Teams usually are comfortable with waiting a few weeks into the regular season before making substantial roster moves, but the Twins appear to be on the verge of bringing in a new shortstop.
So don't look at the Twins' deal on Monday for Eduardo Nunez as an innocuous one. They have every intention of summoning him to the majors as soon as he gets his timing down at Class AAA Rochester. The Twins acquired Nunez, 26, from the Yankees on Monday in exchange for lefthander Miguel Sulbaran, who was in the Class A Cedar Rapids starting rotation. Nunez is a player the Twins have asked the Yankees about in the past, and they finally got him.
Asked about Nunez on Monday following the Twins' 8-3 loss to Oakland, manager Ron Gardenhire said, "We plan on him being a part of it.''
While Pedro Florimon is capable of filling up a highlight reel with his fine glove work, this deal is an indictment of his hitting. Florimon batted .221 last season in 127 games. He was slowed by appendicitis at the beginning of camp and was limited to 10 spring training games, in which he batted .185. Still, the Twins brought him north to start the regular season, and Florimon is 2-for-20 with two walks and seven strikeouts in 10 games.
Florimon has plenty of speed, but you never would know it because he doesn't get on base enough to put it in play consistently. And his high strikeout rate has been a concern. If Florimon could hit .240, he would steal 20-25 bases and this move would not have been made.
"Florimon has done everything we've asked of him,'' Gardenhire said. "Offensively, he's got to bang the ball around.''
It's not as if Nunez is a hitting star, but he once was considered to be the heir apparent to Derek Jeter. Nunez is a career .267 hitter with a .307 on-base percentage and .372 slugging percentage. His career WAR (wins above replacement, which determines a player's overall value) is minus-1.8 compared with 2.6 for Florimon. Nunez has a career range factor at short of 3.66, compared with Florimon's 5.12.
But the Twins are convinced that what Nunez can do with the bat is worth what they might lose in defense. That can be a risky stance but, despite coming off a road trip in which they scored 38 runs in six games, the Twins know they need functional hitters up and down the lineup. And Florimon has been a speed bump.