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    Who Will Be The Minnesota Twins' Closer in 2026?

    The Twins had a handful of candidates to lead their bullpen next year before trading away all of them at the deadline. Now they'll be drawing from a pool of total unknowns.

    Nick Nelson
    Image courtesy of Bruce Kluckhohn, Nick Wosika, Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images

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    Through all of the ups and downs the Twins have experienced in the past 25 years or so — the many changes in managers, front office makeup and team quality — one thing has remained relatively constant: the presence of at least one All-Star caliber fixture at the back end of the bullpen.

    From Eddie Guardado to Joe Nathan to Glen Perkins to Taylor Rogers to Jhoan Duran, the franchise has had a remarkable run of top-tier closers anchoring the relief corps, providing stability in the ninth inning even when the bullpens and teams around them have wobbled.

    Heading into the 2026 season, the Twins bullpen — and especially the back end of it — looks as wide-open as any time in memory. As they look to reconstruct essentially from scratch, the front office needs to identify a foundational cornerstone they can build around. Right now they are short on credible candidates, but that's not to say they have none.

    Here's a look forward at potential names in the mix to take over as Minnesota's top late-inning option in 2026.

    Cole Sands
    He's the de facto choice, since he's the only carryover from the current relief corps with any real track record of success. If Sands could recapture his form from last year (3.28 ERA, 2.63 FIP) he'd be a fine choice as closer at least in the interim. But he hasn't been close to that form in 2025, at least not regularly. His ERA is up to 4.63 on the season thanks to a month of September in which he has allowed 10 earned runs in 11 innings. Sands turned 28 in July and is arbitration-eligible for the first time next year. 

    Taj Bradley
    This is the one I've got my eyes on. It's possible, or maybe likely, that the Twins won't rush into converting Bradley to the bullpen after giving up multiple years of Griffin Jax for him. Maybe that's the right course of action. But man, I dunno. In spite of how hard he throws, Bradley just hasn't been able to sustain any kind of success in a big-league rotation, with a 4.91 ERA in nearly 400 innings, and he's looked worse than ever since coming to Minnesota. Why not just flip the switch now, prepare him as a reliever next spring, and hope you've got your triple-digit Duran replacement on hand for the next four seasons?

    David Festa
    His career outlook is in jeopardy following a thoracic outlet syndrome diagnosis, but Festa expressed optimism that he can come back healthy next year and get back on track after being limited to just 53 innings this season. He's got the stuff of a late-inning reliever and it increasingly appears he does not have the durability of a 5+ inning starter. He'll be 26 next spring without much of a workload baseline. I actually think the decision to transition him into a relief role, if he's healthy, is almost a given at this point. But I'm gonna be worried about that shoulder until I see him back on the mound and letting loose uninhibited.

    Zebby Matthews
    Matthews is another guy with a clearly high-caliber, high-velocity arsenal who has battled shoulder issues as well as performance struggles this season. Through 16 starts and 80 innings, he has a 5.56 ERA and 1.49 WHIP, with flashes of excellence muddied by bouts of inconsistency. He has a much smaller sample of lackluster output as a starter compared to Bradley, and the injury concerns aren't as severe as Festa, so I would guess the Twins aren't quite as ready to think about a relief route for Matthews, but the vision for him as a high-powered closer or setup man is pretty easy to project.

    Connor Prielipp
    Healthy at last, Prielipp was just named the Twins' minor-league pitcher of the year. His numbers were unspectacular on paper — 1-9 with a 4.03 ERA and 1.51 WHIP in 83 innings — but very impressive for a pitcher who'd been limited to just 30 total innings since being drafted in 2022. The lefty struck out 27% of opposing hitters and finished in Triple-A. Given his long injury history and his age (25 in January), there's some urgency to just get Prielipp up the big leagues; he's the epitome of a "don't waste the bullets" case. Promoting him into a relief role would seemingly be the only practical way to get a full season from him in the majors, but he's got what it takes to thrive in a late-inning role.

    Free Agent Veteran
    There's a good chance the Twins won't want to turn the keys in the ninth over to any of these guys, at least not initially. We've seen them turn to free agency for short-term closer fixes in the past, although it hasn't gone especially well with the likes of Alex Colome and Fernandy Rodney. I wouldn't expect the Twins front office to aim remotely high if they seek a free agent closer. Emilio Pagán will be available among others. (Oh boy, did I just speak that into existence?)

    Looking forward to 2026, who would you like to see take over as Minnesota's bullpen leader? Did I miss any credible candidates? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

     

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    On 9/26/2025 at 1:25 PM, jorgenswest said:

    Some realism…

    They are 7th in the AL and 2nd in the Central in runs scored since the trade deadline. They are 2nd in the AL in stolen bases since the deadline. The offense has performed better after trading four starters in Correa, Bader, Castro and France.

    I don’t know how to get a split on OAA but they are 9th of 15 in the AL for the season. Martin and Lewis appear by my eye to be improved. Lewis looks like he finally has his legs under him again. Clemens has been solid wherever they put him. Catcher took a hit when Jeffers and Vazquez were out. Lee is not Correa. Lee is a -2 OAA in 568 innings. Correa was -2 in 773 innings (most with Twins). Some suggest Kiner-Falefa who is -3 in 817 innings. I don’t see the gain. I have no idea how ready Culpepper is for shortstop. His field FV is 45/60. The outfield could be very good next year.

    More realism…

    The bullpen has been bad since the deadline. That brings me to this discussion about finding a closer.

    I agree. While I get and somewhat share the angst over the lineup, that ain’t the reason we’ve stunk since August 1. The bullpen has been awful. I didn’t do research but it’s my sense that with an above average bullpen, we’d be a roughly .500 team since the break. That’s why the BP construction is important. If we can get back to a good bullpen, and Pablo pitches all year, we have a decent team. Add 1 or 2 hitters through guys like Jenkins or Roden taking off or even full season improved hitting from Lewis, Martin ( just make next year look like September for him), or even Wallner or Lee, and you have an interesting team. But nothing kills a team faster than a bad bullpen and that has to be fixed for this team to have any kind of a chance. 

    3 hours ago, LA VIkes Fan said:

    I agree. While I get and somewhat share the angst over the lineup, that ain’t the reason we’ve stunk since August 1. The bullpen has been awful. I didn’t do research but it’s my sense that with an above average bullpen, we’d be a roughly .500 team since the break. That’s why the BP construction is important. If we can get back to a good bullpen, and Pablo pitches all year, we have a decent team. Add 1 or 2 hitters through guys like Jenkins or Roden taking off or even full season improved hitting from Lewis, Martin ( just make next year look like September for him), or even Wallner or Lee, and you have an interesting team. But nothing kills a team faster than a bad bullpen and that has to be fixed for this team to have any kind of a chance. 

    They traded their top five bullpen arms. It isn't just the closer that has to be determined, they need a minimum of four reliable bullpen pieces. It is possible that any of Sands, Topa and Funderburk could be one of those arms and perhaps two of them can take a spot, but they need much more to be even an average BP. 

    On 9/26/2025 at 4:25 PM, jorgenswest said:

    Some realism…

    They are 7th in the AL and 2nd in the Central in runs scored since the trade deadline. They are 2nd in the AL in stolen bases since the deadline. The offense has performed better after trading four starters in Correa, Bader, Castro and France.

    I don’t know how to get a split on OAA but they are 9th of 15 in the AL for the season. Martin and Lewis appear by my eye to be improved. Lewis looks like he finally has his legs under him again. Clemens has been solid wherever they put him. Catcher took a hit when Jeffers and Vazquez were out. Lee is not Correa. Lee is a -2 OAA in 568 innings. Correa was -2 in 773 innings (most with Twins). Some suggest Kiner-Falefa who is -3 in 817 innings. I don’t see the gain. I have no idea how ready Culpepper is for shortstop. His field FV is 45/60. The outfield could be very good next year.

    More realism…

    The bullpen has been bad since the deadline. That brings me to this discussion about finding a closer.

    All good! …….. BUT Clemens is not an acceptable MLB starter going forward (realism), 13th guy on the roster in ‘26 because he can play 4 positions and is durable, OK. Not a starter on a GOOD team.

    I’m not a Clemens hater but he had his BEST year and had a .284 OBP. 19 HR’s are significant in 342 AB but he hit 3 in one game (big game!) & he was at .205 BA and rallied to hit .216. ………Lewis - Lee OBP are not good either but theoretically they had down years (Lewis) or are learning (Lee). 

    On 9/27/2025 at 11:26 PM, stringer bell said:

    They traded their top five bullpen arms. It isn't just the closer that has to be determined, they need a minimum of four reliable bullpen pieces. It is possible that any of Sands, Topa and Funderburk could be one of those arms and perhaps two of them can take a spot, but they need much more to be even an average BP. 

    Definitely need pieces in PEN!

    I’m assuming Funderburk has earned a spot over last 2 months and Topa - Sands are in as well.

    Raya - Prielipp - Rojas - Matthews - Festa - Adams………..re-sign Thielbar? Couple other FA signings? First Base & PEN have to be the Focus for ‘26.

    Abel or Bradley - Lopez/Ryan/Ober/SWR

    Catcher, arguably still a hole……..the kid that came up last 3 weeks seems to be serviceable ……. nobody is going to like this, but Vazquez, for $5-$6M may not be a terrible choice.




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