Twins position breakdown: shortstop

posted in: News | 0

Heading into last offseason, one of the biggest questions facing the Twins was how they could possibly fill the hole left by Carlos Correa, who was expected to opt out of his three-year contract and sign elsewhere.

Correa did opt out of that contract, but a series of twists and turns — and concerns about his right ankle — ended up leading him back to Minnesota, where the Twins were ecstatic to welcome him back.

Now, the Twins have no such questions as they look forward to their third season with Correa manning the position.

2023 RECAP

After all the offseason talk about his right ankle, it ended up being his left foot that bothered him throughout the course of the 2023 season. Correa was diagnosed with plantar fasciitis in May but played through it, appearing in a team-leading 135 games.

Though he was on the field, his production did take a hit. But Correa was always the first one to not blame it on the pain he felt in his heel. Correa hit .230 with an on-base percentage, slugging percentage and OPS well below his career norms. He ended the year with a 94 OPS+, well off his career 124 mark.

Though he didn’t perform to his expectations and he noted his range defensively had suffered because of the injury, Correa was still a team leader both on the field and in the clubhouse, and finished the season as a Gold Glove Award finalist (winners will be announced next month).

Come postseason time, after a short break on the injured list after rupturing his plantar fascia in September, Correa hit .409 with a 1.004 OPS in six postseason games, making a number of key defensive plays.

When Correa wasn’t on the field, Kyle Farmer saw most of the action at shortstop in his place, appearing in 40 games there and starting 27 of them.

2024 OUTLOOK

Correa will spend the offseason working to get his heel right, listening to what his doctors tell him. The issue will not require surgery, he said.

“Hopefully it doesn’t happen ever again,” he said. “I don’t ever want to experience another season where I have to play through it.”

Correa, of course, will command a majority of the playing time at shortstop, so the only question really is who will fill in for him on his days off or if he happens to get hurt.

The Twins could retain Farmer, his primary backup this season, or decide the amount of money he’s expected to be owed is too much and decide to move on. Royce Lewis can play some shortstop, if need, and Willi Castro can, as well.

And in Triple-A, the Twins’ top prospect, Brooks Lee, could come knocking at the door sometime during the 2024 season. Lee played primarily shortstop upon his promotion to Triple-A, but got some time in at third base, as well.

Related Articles

Minnesota Twins |


Twins position breakdown: Third base

Minnesota Twins |


Twins position breakdown: second base

Minnesota Twins |


Twins position breakdown: first base

Minnesota Twins |


Twins position breakdown: catcher

Minnesota Twins |


Twins pitcher Sonny Gray named Most Valuable Player as team announces award winners

‘This is not a burn book’: Cuomo aide’s new book takes on foes

posted in: Politics | 0

NEW YORK — The last five pages may be the most fascinating part of Melissa DeRosa’s new book on her time as the top aide to former Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

It’s a series of 13 short blurbs highlighting the downfalls — or at least, the low points — of all the people and organizations that had crossed her and the Cuomo administration. He resigned in August 2021 amid sexual harassment allegations, and DeRosa left with him.

Example: “Alessandra Biaggi’s dream of running for Congress came true. During the campaign, a number of her staffers accused of her of fostering a toxic and hostile work environment. She lost the election by thirty-four points and subsequently announced she was enrolling in divinity school.”

Biaggi is a former Democratic state senator and was among the loudest critics of the Cuomo administration in the state Legislature. She didn’t respond to a request for comment. Others getting the “where are they now” treatment include Gov. Kathy Hochul, former Mayor Bill de Blasio and Charlotte Bennett, an aide who accused Cuomo of sexually harassing her.

“This is not a burn book, this is not public revenge,” DeRosa said in an interview with POLITICO. That part is just like the closing credits of a movie, she said, filling the reader in on where everybody ended up.

Engaged readers of New York political news — the people who would read the memoir released Tuesday, “What’s Left Unsaid: My Life at the Center of Power, Politics & Crisis” — already know where everybody ended up. And many won’t accept DeRosa’s defense.

“It just seems like retribution,” one consultant close to the Cuomo administration told POLITICO. “This seems like a big ‘I went down, he went down, I’m trying to take people down with me.’”

“There’s a lot of eyerolls” among Albany insiders talking about the book, said another political consultant, who like the first, was granted anonymity to speak freely about the book. “There’s a little bit of desperation here.”

In fact, DeRosa threatened to sue New York magazine for writer Rebecca Traister’s piece on the book, Semafor reported. The two had a frosty relationship from Traister’s previous coverage of the administration — the writer herself is criticized in the book — and DeRosa wanted a different reviewer assigned. But a publicist for DeRosa said there’s no plans for legal action against the magazine.

Some of the newsiest bits have been shared with journalists already. President Joe Biden personally convinced Cuomo not to run for president in 2020. Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown was Cuomo’s top choice for a 2014 running mate. And New York Times Albany Bureau Chief Jesse McKinley was pulled off Cuomo coverage because DeRosa filed a complaint with the paper that he’d made her uncomfortable flirting with her in 2020.

Why do that, after so ardently defending Cuomo from, in her words, “seemingly frivolous” harassment allegations?

It’s the Times — which told The Washington Post a review “did not substantiate Ms. DeRosa’s characterization of the events” — that’s hypocritical, DeRosa said.

“They allowed him to take the lead driving the coverage of a #MeToo story.” And it’s important that readers know that when evaluating the press’s role in Cuomo’s resignation, she said.

When DeRosa isn’t settling scores, the book reads like a testimony for the defense: Over closing businesses during the pandemic. Over Covid-19 nursing home deaths. Over going on TV with Chris Cuomo. Over the governor’s memoir on the state’s pandemic response. Over sexual harassment. Over resignation.

Ambitious aides, however, will love her stories of being in the governor’s mansion or at the Capitol where it happened, or, in one episode, convincing former President Donald Trump to call off his plan to send federal troops to fight crime in New York City by yelling at Jared Kushner.

“It’s certainly on the table, Melissa,” DeRosa recalls Kushner saying in a July 2020 phone call. “It’s the president’s home city, and we can’t trust de Blasio to get things under control. We’ve called on Andrew to use the National Guard for over a month, and he seems unwilling to do it, so what other options do we have?”

The NYPD would freak out and anti-Trump protesters would take to the streets, DeRosa writes. “There will be violence, there will be mayhem, and it will be your fault.” My voice had risen to a near-shout without me even realizing it.”

He got the message, and Cuomo sealed the deal in a call the next day, starting a very brief, very uneasy peace.

The anecdote is typical of those in the book — DeRosa and the other professionals in the administration making hard calls and getting good results. It’s self-aggrandizing, but it could also be inspiring for staffers. That is, if they’re not scared out of the profession entirely by her description of 20-hour days, two phones at the bedside — and no apologies for yelling at people.

DeRosa still has a foot in the world of New York politics that’s been whispering about the book. She’s appearing regularly on talk radio, had a column in The Daily Beast and is consulting “a nice roster of clients.”

Who? She’d rather not say, so as not to open them up to criticism, but “I personally am not appearing before the state on anything,” DeRosa said.

Her two-year lobbying ban would have been lifted recently. She resigned as secretary to the governor in August 2021, just two days before Cuomo did himself.

No, Cuomo didn’t get to edit the book, DeRosa says. He was only given a copy last week, since she didn’t want the infamous micromanager “telling me that I needed to move commas and change this and change that.”

But Cuomo probably wouldn’t find anything to object to. In fact, he came to her book release party Monday night at the Hotel Chelsea, along with, among others, actor Alec Baldwin, a fellow defender of Cuomo.

“The first draft of history is written by reporters in real time,” and they screwed it up, DeRosa said. “This is what was happening when the camera wasn’t rolling. This is the truth about how an administration was undone.”

Florida Jewish Republican tears into DeSantis, endorses Trump

posted in: Politics | 0

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida’s only Jewish Republican state lawmaker is dropping his endorsement of Gov. Ron DeSantis for president, writing in a scathing column that the Republican governor has not done enough to counter antisemitism in their home state.

State Rep. Randy Fine, previously a DeSantis ally, has pushed top priorities of the governor — including co-sponsoring legislation banning gender-affirming care for minors. He had such a good relationship with DeSantis that the governor at one point was backing him as a candidate for the presidency of Florida Atlantic University.

Fine, however, said that in the aftermath of the Hamas attacks on Israel, he is now shifting his support to former President Donald Trump. He touted Trump’s record in office, including his support for moving the United States embassy to Jerusalem and for brokering a peace deal between Israel and two Arab countries.

“The past two weeks have made me realize our choice as Jews is simple,” Fine wrote Monday in The Washington Times. “We can vote for the governor who says all the right things, or we can vote for the president who actually does them. When it comes to action, Donald Trump has never let us down.”

He also faulted DeSantis for not taking action against college students who have participated in pro-Palestinian protests, though DeSantis has said that, if elected president, he would cancel visas for foreign students who openly supported Hamas’ attack on Israel. Fine says students who espouse antisemitic views should be expelled from schools, pointing to a recent change in state law.

DeSantis, during a campaign stop in New Hampshire, called Fine’s Trump endorsement “pure politics” and said that Fine tried to become Florida Atlantic University president and “didn’t get it” and is now running for state Senate.

“He’s trying to ingratiate himself. Totally ridiculous,” said DeSantis, who touted his record regarding Israel, including his use of emergency powers to tap into millions of state dollars to pay for charter flights to bring back Americans from Israel.

“What other governor has rescued people from Israel?” DeSantis said. “I mean, like I marshalled resources. We brought back close to 700 people.”

Bryan Griffin, a spokesperson for DeSantis’ campaign, had also called Fine’s endorsement “shameful political theater at a time when Ron DeSantis is leading the charge to support Israel.”

Fine, in a text message, responded by saying that “what is shameful political theatre is the rallies taking place on college campuses calling for the extermination of Jews. And staying silent as Nazis marched across our state.”

DeSantis, who is trailing Trump in the presidential race, has long touted his support of Israel during his time as governor. He has sharply criticized Trump over his comments during a recent campaign appearance where he called Hezbollah, a group backed by Iran that has clashed with Israel, as “very smart.” Trump in that same appearance was also critical of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Fine was one of nearly 100 GOP state legislators who in May endorsed DeSantis’ bid for president just days before the governor officially jumped into the race. Fine also donated to DeSantis’ campaign. While Fine is just one legislator, his decision to withdraw his endorsement is another sign that the governor’s sway over Florida Republicans is starting to ebb.

Fine said that he told DeSantis’ campaign Monday night about his decision. He acknowledged that they tried to dissuade him from changing his endorsement although he did not go into any details.

A key question is whether other legislators will follow Fine’s lead even though DeSantis has two more years in office and could jettison their budget items and legislative priorities. State Sen. Joe Gruters, a Sarasota Republican who endorsed Trump, contended some of his bills were targeted due to his endorsement.

In his column, Fine took DeSantis to task over several items, including the state’s foot-dragging on creating a Holocaust memorial at the state Capitol. Legislators approved its creation five years ago but it still hasn’t been built. Earlier this year, legislators agreed to move the site of the memorial to a piece of property across the street from the current Capitol complex. Fine publicly complained about the ongoing delays.

Fine also criticized DeSantis for saying little about several sporadic neo-Nazi protests across the state in the last 18 months, including one near Disney World where participants carried both pro-DeSantis and Nazi flags. Democrats have repeatedly criticized the governor for not calling out these protests but DeSantis at one point said that Democrats were trying to “smear” him over the actions of a “half-dozen malcontents” and “jackasses.”

In September, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement arrested four people in connection for hanging antisemitic banners over an interstate highway overpass in Orlando. Fine was one of the sponsors of a 2023 law that prohibited individuals from displaying or projecting images onto a building, structure or property without permission.

Lisa Kashinsky contributed to this report.

KENYAN TROOPS’ DEPLOYMENT TO HAITI POSTPONED BY HIGH COURT

posted in: News | 0

By: Manny EJR

NAIROBI, KENYA – The Supreme Court of Kenya has postponed its decision on whether to allow Kenyan President William Ruto to send Kenyan troops to Haiti.

The court extended its orders blocking the deployment of Kenyan police to Haiti to lead a U.N Security Council-approved mission to combat gang violence in the Caribbean nation.

The High Court on Tuesday said that it would rule on the case on Nov. 9

Former presidential candidate, Ekuru Aukot, filed a petition on Oct. 9 against the deployment of Kenyan forces, arguing that the law allowing the president to do so conflicted with several articles of the constitution.

Aukot’s petition also faulted President William Ruto for agreeing to lead the international peacekeeping mission while Kenya struggles with internal security issues arising from militant attacks and most recently ethnic clashes.

The U.N. Security Council resolution, drafted by the United States and Ecuador, authorizes the force to deploy for one year, with a review after nine months.

Kenya’s national assembly has yet to schedule a debate on the motion to deploy the contingent, which is expected to be made up of about 1,000 police officers. The non-U.N. mission would be funded by voluntary contributions, with the U.S. pledging up to $200 million.

Haiti’s prime Minister Ariel Henry who, a year ago requested international assistance, has been implicated in the murder of Haiti’s president Jovenel Moise.

It is not clear when the deployment will start and whether the Court will rule in favor of Ruto. If the court rules against Ruto, it is not clear what other options are available to Ruto or the United Nations.

It took the United States and Canada over a year to find a country to lead the troops in Haiti. If Kenya is not able to do it, will the United States or Canada take the lead?

The post KENYAN TROOPS’ DEPLOYMENT TO HAITI POSTPONED BY HIGH COURT first appeared on TRUE NEWS BLOG.