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    5 Things You Can Count On in the Second Half of the Minnesota Twins Season

    It's an unpredictable game and this is an unpredictable team. But I feel confident in forecasting these five second-half inevitabilities for the Minnesota Twins.

    Nick Nelson
    Image courtesy of © Kyle Ross-Imagn Images

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    In some ways, this Twins season has gone perfectly according to expectation. They are on pace to finish just below .500, which is exactly where sites like FanGraphs projected. They are being led by the same two All-Stars from last year in Joe Ryan and Byron Buxton. The rotation's been pretty good, the bullpen's been pretty bad. None of this would have shocked me if you told me in March.

    But the way they've gotten here has been full of surprises: dramatic ups and downs, breakthrough offensive performances, elite production with runners in scoring position. It's a mercurial ballclub, and that makes it hard to predict what lies ahead in the final 10 weeks of the 2026 season.

    With that said, there are a few things coming that I do feel confident in asserting. Strap in, because I believe these five outcomes are inevitable:

    The offense's run-scoring productivity will slow down (unless hitters improve fundamentally).

    Minnesota's AL-leading run total (471) is largely a byproduct of their opportunistic nature: they are slashing .286/.368/.451 with RISP for an .820 OPS that is 80 points higher than their overall baseline. That's great, but it's not predictive. 

    Regression is coming. Unless they can improve their overall hitting proficiency — and that's perfectly plausible if guys like Royce Lewis and Luke Keaschall can build on what they've been doing lately — the Twins are going to gravitate downward in run-scoring, possibly to a range reflecting their 20th-ranked .314 xwOBA.

    The Tigers will make a push.

    In recent years, Detroit has proven to be the streakiest of streaky teams. They were heavily favored to win the division, but got off to a stunningly bad start and have been buried near the bottom of the AL Central. History tells us they were bound to counteract their multi-month slump and they've already begun to do so, drawing back toward the pack with nine wins in their past 12 games. 

    With the Tigers being non-factors in the first half, Cleveland and Chicago have battled for first place while hovering around .500, and the Twins are just a few games out. The idea of any of these teams being front-runners is premised on Detroit remaining dormant. I wouldn't bet on that. Whoever wins this division is going to have to make a stand against the Tigers.

    The Twins will do something weird at the trade deadline.

    Expect the unexpected. With three weeks to go, it's not clear whether the Twins will be buyers or sellers. They very well might blur the line. The front office is balancing the realities of an ongoing rebuild with the mandate to build faith among fans, and act on an undeniable opportunity in this watered-down American League. 

    Ryan Jeffers and Josh Bell are impending free agents. Trevor Larnach is blossoming at a position of depth. Joe Ryan's trade value will never be higher. On the flip side, you've got a farm system that was freshly restocked by last year's firesale and a new draft class. 

    I can't pretend to know what kind of shenanigans they've got in store. But I do feel confident in saying it'll be an eventful and surprising deadline.

    The pitching staff will be tested.

    Mick Abel and Anthony Banda aren't coming back. David Festa might not either. Connor Prielipp is already venturing into career-high workload territory. Bailey Ober is back from injury but throwing 87 MPH. Even Minnesota's All-Star ace Joe Ryan is looking to prove something by finishing a season without wearing down. 

    In the bullpen, Derek Shelton has leaned hard on waiver pickup Yoendrys Gómez and rookie Andrew Morris to scrape by. Mike Paredes has delivered beyond any reasonable expectation thus far. These guys will be hard-pressed to maintain like this, and that's not a knock against them.

    The Twins pitching staff hasn't been great overall, allowing the seventh-most runs in baseball in the first half, but it has held together. We'll really see their resilience tested in the final months. Is help coming via trade?

    The Twins will play meaningful baseball in September.

    It doesn't take a whole lot of starry-eyed optimism to reach this conclusion. Yes, the Twins have a similar record to this time last year, but two things are different: the division and league are worse, and there's no chance they team is going to offload talent like last year, which led to playing 16 games below .500 in August and September. 

    I do expect some of the slumbering giants in the AL to come alive down the stretch, including the Tigers as mentioned above. But Detroit has work to do, still nine games away from a winning record. The existence of three wild-card spots — last of which Minnesota is currently tied for — will make it hard to fall completely out of the running before the start of September, unless the the Twins fall off a cliff or multiple mid-range teams get extremely hot. Could happen, but not likely. 

    What's likely is that the Twins will fulfill Tom Pohlad's preseason proclamation. "Let's judge the success of this year on wins and losses, on whether we're playing meaningful baseball in September," he said in late January. And even if that's a somewhat lukewarm definition of contention, the words that followed are what matter most: "If we're doing that, I think we're gonna be in position to grow payroll the following year, and the following year. That's what I hope we can start focusing on."

    I'm ready to focus on that. The Twins have begun to build something in the first half of this 2026 season and they arrived at the break playing great ball. Now the hard part begins: sustaining success, growing momentum, and turning this into something real. 

    Can they do it? That part is anyone's guess. But at this point I wouldn't put it past them.

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    I think you nailed it on a key point: this surprising offense is bound to decelerate.  You look at the presumed starters and wonder how guys like Clemens, Kreidler, Larnach can maintain their performance  given their past history  Add in the erratic performances of Lee and Lewis and one wonders who are going to be the run producers in this lineup, especially with the added high probability of Jeffers being traded.

    As you noted,  the rotation is not the strength envisioned back in April.  Depth is gone and big questions remain on Ober and Prielipp.  If Ryan(assuming he is not traded) and Bradley can maintain their all star performances and Mathews figures out how to keep the ball in the ballpark this will not be a bad rotation, but again, some regression seems more likely.  Coupled with a very shaky pen, where only Gomez and Morris seem dependable, overall pitching is not going to carry this team to the playoffs.  And how will those two hold up in the heat of a pennant race?

    Yes, the Twins could remain in "contention" in September but regression to the mean seems more likely, especially with Detroit's strong rebound.  If I had some faith in Zoll to succeed at the trade deadline or TP to put money where his mouth is and acquire some major league ready relievers, the outlook could be improved considerably, but realistically, history says otherwise.

    Well they recently put Abel on the 60 day disabled list so unfortunately it pretty much ends his season.  I was sure wrong about the Twins so far.  I suggested at the start of season they woild be battling the White Sox for last place.  We'll they are battling the Sox for first place.  Go Twins.



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