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    Which Twins Utility Infielder Should Stick Around a While?

    The Twins have too many utility infielders on the roster right now. Who has the best chance of sticking around?

    Cody Pirkl
    Image courtesy of © Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images

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    The Twins currently have a revolving door at shortstop, with journeyman utility players they can’t keep for much longer—if for no other reason, then because none of them fit that role well enough to lock it down. Having one such player is understandable, but the Twins are currently rostering three. One is likely to go when Kaelen Culpepper debuts, and the Twins would be wise to get rid of at least one more at a later time to better utilize the 26-man roster. Who has the best chance of sticking around?

    An All-Star for Atlanta in 2023, Arcia has been a true super utilityman, playing all four infield spots in his brief time with the big-league club. He posted a .932 OPS for Saint Paul before his promotion, but has posted a sub-.700 OPS in a small sample, which is in line with his production over the last two seasons.
     
    While Arcia’s defensive flexibility is helpful, it’s worth wondering what else he has to provide at this stage in his career. At 31 years of age, it’s hard to envision him holding onto a role beyond 2026 with the Twins, making him especially expendable if the team continues to fall further under .500. He has also only been trusted a handful of times to start games at shortstop, and if the Twins put him behind Tristan Gray and Ryan Kreidler on the shortstop depth chart, his utility in 2026 is worth questioning. He may be the first to go when Culpepper gets the call.
     
    Tristan Gray
    After winning a bench job in spring training, Gray got off to a hot start in 2026 and has been an above-replacement-level player on the season. He started eating into Royce Lewis’s playing time at third base, where he played regularly until Brooks Lee shifted over full-time. His hot start and handful of clutch hits have carried him, but his slightly below-average .697 OPS is more than acceptable production for a bench player who can fill in at shortstop.
     
    The problem is that Gray doesn’t appear to be a trustworthy option now that he’s been exposed to more playing time up the middle. As bad as Lee was defensively at short, Gray has matched him, with -5 Outs Above Average in a fraction of the time. It’s looking more and more like Gray is not a viable option at shortstop, even as an emergency fill-in. He may get more time since the Twins liked him most out of spring training from this group, but his utility will come into question when the Twins get an everyday shortstop on the roster. He's also leading the majors in a rather dubious category: no one misses by more, on average, when they whiff on a swing.
     
    Ryan Kreidler
    Kreidler has been a pleasant surprise offensively, posting a .761 OPS and already clubbing a career-high 3 homers this season. Brought in as a glove-first utility player, the glove has actually been the disappointment so far. Before 2026, Kreidler was an average or better defender across several infield and outfield spots, including shortstop and center field. At 28 years of age, it’s hard to imagine that Kreidler has suddenly lost a step. It’s more likely that we see things even out for him defensively as the year goes on.
     
    Kreidler’s age and subsequent team control make him the most interesting option to keep on the roster moving forward. If his glove evens out, that alone may be enough to utilize some of his five remaining seasons of team control. If his bat can keep up this pace to any degree, he becomes a valuable player in the Willi Castro vein. This long-term upside, however remote reaching it may be, should be enough for Kreidler to be the last man standing if the Twins decide to purge their current veteran super-utility group and look toward the future.
     
    The Twins can’t continue to waste 26-man roster spots the way they have been, especially if they continue to fall further out of contention. Lewis himself is sliding into this role, too, further muddying the picture. If their sights turn toward 2027 and beyond, the current super-utility infielder group should be the first place to look when it comes to swapping younger players in. Which, if any, of these three names should stick around?

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    12 hours ago, Vanimal46 said:

    There’s always a reason to wait, and never any urgency to get the dirty work done developing young players. There’s a reason why this team will miss the playoffs 5 out of the last 6 years. Biggest reason of all is holding back top prospects so they can pretend it’s a top farm system year after year. 

    The main reason why they continue to miss the playoffs is because most of their prospects have disappointed to some degree - not a single Falvey draft pick has ever even made it to an All-Star game. I agree that they have been slow to promote their hitting prospects, but it's not the root to why the team has stunk most of these last 6 years.

    57 minutes ago, Riverbrian said:

    To answer the question. You send down either Gray or Kreidler because they have options. Our infield depth was not properly addressed in the off-season and we have nobody beyond Culpepper who is ready for a call up and if you call up Culpepper, we will need these guys in the future. Keep your depth until the team trades some players and acquires younger infielders close to major league ready to replace them. Acquiring younger infielders should have been a priority this off-season. The infield depth wasn't impressive in October, November, December, January, February or March it it was addressed with Gray, Kreidler and Arcia and look... Here they all are on the 26 man roster. It was all rather predictable and I'll say it. No matter if you percieve a player to be bench or a backup. There is no such thing. The team needing Gray, Kreidler and Arcia was completely predictable because it's the same story we have all watched every single year.  

    The Twins left Fort Myers healthy. They had the 26 man chosen all neat and clean in a pretty little package with roles assigned for everyone. The two first games of the season showed the plan and the pretty little package of exact roles for everyone. 

    Bell, Keaschall, Lewis, Lee, Buxton and Wallner were 6 full time players. 

    Platoons: 1B Clemens vs RH and Caratini vs LH -- LF Larnach vs RH and Martin vs LH

    Jeffers: Primary Catcher - Caratini Secondary

    Gray: Occasional rest day backup against Right handed starters at 2B, 3B and SS. I heard Shelton say that Gray that the tiebreaker in the selection of Gray was his left handed bat with all right handed bats. 

    Outman: Late game defensive replacement for Larnach, Pinch Runner and Buxton rest day. 

    That's all 13. Defined roles for all 13. 11 of the 13 with starts planned either full time or platoon. Two that were rostered with the hope that they would not be needed for anything other than occasional fill in.

    This plan could work if everyone chosen performs to the expectation that awarded them every day playing time in the first place. This plan could work if everyone stays healthy. The problem is that I don't recall a season for any of the 30 teams where everybody performed to expectation or stayed healthy. Those two things never happen and the pretty little package coming out of spring training was never going to last the month of April and now the guys that you rostered Gray and Outman are either being counted on or released because they were never trusted to play a larger role in the first place.      

    I've said this multiple times and I'll say it again. You need to roster 26 players who can play and compete with each other because you don't know who is going to struggle or who is going to get hurt. Injuries are not an excuse because they happen frequently, poor play is not an excuse because it happens often enough to all 30 teams. You need to plan for that... not a pretty little package math'd together that won't even last the month of April. 

    If you roster someone, they will be needed. You can't hide them. I know there are some who disagree with what I'm saying.

    To those who disagree. Tristran Gray with significant playing time was inevitable when he was placed on the 26 man roster. Outman was always going to be jettisoned off the roster if they didn't trust him to play full time when needed so there was no point to roster him in the first place. Kriedler was always just a phone call away and so was Arcia with a little 40 man roster maneuvering.

    And what do you know. All 3 are on the 26 man roster and nobody should be surprised and we still need them even after Culpepper is called up.   

     

    I love this. The MLB roster is there to play and the manager is going to use the guys at hand to try to win. If you have people around who shouldn't be there then he's going to have trouble. When Buxton was missing half each season then the CF caddy needed to be good enough to play three days a week. But he's been healthier of late and so the quality of his backups has dropped.

    To put it another way, when Earl Weaver was asked where his backup SS was and he'd say "Rochester" which was his AAA team at the time. Over the past two years Outman and Margot should have been left in St Paul.  And now that Shelton has been handed a handful of scarecrows instead of a full infield it's clear that the team is missing some important parts. 

    19 minutes ago, stringer bell said:

    Kreidler can't be expected to hit anywhere near league average. He's hit some long balls and a few other extra base hits to make his OPS look pretty good, but it is almost certain that won't last. He's the best fielder of the bunch and is a pretty accomplished outfielder as well as playing the infield spots. Given the composition and fielding ability of the current Twins infield, I would keep the best defender and that is Kreidler. 

    With each tough day Luke Keaschall has, the probability of him going back to the minors increases and then ther could be room for a second utility guy.

    To that I would reply that Clemens or Lewis are already here looking for roles and they can take over at 2B. 

    I totally agree with keeping Kreidler though. 

    5 minutes ago, Cris E said:

    To that I would reply that Clemens or Lewis are already here looking for roles and they can take over at 2B. 

    I totally agree with keeping Kreidler though. 

    It appears that the Twins are trying to shoehorn Lewis into the lineup every day and there isn't room for Clemens, Keaschall and Lewis unless Lewis is playing third base or one of those guys is in the outfield. 

    2 hours ago, Danchat said:

    The main reason why they continue to miss the playoffs is because most of their prospects have disappointed to some degree - not a single Falvey draft pick has ever even made it to an All-Star game. I agree that they have been slow to promote their hitting prospects, but it's not the root to why the team has stunk most of these last 6 years.

    It really feels like there is a rot in the development process that has to be rooted out.  Other teams have players ride the wave of success/failure....but we never have our wave crest for more than an ever-so-brief glimpse at the outset of a player's career.  

    Kriedler is who I would keep. He has 5 years of team control left and he sets the highest floor defensively. He can backup shortstop and center field best out of any options on the team. 

    Gray would be my first pick to go. He has been pretty terrible defensively and his clutch moments are unlikely to be sustainable. 

    I like Arcia. He has a lower OPS but a decent batting average. Singles are still hits. Plus hes a better defender than gray. I'd keep him until the roster spot is needed. 

    I'd keep Kreidler of the three; the defense historically has been quite good, he can play a very credible CF to go with the infield, and while I don't expect the offense to be great, he can at least run into a homer from time to time.

    But it's predicated on calling up Culpepper. When they're ready to bring him up, I'd send Gray down. At some point I'd move on from Arcia for one of our OF down in AAA.

    While I thought the praise of Kreidler's defense by the guest PBP guy was a little over the top, he is the top defensive option at shortstop in the system above Cedar Rapids. Gray is giving away as many runs as he produces at shortstop, so it would appear to be Culpepper or bust in the near term. With Lewis and Clemens as options at second base and Lewis and Lee at third, I don't see much of a role for Gray when (if) Culpepper is recalled. 




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