Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account

Recommended Posts

Posted
Image courtesy of William Parmeter

When the Twins signed Orlando Arcia to a minor league deal this spring, the move barely registered beyond camp depth chatter. Minnesota already had multiple infield options on the 40-man roster and younger players with more upside occupying the spotlight. Arcia looked like organizational insurance, the kind of veteran every Triple-A club carries through a long season. A few months later, the equation is starting to look different.

Arcia entered camp competing for one of the final bench spots on the Opening Day roster. The Twins ultimately chose roster flexibility and younger depth pieces instead, assigning the veteran infielder to Triple-A St. Paul. At the time, it felt like the logical decision. Arcia was coming off one of the worst offensive seasons of his career and had bounced between the Atlanta Braves and Colorado Rockies in 2025 while struggling to provide impact at the plate.

The numbers painted a bleak picture. Across 214 plate appearances last season, Arcia hit just .202/.238/.291 with a 33 wRC+, the lowest mark of his career and the second-worst among players with at least 200 plate appearances last year. Once viewed as a dependable everyday shortstop with strong defense and occasional pop, Arcia looked more like a player nearing the end of his major league opportunities.

That is what makes his 2026 performance at St. Paul so fascinating. Through 36 games, Arcia is slashing .324/.377/.577 (.954) with eight home runs and 10 doubles while posting a 140 wRC+. Even in the hitter-friendly environment of the International League, those numbers stand out. More importantly, the quality of contact has looked noticeably improved. Arcia is driving the baseball again and consistently punishing mistakes instead of merely surviving at the plate.

For the Twins, the timing matters. Minnesota’s roster construction has emphasized versatility and defensive flexibility under Derek Shelton. Arcia checks both boxes. While he built his reputation as a shortstop during his years with Milwaukee and Atlanta, his defensive profile has evolved. This season with St. Paul, he has already made 21 starts at second base, 10 starts at shortstop, and four starts at third base. Last season in Colorado, he even logged the first innings of his career at first base.

That type of positional versatility becomes valuable over a 162-game season, especially for a team that has already dealt with injuries and inconsistency around the infield.

The Twins also know exactly what they would be getting from Arcia. He is not a prospect needing everyday reps or developmental patience. He is a veteran with postseason experience who understands how to handle irregular playing time and clubhouse responsibilities. Teams often underestimate how important that can be for a bench role until injuries begin testing organizational depth.

There are still valid reasons for skepticism. Arcia’s major league decline was not a small sample fluke. His offensive production cratered over the past two seasons, and his defensive metrics have slipped closer to average after years of being viewed as an above-average defender. At 31 years old, it is fair to question whether this Triple-A surge is sustainable or simply a hot stretch against minor league pitching.

The Twins do not necessarily need Arcia to become an everyday contributor, though. What makes him interesting is the possibility that he could stabilize the bottom of the roster when a need arises. If he can provide competent defense at multiple positions while offering even league-average offense in limited duty, that suddenly becomes a useful player for a team trying to stay on the edges of contention.

Minnesota has spent much of the last few seasons searching for reliable depth pieces who can survive injuries without becoming automatic outs. Arcia may not be the All-Star-caliber player he briefly looked like earlier in his career, but the current version might still hold value. At the very least, he is forcing the organization to pay attention.

Triple-A performances from veteran players are easy to dismiss until roster needs start piling up. The Twins have younger names with louder long-term projections, but organizations often lean on unexpected veterans over the course of a season. Arcia is reminding Minnesota that experience still matters and productive depth can emerge from unlikely places.

If he keeps hitting like this in St. Paul, the Twins may not have much choice but to give him another opportunity before the 2026 season is over.

What will it take for Arcia to play for the Twins this season? Leave a comment and start the discussion. 


View full article

Posted

What will it take for the twins to activate Arcia  ?

A smart organization  ...

Arcia appears to have earned a chance to play , we have current rostered players that need a reset at AAA  , wouldn't hurt to at least give the veteran Arcia a chance to make the defense and offense better ...

Changes should be made after this series with Milwaukee  , Bowman and brebbie have opt outs on Sunday so that is the day or Monday for a some changes to be made ...

shake the roster up some and remind some of these underperforming players that there are other players that are hungry for your job ...

Posted

At this point, look at Orlando Arcia and ask why the Twins shouldn’t prefer him over (In order of being controversial):

1. Tristan Gray as Utility Infielder 

2. Royce Lewis at 3B

3. Josh Bell at DH (maybe he can learn  how to play 1B)

4.  Cody Clemons at 1B (if he can learn 1B)

5. Luke Keaschall at 2B (moving Luke to utility infielder)   

 

Posted
1 hour ago, Blyleven2011 said:

What will it take for the twins to activate Arcia  ?

A smart organization  ...

Arcia appears to have earned a chance to play , we have current rostered players that need a reset at AAA  , wouldn't hurt to at least give the veteran Arcia a chance to make the defense and offense better ...

Changes should be made after this series with Milwaukee  , Bowman and brebbie have opt outs on Sunday so that is the day or Monday for a some changes to be made ...

shake the roster up some and remind some of these underperforming players that there are other players that are hungry for your job ...

Brebbia does not exactly inspire confidence. Bowman is pitching well in AAA but his performance over parts of seven seasons at the MLB level screams AAAA ball.

Posted
6 minutes ago, thelanges5 said:

I’d rather see young guys but something needs to be done to make the IF defense better. He’s played 22 games at 2B, 5 at 3B, and 11 at SS. Outman,  Gray, Clemens could easily be dropped. Keaschall could move to LF. 

Keaschall COULD be moved to LF.  But does a zero WAR with an OPS under .600 scream out to move a guy to a defensive position he has less than two dozen times as a pro?

Posted
27 minutes ago, strumdatjag said:

At this point, look at Orlando Arcia and ask why the Twins shouldn’t prefer him over (In order of being controversial):

1. Tristan Gray as Utility Infielder 

2. Royce Lewis at 3B

3. Josh Bell at DH (maybe he can learn  how to play 1B)

4.  Cody Clemons at 1B (if he can learn 1B)

5. Luke Keaschall at 2B (moving Luke to utility infielder)   

 

I like the way you’re thinking. Especially Josh Bell, his swing looks horrible.

I wouldn’t be averse, also, to them sending Lewis down with a mandate to completely overhaul his approach to hitting such that he makes more contact.

Clemens is so likable and plays a really good first base but has been .225 ish for about all of his Twins stay. That’s a tough one.

Not only Arcia, but a case can be made right now for Sabato and Hendry Mendez. Even Ross is having a GREAT year! Possibly even Fedko to platoon with Larnach

As in recent past years, too many .100s and low .200s batting averages on the Twins. It’s part of what’s dragging them down.

 

 

 

 

T

Posted
40 minutes ago, Greglw3 said:

Acton or Adams or Raya with Raya 3rd priority for a drop because of some wild possibility that he does a 180 and becomes a usable pitcher.

Zero chance they want FEWER pitchers on the 40 man…of any ilk…but especially ones with options.

Posted

What is the true goal of this organization, if they think they can truly contend for the division then having Arcia on the roster can make sense to see if his numbers in St. Paul are a mirage or not  They keep riding the fence and we truly don't know is it Zoll convincing TP that they can contend or is TP pushing down.  We know the words TP has said but we don't know what is his reasoning or will we know.

I don't think this team can contend and that should be driving the decisions being made going forward.  And then that would not include bringing up Arcia.  If you want to send Lewis down, bring up Culpepper and move Lee to third.  Start looking at the other guys in St. Paul, find out what you have.

I remember when the White Sox sold at the trade deadline, I don't remember the year but it wasn't too long ago and they were still reasonably in the wild card hunt at the time.  They took a reasonable look at their organization and decided that they were not a contending team and made the appropriate moves to rebuild.  IMHO the Twins need to do this as well.  

But I don't think Zoll is the one to lead the rebuild, that is the problem.  They need to look for players and stop focusing so heavily on versatility and get quality players that can play.  The rest will work itself out.

 

 

 

Posted

No. No. No.

If there is a serious injury to 60 day Lee or Keashall or Grey stops hitting enough to stay, sure then add him to the 40 man roster and bring him up.

If not... Arcia is in the same category of Hendricks and Chaffin this spring - best days are behind him. His best use is 26th man on a contending team, not on a team fighting to stay .500 this year. 

Play the kids...

 

 

Posted
1 hour ago, strumdatjag said:

At this point, look at Orlando Arcia and ask why the Twins shouldn’t prefer him over (In order of being controversial):

1. Tristan Gray as Utility Infielder 

2. Royce Lewis at 3B

3. Josh Bell at DH (maybe he can learn  how to play 1B)

4.  Cody Clemons at 1B (if he can learn 1B)

5. Luke Keaschall at 2B (moving Luke to utility infielder)   

 

I would bring Arcia up to put pressure on Lewis and Keaschall to show there is an option to platoon them. He can play 3 spots in the infield. 

Posted
46 minutes ago, jaimedude said:

I would bring Arcia up to put pressure on Lewis and Keaschall to show there is an option to platoon them. He can play 3 spots in the infield. 

But if he hits like he has the last couple of years in the major leagues I am not sure how much pressure that would put on anyone.

Posted

If an infielder gets hurt, sure.  But there is no reason to believe 36 games in AAA is anything more than a "dead cat bounce".  Arcia's track record is long, and he was never a particularly good hitter.  Much like his brother, he peaked in his early 20's.  If his defense is no longer above average, what's the point? 

Posted
49 minutes ago, Road trip said:

 If his defense is no longer above average, what's the point? 

Maybe to reward someone who is performing well?  Maybe to show young players that nothing is guaranteed?  Maybe to let pitchers feel like someone in the front office likes defense?

Posted
5 hours ago, terrydactyls said:

Maybe to reward someone who is performing well?  Maybe to show young players that nothing is guaranteed?  Maybe to let pitchers feel like someone in the front office likes defense?

Or to continue the Twins long tradition of playing old castoffs over trying to develop new players....

Twins fans are laughably short sighted

Posted
13 hours ago, Greglw3 said:

Not only Arcia, but a case can be made right now for Sabato and Hendry Mendez. Even Ross is having a GREAT year! Possibly even Fedko to platoon with Larnach

Maybe, just maybe, it is a lot easier to hit in AAA than in the major leagues.

Arcia is likely to give the Twins below average performance at the plate and in the field. 

I thought this article was going to be about Bowman when I read the headline. Bowman has a 1.69 ERA in a hitters league with good strikeout and walk numbers.

Posted
Just now, Peter Gravett said:

Bowman will walk based on his recent exercise of opt-outs. I say bring both he and Arcia up. Allow Lewis a reset and catch a little lightning in a bottle.

Bounce Garcia or Adams from the 40-man. 

Posted
6 minutes ago, Peter Gravett said:

Bowman will walk based on his recent exercise of opt-outs. I say bring both he and Arcia up. Allow Lewis a reset and catch a little lightning in a bottle.

Agreed, The Twins need to be shaking things up. We need better results somehow, someway. Although Bowman and Arcia are both vets, and I'm inclined to bring up younger prospects, in this case I think we might at well bring up the old folks and see if they can justify the promotion. 

Posted
On 5/16/2026 at 10:20 AM, jkcarew said:

Who you gonna drop from the 40-man?

Seriously?  The Twins have several players that are readily dropped without any pain.  Outman, Topa, Garcia and that's the tip of the iceberg.

Posted

If the Twins are serious about winning, Arcia should be up yesterday. However I don’t see how anyone can say that with a straight face. 

Posted
5 minutes ago, Linus said:

If the Twins are serious about winning, Arcia should be up yesterday. However I don’t see how anyone can say that with a straight face. 

How many more wins will Arcia really mean for this team, maybe two and that is being generous. So we would be at 70 wins instead of 68.  He has done nothing in the major leagues the last two years, why do you think he had to settle for a minor league contract this offseason.  The love for the aged vets with either no track record or recent success is unbelievable. And yes I know he is doing better in St. Paul against lesser competition in a hitters league.  Let's raise the bar at some point and expect some real quality play.

Posted
On 5/16/2026 at 11:26 AM, Greglw3 said:

I like the way you’re thinking. Especially Josh Bell, his swing looks horrible.

I wouldn’t be averse, also, to them sending Lewis down with a mandate to completely overhaul his approach to hitting such that he makes more contact.

Clemens is so likable and plays a really good first base but has been .225 ish for about all of his Twins stay. That’s a tough one.

Not only Arcia, but a case can be made right now for Sabato and Hendry Mendez. Even Ross is having a GREAT year! Possibly even Fedko to platoon with Larnach

As in recent past years, too many .100s and low .200s batting averages on the Twins. It’s part of what’s dragging them down.

 

 

 

 

T

when you wait a year and a half for a guy to get his swing back and he's such a likable player that does not constitute someone. you keep throwing out there. his swings don't look good. Mr. arcia is really doing the job. He's the veteran with the experience. and please let's don't let Bowman get away into free agency today. he just struck out the side yesterday. 1.69 give the guy a chance. do we have a spot we could move? somebody I think so. let's get Arcia in the lineup. I think Lewis batten average is about the same as Wallner when he was sent down. or we can just keep watching eight guys get in scoring position and can't score any of them. Base is loaded first. inning can't score anybody. who's not seeing this that makes these decisions?

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
The Twins Daily Caretaker Fund
The Twins Daily Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Twins community on the internet.

×
×
  • Create New...