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    Do the Twins Have One of Baseball’s Best Front Offices?


    Cody Christie

    Every fan base is critical of their front office--even those for teams who go to the World Series. Building a thriving organization starts at the top, and the Twins might have one of the best.

    Image courtesy of Kim Klement Neitzel, Jim Cowsert-USA TODAY Sports

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    Last week, The Athletic ranked MLB’s front offices, as voted on by 40 executives across the baseball landscape. As the piece notes, a front office "features dozens of employees with differing, conflicting tasks. There are scouts, analysts, and player-development gurus. There are resources devoted to the acquisition of players, the improvement of players, and the health of players. These are elaborate ecosystems that can be challenging to maintain.”

    Minnesota tied for fourth among AL teams in the rankings, alongside that of Texas, the reigning World Series champions. The trio of AL clubs listed higher include the Rays (2nd overall), Guardians (4th), and Orioles (5th). Baseball front offices become an imitation game, where other teams attempt to poach personnel from successful teams. The Twins have been no stranger to this phenomenon, with many high-ranking figures coming to them from other top-ranked teams.

    Derek Falvey, President of Baseball Operations
    The Twins hired away Falvey from the Guardians organization, the only AL Central team to rank higher than Minnesota on this list. The team's leadership group hoped that Falvey could recreate Cleveland’s pitching and development pipeline, and there have been some successful examples of that during his tenure. The Athletic's article praises Falvey for the culture he has created, with one executive calling him “one of the most exceptional leaders out there.” Last winter, the Red Sox contacted Falvey to fill a similar role in Boston, an organization with more financial resources. He declined the request and seems committed to the process in Minnesota.

    Thad Levine, General Manager
    Levine came to the Twins from the Rangers organization and also became a target for the Red Sox this winter. He interviewed for the position before Boston hired Craig Breslow, a former Twins and Red Sox pitcher. Levine has been a target for other top jobs in baseball in the past, but decided not to uproot his family. From a front-office perspective, Levine is viewed as someone who takes a balanced approach to using analytics in the decision-making process. He likely remains a target for other organizations, especially if the Twins continue to have on-field success. 

    Rocco Baldelli, On-Field Manager
    Baldelli isn’t necessarily a front-office member, but he is an extension of their office from a roster and game-planning perspective. After filling multiple coaching and front-office roles, he joined the Twins from the Rays, the top-ranked AL club. The culture that Falvey attempted to create would have been impossible without a leader in the clubhouse like Baldelli. His skills in building culture can be seen throughout the year, from the famous spring training egg toss to training to explain a home run sausage to the media. Fans might not agree with every decision he makes, but he has been one of the most successful managers in franchise history. 

    Outside these three men, plenty of others help the front office function at a high level. The Twins hired Roman Barinas as the club’s Director of Latin American scouting this winter. He came from the Dodgers organization, which ranked as baseball’s top front office. Assistant General Manager Jeremy Zoll has worked in multiple organizations, including serving as the Dodgers' Assistant Director of Player Development. The list of names could be endless, but it’s clear that the best front offices hire away talented individuals from other smart clubs, which can infuse new ideas.

    So, how can the Twins move up the rankings in future years? Culture can only help a team so much without positive on-field results. The current regime has kept the team’s winning window open despite some trades and signings that resulted in negative value. They have done an excellent job of identifying players late in the draft and building depth at the big-league level. Minnesota ended their playoff losing streak last season, and now it is up to the front office to help the team take the next step. 


    Do the Twins have one of baseball’s best front offices? Is there a way to move up the list? Leave a comment and start the discussion.

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    19 minutes ago, nova_twins said:

    Most fans don't have the knowledge or intellectual capability to evaluate MLB front offices. 

    Not to mention the decisions themselves - front offices have access to vastly greater amounts of information than fans do. 

    Given those underlying realities, the survey results seem valid to me - baseball execs are a small group that know each other fairly well.

    Hi, Thad

    Not much substance to the article, but that's okay, it's a subjective topic in the first place. 

    My main reaction is that IF they're one of the best, and haven't come particularly close to winning a World Series in 7 seasons, it just demonstrates what an unlevel playing field the smaller markets compete on.  Six different franchises have won the WS in those 7 seasons, suggesting a certain kind of competitive balance.  But only Washington is even close to what is meant by "mid-market" these days.

    Maybe I'm just old-fashioned and need to adjust my rooting interest.  I should pick a sentimental team, as the Twins are, and then pick a second team to follow that actually has a chance.

    Meanwhile, good luck, FalVine.  Front offices have gotten smarter during my lifetime* and the latitude for being significantly better gets smaller every year.

    * I take only a little credit 😀

    On a bell curve, #8/30 is above average, not elite. Maybe top 3-4 would be elite. 

    Above average FO, below average ownership, arguably below average luck, the results have been pretty much what should be expected.

    Another ignored element of this is that Falvine agreed not to clean house when they arrived. That added significant extra challenges, but as part of a longer term philosophy that predated them. 

    2 hours ago, JD-TWINS said:

    The TV issue seems to be a National Issue. Not saying the FO is blameless or has no ability to influence positive results but they are not alone in having issues with TV.

    To me it seems the FO took the easy road (and perhaps the one that potentially offered the most money for this year). However, Bally’s was in financial distress and that establishing a streaming option seemed to be the long term path forward.  To have a contract which prohibited the Twins from having streaming rights seems short sighted.  

    3 hours ago, USAFChief said:

    From the same author, recently no less:

     

    I wouldn't be hanging my hat on those numbers. I don't even know what they represent. But the Twins 20 is far from the Dodgers point total. And the fact they're tied for 8th place total is closer to whoever is 30th than it is 1st. It also looks like one can be good at identifying evaluating and developing talent. But what puts the Dodgers in a different stratosphere is an owner who is willing to spend. And the Rays counterpunching back and saying, now hold on a minute. And @USAFChief. Thank you for pointing out this article. Which is hilariously being used by both sides of the discussion. 

    I was a big fan of this FO. IMO they have handled pitching pretty well. The pipeline although has been slow to develop & so far the top product has been Ober & they have tweaked quite a few outside pitchers to benefit us. The usage is trending the right way. 

    A couple of things I dislike the most. 1st thing is that they are tight-lipped when you don't want them to be & open their mouth when they shouldn't (ex: shifting Graterol to pen before trading him). 2nd is they never admit to their mistakes & always double down. IMO a good FO says the buck stops here.

    MN has always maintained a good culture even before Falvey. This is the main reason that separates MN from the rest of the teams. This FO has been pretty lucky in other teams approaching them w/ decent trades. What makes me nervous is when nobody is offering any good trades, this FO is terrible in initiating trades & seems to be a target if a team wants to unload (a) player(s).

    Analytics are a good thing but if your philosophy is off (all or nothing high priority- defense & small baseball not important) analytics won't help you (poor player evaluations & development go hand in hand with this). You also have to know when to go with your gut. I have been patient w/ them & if you don't care about competing at the top level they are fine. But if you want a World Series team we need to go elsewhere.

    3 hours ago, Brock Beauchamp said:

    Honestly, no they do not have one of the best front offices. The Twins front office is above average but no better than that. They're good at their jobs but not one of the best.

    This is where I'm at. They've had some good offseasons mixed in with some bad ones, and have had some great trades mixed in with some dumpster fire ones. It's a mixed bag. The starting pitching pipeline never materialized, but recently they've figured out how to get the most out of their bullpen arms. They've always got hitting prospects up and coming. Hopefully we will start to see an influx of international players as we've had a drought of them over the past 10+ years.

    Still only one playoff series win since they got the job in 2017 despite being in a garbage division... but the front office is certainly not bad. They can build a playoff contender but I'm pretty doubtful about them building a World Series contender.

    5 hours ago, Richie the Rally Goat said:

    Agreed with the kudos for Cody Christie. I do love me some alliteration!

    4th in the AL, 8th in MLB is upper third. Not exactly “complete 180”. certainly more respect among peers than among rubes, but generally you see that phenomenon. 
     

    I do believe it’s a good front office, well run organization and it’s clear the strategic vision from Falvey manifests itself in every aspect of operations. That’s the sign of great leadership. Leadership is only one (albeit important) aspect of effectiveness. They still need to prove consistency. so far 2024 is fairly consistent with 23, but YOY over their tenure has been wildly inconsistent. Achieving goals is the unclear part about their organizational effectiveness. I don’t know where their sites are set… but either they aren’t achieving them very often or the bar is set low.

    all in all, they’re fine and my gripe is mainly with modern baseball more than Falvey

    The general opinion from those active in the TD forum would describe the FO in the bottom 2/3 of all the organizations ………… my personal guess on a pole would have them 22-26th……,some would argue 30th. Completely subjective, but I read everyday & have for a couple years. It’s certainly not a rosey sentiment……pretty close to a 180.

    Wildcard in first year - 2017

    Division Titles in - 2019, 2020, & 2023

    Team was absolutely beaten up by injury in ‘22………….4 playoff trips in 7 opportunities. 

    Some good trades - some really good trades - some clunkers. Julien - Ober - Jeffers - Miranda - Duran - Larnach - Lewis - Lee and more guys to come have come through draft process. I know there are more than a handful of negatives some will be happy to point out…… I still think they do a much better than average job!

    1 hour ago, Doctor Gast said:

    I was a big fan of this FO. IMO they have handled pitching pretty well. The pipeline although has been slow to develop & so far the top product has been Ober & they have tweaked quite a few outside pitchers to benefit us. The usage is trending the right way. 

    A couple of things I dislike the most. 1st thing is that they are tight-lipped when you don't want them to be & open their mouth when they shouldn't (ex: shifting Graterol to pen before trading him). 2nd is they never admit to their mistakes & always double down. IMO a good FO says the buck stops here.

    MN has always maintained a good culture even before Falvey. This is the main reason that separates MN from the rest of the teams. This FO has been pretty lucky in other teams approaching them w/ decent trades. What makes me nervous is when nobody is offering any good trades, this FO is terrible in initiating trades & seems to be a target if a team wants to unload (a) player(s).

    Analytics are a good thing but if your philosophy is off (all or nothing high priority- defense & small baseball not important) analytics won't help you (poor player evaluations & development go hand in hand with this). You also have to know when to go with your gut. I have been patient w/ them & if you don't care about competing at the top level they are fine. But if you want a World Series team we need to go elsewhere.

    If Gray pitches well - as was expected, against Houston, they could have realistically been in the ALCS last season. Not really sure what the beef is with their competitive stature?

    To me they keep re-molding the team to have more strengths every year.

    Correa - Lopez moves seem to not be discussed as positives and only the problem moves get discussed.

    The FO can’t control Buxton or Lewis’ health…..they have an excellent Pen - their rotation is average to above average.

    The Catcher - SS - 3B - 2B all have the capability to star in MLB.

    The Yankees have scored 2 runs or less for a handful of games in a row…….there are no perfect teams. It’s particularly difficult on the FO when ownership shifts the budget back to 2021 level in 2024!

    2025:

    Lee - Correa - Julien - Kirilloff/Miranda…IF

    Lewis - Buxton/Castro - Larnach/Martin…OF

    Jeffers/Vazquez

    Farmer - Santana - Kepler salaries gone and a budget increase of $20M to high $140’s …that’s $42M to spend to supplement the rotation & DH or OF spot.

    Rotation is more than competitive & Pen is solid.

    I do not see why, with decent health, the club as assembled would not be competitive for the AL Pennant?

    Is this delusional?

    I don't understand how people are beefing with this article. The Twins are tied for eight place, with less than half of the points of the teams ahead of them with zero 1st place votes. 

    Based on success in the past five and a fifth years, this front office is objectively better than the FOs of the White Sox, Tigers, Royals, Red Sox, Blue Jays, Angels, Athletics, Mariners, Mets, Marlins, Pirates, Cubs, Reds, Giants, and Rockies. That's 15 teams, at least, that the Twins are better than.

    Then, you have the Padres, Yankees, and Phillies, who have spent oodles of money and made risky trades in search of a World Series they haven't won. Also, the Nationals haven't done squat in the last 4 years, and the Astros have a brand-new coach and a 2nd year GM while being one of the worst teams in baseball so far this year.

    That leaves the Twins and nine other FOs (Orioles, Rays, Guardians, Rangers, Braves, Brewers, Cardinals, Dodgers, and Diamondbacks) at the top. Seems pretty reasonable to be ranked 8th or 9th. 

    I would put them in the general area of 8-14. I think they're above average, but far from the elite. I don't believe their strategies will lead to a World Series, but do believe they'll continue to fight for central titles. They make some good moves, they make some bad ones. If they're replaced I'd say it's more likely they're replaced with someone worse, but there is most definitely room to improve.

    People also need to understand the difference between disagreeing with the FO on certain moves and calling them incompetent. They decided signing Joey Gallo for 11 mil was smart. Some fans disagreed (full disclosure, I defended the move). Those fans could disagree with that move (and they were right while the FO was wrong) and not be calling the FO incompetent or be calling for them to be fired. 

    Along those lines, here's a news flash for everyone: the FO themselves have these very same debates internally. They're debates with far more data, but they're the same general debates. Signing Santana didnt get 100% support, I promise you. There are decisions Falvey and Levine disagree on. Or Falvey and Rocco. Or any combination of the 3. Someone also pointed out that fans have everything they need to judge the FO. Success and failure. That's all any fan needs. The FO shouldn't be judged on anything else. Do they build winning teams or not?

    There is a lot of discussion of recent years and field results and while that is important and part of the discussion its not the whole picture.

    We have to take into account what they inherited and what they have done behind that scenes that will result in continuing the success down the road.  Sure, they've been able to have several extra players other teams want every year but if they can do that every year that would speak highly of them, with the inbound players being a different part of the evaluation. 

    There have been several stories over the years of different things they have upgraded behind the scenes, tech, scouting, etc.  That all cost money and effort but the idea is that $3m that helps all players is worth more than one $30m player.  Again, it's year to year high level results in prospects and big club competitiveness that we will see how much it pays.

    The main thing for me is that we are just entering a phase where they really have what they want in place.  They inherited and entire system of pitch to contact pitchers and make contact hitters and both sides have been completely turned over to power pitchers and what ever you might categorize the hitters.  By my rough figuring, Max Kepler, Alex Kirilloff, Jose Miranda, Griffin Jax and Jordan Balosavic are the only remaining players in the organization they have not made a stay or go roster decision on.  That's quite a significant turnover in faces and features.  They have a type and they collect them.

    This is the most talented Twins 40 man roster I can remember, or look up.  We are having very real discussions of where we will play top 20 prospects regularly.  For all the questions about the pitching pipeline, I'm not sure what more you want-other than a Paul Skenes of our very own.  They are pitching as good as anyone.

    Right now they are top third in baseball or so.  Three years from now they might get some Tampa respect.

    No. A strong organization builds on what they have to get stronger. This season we had a chance at building a stronger pitching staff. But instead they let Gray go to save money hoping Varland would step in. He wasn't ready. So we took a step backwards. They just do what the Pohlads allow and that is to make money and not focus on going deep in the playoffs. That's why they hired Rocco. He is a "Yes" man who won't rock the boat. So if making money is the standard they are good. If going deep in the playoffs then not so much.

    8 hours ago, JD-TWINS said:

    2025:

    Lee - Correa - Julien - Kirilloff/Miranda…IF

    Lewis - Buxton/Castro - Larnach/Martin…OF

    Jeffers/Vazquez

    Farmer - Santana - Kepler salaries gone and a budget increase of $20M to high $140’s …that’s $42M to spend to supplement the rotation & DH or OF spot.

    Rotation is more than competitive & Pen is solid.

    I do not see why, with decent health, the club as assembled would not be competitive for the AL Pennant?

    Is this delusional?

    Question. Where do you get the payroll (budget) increase number from? 

    17 hours ago, bean5302 said:

    Most fans have EVERYTHING they need to evaluate a front office.

    The Twins front office has mediocre as a ceiling for their successes so far, which is why they're on the final year of their contracts and the hot seat for their jobs.
     

    You are right, we have decades of watching the Pohlads operate. That is why you should reevaluate your evaluation. Their seats aren't even slightly warm. 

    Case in point, DSP's continued employment. Once the Pohlads pick you, you are very picked.

    All front offices make mistakes.   Tampa Bay has made plenty.   Cleveland better have a pitcher pipeline, the way they burn through pitchers. There will never be total agreement on everything they do, but as long as they have a solid plan to move forward you live with the errors and move on, kind of like Julein playing second.

    21 hours ago, ashbury said:

    Not much substance to the article, but that's okay, it's a subjective topic in the first place. 

    My main reaction is that IF they're one of the best, and haven't come particularly close to winning a World Series in 7 seasons, it just demonstrates what an unlevel playing field the smaller markets compete on.  Six different franchises have won the WS in those 7 seasons, suggesting a certain kind of competitive balance.  But only Washington is even close to what is meant by "mid-market" these days.

    Maybe I'm just old-fashioned and need to adjust my rooting interest.  I should pick a sentimental team, as the Twins are, and then pick a second team to follow that actually has a chance.

    Meanwhile, good luck, FalVine.  Front offices have gotten smarter during my lifetime* and the latitude for being significantly better gets smaller every year.

    * I take only a little credit 😀

    The winning a world series metric has become an idealistic measure over the past 20 years.  There have been two teams in the bottom half of revenue to win the WS over that period of time and none since Falvey took over.  KC got there by being terrible for a very long time.

    If we use 92+ win seasons.  There has only been (41) 92+ win seasons among the bottom 16 revenue in the past 20 years.  26 of them were produced by Cleveland (7), Tampa Bay (6), Oakland (5), Twins (4) and Brewers (4).   The other 11 teams managed a grand total of (15) 92+ win seasons.  That's 15 seasons out of a possible 300.  Teams in the bottom half of revenue have won 92+ games in 13% of all seasons.

    Maybe we should all pick a 2nd team.  I just accept the reality that it's far from a level playing field.

    The 7 snobbiest cities in Minnesota got into my news feed. I didn’t click on it.
     

    The 10 best pizza joints in Minnesota got into my news feed. I didnt read it. 
     

    I read this article from Cody Christie and by clicking on it. I probably doomed my algorithm. 

    Wasn't going to comment other than my short LOL on page 1 but I just can't get past the lunacy of signing players like Gallo, Santana and Margot and the trading for injured pitchers that happens WAY to often. Add in the acquisition of 1 year wonders like JLopez, and the crop of bullpen arms they went after this off-season and IMO they take too many chances on players that have no consistant track record. Last but not least is the spreadsheet culture and platoon to death or pinch-hit at all costs avenue they have committed to that doesn't really equate into anything but inconsistancy on the field. Do you know how to have players never learn how to hit against an opposite handed pitcher? ....... By never giving them enough opportunities to do so.

    On 5/4/2024 at 8:16 PM, chpettit19 said:

     I don't believe their strategies will lead to a World Series, but do believe they'll continue to fight for central titles. 

    Do they build winning teams or not?

    Which of the teams in the bottom half of revenue do you believe are following strategies more likely to produce a WS winner?  Based on previous posts I am assuming you believe spending and therefore spending capacity influences winning.  They obviously can't follow the Dodger's strategy, so, which team with the same spending capacity would you prefer they follow?

    Should they follow the strategies of the teams that have had a better win record since 2017?

    Win %
    1 Tampa 0.573
    2 Brewers 0.555
    3 Cleveland 0.551
    4 TWINS 0.521
    5 Mariners 0.514
    6 Oakland 0.485
    7 Dbacks 0.480
    8 Padres 0.479
    9 Rockies 0.461
    10 White Sox 0.457
    11 Reds 0.453
    12 Marlins 0.435
    13 Pirates 0.431
    14 Orioles 0.424
    15 Tigers 0.407
    16 Royals 0.405
    8 minutes ago, Major League Ready said:

    Which of the teams in the bottom half of revenue do you believe are following strategies more likely to produce a WS winner?  Based on previous posts I am assuming you believe spending and therefore spending capacity influences winning.  They obviously can't follow the Dodger's strategy, so, which team with the same spending capacity would you prefer they follow?

    Trading for extreme injury risk pitchers because they'll be "cheaper."

    Extreme platooning.

    Prioritizing short side platoon bats over everyday players. 

    Strict 50/50 catcher split when 1 catcher is clearly significantly better. 

    Refusing to move on from veterans until August in the name of depth to not risk a bad young player being forced into that spot being held by a bad old player.

    Building a team that relies on full health so each piece can be perfectly fit into their specific role in order to succeed. 

    None of those are spending capacity based, but yes, spending more does help. That's an owner thing, though, so not something I brought up. There's plenty of baseball strategy things that have nothing to do with spending that I disagree with, though.

    25 minutes ago, chpettit19 said:

    Trading for extreme injury risk pitchers because they'll be "cheaper."

    Extreme platooning.

    Prioritizing short side platoon bats over everyday players. 

    Strict 50/50 catcher split when 1 catcher is clearly significantly better. 

    Refusing to move on from veterans until August in the name of depth to not risk a bad young player being forced into that spot being held by a bad old player.

    Building a team that relies on full health so each piece can be perfectly fit into their specific role in order to succeed. 

    None of those are spending capacity based, but yes, spending more does help. That's an owner thing, though, so not something I brought up. There's plenty of baseball strategy things that have nothing to do with spending that I disagree with, though.

    I understand you would manage the team differently but that's not at all what I asked.   I asked what team is employing strategies that would be more likely to lead to a WS.  You have stated repeatedly that's all you care about so it seems appropriate to ask what team is following strategies that promote this goal unless you don't believe any team in the bottom half of revenue understands how to build a WS winner. 

    BTW ... spending ability is not an "owner thing".  It's a revenue thing.  It would be so great if a TD writer would put together a comparison of payroll as a percentage of revenue.  Then, we would know just exactly how the Pohlad's rank in terms willingness to spend.

    Again, the question is which team(s) are following strategies more likely to produce a WS winner.  Is there a team we should follow or is there not a single team in the bottom half of revenue that understands how to build a WS winner?




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