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Every year, teams enter the offseason having to decide which arbitration-eligible players to tender, which pending free agents to make a qualifying offer to, and which prospects to protect from that offseason’s Rule 5 Draft. This offseason is no exception for the Minnesota Twins. While they do have some easy decisions to make, they also have some tough calls, and we’re going to preview them for you.
Arbitration
A couple weeks ago, MLB Trade Rumors posted their projected arbitration salaries for the upcoming season. Here are the team’s 13 eligible players:
Eight of the 13 players are pretty much guaranteed to be tendered, but the other five are tough calls. Can they afford Willi Castro? Is Alex Kirilloff’s draft and prospect pedigree enough to overcome multiple years of injuries and inconsistent performance? Will the Twins see value in retaining Michael Tonkin, Justin Topa, or Jorge Alcalá for a combined $4.3 million, or will they explore cheaper (but riskier) relief options on the open market? They'll have to make all those decisions by roughly mid-November, when players must either be tendered arbitration or made free agents.
Qualifying Offers
Qualifying offers are limited to pending free agents who have never received one before and who spent the entire season on the Twins roster.
This means the Twins have decisions to make on Max Kepler, Caleb Thielbar, and Anthony DeSclafani. They should be extremely easy decisions to make, but regardless, they are decisions that need to be made within five days of the conclusion of the World Series.
40-Man Roster
Until we know whom the Twins decide to tender, it's unclear how many 40-man spots will be available. There are two prospects in a tier of their own as would-be Rule 5-eligible players this fall, and they are 2020 4th- and 5th-round picks Marco Raya and Kala’i Rosario. There are some fringier players who are newly eligible whom the Twins will need to consider adding, or risk losing: Travis Adams, José Salas, Ricardo Velez, Christian MacLeod, Pierson Ohl, and Jaylen Nowlin. They also have players whom they previously left unprotected to consider, including: Will Holland, Jefferson Morales, Rubel Céspedes, and Ricardo Olivar. This is by no means a comprehensive list, but just some of the most likely names that are under consideration for protection ahead of the mid-November deadline. If they want to protect anyone beyond Raya and Rosario, they'll probably need to create an extra spot or two, which could mean an extra non-tender.
If you were in a position to make these decisions, which players would you tender? Are you handing out any qualifying offers? Which prospect(s) are you protecting? Let us know in the comments, and stay tuned for more in-depth coverage in the Twins Daily Offseason Handbook!







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