Royce Lewis was cleared for a running program over the weekend, three weeks after sustaining a moderate left hamstring strain. President of baseball operations Derek Falvey told reporters that Lewis is likely around three weeks from being able to begin a minor league rehab assignment (link via Phil Miller of the Minnesota Star-Tribune).
The third baseman’s rehab hasn’t hit any kind of snag. Rather, Falvey said the Twins always anticipated that the recovery “was going to take four to six weeks, maybe six-plus weeks.” The team didn’t provide a public timetable initially, only noting that the injury wasn’t as severe as the right quad strain that cost him more than two months at the beginning of last season.
Lewis has been plagued by injuries, particularly lower half issues, throughout his career. The 2017 first overall pick has yet to top last season’s 82 games or 325 plate appearances in an MLB season. Lewis has been very productive when healthy. He’s a .268/.327/.497 hitter with 33 home runs over 605 career plate appearances — the equivalent of one full season. He added another four homers in six postseason contests in 2023.
Losing his bat has been a blow to a lineup that has had a frigid start to the season. They entered play Monday with a .198/.266/.315 team batting line, putting them alongside the Braves and Pirates as the least productive offenses in the early going. They’ve dropped seven of their first 10 while getting outscored by 14 runs. It’s an ugly first couple weeks after last season’s September collapse cost them a Wild Card spot.
Jose Miranda and Willi Castro have divided the third base playing time. Miranda has gone 5-29, striking out 10 times without drawing a walk. Castro has been more productive, collecting four doubles and a home run among his eight hits. He’ll play almost every day while bouncing around the diamond after Lewis’ return. Miranda and Ty France, to a lesser extent, have probably seen the biggest uptick in playing time.
Brooks Lee also opened the season on the injured list. He dealt with lower back tightness late in Spring Training. Lee is much closer to a return, as he began a rehab stint at Low-A Fort Myers over the weekend. Lee, the 2022 eighth overall pick, put up a .221/.265/.320 line over 50 games as a rookie last season. He had fantastic numbers in 25 Triple-A contests (.308/.368/.606) and could take over at second base when he’s activated. That’d push Castro more firmly to third base while allowing the Twins to use any of France, Miranda or potentially Edouard Julien at first base until Lewis returns.
When you believe you have 4 good options then reality hits and it’s .5
if Lee, activated in ~1-2 weeks, took third base with his 150 wRC+ from Triple-A (adjusted to ~110 in MLB), he’d outproduce Miranda’s 60 wRC+ and Castro’s 90 wRC+ (2024 norms) by ~20-30 points, adding 0.6-0.8 runs/game over their combined output (wRC+ run value: 0.01 runs/point). Lewis’s return would then shift Lee to second, optimizing the infield.
I was told there would be no math.
@colonel flagg
There’s no math there.
Hopefully the Twins don’t trade Lewis. I know he’s injury prone though.
They won’t. They’d be trading him at a low and he’s not a free agent until 2029.
Winstrol and skipping leg days…
When you look at his image from 2017 to 2024, it screams at you. When you see his claves and thigh development, it screams at you. When you see the pics of he and his wife from the last 3 weeks, you see a man putting on fat…which screams at you
Royce Lewis was 18 years old in 2017. Of course his body is going to develop. His legs are not small, quite the opposite so he wasn’t “skipping leg days.” Winni is primarily used by pitchers to add velocity, body builders for cutting cycles and getting leaner, and sprinters looking for more speed, not guys trying to bulk up and hit home run hitters.
Who said bulk? You did 🙂
WInstrol is a cut steroid that increases strength..not bulk.
And the “age” thing…Talk about dismissing out of hand without looking, right? We American’s and our “We know!” mentality
You don;t care to look or consider it, that’s your choice. When I see chicken legs having the same injury, I get curious. When I see skinny get chubby from 17-19, then go hard CUT, lean, move up, and start raking 300+, I get curious.
When I see 12 bombs, skip 2 years covid and all of that,. come back with 52 bombs…intelligent people get curious and that may be the rub right there.
Leg, down, next season, leg, down, this season, leg down.
Royce fixates on his upper body.
Since his break from baseball to recover, he has put on a GOOD 20lbs and not in muscle. His wife looks like she is having a rough month as well and makeup can’t really hide “Haggard”.
You do not have to belvie or agree with me….but really, why “White wash” the view with poorly applied logic? ” Oh, he grew up”, because that is halfassed.
Who’s screaming? I lost my way during your lengthy incoherent narrative rant.
“WInstrol is a cut steroid that increases strength..not bulk.” No, duh m*r*n that’s literally what I said. You obviously can’t read.
byron buxton’s successor
I’m thinking by the time this guy is done, he’ll make Byron Buxton seem like Lou Gehrig or Cal Ripken.
Baldelli is entirely incapable of being successful as an MLB manager. He just doesn’t have the internal fire or commanding presence to be a leader. He’s a beta in an alpha role and year after year it shows in the poor performance of his team. This is not surprising though because the Pohlads are all beta and surround themselves with betas. Players have no inspiration to produce and so they just show up and collect their paychecks.