Tag: Castro

  • Twins Notes: Varland, Woods Richardson, Castro


    The Twins entered the 2024 season with high hopes that prospect and Twin Cities native Louie Varland would step up and seize a spot in the rotation. The former 15th-round pick had the look of a late-round steal, having climbed to the No. 88 prospect in the game on FanGraphs’ top-100 rankings after pitching to a 3.06 ERA, 27.3% strikeout rate and 7.9% walk rate in 126 1/3 innings between Double-A and Triple-A in 2022 and notching a 3.81 ERA through 26 frames in his MLB debut late that season. Varland posted a 3.97 ERA with similar strikeout and walk rates in 81 2/3 Triple-A frames in 2023 and then held his own with a 4.63 ERA and continued K-BB rates in his 2023 range.

    The 2024 season, however, could scarcely have gone worse for Varland. He lasted four starts in the rotation before being optioned to Triple-A with a 9.18 ERA (17 runs in 16 2/3 innings). Varland had a rollercoaster season in Triple-A, resulting in a 4.75 ERA through 16 starts, though a disproportionate amount of damage came in one start that saw him tagged for a staggering 11 earned runs. (He had a combined 3.67 ERA in his other appearances.) A late look in the majors yielded poor overall results, though Varland did finish with a nice stretch of 7 2/3 innings, wherein he allowed two runs with an 11-to-2 K/BB ratio.

    Dan Hayes of The Athletic reports that as the Twins gear up for 2025, it appears increasingly likely that Varland will be ticketed for a relief role. The St. Paul native averaged better than 95 mph on his heater last season even when working as a starter; it’s reasonable to expect that velocity to play up in a transition to a shorter role. Varland has posted at least average swinging-strike rates in the upper minors and big leagues as well, so it stands to reason that he could see an uptick in whiffs with a more powerful repertoire.

    One reason it’s become easier to move a former rotation hopeful like Varland to the ’pen has been the reemergence of Simeon Woods Richardson. The former top prospect had tumbled down Minnesota’s starting pitching depth chart heading into ’24 after a dismal 2023 showing in Triple-A. But, as Woods Richardson explained in a sitdown with The Athletic’s Aaron Gleeman, an offseason and spring training of work with the Twins’ data team and coaching staff brought about a new arm slot that produced more velocity and a new-look slider that broke out as his most effective secondary pitch.

    Woods Richardson wore down a bit late in the 2024 season as he pushed to a new career-high level in terms of workload (31 starts, 147 innings), but he finished the season with a 4.17 ERA, 20.6% strikeout rate and 8.4% walk rate. His four-seamer, which averaged just 90.7 mph in his brief MLB looks in 2022-23, sat at 93.1 mph on the season despite fading over his final six starts (92.1 mph average four-seamer, 6.75 ERA). Woods Richardson, acquired alongside Austin Martin in the trade that sent the final year-plus of control over Jose Berrios to Toronto, now looks like he’ll open the 2025 season locked into the No. 4 spot in Minnesota’s rotation behind Pablo Lopez, Joe Ryan and Bailey Ober.

    Development from in-house arms of this nature will be key for the Twins in 2025, as ownership has handcuffed the baseball operations staff all offseason in terms of roster additions, as the Pohlad family explores a sale of the club. The Twins have been active in trade talks but have not yet pieced together a deal of much note. They’ve added some catching depth in small swaps for former top prospect Diego Cartaya and utilityman Mickey Gasper, but top trade candidates like Christian Vazquez and Chris Paddack remain with the club. The Twins still would like to add at first base and pick up a right-handed hitting outfielder, but there’s been no trade of note and not one major league free agent signing thus far, given payroll constraints from ownership. The Twins may not need to cut payroll from its current level, but they also don’t have much (or any) room to raise it without a trade that trims some salary from the books.

    With those financial limitations in mind, the front office is considering some time at first base for utilityman Willi Castro, per Betsy Helfand of the St. Paul Pioneer Press. Twenty-six-year-old Jose Miranda, who bounced back from a 2023 season ruined by shoulder surgery to bat .284/.322/.441 last year (115 wRC+) is the top in-house option at the moment. He’s played 698 big league innings there and graded poorly from a defensive standpoint, although the former second baseman/third baseman was largely learning the position on the fly in 2022 when he tallied 595 of those innings; he’d entered that season with all of 225 career minor league innings at the position.

    It seems unlikely that Castro would be a regular option at first, given the value of his versatility. He’s a viable backup at shortstop, second base, third base and anywhere in the outfield. Adding first base to that repertoire only further broadens his importance to the club. There’s been some thought that Castro and his own $6.4MM salary could be a candidate to change hands, though doing so would thin out the Twins’ depth at all those positions and remove one of the team’s best baserunners. With Minnesota at least ostensibly not required to slash payroll any further, trading Castro seems like a scenario to which the front office would be heavily opposed.


    1. Twins prospect Cole Varland showing promise in the minors
    2. Twins prospect Simeon Woods Richardson impressing in spring training
    3. Twins pitcher Randy Dobnak, catcher Ryan Jeffers could return soon
    4. Twins sign free agent pitcher Miguel Castro to bolster bullpen
    5. Twins prospect Blayne Enlow undergoes Tommy John surgery
    6. Twins prospect Matt Canterino making strides in development
    7. Twins prospect Keoni Cavaco adjusting well to professional baseball
    8. Twins prospect Aaron Sabato showing power potential in the minors.

    Tags:

    1. Twins prospects
    2. Varland pitching update
    3. Woods Richardson development
    4. Castro Twins news
    5. Minnesota Twins prospects
    6. Baseball prospects update
    7. Twins minor league report
    8. Twins farm system news
    9. Twins pitching prospects
    10. Twins top prospects analysis

    #Twins #Notes #Varland #Woods #Richardson #Castro

  • El dolor de Nelson Castro ante la muerte de Lanata: “Decía que estaba bien de salud pero yo veía que no era así”

    El dolor de Nelson Castro ante la muerte de Lanata: “Decía que estaba bien de salud pero yo veía que no era así”


    Nelson Castro se conmovió al aire de TN tras conocerse este lunes la muerte de Jorge Lanata a sus 64 años. El periodista y médico, que compartió la misma señal televisiva, se refirió a su trayectoria y reflexionó acerca del aporte que hizo al periodismo de la Argentina.

    “Estoy conmovido por esta noticia devastadora, realmente. Tenía un gran afecto por Jorge y, por supuesto, admiración. Viví de cerca esta agonía que recorrió los últimos seis meses. Es una noticia malísima aunque no sorpresiva. Tengo contacto con el Hospital Italiano y sabía de la gravedad progresiva que tenía, que desde que se ingresó, no pudo salir. Fue una pérdida irreparable”, empezó Castro.

    Nelson Castro habló sobre las últimas horas con vida de Jorge Lanata y recordó su trayectoria periodística(Fuente: Captura de apntalla/TN)

    Y agregó: “Yo le hice la última entrevista, es fuerte para mí. Lanata fue un número uno. Talentoso, creativo, culto, inquieto… Sin dudas, un número uno”. Sobre ese encuentro que tuvo con su colega en junio cuando tuvieron un mano a mano, Nelson recordó: “Tenía un tema con él, porque era alguien que no se cuidaba nunca. Entonces era un diálogo cortado. Cuando yo le preguntaba por su salud, decía que estaba bien y yo no lo veía así. Todo el tema del tabaquismo fue letal y fatal. Nunca tuvo la actitud de cambiar, incluso cuando los familiares sufrían de verlo así”.

    “Yo llegué a decirle: ‘Una persona inteligente como vos, ¿cómo puede ser que no entiendas esto?’. Pero no había caso. Lo que te impactaba era la irracionalidad. Esta rebeldía lo iba a llevar a algo… Jorge sufría mucho los dolores de los estudios. Era paradojal”, expresó Nelson Castro.

    Hacia lo último de su reflexión, habló de los días previos a su fallecimiento: “Yo tenía contacto con los médicos. Tenía un conocimiento detallado de todo y su padecimiento era tremendo. Los que conocíamos el cuadro verdadero, era un final que se acercaba. La isquemia intestinal fue algo bisagra”.

    Murio Jorge Lanata, el anuncio de LA NACION
    Murio Jorge Lanata, el anuncio de LA NACION



    El pasado viernes, el periodista Jorge Lanata falleció a los 61 años tras una larga lucha contra diferentes problemas de salud. Su amigo y colega Nelson Castro ha expresado su profundo dolor ante esta pérdida, revelando que a pesar de las declaraciones de Lanata sobre su buen estado de salud, él podía ver que no era así.

    En una entrevista reciente, Castro compartió sus sentimientos de tristeza y sorpresa ante la muerte de Lanata, a quien consideraba no solo un gran periodista, sino también un amigo cercano. Según Castro, Lanata siempre intentaba mostrar una imagen de fortaleza y optimismo ante sus problemas de salud, pero él podía percibir que la realidad era diferente.

    “Jorge siempre decía que estaba bien de salud, que todo estaba bajo control, pero yo podía ver que no era así. Sus problemas de salud eran evidentes, y sufría mucho, a pesar de intentar ocultarlo. Ahora que se ha ido, siento un vacío enorme en mi corazón”, expresó Castro.

    La muerte de Lanata ha conmocionado a todo el mundo periodístico y a sus seguidores, quienes han recordado su valentía, su pasión por el periodismo y su incansable lucha por la verdad. Nelson Castro, al igual que muchos otros, lamenta profundamente la pérdida de un colega y amigo querido, y promete honrar su memoria continuando su legado periodístico.

    Descansa en paz, Jorge Lanata. Tu voz y tu valentía seguirán resonando en el periodismo argentino por siempre.

    Tags:

    Nelson Castro, Lanata’s death, health concerns, Nelson Castro interview, mourning, Argentine journalists, health issues, Nelson Castro and Lanata, friendship, journalism, media personalities, health awareness.

    #dolor #Nelson #Castro #ante #muerte #Lanata #Decía #estaba #bien #salud #pero #veía #era #así

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