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The Minnesota Twins are set to give Gabriel Gonzalez his first taste of the big leagues. Minnesota recalled the 22-year-old outfielder from Triple-A St. Paul on Friday, before opening a series against the Red Sox. Infielder Tristan Gray is heading to the paternity list in the corresponding move, creating a short-term roster opening for one of the organization’s more intriguing bats. Gonzalez was already on the 40-man roster, after the Twins protected him from the Rule 5 Draft last November.
At least for now, this feels more like an opportunity to get Gonzalez's feet wet than a permanent arrival. Players on the paternity list can miss up to three days, and teams will occasionally stretch that timeline slightly with a follow-up restricted list move. Still, Gray is expected back relatively quickly, likely sometime during next week’s series against the White Sox. That means Gonzalez may have only a weekend's worth of games to make an impression before heading back down to St. Paul.
But even a temporary promotion matters for a player like Gonzalez. The Twins didn’t have many realistic position-player options available after sending both Royce Lewis and Matt Wallner to Triple-A earlier this week. Minnesota’s upper-level depth has thinned out considerably, especially among players already on the 40-man roster. Gonzalez and fellow outfielder Hendry Mendez were the two obvious names, but Mendez was only promoted to Triple-A a couple of weeks ago. Gonzalez was the cleaner fit.
And honestly, the timing makes sense. Gonzalez arrived in the organization with plenty of hype after the Twins acquired him from the Mariners in the Jorge Polanco trade before the 2024 season. He was viewed as the headline prospect in the deal, with a reputation as a polished young hitter with advanced bat-to-ball skills and emerging power.
The shine dimmed a little after an uneven first season in the organization. Gonzalez battled through a back injury while putting together a fairly underwhelming year at High-A with a .707 OPS. Suddenly, the prospect who looked like a fast-moving offensive prospect started looking more human.
To his credit, he responded well last season and hit enough to move from High- to Triple-A. His .909 OPS earned him Twins Daily’s Minor League Hitter of the Year. The numbers haven’t exploded in 2026, but there are still reasons for optimism. Across 197 plate appearances with the Saints, Gonzalez owns a .216/.294/.392 slash line with eight home runs while striking out at a manageable 20% rate. A lot of the depressed production can be traced to an ugly .231 batting average on balls in play, suggesting there may have been some poor luck mixed in with the inconsistency.
The tools are still there. Twins Daily currently ranks Gonzalez as the No. 10 prospect in the Twins organization. Evaluators continue to believe in the hit tool and raw power potential, though they’ve also pointed to his aggressive approach and tendency to pound balls into the ground as reasons the game power hasn’t fully shown up yet. He's hitting too many ground balls (and too many pop-ups) this year, but he's still showing the ability to hit the ball hard at times, and he's a pull hitter.
He’s not a burner on the bases, and plays corner outfield spots defensively, meaning the bat has to carry a significant portion of the profile. Fortunately for the Twins, one area where Gonzalez has consistently looked comfortable is against left-handed pitching. Last season, he torched lefties to the tune of a .368/.430/.592 line. Even during this year’s offensive downturn, he’s still producing a strong .263/.328/.544 slash line against southpaws.
That could become important immediately. Boston is expected to start left-hander Payton Tolle on Friday night, which makes Gonzalez a logical candidate to jump directly into the lineup for his MLB debut. It may only last a few days, but in the next few months, maybe it becomes something more. By calling up the outfielder to replace Gray (who has become the primary third baseman), the team sets themselves up to get another few looks at intriguing breakout-in-progress Ryan Kreidler.
At the very least, Twins fans finally get their first look at the player who has quietly become one of the organization’s more important long-term bets.
What can Gonzalez bring to the Twins? Leave a comment and start the discussion.
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