In the early weeks of spring training, the most promising on-field development for the Minnesota Twins has been the emergence of Mick Abel.
In his first two appearances, Abel has dominated. He pitched three shutout innings with five strikeouts against the Detroit Tigers last Monday, then followed with three more scoreless frames and six strikeouts versus the Atlanta Braves on Sunday. Over six innings, he has yielded only three hits, issued no walks, and tallied 11 strikeouts. He has thrown 89 pitches and induced 22 swinging strikes.
The second outing came against Atlanta’s split-squad B team, with Jorge Mateo the only 40-man roster player in the lineup. The group included several fringe big-leaguers and a couple of familiar names, in DaShawn Keirsey Jr. and Jair Camargo. Context always matters in March, but Abel did exactly what a young starter with upside should do in that situation. He overwhelmed the hitters in front of him.
Over 43 pitches on Sunday, he induced 10 whiffs. His fastball reached 99 miles per hour and accounted for three strikeouts. His slider-sweeper combination produced three more. The only blemish was a harmless two-out single in the first inning. Otherwise, it was total control.
That word feels intentional, because Abel is pitching with a very clear plan.
“I think it’s more of the goals that we’ve set from going camp which … landing the spin early, and the offspeed stuff early, to get them to expand more,” Abel said, when asked what he is trying to accomplish this spring.
Instead of simply overpowering hitters, he’s sequencing with purpose. He lands offspeed pitches early. Hitters must respect the breaking ball. As a result, the elevated fastball plays up even more. It’s a simple concept, but one that requires conviction.
Abel also emphasized the importance of being precise with his heater.
“We were talking before the game and our meeting, and I told him I wanted to be more specific with the heater locations,” Abel said of his pregame confab with catcher Victor Caratini. “And we were, so I was happy about that.”
That specificity has shown up in the results. He’s avoided the middle of the zone and attacked the edges with intent. When a pitcher throws 99 with life and can consistently spot it, the margin for error increases; opposing hitters are forced to think defensively.
Perhaps the most encouraging part of his spring has nothing to do with radar gun readings or strikeout totals. Instead, it’s his mindset.
“Yeah, for sure. I mean two offseasons in a row where I’m not really thinking too hard about what I’m doing mechanically. It’s all up top now,” Abel said. “So a lot of it boils down to competitive nature now, and you know, being intentional with every single pitch.”
That freedom has translated into confidence. At 24 years old, Abel does not have much left to prove in the minors. He entered camp as a legitimate candidate for the Opening Day rotation, and injuries to Pablo López and David Festa have only increased that possibility.
With Joe Ryan, Bailey Ober, and Simeon Woods Richardson likely in, two rotation spots remain for Abel, Taj Bradley, and Zebby Matthews. Abel is making a tough competition look easy. Asked how he approaches the numbers game, his answer matched the calm confidence seen on the mound.
“I feel like, as long as I’m coming in here and just being myself, that’s all I’m really trying to do every day. There’s nothing more I can do.”
That mindset may be his biggest development. Abel isn’t chasing results or outshining teammates. He’s focused on executing his plan, trusting his stuff, and pitching with intent.
Spring stats need context. Six scoreless innings in March don’t guarantee success in April. But when a young starter combines velocity, command, swing-and-miss stuff, and a strong mindset, it’s worth attention.
If Abel continues pitching this way, the decision-makers in Minnesota will not have a difficult choice to make. And if he carries this version of himself into the regular season, there is a world where he becomes one of the most important arms in the Twins’ rotation sooner, rather than later.
Do you think Abel will make the Opening Day roster? What are your expectations for his season? Share your thoughts and join the discussion.