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    To Extend or Not To Extend: The Ryan Jeffers Decision

    Ryan Jeffers is set to hit free agency after 2026, and the Twins have a real decision to make on one of their most quietly essential players.

    Sam Caulder
    Image courtesy of © Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

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    The Minnesota Twins have a very solid catching situation for 2026, but that stability doesn’t extend beyond this season. While this might not be a universally popular stance, there’s a strong case to be made that the Twins should look to extend Ryan Jeffers.

    To be clear, this isn’t about handing out a massive long-term deal that could age poorly. A huge seven-year, $100 million type of contract would be quite excessive, and that’s not the type of commitment being suggested here. But Jeffers is set to hit free agency after the season, and he’s exactly the kind of player this organization should be looking to keep around on a shorter-term deal.

    Offensively, Jeffers has quietly been one of the more productive catchers in baseball, especially when viewed through the lens of positional expectations. He owns a career .747 OPS, which gives him an OPS+ comfortably above league average. That kind of production from behind the plate carries real value.

    It’s still early in the 2026 season, but Jeffers looks like a hitter who has taken another step forward. Through 92 plate appearances entering Thursday night, he’s hitting .293 with a .418 on-base percentage, along with three home runs. Just as importantly, he’s struck out 16 times while drawing 15 walks, a near one-to-one ratio that speaks to a much more disciplined approach.

    The underlying data supports what’s showing up in the box score. Jeffers’s average exit velocity has climbed above 91 miles per hour, second among all Twins hitters. He’s not expanding the strike zone, there’s very little swing-and-miss in his profile right now, and he’s consistently putting himself in favorable counts.

    This isn’t coming out of nowhere, either. Over the past couple of seasons, there’s been a noticeable shift in Jeffers’s approach at the plate. He’s become far more selective. His bat-to-ball improvements are real, and they’ve elevated his overall offensive floor while also raising the ceiling.

    Defensively, Jeffers isn’t going to stand out in the traditional ways. He’s not an elite blocker, and he doesn’t rank among the top catchers in terms of throwing out base stealers. But the modern game has introduced new ways for catchers to provide value, and this is where Jeffers separates himself.

    With the implementation of the ABS challenge system, Jeffers has been one of the most effective catchers in baseball. He leads the league in strikeouts gained via successful challenges, with 10, and among catchers with at least 20 challenges, he ranks inside the top 10 in both total successful challenges and overall success rate.

    That might seem like a niche skill, but it matters. In a league where every marginal edge can swing an at-bat or an inning, consistently winning challenges adds tangible value. Jeffers has shown an ability to read pitches, understand umpire tendencies within the system, and make the right call in high-leverage spots. That’s a modern defensive skill that isn’t going away, and it gives him an added layer of importance behind the plate.

    Then there’s the bigger picture. Jeffers’s contract expires after this season, while Victor Caratini is only under team control for one more year beyond that, with a mutual option for 2028 that (historically speaking) is unlikely to be exercised by both sides. Beyond those two, the organization’s long-term hope lies with Eduardo Tait, one of the top catching prospects in the game, along with intriguing depth pieces like Khadim Diaw and Enrique Jimenez.

    Tait, in particular, has the upside to become the catcher of the future. But he’s probably still at least two or three years away from making a real impact at the major-league level. That creates a clear gap between the present and the future, and Jeffers is the most logical bridge.

    If the Twins let him walk, what does that leave them with? Caratini for 2027, and then a likely trip to free agency to find another catcher, anyway. At that point, you’re probably paying a similar price for a player who wouldn’t be as productive, and certainly won’t have the same level of familiarity with the pitching staff or the organization.

    Jeffers offers stability in a spot where stability is hard to find. He’s a known commodity offensively; he’s developed into a reliable presence behind the plate in ways that align with the modern game; and he already has established relationships with the Twins’ pitchers. For a team that could be trending younger in the near future, that kind of presence carries weight beyond the stat sheet.

    That’s why a short-term extension makes so much sense. Something in the range of three years would allow the Twins to maintain continuity at catcher while giving Tait the time he needs to develop properly. It avoids a long-term commitment that could become problematic, while still addressing a clear organizational need.

    As long as the financial aspect stays reasonable, extending Ryan Jeffers feels like the kind of move that checks every box. It strengthens the present, protects against uncertainty in the near future, and buys time for the next wave of talent to arrive. For a team trying to balance competitiveness with sustainability, that’s a path worth taking.

    Of course, Jeffers hss agency here, too. He's unlikely to take a three-year deal right now, not only because he's a Scott Boras client (that can be overcome, in certain cases) but because he's playing so well in the last year before he could reach the market. This winter is likely to be marred by a lockout, but last time that happened, some players signed early deals that have gone well for them (if somewhat less so for the teams involved). A version of the deal signed by Sean Murphy after he was traded from the Athletics to Atlanta, though, might work.

    Murphy officially signed for $73 million over six years, but he was further from free agency at the time. If the Twins are willing to guarantee Jeffers $57 million over four years (a $14-million annual salary, plus a $1-million buyout) with a club option for 2031, they could keep him from entering free agency this fall. They should, at a minimum, consider it.

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    21 hours ago, DJL44 said:

    Two years too late. He’s getting paid now.

    This... this... aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaand..... THIS!

    I like Jeffers and wish he was staying, but the Twins ain't outbidding anyone.... J

    Jeffers is gone.... so we better get something for him by the trade deadline

    Caratini is signed to a two year contract. That should have sealed Jeffers future fate with the Minnesota Twins. 

    We have limited financial resources. If we allocate a large chunk of those limited financial resources to the catcher position in both Jeffers and Caratini. You'll have limited money to address other positions and we will need to address other positions and that's hard to do with resources blown on the C position. 

    My guess... is that Jeffers will be traded at the deadline because we will not be in contention. I will also guess that Jeffers will have a good year that will bring interest but that interest will be severely diminished due to his being a two month rental. I predict that Jeffers will be the top free agent catcher available. His family will enjoy his future pay check. 

    In other words. Jeffers probably should have been dealt this past off-season. Especially if you were going to sign Caratini. 

    I could be wrong. Maybe Jeffers leads us to the playoffs. It's a long way to July. 

    2 hours ago, Riverbrian said:

    Caratini is signed to a two year contract. That should have sealed Jeffers future fate with the Minnesota Twins. 

    We have limited financial resources. If we allocate a large chunk of those limited financial resources to the catcher position in both Jeffers and Caratini. You'll have limited money to address other positions and we will need to address other positions and that's hard to do with resources blown on the C position. 

    My guess... is that Jeffers will be traded at the deadline because we will not be in contention. I will also guess that Jeffers will have a good year that will bring interest but that interest will be severely diminished due to his being a two month rental. I predict that Jeffers will be the top free agent catcher available. His family will enjoy his future pay check. 

    In other words. Jeffers probably should have been dealt this past off-season. Especially if you were going to sign Caratini. 

    I could be wrong. Maybe Jeffers leads us to the playoffs. It's a long way to July. 

    Probably should have been dealt? I understand why you typed that, but everyone but Tom pohlad knows he should have been, if they were going to gut the payroll. 

    35 minutes ago, Mike Sixel said:

    Probably should have been dealt? I understand why you typed that, but everyone but Tom pohlad knows he should have been, if they were going to gut the payroll. 

    I have strong opinions and I'm certainly not afraid to voice them but... there is still that part of me that thinks... OK... lets see if Tom Pohlad was right. 

    And then I watch the bullpen and all it's craftiness and it keeps those moments fleeting. 

    Just now, Riverbrian said:

    I have strong opinions and I'm certainly not afraid to voice them but... there is still that part of me that thinks... OK... lets see if Tom Pohlad was right. 

    And then I watch the bullpen and all it's craftiness and it keeps those moments fleeting. 

    Not to mention the "defense." Yikes. 

    You cannot win with zero bullpen arms, you just can't. 

    11 minutes ago, Mike Sixel said:

    Not to mention the "defense." Yikes. 

    You cannot win with zero bullpen arms, you just can't. 

    Not with the average MLB starter averaging less than 6 IP per start. 

    It's Martha and the Vandellas in the bullpen. Nowhere to run... Nowhere to hide. 

    I’m actually thinking the additions of Caratini and Jackson signal the Twins have planned all along to trade Jeffers at the deadline regardless of team standings. There are a bunch of things I like about Jeffers but he is a pretty poor defensive catcher. 

    57 minutes ago, Linus said:

    I’m actually thinking the additions of Caratini and Jackson signal the Twins have planned all along to trade Jeffers at the deadline regardless of team standings. There are a bunch of things I like about Jeffers but he is a pretty poor defensive catcher. 

    To give Jeffers some credit, his caught stealing percentage has more than double in the past two weeks.




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