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Posted
Image courtesy of © Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Every July, baseball conversations become centered around a simple question: Are you buying or selling? For many organizations, the answer is straightforward. Contenders push their chips into the middle of the table, while rebuilding clubs cash in veterans for future assets. But not every front office has the luxury of operating in such absolutes.

The Tampa Bay Rays have spent years proving there is another way. Operating with one of baseball's smallest payrolls, the Rays have consistently remained competitive by blending aggressive buying with calculated selling. They add pieces that improve their postseason chances, while simultaneously reshaping the roster for future seasons. Rather than viewing the trade deadline as an all-or-nothing proposition, they treat it as another opportunity to maximize organizational value.

If the Twins remain in the playoff picture over the next month, Jeremy Zoll may have the chance to follow a similar blueprint.

Buy Without Emptying the Farm System

One of Tampa Bay's defining strengths is resisting the temptation to sacrifice elite prospects for splashy acquisitions. Instead of chasing players with multiple years of control, the Rays frequently target rental players who address immediate needs. The cost is lower, the financial commitment disappears after the season, and their prospect pipeline remains intact.

That philosophy should appeal to Minnesota. The Twins have spent the last several years rebuilding one of baseball's deepest farm systems. Walker Jenkins, Kaelen Culpepper, Marek Houston, Eduardo Tait, Riley Quick, and several others represent the organization's long-term foundation. Trading multiple top prospects for a controllable starter simply doesn't align with the direction the organization has taken.

If Minnesota adds pitching, targeting expiring contracts instead of long-term commitments would allow the club to compete in 2026 without compromising its future.

Prioritize Pitching Above Everything Else

Like Tampa Bay, the Twins are built around run prevention—or, at least, the winning version of themselves they're trying to forge is. Injuries have stretched Minnesota's pitching depth throughout the season, exposing just how thin the organization has become on the mound. Whether it's another starting pitcher capable of covering meaningful innings or multiple late-inning relievers, pitching should remain the organization's top priority.

The Rays routinely acquire experienced arms not only to improve their playoff chances, but also to protect younger pitchers from excessive workloads. Minnesota has similar motivations. Even if several injured pitchers return before October, adding another dependable arm would lessen the burden on the current rotation while strengthening the bullpen for a potential postseason run.

Sell From Positions of Strength

Selling doesn't necessarily mean waving the white flag. Tampa Bay frequently trades players from areas of organizational depth before they become expensive or blocked by younger talent. Those moves create opportunities for the next wave of prospects while maintaining long-term flexibility.

The Twins find themselves in a comparable situation offensively. Their biggest organizational surplus exists in the outfield. Byron Buxton remains one of the lineup's stars. Trevor Larnach and Matt Wallner continue to split time, while Kody Clemens has earned regular at-bats. Meanwhile, Alan Roden and Jenkins are waiting in Triple-A, with Jenkins widely viewed as one of baseball's premier prospects.

Behind the plate, Ryan Jeffers is on an expiring contract, and Victor Caratini has been one of the team’s best offensive players over the last month. The Twins aren’t likely to give Jeffers a qualifying offer, so it would be in the team’s best interest to trade him and get some value back before he leaves in free agency. 

There's simply not enough playing time for everyone. If Minnesota believes Jenkins is close to becoming an everyday contributor, moving an established major-league outfielder for pitching could improve both the present roster and future roster construction. That type of move may look like selling on the surface, but it could actually strengthen the 2026 club.

Address Specific Weaknesses

The Rays rarely make trades simply because talent is available. Instead, they identify specific roster deficiencies and fill them. Minnesota's weakness isn't difficult to identify. Pitching depth remains the obvious concern.

Rather than making a blockbuster move for the biggest available name, the Twins could pursue one starter capable of stabilizing the rotation or multiple bullpen arms capable of shortening games. Filling those targeted needs would have a far greater impact than simply adding the most recognizable player on the market.

A Major League-for-Major League Swap Makes Sense

Perhaps the most intriguing possibility is one that doesn't fit neatly into either category. The Twins possess major-league hitters who have value across baseball. Other organizations possess controllable pitching but need offensive help. 

That creates opportunities for baseball trades. Instead of exchanging prospects for veterans, Minnesota could move from an area of surplus while addressing its biggest weakness at the same time. Those deals are difficult to construct, but they're often the type of creative transactions organizations like Tampa Bay execute successfully. For instance, in July 2024, the Rays dealt third baseman Isaac Paredes to the Cubs in exchange for low-OBP slugger Christopher Morel. Neither of those principals worked out as hoped for their new clubs, but Tampa also got two arms in the deal, who now hold significant promise for them.

The Third Path: Buying and Selling

The American League standings have kept nearly everyone involved in the postseason race. With so few clubs clearly buying or selling, creativity may become more valuable than aggression. 

The Twins don't have the pitching depth to comfortably stand pat. They also shouldn't feel obligated to sacrifice premium prospects simply because they're on the fringes of contention. Instead, they have an opportunity to borrow from one of baseball's most successful small-market organizations.

Trade from offensive depth. Add pitching. Preserve the top of the farm system. Keep one eye on October while refusing to mortgage the future. For years, the Rays have shown that buying and selling aren't mutually exclusive. If Minnesota is still in the race when the trade deadline arrives, Jeremy Zoll may have every reason to prove the same thing.


Can Zoll be a buyer and a seller at the 2026 MLB Trade Deadline? Leave a comment and start the discussion.


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Posted

Alan Roden should be up on the big league club. Can he cut it? Then you trade Larnach. Trade Jeffers otherwise you lose Jackson. If you trade those 2 pieces you should be able to add 2 players to help fill holes on your team which should be pitching and you have not created a hole in your position player depth. I admire what Tampa Bay has done but it does not work every time. Milwaukee has been extremely successful with a payroll similar to ours. They do a version of the Tampa Bay guide and they don't mind trading away soon to be free agents. Hopefully Mr. Zoll looks around and studies the sucessfull teams similar to his team.

Posted

Ideal trade deadline for me…

Trade Joe Ryan for a premium. He should have 10+ teams interested in his services. His past quotes indicate he’s counting his days here. 

Trade Ryan Jeffers. We have a 0.000000001% chance of extending him or offering the QO. Get what you can, and if the Pohlads have a desire, re-sign him as a FA. 

Trade 1 or both of Matt Wallner/Austin Martin. They’re not going to be a core or supporting cast member next time the Twins are good. 

Trade Josh Bell. There’s a reason he signs 1 year deals everywhere and why he gets traded at the deadline more often than not. He’s a hired gun for contending teams. 

Posted
10 minutes ago, Vanimal46 said:

I’m conflicted about trading Larnach now with his improved performance at the plate. I could see him being the cost controlled effective DH/part time LF for next year. 

As soon as someone has trade value, it means there's value also in just keeping him.

It not that I dislike Trevor but his skill set seems so redundant to others in the system and he has started costing more.  Except ... he's producing right now and the other "equal or better" options keep getting dinged up.  Larnach's been healthy - I don't think he's missed significant time since a "core muscle strain" wrecked the second half of his 2022 season.

Posted

Sure, the Twins can add and subtract. that's elementary. Right?

Bell is unlikely to return much, unless there is a team interested and the Twins have identified a totally unheralded player in the DSL or rookie ball. Maybe Bell goes on a real heater all the way up to the trade deadline and some team feels they need his bat. I just can'y see it. Bell seems more valuable to the Twins.

Larnach has been swinging a good bat. He has been pretty important to the offense. Moving Trevor depends on a decent return. Will a team (San Diego?) send a relief pitcher (B. Rodriguez or Jason Adam) worth the bother? 

Austin Martin and Matt Wallner may have some value but it seems pretty low. What ideas do people have for either of those guys?

Ryan Jeffers has been out for quite some time but he will have value and will be gone as a free agent. Additionally, Caratini and Jackson have been fine. I don't believe Jeffers will sign before he goes on the market, at which time the Twins can join in the bidding. Someone will send a good relief pitcher for Jeffers.

Bailey Ober could rebuild some value but it is not certain. Perhaps Ober can be bundled with others.

Joe Ryan has a ton of value but what team will turn over the prospects or players needed to complete a transaction. Mere prospects don't really cut it as a return for Ryan. Last winter I wondered if a combo of Ryan, Charlee Soto, and Alan Roden would entice Boston to send Franklin Arias plus a pitcher or would Sacramento send us Leodalis De Vries plus a pitcher for the same package? Does adding Wallner or Lewis finish a deal? The A's could use a DH, an infielder, and pitching. 

At all times i wonder what those deals would look like from another team's perspective. Would you trade a Cole Sands or Marco Raya type plus Walker Jenkins for Ryan, Soto, and Lewis? Boston would trade Sonny Gray. What would they want in return? I have no idea ... maybe Luke Keaschall and Boston sends money too?

Buying and selling is possible. The question is whether the Twins front office has the stomach for risky deals. The Tampa Bay Rays have made more than a few gambles. Trading Joe Ryan and another dude for Nelson Cruz was an example that didn't go so well for them.

I wouldn't mind seeing some buying and selling this trade deadline.

 

Posted

I'm not crazy about trading for prospects unless they fit a need & are MLB-ready. I'm ok about trading prospects & or MLB players that are redundant to fill our immediate need that is where the focus has to be. My hope is Zoll can be a good trader but he needs to break away & find himself.

Posted
5 minutes ago, Andy MacPhail said:

I'm not crazy about trading for prospects unless they fit a need & are MLB-ready. I'm ok about trading prospects & or MLB players that are redundant to fill our immediate need that is where the focus has to be. My hope is Zoll can be a good trader but he needs to break away & find himself.

What do you think you're getting for Jeffers other than prospects? Why don't you want prospects that might help in the future? 

What prospects are redundant? 

I'm on @Vanimal46 team all the way. Trade Ryan, Jeffers, Martin, Wallner, Bell. If you can't get anything for Martin and Wallner stash them both in AAA for now. I'm ok if they trade Larnach, or keep him if they 100 percent will bring him back next year. I'm not trading Clemens or Gomez, though if someone makes a ridiculous offer for either.....

Old-Timey Member
Posted

Just over half the season over, and you sit 2.5 games out of a wildcard, and 4 back of division lead. Now is NOT the time to get rid of your most productive players for prospects you won’t see for years, if ever, or rely on unproven prospects in AAA in mass. They will trickle up with  injuries, or be injured themselves before or after promotions. But some preach that all the time. 

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