With a dismal trial run at the plate in 2015, Byron Buxton is on the spot this spring with the Twins.
The club is all but begging him to win the center field job left open by the offseason trade of Aaron Hicks to the Yankees for catcher John Ryan Murphy. As of yesterday, Buxton was hitting .225 with no home runs and three RBI in spring training. He has struck out 12 times in 40 at bats. That’s similar to his initial big league production last season and not acceptable for a much hyped athlete who the Twins chose with the second overall pick in the 2012 First-Year Player Draft.
The Twins have been struggling for years to fill the position Kirby Puckett and Torii Hunter turned into a franchise legacy. Buxton, then 21, arrived in Minneapolis last season with fielding and base running skills to make him a highlights regular on ESPN’s SportsCenter, but at the plate he often looked clueless. He struggled to make contact with the ball in his MLB debut year, frequently fooled by both fast balls and breaking pitches. In 129 at bats he hit .209 and struck out 44 times. He hit two home runs with six RBI.
Despite the disappointment of 2015, expectations remain high for Buxton. MLB.com placed him at No. 2 on its top 100 prospects list for 2016 and other authorities are also all in.
Buxton is even given a No. 47 ranking by Sports Illustrated in its March 7 article about the 50 MLB players with the most trade value (Twins right fielder Miguel Sano ranked No. 25 while the Angels’ Mike Trout topped the list).
SI wrote this about Buxton: “So ummm…mulligan? Buxton’s highly anticipated MLB debut was a bust.” The magazine said he has been “viewed by most as the best prospect in the game” and he could become an AL MVP candidate.
Health problems have slowed Buxton’s progress since the Twins signed him out of Appling County High School in Georgia. More injuries in 2016 will send the wrong signal about his future—and a worse indicator will be troubles at the plate. Yet this offseason Baseball America ranked Buxton the Twins’ best prospect in several categories including best hitter for average.
Buxton, who didn’t have enough at bats to expire his eligibility for American League Rookie of the Year in 2015, has a .301 lifetime minor league average. His stats include an impressive 2013 season when he hit .341 at Cedar Rapids and .326 with Fort Myers.
With his sensational fielding and base running skills, the Twins will drool over a Buxton who starts to approach .300 this year or next—and he better or the doubts about his hitting will be supported by facts.
Twins Notes
The Twins open the regular season in Baltimore a week from today and Buxton could be one of six new faces in the lineup from a year ago. Others look like shortstop Eduardo Escobar, designated hitter Byung Ho Park, left fielder Eddie Rosario, pitcher Ervin Santana and right fielder Miguel Sano.
The Baltimore game will be one of 150 FOX Sports North will telecast during the regular season. ESPN will televise the Twins game at Oakland May 30 while FS1 will carry Twins games May 14 at Cleveland and June 4 in Minneapolis against the Rays.
The Twins will play their sold out home opener at Target Field on April 11 against the White Sox. Twins legend Rod Carew will throw the ceremonial first pitch. Carew, who suffered a major heart attack and subsequent surgery last year, awaits a possible heart transplant. In January the Twins and the Carew family launched the Heart of 29 campaign designed to assist the American Heart Association’s efforts to raise funds and build awareness of cardiovascular disease.
The Twins have opened their regular season on the road in five of the last seven years. Minnesota has lost seven consecutive opening games.
The Twins had a bad start last year at 1-6 but earned a comeback season under first-year manager Paul Molitor. The team’s 83-79 record was a big improvement over four consecutive previous seasons of 90-plus loss records.
Minnesota finished second in the AL Central Division behind the Royals who were 12-7 in the season series against the Twins. The Royals won the World Series and are the preseason pick by many authorities to win the Central again.
Four passionate baseball fans and Sports Headliners readers offered predictions about the Twins and other teams. Three of the four forecast an 85-77 record while the fourth person, Bill Robertson, e-mailed that Minnesota will win “two to four more games than in 2015.”
Tim Murray has the Twins finishing third in the division behind the Royals and Indians while the others project another second place finish. Joel Shama, the most optimistic crystal baller, wrote the Twins “will snag a wild card.” Everyone predicted the Royals will win the division again.
Here’s how one fan summed up the Twins: “They still lack a true ace of the starting rotation and the bullpen is very shaky. It should be fun watching their hitters do damage to once ‘un-homerable’ Target Field.”
The Cubs and Blue Jays are popular choices by the predictors to play in the World Series. The group split two-two on whether the Cubs or Jays will become baseball’s 2016 champion.
Isn’t the Twins home opener Aprol 11th rather than April 10th?