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    Kody Clemens Had the Season Minnesota Twins Wanted Edouard Julien to Have

    Kody Clemens had the season Twins Territory wished Edouard Julien would. What does it mean for both players' long-term prospects with the organization?

    Cody Schoenmann
    Image courtesy of © Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

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    Entering the 2025 MLB regular season, former top Minnesota Twins prospect Edouard Julien was at a career crossroads. Making his major-league debut in early 2023, Julien instantly became (at least for a short while) one of the premier take-and-rake bats in baseball, hitting .263/.381/.459 with 16 home runs, 16 doubles, a 31.4% strikeout rate, and a 134 wRC+ over 408 plate appearances. The then-24-year-old rookie also played a pivotal role in guiding Minnesota to its first playoff win in 19 years and advancing to the ALDS, seemingly solidifying himself as a long-term core contributor to the Twins offense. 

    Unfortunately, it's all been downhill since. Julien has batted .208/.299/.324, with 11 home runs, a 32% strikeout rate, and a 79 wRC+ over a combined 509 plate appearances across the last two seasons. With a near-identical strikeout rate and some vestigial capacity to drive the ball, Julien's approach and overall skill set haven't entirely disintegrated since his breakout rookie campaign. Yet, pitchers have been able to exploit his weaknesses more efficiently, throwing him a significant number of breaking and offspeed pitches that possess a movement profile antithetical to his swing path, making him unsteady at the plate and unable to feast on fastballs like he once did.

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    Julien has been lost at the plate since early 2024. Unable to make meaningful strides toward combating opposing pitchers' adjustments, the one-time fan favorite's long-term prospects in Minnesota have been plunged into doubt, making him a non-tender candidate this offseason. Given Julien's struggles, an opportunity has arisen in Minnesota's infield, particularly at second and first base. Interestingly, a 2025 acquisition has capitalized on that opportunity, filling the role Twins Territory once hoped Julien would. 

    Acquired from the Philadelphia Phillies in late April, Kody Clemens quickly cemented himself as an integral member of Minnesota's offense, hitting .304/.391/.696 with five home runs and an Aaron Judge-esque 195 wRC+ over his first 65 plate appearances with the club. Unfortunately, the 29-year-old's performance has significantly cooled since early June. Entering Sunday, he was hitting .202/.265/.397 with a well-below-league-average 80 wRC+ over his last 310 plate appearances. 

    Still, for the season, Clemens generated an acceptable 97 wRC+, while hitting an impressive (albeit unexpected) 19 home runs, 14 more than his previous career-best. Being one of the lone sources of steady power in Minnesota's lineup, Roger's son has also provided defensive flexibility, appearing at first base, second base, left field, right field, and center field. Despite playing meaningful innings in the corner outfield, Clemens has primarily played on the right side of the infield, netting 388 innings at first base and 307 1/3 at second. 

    Now, Julien was never going to factor into the corner outfield mix, meaning Clemens could have scratched out a utility role on Minnesota's roster regardless of Julien's performance. Yet, Clemens's ascension as a power-hitting left-handed bat who primarily plays second and first base has led to the former Phillie capitalizing on Julien's struggles, usurping the role from the once-promising rookie.

    Clemens will enter the offseason as the club's de facto primary first baseman. He's likely to be usurped, but he has plenty of ways to fit into the roster beyond that position. As noted earlier, Julien could no longer be with the organization by next Opening Day. Expectations weren't high for Julien entering the 2025 regular season. There was still an opportunity for him to revive his career in Minnesota this season, returning to being a cost-controlled core member of the club's long-term success. Instead, he (like many Twins position players) squandered his opportunity, potentially signaling a premature end to his once-promising major-league career. 

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    19 hours ago, Jacksson said:

    ANY Position Player, other than Catcher who can't hit .250 over the course of the season has no business being on a MLB 26 man roster and for that matter a MLB 40 man roster.

    Only 11 teams had team batting averages of .250 or above and only five were above .253. More than 50 players in MLB had more than 502 plate appearances and hit less than .250, including Mr. 60 home runs Cal Raleigh. If you were talking 20-30 years ago, you might have a case, but getting a high batting average is difficult these days. Today's .270 hitter was a .300 hitter in earlier eras.

    Kody Clemens season with the Twins includes a hot month of May and the rest of the season where he performed pretty close to his career norms. I don't think his good month should be ignored, nor should we fans expect him to hit like he did in May for a sustained period of time.

    In Clemens' first season where he got fairly regular playing time, he hit 19 homers and had a .715 OPS. He played more than acceptable defense at four positions and provided more than his share of clutch hits. IMHO, if he was to replicate his 2025 in 2026, he would deserve a roster spot and hold it for the entire season. I'd hesitate to make him Option A at first base, but he does represent a backup plan.

    On 9/29/2025 at 1:56 PM, Sjoski said:

    Julien is still young.  The problem is pitchers figured him out with offspeed stuff, and he hasn’t adjusted.

    If he can get back to using his patience and on-base skills, he brings something Clemens doesn’t.

    However, he will have to prove himself by winning a job during spring training next season. 

    It's highly probable he can't play himself back to the majors...another Miranda. 

    Julien doesn't have a position.  Where are you going to play him?  The Twins have to improve their defense and Julien is not the answer.  I hope the Twins have better options than Clemens; but Julian is certainly not one of them.  And I like Martin backing up 2nd base better than either of them.

    On 9/29/2025 at 1:25 PM, DJL44 said:

    The real answer to that is Brooks Lee. If they want a 90 loss season, make Brooks Lee the everyday SS again.

    If 2024-2025 Brooks Lee is the Twins shortstop, they won’t be very good. 24-year-olds get better more often than not, so I do expect a better version of Brooks Lee in 2026. How much better? I’m not really sure.

    There will be a new manager and maybe he can unlock the likes of Lee, Wallner and Lewis so that there are.six or seven guys who are season long regulars. 

    18 minutes ago, stringer bell said:

    If 2024-2025 Brooks Lee is the Twins shortstop, they won’t be very good. 24-year-olds get better more often than not, so I do expect a better version of Brooks Lee in 2026. How much better? I’m not really sure.

    There will be a new manager and maybe he can unlock the likes of Lee, Wallner and Lewis so that there are.six or seven guys who are season long regulars. 

    I think Brooks Lee will become a better hitter. He was the lowest rated SS defensively in 2025. His athleticism gives him a ceiling of below average at SS. He’s a 3B playing out of position.

    On 9/30/2025 at 1:30 AM, JD-TWINS said:

    Agree, he looks like a 48 year old playing in a 25 year old body - lack of strength and quickness is glaring!!

    That's the best --- and maybe most accurate --- description I've read about him yet.

    On 9/29/2025 at 1:38 PM, chpettit19 said:

    How many PAs were given to players worse than Julien? Unless your answer is 0 so you're literally arguing he's the worst player in MLB and that's why he doesn't deserve a spot on any roster then I don't understand the argument.

    1. The Twins didn't give 2000 PAs to worse players than career norm/June through September Kody Clemens. 2. Just because the Twins, and other teams, had a number of other players who also weren't MLB quality doesn't make Clemens MLB quality.

    If you're using his season stat line and including the complete and utter outlier that was his month of May in your argument, cool, have at it. Good luck getting the same performance moving forward. But career norm (which is nearly identical to his June through September performance) Kody Clemens is not a major league player. It's why he was available on the waiver wire at the age of 29 with only 402 MLB PAs to his name.

    I mean this is the Twins in a nutshell. Carrying Jonah Bride on your AAA team the whole season after DFAing him and Kody Clemens on your MLB team the whole season. They have no present or future value. Having people trying to convince themselves a 1B/cOFer who plays a barely passable 2B and brings a .665-.670 OPS bat is a real MLB player. He isn't. And the fact that the bar for entrance onto the Twins 26-man roster is that low explains everything very well.

    Over 2700 PA by position players with a worse fwar and having at least 50 PA. Another way to look at numbers, there were 196 players with a worse WRC+ and 50 AB. No idea how many of either groups were catchers as so many can’t hit 




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