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OF Tommy Pham, 35-Mets
If you missed it, Mets owner Steve Cohen hosted a unique, and somewhat strange press conference in which he processed his team’s weak play with a shrug while admitting that he’s willing to deal pieces to gain prospects. The Twins don’t need Max Scherzer or Justin Verlander—and Pete Alonso is also a pipe dream—but Tommy Pham could be a wise addition.
At 35-years-old on a one-year deal, Pham seems like a logical trade chip—and Minnesota should be in. His Baseball Savant profile is as red as the South, as he’s been able smoke fastballs and breaking balls alike, showcasing a rare dynamic hitting ability that made him so coveted a few years back. His glove isn’t great, but who cares. The only issue is the hulking elephant unable to wallflower his way around the room—Joey Gallo. The Twins would likely need to cut bait with him to create space for Pham, and whether they will admit defeat and do so is unclear.
RHP Hunter Harvey, 28-Nationals
Hunter Harvey looks like someone retrofitted Rod Beck to modern times. He throws gas, almost touching 99 on his average heater while yoinking hitters with an effective split and a slider that’s death to righties. This one isn’t complicated: Brock Stewart’s elbow issues softened a bullpen already lacking a little in depth, and the Twins will need to avoid “Jovani Moran on the mound needing multiple outs against a good team” as much as they can. The only issue is that everyone will probably look to Harvey—what other arm does Washington have—which will inflate his price.
RHP Mark Leiter Jr. 32.-Cubs
Another reliever, Mark Leiter Jr. is throwing splitters 35% of the time with the Cubs, and he is dominating. His ERA is fine, but his peripherals are mouth-watering—and his style of pitching as a reverse-split lefty-killer could help aid the Twins as they search for Caleb Thielbar’s health and Moran’s control. If neither of those come to pass, Leiter Jr. should be a cheap-ish lefty neutralizer just entering arbitration.
RHP Chris Martin, 37-Red Sox
There’s something hilarious about a team playing just about as well as the Twins having to sell; should have made your home in an easier division, Boston. Anyways, Martin is on what feels like his hundredth year of solid relief work, as the veteran holds a 1.67 ERA and good peripherals. Not 1.67 ERA peripherals, but good enough. He’s actually found a touch more velo this season, and while the strikeouts are down, his under-the-hood numbers don’t appear strange. Martin is no rental as well; he would be a Twin in 2024 as well if they consummate a trade for him.
DH/1B Justin Turner, 38-Red Sox
Did you know that Justin Turner was an Oriole way back in 2009? He’s famously the Met Who Couldn’t Hit turned The Dodger Who Could Do Nothing But, and 2023 so far has been yet again consistent—almost boringly so—with a healthy 121 wRC+. Considering Royce Lewis’ injury and José Miranda’s refusal to hit, waiting on the baseball gods to alter their favor may be unwise; Turner could be the name they look to for lineup beefing. He’s not much of a fielder anymore, making Byron Buxton’s permanent residence at the DH slot a tough road block, but few bats available at the deadline could provide more punch.
I think if there were any lessons learned from this exercise, it’s that the extra wild card slots have made it more difficult on the buyers, as mediocre teams may buy into their glory, and close up business. Important pieces are no longer free to deal for. There will be surprises—that will never fully go away—but it’ll be hard to dig through and uncover players who can help the Twins going forward.
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- DocBauer, tarheeltwinsfan and weitz41
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