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Posted
Image courtesy of Rob Thompson, St. Paul Saints (photo of Hendry Mendez)

When the Twins pivoted into seller mode at the 2025 trade deadline, the reaction from fans was mixed. Minnesota traded several established big leaguers for younger talent, hoping to build a stronger foundation for the future. While much of the attention centered on the headline deals, one of the quieter transactions is beginning to look like one of the organization's biggest wins.

The Twins sent veteran outfielder Harrison Bader to Philadelphia in exchange for outfield prospect Hendry Mendez. At the time, it felt like a modest move involving a pending free agent and a promising but unproven minor leaguer. Less than a year later, Mendez is emerging as one of the most intriguing hitters in the organization and perhaps the best return Minnesota received during its deadline selloff.

For Philadelphia, the deal accomplished its short-term objective. Bader provided quality defense, speed, and production during the stretch run as the Phillies pushed toward another division title. He hit .305 with five home runs and an .824 OPS across 50 regular-season games with Philadelphia. Unfortunately, injuries limited his postseason impact before he departed in free agency following the season.

The Twins, meanwhile, acquired a player who continues to increase his value every month. Mendez was already producing at Double-A before the trade. After arriving in Wichita, however, he took another step forward. He posted a .911 OPS over his final 33 games of the season while walking more often than he struck out. That performance helped elevate his prospect status and put him firmly on the radar heading into 2026.

Instead of slowing down this season, Mendez has accelerated. He opened the year with Wichita and quickly demonstrated that he had little left to prove at that level. Through 24 games, he carried an .857 OPS and earned his first promotion to Triple-A St. Paul in early May.

The jump to Triple A has looked almost effortless. Mendez recently put together a perfect 4-for-4 performance that included two doubles, two singles, and a walk. Through his first 20 games with the Saints, he hit .372 with three home runs, 15 RBI, and a 1.017 OPS. Just as encouraging, he continued to show excellent plate discipline, walking 16 times and striking out only 12.

Those numbers are impressive on their own, but the underlying approach may be even more encouraging. Mendez consistently controls the strike zone with a 16.3 K%. He rarely expands his zone (12.8 BB%), makes frequent hard contact (54.5 Hard Hit%), and shows an advanced understanding of how pitchers are attacking him. His smooth left-handed swing generates power to all fields, allowing him to impact games without selling out for home runs.

The 22-year-old has already experienced plenty of change during his professional career. Originally signed by Milwaukee as an international free agent out of the Dominican Republic, he later moved to Philadelphia before eventually landing with Minnesota. Some prospects struggle after changing organizations multiple times. Mendez has done the opposite, seemingly improving at every stop.

There are reasons to expect some statistical regression. His expected batting average is nearly 50 points lower than his actual batting average at Triple-A, and his ground ball rate remains elevated. Long term, the Twins would likely prefer to see him elevate the baseball more consistently in order to maximize his power production. Even with those caveats, the overall profile remains highly attractive.

Mendez is already on Minnesota's 40-man roster, which could put him in line for a major league opportunity sooner rather than later. The Twins have seen several young hitters force their way into the conversation through strong minor league performances, and Mendez appears to be doing exactly that.

Prospect evaluations can change quickly, and there is still development ahead. However, the return on this trade already looks extremely favorable for Minnesota. Turning a few months of a rental player into a 22-year-old hitter who is thriving at Triple-A is exactly the type of transaction successful organizations need to make.

The Twins acquired several intriguing pieces during last summer's selloff. Right now, though, no player is doing more to validate those moves than Mendez. If his current trajectory continues, Minnesota may eventually look back on this trade as one of the defining steals of the 2025 deadline.

Is Mendez the best player the Twins received at last year’s trade deadline? Leave a comment and start the discussion.


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Posted

Well, it's absurd to suggest that no one is doing more to validate the trade deadline than Mendez, when Taj Bradley has been so good overall as well. (and while Mick Abel's injury is a setback, he was also showing out) In terms of prospect capital that hasn't reached MLB...sure? Tait is doing well, but is still a ways away, but the Twins return was focused on players that already had some MLB experience or were close to coming up (Bradley, Abel, Rojas).

Mendez is doing very well so far and as a return for half a season of Bader, it's an excellent return. there's still some concerns about the amount of groundballs he hits and whether or not he'll generate enough consistent power to be a corner OF/1B/DH. But they targeted well and got a real asset in flipping a player that wasn't going to be back.

Verified Member
Posted

Harrison Bader contract is up there as best in franchise history. Can't be too high though, obviously, as a one year deal. 

Posted

Mendez has also stayed healthy unlike nearly all the other OF prospects, I hope we see him in the majors soon. There's really no reason not to give him a chance, he's already on the 40 man and is using an option year. If he continues to rake, he should be up before September. 

Posted
1 hour ago, jmlease1 said:

Well, it's absurd to suggest that no one is doing more to validate the trade deadline than Mendez, when Taj Bradley has been so good overall as well. (and while Mick Abel's injury is a setback, he was also showing out) In terms of prospect capital that hasn't reached MLB...sure? Tait is doing well, but is still a ways away, but the Twins return was focused on players that already had some MLB experience or were close to coming up (Bradley, Abel, Rojas).

Mendez is doing very well so far and as a return for half a season of Bader, it's an excellent return. there's still some concerns about the amount of groundballs he hits and whether or not he'll generate enough consistent power to be a corner OF/1B/DH. But they targeted well and got a real asset in flipping a player that wasn't going to be back.

This.

Mendez is cause for optimism but the title to this article strikes me as a bit off. 

Posted
2 minutes ago, Twins_Fan_in_NJ said:

 the title to this article strikes me as a bit off. 

Clickbait headlines are bait for clicks.  Or so i've heard.

Posted

Since Mendez hasn't been a real wowwer in the outfield, I think they should give him a long term home at first base. The Twins do need to train some players to cover first and they have a few who can cover the outfield, if they ever stay healthy. Perhaps unlikely to stay at that level, they could use someone with a 977 OPS.

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