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    Should the Twins Consider Adding Another Starting Pitcher Before the Season Begins?

    Recent interest in Framber Valdez and Freddy Peralta suggests Minnesota may still be weighing the idea, even with a rotation that already looks like a strength.

    Matthew Taylor
    Image courtesy of © Paul Rutherford-Imagn Images

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    Much of the conversation this offseason centered on the Twins adding impact offense or bolstering the bullpen. On paper, they have checked those boxes, albeit without much flash. Josh Bell adds a switch-hitting bat with power. Victor Caratini provides depth and flexibility behind the plate. Taylor Rogers brings a familiar and reliable late-inning arm back into the fold. None of those moves qualify as headline-grabbers, but they do improve the roster.

    One area the Twins have not yet addressed is starting pitching, and on the surface that is a perfectly reasonable stance. Starting pitching is arguably the strongest area of the roster heading into 2026. Joe Ryan and Pablo Lopez anchor the rotation as proven, high-end starters. Bailey Ober, despite a frustrating and injury-marred 2025 season, still offers mid-rotation stability when healthy. Behind them is a wave of young, intriguing arms with upside, including Zebby Matthews, Simeon Woods Richardson, David Festa, Taj Bradley, and Mick Abel.

    Because of that depth, it was somewhat surprising to read ESPN’s Jesse Rogers nugget that the Twins were “in” on Framber Valdez before the Tigers signed the former Astros ace. That came on the heels of Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic reporting earlier this offseason that the Twins expressed “late interest” in Freddy Peralta before the Mets ultimately traded for him. Both pitchers represent a clear tier above the remaining free agent starters, however those reports suggest the Twins may not be as content with their current rotation as it appears.

    Adding another starting pitcher makes sense on multiple levels. While the Twins have a lot of depth and upside, there is also a significant amount of risk baked into the group. Pablo Lopez and Joe Ryan are as close to certainties as the Twins have. After that, confidence becomes much shakier. Bailey Ober entered last season as a reliable option, but injuries, inconsistency, and a tendency to give up the long ball introduced real doubt heading into 2026. Beyond Ober, the rotation is filled with young arms who are interesting but unproven. Simeon Woods Richardson profiles as a steady option, though his upside is limited. David Festa and Zebby Matthews have flashed promise across two seasons but have also struggled with command and efficiency. Taj Bradley and Mick Abel offer top-half-of-the-rotation upside, but both have shown the kind of volatility that makes it hard to count on them as being ready. High ERAs, uneven workloads, and growing pains have been part of the story for nearly all of the Twins' starting pitching depth.

    Another reason to continue exploring the starting pitching market is identity. A common critique of this iteration of the Twins is that they lack a clear identity. Leaning fully into starting pitching could change that. Even without a true ace available, adding a dependable veteran would allow the Twins to push young arms to Triple A, protect workloads, and build depth that inevitably gets tested over a long season. It is a way to build on a strength rather than constantly chasing weaknesses.

    If the Twins do decide to add a starter during spring training, there are still a few intriguing names on the market.

    Lucas Giolito
    Giolito is a familiar name to Twins fans after years as a division rival and frequent foe during his time as the ace of the Chicago White Sox. Now heading into his 10th Major League season, the former All Star remains a solid and dependable starting pitcher. Last season with the Red Sox, Giolito logged 145 innings with a 3.41 ERA, and he was even better down the stretch, posting a 2.51 ERA over his final 19 appearances. His season ended early due to flexor irritation, but there were no signs of a broader decline when he was on the mound. As a veteran presence, Giolito would fit a recent Twins trend of adding experienced arms to stabilize the roster, joining names like his former Chicago teammate Liam Hendriks. He may no longer profile as a front-line ace, but his durability, experience, and familiarity with the division make him a logical option for the Twins.

    Zack Littell
    A familiar name for Twins fans, Littell pitched out of the bullpen for Minnesota for parts of three seasons before bouncing around and reinventing himself as a starter in Tampa Bay. Since the start of the 2024 season, Littell owns a 3.73 ERA with an excellent 4.30 strikeout-to-walk ratio. Now 30 years old, a reunion where his career began would be an interesting full-circle moment. There are reasons to be skeptical based on his underlying numbers, but Littell has delivered consistently solid outings since being permanently moved into a rotation.

    Griffin Canning
    Now 29 years old, Canning, was once a highly regarded prospect after being selected in the second round. Injuries have defined much of his career, but he showed promise early last season, posting a 3.77 ERA over 76 1/3 innings before tearing his Achilles. He is still rehabbing but should be ready around Opening Day. That injury likely creates an opportunity to sign him at a reasonable price on a short-term, make-good deal. There is upside here, and if things click, Canning could also become a trade chip at the deadline, should the Twins season find themselves in the position to sell yet again this season.

    Spring training being underway does not mean the Twins are done shaping their roster. Recent reporting indicates the front office has at least explored adding another impact arm. While starting pitching is already a strength, it is also an area filled with volatility beneath the top two names.

    Adding a veteran starter would not only mitigate risk but could also help define what this Twins team wants to be in 2026. Depth, durability, and pitching could become the backbone of the roster, giving Minnesota a clearer identity and a higher floor heading into the season.

    What do you think? Should the Twins stand pat and trust their young arms, or does it make sense to add another starter even this late in the offseason? Join the conversation and let us know your thoughts in the comments.

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    The Red Sox need starting pitching.  They gave up real prospect capital for damaged goods with a FIP on the wrong side of 4.50 in Johan Oviedo while letting Giolito walk.  Maybe that should tell us something

    The new Pohlad is talking a big game about how things would be different had be involved earlier and how things need to be competitive.

    Well you just got the first chance we can fully place on your shoulders.  Go sign Giolito.

    Personally I am not sure that is the right move, it was a long shot they would be good with Pablo, but he has talked the game.

    The Twins need a Schittler or Yesavage type or two to rise up from the system.

    Shane Smith, Cameron, Patrick, Horton, Burrows, Misiorowski, Cantillo, Jobe, McLean, Waldrep, Ashcraft, Burns types. 

    If that doesn't happen. 2027 will make 2026 seem like good times. 

    Falvey was the kind of word salads - he said so much without saying anything at all.

    Tom P. puffs out his chest and marches around with the false bravado but I have a feeling it will be mostly bluster and empty promises.

    Until the leadership changes, the Twins are what they are -  a bad to mediocre baseball team.

    The Twins reporting that they were in on Peralta or Valdez is a joke.  More Twins bs.  Just trying to save face in my opinion.  Even if it was true their reputation lends one to question it.  It makes no sense to keep a 21 million starting pitcher in Lopez when the payroll is so low.  I hope hes not hurt too badly.  Trade him and Ryan soon while you can still get something good for them.  Ryan had sub par second half each of the past two years.  Jeffers should be traded because free agency is coming soon for him.  I doubt the Twins are going to sign him to an extension.  The should go into a full rebuild.  This team left over from the trade deadline was very poor.  They finished like 70 and 92 .  The roster they are putting out now anyway looks like a AAAA team at best.

    23 hours ago, TheLeviathan said:

    Lopez-Ryan-Ober are locked in.

    SWR, Zebby, Festa, Abel, Bradley, and Rojas should also get opportunities. 

    Seriously, why is there a bi-weekly "Should we sign a starter?" post?

    Probably because Zebby & Festa aren’t real rotation answers and Rojas is a year away…… that leaves Bradley & Abel …… & after Pablo left with Elbow Soreness yesterday…… Abel & Bradley may both be IN the rotation in 6 weeks.

    19 hours ago, Dawgzilla said:

    Lopez already hurt.  Trade him already when healthy, sign Giolito to replace him in rotation.  Use Lopez and Larnach to get a shortstop and reliever.  Trade our #1 catcher for a great utility player, capable of playing multiple infield/outfield positions and can hit a decent bit.  There!

    …….and oh what a Merry Christmas it would be!

    3 hours ago, JD-TWINS said:

    Probably because Zebby & Festa aren’t real rotation answers and Rojas is a year away…… that leaves Bradley & Abel …… & after Pablo left with Elbow Soreness yesterday…… Abel & Bradley may both be IN the rotation in 6 weeks.

    If Zebby and Festa aren't real answers they should be in the bullpen right now.

    23 hours ago, chpettit19 said:

    Pablo getting an MRI. If they're still trying to compete, yes, they should look at bringing in another starting pitcher. No matter what the results of that MRI are. Their rotation has to be lights out. Has to be top 5 in the AL, top 10 in baseball if they're going to compete. They can't rely on Zebby, Festa, Abel, or Bradley being good. Or Ober even at this point. They need another starter if they're trying to contend.

    I know you and I mostly agree on the direction they should have gone. 

    I also tend to think like you are here. Which... Well... this is the direction they are going. 

    However.... I do believe it's not too late. Like Led Zeppelin said. "There's still time to change the road you're on". 

    Attempting to replace Lopez with a Littell for example is a slippery slope. OK... you replaced him... what do you do in May when antother key player geos down. 

    I think this is an early indication to do what they should have done. It's like the baseball gods are telling Tom Pohlad... OK... how about now?

    Trade Ryan and Jeffers get some young infielders in return. 

    "Be a Rock and not a Roll".  

    6 minutes ago, Riverbrian said:

    I know you and I mostly agree on the direction they should have gone. 

    I also tend to think like you are here. Which... Well... this is the direction they are going. 

    However.... I do believe it's not too late. Like Led Zeppelin said. "There's still time to change the road you're on". 

    Attempting to replace Lopez with a Littell for example is a slippery slope. OK... you replaced him... what do you do in May when antother key player geos down. 

    I think this is an early indication to do what they should have done. It's like the baseball gods are telling Tom Pohlad... OK... how about now?

    Trade Ryan and Jeffers get some young infielders in return. 

    "Be a Rock and not a Roll".  

    I still hope they trade Ryan. I still hope they trade Jeffers. I've never waivered from that. I hope they do it. I also hope they use bulk pitchers on 3 days rest. I hope they do a lot of things. I wanted them to use Varland as that bulk guy last year. I wish they'd do it with Festa no matter what this year. 

    Pablo was the exact risk many of us spent all offseason talking about. I don't think it changes the strategies at the top because I don't think their strategies were baseball based. Unfortunately. They're in a bad spot. We'll see where they go from here.

    1 hour ago, chpettit19 said:

    I still hope they trade Ryan. I still hope they trade Jeffers. I've never waivered from that. I hope they do it. I also hope they use bulk pitchers on 3 days rest. I hope they do a lot of things. I wanted them to use Varland as that bulk guy last year. I wish they'd do it with Festa no matter what this year. 

    Pablo was the exact risk many of us spent all offseason talking about. I don't think it changes the strategies at the top because I don't think their strategies were baseball based. Unfortunately. They're in a bad spot. We'll see where they go from here.

    There will be plenty of teams interested in Joe Ryan at this late date. 

    Even teams that think they have the lions share of work done in roster construction. Some of those teams will receive bad news before February is up. Pablo Lopez won't be the last one in spring training with horrible news. 

    When that happens to the Phillies or the Mets or the Mariners or the Astros or anyone that fancies themselves a contender.

    There will be less replacement options available to them because the lions share of work has been done.  

    If Tom can just get past whatever... non baseball based strategy... that got him to this point. He might realize that Ryan has a different price tag now... a different desperation price tag attached to him. 

    He has a choice. He can either take advantage of the desperation of the other teams or have his own desperation taken advantage of attempting to replace Lopez. 

    I simply have no reason to believe that a baseball team in contention in 2026 is going to move the financial needle this year. 

    I also have no reason to believe that 2027 will be any better... even if they can remain in contention in 2026.

    Every year... players are going to age out as we look keeping looking for Josh Bell over and over again.       

      




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