Twins and starting pitching
Posted: Fri Nov 20, 2015 2:09 pm
To me the twins future is all about pitching, what they do to address that will determine our success. I think Molitor gets the most out of and develops hitters and lets face it we got quite a few hitters that are pretty good. So will we get SP via FA? Trade?
The farm has: Jose Berrios, Kohl Stewart, and Tyler Jay as what I would call our best 3 SP prospects.
Berrios is the guy to get excited about, why he wasn't called up last year is completely beyond me. He struck out over a batter per inning last year and had a low walk rate with a low 3's ERA in AA & AAA. Fast Ball sits 92 on most nights but he can rear back for a little extra gas at times. I doubt he throws much harder than that as he develops because he's only six feet tall and is pretty much filled out. In one word his change up is "DIRTY" in a good way! He will use in a 2-0 count or a 0-2 count and dare I say it might be as good as Johan Santana's was back in the day (loved that guy). His third pitch is a breaking ball of some sorts, I still don't know if its a curve or slider and I have seen him pitch a few times. The breaking ball needs the most work but provides enough to keep batters off balance. I also sat right behind home plate and the thing I like most about him is his fast ball and change up come out the same arm slot and it was hard to pick up on witch one he is throwing, he also hides the ball well creating quite a bit of deception. I'd like to see him break camp with a job but the since they held him back last year my guess is they work out a few things in AAA before giving him a chance around mid to late summer. I don't think he's an ace but has the upside of a very solid #2 SP.
Kohl Stewart was our top pick in 2013 and I was all about him being a monster power pitcher, well that hasn't panned out thus far but he is a ground ball machine and only yielded 2 HR's all year last season at high A ball. Now he's only 21yrs old and at 6'3" a buck ninety five, I think he has yet to fill out completely. Therefore I still hold out hope that he can fill into that power pitcher I thought we drafted back in 2013. He's throwing 92 to 94 ish with room for more on the fastball, he's got a sinker that would make Derek Lowe proud. He also sports an old fashioned hammer curve, when you swing a hammer downward you start high and end low, that's the same path his curve takes coming in around chest level and dipping down hard ending around the knees. So while I remain high on Mr. Stewart the real question is why is he only striking out just less than 5 batters per 9inn? My guess is the sinker creates ground ball outs limiting the strikeouts some, but still with his pitch mix I'd expect more strikeouts. Maybe he's tipping his pitches or maybe he offers little deception in the delivery, not quite sure but upside is there just gotta hope he reaches his upside and not his floor.
Tyler Jay is your MN Twins 2015 1st round pick and he's a bit older for such a recent draft pick at 22yrs old he's 6'1" about a buck eighty. He has experience as he went to college and was dominant closer at Illinois. As a closer I think he'll be damn good with a upper 90's fastball, as a starter his fastball will be mid 90's. The curve is arguably his best pitch and the change up plays up because hitters are worried about keeping up with his elite fastball. His ability to command his pitches with accuracy allows him to throw any pitch in any count so hitters can't hone in on any single pitch. So as a closer or high end RP I'd say he's border line ready to play at the big level now if not very soon. As a starter we'd have to wait at least three years in my opinion for them to get him ready to pitch 175-200 innings in a season. Spending #6 overall on a closer is not a good move and the main reason I didn't like the pick at the time. However RP is probably his best position and with a slightly high HR rate per fly ball he may not succeed as a starter. So what do you do with Mr. Jay, wait and try to develop him as a starter? As a legit starter he'd be more valuable than a closer but he's already good as a RP and the wait wouldn't be long. Hard call but either way he will be a contributor to the MN Twins one day.
One thing I believe is that the Twins are on a good path to be competitive in the near future but the quality of SP's will ultimately determine how good they can really be.
The farm has: Jose Berrios, Kohl Stewart, and Tyler Jay as what I would call our best 3 SP prospects.
Berrios is the guy to get excited about, why he wasn't called up last year is completely beyond me. He struck out over a batter per inning last year and had a low walk rate with a low 3's ERA in AA & AAA. Fast Ball sits 92 on most nights but he can rear back for a little extra gas at times. I doubt he throws much harder than that as he develops because he's only six feet tall and is pretty much filled out. In one word his change up is "DIRTY" in a good way! He will use in a 2-0 count or a 0-2 count and dare I say it might be as good as Johan Santana's was back in the day (loved that guy). His third pitch is a breaking ball of some sorts, I still don't know if its a curve or slider and I have seen him pitch a few times. The breaking ball needs the most work but provides enough to keep batters off balance. I also sat right behind home plate and the thing I like most about him is his fast ball and change up come out the same arm slot and it was hard to pick up on witch one he is throwing, he also hides the ball well creating quite a bit of deception. I'd like to see him break camp with a job but the since they held him back last year my guess is they work out a few things in AAA before giving him a chance around mid to late summer. I don't think he's an ace but has the upside of a very solid #2 SP.
Kohl Stewart was our top pick in 2013 and I was all about him being a monster power pitcher, well that hasn't panned out thus far but he is a ground ball machine and only yielded 2 HR's all year last season at high A ball. Now he's only 21yrs old and at 6'3" a buck ninety five, I think he has yet to fill out completely. Therefore I still hold out hope that he can fill into that power pitcher I thought we drafted back in 2013. He's throwing 92 to 94 ish with room for more on the fastball, he's got a sinker that would make Derek Lowe proud. He also sports an old fashioned hammer curve, when you swing a hammer downward you start high and end low, that's the same path his curve takes coming in around chest level and dipping down hard ending around the knees. So while I remain high on Mr. Stewart the real question is why is he only striking out just less than 5 batters per 9inn? My guess is the sinker creates ground ball outs limiting the strikeouts some, but still with his pitch mix I'd expect more strikeouts. Maybe he's tipping his pitches or maybe he offers little deception in the delivery, not quite sure but upside is there just gotta hope he reaches his upside and not his floor.
Tyler Jay is your MN Twins 2015 1st round pick and he's a bit older for such a recent draft pick at 22yrs old he's 6'1" about a buck eighty. He has experience as he went to college and was dominant closer at Illinois. As a closer I think he'll be damn good with a upper 90's fastball, as a starter his fastball will be mid 90's. The curve is arguably his best pitch and the change up plays up because hitters are worried about keeping up with his elite fastball. His ability to command his pitches with accuracy allows him to throw any pitch in any count so hitters can't hone in on any single pitch. So as a closer or high end RP I'd say he's border line ready to play at the big level now if not very soon. As a starter we'd have to wait at least three years in my opinion for them to get him ready to pitch 175-200 innings in a season. Spending #6 overall on a closer is not a good move and the main reason I didn't like the pick at the time. However RP is probably his best position and with a slightly high HR rate per fly ball he may not succeed as a starter. So what do you do with Mr. Jay, wait and try to develop him as a starter? As a legit starter he'd be more valuable than a closer but he's already good as a RP and the wait wouldn't be long. Hard call but either way he will be a contributor to the MN Twins one day.
One thing I believe is that the Twins are on a good path to be competitive in the near future but the quality of SP's will ultimately determine how good they can really be.