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    Three Players Who Seized An Opportunity In 2025

    There weren’t many positives to the end of the Twins’ season. A few players seized an opportunity, though.

    Cody Pirkl
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    After the Twins sold at the deadline, all that was left to hope for was that some of the remaining players would make the best of the opportunity that had opened up and earn their way into the 2026 plans. While not everyone made good on this, a few players certainly look like they’ve earned themselves roles on next year's roster.

    Kody Clemens
    Clemens looked like a flash in the pan when he followed up his explosive first month in a Twins uniform with a .625 OPS in June. Being a well-traveled 29-year-old, there was always a chance that his performance was simply one good month and that he would return to the version of Kody Clemens that could never quite carve out a regular role on an MLB roster. Finishing as a comfortably above league-average hitter in two of the last three months of the season while playing regularly may have changed that in the Twins’ eyes.

    Clemens may not be a part of the long-term future, but he should fit quite well on the 2026 Twins roster. The organization lacks interesting options for first base, where Clemens filled in for much of the second half. He will also be plenty cheap for a roster that is likely to shed more payroll than add to it this offseason. Clemens can be an ideal stopgap at first base and second base in addition to filling in at both corner outfield spots. It may not be a massive development for the future, but Clemens at least gives the team one less roster spot to worry about.

    Austin Martin
    Making up one half of the trade return from dealing Jose Berrios to the Blue Jays, Martin looks to have finally made good on the Twins' acquisition of him in 2021. Martin has dealt with swing changes, injuries, and overall inconsistency in his Twins tenure. He’s no longer considered a serious option in the infield mix and remains extremely raw in center field. After receiving regular opportunities down the stretch, he settled into left field, where he showed positive defensive metrics and was one of the Twins’ better overall hitters in the final months of the season.

    Martin still lacks power, but his right-handed bat makes him a shoo-in for the Twins’ 2026 roster. Left-handed hitters dominate the outfield, and the team has lacked a quality option to spell them for several years. His speed and athleticism also complement the overall roster, making him a strong bench option at the very least. He may not be the player who was once selected fifth overall in the MLB draft, but Martin may finally be emerging as a valuable MLB player.

    Simeon Woods Richardson
    SWR has been a solid back-end starting pitcher for multiple seasons, although he’s lacked consistency at times, and the upside has seemed capped because of his repertoire. The end of his season has to have raised some eyebrows, as after returning from a stomach illness, Woods Richardson did enough to leave us questioning whether he just needed a little extra time to take that next step.

    image.png.e71ccd6afa931715d2afbf8be43bd5e8.png
    Allowing two runs and striking out 23 in his last 17 innings, Woods Richardson looked like he had finally built back up after his illness. He ramped up the usage of his new splitter, which became arguably his best pitch after adding it to his mix partway through the season. After inconsistent usage throughout the year, SWR began to rely on this new offering, and it looks like the key to taking another step forward. With so many arms added at the deadline, Woods Richardson’s job looked to be a bit more in question heading into 2026. His flashes of brilliance to end the season, which coincided with a notable change in pitch mix, should earn him an Opening Day rotation spot for 2026.

    Were there any other players who made the most of a bad situation down the stretch? Was there anyone you wished would have done a better job of taking advantage of their opportunity? Let us know below!

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    22 hours ago, JD-TWINS said:

    To me, it’s the 4 guys from last year in the rotation (Looez-Ryan-Ober-SWR) along with Bradley.

    Matthews to the PEN in a Griffin Jax, high leverage role. Can throw hard in short bursts and would only need 2-3 effective pitches & there’s a big hole. He has options if they need to adjust on the fly.

    Abel, on paper, is the 6th rotation guy…….Festa being next if healthy enough?

    Matthews - Sands - Funderburk - Topa - Roya - Prielipp - Morris - Adams - Lawyerson & couple FA’s in the PEN mix.

    I hadn't thought about Zebby as a bullpen piece, but ... hmm .... that might work!

    20 hours ago, LA VIkes Fan said:

    Agree. Funderburk is a lock for the 2026 bullpen, might even get closing opportunities if we can get another LH like Coulombe in the off season. What about Cody Laweryson? Small sample size for sure (5 app, 7.2, IP, 1.17 ERA, 0.53 WHIP), but he looked the part of a competent reliever, maybe even a late inning guy. That's a major step up for a guy who aa 27 year old afterthought going into this year. Also, Ohl's stats weren't great because of a couple of blow ups early, but he looked like a real potential bullpen option the last month.  

    You are right, Laweryson did look very good in his short stint in the bullpen. Is it sustainable? Only one way to find out. And as you noted, Ohl might be a useful piece next season too. We need to find more bullpen arms from somewhere, and we might have a few keepers already. 

    On 10/6/2025 at 11:48 AM, srlarson said:

    Sorry Clemens is a AAA player.....  hitting .218 is not a mlb bat.........  Martin is at best a platoon player, 4th outfielder......first year in a long time...didn't get to a game....not sure about next year....

    First, let me say that we agree that Clemens shouldn't be an everyday starter, but I do think he is a decent bench piece. 

    I think perceptions on batting average need to change a bit.  MLB league wide batting average was .245 for 2025. The days of multiple guys having averages >.300 with 30+ HRs are long gone. This year only 7 guys in MLB had averages at .300 or above (Judge, Bichette, Jacob Wilson, Springer, Jeremy Pena, Trea Turner, and Yandy Diaz).  Compare that to the year 2000 (I just picked a year). League average was .270 and 53 players hit at or above .300...

    Clemens really wasn't that far off from league average in terms of batting average.  The difference between hitting .250 and .300 is about 1 hit/week.  Put that in terms of Clemens batting average.  He played May through September (5 months). Figure 4 weeks/month, that would be 20 more hits in 2025.  Those 20 hits would bump his average up to .270, which is well above league average.  He would have only needed 11 more hits over 5 months to be at league average.  That tells you that the margin is very thin. 

    There are other stats that support your statement (wRC+, xBA, etc...) that show he was at replacement level.  But batting average is such a thin margin that our viewpoint can be a bit skewed.




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