BOO-ks!

Did I scare you? Hey, I'm a little frightened by how long it's been since we've had a book post! Given that it's October, I figured it might be a good moment to talk about spooky books.

As it happens, I'm pretty much a wimp when it comes to scary books (or movies or whatever). I still remember the summer day when I was about 16 and I decided to read Jurassic Park because I had nothing else to do. I got through more than half the book that first day, and I then had nightmares about dinosaurs that night. I finished the book the following day and never picked up anything in that vein again!

At least I am able to handle scary picture books. Here are a few recent favorites:
Creepy Carrots by Aaron Reynolds, illus. Peter Brown
Creepy Pair of Underwear by Aaron Reynolds, illus. Peter Brown
Hailey's Halloween by Lisa Bullard, illus. Holli Conger
Hallowilloween by Calef Brown
Leo: A Ghost Story by Mac Barnett, illus. Christian Robinson

So what have you been reading since the last book post? Anything scary?

One Man’s Opinion Of The Top 300 Twins Of All Time-Updated Through 2017

It is year 6 of putting my pet project on the WGOM site, SBG put it on his old site a few years before this. The Twins first playoff appearance in 7 years (kind of) leads to some movement on the list. Joe finally jumps TonyO for the #4 spot. Dozier follows up on his 2016 season with another great one to jump into the top25. Sano and Ervin enter the top100. Escobar, Buxton, and Rosario are poised to join them just outside (ranging from 117-125). On the strengh of mostly just some added longevity, Gibson joins the top150. Polanco and Kepler join the top200 and Grossman and Vargas make modest jumps from last year. Newcomers this year are Kintzler, Castro, and Berrios. I updated with Ervin's Cy Young votes and MVP votes and Gold Gloves for Buxton and Dozier.

Staying put (or even falling backward) are Perkins, Hughes, Danny Santana, and Ryan Pressley. Falling out of the top300 this year are Darrell Brown, Juan Castro, and Brent Gates.

I stole most of the idea from when Aaron Gleeman started his top40 list over a decade ago (book coming soon of the top50?) The below quote is his, and the rest is an excerpt from a book I put together at the 50 year mark. I’ve updated the list and stats through 2017.

“The rankings only include time spent playing for the Minnesota Twins. In other words, David Ortiz doesn’t get credit for turning into one of the best players in baseball after joining the Red Sox and Paul Molitor doesn’t get credit for being one of the best players in baseball for the Brewers and Blue Jays. The Twins began playing on April 11, 1961, and that’s when these rankings start as well.”

I used a variety of factors, including longevity and peak value. Longevity included how many years the player was a Twin as well as how many plate appearances or innings pitched that player had in those years. For peak value, I looked at their stats, honors, and awards in their best seasons, as well as how they compared to their teammates. Did they lead their team in OPS or home runs or ERA for starters or WPA? If so, that got some bonus points. I factored in postseason heroics, awards (gold gloves, silver sluggers, MVPs, Cy Youngs), statistical achievements (batting titles, home run leaders, ERA champs, etc), and honors (all star appearances), and I looked at team success as well. If you were the #1 starter on a division winning champ, that gave you more points than the #1 starter on a cellar dweller. I looked at some of the advanced stats like WPA, WAR (as calculated by fan graphs and baseball-reference.com), WARP (as calculated by Baseball Prospectus), and Win Shares (as calculated by Bill James). For hitters, I also looked at OPS and the old school triple crown statistics like batting average, home runs, stolen bases, and RBI (and not only where you finished within the AL in any given year, but where you appear on the top25 lists amongst all Twins in the last 50 years). For pitchers I looked at strikeouts, innings pitched, win/loss percentage, ERA as well as ERA+). If there was a metric that was used for all 57 years of Twins history, I tried to incorporate it. I tended to give more credit to guys who were starters instead of part time/platoon players, more credit to position players over pitchers (just slightly, but probably unfairly) and starters over relievers (and closers over middle relievers). There’s no formula to my magic, just looking at a lot of factors and in the end going with the gut in all tie-breakers. Up in the top10 I’m looking at All star appearances, Cy Young and MVP votes, batting average or ERA titles or top10 finishes, etc, and placement in the top25 hitting and pitching lists in Twins history as well. In the middle 100s, it’s more about who started a few more years or had 2 good seasons rather than 1 with possibly an occasional all-star berth or top10 finish in SB or strikeouts. Once you’re in the latter half of the 200s there are none of those on anyone’s resume, so its basically just looking at peak season in OPS+ or ERA+, WAR, Win Shares, and who started the most years, had the most at bats, or pitched the most innings. What the player did as a coach, manager, or broadcaster is not taken into consideration for this list, so Billy Martin, Tom Kelly or Billy Gardner weren’t able to make the top 300 since they were poor players and Frank Quilici and Paul Molitor didn’t improve his status due to his managing career. Feel free to pick it apart and decide in your opinion, who was slighted, and who's overrated.
Continue reading One Man’s Opinion Of The Top 300 Twins Of All Time-Updated Through 2017

2017 Postseason, Game 5: Goodbye, AL East

No, really. You can go home now.

HOU @ BOS: Morton vs. Porcello (HOU up 2-1)

WAS @ CHC: Scherzer vs. Quintana (series tied 1-1)

CLE @ NYY: Bauer vs. Severino (CLE up 2-1)

LA @ ARI: Darvish vs. Greinke (LA up 2-0)

Lots and lots of high quality pitchers. I'll bet a couple of them even go 5 innings.

2002 Rewind: Game Five

MINNESOTA 7, TORONTO 5 IN TORONTO

Date:  Saturday, April 6.

Batting stars:  Cristian Guzman was 2-for-4 with a double and a stolen base.  Corey Koskie was 2-for-4 with a double.  Doug Mientkiewicz was 2-for-5 with a double and a stolen base.

Pitching stars:  LaTroy Hawkins pitched 1.2 scoreless innings.  Eddie Guardado struck out two in a scoreless inning.

Opposition stars:  Felipe Lopez was 2-for-4 with a double.  Carlos Delgado was 2-for-5 with a double.  Shannon Stewart was 2-for-5.

The game:  The Twins again jumped out to an early lead.  Guzman scored from first on a Mientkiewicz double to put Minnesota up 1-0 in the first.  Two walks, a single, and a ground out gave the Blue Jays a 2-1 lead after one, but the Twins came back with five in the second.  Jay Canizaro had a two-run triple, Tom Prince an RBI single, a run scored on a ground out, and a sacrifice fly rounded out the inning.  Toronto got one back in the third on a Delgado double, but it was still 6-3 until the eighth, when the Blue Jays opened the inning with four consecutive singles, making the score 6-5.  They put men on second and third with two out, but a popup ended the inning.  A Jacque Jones homer in the ninth gave Minnesota an insurance run, and Guardado came in to slam the door in the ninth.

WP:  Hawkins.  LP:  Scott Eyre.  S:  Guardado.

Notes:  Canizaro got the start at second this time and went 1-for-3 with a triple and two RBIs...Tom Prince caught for the second straight game in place of A. J. Pierzynski...Starter Kyle Lohse lasted just 4.1 innings, giving up three runs on eight hits and three walks and three strikeouts.  He was removed in the fifth after consecutive singles put men on first and third with one out...Jones' home run was his third in five games...Guardado's save was his fourth in five games...Dustan Mohr was 1-for-3 and was batting .400...Jones and Mientkiewicz were each at .381...The Twins had four starters batting below .200:  Torii Hunter (.190), Guzman (.176), Koskie (.150) and Canizaro (.125).

Record:  The Twins were 4-1, tied for first place with Cleveland.

Happy Birthday–October 9

Dave Rowe (1854)
Al Maul (1865)
Rube Marquard (1866)
Joe Sewell (1898)
Mike Hershberger (1939)
Joe Pepitone (1940)
Freddie Patek (1944)
Bob Moose (1947)
Steve Palermo (1949)
Brian Downing (1950)
Randy Lerch (1954)
Felix Fermin (1963)
Danny Mota (1975)
Brian Roberts (1977)
Mark McLemore (1980)
Jason Pridie (1983)

Steve Palermo was a major league umpire from 1977-1991, when he was shot and paralyzed while trying to prevent a robbery.  He became Supervisor of Umpires in 2000.

We would also like to wish a happy birthday to brianS' dad.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–October 9

2002 Rewind: Game Four

MINNESOTA 4, TORONTO 3 IN TORONTO

Date:  Friday, April 5.

Batting stars:  David Ortiz was 2-for-5 with a two-run homer and a double.  Doug Mientkiewicz was 2-for-4 with two doubles and a walk.  Dustan Mohr was 2-for-3 with a triple, a walk, and a stolen base.

Pitching stars:  Rick Reed pitched five innings, giving up two runs on three hits and two walks with three strikeouts.  J. C. Romero struck out two in 1.1 perfect innings.  Mike Jackson struck out two in 1.2 perfect innings.

Opposition stars:  Felix Heredia struck out three in 2.1 scoreless innings, giving up a hit and three walks.  Dave Berg hit a pinch-hit home run.

The game:  The Twins jumped on Blue Jays starter Brandon Lyon, as Ortiz hit a two-run homer and Torii Hunter made it back-to-back homers, giving the Twins a 3-0 lead.  Shannon Stewart led off the bottom of the first to make it 3-1, but the Twins got the run back in the second as Tom Prince scored from first on a single-plus-error by Jacque Jones.  Carlos Delgado led off the fourth with a home run to cut the lead to 4-2.  There was no more scoring until the ninth, when Berg led off with a pinch-hit homer to make it 4-3.  A walk put the tying run on base, but a double play and a fly out ended the game.

WP:  Reed.  LP:  Lyon.  S:  Eddie Guardado.

Notes:  Luis Rivas was apparently injured in the second game of the season.  He would not return until June 4.  The Twins appear to have been auditioning candidates to replace him, as Jay Canizaro started at second yesterday and Warren Morris started this game, going 0-for-3...Prince replaced A. J. Pierzynski at catcher and was 1-for-4...All of the Toronto runs came on solo homers, by Stewart, Delgado, and Berg.  It was the first homer of the season for each.  I guess solo home runs don't hurt you...The Twins had several players batting well in the young season, as Mohr was batting .429, Jones .412, Mientkiewicz .375, and Ortiz .353.  On the other end of the scale were Cristian Guzman at .077 and Corey Koskie at .063.