Tag: AL Central

Abraham Almonte Suspended 80 Games: Latest Details, Comments, Reaction

The Cleveland Indians‘ depleted outfield has taken another hit, with Abraham Almonte receiving an 80-game suspension.

On Friday, Jordan Bastian of MLB.com reported Major League Baseball suspended the outfielder for failing a test for performance-enhancing substances.

Per Tom Withers of the Associated Press, the Indians said in a statement that they were “disappointed” upon learning of Almonte’s suspension.

The Indians acquired Almonte from the San Diego Padres at the trade deadline last season. He appeared in 51 games for the team, hitting .264/.321/.455 in 178 at-bats. He also provided solid defense in center field, with FanGraphs crediting him with two defensive runs saved in 481.1 innings. 

Losing Almonte for half of the season is a devastating blow for the Indians, who were already coming into 2016 with major outfield questions. Left fielder Michael Brantley had shoulder surgery in November, which could keep him out for at least the regular season’s first month.

The situation in right field is fluid, with Lonnie Chisenhall and Collin Cowgill possibly platooning. Cleveland did sign Rajai Davis, who has experience at all three outfield positions, early in the offseason. 

Even though Almonte wasn’t a lock to end up as Cleveland’s starting center fielder, he was an option for manager Terry Francona to choose from.

Now, Francona and the Indians front office will have to get more creative with their outfield mix. The American League Central figures to be one of MLB’s most competitive divisions next year, so any setback is huge.

The good news is that MLB announced Almonte’s suspension early enough for Cleveland to see which outfielders separate themselves from the pack during spring training.

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Justin Verlander’s Temporary License Tag Stolen in Thief’s Alleged Crime Spree

Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Justin Verlander was among the victims of an alleged crime spree in which the All-Star ace’s temporary license tag was stolen from his truck.  

According to Clifford Parody of the Ledger, 24-year-old Tyler Demalignon is accused of multiple carjackings and thefts in Lakeland, Florida, including taking the paper tag from Verlander’s vehicle Feb. 20.

The 33-year-old’s stolen property was ultimately recovered, and Demalignon is currently being held on 27 charges.

According to Parody, Verlander came out of a movie theater in Lakeland to find his tag missing. He told police he believed the tag had blown off, but it was found on a car Demalignon reportedly stole, which was full of stolen goods.

Verlander is gearing up for his 12th MLB season with the Tigers, and there is a great deal of optimism for him and the team as a whole.

After going 5-8 with a 3.38 ERA and 113 strikeouts in 133.1 innings last season, the former American League Cy Young Award winner and MVP has already been tabbed as Detroit’s Opening Day starter, per MLB.com’s Jason Beck:

While Verlander was limited to 20 starts in 2015 due to injury, he is upbeat about his health and prospects for 2016, according to Beck:

Spring training last year we talked about it and I felt pretty good, but obviously I had the injury at the end of spring. But right now it feels the best I can remember in a long time. I’m able to throw every day. I’ve been long-tossing a lot, something that I wasn’t able to do the last few years just because [I’d] long-toss one day, come back the next time and [didn’t] feel too great. But I don’t even feel like I’m pushing it right now. It just naturally feels good.

The missing license tag could have put a bit of a damper on Verlander’s time in Florida, but now, his focus can shift entirely back to baseball and the upcoming regular season.

Detroit disappointed in a big way last season with a record of 74-87, which put it last in the AL Central, but with Verlander locked in and new additions like pitcher Jordan Zimmermann and outfielder Justin Upton in the fold, a return to the playoffs is within reach.

 

Follow @MikeChiari on Twitter.

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Anibal Sanchez Injury: Updates on Tigers Pitcher’s Triceps and Return

Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Anibal Sanchez has inflammation in his triceps that will keep him sidelined through the weekend, according to Jon Morosi of Fox Sports.

Continue for updates.


Tigers to Hold Sanchez Out Until at Least Monday

Thursday, Feb. 25

Sanchez believes the swelling isn’t serious and should heal with time, per Anthony Fenech of the Detroit Free Press:

I’m fine, I’m good. I think it’s early. We don’t have to rush anything, especially if I have the soreness. But in order for me to throw, I don’t have to take the risk of it getting worse if I want it to be ready in time.

There’s no rush right now. We have enough time to get ready for the season. We have a month and a half.

Tigers manager Brad Ausmus said Sanchez initially experienced soreness in his throwing arm Monday, per Fenech, which prompted the team to conduct an MRI. Sanchez felt his triceps flare up while throwing a fastball during a bullpen session, per Jason Beck of MLB.com.

Ausmus noted he isn’t overly worried, per Fenech.

“It doesn’t seem to be anything concerning, but I guess you’re always cringing when it involved one of your starting pitchers,” the third-year manager said. “It’s not really in an area where we see a ton of problems with. The MRI looked good; it just showed a little inflammation there.”

Sanchez, 31, has missed time in each of the last three seasons with arm injuries and has never reached the 200-inning plateau. In 2015, Sanchez went 10-10 with a 1.28 WHIP and career-worst 4.99 ERA. The team shut him down in August after he suffered a strained rotator cuff, yet he still allowed an American League-worst 29 home runs.

The Tigers are hoping the 10-year veteran will round out the top three of a rotation anchored by Justin Verlander and offseason signee Jordan Zimmermann.

Sanchez’s injury seems like only a minor byproduct of a throwing arm returning to baseball activities after a lengthy hiatus over the winter. By returning Monday, he can squander most speculation about his health as Detroit continues camp and hopes to catapult from its last-place finish in 2015.

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Todd Frazier Will Prove to Be the Biggest Steal of the MLB Offseason

In a league where overpaying for talented players is commonplace, the Chicago White Sox broke that trend when they acquired All-Star third baseman Todd Frazier from the Cincinnati Reds back on Dec. 16.

The three-team deal included the Los Angeles Dodgers, who landed outfielder Trayce Thompson, pitcher Frankie Montas and infielder Micah Johnson in the trade. The Reds received prized infielder Jose Peraza, fellow infielder prospect Brandon Dixon and outfielder Scott Schebler, while the White Sox came away with Frazier.

It became clear in the aftermath of the trade that the public viewed Chicago as big winners in the deal and the Reds as chumps:

Part of the negative reaction surrounding the trade stemmed from irked Cincinnati fans. The 30-year-old Frazier was a fan favorite in Cincinnati, a notion best exemplified when Reds fans gave him a nice ovation after he won the 2015 Home Run Derby in front of the home crowd:

Adding Frazier to the middle of Chicago’s lineup will strike a newfound fear into the hearts of opposing pitchers, something that surely excites fans and players alike.

In an interview with USA Today‘s Nancy Armour, White Sox first baseman and fellow All-Star Jose Abreu expressed his own excitement about the acquisition of Frazier with a very concise statement:

“He’s a good player who can hit,” Abreu said. “I love it.”

Giving up three good (but not great) prospects for an All-Star third baseman is simply nothing short of a steal. The most heralded prospect given up in the trade didn’t even come via Chicago. Rather, it was Peraza, the No. 71 overall prospect in baseball according to MLB.com, given up by the Dodgers. 

Frazier’s contract situation is great for the White Sox in the short term, although there could be some issues long term. Having signed a two-year, $12 million deal before the 2015 season, Frazier will be up for arbitration after the season.

Should the White Sox wish to sign him to a long-term extension, however (and there’s no reason to think they wouldn’t), they certainly have the money to do so. At worst, the team could deal him at the 2016 trade deadline next July for some prospects if things don’t work out this season.

White Sox fans are surely hoping that the Frazier trade ends up becoming this year’s version of the infamous (unless you’re a Toronto Blue Jays fan) Josh Donaldson trade and for good reason.

The parallels between the two situations are eerily similar. Both players were approaching their age-30 season on underachieving teams at the time of their trade, and both were All-Stars the previous season.

Take a look at their stats in the season before their respective trades:

We all know how the Donaldson trade worked out, as the Oakland Athletics dealt their star player to Toronto for third baseman Brett Lawrie and a trio of prospects. Donaldson went on to become the American League MVP, Lawrie is ironically now the White Sox second baseman after the Frazier trade and the A’s finished with the worst record in the AL.

It would be a stretch to say that Frazier will now become the MVP, especially since Donaldson had the benefit of landing in a loaded Blue Jays lineup. Frazier and Abreu are practically the only power threats in the entire White Sox lineup—aside from an occasional blast from Lawrie or the aging Adam LaRoche, of course.

But regardless of the lineup disparities between Toronto and Chicago, the White Sox will almost certainly improve on their 76-86 record last season. Manager Robin Ventura certainly feels that way, per Colleen Kane of the Chicago Tribune:

We’re also in the division that has the World Series champion. We know it’s a tough division. Everybody in that division is getting better, and this is our way to improve and make ourselves a viable candidate. So we’re much improved from last year — just look at the people that we’ve got. But you’re going to have to play to be able to make an impact and make it happen, because it doesn’t happen on paper.

As Ventura noted, the White Sox have the misfortune of playing in the same division as the Kansas City Royals, who are coming off a 95-win regular season. Still, the club has a respectable chance to be playing baseball deep into October.

Todd Frazier, easily the steal of the offseason, helps gives the White Sox that chance.

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Miguel Cabrera Comments on Health, 2016 Goals, Justin Upton, More

Detroit Tigers superstar Miguel Cabrera dealt with nagging injuries and went to the disabled list for the first time in his career last season, but he believes he’s healthy and will be ready to roll in 2016.

Cabrera spoke Tuesday to ESPN.com’s Katie Strang about his aspirations for this year, how he’s fully recovered this offseason, has added strength in his legs and has improved his conditioning.

“I feel the difference. I can feel my back leg more. Also, I can stay more back so I can drive the ball up the gap,” said Cabrera, who added, “I mean, play 160 games. That’s my goal. I’m trying not to miss too many games. I’m trying to play every day.”

The 10-time All-Star will turn 33 in April but sounds as though he’s in great shape and appears determined to bounce back after playing in only 119 contests during the 2015 campaign.

Cabrera still managed to bat .338 even as his power numbers declined—his 18 home runs were the fewest he hit since his rookie year when he played only 87 games.

Renewed optimism for his future as a player has to have Cabrera feeling particularly good about a fresh start this year. The same could be said for a reunion with new Tigers general manager Al Avila, who, according to Strang, played a big role in signing Cabrera to this first contract with the Marlins franchise at age 16.

“Back in the day, I say, ‘Sign me, please,'” Cabrera said of his longtime relationship with Avila. “It’s amazing because we still here and we want to win a World Series together.”

Another notable offseason addition to Detroit, prized free-agent acquisition Justin Upton, is someone Cabrera feels will add a new dimension to the Tigers’ batting order and provide an upgrade in the outfield.

“He plays defense, [brings] power, brings speed to the whole lineup. That’s great to have him,” Cabrera said of Upton.

But Cabrera did emphasize to Strang how vital it is for Detroit to stay healthy as a team in order to bounce back from missing the playoffs last year. It helps to have a proven workhorse in Upton, who has averaged well over 150 games played per season since 2011.

The American League Central alone figures to be tough, headlined by the defending World Series champion Kansas City Royals, who played in the Fall Classic the year prior as well. The Minnesota Twins and Cleveland Indians also finished north of .500 last season.

Even the Chicago White Sox have upgraded their roster considerably in the infield in particular, with the likes of All-Star Todd Frazier and Brett Lawrie coming aboard.

There’s no shortage of top-tier personnel in the Tigers’ core, yet it will take a total team effort to markedly improve from 2015’s 74-87 record, which came even as Cabrera claimed the AL batting title.

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Tommy Hunter Injury: Updates on Indians Pitcher’s Recovery from Surgery

Newly signed Cleveland Indians relief pitcher Tommy Hunter could be sidelined for at least three months following offseason core-muscle surgery.

Continue for updates.


Hunter Could Make an Impact When He Returns

Saturday, Feb. 20

Jordan Bastian of MLB.com reported the news Saturday just days after Hunter signed a one-year, $2 million deal with Cleveland.

Hunter, who has started 75 games in his career—but none since 2013—spent last season with the Chicago Cubs and Baltimore Orioles, compiling a 4.18 ERA with 47 strikeouts and 14 walks in 60.1 innings pitched. 

D.J. Short of Hardball Talk noted Hunter, along with the injured Craig Stammen (elbow), could be an important part of the Indians bullpen later in the year: “Both could be useful bullpen arms if they come back healthy, but the Indians will have to make do without them in the early part of the season.”

Hunter is 46-33 in his career with a 4.31 ERA to go along with 423 strikeouts and 151 walks in 676.2 innings.

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Mike Minor to Royals: Latest Contract Details, Comments and Reaction

Seeking depth for their starting rotation, the Kansas City Royals signed left-hander Mike Minor to a two-year contract Friday.   

The Royals announced Minor’s deal on Twitter. Per Jeffrey Flanagan of MLB.com, Minor will make $6 million through 2017, and the agreement includes a mutual option for 2018 valued at $10 million with a $1.5 million buyout. 

To make room for Minor, per MLB Roster Moves, the Royals put left-handed starter Jason Vargas on the 60-day disabled list as he recovers from Tommy John surgery. 

Per Flanagan, the Royals believe there is a “slim chance” Vargas pitches this season after he went under the knife on Aug. 5.

Minor isn’t coming to Kansas City with a track record of staying healthy. The 28-year-old missed all of 2015 after having surgery in May to repair a slightly torn labrum in his left (pitching) shoulder. 

Royals general manager Dayton Moore told reporters (via Rustin Dodd of the Kansas City Star) that Minor will likely miss “six weeks to two months” of the regular season while he continues to rehab his shoulder. 

The Royals are betting on Minor’s youth and upside with this deal. He spent the first five years of his career with the Atlanta Braves, looking like a terrific young piece in their rotation in 2013 with career highs in starts (32), innings (204.2), ERA (3.21), strikeouts (181) and WHIP (1.09).

In 2014, even though things started to fall apart for Minor with a 4.77 ERA in 25 starts, he still had occasional moments of brilliance, via MLB.com:

Moore is not afraid to take risks on starting pitchers. He already signed Ian Kennedy, who had a 4.28 ERA last season, to a five-year contract. Chris Young was a reclamation project taken on in 2015 and posted a 3.06 ERA in 34 games (18 starts). 

The Royals’ success stems largely from an outstanding defense, which will put less pressure on Minor to overpower hitters when he returns. If his shoulder is close to 100 percent, this signing will be one of the biggest offseason steals. 

 

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Ned Yost, Dayton Moore Agree to Contract Extensions: Latest Details, Reaction

The Kansas City Royals locked up two key leaders in their organization Thursday, announcing contract extensions for manager Ned Yost and executive vice president of baseball operations and general manager Dayton Moore.

Andrew Simon reported the news for the Royals’ official website, indicating that the length of Moore’s new deal isn’t yet known, but that Yost’s extension goes through the 2018 season.

Royals president Dan Glass commented on the decision to extend Moore, via the news release:

You can’t find an individual with a stronger work ethic or dedication to his craft than Dayton Moore. He possesses all of the qualities you look for starting with his leadership, to organizational vision and tireless dedication to the position. Dayton also possesses the ability to get everyone working toward the same common goal, which is to strive daily to make this organization better.

Moore has done a tremendous job constructing a championship roster for the Royals, who appeared in the past two World Series and hoisted the Commissioner’s Trophy this past year. He has been in Kansas City’s front office since 2006 and has cemented an indefinite tenure.

“It’s a privilege to continue to represent the Glass family, our organization and the great fans as the general manager of the Kansas City Royals,” said Moore, via Simon. “I’m proud of the culture and it’s an honor to work alongside so many talented and dedicated people within this organization.”

But Yost was the clubhouse catalyst who helped the Royals take the next step. The skipper shepherded a burgeoning young core into a juggernaut contender.

The duration of Yost’s new deal is in line with how long he believes Kansas City can remain a factor in the Fall Classic picture.

“You work so hard as a group to develop a winner, and it’s hard to leave while they still have an opportunity to win,” Yost said, via the Kansas City Star‘s Rustin Dodd. “We feel like we’ve got that opportunity [to win] for the next three years.”

ESPN Stats & Info highlighted how magnificent Yost has been when it counts most:

“We are extremely delighted that Ned will remain our manager through at least the 2018 championship season,” Moore said of Yost, via Simon. “It’s an absolute joy and honor to work alongside him.”

Part of the reason Moore’s vision for the club came to fruition in the form of a World Series crown was his patience with Yost, whose time in the Kansas City dugout began with three losing seasons. 

Instead of making a rash decision to fire him based on the lack of bottom-line results, Moore stuck with a manager who hadn’t made the playoffs in six prior years with the Milwaukee Brewers.

Their partnership has appropriately been extended at the same time, presenting an exemplary, unified front for the reigning World Series champions.

Although Moore and Co. weren’t able to retain marquee starting pitcher Johnny Cueto in free agency, Kansas City still has much of its nucleus intact. That should help its efforts to guard the Commissioner’s Trophy in 2016, though Odds Shark lists the Royals with 16-1 odds to do so, behind six other clubs.

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Byron Buxton Can Become MLB’s 2016 Version of Carlos Correa, Kris Bryant

Carlos Correa and Byron Buxton shared space atop draft boards in the spring of 2012, and they shared space on prospect lists in the years that followed. And when Correa showed up in the major leagues early last June, it seemed perfectly fitting that Buxton joined him there not even a week later.

But in a 2015 season that belonged to hot-shot rookies, Buxton was the one who wasn’t quite ready. He was the one who showed promise but not polish, the one who tempted us with his talent but had us asking what he would become and when it would happen.

We’re still asking now, but as spring training 2016 begins, Buxton is one of the guys we’ll be watching the closestwatching and wondering if he can be to 2016 what Correa and Kris Bryant and Francisco Lindor and all the other super kids were to 2015.

He’s not the only big prospect on this year’s list. In fact, the big prospect rankings pushed Los Angeles Dodgers shortstop Corey Seager ahead of Buxton this past winter. But Buxton is the guy we’ve been waiting for, the possibly five-tool center fielder who, on his best days, earns comparisons to Mike Trout.

He’s the Minnesota Twins‘ center fielder-in-waiting, with the idea that the waiting ended when the Twins traded Aaron Hicks to the New York Yankees in November. The Twins have said Buxton will still need to win the job this spring, but they left it open with the idea that he will win it.

There will be no repeat of last year’s Bryant controversy with the Chicago Cubs. If Buxton comes to camp and shows he’s ready, he’ll be in the Twins lineup on Opening Day.

But will he be ready? Will this season belong to him, the way 2015 belonged to Correa and Bryant?

Even the scouts, coaches and executives who know Buxton the best and like him the most aren’t ready to answer that question. This kid is going to be good sometime, many of them told Bleacher Report over the last week.

But how good? And how soon?

“I think the raw tool set and athleticism is so overwhelming that he’ll be a star,” one scout who has followed Buxton‘s career and saw him several times last year said. “You have a potential All-Star. But do you have a potential Hall of Famer?”

The question seems unfair, but at the same time, it isn’t. Buxton is just 22 years old, with a mere 46 major league games (he kept rookie status for 2016) and 1,069 minor league at-bats. He has missed considerable time with injuries, including wrist trouble in 2014 and a thumb injury last year.

The scouting scale numbers rank him up there with the greats—MLB.com gave him a top-of-the-chart 80 for speed, with a 70 for his arm and fielding, 65 for hitting and 55 for power (higher overall numbers than Trout had at the same stage)—but the stats remind you he struggled terribly in last season’s cameo with the Twins.

Besides the .209 batting average and the 44 strikeouts in just 129 at-bats, Buxton showed little ability to recognize pitches. He admitted at times being overwhelmed, as when he struck out four times in a game against Chicago White Sox left-hander Chris Sale.

“You don’t see that [pitching] down there [in the minor leagues],” he told reporters.

He wasn’t ready, but Twins people remind you that they hadn’t expected him to be ready. They were in a bind in the outfield, with Hicks and Torii Hunter both hurting, and Buxton was their best option at the time.

They didn’t think he was ready then. By trading Hicks and opening center field for Buxton, they showed belief he is ready now.

At the worst, they think he can be a Gold Glove center fielder and a force on the basepaths, with occasional power and a chance to get on base often enough to contribute.

At best? Well, at best Buxton becomes the exciting rookie of 2016, the guy who takes a Twins team that already made progress last year and boosts it into the playoffs this season. Correa‘s Astros and Bryant’s Cubs did it, so why not Buxton‘s Twins?

At worst, Buxton is a guy you’ll want to watch, because speed like this is so exciting.

“He plays at a game speed that others can’t,” one Twins coach said.

“It’s like his feet barely touch the ground,” another American League Central coach said.

At best, he’s something like Trout, a center fielder who makes a difference in the field, at the plate and on the bases. So maybe it’s instructive that Trout batted just .220 (with 30 strikeouts in 123 at-bats) in his 2011 big league cameo, following it up with a 2012 season that won him the Rookie of the Year and nearly the Most Valuable Player award, as well.

The Twins remind you Buxton got better the longer he stayed at each level of the minor leagues. They say his major league at-bats improved as 2015 went on. They tell you he’s a great kid with a great attitudethe kind likely to benefit from his 2015 struggles.

“The transition for him has always been how to deal with the next level of pitching,” Twins manager Paul Molitor said at the winter meetings. “We saw some improvements, particularly in September. There will be a question of whether Triple-A at-bats are needed.

“Either way, he’s going to be an impact player, I believe, for a long time. We’re just going to see when that clock really starts ticking.”

The issue for the Twins could be that one clock already started, with the 113 days of major league service time they gave Buxton in 2015. They need him to become a star fairly quickly, as in before free agency approaches and we start wondering whether they can afford to keep him.

For now, though, this is about 2016. This is about what Buxton can do right away, and whether he can once again be mentioned alongside Correa.

They were the first two players picked in 2012, with Correa going first and Buxton second. They were first (Buxton) and third (Correa) on the MLB.com prospect list going into last season.

They showed up in the big leagues on nearly the same day, but only Correa really arrived in 2015. Last year belonged to him.

This year, possibly, will belong to Byron Buxton.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

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Joe Mauer Comments on Impact of Concussions on Vision, Hitting, More

Minnesota Twins first baseman Joe Mauer is no longer the superstar he once was, which he revealed can be blamed partly on lingering symptoms from a concussion he suffered in 2013.

Speaking to Brian Murphy of the Pioneer Press, Mauer said he still has bouts of blurred vision in the batter’s box. 

To combat the problem, he said he’ll use sunglasses while hitting: “I’ve always been kind of weird about my routine when it comes to stepping into the [batter’s] box, but it’s something I’ll give a shot this spring and see if it helps.”

Murphy added that Mauer will experiment with the shades during spring training, as the Twins will have their first workout February 22. The former American League MVP said he was first diagnosed with a concussion in August 2013 due to at least “two significant blows” from foul tips while he was catching. 

The Twins announced in November 2013 that Mauer was moving to first base on a full-time basis as a result of the concussion he suffered. He hasn’t been the same player the last two seasons as he was early in his career. 

Some of that drop-off in production can be attributed to a player in his early 30s in 2014 and 2015, but as recently as 2013, he posted a .324/.404/.476 slash line, so clearly something was not right for Mauer. 

Physically, the 32-year-old admitted there was a time after his concussion diagnosis when working out was a problem: 

Some of the exercises we tried to do last year, I’d come up and be like, ‘Whoa.’ Now it’s gradually getting better. I’m excited for that. That’s why I’m excited to get down there (to Fort Myers) and try some different things.

It could be a lot of things. There are so many different symptoms. For me it was lighting, I couldn’t really pick up the ball. It was blurry at times. Where I am here versus last year at this time, I can tell my workouts are better.

Even though lighting can seem like a silly issue for a hitter as talented as Mauer is, he provided a very sound reason why it does make a difference: “If you’re just a little off, you’re fouling off pitches you should be driving into the gap. In the big leagues, you don’t get too many more opportunities to see good ones to hit.”

The Twins shocked baseball pundits last year, winning 83 games and staying in the wild-card race until the final weekend. Their young talent is starting to make its presence felt in the big leagues, with Miguel Sano finishing third in AL Rookie of the Year voting and Byron Buxton getting integrated into the mix. 

If Sano and Buxton continue their evolution next season and Mauer plays closer to his 2013 level with a new approach and deeper understanding of what was wrong, the Twins will be a dangerous team in the American League.   

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