murphy trade appeared to be a bust. Centeno has been fine as well. He has 154 at bats, roughly on fourth of a season for a regular position player (a half a season if you platoon catchers) and has a .253 / .294 / .364 / .658..........not great but definitely better than Butera when he was a love child of Gardy with the Twins. And Centeno has 20 rbi's as well.

Murphy trade was never a bust. Consider how Hicks is doing in NY...

Pretty even trade if you ask me.


It was a bust for both teams. It sure didn't give the Twins what we thought we were getting. Nor did it give the Yanks.

Well. It looks like the Lightbulb has come on for Murphy. Let's hope that the light stays on. Then it wont be a bust in the long run.




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