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    Remember When the Twins Had Too Much Starting Pitching?

    What looked like an organizational strength in March has become a weekly exercise in survival by May.

    Cody Christie
    Image courtesy of © Bruce Kluckhohn-Imagn Images

    Twins Video

    During the offseason, there was constant discussion about the Twins having too much starting pitching depth. Minnesota looked like a team with eight legitimate rotation options before even mentioning some of the team's top starters in the upper minors, who were viewed more as a long-term development projects than an immediate contributors.

    At the time, it felt reasonable to wonder whether the Twins should trade from that depth. Injuries happen, but few teams carry that many realistic starting options into a season. A few months later, that conversation feels almost impossible to believe.

    What once looked like one of the deepest pitching staffs in baseball has quickly unraveled. One starter is out for the season following Tommy John surgery. Another recently landed on the injured list after pitching like the staff ace. Multiple depth options have battled significant arm injuries, while another has struggled badly enough that a move to the bullpen may be necessary. Suddenly, the Twins are no longer talking about a pitching surplus. They are simply trying to piece together enough healthy innings to survive.

    Looking back at the preseason expectations compared to the current reality shows just how quickly pitching depth can disappear.

    Pablo Lopez
    Preseason Expectation: Ace of the staff. Helping the Twins stay on the fringes of contention.
    Current Reality: Lopez is out for the season following Tommy John surgery. Losing the team’s most dependable starter completely changed the outlook of the rotation and forced everyone else into bigger roles.

    Joe Ryan
    Preseason Expectation: Build off his first All-Star season and continue establishing himself as one of the American League’s best pitchers.
    Current Reality: Ryan briefly terrified the organization after leaving last Sunday’s start following just nine pitches because of elbow soreness. Fortunately, he returned for last night's outing without needing an injured list stint. At this point, simply having Ryan healthy feels critical to keeping the rotation together.

    Bailey Ober
    Preseason Expectation: There was optimism that a healthy offseason could help Ober regain some of the velocity he lost last year.
    Current Reality: The velocity still has not returned, with his fastball averaging just 88.6 mph. However, Ober has adapted by leaning more heavily on his changeup and sequencing effectively enough to remain productive.

    Taj Bradley
    Preseason Expectation: The Twins spent the offseason trying to determine which version of Bradley they acquired from Tampa Bay at last year’s trade deadline. His inconsistency with the Rays made it difficult to project his role.
    Current Reality: Bradley looked like the team’s ace before landing on the injured list with right pectoral muscle inflammation. With the state of the rotation, the Twins desperately need him back and pitching well as quickly as possible.

    Simeon Woods Richardson
    Preseason Expectation: Woods Richardson had developed a reputation as one of the organization’s steadier pitching options and looked like a reliable back-end starter.
    Current Reality: He has been one of baseball’s least effective starters with a 64 ERA+ while allowing an MLB-leading 30 earned runs. Since he is out of minor league options, if the Twins want to reset him, it would need to be in the bullpen.

    Mick Abel
    Preseason Expectation: One of the key pieces acquired at last year’s trade deadline, Abel entered the spring with expectations that he could eventually force his way into the major league rotation.
    Current Reality: Abel impressed early before right elbow inflammation landed him on the injured list. A setback later required a cortisone shot, adding even more uncertainty to his timeline.

    David Festa
    Preseason Expectation: Festa was expected to fight for a rotation spot this spring. Even if he began the season at Triple-A, he remained one of the first starters called upon when the Twins needed reinforcements.
    Current Reality: Festa has spent the entire season on the injured list due to a shoulder injury that has resulted in multiple setbacks. At this point, if he returns this year, it may only be as a reliever.

    Zebby Matthews
    Preseason Expectation: Matthews gave the Twins another valuable layer of Triple-A depth.
    Current Reality: He struggled early in Triple-A but has shown recent improvement. Given Minnesota’s current situation, Matthews may soon become the next starter called upon.

    Connor Prielipp
    Preseason Expectation: Prielipp entered the year as the organization’s top pitching prospect; he wasn't supposed to be one of the eight major league-ready starters. There was speculation (both internally and externally) about whether his long-term future belonged in the bullpen.
    Current Reality: He arrived in the majors earlier than expected when Abel was injured and, with Bradley sidelined, will likely continue to receive every opportunity to establish himself in the rotation.

    The Twins entered the season believing they had enough starting pitching depth to withstand almost anything. Instead, they have learned the same lesson every organization eventually learns. There is never such a thing as too much pitching.

    What once looked like an organizational strength has quickly become one of the biggest reasons this season feels so fragile. Injuries, setbacks, and inconsistency have thinned out a group that once seemed overflowing with options. Now, every healthy start feels important, every injury update carries added weight, and young pitchers are being asked to contribute earlier than expected.

    Back in March, the conversation centered around whether the Twins could afford to trade from their pitching depth. By May, that depth is already gone.


    What stands out about the preseason projections and current reality? Leave a comment and start the discussion.

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    Featured Comments

    On 5/10/2026 at 12:14 PM, Nshore said:

    "Depth" is pretty meaningless if the next man up on the mound can't do the job - unless you're looking to increase your depth in the standings.  The phrase that applies to mutual funds applies to Minor League records- "Past performance is not an indicator of future (Major League) returns".  How many proven pitchers?  As many as humanly possible.

    Nobody has pitchers with proven MLB track records on retainer in AAA. 

    I do agree with the bolded though. People have been crowing about "depth," for a while now, and many of those guys ended up being fringe at best. 

    5 hours ago, KirbyDome89 said:

    Nobody has pitchers with proven MLB track records on retainer in AAA. 

    I do agree with the bolded though. People have been crowing about "depth," for a while now, and many of those guys ended up being fringe at best. 

    Similar …… to the fabulous OF depth. “Trade Larnach - don’t pay him” …… “……Larnach is BLOCKING the youngsters………….Let Wallner DH and bring up two young guys to play the Corner Outfield spots!” ……. “F.O. is clueless keeping Slow Footed Larnach with all the DEPTH they have at AAA”

    All 3 OF “depth pieces” are on the IL and none of them are setting the world on fire………..and to add insult to injury, the would be DH, Wallner, is having the worst 7 week stretch imaginable!!!

    On 5/10/2026 at 2:52 PM, Riverbrian said:

    Whenever I accidentally trip and fall into one of those greatest of all time questions. 

    I always say... I don't know but whoever he is. He's playing right now. 

    Babe Ruth would have never seen a 90 MPH Slider.

    The game has indeed dialed up. 

    Yeah, evolution is undefeated.. 
     

    Fortunately those ‘greatest ever’ debates seem to have tapered off with more recent generations.

    3 minutes ago, nicksaviking said:

    Yeah, evolution is undefeated.. 
     

    Fortunately those ‘greatest ever’ debates seem to have tapered off with more recent generations.

    I want to know what generation is generating all these fake AI videos that are infecting my social media feeds. 

     

    10 hours ago, Riverbrian said:

    I want to know what generation is generating all these fake AI videos that are infecting my social media feeds. 

     

    Certainly could be user algorithm bias on my end. I don’t see too many top ten lists since I stopped watching ESPN live eight hours ago day and David Letterman retired.

    To me it seemed like a prior generation obsession. But I can see how it could be the easiest thing for an AI bot to generate.

    9 hours ago, JD-TWINS said:

    Similar …… to the fabulous OF depth. “Trade Larnach - don’t pay him” …… “……Larnach is BLOCKING the youngsters………….Let Wallner DH and bring up two young guys to play the Corner Outfield spots!” ……. “F.O. is clueless keeping Slow Footed Larnach with all the DEPTH they have at AAA”

    All 3 OF “depth pieces” are on the IL and none of them are setting the world on fire………..and to add insult to injury, the would be DH, Wallner, is having the worst 7 week stretch imaginable!!!

    If the goal is to go from 70 wins to 73 wins, then yes, keeping Larnach makes sense.  He is not at all important if your goal is to build a 90-win team.  For those of us who think these half measures generally produce mediocrity or less, it does not matter if Larnach is here to get us to 73 or 75 wins.  It just takes up a roster spot that could be used to audition players that could contribute to building a contender.

    We also don’t know if Rodriguez or Jenkins would be hurt if they had been brought up.  We do know that Rodriguez would not have made the slide into 1B that got him hurt and Jenkins would not have run into the wall on the play that got him hurt.
     




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