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The Twins are clearly in the playoff hunt, making them an obvious buyer. However, the trade deadline has taken on a different vibe, with teams waiting until the last minute to decide whether to be buyers or sellers. Minnesota’s front office has been clear about wanting to add starting pitching, but that depends on which strategy the front office utilizes in the coming days.
1. Pay a Prospect Premium
MLB’s traditional trade deadline involves teams in contention trading prospects to non-contending teams. Minnesota has one of baseball’s best farm systems with somewhere between five and seven top-100 global prospects. Many of these top prospects are in or approaching the upper minors, making them more intriguing to selling teams.
This depth gives the Twins options and the current front office regime has been aggressive at previous trade deadlines. Minnesota also understands that there are more buyers than sellers, driving up the cost of players on teams who are clearly out of the playoff race. It might not be worth the prospect premium to outbid other contending teams.
2. Deal MLB players for MLB players
Twins general manager Thad Levine recently joined Jayson Stark and Doug Glanville on an episode of The Windup. The focus of the interview was Levine’s connections to recent Hall of Famers Adrian Beltré, Joe Mauer, and Todd Helton. During the interview, Stark asked Levine about the upcoming trade deadline, and he discussed the difficulties of having so many teams close to the playoffs. Levine said the Twins have been actively looking for trades with other contending teams in MLB-for-MLB player swaps.
On the Twins, this could mean trading away players like Max Kepler, Matt Wallner, Jose Miranda, Edouard Julien, Alex Kirilloff, Trevor Larnach, or other similar players. Minnesota would likely want to get pitching back in a trade involving those players.
3. Stand Pat and Rely on Internal Options
Minnesota followed this strategy last season for multiple reasons. Players were returning from injury or could switch to different roles, and there was depth in the farm system. The Twins have a similar situation in 2024 with Royce Lewis and José Miranda rejoining the team over the weekend and Carlos Correa’s return on the horizon.
On the pitching side, young pitchers like David Festa, Zebby Matthews, or Louie Varland can add rotational depth or switch to a bullpen role if needed for the playoffs. In the abovementioned interview, Levine seemed content with the team’s depth if the team stood pat at the deadline.
Overall, the Twins are attempting to make a move to add pitching depth, but the front office values the team’s current prospect depth. To have a successful trade deadline, the front office may need to combine some of the abovementioned strategies to acquire players to help the team in 2024 and beyond.
Which strategy will the Twins execute before Tuesday’s trade deadline? Can they effectively combine more than one of the above strategies? Leave a COMMENT and start the discussion.







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