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    What The?!: Derek Falvey to Depart Minnesota Twins Front Office

    Minnesota Twins' President of Business and Baseball Operations Derek Falvey is leaving, the team informed staff on Friday.

    Matthew Trueblood
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    The Minnesota Twins and top baseball executive Derek Falvey are parting ways, the team announced to staff in a stunning internal email Friday morning. Falvey, 42, ran baseball operations for Minnesota for nine seasons. The team issued a press release announcing the move shortly after sharing it internally.

    Falvey began his career with Cleveland, worked his way through a variety of front-office roles, and ultimately rose to assistant general manager. He joined Minnesota in the fall of 2016 as the Twins’ top baseball decision-maker, with a background built on process, research, and analytics (particularly in regard to pitching) and emphasizing relationships and culture. 

    The Twins hired Falvey to lead a reset after a 103-loss season, and much of his early impact came behind the scenes. Under his leadership, Minnesota invested in technology and information, modernizing how they integrated pro scouting, player development, medical/performance, and research. That foundation helped fuel competitive peaks, including a quick return to the postseason in 2017, and the 2019 breakout, when the Twins won 101 games with their Bomba Squad. 

    These efforts were recognized by Executive Chair Tom Pohlad in the Twins press release. "When he joined the Twins nine years ago, it was, in many ways, a watershed moment for this franchise. His leadership was transformational. He helped modernize every aspect of our baseball operations and led with strong values, intention, and purpose," stated Pohlad.

    With success came some bold roster bets: signing Josh Donaldson, committing long-term to Byron Buxton, aggressively pursuing Carlos Correa, and trading Luis Arráez for Pablo López. He also developed the pitching pipeline the fans were promised, with somewhat middling results. 

    After the 2023 season, when the Twins snapped their 18-game postseason losing streak, won a Wild Card series, and advanced to the ALDS, the club’s payroll was cut by roughly $30 million. Those reductions have continued, with next year’s payroll currently projected around $100 million, down from roughly $160 million in 2023. With fewer resources, the team’s offseason additions have been modest, and at the most recent trade deadline the Twins pivoted sharply toward shedding salary and stockpiling depth, moving 11 players in total, including Carlos Correa.

    In this latest phase, Falvey was elevated to President, expanding his responsibilities to include both the baseball and business sides of the operation. He’s held that role amid major organizational turbulence: an effort to sell the franchise, a restructuring of approximately $500 million in team debt, and an ownership transition, with Tom Pohlad succeeding Joe Pohlad as the club’s Executive Chair. His role, his boss, and the franchise's trajectory have changed significantly over the last two years compared with his first seven years with the franchise. 

    "Ownership transitions naturally create moments for reflection and honest dialogue about leadership, vision, and how an organization wants to move forward," wrote Derek Falvey in the team's press release. "Over the past several weeks we had those conversations openly and constructively and ultimately reached a shared understanding that this was the right step both for the organization and for me personally."

    Those changes were also recognized by Tom Pohlad. "Over the past several weeks, Derek and I had thoughtful and candid conversations about leadership, structure, and the future of the club," Pohlad wrote in the team's press release. "We reached a shared understanding that the needs of the organization are evolving and that a leadership transition is the best way to move forward."

    Jeremy Zoll, previously Falvey's lieutenant and the general manager, will take over his duties running baseball operations, while Tom Pohlad will become the point person for business operations, which Falvey had taken under his purview in 2024. 

    Falvey is not leaving for another job, or at least that has not been announced. The Twins released a statement saying the two sides "mutually agree to part ways."

    "On a personal level, I’m looking forward to taking some time to be with my family, reflect and consider what comes next," Falvey wrote in the press release. "I don’t have specific plans yet, but I’m grateful for the experiences I’ve had here and excited about the next chapter when the time is right."

    Zoll will not get an immediate title bump, but he becomes the new head of baseball operations, which Pohlad said would remain true. Dave St. Peter, who served in that role since 2002, stepped down last March, but has remained with the team as an adviser. It's hard to predict how soon the team will find a suitable candidate for a vacancy that comes at the most unusual point in the baseball calendar.

    That timing is perhaps the most interesting aspect of the news. It is unusual for any organization to have a leadership vacuum without a transition plan at this critical time of year. For instance, when Dave St. Peter left the Twins, the announcement was made in November 2024, but the move didn't take effect until Opening Day. 

    Tom Pohlad has been leading the organization for just over a month. On the baseball side, the offseason moves are not yet complete. On the business side, the season is ramping up. And while the Twins' press release says that there have been going on for the past several weeks, this change is sudden and seemingly unforeseen.

    The team is holding a press conference today at 11:15, with Pohlad and Falvey answering questions, though at separate times. 


    Editor's Note: An earlier version of this story indicated the team would begin an immediate search for a new president of baseball operations. During his press conference, a reporter asked Pohlad about that search, and Pohlad corrected the record: Zoll will be in charge of baseball ops. The team is not pursuing a replacemeny for Falvey outside the organization at this time.

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    The Pohlads came to the conclusion that Falvey wasn't capable of building a winner within their payroll restrictions and Falvey came to the conclusion that the Pohlads were never going to give him the huge amount of payroll he'd need to cover up his mistakes and still be a winner, 

    That my friends is the mutual understanding and agreement they arrived at. Period.

    1 minute ago, rv78 said:

    The Pohlads came to the conclusion that Falvey wasn't capable of building a winner within their payroll restrictions and Falvey came to the conclusion that the Pohlads were never going to give him the huge amount of payroll he'd need to cover up his mistakes and still be a winner, 

    That my friends is the mutual understanding and agreement they arrived at. Period.

    Lets just be clear,  this isn't a mutual decision.   Pohlads told him he was fired and here is your departing package if you agree and this is stated as a mutual parting.   

    33 minutes ago, Blyleven2011 said:

    I'm glad he's gone but the timing isn't quite right , reminds me when our pitching coach left to go back to college coaching ...

    Maybe Zoll will show some guts and add something worthwhile for the lineup  ...

    Did Falvey clash with leadership Tom  , tom trying to be the alpha dog when falvey wouldn't have none of it , falvey wanted to do it all , im reallysurprised he never went to the dugout to manage when we all knew all the yes men had to follow Falvey's plan ...

    Shelton hopefully can manage footloose and fancy free ...

    It's also good for the players ( i hope ) it also allows them to play the game with a Shelton plan and not a falvey plan  , Zoll will have to follow him out the door ( falvey clone ) as soon as a new president of operations is hired and changes GM's ...

    It's a good day for the team and fans , baseball just got alittle more exciting , now the players need to play like professionals and I think they will with nothing holding them back now  ...

     

    I think it’s far more likely that established players will be traded. If ever a GM gets slack to tear it down, it is when he is appointed. 

    Good riddance. If Falvey had a spine at all he would have resigned at the trade deadline instead of agreeing to decimate this team. These guys like Falvey are hired guns only interested in their own career and are temporary while caring fans are permanent. Who’s the next stranger to come in and pretend they know it all and say they love the Twins? (How about all those top of the line pitchers he promised?) The sad thing is their character can’t be to keen if they will work for Pohlad. 

    Tom Pohlad is like the new guy in the grocery store’s hierarchy that comes in and wants to make his mark so he has the guy under him rearrange the location of everything (firesales the best parts) and makes the employees (feckless FO) do all that meaningless extra work only to piss off the customers (fans) because they can’t find anything anymore (a team full of new less talented and cheaper strangers). 
     

    4 hours ago, LA Vikes Fan said:

    You have to wonder what Dereck Shelton is thinking. The guy who he knew in 2019 and who hired him now just got fired. Is he safe and if so, is that just for now? this could rapidly spin out of control unless someone does some serious triage. Here's looking at you, Tom.  

    Jeremy Zoll is the GM and will be the GM, no change there. Shelton is ok.

    5 hours ago, Twins_Fan_in_NJ said:

    I'd like to think this marks a big shift or change in direction (in a good way) but I don't see Zoll doing anything differently - at least not enough to move the needle. Until the franchise (Tom Pohlad) develops a different philosophy, the Twins are kind of stuck in neutral.

    Concur, promoting Zoll and taking over the business side yourself doesn't equate to a big shift. If anything it's pretty much status quo for this organization. 

    5 hours ago, LewFordLives said:

    This organization does everything ass backwards. Don't get me wrong, he needed to go. Now you are trying to hire someone who will knowingly inherit Falvey's mess of a roster and hand picked manager. Who's gonna want this job?

    I'll take it. I have a degree in economics from UNC and a law degree from UNC and have run a successful law firm for 50 years. Plus, I love the Twins. Hey wait a minute, maybe I'd better not do this, since I'm no more qualified to do this than I am to be president of the United States. Hey, wait a minute.... 

    Regardless if any of us like or dislike Falvey. 

    The timing could not be worse. 

    Who knows how the power structure actually works. To my understanding (which isn't worth much) Falvey was in charge of everything from the price of hot dogs to the staffing to the rosters. Everybody answers to Derek. He's not leaving if the staff working for him is insubordinate or disagrees with direction. 

    That leaves only one level above him where direction can be questioned. Sure sounds like we have a directional disagreement at 1 Twins Way because the timing couldn't be worse. 

    I don't know what direction the winds are blowing out of Tom Pohlad and the ownership group. I don't know the direction of the winds that were blowing with Joe Pohlad and I don't know what direction the winds are blowing with Derek Falvey. 

    Is it Derek that wants to go for it? Is it the Pohlads that want to go for it? Someone said we are keeping Joe Ryan and going for it?

    Who is the driving force behind Keeping Ryan and going for it?

    Is that person still in the building? 

    Regardless of the answer... The timing sucks as the Off-season is winding down.

    If they are changing plans on January 30. What a WASTE of October, November, December and 29 days of January.  

    All we can do is watch comes next. Player movement or lack of movement as we head toward Fort Myers. 

    All I know... the club is still lumpy. The club isn't complete. Rob Zoll has to carry on. But what direction Rob? What Direction? Whatever the answer... it must be coming from above. 

    5 hours ago, JD-TWINS said:

    The fact that spending was cut/has been cut at the severe level we’ve seen & then to bitch about the FO’s inability to have an effective roster is nuts!

    They were literally the worst team in baseball after the deadline last year. They've done next to nothing to raise that floor. The roster is pathetic. That doesn't happen only because spending was curbed. The development side has been an abject failure. Poor decision making in trades/FA have compounded the issue, and yes, cutting payroll hurt as well, but this club has missed the postseason 4 of the last 5 years in what's undeniably the worst division in baseball. 

    5 hours ago, SF Twins Fan said:

    What I do wonder is, will they be able to pluck a good candidate from a well-run organization this late into the offseason?  Also, with the Pohlad's still potentially selling after the new CBA comes into effect would someone want this GM spot knowing they may have a new boss in a few years?

    I'll take it.

    22 minutes ago, Pykkman said:

    The dumpster fire started by the Polhads continues to burn.   Causalities mounting.    Fans, players, coaches, front office paying the price.  

    Chaos. We've already got enough chaos in our lives. Even though we love the Twins and want them to win, this is very minor compared to the chaos in our country right now. I will not allow this situation to bother me. I will not.  You folks in Minnesota are especially in my thoughts and prayers, as is our whole country.

    5 hours ago, Richie the Rally Goat said:

    Bingo! From Gleeman via @jharaldson ‘Tom Pohlad says he "will immediately begin a search for a president of business operations who, along with GM Jeremy Zoll, will report to me."‘

    "Editor's Note: An earlier version of this story indicated the team would begin an immediate search for a new president of baseball operations. During his press conference, a reporter asked Pohlad about that search, and Pohlad corrected the record: Zoll will be in charge of baseball ops. The team is not pursuing a replacemeny for Falvey outside the organization at this time."

    I'm too lazy to piece the timeline together. Are they seeking a replacement or simply eliminating the role and putting Zoll in charge? 

    It was time for Falvey to go. It probably should've happened before now, but whatever. Call me a downer, but I think there's a lot of wishcasting going on with regards to Tom Pohlad's motivation(s) right now. I too hope he saw the god awful roster and the piss poor on field performances this club has been turning in, but I also have zero faith in that family giving a **** about the on field product.

    I'm curious whether it was a power struggle and Falvey didn't want to relinquish control of the business side, or maybe it was personal, Idk, either way I kinda doubt it matters. Zoll sliding into Falvey's old chair is just another half measure from an organization feebly attempting to tell us that they don't do half measures and the business is being run by a family that's a walking PR nightmare. 

    Two things can be true at once; I can be glad the Falvey era is over and simultaneously feel zero optimism for this club based on the current power structure. 

    22 minutes ago, KirbyDome89 said:

    "Editor's Note: An earlier version of this story indicated the team would begin an immediate search for a new president of baseball operations. During his press conference, a reporter asked Pohlad about that search, and Pohlad corrected the record: Zoll will be in charge of baseball ops. The team is not pursuing a replacemeny for Falvey outside the organization at this time."

    I'm too lazy to piece the timeline together. Are they seeking a replacement or simply eliminating the role and putting Zoll in charge? 

    Me too, and agreed, my read is they’re going back to a business lead and a GM and eliminating the POBBO

    FINALLY! Both Falvey and Baldelli should have been fired after the epic collapse down the stretch in 2024; not doing so was a big mistake. When Baldelli was ousted last October, Falvey should have been shown the door as well. The Twins have totally wasted this entire off-season, and the timing of this move is very strange, coming just a few weeks before pitchers and catchers report - but better late than never. 

    1 hour ago, Riverbrian said:

    Regardless if any of us like or dislike Falvey. 

    The timing could not be worse. 

    Who knows how the power structure actually works. To my understanding (which isn't worth much) Falvey was in charge of everything from the price of hot dogs to the staffing to the rosters. Everybody answers to Derek. He's not leaving if the staff working for him is insubordinate or disagrees with direction. 

    That leaves only one level above him where direction can be questioned. Sure sounds like we have a directional disagreement at 1 Twins Way because the timing couldn't be worse. 

    I don't know what direction the winds are blowing out of Tom Pohlad and the ownership group. I don't know the direction of the winds that were blowing with Joe Pohlad and I don't know what direction the winds are blowing with Derek Falvey. 

    Is it Derek that wants to go for it? Is it the Pohlads that want to go for it? Someone said we are keeping Joe Ryan and going for it?

    Who is the driving force behind Keeping Ryan and going for it?

    Is that person still in the building? 

    Regardless of the answer... The timing sucks as the Off-season is winding down.

    If they are changing plans on January 30. What a WASTE of October, November, December and 29 days of January.  

    All we can do is watch comes next. Player movement or lack of movement as we head toward Fort Myers. 

    All I know... the club is still lumpy. The club isn't complete. Rob Zoll has to carry on. But what direction Rob? What Direction? Whatever the answer... it must be coming from above. 

    The positional roster is a mess. Almost everyone knows this. The bullpen is a mess. Almost everyone knows this.  Yes what a waste of an offseason. What we don't know is if Falvey's hands were tied to make better moves or if he is extremely incompetent. My honest guess is it's both. What hasn't changed as of today is that this team looks very bad and very poorly put together. 

    OK, just read Dan Hayes' piece in The Athletic.  Very informative, still leaves a little shadow in the corners but pretty clear about the basics, including a great history of the highs and lows of the past three years. Read it if you can find it. 

    Falvey and Tom Pohlad were not going to get along. It sounds like Tom is going to be more hands-on than Falvey was comfortable with, maybe because he likes being his own guy or maybe because Pohlad knows nothing about baseball. In the context of the parting this morning it really doesn't matter much, but what it means for Zoll and the club going forward is quite another matter. 

    There were a couple vague comments in the article that left me unclear what was going on, but it does look like Pohlad is now the one who claims they can win in 2026. That's probably good for fans. OTOH the odd line below about the deadline fire sale seems to indicate that some Pohlad was the one pushing for the sell off. Either it was Joe and he's gone or it was Tom and he's having a change of heart, but either way Falvey sounds a little POed at the constant changes. 

    Quote

    Pohlad described the 2026 season as critical. To regain fans’ trust, Pohlad perhaps naively is insisting the Twins will contend even though the bullpen is only minimally rebuilt after the trades of Jhoan Duran, Griffin Jax, Louis Varland and Brock Stewart. The club’s estimated payroll is $109 million, down from $142 million in 2025. Pohlad said he believes there’s still “room for investment” into the roster between now and Opening Day.

    Faced with another change of direction from ownership after the front office was implored to rip apart the roster before the Aug. 1 trade deadline, Falvey and Pohlad instead began discussions over the past two weeks about the team president’s exit strategy.

    There was no indication of a specific match that started the fire, so more stories may be forthcoming, but this is a case of personalities and direction changes rather than bombshells on the ownership or CBA front.

    It also seemed odd that Baldelli, the large majority of his staff, and even Joe Pohlad was fired from their respective positions and Falvey survived.  We all questioned the idea when Dave St. Peter retired from his position as President of the Twins and Joe gave Falvey St. Peter's position as well.  I saw many comments on this site when Levine and St. Peter left that there's now nowhere for Falvey to hide on his decision-making when it comes to the team.  It does look to me that Joe Pohlad had no clue what he was doing as overseeing the Twins and gave Falvey all of the power without any meaningful oversight. 

    Tom took over just over a month ago.  If he had no knowledge of the situation prior to taking over, it would be reasonable that he would take some time to get up to speed before making major decisions.  From reports coming out of 1 Twins Way (your mileage may vary), Tom called season ticketholders and asked why they did not renew.  He flew to Georgia to talk to Buxton, same to CA for Ryan, and visited Lopez at TwinsFest, similar to what Shelton did when he was hired as the Manager.  It is quite possible that Tom ended up having questions for Falvey about how he was running the team that Falvey could not answer.  If Falvey tried giving Tom one of those same lengthy discussions as he gave to the media and us fans, Tom probably wasn't going to put up with it.  It's possible that Tom came up to the same conclusion that us fans did at least two years ago, that Falvey was in over his head.  Rather than take a demotion, Falvey just left.

    None of that leaves the Pohlads off the hook for blame.  The Pohlads as a group created the problem, but Falvey was not skilled enough to ride the wave through to smooth out the bumps that the Pohlads were creating.  The Correa contract made sense when they were operating at $150M+ payroll.  When Falvey was forced to cut payroll, the downfall started and hamstrung Falvey.  Even if you consider it lip service, Tom even admitted that it was bad business to slash payroll immediately after the most successful season in Twins history in over 20 years.  Falvey did a great job in getting out of the Donaldson contract when it started to look bad.  All this adds up to that Falvey likely needed to go and should have been gone after the season.  It just took a new sheriff in town to make it happen.

     

    Edited by Western SD Fan
    Hit submit before I finished the post.
    47 minutes ago, sweetmusicviola16 said:

    The positional roster is a mess. Almost everyone knows this. The bullpen is a mess. Almost everyone knows this.  Yes what a waste of an offseason. What we don't know is if Falvey's hands were tied to make better moves or if he is extremely incompetent. My honest guess is it's both. What hasn't changed as of today is that this team looks very bad and very poorly put together. 

    This just looks like the ole difference of direction discussion. The timing of it suggests... the difference of opinion wasn't going to resolve and the timing also suggests... it has been festering. This isn't a move you make at this point of the off-season. 

    What ever this was. One reasonable assumption I'm going to make is this. Tom Pohlad is in charge. This is one of those end results where it is declared through action... I'm in Charge

    1 hour ago, sweetmusicviola16 said:

    The positional roster is a mess. Almost everyone knows this. The bullpen is a mess. Almost everyone knows this.  Yes what a waste of an offseason. What we don't know is if Falvey's hands were tied to make better moves or if he is extremely incompetent.

    I think the challenge is there are too many holes to fill mostly due to under development of prospects. Trading Ryan or Lopez or both for top 20 MLB prospects which seems like a reach will not make the team substantially better as there 5 + positions that need serious upgrading and most of these position players from last year are still on the team. Several of these players are best suited for DH and describing them as position players is being generous. 

    1 hour ago, Cris E said:

    OK, just read Dan Hayes' piece in The Athletic.  Very informative, still leaves a little shadow in the corners but pretty clear about the basics, including a great history of the highs and lows of the past three years. Read it if you can find it. 

    Falvey and Tom Pohlad were not going to get along. It sounds like Tom is going to be more hands-on than Falvey was comfortable with, maybe because he likes being his own guy or maybe because Pohlad knows nothing about baseball. In the context of the parting this morning it really doesn't matter much, but what it means for Zoll and the club going forward is quite another matter. 

    There were a couple vague comments in the article that left me unclear what was going on, but it does look like Pohlad is now the one who claims they can win in 2026. That's probably good for fans. OTOH the odd line below about the deadline fire sale seems to indicate that some Pohlad was the one pushing for the sell off. Either it was Joe and he's gone or it was Tom and he's having a change of heart, but either way Falvey sounds a little POed at the constant changes. 

    There was no indication of a specific match that started the fire, so more stories may be forthcoming, but this is a case of personalities and direction changes rather than bombshells on the ownership or CBA front.

    An owner being more hands on and trying to force a "winning," season with one of the worst rosters in baseball seems like a disaster but YMMV. Falvey might have wanted out before too much of the organizational stink got on him, not that he isn't also culpable for the mess that is the Minnesota Twins. 




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