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MINNEAPOLIS—Major League Baseball announced Tuesday that it has opened a formal investigation into the Minnesota Twins, after receiving multiple complaints that the organization may be stockpiling an unreasonable number of left-handed-hitting outfielders.
The investigation began after rival scouts attending a Triple-A St. Paul game accidentally submitted identical reports for four different players.
"We thought Walker Jenkins had taken four consecutive at-bats," one scout admitted. "Turns out it was Walker Jenkins, Emmanuel Rodriguez, Matt Wallner, and Alan Roden."
Commissioner Rob Manfred reportedly became concerned after reviewing Minnesota's organizational depth chart.
"It appears every time the Twins identify an athletic player with offensive upside, someone in the draft room asks one question," Manfred said. "'Can he hit left-handed?' If the answer is yes, they stop asking questions."
League officials immediately requested access to Minnesota's internal scouting model. Sources say the entire algorithm consists of three weighted categories:
- Hits left-handed.
- Can stand in an outfield.
- Hits left-handed exceptionally well.
Twins general manager Jeremy Zoll denied any wrongdoing.
"We reject the notion that we're hoarding left-handed outfielders," Zoll said. "We're simply committed to acquiring talented baseball players."
When asked why nearly all of those talented baseball players bat left-handed and profile in a corner outfield spot, Zoll paused.
"That's... actually a fair question."
The investigation intensified after inspectors visited the Saints clubhouse. According to league officials, Wallner, Jenkins, Rodriguez, and Roden were all assigned the same locker.
"We figured they could work something out," said one clubhouse attendant. “It’s already tricky enough for left-handed people living in a right-handed world.”
The situation reportedly became more confusing after each player answered to the nickname "future middle-of-the-order bat." Meanwhile, Triple-A manager Brian Dinkelman admitted lineup construction has become increasingly complicated.
"Every day I ask who's playing left field," Dinkelman said. "Four guys raise their hands. Sometimes I just point and hope for the best."
In an effort to maximize organizational depth, the Twins recently experimented with deploying all four players in left field simultaneously. The alignment placed one defender shallow, one deep, one in the left-center gap, and one somewhere near the warning track eating sunflower seeds.
According to Statcast, no fly balls landed safely in left field. Unfortunately, every ground ball through the right side became an automatic triple. The Twins viewed the experiment as a success.
"We're innovators," one front office official explained. "If one left-handed outfielder is good, twenty must be better."
The strategy appears to have influenced every level of the farm system. Sources indicate Twins scouts have stopped evaluating players by traditional tools such as hitting ability, arm strength, or defensive instincts.
Instead, reports now begin with a single question: "Could this player eventually become another left-handed corner outfielder?"
One amateur scouting report obtained by TwinsDaily simply read: "Throws right-handed. Unfortunate."
The philosophy has reportedly spread beyond the scouting department. During this year's Draft meetings, area scouts presented a right-handed hitting shortstop with plus speed. The room fell silent.
After several awkward moments, one executive finally asked, "Do we think he could learn to bat left-handed?"
The player was removed from the draft board.
The organization has become so committed to the strategy that prospects have begun changing positions on their own. A catcher recently volunteered to move to left field.
"No reason," he explained. "It just seems like the fastest way to get promoted."
As the investigation continues, MLB has reportedly proposed several possible punishments. Among the options under consideration are requiring the Twins to draft three consecutive right-handed infielders, forcing the organization to sign a veteran right-handed corner outfielder in free agency, or making Minnesota explain the difference between left field and right field on a written exam.
For now, however, league officials have simply asked the Twins to refrain from acquiring any additional left-handed outfielders. Sources confirmed Minnesota responded by selecting one on waivers for cash considerations.







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