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    The Twins are All-In on Royce Lewis (Again)

    Minnesota is doubling down on belief in its most unpredictable young star.

    Cody Christie
    Image courtesy of © Matt Blewett-Imagn Images

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    The Minnesota Twins have not been subtle about their belief in Royce Lewis this winter. Shortly after being hired, manager Derek Shelton made a point to visit several core players in person, a gesture that sent a message about how he intends to lead. Lewis was one of the first stops. At the Winter Meetings, Shelton took that message public on MLB Network, calling Lewis the type of player who can elevate a franchise.

    “This guy has a chance to be a superstar," Shelton said.

    Minnesota’s front office echoed that tone throughout the week. Their collective approach feels intentional. They want Lewis to feel supported, challenged, and surrounded by stability as he enters a pivotal stage of his career. For a player whose performance often rises with confidence, it is clear the Twins see value in reaffirming his place in their long-term plans.

    Highs and Lows of His Career
    The story of Lewis has always been dramatic, from the day the Twins took him with the first overall pick. At his best, he looks like one of the most electric players in the sport. Falvey highlighted that when speaking with reporters.

    “Royce has gone through so many ups and downs in his career at this point. We all know that," Falvey said. "There were huge, awesome moments, right? Go back to [2023] and big moments in postseason games and things you could not really believe were happening.”

    Those moments are the reason the Twins refuse to give up on the idea that he could still become a franchise pillar. But the team has also been forced to navigate long absences, extended recovery periods, and the uncertainty that comes with repeated setbacks

    “Obviously, the injuries that he’s dealt with at different times," Falvey said. "I think quite frankly, some of his performance was a result of some of those injuries and trying to track back and try to get himself where he needs to be physically.”

    This ebb and flow has made it challenging to project Lewis from one season to the next. Yet, the organization believes that with maturity and better health, the extremes in his performance will gradually smooth out. Falvey noted that Lewis is beginning to understand how to manage those waves, both physically and emotionally.

    Defensive Improvements Last Season
    One of the most encouraging developments last year was Lewis’s defensive trajectory. Early in the season, there were questions about how consistently he could handle third base, but by late summer, he appeared more polished and reliable. Falvey pointed to that progress as evidence that Lewis can grow when given repetition and structure.

    “The thing I took away from the end of the season with him was how much better he got defensively by staying consistent with the work, by doing the things every day,” he said.

    Behind the scenes, coaches praised Lewis for taking ownership of his preparation. He embraced early work, leaned on infield instructors, and made the incremental gains the Twins had hoped to see. Falvey emphasized that this consistency was not accidental, but the result of a player starting to understand what everyday excellence requires.

    “That’s the type of small wins every day that you build upon each other, and you find a way to become a better overall player. I think he found a way to do that.”

    With Lewis now projected as the primary third baseman for 2026, the Twins are optimistic that last year’s improvements were the beginning of a more stable defensive foundation.

    Need for Offensive Consistency in 2026
    The offensive side, however, remains the most significant area of concern. Lewis has flashed elite bat speed and strength, but extended slumps, health interruptions, and an inability to stay in rhythm have limited his overall impact. Falvey addressed this directly.

    “Now we have to get a little more consistency on that on the offensive side, and he knows that,” Falvey said.

    The Twins believe that if Lewis can enter spring training fully healthy, he may finally get the uninterrupted runway necessary to find his timing and approach. The organization sees parallels to last year’s defensive gains, hoping that the same daily focus can push him toward becoming a more balanced hitter. Falvey added that a stable offseason and a cleaner spring could give Lewis a “build-up” similar to the one he experienced in the field.

    Lewis does have superstar talent; the ingredients are all there. The question is whether 2026 becomes the season when everything finally lines up. The Twins are betting that it will, and based on the messaging from the front office and the manager’s chair, they want to make sure Lewis believes it, too.


    Do you still believe in Royce Lewis? Leave a comment and start the discussion. 

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    Featured Comments

    6 hours ago, NYCTK said:

    With all this complaining that Rocco RUINED Royce by insisting he play around the diamond, I thought I'd point out the diva played a total of 8 innings at a position other than 3B the last couple seasons. 

    This excuse making is his job, not yours as a fan. 

    Pretty harsh there NYC.  If you read the entire post you would see that it is a suggestion for the management and apples to all the young players. Put them in the best position to succeed. Lewis started out his MLB at SS. Then CF. Then SS. Then 3B. Then rumors last year of a mid season move to 2B. A legitimate concern IMO. 
    I have followed the Twins for 60 plus years as a fan. Apparently I never received the rules of what a fan could do, other than not run on the field. I will try not to violate your rules in the future. Do the rules allow everyone to determine who is or isn’t a diva or is that reserved for you alone?

    2 hours ago, Elliot said:

    Pretty harsh there NYC.  If you read the entire post you would see that it is a suggestion for the management and apples to all the young players. Put them in the best position to succeed. Lewis started out his MLB at SS. Then CF. Then SS. Then 3B. Then rumors last year of a mid season move to 2B. A legitimate concern IMO. 
    I have followed the Twins for 60 plus years as a fan. Apparently I never received the rules of what a fan could do, other than not run on the field. I will try not to violate your rules in the future. Do the rules allow everyone to determine who is or isn’t a diva or is that reserved for you alone?

    This site , as a whole, has a lot of posters who use Their prejudice and bias to annoint or trash players. 

    They act as if a dude is their boy not getting a fair chance , or,  one of those boys from the wrong side of the rails is BLOCKING their chosen son, or the manager does not realize how wonderful their boy is.

    Baldelli did not ruin any one, nor was any one ever blocked by another.

    Skill, or lack of it,  is what really matters.

    2 hours ago, RpR said:

    This site , as a whole, has a lot of posters who use Their prejudice and bias to annoint or trash players. 

    They act as if a dude is their boy not getting a fair chance , or,  one of those boys from the wrong side of the rails is BLOCKING their chosen son, or the manager does not realize how wonderful their boy is.

    Baldelli did not ruin any one, nor was any one ever blocked by another.

    Skill, or lack of it,  is what really matters.

    C'mon dude, you do the same thing, a ton of times. You put both Joey Gallo and Kyle Farmer, both fine folks, in the Hall of Fame nearly. I'm not giving the dumb thumb, which says nothing, but responding with what I have read on here from you.. A few opinions aren't harmful. I kind of enjoyed how loyal you were to Farmer.

    All the comments are just by degrees. There isn't any reality to it. It is just a place for people who prefer thinking and talking about baseball rather than hearing or reading or listening to the piracy, drug running, and assaulting of common working laborers 24/7. Baseball is pretty nuanced. Our comments are just inexpensive entertainment. You said yourself on several occasions that you make comments based on statistics without ever having seen a guy play. Every single one of us is guilty of bias, which is more kindly looked at as point of view. 

    You want to read comments that trash people, go look at a Mets site, where a number of people are melting down right now. Be careful in Queens. I look forward to you promoting more rookies. It's all good, even for us really old folks.

    On 12/10/2025 at 6:52 PM, tony&rodney said:

    Whenever i think of Lewis I think of our government (or some person) blathering about the greatest country in the history of the world. Baseball has a trove of statistics and so do governments. "We are men of action. Lies does not become us."

    I'm hoping for the best ..... but I'm still hoping for change.

    Better than the last guy. 😁

    On 12/11/2025 at 6:46 PM, RpR said:

    This site , as a whole, has a lot of posters who use Their prejudice and bias to annoint or trash players. 

    They act as if a dude is their boy not getting a fair chance , or,  one of those boys from the wrong side of the rails is BLOCKING their chosen son, or the manager does not realize how wonderful their boy is.

    Baldelli did not ruin any one, nor was any one ever blocked by another.

    Skill, or lack of it,  is what really matters.

    I gave this post a grudging thumbs up. We are all guilty to some degree of bias. I thought Alex Kirilloff would be a potential All-Star and I didn't want Santana to take his at-bats away (I was wr-wr-wrong). I thought Brent Rooker was a stiff who ran into an occasional fastball (wrong again!) but I think I've been right a lot as well. 

    Being skeptical of Twins prospects has a lot of recent history on its side. I prefer to think that the prospects are not so much overhyped as undeveloped and the franchise has failed in the last five years to get those prospects to flourish. 

    The next wave of prospects is close Jenkins, Rodriguez, Gonzalez and Culpepper all should start 2026 in St. Paul. Those guys probably will determine what the next five years looks like for the team. Three former first round draft choices--Lewis, Lee and Wallner--probably have a lot to say how the coming season goes. To expect all of these guys to be stars is a pipe dream. For them all to fail would be a nightmare.




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