Eric Blonigen Twins Daily Contributor Posted October 5, 2025 Posted October 5, 2025 No fewer than ten rookies debuted for the Twins in 2025, and they can be grouped together a bit. Some, like Mickey Gasper, and DaShawn Keirsey looked overmatched. Some, like Carson McCusker and Alan Roden had such a limited opportunity (and didn’t do much with it) that it’s tough to project much from. Still others struggled but were miscast, asked to do too much by pitching in bulk innings, but may find success in one-inning roles: I’m looking at you, Travis Adams and Pierson Ohl. Finally, you have the guys that flashed a bit, but again, in small samples. These are the runners-up, in no particular order. Mick Abel - 4 GS, 14 IP, 27.3 K%, 10.6 BB%, 8.36 ERA, 2.99 FIP, 0.1 fWAR Abel had two rough outings, one decent one, and one brilliant start that telegraphs the sort of upside that had the Twins willing to trade Jhoan Duran to acquire him. Hitting 98 consistently and with legitimate secondary pitches, the fulcrum on which his upside balances is his ability to throw strikes. If he can get there, he’s got a real possibility to be a playoff-caliber starter. If not, his worst-case scenario is probably a setup-caliber reliever. Cody Laweryson - 5 games, 7-2/3 IP, 26.9 K%, 0.0 BB%, 1.17 ERA, 1.31 FIP. 0.3 fWAR Despite pitching fewer than eight innings, Laweryson looked legit — preventing hard contact, getting hitters to chase, and not walking anyone. With the state of the Twins bullpen heading into 2026, Laweryson can be at least penciled in — that is, unless the Twins sign four or five backend weapons in free agency. (Just kidding.) Ryan Fitzgerald - 24 games, .196/.302/.457/.759, 106 wRC+, 0.3 fWAR, 4 HR, 1 SB He's too old to be a prospect, but when the 31-year-old finally got the call, Fitzgerald showed enough that he likely has a path to being a utility infielder for the Twins next season; he certainly won’t have a long enough leash to block any real prospects though. His fielding at short, second, and third was average, and he hit enough (106 wRC+) that he’s not a liability at the plate. In fact, despite a .759 OPS, he had an unsustainably low .147 BABIP, suggesting that he has some room to grow. Alright. Enough buildup. It’s time for the Twins Daily Rookie of the Year. Surprising exactly nobody, it’s Luke Keaschall. And for good reason, too, even though the rest of the rookie class was a bit lacking. Luke Keaschall - 49 games, .302/.382/.445, 134 wRC+, 1.6 fWAR, 4 HR, 14 SB Luke Keaschall entered the 2025 season as a top-50-ish prospect in baseball after being picked in the second round of the 2023 draft. His ascension was rapid, and he entered the Twins scene with a bang, immediately showing that he belongs. Sporting one of the shortest (yet slowest) swings in baseball (right up there with Luis Arraez and Steven Kwan), he has been able to wait to make his swing decisions until the last second. This has allowed him to make contact at an elite rate, and to use all fields roughly equally. He has shown good awareness of the strike zone as well. All of this together, he took a ton of walks, didn’t strike out much at all, and hit over .300 in his rookie campaign. Plus, his 85th percentile sprint speed allowed him to steal 14 bags in 17 tries. The only real thing working against him as a hitter is that his swing style does limit his game power, making him more of a doubles hitter than a home run threat. Still, as the Twins look to get younger, more athletic, and faster, Keaschall has typified the sort of player that can get on base and then cause chaos. Defensively, Keaschall is a work in progress as he didn’t look good at second base. His arm strength has been almost non-existent. Part of that is skill-based, but part is likely due to his ongoing recovery from Tommy John surgery late last season. 2026 will reveal a lot regarding his future home: can he be an average-ish second baseman, or will he need to move to the outfield? Either way, the bat should play. Let’s look at a few of his accomplishments: He knocked in ten in his first ten games, the most in Twins team history. He stole five bags in his first seven games. He reached base 20 times in his first ten games, second-most in team history, tied with Kirby Puckett. He was named the American League Player of the Week in his second week in the majors. I would be remiss to not also discuss some of his big moments: the game winners and the fun. On August 10th, against the Royals, he hit a walkoff homer in the bottom of the 11th, his first career walkoff. He hasn’t looked overmatched, even when facing the best pitchers in baseball. On August 14th, he hits an RBI single off of Tarik Skubal. The Twins lost, On September 7th, he successfully stole home on a double steal. By the way, Keaschall was also quite clutch throughout his debut season. In less than a third of a season, he accumulated 1.14 WPA, meaning he netted the team roughly two wins through situational hitting. So there you have it. Keaschall was an exciting rookie, beset by fluke injuries, who is penned into the 2026 opening day lineup. With his skill set, he should be a key part of the next, hopefully more successful core. In 2026, this award will likely be more of a battle, with several of the Twins' top prospects likely to debut. However, Keaschall has set a high bar for his future peers. Maybe, just maybe, we will be talking about him as team MVP in 2026. View full article
Richie the Rally Goat Community Moderator Posted October 5, 2025 Posted October 5, 2025 What can we do to turn the baseball god’s ire away from Luke Keaschall? Mia Bednar and rdehring 2
Doctor Wu Verified Member Posted October 5, 2025 Posted October 5, 2025 Well, not much real competition for that award this year, but Keaschall definitely made a good impression in his rookie season. Crossing my fingers that he doesn't regress like players such as Miranda and Julian. Hubie29, Patzky, Coach Wheels and 2 others 5
Jeff K Verified Member Posted October 5, 2025 Posted October 5, 2025 He looks like a guy that ignites teams. I expect his fielding to be much improved in 26 Coach Wheels, DocBauer, mikelink45 and 1 other 3 1
Old Crow Verified Member Posted October 5, 2025 Posted October 5, 2025 13 minutes ago, Doctor Wu said: Well, not much real competition for that award this year, but Keaschall definitely made a good impression in his rookie season. Crossing my fingers that he doesn't regress like players such as Miranda and Julian. In other words isolate him from the Twins crack hitting coaches who advocate big loopy swings that generate bombas. With RISP I'ld take a high percentage doubles hitter over a.204 hitter with the proper launch angle every time. Hubie29, mikelink45, Doctor Wu and 5 others 7 1
Coach Wheels Verified Member Posted October 5, 2025 Posted October 5, 2025 Luke was a no-brainer for this award. He is truly a potential All Star and, on a team where most of our young players still have a lot to prove, he may be our best offensive player after Byron in 2026. Stay healthy for 162 and let's see who he can be. Patzky, Doctor Wu, Old Crow and 2 others 5
FlyingFinn Verified Member Posted October 5, 2025 Posted October 5, 2025 I'm thinking next year, there will be a lot more competition for this award. DocBauer, rdehring, Dman and 3 others 6
mrtwinsfan Old-Timey Member Posted October 5, 2025 Posted October 5, 2025 1 hour ago, FlyingFinn said: I'm thinking next year, there will be a lot more competition for this award. we can hope Old Crow and Patzky 2
Chembry Verified Member Posted October 5, 2025 Posted October 5, 2025 Luke was the only real choice for this award. For what it’s worth. Baseball America also named Keaschall on their all rookie team. Old Crow, Coach Wheels, rdehring and 4 others 7
rdehring Verified Member Posted October 5, 2025 Posted October 5, 2025 As for the above comments about keeping him away from the Twins hitting coaches. I remain hopeful that the Twins will have an entire new coaching staff next year. Personally, would like to see Watkins return, just not as third base coach. Doctor Wu and LambchoP 2
LambchoP Verified Member Posted October 5, 2025 Posted October 5, 2025 Keaschal deserves the award. Hopefully next year we will all be arguing over who deserves the 2026 award between guys like Jenkins, Rodriguez, Gonzalez, Fedko, Culpeper etc...... Doctor Wu, Chembry and DocBauer 3
sweetmusicviola16 Verified Member Posted October 5, 2025 Posted October 5, 2025 Luke K all the way. Really don't know why we'd even mention the others mentioned though. Coach Wheels 1
gman Verified Member Posted October 5, 2025 Posted October 5, 2025 2 hours ago, FlyingFinn said: I'm thinking next year, there will be a lot more competition for this award. I hope so!
gman Verified Member Posted October 5, 2025 Posted October 5, 2025 For now I would place Keaschall and Martin 1,2 in next years order. Maybe Buxton third. it would be nice to have more positions set in the batting order. DocBauer and Hubie29 2
Doctor Wu Verified Member Posted October 7, 2025 Posted October 7, 2025 On 10/5/2025 at 10:31 PM, rdehring said: As for the above comments about keeping him away from the Twins hitting coaches. I remain hopeful that the Twins will have an entire new coaching staff next year. Personally, would like to see Watkins return, just not as third base coach. Yeah, Watkins seems like a good guy, but I'm not impressed with his third base coaching "technique", giving runners the green light to round the base, only to become sitting ducks at the plate. rdehring 1
Billy Amick Wichita Wind Surge - AA 1B/3B Despite hitting just .194, the 23-year-old ranks fourth in the Texas League in Home Runs (17) and sixth in RBI (50). Explore Billy Amick News >
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