Thursday,
September 22, 2011
Early Observations
Don’t Forget – The TwinsCentric
Viewing Party will be on Saturday at Manitou Station in White Bear Lake during
Game 1 of the Twins/Cleveland double header. Get there between 11:30 and 12:00,
and stay through the game.
Another quick posting today. I fell asleep writing early again last night. I’ve
got about 20 minutes to write
before I run in to work, so I thought I would jot down some
quick, early observations of some of the younger players on the Twins roster. To be fair, small sample means very little, whether the sample is
positive or negative. Obviously a positive sample is much more memorable
and fun than a negative small sample, but what happens over 50-60 plate
appearances this September means little when it comes to long-term success.
It’s been hard
to write of late. In fact, I was telling someone last night that I’ve enjoyed
just sitting back and watching the young guys play, seeing what they do, seeing
what they still need to work on. It doesn’t need to be analytical or
statistical at this point, and that’s good. But here are some of the things
that I have seen so far.
Chris Parmelee – He
has made a terrific first impression on everyone. In my Twins Prospect Handbook,
release last January, I ranked Parmelee as my #12
Twins prospect, and many predicted that he would have his breakout season in
the Twins minor leagues this year. My reason for optimism was that I believe
something clicked with him when he was demoted last May to Ft. Myers from New
Britain. He figured out something. He cut down on the strikeouts and became a
better all-around hitter. Some of the power he had shown early dropped, but if
he could use the whole field more and not strikeout as much, that was a great
start. The power is still there. I saw him play in the Arizona Fall League two
years ago, and he was a big guy. He has lost more than the 15 pounds that
people talk about. What I have seen so far with the Twins is a guy who knows
the strike zone. He is willing to be patient at the plate, but when he takes a
swing, it is not a singles swing at all. He swings hard. We’ve seen the two
home runs, but he has hit a lot of line drives. He uses the whole field. He
makes contact. (in other words, even if he was hitting
.150, I would be impressed by the approach.) He ended this minor league season
as my #10 Twins prospect, but he has made a strong impression. Again, it’s not
the high batting average that has been impressive, although that is nice. It’s
his impressive approach at the plate that is equal parts patience, contact, and
willingness to swing out of his shoes. The defense at 1B has been shaky at
times, as expected, but that’s an area he can improve. I think that he will
begin the 2011 season in Rochester, and that he definitely should. But when he
has done this September is show that if needed next season, he could come up
and not just fill in, but be a good contributor.
Joe Benson – Benson
was my #4 Twins prospect, and to this point, all of the reports about him
appear to be true. He is a tremendous athlete, very strong, great arm, good
power, tremendous speed. He also is one to strike out a lot, and his
aggressiveness on the base paths and in the field have
been on display, both positive and negative. He has shown some patience at the plate, but he has also seemingly fallen
behind 0-2 many times because of it. The 4-4 night with two doubles and a
triple shows the kind of potential that Benson has. 15 strikeouts and two walks
in 50 plate appearances tells us that he still has some work to do, although
that strikeout rate is only minimally higher than it was in New Britain. Benson
will also start the 2012 season in Rochester, and it will be a good challenge
for him. He will need to continue to work on contact, something he has worked
hard on in the past as well. However, I think that the biggest observation in
my mind is that reports of his talent and his potential have not at all been
overblown. He has the ability to be an all-star. And, he has the ability to be
a fan favorite because of his hustle and aggressiveness.
Brian Dinkelman –
Singles Machine! Dinkelman was not in my Top 30 Twins
prospects this year, and probably would not have been in the Top 50. That’s why
I frequently remind people that just because I don’t rank a guy highly on a
prospect list does not mean that he can not be a
major league contributor. I love following prospects like this, guys who are
not going to be super stars, but they just work their way up the system and get
an opportunity. In all reality, Dinkelman came up
after Labor Day because the Twins needed a body. He was going to be DFAd following the season, and no one would have claimed
him, and he would have spent the 2012 season in Rochester (where he hit about
.230 this year, by the way). However, at this point, would anyone really have a
problem with Dinkelman maintaining his 40 man roster
spot through the offseason (in place of Tolbert and if it doesn’t make a
prospect get exposed to the Rule 5 draft)? If the Twins take him off the 40 man
roster, I still don’t think anyone would claim him. However, he has the 20
singles, pretty much all through the 3.5 hole. He has
been solid at 2B, and played most of the last two years in LF or RF. Not a bad
utility type.
Rene Tosoni – In
the last two years, I have consistently ranked Tosoni
between my #9 and #12 prospect in the Twins system. After he missed more than
half of the 2010 season with shoulder surgery while playing at AA, I mistakenly
dropped him in my rankings. To my surprise, he began the 2011 season in
Rochester, and he played very well. That is why, when the Twins first needed an
outfielder this season, it was Tosoni that they
turned to, not Ben Revere. He had just 19 games of AA under his belt, but he
was in the big leagues. Now, I think it is fair to say that Tosoni
has struggled to this point in the big leagues. He is a very patient hitter at
the plate, and I think that he has found himself if a lot of bad counts. He has
40 strikeouts in just over 160 plate appearances. That’s actually not a
terrible rate. He has shown power with three doubles and three home runs, long
home runs. That’s the kind of thing that makes me very excited about Tosoni. I think far too many people have written off Tosoni at this point. I still believe that he can be a very
good big leaguer. I always called him Kubel-lite,
meaning I think his potential can be about a .280 hitter with 15-18 home runs
in a full season. He is a very solid outfielder with a good arm. Like Kubel, Tosoni’s one weakness in
the minor leagues was hitting left-handers. I think Tosoni
would be a great platoon option in the outfield. I think he needs a little more
time. The time he has received with the Twins has been valuable for him, but we
have not yet seen what he can do.
Ben Revere – He has
played a lot more, and the Twins love him. The Twins media (written and spoken)
love him. Most Twins fans love him. And why not? He is
exciting. He plays hard. He hustles down the line, and he makes some pretty
incredible catches out in center field. I believe that he is going to be a
solid big league player, but I think expecting anything more than a Juan
Pierre-like career would be way too optimistic. In fact, if Revere posts
Pierre-like numbers in his career, I will be impressed and a little surprised.
He has been better of late, but his offensive game has been pretty horrible this
year. His recent hot streak has elevated his on-base percentage to .310. His
slugging percentage is just .297. We kept hearing that at some point, he would
show power. No, that’ won’t happen.
Outfielders play in so far against him that he could get some gappers or occasionally hit one over their heads. Then we
get to watch him run. He almost had an inside the park home run this year.
Defensively, he has made some incredible catches, and his range is remarkable.
His terrific speed has helped make up for taking some bad angles on baseballs.
People always accuse me of not liking Revere. I ranked him as my #8 Twins
prospect before the season, and that’s probably fair. He is what he is as a
player. Batting average will be his money-maker. If he can
hit .300 (as he did throughout the minors), he could post a .350 on base
percentage. If he does that, he could steal 75 bases a year. He has
stolen 33 bases (in 42 attempts) in 109 games this year with a .310 OBP. Again,
I think that the reports on Revere have proven very accurate. He is very
exciting, and he is going to get better. In fact, what he has done over the
last 3 weeks shows why getting this playing time and experience in the big
leagues is so important for all of these guys.
Liam Hendriks – Hendriks came to the Twins, already well over his innings
pitched count from last year. He impressed in his debut, and he had a rough
game against the Royals in his second start. His most recent start is probably
a good indication of where Hendriks is right now. He
gave up two runs in the first inning before recording an out, but he worked out
of that and got through five innings having allowed just those two runs. He was
one pitch away from completing six innings with two runs, but he threw a bad
pitch and Alex Liddi tied up the game at four with a
long home run. Again, he began this season at AA and pitched great, and then
did well at AAA at times. He is up with the Twins because of all the numbers. If
he wasn’t, he would most likely be getting ready to join Allan de San Miguel,
James Beresford and Todd Van Steensel on the
Australian Team at the World Cup in Panama. Hendriks
was my #6 Twins prospect after he was selected (by me) as the Twins minor
league pitcher of the year last year. He was the repeat choice for me this
year. So, what have I seen? Reports of a fastball with
movement that is 89-91 is accurate. He has even touched 93, which is good. His
changeup can be very good. I like the break on his curveball. In reality, I
have seen him pitch well, but consistency with all of those pitches needs to be
a little better. We have seen batters where he throws three straight pitches
right on the outside corner. We have seen sharp sliders off the outside corner.
We have seen him get called strike threes on pitches on the inside corner. But
we have also seen him hurt when he (like any pitcher) misses his spots. Hendriks needs another half-season at Rochester, I think.
But I have seen more than enough to tell me that he can fit into the back of
the Twins rotation as early as next year, and of all the pitchers that have
been compared to Brad Radke in recent years, he might
be the one that I think most closely resembles him as a pitcher.
Luke Hughes – He’s
out of options, and I have no problem with him being a utility infielder and a
right-handed bat off the bench. He can adequately play 3B, 2B and 1B, and he
has shown good pop in his bat. I think we’ve seen that he probably isn’t a
regular at any position, but he can contribute to the team and should play
fairly frequently.
Trevor Plouffe – Like Hughes,
Plouffe will be out of options next season, so he will
have to make the team. He has certainly had his struggles at SS at times, but
he’s also gone through semi-long stretches of adequacy there. I think he can be
a well below defensive SS and an average to slightly above average offensive
SS. I don’t think he’ll get that opportunity with the Twins. Like Hughes, I
think he can adequately play the infield positions, and even some in the corner
outfield positions. Like JJ Hardy, he is really non-fast. I think he can hit in
the big leagues, despite his struggles in September. Again, probably not a big
league regular, at least not with the Twins, but he should have his bat in the
lineup quite a bit!
If you have any
questions or comments or observations, please feel free to discuss in the Comments section.