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    A Not-Too-Early Breakdown of Minnesota’s Most Interesting Trade Deadline Candidates

    Minnesota’s roster still has recognizable talent, but the organization increasingly feels stuck in the middle with difficult decisions looming this summer.

    Cody Christie
    Image courtesy of Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

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    The Minnesota Twins entered the season hoping to convince everyone that last year’s disappointment was a temporary stumble. Instead, the first half has only created more uncertainty about where this organization is actually headed.

    Minnesota’s ownership would say this isn’t a full rebuild. It also doesn’t look like a legitimate contending effort. That middle ground is the worst place a franchise can live in modern baseball. Teams either push their chips in or aggressively build toward the future. The Twins continue to hover somewhere in between, and with the trade deadline approaching, they may finally have to choose a direction.

    Minnesota still has enough talent on the roster to intrigue contenders around the league. However, they also have enough flaws and long-term concerns to justify selling pieces for the future. The biggest question is whether the front office is willing to admit this core may not have the runway everyone once expected.

    Here’s an early look at some of the most fascinating trade deadline decisions facing the Twins.

    Byron Buxton

    No player better represents the current state of the franchise than Buxton. On one hand, he remains the face of the organization. He has a full no-trade clause, and he has repeatedly made it clear that he wants to stay in Minnesota. When healthy, he is still one of the most electric players in baseball and one of the few stars capable of changing a game by himself. The Twins should do everything possible to keep him.

    Trading Buxton would signal far more than a roster adjustment. It would essentially announce the end of this competitive era. He is one of the few players casual fans still associate directly with Twins baseball, and moving him would create major backlash inside the clubhouse and throughout the fanbase.

    At the same time, the situation becomes more complicated if Minnesota starts moving other veteran pieces. If the front office deals away multiple core contributors, Buxton may eventually decide he no longer wants to spend the remainder of his prime stuck in another retooling phase. There would almost certainly be interest if he became available, especially from teams looking for a dynamic postseason weapon.

    The Atlanta Braves would immediately become a fascinating fit. Buxton is from Georgia, and a return closer to home could appeal to him if the Twins no longer appear serious about competing. Still, unless Buxton himself pushes the issue, it is difficult to envision Minnesota voluntarily moving him.

     

    Joe Ryan

    Ryan might be the most realistic blockbuster candidate on the roster. He is under team control only through the 2027 season, and his value may never be higher than it is right now. Ryan survived an early-season injury scare that initially looked far more concerning, and he has continued pitching like a frontline starter whenever healthy.

    That combination would make him one of the most attractive arms available at the deadline. The timing also matters. With Tarik Skubal injured, the market for controllable starting pitching could become even more aggressive. Teams desperate for rotation help would likely line up to make significant offers for Ryan.

    From Minnesota’s perspective, there is logic behind considering it. The Twins do not currently look like a team positioned to seriously contend over the next two seasons. By the time the roster is realistically ready to compete again, Ryan could already be nearing free agency. Add in his injury history and the general volatility that comes with pitchers, and there is a legitimate argument that the organization should capitalize on his value now rather than waiting for something to go wrong later.

    Of course, there is another side to the conversation. Quality starting pitching is incredibly difficult to acquire. Ryan is already proven, affordable, and capable of anchoring a rotation. Trading him would create an enormous hole and likely force the Twins into another lengthy search for pitching stability. Unless Minnesota receives an overwhelming package centered around elite prospects, there is still a strong case for keeping him and attempting to build around him instead.

    Ryan Jeffers

    Before his injury, Ryan Jeffers looked like one of the few clear success stories on Minnesota’s roster this season. He was off to a tremendous start offensively and had arguably been the team’s MVP through the first half. Jeffers provided stability in the middle of the lineup while continuing to handle a difficult workload behind the plate. At a time when much of the offense struggled with consistency, he was one of the few hitters regularly producing quality at-bats.

    That is what makes this week’s injury so frustrating for both Jeffers and the Twins. Minnesota placed Jeffers on the injured list earlier this week with a broken hamate bone, an injury that will likely sideline him for six to eight weeks. The timing could not be much worse with the trade deadline approaching quickly.

     

    Under normal circumstances, Jeffers would have made plenty of sense as a trade candidate. He is a veteran catcher on an expiring contract who could help a contender looking for offense behind the plate. Catching depth is always in demand at the deadline, especially from teams searching for postseason upgrades.

    Now the situation becomes far murkier. Even if Jeffers returns before the deadline, he will likely need time to prove he is fully healthy. Hamate bone injuries have a long history of sapping hitters’ power temporarily after they return. Many players eventually regain their production, but it is rarely an immediate process. That uncertainty could significantly shrink his market.

    Contenders may hesitate to part with meaningful prospects for a catcher who is still working his way back physically and trying to rediscover his power swing. The Twins would still likely prefer to move him rather than risk losing him for nothing after the season, but the return may not justify making the deal unless Jeffers comes back quickly and looks like himself immediately.

    Josh Bell

    Bell feels like the classic trade deadline rental candidate. He has been traded four different times during his career, so another move would hardly be surprising. Bell’s offensive profile also makes him the type of player contenders often gamble on in July. When he gets hot, he can carry a lineup for stretches, and playoff teams are always searching for extra power from the designated hitter spot.

    A contender could easily convince itself that Bell is one productive month away from becoming an impactful postseason bat.

    The problem is that his market may be limited. Bell’s defensive limitations narrow the list of interested teams considerably. His streaky offensive production also makes him difficult to trust as an everyday option. Since he is on an expiring contract, the return would likely be modest even if he finishes the first half strongly.

    Minnesota may ultimately decide his veteran presence is more valuable in the clubhouse than the low-level prospect package they would receive in return. Still, among the Twins’ veteran position players, Bell remains one of the more obvious names to watch.

    Austin Martin

    Martin has quietly become one of the more interesting depth pieces on the roster. Since being recalled during the second half of last season, he has consistently found ways to get on base and provide quality at-bats. He has also proven capable defensively in corner outfield spots, giving Minnesota a versatile player who can contribute in multiple roles. That type of player tends to matter more over a full season than many fans realize.

    However, his trade value is probably fairly limited. Contending teams could view Martin as a useful bench bat or platoon player, but there are questions about how large a role he can realistically handle. Since he bats right-handed, his ideal usage against left-handed pitching becomes somewhat restrictive compared to a traditional platoon option.

    The Twins also may not gain much by moving him. Martin is under team control through 2030, and his versatility fits well on a roster that constantly deals with injuries and lineup instability. Unless another organization views him as more than a complementary piece, Minnesota likely benefits more from simply keeping him around.

    Royce Lewis and Matt Wallner

    A few months ago, Lewis and Wallner might have carried substantial trade value. Now, both players are coming off demotions, and their stock has cratered. That creates an awkward dilemma for Minnesota.

    Selling low on talented players is almost always dangerous, especially when both still possess significant upside. Lewis was a former top prospect that the club has invested in, while Wallner’s raw power and patience still intrigue evaluators despite the swing-and-miss concerns.

    Some organizations would absolutely be willing to take a gamble on either player. Teams constantly believe they can unlock talent that another franchise could not fully develop. A rebuilding club, in particular, may view Lewis or Wallner as ideal buy-low opportunities.

    But that same upside is exactly why the Twins may hesitate. Trading either player right now would almost certainly mean accepting pennies on the dollar compared to what their value once looked like. Minnesota would essentially be betting that both players are closer to finished products than temporary struggles. That is an extremely risky gamble to make this early. The more likely scenario is the Twins allow both players time to rebuild value at Triple-A before revisiting any long-term decisions during the offseason.

    The most frustrating part about the Twins right now is not simply that they are losing games. It is that the organization no longer feels aligned with what this current roster is supposed to accomplish.

    There are still recognizable stars. There are still talented players capable of contributing to a winning team. But there are also growing signs that this core may not be built to sustain contention much longer.

    That reality makes this trade deadline incredibly important. If Minnesota decides to aggressively sell, it could mark the beginning of a major organizational reset. If the front office stands pat or buys marginal help, it risks prolonging the same directionless cycle the franchise already appears trapped in.

    Either way, the next few months may determine what Twins baseball looks like for the rest of the decade.

    Who will the Twins trade at the deadline? Will it be another trade deadline selling spree? Leave a comment and start the discussion.

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    21 hours ago, bean5302 said:

    I'm not sure what talent people are talking about. Trade value for virtually all our guys is suspect.

    BBTV has paywalled their site down so hard I no longer use it at all, but I'd say Buxton is probably about a +30 value at this point.

    Joe Ryan's value is highly questionable at this point due to Skubal's Arb3 ruling. Ryan is probably in line for a $20MM pay day through arbitration if he remains healthy. As a 3 WAR kind of pitcher, maybe 4 WAR for a desperate partner, his surplus value would be hamstrung quite a bit. Maybe +25 at this point? Not trading him last year was the biggest mistake this front office has ever made, IMHO.

    Ober's tough to gauge. I don't think his results will continue as the league adjusts to his new methodology. 

    Ryan Jeffers may be worth more because of his injury TBH. Keeping up that outstanding wRC+ 166 production line would be unbelievable given his one outlier season capped at wRC+ 136 and his career wRC+ 112. Jeffers is looking like a totally transformed hitter at this point in his age 29 season, and teams may be willing to bite on that. The hamate bone surgery has about a 100% success rate so I think teams will be all aboard. Still, he's a rental, and if traded this year, he's ineligible for a QO. His value is going to be fairly limited.

    Josh Bell is a DFA / release candidate. Not a trade candidate. He's at -0.4 fWAR right now. 

    I would question how much Skubal's Arb 3 ruling impacts Ryan.  Skubal's bWAR for the last 2 years is 13.2.  Ryan's is 7/1.  Skubal is the next level up and that level often decides playoff games. Dylan Cease got $13.75 in his Arb 3 season and his performance has tracked a fair amount higher than Ryan.  If Ryan continues to perform close to his current level he might get close to Cease money.  Just an opinion of course.

    It is NOT too early to be discussing this.  Reality Check:  The Twins are a bad baseball team with serious roster holes.  We are a half game out of a Wildcard spot by playing in the worst division in baseball.  We'd get destroyed in said Wildcard game.  Reality says we need to be aggressive and smart in dealing for young talent to retrofit this roster.  There were a couple of players NOT mentioned in the article who should be included.

    1.   Buxton-He's 32 and now has 10 and 5 rights.  I do not trade him unless he requests it.  There would be teams, with the Braves at the top of the list, who could and probably would provide a handsome return.  But he's the face of the franchise and deserves the chance to be a one-team player,  It's got to be Buxton's choice.

    2.   Ryan-After the injury scare, the loss of Lopez for the season, the near deal with Boston last year and with the emergence of Bradley, Abel, Prielipp and hopefully Matthews, it's time to cash in on Joe Ryan.  He will start getting more and more expensive and he will bring a solid package back.

    3.   Jeffers-The injury is disappointing, but further points to the need to move him.  he should have been traded a month ago.  With Boras as his agent, he's never signing an extension.  He's having his best season ever.  Smart FO's see this opportunity and move on it.  We have Caratini.  We have some emerging catching talent in the minors and the chance to draft the top catcher with the 3rd overall pick.  Find the team willing to give up some real talent and make the deal.

    4.   Josh Bell is a release candidate.  Trade him for anything you can get.

    5.   Ober-His season to date offers a tremendous chance to maximize the return.  While Ryan could be a All Star caliber #2 on a contending team, Ober is an intriguing #4 or #5.  I'd trade him right now to open up spots for younger pitchers.  From this point forward, his value can only decrease.

    6.   Lewis and Wallner-Lewis is still just 26 years old.  Wallner is 28.  Each has flashed a tantalizing future only to look so lost it's maddening.  There are younger players who are making them less and less of a Twins future.  EVERY TEAM in MLB has players just like Lewis and Wallner.  It's time for the Twins to move on and take a chance on getting a Shane Mack type back in return who thrives on a change in scenery.  

    7.   Larnach-He's having his best season at age 29.  But I'd move on with the young OF we have coming up.  I wouldn't give him away, but somebody may give up a nice piece if Larnach would be a good fit for them.  

    8.   SWR-There are younger players who have far greater upside than SWR.  If the Twins move him to the BP and he does well I'm hanging on to him as a 25 year old.  He's got no spot in a future Twins rotation, but has a chance to be a decent BP pitcher.  

    With a labor stoppage sure to affect at least SOME of 2027 and the hopes that the Pohlad's will finally sell this off season the tear-down should continue with enthusiasm.  The Twins are NOT a contender this year.  Trade the guys who no longer have a place on a 2027 roster, get the team in a good sale position and build for 2028 & 2029 with young players.  It's 1981 all over again.  

     

    1 hour ago, Major League Ready said:

    I would question how much Skubal's Arb 3 ruling impacts Ryan.  Skubal's bWAR for the last 2 years is 13.2.  Ryan's is 7/1.  Skubal is the next level up and that level often decides playoff games. Dylan Cease got $13.75 in his Arb 3 season and his performance has tracked a fair amount higher than Ryan.  If Ryan continues to perform close to his current level he might get close to Cease money.  Just an opinion of course.

    I can't agree with your take at all. Skubal's ruling showed the following.
    1. Player performance in Arb2 season directly correlates with Arb3 salary.
    2. What the player is currently making is irrelevant.

    The CBA had the provision that free agency value is supposed to be considered in the final year of arbitration. Arbiters proved they cared about free agency value, and not the salary the player was earning. The Tigers submitted a $19MM figure for Skubal, which was a $9MM jump and nearly double what he was previously making. Huge increases already.

    It's about the precedent in the contract negotiation. There's no way arbiters can make a ruling like they did with Skubal and say it only applies to the best pitcher in the game. Only 1 player in the game gets to follow this new precedent.

    This precedent will even be used for Trevor Larnach. It changes everything.

    6 hours ago, bean5302 said:

    I can't agree with your take at all. Skubal's ruling showed the following.
    1. Player performance in Arb2 season directly correlates with Arb3 salary.
    2. What the player is currently making is irrelevant.

    The CBA had the provision that free agency value is supposed to be considered in the final year of arbitration. Arbiters proved they cared about free agency value, and not the salary the player was earning. The Tigers submitted a $19MM figure for Skubal, which was a $9MM jump and nearly double what he was previously making. Huge increases already.

    It's about the precedent in the contract negotiation. There's no way arbiters can make a ruling like they did with Skubal and say it only applies to the best pitcher in the game. Only 1 player in the game gets to follow this new precedent.

    This precedent will even be used for Trevor Larnach. It changes everything.

    You might be right.  I will take note and we will see what happens next fall/winter.

    This all depends on lots of different factors. If the Twins are legitimately in the playoff hunt I wouldn’t be opposed to keeping everyone. Playoff chances aren’t to be taken lightly. But, if they end up trending towards 75 wins the for sale sign goes out. Doesn’t mean I’m moving all of them but if there is good value I wouldn’t trade Ryan and Jeffers for sure. If the offer isn’t good, there is value in keeping Ryan too or trading him later. I guess my point is the correct decision could be any of the above depending on circumstances. 




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