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    Twins President Derek Falvey is In Over His Head

    When one man tries to run both the baseball and business sides of a franchise, everyone loses.

    Matthew Taylor
    Image courtesy of © Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images

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    When longtime Twins president Dave St. Peter announced his retirement, ownership made a surprising choice. Instead of replacing him with another member of his own department or conducting a talent search in other industries or organizations, they promoted Derek Falvey into a dual role as president of both baseball and business operations. It was an unusual move—one that only a handful of executives across Major League Baseball have attempted—and one that comes with enormous responsibility. Each job is a full-time challenge on its own. Expecting one man to juggle both is unrealistic, and 2025 made clear just how unsustainable the arrangement has become. The Twins stumbled to 90-plus losses for the first time since 2016, and Target Field posted its worst attendance numbers in history. That’s failure on both fronts.

    Falvey’s own comments at his end-of-season press conference only underscored how shaky the structure is.

    “Dave St. Peter is still around a lot, a tremendous advisor, not just to the Pohlads but to me and the whole organization. He’s played a really nice role during that transition," Falvey said Tuesday, in response to a question about his business-side role. "I haven't been told anything else in going forward and how I operate.”

    That first note, that St. Peter remains very much in the mix, sounds far less like a short-term advisor and far more like someone still running the show. It’s a recipe for internal confusion. Who is actually in charge? If employees don’t know whether Falvey or St. Peter is calling the shots, accountability vanishes and messaging fractures. The supposed transition looks more like a muddled overlap, with no clear leadership on the business side at all.

    On the baseball side, the expectation was that new GM Jeremy Zoll would handle more of the heavy lifting. Instead, Falvey continues to dominate every decision, every media session, every big-picture answer about roster construction, coaching hires, and trades. Zoll is essentially invisible in the public eye, and there’s no evidence Falvey has truly delegated responsibility. Even behind the scenes, his was the ubiquitous face in postgame huddles in Rocco Baldelli's office at Target Field all season. For a man tasked with leading all areas of the organization, it doesn’t work if he’s still doing everything himself. The result has been questionable roster management, strange deadline moves, and a team that collapsed beyond a previous collapse.

    “I’m ultimately responsible for it all," Falvey admitted. "He didn’t perform, and I feel like I’ve let down the staff, the coaches, the fans, and everybody in here when that happens.”

    Responsibility is one thing, but accountability without change just keeps the cycle spinning. Falvey paid lip service to a change that needs to be much more far-reaching and (perhaps) much less talked-about.

    Meanwhile, fans have turned away. Attendance numbers cratered, and when pressed about how to win people back, Falvey fell back on a blunt truth—but a convenient one.

    “We’ve got to go perform. We’ve got to go be a team that wins more games," he opined. "You can’t separate the business and the baseball side. This is a baseball team. You want the baseball team to go perform.”

    He’s not wrong, but he is missing the point. The baseball side isn’t winning, and the business side hasn’t found a way to keep fans engaged while they wait. Both engines are stalling, and the man in charge has spread himself too thin to fix either one—not least, perhaps, because he sees them as so dependent on each other. His background has taught him that his spending power as the baseball operations chief determines how hard he can push to contend, and it's the business side's job to deliver money that can be spent. On the other hand, he knows that that job is almost impossible to perform without a baseline of goodwill created by fielding a competitive team. The two halves of him are each waiting for the other to give them a green light. Meanwhile, the car he's supposed to be driving is idling at an empty intersection.

    The Twins need clarity. Either Falvey empowers Zoll to run the baseball operation or ownership finds a new leader on the business side. Right now, Falvey is in over his head. He holds too much responsibility and delivers too little in either arena. For the sake of the franchise’s future, the Twins need more than one overstretched executive. They need leaders who can devote their full energy to building a winning team and rebuilding trust with a dwindling fan base.

    The call is simple: Twins ownership must decide if Derek Falvey is going to run baseball or business, but not both. Until they split the roles again and bring in focused leadership, the team will remain stuck in neutral, drifting away from both success on the field and support in the stands.


    What do you think? Should the Twins keep this dual-role structure, or is it time to make a change? Leave a comment below and start the conversation!

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    No idea how Falvey runs the shop. I just know the results haven't been good on the field or in the stands. Falvey is the last stop for roster construction, front office performance, and now game day experience. He's been given more autonomy and assets to work with than any of his divisional rivals.

    Generally speaking, that's when responsible leadership (in this case ownership) pulls the plug.

    Colorado is supposedly looking at Thad Levine. That would be interesting.

    2 hours ago, Vanimal46 said:

    Why would we believe anything they say when they can't even state the correct number they're in debt? If the economics of owning a mid/small market team is as bad as the Pohlads portray them to be, we would have up to 15 teams closing shop. If the economics is that bad, they would have taken the $1.5 B offer from Ishbia immediately and died laughing that someone was stupid enough to offer that much. 

    It feels mean to ridicule and demean pretty much everything the Pohlad kids spew forth but there it is .... I used the word "spew" which is not a favorable much less neutral word choice. Twins fan are between a rock and hard place and it seems to just bring out a person's bad side to even think about much less comment on the reality of the present situation of the Twins franchise. Things are spiraling and I feel I need to step away. Things are not good.

    FWIW, your comment basically hits it square. Then again, honesty is a trait that gets people arrested in 2025 U. S.

    1 hour ago, bean5302 said:

    No idea how Falvey runs the shop. I just know the results haven't been good on the field or in the stands. Falvey is the last stop for roster construction, front office performance, and now game day experience. He's been given more autonomy and assets to work with than any of his divisional rivals.

    Generally speaking, that's when responsible leadership (in this case ownership) pulls the plug.

    Colorado is supposedly looking at Thad Levine. That would be interesting.

    That would be awesome if Levine could turn Rockies into a winner and that would definitely prove who the idiot is in our organization ...

    'Consider yourselves lucky to have a 100 million dollar payroll because we're losing so much money because you don't come to games.' combines well with 'We're banking on hope and that the next manager can develop this wave of minor leaguers into fully functioning members of the proven Falvey baseball system'.  

    I think Falveys just a Yes Man for a very prestigious roles in MLB, that he gets to keep by being a Yes Man.

    20 vice presidents of something. 22 Senior directors. It is really poor writing to say that someone is in over their head in an organization that you really don’t have any idea who does what, who has some autonomy, how much better or worse departments are working on the business side.  Joe Pohlad supposedly oversees the day to day operations.  Jim Pohlad makes the money decisions. The former was announced in stories here, the later should be obvious from the Correa trade. 

    Funny how Levine is being considered for GM in CO, he worked there before, so that may be why, or he may be good.  It seems like Falvey is  trying to get rid of everybody who is a threat to his authority.  Get rid of scouts ?  Sounds great if you want no one to question about choices.  Falvey is  stuck in the past, it looks like the game is slowly evolving away from an analytic only viewpoint. There seems to be more emphasis of player development as well as motivation. Falvey seems to be stuck in the past. And the team team builds reflect it.  Slow, swing for the fences, ignore point to point baseball, focus on speed and spin rate while his pitchers go down with multiple injuries. That is the focus of the front office of the twins. Baldelli will be a successful manager when he gets a job elsewhere. I love how player development was being fobbed off on him at the year end press conference.  The front office added a tremendous number of specialists, analysts, and technicians, to no apparent result. Until this general manager is gone, I think we are stuck with this below, average mediocre team and ownership..

    3 hours ago, bean5302 said:

    No idea how Falvey runs the shop. I just know the results haven't been good on the field or in the stands. Falvey is the last stop for roster construction, front office performance, and now game day experience. He's been given more autonomy and assets to work with than any of his divisional rivals.

    Generally speaking, that's when responsible leadership (in this case ownership) pulls the plug.

    Colorado is supposedly looking at Thad Levine. That would be interesting.

    Attendance has pretty much followed wining. The 2 exceptions were Paul Molitor playing and the opening of Target Field. There is no comeback for Molitor, there is no native son that will be able to be added as a star from another team anytime soon. 

    He’s definitely over his head in both roles. He sounds like and appears to be a micromanager. To do both of the roles he’s assigned, he would have to delegate some of the responsibilities. To do that you have to trust people you’re delegating responsibility to. Doesn’t seem like he trusts anyone to do the work. Remember, we’ve all observed his most prominent character trait is that he sees himself as the smartest man in the room at all times. He’s his own worst enemy. Thats why he’s failing at both roles.  

    Collaboration has been a Falvey buzzword. There is collaboration of sorts. It starting to seem to me that Jim Pohlad still controls the money supply and Falvey was his hire. Changing that is not happening  Little Joe has worked his way up the ladder doing things in the organization to now having some day to day control.  Something that he said when they announced 2 investors was that they would bring in new ideas to the organization. That struck me as Gen3 has different ideas than Gen2 Pohlad. Of course a bunch of 70 year olds are old school .  It may well be just as Falvey couldn’t fire Molitor without reason, Joe can’t fire Falvey without Jim’s approval. Joe is setting up Falvey to fail much like Falvey set up Molitor to fail in year 2. Stretch him thin, hit the organization where Jim will do something about it.  

    Just a thought

    5 hours ago, 1985Fan said:

    He’s definitely over his head in both roles. He sounds like and appears to be a micromanager. To do both of the roles he’s assigned, he would have to delegate some of the responsibilities. To do that you have to trust people you’re delegating responsibility to. Doesn’t seem like he trusts anyone to do the work. Remember, we’ve all observed his most prominent character trait is that he sees himself as the smartest man in the room at all times. He’s his own worst enemy. Thats why he’s failing at both roles.  

    History does repeat itself. 

    It feels fairly clear at least that ownership sets the guideline for the maximum budget for the next year before the current season ends based on historical quotes/articles; however, it also seems clear they're willing to adjust that guideline (Correa x2) if the front office makes a case.

    Joe Pohlad is not an owner. He's a spokesperson for ownership and liason between ownership and the front office.

    Whether or not Falvey is a micromanager, I have to believe that's pure speculation on the part of everybody making a comment here. 

    I base my opinion on results Falvey's leadership has brought. Regardless of what his management style is, the results haven't been there. 

    10 hours ago, 1985Fan said:

    Remember, we’ve all observed his most prominent character trait is that he sees himself as the smartest man in the room at all times.

    Really hard to say what someone is thinking....but the votes speak for themselves...70-92

    I just listened to the pre-game for the Brewers-Cubs. Craig Counsell, Cubs manger, was praising Pat Murphy (Brewers manager) for shaping the Brewers into playing Murphy’s style of baseball. Jimmy Rollins and Curtis Granderson both echoed the same thing; Murphy has the Brewers playing his style of baseball. 
    This struck me as a contrast to Baldelli supposedly being a Falvey robot and not responsible for the teams play on the field. Backs up my and others contentions here that yes, the manager does make a difference, and Twins need a baseball man to manage this team and push back on Falvey if he tries to micromanage. They need to hire a Pat Murphy to start getting this turned around. I hope Joe Pohlad is watching so he gets the message and either moves on from Falvey, or at least minimizes his impact on the manager hire. 

    Seems to me that there are a lot of people on here that think they know more about running a baseball team than the ones running it. I tend to think that most of them know very little about running a baseball team. 

    I certainly don't think that current management has probably done a great job of running this team, but I sure wouldn't want to see what the team looked like if it was run by a collaborative effort of the writers and commenters on this site. 

    I agree that people need to state their opinions on these subjects, but this has been months and months if non stop whining. Why can't we get back to talking about baseball and quit all the back stabbing and finger pointing

     There!! That's my opinion!

    On 10/2/2025 at 11:37 AM, Vanimal46 said:

    It’s truly a slap in the face to anyone with just a little bit of financial literacy. I missed these puff pieces written in the Star Tribune when they were published, but they were linked in the yahoo story…

    https://www.startribune.com/why-the-pohlad-family-decided-to-keep-the-minnesota-twins/601455080

    https://www.startribune.com/joe-pohlad-keeps-the-faith-even-after-twins-fire-sale-and-fan-backlash/601474514

    Of course Glen Taylor who owns the Star Tribune has no issue carrying the water for another local billionaire family. 

    I the first article Tom (Joes brother) tells us that we shouldn’t question their financial investment in the team but maybe the way/where that $$ was invested. Promoting Falvey after the 2024 collapse should definitely be questioned. 

    5 hours ago, twinsfansd said:

    Seems to me that there are a lot of people on here that think they know more about running a baseball team than the ones running it. I tend to think that most of them know very little about running a 

      I get that some folks think fan criticism is just whining, but let’s be real, this isn’t just venting for the sake of it. Fans buy the tickets, wear the gear, follow every move. When the front office doesn’t explain the plan or keeps repeating the same mistakes, what do you expect fans to do, just clap politely?  

     

    If leadership won’t explain the plan, expect the fans on TD to reverse-engineer it.

    5 hours ago, twinsfansd said:

    Seems to me that there are a lot of people on here that think they know more about running a baseball team than the ones running it. I tend to think that most of them know very little about running a baseball team. 

    I certainly don't think that current management has probably done a great job of running this team, but I sure wouldn't want to see what the team looked like if it was run by a collaborative effort of the writers and commenters on this site. 

    I agree that people need to state their opinions on these subjects, but this has been months and months if non stop whining. Why can't we get back to talking about baseball and quit all the back stabbing and finger pointing

     There!! That's my opinion!

    Many of the comments are specific and actually somewhat analytical. It is doubtful that many of us agree on too many things. We are exchanging thoughts and ideas.

    Plus ..... you do know that you have written several comments that are merely whining about what you call whining. Right? If you don't like a comment, that is perfectly fine. Just state your objection and offer a separate thought or solution. The topic - "Derek Falvey is in over his head". Do you agree or disagree and why?

     




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