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Image courtesy of Rob Thompson, St. Paul Saints

The middle of the minor-league season is when organizations separate intriguing stories from true momentum. Some players are just getting healthy. Others are adjusting to new teams or levels. A few force their way in with undeniable results.

This week’s group features three players trending in the right direction for the Twins organization. From a former Giants farmhand tearing through Low-A pitching to a once-highly regarded arm finding his footing in relief, there are several interesting developments worth monitoring.

OF Quinn McDaniel– Cedar Rapids Kernels
How He Got Here: The San Francisco Giants selected McDaniel in the fifth round of the 2023 MLB Draft, after a productive college career at the University of Maine. He spent portions of three seasons climbing through the Giants system and eventually reached High-A ball, but consistency never fully arrived at the plate. Across 108 games last year, he finished with a .688 OPS before San Francisco moved on from him during spring training.

After briefly preparing for a stint in independent baseball, McDaniel landed with the Twins organization when Minnesota signed him on May 12. The move immediately gave him a fresh opportunity, and so far, he has made the most of it.

Hitting the Hot Button: Few hitters anywhere in the organization have been hotter over the last couple of weeks. McDaniel exploded out of the gate with the Fort Myers Mighty Mussels and quickly earned Florida State League Player of the Week honors during his first week in the system. Over 27 plate appearances, he posted a ridiculous .538 batting average alongside a .962 slugging percentage for a 1.480 OPS.

The Twins wasted little time moving him to Cedar Rapids, and the production has continued. In his first three games with the Kernels, McDaniel collected six hits in 11 at-bats, while adding a triple. At 23 years old, he is older than much of the competition at both levels, but the early results still matter. Minnesota saw enough to aggressively challenge him, and he has responded immediately.

RHP Marco Raya– St. Paul Saints
How He Got Here: Raya has experienced one of the more winding developmental paths in the organization. Minnesota selected the Texas prep right-hander in the fourth round of the shortened 2020 MLB Draft, but his professional career was delayed almost immediately. The pandemic wiped out any chance of an official debut after signing, and then a shoulder injury sidelined him throughout the entire 2021 season.

When Raya finally returned to the mound in 2022, flashes of his upside were easy to see even in limited workloads. His stuff continued progressing over the next two years, and he eventually climbed all the way to Triple-A in 2024 while earning a place on the Twins’ 40-man roster. The momentum stalled last season in St. Paul, as command issues created significant problems. His walk rate ballooned to a career worst 12.6%, and outings often unraveled before he could settle in.

Hitting the Hot Button: Raya may finally be carving out a more stable role in the bullpen. On Friday, he fired three shutout innings during a Saints victory while allowing only one hit, with three strikeouts and no walks.

The biggest development has been improved control. In four of his last six appearances, Raya has thrown at least two innings without surrendering a run. Even more encouraging, he has issued just three walks over his last 58 batters faced. The Twins have long believed the raw stuff could play at a high level. If the strike-throwing continues trending upward, a bullpen role could become a legitimate pathway back into Minnesota’s long-term plans.

OF Jhomnardo Reyes– FCL Twins
How He Got Here: The Twins invested in Reyes during the international signing period, handing the Dominican outfielder a $300,000 bonus. He made his professional debut last season in the Dominican Summer League as a 17-year-old and immediately showed intriguing athletic tools.

Across 50 games, Reyes slashed .291/.386/.469 with 10 doubles, nine triples, and one home run, while stealing 10 bases. His combination of speed and extra-base ability stood out, although swing-and-miss concerns remained part of the profile. Reyes struck out in 28.5% of his plate appearances, while drawing walks at an 11.6% clip.

Hitting the Hot Button: The transition from the Dominican Summer League to Complex League ball in Florida can be difficult for young international prospects, but Reyes has looked completely comfortable since arriving stateside. Through his first 10 FCL games, Reyes owns a .385 batting average with a .529 on-base percentage and an even 1.000 slugging percentage. He has already launched three home runs while piling up eight extra-base hits and swiping three bases.

The most encouraging signs may be hidden in the plate discipline numbers. Reyes has boosted his walk rate to 20.6% while trimming his strikeout rate down to 17.6%. For a teenager with loud athletic traits, that kind of early adjustment is exactly what organizations hope to see.

All three of these prospects are gaining momentum in very different ways. McDaniel is attempting to turn a career reset into a legitimate breakout. Raya appears to be settling into a role that better fits his current strengths. Reyes is showing why the Twins believed in his long-term upside when they signed him internationally. Each is, in their own way, an emblem of the player development the team will need to do well to return to the top of the AL Central and stay there—whether any turns out to be the difference-making individual within their archetype or not.


What stands out about these three players? Leave a comment and start the discussion.


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