Twins & Yankees agree on a blockbuster

Less than two days ago the Minnesota Twins and New York Yankees agreed on a blockbuster trade but Twins and Yankee fans are in a quandary about what to think of the deal. Social sites for both teams seem to be up in arms about the deal with both sides thinking they got the short end of the stick.

The trade in question calls for the New Yorker’s sending 29-year old catcher Gary Sanchez and 30-year old third baseman Gio Urshela to Minnesota for 36 year-old third baseman Josh Donaldson, 27-year old shortstop Isiah Kiner-Falefa and 24-year old catcher Ben Rortvedt.

It appears that there were multiple reasons to make the trade. The Twins seem to be looking to get out from under the $50 million the team owes Donaldson over the next two seasons and the Yankees have wanted to move Sanchez for some time. It is one of those situations where you swap my problems for your problems. The Yankees were in desperate need of a shortstop and the Twins had just acquired Kiner-Falefa from Texas earlier in the day. So in order for the Yankees to take Donaldson and pay him what he is owed the Yankees needed to get Kiner-Falefa in the deal and they wanted Rortvedt to replace Sanchez. Getting Donaldson and Kiner-Falefa made Urshela expendable and he was on his way to Minnesota.

Gary Sanchez

Twins deal 2021 first round pick for 2011 first round pick

While most of us have been enjoying our week-end, the Minnesota Twins front office has been hard at work burning up the phone lines looking high and low as they work to improve the team. Today they made their second trade in as many days when they traded their 2021 first round selection (26th over all) RHP Chase Petty to the Cincinnati Reds for RHP Sonny Gray who himself was the Oakland A’s first round selection (18th over all) back in 2011 before moving on to the Yankees in 2017 and finally the Reds in 2019. The Twins also received right-handed minor league reliever Francis Peguero a 24-year old Dominican who pitched in High A ball in 2021.

This is one of those “potential for experience” kind of deals. A type of trade that the Minnesota Twins disdained over they years. In a way it is similar to the Kenta Maeda deal with the Los Angeles Dodgers for prospect pitcher Brusdar Graterol a few years back. The big difference in that deal was that Graterol was big league ready and Petty is straight out of high school and has all of 5 innings of pro ball under his belt. Another trade that comes to mind was the 2010 deal with the Nationals when the Twins traded catcher Wilson Ramos for closer Matt Capps and Twins fans were not happy campers. Capps went on to save 45 games for Minnesota over three seasons. Ramos is still catching in the big leagues after 12 seasons (seven teams) and has two All-Star games and a Silver Slugger on his resume. You just never know how these kinds of trades will work out.

Twins and Rangers make a deal

It didn’t take long for the Minnesota Twins to make their first post lockout deal when they traded 31-year old catcher Mitch Garver to the Texas Rangers for soon to be 27-year old shortstop Isiah Kiner-Falefa and minor league right-handed pitcher Ronny Henriquez who pitched in AA ball after starting at High A.

Mitch Garver – Credit: Bruce Kluckhohn-USA TODAY

Garver was drafted by the Minnesota Twins in the 9th round of the 2013 amateur draft and for all practical purposes was the best player the Twins selected in that draft. In addition, Garver was the best catcher drafted that year if you rank them by WAR and they got him for a measly $40K signing bonus.

Garver made his big league debut on August 19, 2017 at Target Field against the Arizona Diamondbacks as a pinch-hitter for Miguel Sano and struck out in his lone appearance in that game. Garver had a breakout season in 2019 as part of the Bomba Squad when he hit 31 home runs and was awarded the Silver Slugger award as the best hitting AL catcher. 2020 and 2021 were seasons that Garver would just as soon forget as injuries limited him to 23 and 68 games respectively.

MLB is back in business

Play Ball!

Late yesterday I heard the news that MLB and the players had agreed on a new agreement and that Spring Training would begin on Sunday March 13. That is such great news to hear after all this time. Although it has no direct impact on me personally other than me being a long-time baseball fan, it is as if a big load was taken off my shoulders. It instantly put me in a better mood.

I understand that all 162 games will be played and the first two series that were originally cancelled will be made up somewhere at the tail-end of the season. The regular season opens on April 7 and a number of rule changes will take place. Both leagues will now use the designated hitter, 7-inning double-headers are history as is the extra-inning ghost runner at second base, the number of play-off teams increases from 10 to 12 and the Amateur Free Agent draft has a lottery system. Players can no longer be optioned to the minors no more than five times in a season. This is a few of the rules changes that have surfaced so far. I have also read somewhere that unvaccinated players will not be allowed to play in Canada and that they will not be paid or accrue service time. Another thing I read someplace that I find extremely interesting was when the MLBPA voted that all eight player representatives that was actually participating in the negotiations voted to reject this latest proposal but the other teams out voted them while the owners voted 30-0 to accept. Very Interesting!

So now the action shifts to the front offices that have been shut down from communicating with the other teams front offices as they battle to sign free agents and make trades to fill holes on their rosters. It should be a hectic time between now and and when the season begins to be sure.

Teams need to start selling tickets. I see that the Twins will start selling single game tickets on March 17 and that they will not charge fees for two days. Only two frickin fee free days after a 99 day lockdown? If the Twins and MLB had any smarts they would waive all ticket fees for 99 days and show their fans some respect for a change. Come on MLB, how about it?

In the mean time let’s get it on, Play Ball.

I miss the complete games

The last time the Minnesota Twins team had ten or more complete games by their pitching staff in a season was in 2001 when they had 12. The last time they had more than 8 complete games in a season was in 2010. The Falvey/Levine regime has had a grand total of ten complete games since they came into power after the 2016 season. Once they installed Rocco Baldelli as their manager the Twins have had one complete game in 2021, zero in 2020 and one in 2019. The only Twins pitcher to throw a complete game since 2017 was Jose Berrios so they rewarded him by trading him. Do you know who the last Twins pitcher to throw a complete game before Berrios was? That would be Bartolo Colon on August 4, 2017. Back in 1963 and 1967 the Minnesota Twins team had a franchise high of 58 complete games.

Happy New Year

We would like to wish each and every one of you a safe, happy and healthy 2022.

Twins players that left us in 2021

As we start a new year in 2021 and hope to get the COVID-19 pandemic behind us and head out to Target Field to watch the Twins play ball I wanted to share a list of former Minnesota Twins players and people associated with the Twins that passed away in 2021. We lost some great ones.

Stan Williams was born on September 14, 1936 in Enfield, New Hampshire and passed away at the age of 84 in Laughlin, Nevada on February 20, 2021.

Williams started pitching in pro ball at the age of 17 in 1954 and threw his last pitch 20 years later in 1974. In between “Big Daddy” pitched in the majors for 14 seasons with the Dodgers, Yankees, Indians, Twins, Cardinals and the Red Sox starting his career as a starter and finishing up in the bullpen. Williams pitched for Minnesota in 1970-1971 putting up a stellar season in 1970 at the age of 33.

Was Calvin Griffith really a “cheap” owner?

There are a lot of opinions out there floating around about former Minnesota Twins owner Calvin Griffith and the two most common ones are that he was cheap and that he was a racist. I am not going to get into the racist discussion here and now but I did want to share with you a piece of a column that Minneapolis Star Tribune writer Dick Cullum wrote on August 20, 1968.

Merry Christmas

We would like to wish each and every one of you a wonderful and blessed Christmas.