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The offseason has been slow and cold for Twins fans. Budget limitations and ownership uncertainty have handcuffed a front office who usually move deliberately through winter. Despite the inevitable frustration, there is plenty to be optimistic about regarding the future of the Twins organization, highlighted by MLB dot com’s recent executive survey.
The survey anonymously polls front office executives, scouting directors and personnel, player development staff and analytics departments on a wide variety of topics from pre-season awards favorites to which teams draft and develop the most effectively. The survey received responses from all 30 MLB organizations. Here’s the most important Twins takeaways.
The Twins are Flush with High Impact Prospects
Would you rather have a farm system headlined by depth or impact talent? The Twins have the latter, and Walker Jenkins received plenty of plaudits in the survey. He was ranked as the third best prospect overall (6.1% of the vote), the fourth best hitter (11.1%), as having the best hit tool (11.1%), and the 7th best usable power (6.5%). Cut it any way you want; there’s industry belief that Walker Jenkins is the real deal. He’ll start 2025 at AA as a 19-year-old, so it’s easy to see why.
Perhaps surprisingly, Emmanuel Rodriguez didn’t receive any attention in the survey, but he is now a consensus top 20 global prospect on the cusp of the majors with a tantalizing combination of power and swing decisions. Luke Keaschall did come up, tying for first place (6.4%) as the most underrated prospect in baseball. He’s catapulted himself to top 75 global prospect status, too, and should start the year healthy at AA after TJ surgery cut short his 2024 season.
The Twins are One of the Better Drafting Organizations in Baseball
Until the ownership situation is resolved, the Twins are more reliant than ever on drafting and developing MLB contributors in house. Looking at their 40 man roster, 23 players were drafted (or signed on the international market) by Minnesota. The Twins were votes tied fifth for the organization who drafts the best. Looking beyond their current MLB roster, there’s 3 more prospects in top 100 lists (Jenkins, Rodriguez, Keaschall), and many more intriguing arms and bats throughout the system. While you might argue the Twins have found more success in the middle rounds of the draft than at the top, their track record is strong in the Falvey regime.
Notably, there was no mention of the Twins in questions surrounding performance on the international market. Emmanuel Rodriguez could alter that perception, but the Twins have had a disappointing run in recent seasons of their top international prospects ‘popping’. There were a number of standout performers in 2024, including Daiber De Los Santos, Eduardo Beltre, and Yasser Mercedes, with Danny De Andrade and Ricardo Olivar also noteworthy on slightly higher organizational rungs.
Prospect Turnover Masks the Strength of the Twins Young Core
The Twins didn’t receive any votes for best farm system despite finishing third overall in MLB Pipeline’s midseason update. So what gives? Turnover. The Twins graduated Brooks Lee and David Festa from their farm system (with Zebby Matthews soon to follow). This is why I much prefer a ‘pre-arb talent ranking’, or ‘young talent ranking’. Organizations like the Twins are not only reliant on drafting and developing their own contributors, but they need to produce those contributors in relatively short order. The Twins have a ton of young talent.
The organization also received votes for the best at developing pitching and was graded out as fourth best for finding and developing sleeper prospects (hello Payton Eeles). One barometer of their player development for me in 2025? Can they add another name to global top one hundred prospect lists who's not currently featured on them?
Aside from any offseason frustration, what do you make of the health of the Twins organization? Who or what are you high or low on entering 2025?







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