Saturday, March 15, 2008

AL Central Update (3.15.08 Edition)

Chicago White Sox

  • The Sox, who at various points during the offseason, were interested in signing everybody from Torii Hunter to Aaron Rowand to Kosuke Fukudome. Instead, they traded prospects for Carlos Quentin and Nick Swisher, signed Cuban defect Alexi Ramirez and retained Jerry Owens hoping that one would emerge as a centerfielder candidate. They had discarded one-time heir to center at the Cell, Brian Anderson, as an afterthought. Naturally, Anderson did nothing to impress the top brass in his tenure in Chicago, finishing in 2006 with a low .225/.283/.359 line. That season he showed little patience, walking in only 8% of his plate appearances while striking out in over 22%. At age 25 Anderson found himself back in triple-A trying to show Kenny Williams that he didn't commit an egregious error in judgement assuming that Anderson could be just as good as fan favorite Aaron Rowand who he sent to Philadelphia for Jim Thome. He was brought up to Illinois in April but demonstrated the same futility that earned him the passage to Charlotte by reaching base in 4 of his 19 plate appearances. This spring, however, Anderson has been hitting well enough to place himself back into the mix. ''The only thing about Brian," Manager Ozzie told the Chicago Sun-Times,"hopefully he takes this game the way we thought he can play and he starts his career.'' In more than double the plate appearances this spring compared to 2007 (50), Anderson has made a strong case for being given one last chance: He has hit .380/.481/.750 with 3 home runs in his time provided to him by Quentin's lingering shoulder injury.
  • Joe Crede, who was a catalyst of the 2005 Championship team with his glove and recovering from missing a chuck of the 2007 season, has been the topic of trade conversation all spring as Josh Fields emerged as a bonifide slugger in Crede's absence. Injury recovery is never a guarantee, any 30-year-old will tell you that, but Crede is a valuable commodity. Admittedly, Fields being a younger still in indentured servitude so his production is that much more valuable, but Crede is a rare two-way player. Offensively, Fields has a much higher ceiling. In his 418 plate appearances last season, Fields hit 23 home runs and accumulated .244/.308/.480 averages in Crede's stead. Meanwhile Crede's last healthy full-season performance he had over 500 plate appearances in 2006 he had 30 home runs and averages of .289/.323/.506. Crede finished 6 ops+ points higher (107) in 2006 than Fields did in 2007 (101). Defensively, a healthy Crede is that much better than the former Sooners quarterback. In 2007, Fields gave an effort at third that lead to 2.9 win shares with his glove. He started 19 double-plays (being a quarterback, he has a very strong arm, more suited for an outfield position) and made 15 plays out of zone leading to a revised zone rating of .668 in his 689 innings of work. In 2006, Crede provided 7 win shares with his defense. He started 36 double-plays and retrieved 57 balls out of zone, leading to a revised zone rating of .760 in his 1260 innings of work. Kenny Williams hasn't quite given Crede the vote of confidence, assuming that Williams is offered the right deal by San Francisco or Los Angeles, Crede could be on the first train west, especially because he is in the final year of his contract. The unfortunate part is that Crede hasn't given much reason to have him play with his 1 extra base hit (a home run) in 7 hits.

Cleveland Indians (Grapefruit League)

  • Cardinals Rule 5 draft pick centerfielder Brian Barton, snatched from the Indians organization, is having a great spring batting .333/.385/.666 with 2 triples, 2 home runs and 1 double. Cleveland has reiterated that in spite of having one of the AL's best centerfielders in Grady Sizemore, they are hoping that St. Louis returns him at the end of spring training. When the Twins were light on the centerfield candidates during the Rule 5 draft, there was speculation that if Barton were available when the Twins selection came, Barton could be brought in to audition for the position. Unfortunately the Cardinals had the same need and drafted prior to the Twins. Barton is competing with former MVP Juan Gonzalez, who is hoping to mount a major league comeback, is also having a good spring hitting .308/.333/.482 with one home run off of Johan Santana. But a nagging injury to Gonzalez's abdomen has given a better opportunity to Barton to make the team making it less likely of a chance of a Cuyahoga homecoming for Barton.
  • The Indians rotation - outside of Sabathia, Carmona, Byrd and Westbrook - is still wide open between Jeremy Sowers, Cliff Lee and Aaron Laffey. Sowers continued to impress Cleveland management this late in the spring with 12 days remaining until the team heads north. The one mitigating factor is that Lee is still due $3.75 million in 2008 and $5.75 in 2009 in a mishap of a contract while Sowers and Laffey are still secured in their indentured servitude portion of theirs. The 24-year-old Sowers has thrown 3 times against the Twins for 23 innings and maintains a 3.13 era. In his only game facing the Twins on April 23rd Sowers did not receive the decision in a 7-3 Indians victory after he threw 7 innings of 9 hit ball and giving up all 3 runs. Laffey, meanwhile, made his major league debut against the Twins last August 4th going 5.1 innings versus Matt Garza. The Twins won 3 to 2 (Ramon Ortiz was the pitcher of record as Garza exited in after 4 innings) and they dinged Laffey for 6 hits and all 3 runs. Lee, who was battling injuries last season, did not face the Twins in 2007. The 29-year-old Lee has amassed a decent record of 5-2 with a 4.23 era in 66 innings facing the Twins in his career. Considering that they are all lefties, the albatross to the Twins offense last season, none of the three are ideal. Laffey is a shade less experienced than Sowers but did win 17 games in three levels in 2007.
  • Kelly Shoppach, Victor Martinez's understudy catcher, spent the 2007 season being Paul Byrd's personal catcher. For whatever the reason, be it rapport,

    Synchronicity, or just preference, some pitchers will request the services on one particular catcher no matter the circumstance. In 2007 the Byrd/Shoppach battery took the field 31 time in 2007. In those games the combination finished 19-12 (Byrd was the 15-8 in those matches). For his career, Byrd had allowed hitters to hit .274/.319/.451 against him while he struck out 13.7% of batters faced and walked just 5.6%. However, in 2007 coupled with Shoppach at his behest, Byrd was touched up for .301/.329/.473 with a strike out rate of 10.5% and a walk rate of 3.3%. While the correlation may be weak and the notion that a catcher can influence a pitcher is still an on-going debate among statheads, it would appear that Byrd/Shoppach is a successful combo for the Indians as evident by the .612 winning percentage in spite of producing a batting line similar to Miguel Tejada.

Detroit Tigers

  • Scouts on MLB.com have elected Justin Verlander's fastball as the best in the major leagues. While the impromptu poll doesn't quantify the basis for the award, Verlander, according to pitch f/x data, throws his fastball on average at 95.1 mph. While this is a very good velocity, Verlander certainly doesn't have the most unhittable fastball. In a partial study of the data, Verlander leaned on his fastball using it 63% of the time and had a WHIFF of .082. Javier Vazquez, an AL Central rival, throws his at 92.6 mph but carries a WHIFF of .190. Johan Santana throws his at 92 as well and accumulated a WHIFF of .209. The runner-up in the category was Yankee Joba Chamberlain who throws his significantly harder than Verlander at 98.2 and had a WHIFF of .146. The point is without any defined parameters it is hard to understand why it is the best fastball. Then again, SI did name him the number 1 young pitcher in the major leagues.
  • The once dominant bullpen that led the Tigers to the World Series in 2006 is facing turmoil in 2008 as both Joel Zumaya and Fernando Rodney could be absent from the beginning of the season. While the confidence is high because Todd Jones, arguable one of the most underwhelming closers in 2007, is still anchoring the bullpen. Though crafty, Jones is not a dominating closer. The 2006 World Series appearing Tigers benefited from the dominance of Zumaya and Rodney in crucial late innings situations and handed the ball to Jones in cushy "save opportunities".
  • Even though they have relinquished several key arms in the past few offseasons including Andrew Miller to Florida (who might be the opening day starter for the Marlins), 2007 draft pick Rick Porcello is proving that the Tigers still have a plethora of arms in their system for the future.

Kansas City Royals

  • Free agent acquisition right-handed pitcher Brett Tomko is off to a poor start in the ides of March. In 10.2 innings of work, Tomko has allowed 12 earned runs (15 total) and is sporting a 10.12 era. The 34-year-old Tomko, who is due $3 million for 2008, has been mostly a spot-starter and long relief the past several seasons. At the time of the signing the Royals figured that Tomko would be in the rotation behind a solid Gil Meche, stathead sophomore Brian Bannister and Zack Greinke but has instilled doubt after his preseason performance.
  • Joe Posnanski does an excellent, if not long-winded, preview (part II) of the Kansas City Royals.
  • Billy Butler is a really, really, really good hitter. In his 37 spring training at-bats, Butler is hitting .378/.452/.676 with 5 extra base hits (3 home runs). This could be the story-line of the 2008 season for the Royals and when Royals fans are grasping for straws mid-season, they may enjoy having Butler as the KC All-Star representative. Making the call right now.

Minnesota Twins

  • Always the bearer of cold shower columns, Patrick Ruesse didn't fail to pen a depressing opinion piece detailing the shortcomings of the 2008 Twins. Admittedly, the starting rotation has plenty of question marks but Ruesse missed the mark by calling Scott Baker and Boof Bonser "4-and-5 starters, not 1-and-2's". In his iceberg reporting of just calling it as he sees 'em style is a method as outdated as the newspaper it is printed on. While Baker and Bonser have yet to produce season in the major leagues that equate to being frontline starters, both hurlers have minor league track records that suggest it is possible. Baker showed his brilliance in his 1-hit shutout of the Kansas City Royals and Bonser has worked hard to drop excess poundage which has given him better numbers this spring. Furthermore, Ruesse pointed to just the second outing of Francisco Liriano since 2006 as an early canary in the coal mine that Liriano is finished as a pitcher. "Liriano had no more life on his pitches than in his first comeback start last Friday" wrote the Strib scribe. The truth is that Liriano is rebounding from an injury that cost him the entire 2007 calender year. His velocity will not be at the point it was in 2006 most likely until May or June. The slider lacked both bite and accuracy but it is hardly appropriate to write him off after two spring training outings.
  • The problem is that Baker could begin the season the disabled list, after suffering from similar malady to Glen Perkins, who missed more than 3 months last year. In his 4 innings in the spring, Baker did not give up a run and struck out 4 while walking only one.
  • Bonser, meanwhile, has continued his torrid pace, finishing 9 innings and giving up only three runs. The success has been attributed to both his weight loss and his approach. Part of that new approach is instituting more change-ups during the game. "Last year, I threw like maybe one or two a game,'' he said, "and that was amazing." Actually, Bonser used his change-up 6% of the time according to pitch f/x data. The problem is, it appears to be very hittable. Bonser's 92 mph fastball, which he employed 58% of the time, had a WHIFF average of .071 (roughly average for a fastball). His 83 mph change-up (1 mph faster than Hernandez's top speed) when thrown had a WHIFF average of .068. This is a very low rating for a change-up meaning that contact was made when it was thrown. For perspective, Baker throws his change-up at 81 mph (and used it even less frequently at 4% of his pitches), but managed to make bats miss with a WHIFF average of .200. More might not be necessarily better however it may disrupt the hitters ability to sit on his fastball or curveball (which enjoyed a high WHIFF average of .247).
  • One correct line out of the Ruesse column was "Livan Hernandez will need five runs (or more) to win a game." Last season the enigmatic Cuban's Diamondbacks needed more than 5.11 runs of support on average to lift the team to victory. This season with the adjustment to American League hitters may require additional runs from the Twins. His 9 runs given up in 9 spring training innings is not reassuring anyone in the Twins Territories.

Monday, March 10, 2008

Nick Punto | 30-years-old | Utility | -6 WSAB (2007)

2007: .210/.288/.271 | 1 HR | 11% bb%/17% k%

  • 15% LD% | 51% GB% | 34% FB%

  • 14.6% : Nick Punto's line drive rate was the third lowest in the American League among qualified batters (ahead of him was 2/3rds of the 2008 Los Angeles Angels outfield, Torii Hunter and Gary Matthews Jr). This was a significant decrease from his 2006 line drive rate of 24%.

  • .255 : Nick Punto's batting average of balls in play was the lowest in the American League.

  • .271 : slugging percentage. Lowest among qualified American League batters.

  • 23% : of Nick Punto's 99 hits went for extra bases, though 55% of his hits from the right side of the plate went for extra bases while only 20% of his hits left-handed went for extra bases.

  • .175/.243/.240 : batting line in 172 plate appearances as a right-handed batter against left-handed pitching in 2007.

  • .127/.207/.155 : batting line in his 82 plate appearances in August.

  • 4.0 : Number of pitches per at-bat.

  • 0 - 1 : Nick Punto's best count. He hit .308/.308/.404 with one strike and no balls. Very meaningless statistic but interesting nonetheless.

  • .205 : batting average against Cleveland's CC Sabathia (2 for 15), Paul Byrd (2 for 10) and Fausto Carmona (3 for 9).

Nick Punto GB/FB/LD : Season Stats Graph

Why he'll improve in 2008: As the axiom goes, went you hit bottom there is no where else to go but up. And the bottom of the league was right where Nick Punto's batting average on balls in plays was. Some will tell you that BABIP is luck, which if true, Nick Punto's season could have been one of the unluckiest of them all. By isolating both Punto's contact type and BABIP you can see how the production declined. 85% of the time he was putting the ball into play as a pop-up or groundball, two methods that have very good odds of being converted in to outs. His low line drive rate in addition to his high groundball and fly ball rates decreased his average on batted balls (the low .255). Some will suggest that 2006 in which he finished batting .290/.352/.373 was the deviant to his true production. Punto's 2007 season, however, witnessed a significant regression from the type of contact he was making 2004 through 2006. In 2004, Punto hit line drives in over 30% of the balls in play. The following season he hit line drives 21% of the time and improved his contact in 2006 by hitting line drives 24% of the time. In those seasons, his batting average on balls in play was around or above .300. When his line drive rate plummeted to 15%, so did his BABIP and consequently his batting average followed. Punto's walk rate and strikeout rate in 2007 were both slightly above the league average but consistant with the output he had in his two previous seasons. The biggest change was the contact. There is nothing to suggest that Nick Punto's swing will create more line drives in 2008 but it should improve considering the previous trajectory of his career.

Friday, March 07, 2008

Post-Game (Exhibition Game 8)

Twinks 8, O's 7 (Box Score)

  • The Twins provided Livan with a 5 runs, .6 of a run improvement from his 2007 average run support from Arizona, yet Hernandez allowed 6 runs, almost a run higher than his runs allowed average last year. La Velle reports that Hernandez isn't worried, based on the fact that last spring he entered the 2007 sporting a 13.07 era in spring training. The rationale is that even though Hernandez had a terrible 10.5 innings in the spring, he still finished 11-11 with a 4.93 era. The problem with that logic is that there are far too many varitables that would suggest that Hernandez will repeat this performance. Several mitigating factors including age and nine hitters instead of eight in the American League suggest that there is the possibility that Hernandez will significantly regress. The transition from a ballclub that was ranked 5th best in the majors in overall defense by John Dewan to Minnesota who finished 18th best in 2007 and has lost a Gold Glove centerfielder could adversely effect Hernandez's 2008 numbers. The fact is, Hernandez is heavily reliant on his defense as 85% of batters faced put a ball in play (and 21% did so in line drive form). Livan, however, is particularly good at stranding runners. Last year, he finished among the top National League starters with a 75% left-on-base rate. If Hernandez is able to keep the ball in the park and replicate his left-on-base rate, he stands the opportunity of shaving runs scored down from his bloated 5.11 per 9 innings last year.

  • In some way, you have to respect Carlos Gomez's swagger, no matter how misguided. Gomez recently told the Tom Powers that he will help this team because he would be batting "ahead of Morneau and the catcher and the other guy." Reading statements like this I envision Gomez to be a Dominican Ricky Bobby.

  • Delmon Young finished the game 3 for 3 with 2 rbis and a run score. Following Wednesday's Yankees game where he launched a shot off the centerfield batting eye on a line has Twins fans anxious to see if he has honed his plate approach this offseason. Potential has been there for Delmon, discipline has been lacking. Patrick Ruesse penned a column indicating that Young is expected to carry a big load considering he is the replacement Torii. The relatively bland piece of reporting took an abrupt u-turn in the final two paragraphs however:

    Young's home run was the game's first for the Twins. Garrett Jones followed with a two-run bomb off the Yankees' Joba Chamberlain. Buscher also had another line-drive hit. These are two lefthanded hitters the Twins would like on the bench -- but only one can make the club. Unless, Jason Kubel's first week of lifeless at-bats continues through March ... then what?

    "Kubel proved he can hit the second half [of 2007]," Gardenhire said. "I've decided that with him what you see is what you're going to get. He's going to be that speed. And when he turns it up a notch, we don't notice. It's not that much of a notch." Between Gardenhire's comments and Ruesse's reporting, it sounds as if there is an undercurrent to add Garrett Jones and Brian Buscher to the roster at the expense of Jason Kubel. Kubel was undoubtedly the Twins best hitter in August and September (if not that then the most improved hitter). This spring he has only two hits in nine at-bats inciting some concern among the coaches that the second-half was the anomaly and not the beginning. I wrote in January reiterating BP's Joe Sheehan's sentiment that Kubel will have a breakout season in 2008 and that the only thing impeding him from doing so would be Gardenhire's line-up shuffles. Whether or not Gardy's quote is an indication that he is willing to sit Kubel for an extended period of time has yet to be seen.

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Post-Game (Exhibition Game 6 & 7)

Twinks 0, Rays 0 (PPD)

  • They say the stats don't count even though the teams completed 4.5 innings. In the grand scheme of things this is spring training and none of the stats count, right? You can believe that the outings by Boof Bonser and Denard Span still mattered as they both made impressive performances. Nick Blackburn also managed to throw an inning of scoreless ball.
  • Prior to this game, the MLB Press Pass for the Twins indicated that the team had already grounded into 10 double-plays. This is leading the majors in that category so far.
  • Speaking of grounding into double-plays, MLB.com's Kelly Theiser answered a series of mailbag questions recently, one that dealt with the possibility of having Michael Cuddyer or Delmon Young in the number three bat slot in the lineup. The reader asked: "I the idea of having Delmon Young's potent bat after Justin Morneau in the lineup to stop any intentional walks. But I worry about Michael Cuddyer hitting into double plays and having unproductive at-bats in the three spot. Assuming that Joe Mauer bats second and Morneau hits cleanup, are the Twins better off with Cuddyer batting third and Young batting fifth or the other way around? -- Aaron W., Brooklyn Park, Minn." Thesier answered the question in a relatively straightforward manner, as I assume MLB reporters are instructed to do, while never really offering any in-depth analysis. What should have been made clear is that even though Michael Cuddyer has had a large amount of gidp's in 2007 (19), Delmon Young actually hit into more (23). In terms of having unproductive at-bats, Cuddyer clearly has the on-base percentage advantage .346 to Delmon's .319. Furthermore, Cuddyer has had 192 plate appearances batting 3rd where he is hitting .281/.396/.469 with 31 walks and 33 strikeouts. Delmon is still learning the nuances of major league pitching and will be a very successful hitter but for now Cuddyer should be the favorite for batting 3rd.

Twinks 7, Yankmes 5 (Box Score)

  • Kevin Slowey had yet another tough outing, finishing 2.0 innings with 3 earned runs, 2 walks and 3 strikeouts while giving up 5 hits. With just under 26 days until the season begins for the Twins, Slowey has dug himself into quite a hole. His normal pinpoint control has disappeared and the fastball with movement has not helped him avoid giving up the big hits as opponants are slugging .850 off of him in 3.2 innings. In Slowey's defense he has had to work against to very formidable lineups in the Red Sox and Yankees. He worked particularly well against Jason Giambi in the 1st inning. Slowey moved ahead of Giambi 0-2 and then changed his eyeline but buzzing a 91 mph fastball above the letters only to set up a called third strike as he painted the low-outside corner. As pitch f/x data showed last year, Slowey does not make bats miss. His source of dominance is his control, proven by his battle with Giambi.

  • Garrett Jones, the proud owner of the longest home run hit in Fenway Park last season (456 feet) off of Josh Beckett, connected off of another golden arm of last year, Joba Chamberlain. Jones, who has spent the past three seasons in Rochester, is clinging to a thread of hope for making the 2008 roster. His ability to play outfielder and displace Justin Morneau at first has kept him on the bubble, however, as his minor league record shows he is a freeswinger. In 3,268 plate appearances, Jones has struck out in 23.5% of them. His saving grace in his lowly .250/.304/.439 career numbers is his ability to generate power (he has a 40% xbh% on his career).

  • Speed kills. Alexi Casilla, finishing the day 1 for 2 with an rbi, should recieve consideration for batting lead-off. In his 13 plate appearances, the switch-hitting Casilla has drawn three walks and is batting .300/.462/.300 with 3 stolen bases. Prior to today's game, the Twins had 9 stole bases tied for second with Tampa Bay who had 10. Casilla's speed, coupled with Carlos Gomez and Jason Pridie who also have 2 stolen bases each, would make the Twins one of the fastest teams in the majors.

  • Delmon Young has been hitting the ball very well this spring, including his homer to center off of the Yankees' Ian Kennedy. His .500/.545/.800 spring line with 5 hits (including the aforementioned home run) has offered vindication for trading a potential frontline starter. Matt Garza, meanwhile, was touched up by the Detroit Tigers for 2 earned run in his 1.2 inning debut for the Rays. Garza gave up back-to-back hits to Carlos Guillen and Miguel Cabrera after walking Gary Sheffield in the first. He was unable to get out of the 2nd after Edgar Renteria led off with a single and then Curtis Granderson followed with an rbi double at which point Garza was yanked for another former Twin, Grant Balfour, who worked out of the jam.

  • Delmon's brother Dmitri, fresh off of his comeback season and new contract, has annoyed Nationals officials by reporting to camp weighing in at a whopping 298 pounds. He has been having issues controlling his diabetes. I wrote a month ago how Young's contract with Washington was one of the best free agent acquisitions in 2007 however after he signed for 2-years at $5 million AAV, he could easily swing to the worst contracts list of 2008.

Monday, March 03, 2008

Post-Game (Exhibition Game 5)

Twinks 8, Reds 6 - 10 innings (Box Score)

  • Carlos Gomez, now 2 for 8 this spring (.250), coaxed a lead-off walk from Jeremy Affeldt and stole third displaying his speed that even surprised the veteran lefty Affeldt. "I never came set in the first and still stole off me," Affeldt told the Cincinnati Enquirer. Second base candidate Alexi Casilla also added two stolen bases, his first off of Affeldt as well. As impressive as it is to swipe a base off of a left-hander underneath his nose, Affeldt does not have a pick-off recorded between 2004-2007 and in just 59 innings in 2007 he was ran on 7 times. Later, Casilla took 2nd again this time off of Scott Sauerbeck. All of the stolen bases were swindled from former Twin Javier Valentin, who threw out only 11% of potential base-stealers in 2007 down a significant amount from 47% in 2006.

  • Defensively and on the basepaths, Gomez has certainly given himself the edge between he, Jason Pridie (.333) and Denard Span (.285) which may compensate for his offensive inadequacies. Of course, approximately 10 at-bats is too small of a microcosm to project to 450+ plate appearances. Therefore spring training you have to analyze the other details of a batter. In a previous blog, Joe Christensen noted that Gomez's swing in one game appeared "cartoonishly" big. Yesterday, Joe Vavra confirmed to Christensen that the Twins are also monitoring this: "You're thinking, 'How many swings can he make like that without breaking down?' " Vavra said. "Because he puts a tremendous amount of torque on his back, and if you do that too many times, boy. You try not to be so violent in your approach but try to be aggressive."

  • In the past two games Twins second basemen have been victims of botched double-play balls. On Sunday, Nick Punto misplayed a Coco Crisp ball to allow Doug Mirabelli to advance to second. Monday, with one out and Norris Hopper on first, Casey Daigle induced a groundball out of Ken Griffey Jr however Brendan Harris had trouble making the transfer from his glove. Norris was able to advance to second leaving Harris's only play at first for Griffey Jr. Now with two outs the dangerous Adam Dunn came to the plate and knocked a base hit into center scoring Hopper from second with two outs. Admittedly, this is still spring but these kind of miscues will be detrimental to the team in the regular season.

  • 29-year-old Randy Ruiz is putting together a decent spring hitting .375/.444/.750 with a home run and 6 total bases in 8 at-bats. Ruiz, for those unfamiliar with the ballplayer, is a modern day version of Crash Davis. It is hard to label him as a quadruple-A player considering he has only had 79 at-bats above double-A. Originally drafted by the Mets in 1996 with the 1068th pick overall, Ruiz opted to attend Bellevue Community College in Washington instead of signing (possibly because Ruiz is from the Bronx). In 1999 he signed as a nondrafted free agent with the Cincinnati Reds and played four years in their organization. Even though he hit .291/.371/.465 with 41 extra base hits (36.6% xbh%) split between A and high-A, the right-handed batting Ruiz never was promoted above high-A with the Reds and was released following that season. He was signed by the Orioles who sent him initially to class A Delmarva Shorebirds and then eventually to the high-A Fredrick Keys. Ruiz finished his 25-year-old season hitting .296/.395/.505 with 37 extra base hits (40.6% xbh%) yet Baltimore too released him. This musical teams continued on for Ruiz who, between 2004 and the end of 2007, was signed by seven teams in those four year. In the face of such adversity, lesser ballplayers might have been prone to calling it a career. In 2007 alone he was in the Pirates, Giants and Phillies organizations and finished hitting .293/.359/.511 with 55 extra base hits (39.5% xbh%). While with the Phillies last year, Ruiz was given his first taste of triple-A. The unfortunate part of Ruiz's career remains in the part that I quickly rushed over. In 2005 while in his first stint in the Phillies organization, Ruiz tested positive TWICE for performance enhancing drugs and was suspended for 45 games. Throughout that season, Ruiz had absolutely crushed the ball. In just 89 games, Ruiz hit 27 home runs (an ungodly 7.0% hr%) and batted .349/.405/.669. Furthermore, Ruiz could be considered the right-handed batting equivalent of Jack Cust - minus the obscene on-base percentage. Randy Ruiz's minor league career compares to that of Cust (in both performance enhancing accusations and statistics). Cust, who had his breakout season with Oakland last year at 29-years-old, hit .286/.428/.518 with 200 home runs (4.2% hr%) in 3,786 at-bats. Ruiz in his 3,228 minor league at-bats has hit .300/.370/.522 with 150 home runs (4.1%). If he remains clean (as he insists he was in 2005) and continues to punish the ball this spring, Ruiz could be another power-hitting right-handed bat the Twins will need at some point this season.