Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • Twins News & Analysis

    How Are Ex-Minnesota Twins Traded in Team's Trade Deadline Fire Sale Doing With Their New Teams?

    It’s been two and a half weeks since the trade deadline fire sale. Of the 11 guys sent packing, who has been doing well? Who hasn’t? And who’s been injured?

    Eric Blonigen
    Image courtesy of © Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

    Twins Video

    On Friday night, Jhoan Duran was doing normal Jhoan Duran stuff, when he took a screaming comebacker off his foot near the ankle. He was unable to put any weight on the foot in the immediate aftermath of that, and needed to be carted off the field. From a baseball standpoint, this was a brutal moment, as the Phillies' (new) best reliever seemed destined to hit the shelf for at least a while—and maybe the season. From a human standpoint, this was also a tough break, as Duran was very durable during his time in a Twins uniform and is having (arguably) his best big-league season.

    Luckily for him (and Phillies and Twins fans), X-rays came back negative. He should be back in action sooner, rather than later. It’s good news, too, because he has been on fire since the trade. That prompts the question: how have the rest of the players sent away at the deadline been faring with their new clubs? Who has been hot? Has anyone been a train wreck? Let's check in on all 11 players moved at the deadline.

    Jhoan Duran
    It’s only fair to start with him; don’t want to bury the lede. The Twins sent him to Philly set up for success, complete with his usual entrance music and video. He has quickly shown fans how filthy he is. Since becoming a member of the Phillies, he’s come into five games. In four innings, he has four saves, has not allowed a run, hasn’t walked anyone, and has allowed just two hits. I don’t know about you, but I miss having him anchoring the bullpen. At least there's this:

    Griffin Jax
    Much like Duran has been doing Duran stuff, Griffin Jax has also been doing Griffin Jax stuff. That is to say: his underlying metrics look good, but man, the results haven’t been pretty. With the Rays, he has come into seven games. In 5 2/3 innings, he has struck out seven, walked two, and has given up just four hits. Despite that, he has given up four runs, taken a loss, and is sitting on a 6.35 ERA with a very mediocre 3.99 FIP. As nasty as he is, and as good as his stuff is, he may just be one of those players whose results are always worse than expected.

    Brock Stewart
    Like the guys before him, Beef Stew has been doing the expected with the Dodgers. In his case, that means getting injured. He’s pitched four times, to a 4.91 ERA and a marginally better 3.93 FIP. He has allowed way too many baserunners (including six hits and two walks) across 3 2/3 innings. He hit the shelf with a shoulder injury within a week. You gotta feel for a guy that has had as many injury concerns as he has.

    Louis Varland
    Varland has been nails since being traded to the Blue Jays. He has continued his trend of pitching basically every other day, and has struck out fully a third of the hitters he has faced. With a WHIP of 1.00, he has shown himself capable of taking on closer duties, and that just may happen before the year is over.

    Danny Coulombe
    Remember just how good Coulombe was for so long with the Twins? Remember when he didn’t allow a run until June? Remember when he was the ultimate fireman, often coming into jams and then wriggling out of them without damage? Well, I have a sneaking suspicion that the Rangers were hoping for that guy when they traded Garrett Horn to the Twins. Instead, since donning a Rangers uniform, Coulombe has given up four runs in 5 2/3 innings, and, well, this sort of speaks for itself:

    Chris Paddack
    Conversely, remember that stretch Paddack had in May, where his results were great, despite shaky underlying metrics? You know, when he wasn’t striking anyone out and sort of danced through raindrops? Well, good news. That’s the version the Tigers got. He’s striking even fewer people out for them than for the Twins, yet has pitched to a 3.45 ERA (4.64 FIP). It’s fair to assume he will come back down to Earth and look every bit the fifth starter his current talent level suggests he should pitch like. Meanwhile, Enrique Jimenez, the catcher the Tigers sent the Twins in return for Paddack, has done this:

    Randy Dobnak
    The Dobber is languishing in Toledo, playing for the Tigers’ Triple-A affiliate. Okay results, tons of strikeouts, but allowing tons of hits. All the best to him. It’s fair to wonder what may have been if not for the finger injuries on his throwing hand. Hopefully, he will get one more chance to carve out a major-league career for himself.

    Carlos Correa
    You… might want to sit down for this one. The Twins signed Correa to play like a superstar for them. In 2024, he did, for the half-season he played. Aside from that, he was just sort of average. To be sure, his time back with the Astros is the very definition of a small sample—just 12 games. But you know what he’s done so far? Played like a superstar. He’s got a .914 OPS and is hitting .340, good for a 158 wRC+. That’s right, he’s been 58% better than an average player. He’s doing it lower down the defensive spectrum, but it’s possible spending his time at the hot corner may have been what he needed. It may be fun to keep track of how he’s doing the rest of the way. Oh, and Astros fans are very excited to have him back.

    Harrison Bader
    As a Twins player, Bader hit way better than anyone expected, given his history as a mostly mediocre bat. The Twins signed him for his fielding, and I’m sure they were pleasantly surprised by what they got. The Phillies, on the other hand, got the Harrison Bader from the past several seasons. You know, the one that fields great but doesn’t hit his weight. Across 35 plate appearances, he’s put up a .586 OPS (31% worse than average). He has continued to be a cool vibes guy, as we all would expect.

    Willi Castro
    Read what I wrote about Bader, now subtract about .300 points of OPS. He hasn’t walked once, and has one extra-base hit in nine games. He will probably turn it around soon… unless, maybe, just maybe, Willi Castro was destined to only be good as a member of the Twins. He has continued to play all over the field, and I’m sure he's been plenty fun to watch.

    Ty France
    France, somewhat surprisingly, has hit like a first baseman since joining the Blue Jays. With an .872 OPS, he has hit for average, walked a bit, and hit for power. He’s been 49% better than average by wRC+

    So there you have it. All 11 players the Twins moved. Bader, Castro, Jax, Coulombe, and Stewart have played worse in a small sample than they did for the Twins. Dobnak, Paddack, Varland, and Duran have performed about the same, and Correa and France have played much better. What do you think? Any surprises?

    Follow Twins Daily For Minnesota Twins News & Analysis

    Recent Twins Articles

    Recent Twins Videos

    Twins Top Prospects

    Marek Houston

    Cedar Rapids Kernels - A+, SS
    The 22-year-old went 2-for-5 on Friday night, his fourth straight multi-hit game. Heading into the week, he was hitting .246/.328/.404 (.732). Four games later, he is hitting .303/.361/.447 (.808).

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    7 minutes ago, RpR said:

    It would be no better than a crap-shoot, and Twins rookies have NOT been the wunderkindt so many here pretend they are.

    Twins need a winning team now, not a pie-in-sky crap-shoot.

    How do you propose we get there right now? Spend a lot of money? There is only one way the Twins are going to be good, and it’s going to primarily be from prospects. Keaschall is looking pretty good so far.n

    37 minutes ago, bunsen82 said:

    Fair enough. Then you agree if we are  operating as a small market team the primary way to succeed then is to have a superior prospect line that creates more opportunities at finding elite players? We can’t win spending more money so we have to be opportunistic with the draft, it’s why tanking in a really good draft year is probably smart. It doesn’t feel good, and some people don’t want to acknowledge it, but it’s clearly a tactic The Twins are utilizing to strengthen its prospect pool. 

    The problem as I stated is that we have not been successful at devoting talent. We’ve had high rated farms before, during Falvey’s realm even, yet, our talent doesn’t produce. If you are going to operate like a small market team (we are a mid-market team in terms of our demographic, btw), then you damn well better develop that talent. We have failed to do so. Once our players get to the majors, they don’t produce. Either the wrong talent is being selected, there is something majorly amiss in our development tactics, or our on-field management kills it. As I’ve stated previously, the wrong questions are being asked. I said that selling was the right move, but it doesn’t seem to matter. Something else is wrong. It’s not the players. Until there is new ownership, it won’t change.

    1 hour ago, stringer bell said:

    I bolded the part of your post I disagree with. The preseason Fangraphs prognostication had the Twins, Tigers, Royals and Guardians as four equal co-favorites and projected a low 80s total of wins. The 13 game winning streak made it look like more than mid-80s wins could happen, but really the talent isn't there. The players who have reached the early years of their prime haven't developed--Wallner, Jeffers, and Larnach haven't moved to the next level and two other guys--Miranda and Julien--ended up in the minor leagues. There is nothing to prove that they ever become more than marginal big league players. I have lived through the Rocco years waiting for a time when Rocco would have a lineup where the first five guys would be written in every day and it hasn't happened since 2019. 

    I've opined that the pitching appeared to be good and deep enough to be a playoff team. The position players weren't good enough and they only had two proven players and one of them, Correa, was in a gigantic rut. Is that enough talent? I don't think so. That is where I fault both the front office and the field staff. They haven't developed position players to a level that is expected of them. 

    I think the team had talent. The most, enough to win it all? No, I’d agree with you there. And I was dubious of their offense at the start of the season. I had them at 80 wins. That’s not WS caliber. But this team still had talent and really underperformed. We aren’t going to come close to what we should have, even if not a WS caliber team. And that seems to be the trend, or cycle. We can talk all we want about trades, good, bad or ugly, but if talent cannot be fully developed, or dies when it hits the majors, more is wrong.

    36 minutes ago, Squirrel said:

    I think the team had talent. The most, enough to win it all? No, I’d agree with you there. And I was dubious of their offense at the start of the season. I had them at 80 wins. That’s not WS caliber. But this team still had talent and really underperformed. We aren’t going to come close to what we should have, even if not a WS caliber team. And that seems to be the trend, or cycle. We can talk all we want about trades, good, bad or ugly, but if talent cannot be fully developed, or dies when it hits the majors, more is wrong.

    When the decision was made to sell off, the Twins were on about an 80 win trajectory, so they weren't underperforming by a huge amount this year, but I would submit the club has underperformed over the years precisely because they haven't developed position players to provide year-in year-out production and as you said trades and free agent signings really can't make up for failing to develop players in their own system.

    On 8/18/2025 at 11:54 AM, jmlease1 said:

    It's interesting to see the updates on how guys are doing since the trades, but not necessarily all that meaningful because of the small sample sizes. Where everyone sits at the end of the season will be worth taking a look at to do a little more intermediate evaluation of the trades.

    Some of them are still going to be hard to evaluate accurately this soon, but others (especially where we flipped a rental) will probably be easier.

    I think the Varland deal is going to stay hard to swallow for most fans, and it puts a lot of pressure on Rojas to make it to MLB as a starter. The Stewart one was looking pretty upsetting, but the reminder that it's very hard to count on Brock Stewart to stay healthy might start mitigating it, even if few seem sold on Outman (I'm one of those for sure).

    I'll miss Duran, but the return for him does look pretty respectable. 

    People were very down on the Castro trade, but I do think people were overrating just how good Willi actually was. I loved watching him play, and he's been a good dude too...but he really shouldn't play SS any longer and he's such a streaky hitter that can fall off very quickly. I think his value was down quite a bit around the league, similar to how by the time Polanco was dealt.

    By the way, Stewart hit his 35 inning limit (made it to 37 this year!) and is now on the IL for shoulder inflammation. The word out here is that he Dodgers are "hopeful" that he'll make it back by mid to late September and pitch in the playoffs but there's a 50/50 shot he's done for the year.  He's a 34 year old Arb 2 player next year on a team with lots of money but only 40 protectable spots and lots of players angling for spots 35-40. Will be interesting to see what the Dodgers do; he may become available again. 




    Create an account or sign in to comment

    You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

    Create an account

    Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

    Register a new account

    Sign in

    Already have an account? Sign in here.

    Sign In Now

×
×
  • Create New...