Posted By:
Todd SchultzWhile all Twins fans are hoping for the best, Liriano's earlier callup would almost certainly made no difference. A few points to ponder.
1. Liriano would have made his three years of service had he performed well for the Twins throughout '08. Instead, he showed up late for training camp due to a visa problem relating to a DUI arrest from '06. Having more than a year to figure out and make sure he was in everyone's good legal graces before the '08 season, he mucked up.
2. Liriano made the squad out of Spring Training, and again, if he performs consistently, there's no question about his arbitration eligibility. The Twins gave him the ball, and he sucked--- 0-3 with a double digit ERA. They sent him down, where he immediately sucked some more-- 7 earned in 8 1/3 innings over two starts. Once May 24th passed, ie, while he was still awful, there were not enough games remaining in the season for Liriano to reach the three-years service requirement.
3. There are some exceptions to the three year requirement, for a select few known as the Super Two players. A decent article on the subject and especially as relates to Liriano is found here: http://www.twinkietown.com/2008/7/20/575451/greg-genske-wrong-about-ev
Liriano remained inconsistent at Rochester, and the author expalins well what happened:
"On June 25, Liriano was coming off four quality starts since his last trainwreck, and he been called up that day, he'd have been a lock for Super Two status. Instead, he stayed in Rochester and produced two of his worst starts of the season on June 25 and 30, allowing 10 ER in 10.1 IP — and most troubling, giving up four home runs in those two games. Had the Twins called up Liriano for his next start on July 5, he still would have had a good chance to reach Super Two status — but what team calls up a pitcher after two straight trainwrecks in the minors? Only a team desperate for starting pitching, which the Twins obviously were not. Liriano bounced back with a solid start on July 5, and another on July 10, but by then it was already too late. Even had the Twins promoted him to start on July 10 — following his one good start after the two trainwrecks — he still would have ended the season with at most 2.125 days of service time, almost certainly under the Super Two threshold."
4. It is important to note that this situation hardly screams of injustice to the player. The Twins kept Liriano on the 40 man roster and thereby gave him service eligibility for all of 2007 and a large chunk of 2006 when he was on the DL and unable to lift his arm and pitch for ANYBODY, major or minor league. In other words, Francisco had more time on the DL than on any roster, yet got credit for that entire time while contributing nothing to the team.
5. At the time his agent cried foul against the team, the Twins had just gone 21-7 in their last 28 games. Noboby messes with the chemistry of a team playing .750 ball. Given how he had hardly played in two years on the big club and had sucked in the early part of the year, it would almost certainly have created ill will on the team to see Liriano promoted at someone else's expense when "it ain't broken".
6. Liriano remains unproven as a full-year starter, and got pounded in two of his last three starts--all in the heat of the September pennant race. While he may or may not be the stopper on this staff, he is not as good as Baker right now, and probably not as good as Slowey either.
In sum, Liriano should focus on getting better, more consistent and remaining healthy, not trumpeting that the cheap Twins are out to cheat him. The team has been more than fair with him, and will remain so.