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

    Minnesota Twins 2025 Opening Day Roster Projection: Post-Royce Lewis Injury Edition


    Cody Schoenmann

    How will the Twins' Opening Day 26-man roster shake out, now that their should-be star third baseman is expected to miss time due to a hamstring injury?

    Image courtesy of © Chris Tilley-Imagn Images

    Twins Video

    Projecting 26-man rosters is a thankless practice. What looks like a sound prediction one day can be proven moot by a twinge or a sproing the next. Regardless, we here at Twins Daily persevere. Although our hard work is under a perpetual threat of being deemed meaningless and outdated, we still want to keep you, valued reader, informed on what your favorite team could look like as the 162-game season begins in less than two weeks.

    The Twins had been relatively lucky in the injury department for most of camp, as relievers Matt Canterino, Michael Tonkin, and Erasmo Ramírez were the only potential contributors who sustained significant injuries. Unfortunately, those fortunes changed when star third baseman Royce Lewis sustained a left hamstring strain in the process of grounding out to third base in the second inning of Sunday's exhibition game against the Boston Red Sox.

    Lewis will undergo an MRI on Monday and will almost certainly begin his 2025 campaign on the 10-day IL. What implications will his presumed absence have on the club's Opening Day 26-man roster? Let's take a look.

    Catchers (2): Ryan Jeffers, Christian Vázquez
    Minnesota will field Jeffers and Vázquez behind the plate for the third consecutive season. Last season, the two veterans started 81 games each at that spot, a perfect 50/50 split. Although generating a perfect split presumably won't happen again this season—it's nearly impossible to do that, from a logistical standpoint; props to you, Rocco Baldelli—the tandem will try again to maintain a near-perfect timeshare, with Vázquez potentially earning more time behind the plate due to his defensive superiority.

    The Twins have one of the best catching duos in the AL. Those who follow the team should find comfort in that reality, despite many vocally advocating for Vázquez's departure over the past five months. Jair Camargo will serve as the primary depth option at Triple A, with recently acquired post-hype prospect Diego Cartaya serving as a high-upside fourth option alongside Camargo in St. Paul.

    Infielders (7): Ty France, Brooks Lee, José Miranda, Carlos Correa, Willi Castro, Edouard Julien, Mickey Gasper
    This is going to be a little controversial, but hear me out. The Twins will exercise France's $1 million contract. Crazy! I know. Here I come with the hot takes on what's supposed to be a strictly informative 26-man roster projection.

    Arguably, Lewis's subtraction affects the right side of the infield more than his primary position, third base. The trio of Miranda, Lee, and Castro can sufficiently replace his production at the hot corner, with Miranda likely receiving the bulk of those opportunities. However, with Miranda and Lee needing to slide over to third base more than expected, depth becomes more of a concern at second and first. That being the case, I project Julien and Gasper (both of whom can play each of those spots) to be rewarded with spots on the 26-man roster.

    Their skill sets are redundant. However, Julien and Gasper being able to slot in at first base, second base, designated hitter, or a bench role on a game-to-game basis provides the club the flexibility necessary to navigate the early months of a 162-game marathon. Castro will remain in the second base, third base, and shortstop (and first base?) mix, but play plenty of outfield, too. Also, it should be noted that Correa is still an exceptional shortstop whose health will play an integral role in Minnesota's ability to return to the postseason.

     

    Outfielders (4): Trevor Larnach, Byron Buxton, Matt Wallner, Harrison Bader
    Aside from catcher, the Twins' outfield is their most stable position-player unit. Larnach and Wallner will handle the corners against right-handed pitching, with Buxton operating as a cog in center field. When the team faces left-handed starting pitchers, Bader could slot into left or right field, with Castro or one of Larnach or Wallner occupying the other corner.

    Like Lewis and Correa, Buxton's health will significantly affect how productive Minnesota's outfield can be. However, if Buxton does miss extended time, Bader or left-handed hitting outfield prospect DaShawn Keirsey could deliver the defensive prowess necessary to mimic his production in center field.

    Starting Rotation (5): Pablo López, Joe Ryan, Bailey Ober, Chris Paddack, Simeon Woods Richardson
    The organization optioning starting pitchers David Festa and Zebby Matthews to Triple-A this past Sunday solidifies Woods Richardson's standing in the club's five-pitcher starting rotation. Twins decision-makers awarding Woods Richardson the final rotation spot over Festa and Matthews isn't surprising, considering his contributions to the team in desperate times last season. However, there is reason to believe that Festa and Matthews will be the better pitchers in the long term.

    If Festa and Matthews perform well at Triple-A to begin the season (which is the expectation), it will be interesting to see if they usurp Woods Richardson or Paddack for one of the back-of-the-rotation spots. Alas, injuries will probably make that kind of speculation moot. López, Ryan, and Ober form one of the strongest starting pitching trios in baseball, and their ability to perform at or above their career rates will be a driving force in Minnesota's ability to bounce back from last season's drastic late-season collapse.

    Bullpen (8): Jhoan Durán, Griffin Jax, Cole Sands, Brock Stewart, Danny Coulombe, Jorge Alcalá, Louis Varland, Eiberson Castellano
    Did you know that FanGraphs projects the Twins to have the game's best bullpen? What?! I know! That's how I responded, too. Even if you follow the club closely, you are probably learning this information for the first time. I understand if some of you reading this need to regroup after exposure to the shocking truth I just dropped on you.

    Snark aside, yes, Minnesota's bullpen could be exceptional. However, injuries have made depth a concern. Tonkin and Ramírez won't be ready for Opening Day, and there is reason to suspect medium- to high-leverage reliever Justin Topa will also begin the season on the 15-day IL. That being the case, Alcalá and Varland are seemingly locked into the bullpen's sixth and seventh roles. Injuries should never be celebrated. However, it will be interesting to see Alcalá and (more notably) Varland receive extended opportunities in the bullpen. Both could blossom into fire-throwing high-leverage arms, which would be a welcome development.

    Despite a concerning 12-to-8 strikeout-to-walk ratio over eight innings pitched, Castellano's four-seam fastball and curveball have impressed this spring, lending merit to the possibility that team decision-makers will provide the 23-year-old Rule 5 Draft selection an opportunity with the major-league club out of camp. Nevertheless, Durán, Jax, Sands, Stewart, and Coulombe will be the driving force behind the bullpen's ability to succeed this season. Uncertainty and volatility are part of every bullpen. However, there is reason to believe this unit could be one the most hard-throwing and effective bullpens in baseball this season.

    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

    1 hour ago, chpettit19 said:

    The Twins failing to develop a useable CF option for league minimum is the problem. Having to go out and get MAT, Margot, or Bader types is the problem. You should be able to develop a guy who can play OF defense and OPS+ 70-90 to backup Buck for 750K instead of 4-7 mil. Keirsey may be that guy now, but his injuries held him up too long. If they have a glove only guy like MAT or Bader from the system all these years its not such a big deal to work to have Buxton healthy by the time the playoffs roll around and have him for that time of year.

    I agree Kiersey could be that guy now but there is an even better solution on the horizon.   What if the develop an above average starter who can play corner or CF (Rodriguez)  who is a left-hand hitter with relatively equal splits?  Then, develop Buston's replacement (Jenkins) and move Buxton to a corner the last year of two of his contract.  Walner becomes a DH / 4th OFer or maybe he learns to play some 1B too.

    I am pulling hard for Rodriquez because he would perfectly and end the need for a MAT / Bader type player or at least minimize their role.

    24 minutes ago, Major League Ready said:

    I agree Kiersey could be that guy now but there is an even better solution on the horizon.   What if the develop an above average starter who can play corner or CF (Rodriguez)  who is a left-hand hitter with relatively equal splits?  Then, develop Buston's replacement (Jenkins) and move Buxton to a corner the last year of two of his contract.  Walner becomes a DH / 4th OFer or maybe he learns to play some 1B too.

    I am pulling hard for Rodriquez because he would perfectly and end the need for a MAT / Bader type player or at least minimize their role.

    For sure. He, unfortunately, has his own injury concerns, but Emma, Jenkins, Keaschal are possible answers. I think many of us agree that development is the answer to almost every question. You can pay Correa 30+, Pablo 20+, Buxton 15+, and all the other guys their arb numbers if you're developing behind them. It's not easy and you're not going to hit on anywhere close to 100%, but you have to be able to hit at a better rate than they have.

    1 hour ago, chpettit19 said:

    For sure. He, unfortunately, has his own injury concerns, but Emma, Jenkins, Keaschal are possible answers. I think many of us agree that development is the answer to almost every question. You can pay Correa 30+, Pablo 20+, Buxton 15+, and all the other guys their arb numbers if you're developing behind them. It's not easy and you're not going to hit on anywhere close to 100%, but you have to be able to hit at a better rate than they have.

    Good post as always. I understand that this thread is about 2025 and not 2026 but let's take a look at 2026. 

    Odds are that the Twins will lose the following players due to contract expiration:

    Vazquez, Bader, Paddack, Coulombe, Topa, France, Castro

    If you add in the 5 million less that Correa will make in 2026. That is about 38.6 million coming off the Books but it also means 7 replacements will be needed: 1 starter, 2 bullpen arms, 1 Catcher, 1 1B, 1 OF and 1 Super Utility Position player. 

    I don't how much of that will be in eaten up in Arb Raises but with 12 players due raises, 30 million may be a fair guess. 

    If Pay Roll is to remain the same. That leaves around 8 million to fill those 7 spaces.  

    This is of course without any assumption that a new owner will be in place and any assumption that a new owner is going to raise payroll. It's not unreasonable to expect a honeymoon bump from a new owner but I don't know that you can plan for a new owner being in place or willingness to bump payroll. 

    8 million to fill those 7 spaces. That means without a shadow of a doubt that we will need development to fill the majority of those spaces.

    Those guys on the farm... are critical. 

    Might as well get started on the development thing because if we don't... We are trading Lopez, Ober, Ryan or Duran just to free up extra money so we can sign Bader or France level types to fill some of those open spaces.  

     

     

    4 hours ago, chpettit19 said:

    And, again, ROYCE LEWIS MAKES 1.625 MILLION. That is not "full-time salary" no matter how many times you want to say it. And Buxton's 15 mil is not "full-time salary" either. A player of his talent level being paid a "full-time salary" gets paid over 30 mil. He's getting paid a "part-time salary." Sorry to break it to you.

    Thank heaven salaries aren't based on perceived potential, but performance.

    I don't see Buxton as worth the $15 million he's getting, given his inability to be in the line-up when they need him. But I can buy your implicit argument that Royce Lewis is being paid to be a part-timer and is still cheap. It clearly became evident early on how injury-prone he is, so the front office didn't offer him a big, multi-year contract based on the potential he had when he was drafted and they can continue paying him based on his actual performance. Maybe they learned something from Buxton and, to a lesser extent, Joe "bilateral leg weakness" Mauer.

    Maybe the Twins are working toward a model where they have a platoon at every position, so that talented, but unreliable guys like Buxton and Lewis make sense. I'd rather see a clear and reliable starter at every position and a less uncertainty about who's going to be on the field every day. It's pretty clear that the team isn't winning pennants or championships with part-time stars and average (or worse) replacements for them when star inevitably go on the IL.

    15 minutes ago, mluebker said:

    Okay, let me know when that happens for the Twins.

    Let me know when you come up with a plan for a championship team that doesn't include stars for the Twins or any team.

    20 minutes ago, chpettit19 said:

    Let me know when you come up with a plan for a championship team that doesn't include stars for the Twins or any team.

    Someone else is getting paid for that. I'm just a fan with an opinion about how that someone else is doing.

    Just out of curiosity, do you have any idea what the cumulative stats were last year for all the guys who played at 3B, SS. and CF? It would be interesting to know whether the total production for each of those positions reflected the presence of the part-time star-quality players, or something less.

    12 minutes ago, mluebker said:

    Someone else is getting paid for that. I'm just a fan with an opinion about how that someone else is doing.

    Just out of curiosity, do you have any idea what the cumulative stats were last year for all the guys who played at 3B, SS. and CF? It would be interesting to know whether the total production for each of those positions reflected the presence of the part-time star-quality players, or something less.

    Easy to say they're doing their jobs poorly and they should get rid of these guys but not so easy to come up with a better answer on what they should be doing, huh?

    3B: .254/.320/.410/.730 wRC+ 108- tied for 10th best in baseball
    SS: .283/.350/.459/.809 wRC+ 129- 4th best in baseball
    CF: .263/.321/.465/.786 wRC+ 122- 3rd best in baseball

    6 hours ago, chpettit19 said:

    Fine. Cut them. Trade them. Now you have $17 million and only need one starting 3B and CF. Find even remotely as much talent as Buxton and Lewis for $17 million to build your team with. Good luck with that. Not a lot of starting level guys out there for 8.5 mil. Harrison Bader doing it for you?

    It sucks they can't stay healthy. But you need stars if you want to win at a high level. They're stars. You need them. So you need to develop talent behind them to get you through the times they're down and hope they're healthy for the postseason and you can go on a run. Or you can get rid of them and give up all hope.

    I didn't say either of those. Please. But can you at least acknowledge the difficulty of managing a roster with these two on it? But they have Bader precisely because of Buxton. Just like they had the two other guys the previous two years. How'd that work? You have to pay someone 8 million to backup Buxton for three years.... It's a difficult situation. No one wants Emma up here rarely playing, so you sign a veteran, so you sign a veteran..

    I don't have a good answer, I'm saying there likely isn't one.

    I'm actually confident one of Emma or Jenkins is that star to replace Buxton. 

    3 minutes ago, Mike Sixel said:

    I didn't say either of those. Please. But can you at least acknowledge the difficulty of managing a roster with these two on it? But they have Bader precisely because of Buxton. Just like they had the two other guys the previous two years. How'd that work?

    I'm actually confident one of Emma or Jenkins is that star to replace Buxton. 

    Sure, there's difficulty in managing a roster with injury prone players. But there's even more difficulty in managing a roster with less talent. No, they have Bader precisely because they can't develop their own average at best, all glove, no bat players for league minimum. Even if Buxton played 150 games a year this front office would bring in right-handed veteran outfielders. Kyle Garlick and Jordan Luplow weren't here because of Byron Buxton. Harrison Bader is going to start a whole bunch of games WITH Byron Buxton in the outfield. 

    Stars that stay healthy are obviously better than stars that get hurt. But stars that get hurt are better than average players that stay healthy. And stars that get hurt that only make 15 mil a year are better than average players that also get hurt and make 6 mil a year. The Twins are better with Byron Buxton and Royce Lewis. The fact that it's even a discussion is mind blowing to me. The Twins have literally 0 chance of replacing their combined talent for $17 million. No chance at all. Any difficulty they bring in managing the roster because of their injuries is less than the difficulties in not having them. 

    Emma and Jenkins are hopefully stars that will play WITH Buxton while he's healthy and without him while he's hurt. 

    I guess I don't understand the last few pages.  Everyone deals with injuries and everyone has to fill out their roster with players outside their organization.  The Dodgers have had a stupidly good farm pipeline but have also gone outside their organization (frequently!) to backfill positions their farm didn't give them.  This idea you can be purely homegrown for all scenarios is just as silly as expecting the team to dump the injury prone stars for pennies.  It doesn't feel like either "side" of this conversation is giving the concerns of the other side a fair hearing.  The conclusion seems pretty simple to me, though not particularly attractive: unfortunate luck makes our roster construction what it is.  But it is what it is.  The alternatives are worse.

    Buxton and Lewis getting hurt all the time is a real strain on roster construction.  It forces you to invest assets into players who you can't plan on playing full time but also have to be good enough to play full time in all likelihood.  That's a tough needle to thread.  But dumping them is worse.  So here we are. 

    Is there a magical way out of that?  Probably not.  Does it change the problem?  Not really.  It's frustrating as a fan.  (And probably as a front office)  The loud implication lately is that the Twins have just failed to wave their Wand of Magical Prospect Farming and therefore failed to have a ready-made dude at AAA for all positions.  I'm being ridiculous, but that seems to be the counter-argument lately and it's just not grounded in reality at all.  I'd love it if it were true, but I'd also love it if Royce Lewis was a bionic human who was impervious to all harm.  I have just as much chance of Robo-Royce as the Twins do of having a viable Plan B at AAA for all contingencies.

    Hopefully the pitching pipeline creates some trade possibilities going forward, but that has it's own risks and flaws.  It is what it is guys, unlucky and unfortunate as it may be.

    On 3/18/2025 at 10:21 AM, chpettit19 said:

    Easy to say they're doing their jobs poorly and they should get rid of these guys but not so easy to come up with a better answer on what they should be doing, huh?

    3B: .254/.320/.410/.730 wRC+ 108- tied for 10th best in baseball
    SS: .283/.350/.459/.809 wRC+ 129- 4th best in baseball
    CF: .263/.321/.465/.786 wRC+ 122- 3rd best in baseball

    Where are those stats from?




    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...