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    The Twins Are Killing Their Brand, and It's Brutal to Watch


    Nick Nelson

    With baffling decisions and tone-deaf messaging, the Twins continue to alienate their audience at a crucial moment of opportunity. Despite their best efforts, the organization's leadership cannot escape culpability in this fan-infuriating fiasco. You have to wonder where everything went so wrong.

    Image courtesy of Theo Tollefson

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    When Joe Pohlad took over as the new figurehead for ownership during the 2022-23 offseason, he talked a big game, with the organization positioning him as a bold leader who would usher in a bright new era of prestige for the Minnesota Twins brand. He seemed ready to back it up.

    As the third-generation Pohlad settled into his new title and role, Minnesota's payroll rose to unprecedented heights, fueled in large part by the paradigm-shattering Carlos Correa signing. Meanwhile, the Twins were unveiling an ambitious and comprehensive rebrand, while also teasing big upgrades to Target Field, including a $30-million scoreboard expansion. 

    The message at the time was that the Twins were only getting started. "While he didn’t mention a specific number, Pohlad didn’t hesitate to suggest the Twins could increase payroll significantly if everything was properly aligned," wrote Dan Hayes in The Athletic at the time. In the article, Pohlad did not rule out the possibility of payroll eventually climbing into the $180-200 million range, putting Minnesota into another class of resource availability and market legitimacy.

    In the ensuing 2023 season, a slow start stifled enthusiasm around the team, but things progressed brilliantly after the All-Star break, as the Twins rallied to a division title and snapped a two-decade postseason curse before a packed house at Target Field. 

    As luck would have it, their TV contract with the much-maligned Diamond Sports Group was reaching an end, making the Twins free agents in the broadcast arena, free to shop their rights around or bring them under their own umbrella. Team officials crowed about the opportunity to expand reach and access throughout Twins Territory, while also publicly promising to end blackouts.

    Here's a quick recap of all that's happened since the Twins were eliminated from the playoffs by Houston last year:

    • Derek Falvey openly stated the team's intention to substantially reduce spending, just days after one of the most exciting breakthroughs in the franchise's modern history, driven by a record payroll.
    • The Twins followed through on this declaration to the extreme, slashing payroll by a whopping $35 million to drop into the bottom third of the league.
    • At the same time, they ended up signing on for another year with Diamond Sports, in a decision clearly and solely motivated by money, rendering false and hollow their talk about fan access being the priority.

    You can throw in some other questionable courses of action – e.g. unceremoniously parting ways with Dick Bremer in a manner that struck many as cold – but those are the big ones, from my view. Especially in tandem. Slashing payroll and pocketing the TV money (while sticking with a broadcast situation that the team already acknowledged as a raw deal for their fans) really felt to a lot of people like a middle finger extended in their direction, rather than an open hand of welcome. Who could blame them?

    Now, it's gotten even worse. Last week, without any warning, Bally Sports North and other Diamond Sports RSNs went dark for Comcast and Xfinity customers, as the two sides evidently failed to reach agreement ahead of a May 1 deadline. Two huge, greedy, despised companies at war. As a byproduct, a massive share of the Twins' already-restricted audience lost their means of watching them.

    In light of all those lofty proclamations about the vital importance of making their product available to a larger audience, the emergence of new barriers for willing, would-be paying customers to watch this baseball team almost feels like some kind of sick joke. Those proclamations were savvy, and correct! Yet, the Twins have betrayed these supposed beliefs in their every action, and they now find themselves embroiled in a disaster of their own making, damaging their brand in ways that are difficult to overstate.

    Yes, someone like me can find an alternative. I did. I canceled my Xfinity subscription over the weekend and I'm now on board with Fubo TV, which seems fine. But the Twins were never at risk of losing me. They're at risk of losing people who lack the means to find a new solution, or who are so fed up with all this garbage that they don't even try to do so. 

    I think of restaurants and sports bars, which – I can say from experience – were already liable to have whatever out-of-market NBA or NHL game happened to be available on TV instead of the Twins, even when the broadcasts were easier to access. I think of people like my parents, who are big Twins fans but also longtime cable subscribers, and unlikely to make some drastic change over this. Guess they'll just dial back their investment.

    I think of stories like the one below, from a Twitter acquaintance whose 87-year-old grandpa now suddenly has to figure out how he can watch the team at his assisted living community. It's sad. 

    These are all missed opportunities at best, and flagrant brand-building blunders at worst. Although I am one, it doesn't take a marketing professional to understand the dire long-term implications of this sort of audience gatekeeping, especially in a local market where competition for sports fans is fierce: The Timberwolves are making a thrilling postseason run, and the Vikings just drafted their quarterback of the future.

    Look, I'm not unearthing any secret, groundbreaking revelations here. And that's where I end up utterly confused. Joe Pohlad is renowned for, as much as anything, his brand-building chops. His previous work in taking over Go Media was largely tied to this strength, despite business failures, even in his own words. "Go had a ton of successes in my opinion on the brand side. But the failures came from the business standpoint, from pivoting," Pohlad said in the aforementioned Hayes article

    Well, from a business standpoint, the Twins need to pivot. Clearly. They're fumbling that right now. But at the very least, they can get their situation straight from a messaging and branding standpoint. Your fans, and potential future fans, are everything. Stop antagonizing them! Is this billable business advice? Should I be charging?

    Whatever advice this organization's leadership is receiving now, it doesn't seem very good. I'm not sure who felt that an out-of-touch shrug the shoulders ¯_(ツ)_/¯ would be received well as the team's spin on this Bally Sports travesty. "No role or voice in this matter"? Get real. Treating your audience as expendable is one thing; treating them as idiots is another.

    I'm writing this not because I'm calling for heads to roll, or even because I want to single out any specific person for the complete debacle that has unfolded with this franchise. Joe Pohlad, Dave St. Peter, I don't care. Someone's gotta step up and mitigate the brand damage.

    Notably, whoever is going to play a role in turning around this wayward ship, it won't be Meka Morris. Hired in 2021 as the organization's first-ever Chief Revenue Officer, and described by Forbes in a glowing feature last summer as "the woman in charge of selling [the Twins'] appeal," Morris quietly exited recently, taking a job in March as EVP/Revenue & Chief Business Officer (essentially the same title) for the Chicago Bears.

    I'm not going to speculate on the reasons behind the departure of this executive who was seemingly viewed as a rising star. As far as I can tell, neither side has commented on the split publicly. But at the very least, it's yet another glaring example of the bright and confident vision laid out for this organization just a few years ago going by the wayside. Revenues are dropping, payroll is dropping, fans are pissed off, and everyone seems completely clueless and reactive in the way they're responding and communicating about it.

    It's a real shame, at a time where the Twins should be capitalizing on all the excellent work this front office and this coaching staff and these players have done to generate energy and excitement. They deserve better.

    We all deserve better. It's time for the Minnesota Twins – their ownership, their business side – to do better. Or find somebody who can.

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    Featured Comments

    8 hours ago, Mike Sixel said:

    Given sports teams always sell for massive gains, they aren't losing money. Unless they are the only major US sports team ever to do so.

    The potential sale price does not matter if you don't want to sell the business.  If you are keeping the business the only value is profit/loss.  Let's say they have decided to sell the business in the next 5 years or if they are interested in growing the business value to sell it someday.  What are the primary factors that influence business valuation?  

    23 minutes ago, Major League Ready said:

    The potential sale price does not matter if you don't want to sell the business.  If you are keeping the business the only value is profit/loss.  Let's say they have decided to sell the business in the next 5 years or if they are interested in growing the business value to sell it someday.  What are the primary factors that influence business valuation?  

    Also the aspect that the Twins are not the Pohlad's only business venture.  But it is probably the one that easiest to selectively 'create' profit or loss numbers to balance their overall "family" books tax-wise. Make too much profit somewhere else, they "invest' in a new video board for the Twins (business expense). Tough economy, high interest rates, Twins get "right sized". 

    ***part of me has a niggling feeling that we are seeing the early vestiges of an owner getting ready to sell, before the $$$ start to change downward league-wide***

    Great article!  I have been a Twins fan for decades.  But the past 3-5 years have been very tough.  I haven't had access to Twins for 5 years.  I blame most of this on the Twins.  I can't even go to my local restaurant to watch them as they had Comcast.  I don't trust the Twins anymore.  They treat their fans like dirt.  So many miscues.  So many people I talk to say they don't care about the Twins anymore.  I still care.  That's why it is so hard to see it deteriorate due to all the self inflicted wounds.  The Twins handle this so poorly.  Well written article.  One of the best ever on TD!

    51 minutes ago, Original_JB said:

    Also the aspect that the Twins are not the Pohlad's only business venture.  But it is probably the one that easiest to selectively 'create' profit or loss numbers to balance their overall "family" books tax-wise. Make too much profit somewhere else, they "invest' in a new video board for the Twins (business expense). Tough economy, high interest rates, Twins get "right sized". 

    ***part of me has a niggling feeling that we are seeing the early vestiges of an owner getting ready to sell, before the $$$ start to change downward league-wide***

    I had a slight "niggling" as well which is why I posted.  What drives valuations / business value?  Number 1 is Earnings and Revenue Growth Potential. Market Conditions and Risk next.  Name Recognition and Goodwill have role and then a number of other less influential factors. The premise that profitability does not matter because the business is worth a lot ignores the most important factor driving valuations.  The business has value because of the likelihood of profitability.  We have a constant buzz here about the inevitable demise of MLB so will these valuations be viable going forward.  The average return on capital (stock market) in the US is 10%. Anyone buying the team at the current $1.2B valuation could make $120M in the stock market.   

    16 minutes ago, Whitey333 said:

    Great article!  I have been a Twins fan for decades.  But the past 3-5 years have been very tough.  I haven't had access to Twins for 5 years.  I blame most of this on the Twins.  I can't even go to my local restaurant to watch them as they had Comcast.  I don't trust the Twins anymore.  They treat their fans like dirt.  So many miscues.  So many people I talk to say they don't care about the Twins anymore.  I still care.  That's why it is so hard to see it deteriorate due to all the self inflicted wounds.  The Twins handle this so poorly.  Well written article.  One of the best ever on TD!

    Can't get DirecTV where you live?  MLB steaming?

    32 minutes ago, Major League Ready said:

    I had a slight "niggling" as well which is why I posted.  What drives valuations / business value?  Number 1 is Earnings and Revenue Growth Potential. Market Conditions and Risk next.  Name Recognition and Goodwill have role and then a number of other less influential factors. The premise that profitability does not matter because the business is worth a lot ignores the most important factor driving valuations.  The business has value because of the likelihood of profitability.  We have a constant buzz here about the inevitable demise of MLB so will these valuations be viable going forward.  The average return on capital (stock market) in the US is 10%. Anyone buying the team at the current $1.2B valuation could make $120M in the stock market.   

    Who the F said profit doesn't matter? Not me. I said that given every sports team in the US sells for big gains, every one of them, it is unlikely any of them lose money, or, as you point out, they wouldn't sell for big gains. 

    Also agree. Great commentary, Nick.

    I’ll just say contracting is hard and too many moving parts for me to understand here. We can hope that the organization is trying to gut out one more difficult year, for the promise of something better or transformative in 2025. Not likely but maybe. 

    The other thing is: I do disagree with the suggestion that Derek Falvey is an innocent party here. If Falvey and Levine are going to require ever-increasing record payrolls to put competitive teams on the field, year after year, then you should take it as just another sign that they are not the guys for the job. I mean, pretty much anyone could be the GM in that scenario.

    And yes you can still get kicked out of local bars for asking them to put the Twins game on. The 2012-2014 years did a number on this franchise.  🙂

    14 hours ago, CCHOF5yearstoolate said:

    This is not an accurate characterization of the Glen Taylor A-rod/Lore situation. He balked at spending money on the Wolves for nearly 20 years until they finally lucked into a couple of #1 overall picks.

    A-Rod & Lore brought in Tim Connelly who brought in Rudy and completely changed the course of this franchise. Glen Taylor halted the sale because the franchise is worth a billion more than it was when they started the sale - because of the Connelly hire. He's doing this purely for the money. 

    That "report" about them "gutting the team" is pure propaganda from Glen - something he's always done. In their documents to prove they are ready to own a team, they submitted multiple budgets for multiple scenarios depending on how well the team did this year. Glen selectively chose the worst case scenario and broadcast that as if that was their main plan, when it was not. Plenty of reporting from the Wolves beat that confirms all of this.

    Glen has been more hated than the Pohlads for decades, it's kind of crazy to see an obvious bit of propaganda actually change the perception of him overnight. 

    I am not a huge Taylor fan.  He is not a great basketball mind and has made tons of mistakes.  BUT, spending money is not one of them.  Garnett was the highest paid player in the NBA for a time.  He doled large contracts out to role players.  He was willing to spend money.

    The thing that I find to be a bit shocking, is that they seem to be showing absolutely no awareness of the MLB market competition that is available in their own television market. I can sign up for MLB.TV and watch Shohei Ohtani play every night, except for when the Dodgers play the Twins. Ditto the Baltimore Orioles' exciting young team, or classic TV behemoths like the New York Yankees. How does it make any sense from a business standpoint to allow other teams to scoop up your audience? I know people who are lifelong fans of the Cubs and the Braves, because their games were broadcast on WGN and TBS, which got national reach. I know people who are lifelong fans of the Mariners because of Ken Griffey Jr. When you think about the draw that Ohtani provides, and the fact that his team is available to stream in the Twin Cities, it's not hard to envision the Twins losing a significant chunk of their potential audience to the Dodgers. This is just terrible business, especially when you consider that they did this for such a short-term gain with, what appears to me anyway, no regard for what happens after the initial payday.  

    4 minutes ago, Fire Dan Gladden said:

    I am not a huge Taylor fan.  He is not a great basketball mind and has made tons of mistakes.  BUT, spending money is not one of them.  Garnett was the highest paid player in the NBA for a time.  He doled large contracts out to role players.  He was willing to spend money.

    Sure, Glen spent from 2001-2006.

    Before Garnett's rookie extension the Wolves were 16th in payroll in '99 & 20th in 2000.

    After he shipped out Garnett, the Wolves averaged 19th in payroll for the next 16 years (including this season). Sounds a lot like what the Pohlads have done over the last 2 decades. 

    On 5/8/2024 at 9:58 AM, Mike Sixel said:

    Who the F said profit doesn't matter? Not me. I said that given every sports team in the US sells for big gains, every one of them, it is unlikely any of them lose money, or, as you point out, they wouldn't sell for big gains. 

    Why the hostility?  If you think I didn't understand your point, make your case.  It's an interesting topic.  You didn't understand my point which is profitability drives the valuation so to say they are making money even if they are not operationally profitable flies in the face of every financial principle applicable here.  These teams sold for big money in part because of the incredible / consistent growth.  That looks much more suspect than it ever has in the past.

    8 hours ago, Hosken Bombo Disco said:

    The other thing is: I do disagree with the suggestion that Derek Falvey is an innocent party here. If Falvey and Levine are going to require ever-increasing record payrolls to put competitive teams on the field, year after year, then you should take it as just another sign that they are not the guys for the job. I mean, pretty much anyone could be the GM in that scenario.

    This is a fantastic point and similar to one I've been making over and over throughout the off-season.  If there's a good contending product on the field year after year, I don't care one bit what the payroll is.  Fortunately, so far they seem to be setting up all the pieces of a long term competitive group which is ultimately the only way out of this mess.  If we circle back to a different thread, about how good are they, how much they spend is part of the equation.  They aren't going to need record payroll, although I'm sure they would have liked a little extra this year.

    Can you imagine a Brian Cashman doing the Twins job?  They way he does this job is completely different than a Twins situation.  Can you imagine someone even named Cashman working for the Twins?

    Also, B-R is littered with failed GMs that had a seemingly open checkbook.  I'm sure it's easier but the mistakes are bigger.  I'd give it a try though.

    I am so disappointed in this TV situation.  I dropped DirecTV in 2019 for YouTube TV, as they were carrying Fox Sports regional networks.  Then Diamond and YTTV couldn't come to an agreement after 2020, and my TV access was gone.  As a partial season ticket holder, I get MLB.TV for free, but I can only watch the Twins game after the 90 minute blackout.  I was somewhat encouraged this off-season when DSP sounded like the Twins were looking for a TV deal that would also include streamers, then was disappointed once again when they signed again with Bally.  I can't believe they were unaware that the Bally/Comcast contract was up on 5/1 when they signed, which is unforgivable.  My 90 year old mom (and lifelong Twins fan) has Comcast and is unhappy that she can no longer watch the Twins.  At this point, I listen on the radio or I just watch the MiLB games on MLB.TV.  The Twins just do not seem to care about their fans anymore.  

    I wonder what "GM Correa" thinks about this. Falvey joked when they signed Correa that he was the "assistant GM" I wonder how he's reacting to this, if they're keeping him in the loop, and if things keep happening, if he will eventually ask out. 

    On 5/9/2024 at 10:28 AM, Lauriee23 said:

    I am so disappointed in this TV situation.  I dropped DirecTV in 2019 for YouTube TV, as they were carrying Fox Sports regional networks.  Then Diamond and YTTV couldn't come to an agreement after 2020, and my TV access was gone.  As a partial season ticket holder, I get MLB.TV for free, but I can only watch the Twins game after the 90 minute blackout.  I was somewhat encouraged this off-season when DSP sounded like the Twins were looking for a TV deal that would also include streamers, then was disappointed once again when they signed again with Bally.  I can't believe they were unaware that the Bally/Comcast contract was up on 5/1 when they signed, which is unforgivable.  My 90 year old mom (and lifelong Twins fan) has Comcast and is unhappy that she can no longer watch the Twins.  At this point, I listen on the radio or I just watch the MiLB games on MLB.TV.  The Twins just do not seem to care about their fans anymore.  

    Get a VPN, set it outside the US to watch the game, and enjoy the mlbtv.




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