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    What to Make of the Minnesota Twins' 82-Win Projection from FanGraphs?

    The statistical model surprisingly views the Twins, in their current depleted state, as a borderline playoff contender heading into 2026. Amid the negative vibes surrounding this team's outlook, it's a piece of context worth chewing on.

    Nick Nelson
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    A couple weeks ago, Jake Mailhot of FanGraphs presented the site's very preliminary power rankings for the 2026 MLB season, using "an elegant ranking format that measures teams’ relative strength and is very reactive to recent performance." The idea was to provide a benchmark on where each roster stands heading into the most active stretch of the offseason.

    Many Twins fans (including myself) were downright shocked to see Minnesota ranked 12th on the list with a projected record of 82-80. Obviously that's nothing to write home about, but it's roughly 10 rankings slots and 10 wins higher than I have set my own expectations personally. "Fringe playoff contender" feels a lot more like a best-case scenario to me than a median outcome. But maybe I'm being too harsh?

    To be clear, these types of predictive forecasts and rankings aren't necessarily all that meaningful. The Twins have repeatedly fallen short of their projections from FanGraphs, including by an MLB-high 14 wins this past season. But, as Aaron Gleeman notes at The Athletic, these projections can "provide useful league-wide and narrative-free context" when assessing the club's relative strength. In other words, objective data like this can help us get out of our own heads.

    So let's take a closer look. Why does a system like this one view the Twins more favorably than many fans might? And further, if we treat the premise as valid — that Minnesota enters this offseason as a .500-ish team with room to grow — how much should that insight guide the front office's approach?

    A proven talent nucleus remains in place (for now)
    I find it easy to get lost in the disposable assets littering the Twins' 40-man roster, and the massive question marks surrounding guys like Royce Lewis and Brooks Lee. But what this FanGraphs ranking really brings to light is the value of Minnesota's remaining contingent of established star talent. Few other teams can boast a core trio matching the caliber of Byron Buxton, Pablo Lopez and Joe Ryan. It helps to have your best players at positions like center field and starting pitcher, where impact is maximized. 

    Of course, all three have seen their names bandied about in trade rumors. The concentration of projected value in these players alone underscores how much the team's fortunes will be affected if they deal one or more — presuming they aren't getting back similar present-day value, which is a tough needle to thread.

    ESPN's own projections view the Twins a bit less favorably, but still not terribly, at 17th in the majors. "If the Twins' roster trends even younger and cheaper," writes Bradford Doolittle, "this ranking will tumble accordingly."

    Projections are more about form than function
    Does a model like FanGraphs account specifically for the fact that the Twins currently have no viable late-inning relievers? Not really. It just sees an overall pitching staff that is undeniably deep on quality, and assumes the logistics will work themselves out.

    In real life, we know it's not that simple. You're just not going to win without at least a decent bullpen and right now that's the most difficult gap to envision getting filled. The Twins have so many late-game roles to address and so little to work with. Even if you assume a couple of immediately successful starter transitions, and a bounce-back year from Cole Sands, the Twins are still probably short of a dependable all-around unit.

    Similarly, projection systems that are looking at raw performance forecasts might not account for the challenges posed by an overabundance of left-handed hitting corner outfielders. But maybe this example poses an opportunity: flipping one of their redundant bats for relief help from other rosters. 

    There's work to be done
    In the power rankings from FanGraphs, the Twins were listed above several larger market teams — Rangers, Cubs, Orioles, Astros, Giants, etc. — that are very likely to leapfrog them through a more aggressive course of action this offseason. 

    Unless the Twins surprise us by focusing more on adding that subtracting, they're bound to fall behind in the hot-stove reshuffle. Admittedly I've found myself wondering whether it even makes sense to push much, given all they lost at the deadline last year and all the structural issues plaguing this roster. If the ESPN ranking (17th) is more accurate than the FanGraphs ranking (12th), is it even logical to try and keep pace with the lower-middle of the pack versus blowing it all up and supplementing the farm for future efforts?

    These are the weighty questions hanging over the Twins and their front office as the Winter Meetings get rolling and the offseason action accelerates. Up to this point there has been little indication that Minnesota intends to lean into a competitive approach, aside from what Derek Falvey has positioned as wishful thinking at the mercy of ownership. But if you put any stock into the projection system from FanGraphs, it's possible the Twins don't have THAT much work to do in order to become a credible threat in 2026.

     

     

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    This team is closer than almost everybody on TD thinks or feels. If the Twins do this right we could be actually encouraged by the end of the year. I know that many feel I just said the dumbest sentence ever but this team isn't as far off as you think. 

    Of course the off-season isn't over and there is plenty of time to get further away before 2026 starts and a nagging feeling that they won't do it right when the front office really needs to get it right. 

     

    20 minutes ago, Riverbrian said:

    This team is closer than almost everybody on TD thinks or feels. If the Twins do this right we could be actually encouraged by the end of the year. I know that many feel I just said the dumbest sentence ever but this team isn't as far off as you think. 

    Of course the off-season isn't over and there is plenty of time to get further away before 2026 starts and a nagging feeling that they won't do it right when the front office really needs to get it right. 

     

    Thanks River. I needed to read your post. I agree with you.

    Nick, It is time to put on our sanguine hats and send positive vibes to each other here on TD. I pledge to do my part. Let's get the band back together. Go Twins ! My team. Win or lose. 

    I actually think with good owners and FO we'd be in a really good place. A very good core group of players on relatively low salaries. A very low payroll combined with good owners would open the door for some really good additions to the team, either through free agency or trade. 

    Sadly we have the complete opposite and will probably trade Ryan, Lopez and Buxton for random prospects or more Outman/Roden type players and crowds will crater to below 10,000 a game.

    The projections assume Ryan & Lopez are here in 2026, since they're on the roster. They assume regression to the mean for veteran players, so guys with down seasons like Wallner or Lewis will be projected to have a return to form. It doesn't care about inexperience in late-inning roles for bullpen pitchers, only what they might be able to do statistically in some role without presuming that they'll be better or worse in lower or higher leverage roles.

    But these projections are often a reasonable evaluation of the overall talent level of a team. It's not that hard to quint and see the opportunity for this team to bounce back quickly and stop sucking. It's just hard for anyone around here not to believe that our terrible owners are going to force a trade of Lopez/Ryan/Buxton, or that we're going to continue to have bad luck with injuries, or our young players will not take a leap forward when needed.

    Pessimism reigns around here because ownership has put such a black cloud over the fandom. (and the tone-deaf front office hasn't done enough to justify their apparent job security)

    14 minutes ago, UK Twin said:

    I actually think with good owners and FO we'd be in a really good place. A very good core group of players on relatively low salaries. A very low payroll combined with good owners would open the door for some really good additions to the team, either through free agency or trade. 

    Sadly we have the complete opposite and will probably trade Ryan, Lopez and Buxton for random prospects or more Outman/Roden type players and crowds will crater to below 10,000 a game.

    I kind of agree with you, but I do still have some HOPE that the front office finds some important support from that secret new investors group.  

     

    These projections are as accurate as if I sat with a die and rolled it over and over and kept track of how many times the numbers were odd or even. This is just something to fill the offseason especially for teams like the twins that seem content to watch the other teams trade and sign. For me as I try to grasp modern baseballs soul I see the bullpen having become the key to success. With our Ryan and Lopez starts we can win the five inning game but unfortunately games go nine. We have young players with potential, but potential doesn't win games. Royce had great potential and started out amazing but now we all question whether he'll regain that form and production at any point so I look at those projections and basically ignore them. If you hadn't written this essay I would have just passed on fan graphs and ESPN and all the other projectors. 2/3 of the way through spring training projection start to have more validity as we see rookies free agents trades shape the team and what it will be during the season. But at least you gave me something to read today

    The trade market so far this year has been weak - not great returns for established talent.  The pending 2027 strike might be a good part of the reason.  TDers, like myself, who hoped we’d be getting a haul of top 100 in trades this off-season look like they are going to be disappointed. 

    So, with trade conditions as they are, the FO will take these FanGraph predictions to heart and roll the dice on ‘26.  So the TDers who want to keep Buxton, Lopez and Ryan should take heart - you very well could see them in Twins uniforms on Opening Day. 

    Its not a terrible strategy if the return for any of those three isn’t a pretty much sure-fired (as much as any player can be) contributor in ‘28 and beyond.

    However, don’t expect any big additions to this roster to bolster the probabilities of success - the penny pinching is not going away.

    With only one above average major leaguer (the oft hurt Buxton) and one average major leaguer (the “has to be traded by the deadline” Jeffers) among our position players, as well as possibly the worst bullpen on paper in the majors, all being led by the proven managerial genius Shelton, the smart money has the under on 82 wins - and it’s not even close. 

    56 minutes ago, Riverbrian said:

    This team is closer than almost everybody on TD thinks or feels. If the Twins do this right we could be actually encouraged by the end of the year. I know that many feel I just said the dumbest sentence ever but this team isn't as far off as you think. 

    Of course the off-season isn't over and there is plenty of time to get further away before 2026 starts and a nagging feeling that they won't do it right when the front office really needs to get it right. 

     

    We have been picked the past few years to win the central and that hasn't happened  , the past few years we were picked to have one of the best bullpen,  now thats gone ...

    The offense hasn't shown up , as of now I don't know if we are a 500 team to carry us to that mark ...

    To many uncertainties yet remain in the off season  , trades or additions , right now I still feel we are going to trade off more valued talent,  we might get a more substantial direction of their plan after the winter meetings but until us fans ( which are invisible to the owners and FO personal ) I have no choice but to believe this organization is flawed to contruct a consistent winning team ... ,,,

    1 hour ago, Nick Nelson said:

    Does a model like FanGraphs account specifically for the fact that the Twins currently have no viable late-inning relievers?

    What does a viable late inning reliever look like? The Mariners had a long stretch of trading away their late inning relievers including Sewald their closer in a year they were buyers. The Brewers trade away their late inning relievers as they become expensive. Neither sign established viable late inning relievers. The Guardians don’t sign viable late inning relievers.

    Look at their projected bullpens. All 24 of these players were acquired in prospects in trade or waiver claims or DFA pick ups or low draft choices or  minor league free agents signings or minor trades. They do not use any prospect resources or free agent dollars to build their pens. There is one player of the 24 with a significant contract in Munoz and his AAV of 7 million. I should not that Clase comes in next with a 5 year 20 million dollar contract (AAV of 4 million) though he is not on the projected roster.

    1 hour ago, Nick Nelson said:

    It just sees an overall pitching staff that is undeniably deep on quality, and assumes the logistics will work themselves out.

    Maybe this is how the Guardians, Mariners and Brewers do it. They gather a bunch of good inexpensive arms and it works itself out.

    Currently, they only have 1 projection updated for 2026, and they will add a few more once those people run their numbers so this will change. 

    Looking at the players, they love Keaschall, have Lewis bounce back and have Lee being an average player. On the pitching side, Zebby, Bradley, and SWR are all solid starters, and they have Festa as our best reliever with Sands close behind.

    We are going to live or die by our youth this year.

    I’ll take 82 wins!! It’s winning record!!! Remember we are a small town team that isn’t supposed to beat the big city teams!!! Also secret ownership group is former twins players. Can’t wait for new season!!! Let’s go twins!!!

    Thought provoking article Nick.  On one hand, our deep-seated (and well-deserved) disdain for ownership and management has us convinced that the sky is falling (it might be, but that’s not a sure thing either).  On the other, a projection like this gives me hope that things aren’t as bad as they seem.  A little objectivity will do that for you sometimes.  

    My hope is that ownership/management takes this to heart and finds some quarters in the seat cushions to add to this team in meaningful places.  Nobody can make this team World Series contenders, but reasonably competitive isn’t outside the realm of possibilities.  

    I know I am in the minority on this, but I don’t think that the Twins should be tearing down this team further.  I lived through several periods of the dark days in the 1970’s, 1980’s and 1990’s.  It wasn’t pretty or fun to watch Ron Coomer be the best player on the team.  Let’s not do that again.  

    I'm sorry, but I don't see an "overall pitching staff that is undeniably deep on quality". I see Ryan and Lopez. Ryan has been good, but always has a problem finishing the year. Last year it was a virus. Before that, a shoulder strain. Before that a groin strain. Now Lopez is coming off an injury plagued season. Ober seems to wear down every year and now he has lost velocity that he didn't have a lot of to begin with. SWR is very good at home and terrible on the road. After that comes, Matthews, Bradley, Abel, Festa, Raya, Prielipp, Soto, etc, who are all so promising that people want to move most of them to the bullpen. Speaking of the bullpen...on second thought, I'd rather not.

    All it does is remind you that computer projections are flawed and only a conversation starter. No computer should ever make a decision, for no computer can ever understand reality, much less know the future. 

    BTW it's a good thing that our entire economy is based on AI now. What could go wrong?! 

    2 hours ago, Blyleven2011 said:

    We have been picked the past few years to win the central and that hasn't happened  , the past few years we were picked to have one of the best bullpen,  now thats gone ...

    The offense hasn't shown up , as of now I don't know if we are a 500 team to carry us to that mark ...

    To many uncertainties yet remain in the off season  , trades or additions , right now I still feel we are going to trade off more valued talent,  we might get a more substantial direction of their plan after the winter meetings but until us fans ( which are invisible to the owners and FO personal ) I have no choice but to believe this organization is flawed to contruct a consistent winning team ... ,,,

    It's hard to feel optimistic given everything that has transpired. 

    I wouldn't even call my statement "Closer than we think" optimism in itself... it's just going to sound optimistic when it is placed next to the general overall feeling that most of us are holding right now. 

    But I believe... at worst... there is nowhere to go but up and at best... if the Twins do this right and put every ounce of energy into finding young offensive talent we can find a decent offensive team with some athleticism from players hungry to prove themselves and it may partially reveal itself by the all-star break if not sooner. I'm simply not afraid of youth. 

    When it comes to doing this right. I'm not afraid of youth but not all of it is going to pan out... some may struggle hard so if the Twins take the approach of running multiple options through. They'll find offensive talent because they will find players who exceed expectation along with some that disappoint and they can adjust accordingly. It's all about the accumulation of talent and the commitment to let it grow. Martin, Roden and Outman are going to let us know and the options behind them are breathing down their necks. We just gotta find the answer for SS and 1B so we can provide sufficient numbers to run through the infield positions and pressure Lewis and Lee so they can't suck the life out of the team with .600 OPS performance. 

    It won't take much to reach the level of the past two years. Offense has been our primary problem, station to station averageness on offense has been our primary problem. We have the chance to do some things on the bases now, we have higher ceilings to utilize and strive for potenially greater than the Ty France plug in's. 23rd in runs scored isn't a high bar to clear. We have the chance now to not only match it but exceed it.  

    I like our starting pitching depth. I know it doesn't excite some but I like the depth and potential of it. I think Matthews, Bradley and Abel are live impressive arms. I think you can even move Ryan and the starting pitching can still keep us in ball games.    

    I have no answer for the bullpen because it was completely destroyed other than saying a bullpen can be built from multiple directions and be functional. It doesn't have to be the best in baseball... it can be average. and the team can survive. However... If you look at the best bullpens in baseball by actual performance. They consist of a lot of "who are these guys". They don't all look like the Padres with names we have heard of. This is where I'd like to see the Twins spend some money and add some converted young starters with some gas and get a couple of trade throw in's and maybe... just maybe... it won't be the Hatch nightmare post deadline.    

    How would the Twins front office do this wrong? Make this take longer and the nagging thought that I worry about? They will do it wrong by continuing the practice of trying to Frankenstein things together. They need to run 26 players full speed at the problem at all times. They will do it wrong by wasting 26 man roster space on specialists thinking that they are a late pinch running guy away from winning ball games instead of running 26 players full speed at the problem. They will do it wrong thinking that they can make a platoon combo out of Roden and Martin to Frankenstein things together because you will just kill the development of both as you continue the practice of strip mining your prospects for parts.

    The front office can flat out F this up by thinking that they... the front office can fix this with math. Instead of letting the players fix it by demonstrating that they want major league jobs. The front office just needs to go on a talent accumulation quest, flood this thing with options and get out of the way and let the success failure ratio fix it.  

     

    To my knowledge, the teams that consistently have quality cheap bullpens have a couple things working for them that the Twins do not.  One, they are replacing one or two each year, not trying to replace the entire thing all at once.  Two, they develop a steady stream of these young quality arms so they're able to reliably make those replacements constantly.  Even as injuries inevitably arise during the year, they have quality depth to fall back on.  There's a reason they targeted a bunch of young AAA-ish arms with a lot of their trades last deadline - there was a hole in their org chart in that area in terms of healthy upside, especially looking ahead to a post Ryan/Lopez era.

    These projections are based on WAR, which is a context-neutral stat.  If your bullpen's WPA is worse relative to its WAR, then that's an easy recipe for coming up short of your win totals.  Unless you think Sands/Topa/Orze/etc are going to magically become reliable high-leverage weapons this year, or they're actually going to use some of their top young arms immediately in the bullpen instead of somehow finding a way to evaluate like 8 young guys as major league starters all at once, that seems like a fairly likely outcome for this bunch

    Gleeman recently noted that they've undershot their Fangraphs win projections in four of the last five years.  And you can't really blame last year's underachievement on the trade deadline since they were already on pace to underachieve before the trades.  That could just be statistical noise, or it could be some characteristics of the club that cause an inherent overestimation.  Does fWAR for pitching (which I don't love) overrate their pitchers?  Was Rocco really that bad?  Who knows.  But it doesn't exactly fill me with a ton of optimism

    2 hours ago, Riverbrian said:

    This team is closer than almost everybody on TD thinks or feels. If the Twins do this right we could be actually encouraged by the end of the year. I know that many feel I just said the dumbest sentence ever but this team isn't as far off as you think. 

    Of course the off-season isn't over and there is plenty of time to get further away before 2026 starts and a nagging feeling that they won't do it right when the front office really needs to get it right. 

     

    In a bubble, I agree with your first sentence. Strong SP (which the Twins currently have) goes a long way in a weak division. But with ownership content to be just competitive enough to keep the fans interested, they will not make the necessary financial investment to improve this team.

    That being said, I am more convinced than ever that there is a big blow up coming.  I do not expect to see Lopez, Ryan, Buxton, or Jeffers on the roster come Spring Training.

    12 minutes ago, Fire Dan Gladden said:

    In a bubble, I agree with your first sentence. Strong SP (which the Twins currently have) goes a long way in a weak division. But with ownership content to be just competitive enough to keep the fans interested, they will not make the necessary financial investment to improve this team.

    That being said, I am more convinced than ever that there is a big blow up coming.  I do not expect to see Lopez, Ryan, Buxton, or Jeffers on the roster come Spring Training.

    My opinion of course... but I don't think the owners should make a necessary financial investment this off-season. Make the necessary financial investment when they have found some players so they know exactly where to spend that investment. 

    The most hopeless feeling I had the past two years since the death of the RSN money was knowing that the team was out of money. I don't have to look at the books to know they were out of money and they have not been producing offensive farm talent... actually not even trying in my opinion. They signed Ty France to play 1B everyday because they didn't develop even Ty France level talent. Teams don't do that unless they are out of financial wiggle room and they don't believe in their farm.  

    That isn't the case right now. This team can add... payroll is as low as it's been since Falvey arrived... they just shouldn't do it this off-season... other than spend on bullpen because the bullpen was... well you know.   

    They don't need to completely tear this thing down and make this longer. Let 2026 happen... and let's see what the team looks like at the end of the year and then strategically invest in one or two bigger free agents not a pile of little one year guys. 

    They can do this... Will they? That's the million dollar question or the projected 90 million dollar question.   

    The projection is (I guess) a reminder we have some pieces, and not worth much more since those pieces may (or may not) be gone by ST. One of the main sources of gloom in Twinsland is how deeply vested too many got in the ownership and possible sale. I frankly don't get that; as far as I'm concerned an owner needs to provide decent resources, and the less I know about them and hear about/from them the  happier I am. And the younger Pohlads have (at least in the past) provided decent resources within the context of the division. After that it is up to the baseball side to perform.

    This team currently has enough to compete for our division; without making a move you can have a 'pen of Prielipp, Festa, Orza, Sands, Funderburk, Topa, and Klein on a budget of under $90 million (with several strong arms in St Paul as backup for both the rotation and the bullpen). We also have some serious hitting on tap (Emma, Gonzalez, Jenkins), and if people are so hung up on what we lost (which really was Duran, Jax, Varland, and a bunch of expiring contracts), many of those like Castro and Bader are available right now on the FA pile. Yep, things may change, and yep, a bunch of things have to go right, but that is pretty much the same thing you can say about most teams that aren't the Dodgers. 

    Chin up peeps, rub some dirt on the spot that hurts, and let's play ball.

    1 hour ago, jorgenswest said:

    What does a viable late inning reliever look like? The Mariners had a long stretch of trading away their late inning relievers including Sewald their closer in a year they were buyers. The Brewers trade away their late inning relievers as they become expensive. Neither sign established viable late inning relievers. The Guardians don’t sign viable late inning relievers.

    Look at their projected bullpens. All 24 of these players were acquired in prospects in trade or waiver claims or DFA pick ups or low draft choices or  minor league free agents signings or minor trades. They do not use any prospect resources or free agent dollars to build their pens. There is one player of the 24 with a significant contract in Munoz and his AAV of 7 million. I should not that Clase comes in next with a 5 year 20 million dollar contract (AAV of 4 million) though he is not on the projected roster.

    Once again... you knock it out of the park. 

    A closer is created by giving someone the closer role. Yes they need to get the job done but Duran was created by giving him the closer role. We didn't need to spend 16 million for a year of Kenley Jansen. 

      

    3 hours ago, Riverbrian said:

    This team is closer than almost everybody on TD thinks or feels.

     

    I really want to believe this.  But logic keeps getting in the way.  How does worst team in baseball + a few scrap heap pickups (in the best case scenario)OR a further selloff as is being rumored = "closer than almost everybody thinks"?  I just don't understand.  I can see a healthier Lopez being worth a few more wins...otherwise what could be different about 26 than in 25?  Doesn't this feel like doing the same thing and expecting different results?

    Help me understand, o wise one!

    Fangraphs?  Seriously?  What a joke.  Your article is good but if you are suggesting it gives us something to chew on i say be careful you might choke.  And I hope people that throw up like to do so because that is what's likely to happen if you swallow it.  I want them to do well.  Ive followed Tyrone Twins for many decades and will continue to do so.  But for once I'm not buying all the jope and hype out there anymore especially from Falvey.  It's been happening for years.

    1 hour ago, jorgenswest said:

    What does a viable late inning reliever look like? The Mariners had a long stretch of trading away their late inning relievers including Sewald their closer in a year they were buyers. The Brewers trade away their late inning relievers as they become expensive. Neither sign established viable late inning relievers. The Guardians don’t sign viable late inning relievers.

    Look at their projected bullpens. All 24 of these players were acquired in prospects in trade or waiver claims or DFA pick ups or low draft choices or  minor league free agents signings or minor trades. They do not use any prospect resources or free agent dollars to build their pens. There is one player of the 24 with a significant contract in Munoz and his AAV of 7 million. I should not that Clase comes in next with a 5 year 20 million dollar contract (AAV of 4 million) though he is not on the projected roster.

    Maybe this is how the Guardians, Mariners and Brewers do it. They gather a bunch of good inexpensive arms and it works itself out.

    More likely CLE, SEA and MILW are far better at evaluating talent then TC.

    The deadline trade massacre shouldn't be seen as one thing inasmuch as the trading away of the entire BP was the real issue. I don't see a lot of people complaining about trading away Bader or Castro.

    The idea that the Twins could simply put together an effective BP in 2026 essentially from scratch is the main cause of current pessimism. Especially when they had some proven arms in the BP with multiple years of control remaining.

    Add  on to  that the reasonable expectation that the Twins might execute part II of their reset by trading away Buxton, Lopez, Ryan and Jeffers thereby eliminating any hope of a competitive season in 2026.

    Drawing those conclusions doesn't make me or anyone else less of a Twins fan.  

    1 hour ago, Peter said:

    I’ll take 82 wins!! It’s winning record!!! Remember we are a small town team that isn’t supposed to beat the big city teams!!! Also secret ownership group is former twins players. Can’t wait for new season!!! Let’s go twins!!!

    3.75 million people isn't exactly small town, but Minnesotans like to think that they are underdogs. Underdog was a funny cartoon.

    All the discussion of trading our three best players is a downer, for sure. What needs to be remembered is that the team was abysmal from the All Star Break through the end of the year and the team had better than average luck in terms of injuries. Ironically, the team was more fun to watch from mid August through September than it was from April to the All Star break save for a two weeks.

    Thus, an evaluation needed to be made of the roster and not all hope can be dumped on fab campaigns from Jenkins, Rodriguez, Gonzalez, Culpepper, and a half dozen inexperienced pitchers. A roster that is slow and defensively challenged needs some adjustments. Just one example - if Wallner is an important bat put him at DH only and part with those guys who are also DH's, like Julien and Larnach. There are opportunities to trade. We have seen big trades (Rangers-Mets) and smaller trades (Red Sox-Pirates) already this offseason. Possibilities exist that do not include losing Buxton, Ryan, and Lopez. 




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