La Velle's 3-2 Pitch: Three observations and two predictions:
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The Marlins' game against the Phillies on Tuesday began about an hour ahead of the Twins-White Sox game. Under today's pace of play rules, that's nearly a four-inning head start.
So, by the time Twins righthander Pablo López was in the middle innings against Chicago — after giving up two runs in the first inning — Luis Arraez already had singled, tripled and homered on his way to a cycle.
"You better not look at what Luis Arraez is doing tonight," someone barked at me on Twitter, the social media digital buffet.
The sentiment that the Arraez-López trade is a bad one for the Twins needs to be debunked. It just might be a proven talent-for-proven talent swap that benefits both teams.
Securing a legitimate, "ace" pitcher is difficult if you don't spend $40 million a year on one. Teams still need someone to be a capable staff ace, and that's what López brings. He has a good fastball, but it's his high-level changeup and a breaking ball called a sweeper — a pitch developed during the offseason — that flummox hitters. He had some arm problems in 2021, but his 180 innings last season were 33 more than the best Twins pitcher produced. He filled a need, looked like a true ace on Tuesday and has the stuff to sustain his success.
Arraez is an excellent contact hitter who is on everything right now. Miami already has one of the best pitchers in baseball in Sandy Alcantara. The Marlins won 69 games last season with Alcantara, López and lefty Jesús Luzardo showing their talents. They needed offense.