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    Inside the Twins’ Catching Pipeline

    The Twins have a few intriguing prospects not on the 40-man roster and a few recent additions behind the plate who could make some noise in prospect circles in 2026.

    Cory Moen
    Image courtesy of © Matt Blewett-Imagn Images

    Twins Video

    Depth is something every organization tries to create, whether through the draft, international free agency, or even minor league free agency. Let’s take a look at how the Twins’ system stacks up at various positions. I decided to start with catchers and work my way around the diamond.

    Below is a look at the catchers in the Twins system not named Ryan Jeffers or Alex Jackson . I’ve included how and when they were acquired, along with the highest level they played this past season.

    Mickey Gasper

    Acquired: Trade, Boston Red Sox, December 2024
    Highest Level in 2025: MLB

    The Twins acquired Gasper in a minor trade with the Boston Red Sox in December 2024 for left-handed relief pitcher Jovan Moran. Gasper split time between Triple-A St. Paul and the Twins in 2025. While he is listed as a catcher, he can also play first base, second base, and has even dabbled in left field. The upside is limited, as he hit .158/.257/.232 over 110 plate appearances with the Twins.

    Ricardo Olivar

    Acquired: International Free Agency, 2019
    Highest Level in 2025: Double-A

    Olivar has slowly worked his way up the minor league ladder since signing in 2019. Playing the 2025 season with Double-A Wichita, Olivar appeared in 93 games, catching in 38 of them while playing left field and designated hitter in the others. He has been a bat-first catcher, posting a career .832 OPS over five minor league seasons. His future may be more likely as a designated hitter if he cannot stick behind the plate. If that happens, his path to a role on the major league roster will hinge on his bat.

    Noah Cardenas

    Acquired: 2021 Draft, 8th round
    Highest Level in 2025: Triple-A

    After signing for a $200,000 bonus as an eighth-round pick in 2021, Cardenas has steadily worked his way toward the major leagues, spending the 2025 season between Double-A Wichita and Triple-A St. Paul. His .245/.387/.438 slash line in 2025 is passable for a backup catcher. He does not strike out at an unreasonable rate at 19.9 percent and his walk rate is higher than average at 16.4 percent. If he continues to develop, Cardenas could carve out a role for the Twins over the next few years.

    Patrick Winkel

    Acquired: 2021 Draft, 9th round
    Highest Level in 2025: Triple-A

    Drafted one round after Cardenas, Winkel also reached Triple-A this past season, though with a very different profile. In 2025, he posted a 32.8 percent strikeout rate and a 7.2 percent walk rate over 47 games and 180 plate appearances. Winkel will look to continue improving both in the field and at the plate. At this point, he is serving as organizational depth in the upper minors, and it remains to be seen whether he can break through and carve out a role in the Twins’ future plans.

    Nate Baez

    Acquired: 2022 Draft, 12th round
    Highest Level in 2025: Double-A

    You’ll notice a trend of mid-round picks making their way into the upper minors. Prior to 2025, Baez was an above-average hitter at every level. He started the season in High-A Cedar Rapids, continued to hit, and earned a promotion to Double-A. Double-A marked the first extended stop in his minor league career where he posted an OPS below .700. Assuming he makes the necessary adjustments, Baez’s bat could move him closer to the majors this year. He also began playing more first base in 2025, raising some questions about whether he can stick at catcher defensively. Even if he does not, the hope is that his bat continues to develop.

    Andrew Cossetti

    Acquired: 2022 Draft, 11th round
    Highest Level in 2025: Double-A

    Another mid-round pick, Cossetti was drafted out of St. Joseph’s University, where he posted a 1.016 OPS over four seasons. He has spent the last two years with Double-A Wichita and has shown some power, hitting 22 home runs over 604 plate appearances. In 2025, he recorded a .374 wOBA with a .798 OPS, good for a 123 wRC+. He has also played some first base, and if he continues to hit, he could begin climbing prospect lists in the future.

    Poncho Ruiz

    Acquired: Non-Drafted Free Agency, 2023
    Highest Level in 2025: High-A

    Ruiz signed as an undrafted free agent in 2023, which can happen for a variety of reasons, especially with fewer draft rounds than in the past. He began 2025 in Single-A and was promoted to High-A after 31 games. At 23 years old, he held his own between the two levels, posting a .723 OPS. He has shown a good eye at the plate throughout his minor league career and walked at a 15.8 percent rate in 2025. While not a highly touted prospect, Ruiz can make a name for himself if he continues to grow both at the plate and in the field.

     

    Eduardo Tait (#3 Twins Daily Prospect)

    Acquired: Trade, Philadelphia Phillies, July 2025
    Highest Level in 2025: High-A

    Tait was one of two players, along with right-hander Mick Abel, acquired from the Phillies in exchange for closer Jhoan Duran at the 2025 trade deadline. He signed for $90,000 out of Panama in January 2023 and hit at every level in the Phillies’ system. Like many young catchers, Tait’s defense is still a work in progress. He has a plus arm, and the Twins are hoping he can become at least average as a receiver. Still just 19 years old, he is likely a couple of years away from his major league debut. Tait projects as a future starting catcher and is someone many Twins fans will be watching closely in 2026.

    Khadim Diaw (#20 Twins Daily Prospect)

    Acquired: 2024 Draft, 3rd round
    Highest Level in 2025: High-A

    Diaw was the highest-drafted catcher by the Twins since Ryan Jeffers went in the second round in 2018. He played his age-21 season in 2025, spending the year at High-A Cedar Rapids. A good athlete, Diaw also saw time in center field and right field. He has a reputation as an aggressive hitter who makes a lot of contact, which showed up in his .429 wOBA this past season. He is likely a few years away, but if catcher does not work out, his athleticism could allow a move to the outfield.

    Enrique Jimenez

    Acquired: Trade, Detroit Tigers, July 2025
    Highest Level in 2025: Single-A

    Another pre-deadline acquisition, Jimenez will play his age-20 season this coming year. In 2025, he spent about two-thirds of his time behind the plate and reached Single-A. He showed some power, hitting 12 home runs with a .846 OPS between the Tigers’ and Twins’ systems. While not a high-end prospect, he provides a solid floor and could eventually serve as a backup to Tait, though he is still a long way from that point.

    Daniel Pena

    Acquired: International Free Agency, 2022
    Highest Level in 2025: Single-A

    Pena signed out of Venezuela in 2022 and played with Single-A Fort Myers in 2025. He has not hit much since reaching that level, posting a .567 OPS over 55 games this past season. Still just 20 years old, he remains a developmental player to check in on periodically.

    Ricardo Pena

    Acquired: International Free Agency, 2022
    Highest Level in 2025: Single-A

    Pena appeared in a combined 22 games between the Complex League and Single-A Fort Myers, so he remains early in his development. He has also seen some time at first base, and a position change could be in the cards, though that decision does not need to be made anytime soon.

    Pablo Castillo

    Acquired: International Free Agency, 2025
    Highest Level in 2025: Dominican Summer League

    A 2025 international free agent out of Venezuela, Castillo showed promise in his first 28 games in the Dominican Summer League. At 17 years old, he posted an .885 OPS. While it is a small sample, it provides a strong starting point for a young prospect heading into his next stage of development.

    Miguel Caraballo

    Acquired: Trade, San Francisco Giants, December 2025
    Highest Level in 2025: Dominican Summer League

    Caraballo came over from the Giants in the trade that sent Rule 5 selection Daniel Susac to San Francisco. He is not currently a strong defender, but he has shown both power and on-base skills. At 16 years old, he hit five home runs and posted a .874 OPS over 41 games in the DSL. He is a long way from making an impact, but will be a name Twins fans check in on from time to time, especially if Susac makes an impact in San Francisco.

    Irvin Nunez

    Acquired: International Free Agency, 2023
    Highest Level in 2025: Complex League

    Nunez signed with the Twins as part of the 2023 international free agent class and played in 43 games in the Florida Complex League in 2025. He also saw time at first base and a handful of games at third base, so he could end up with some positional versatility depending on how he develops over the next few years.

    Overall, the Twins’ catching depth is a mix of near-ready upper-minors options, mid-level organizational pieces, and longer-term developmental bets in the lower minors and international pipeline. While there is no shortage of names in the system, the group reflects the reality of building depth through many avenues, with some players closer to contributing in Minneapolis and others still several years away. As with most organizations, only a handful will ultimately impact the big league roster, but this collection gives the Twins flexibility, insulation against injuries, and multiple paths to address the position as they continue to build out the system from top to bottom.


    Interested in learning more about the Minnesota Twins' top prospects? Check out our comprehensive top prospects list that includes up-to-date stats, articles and videos about every prospect, scouting reports, and more!

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    Riley Quick

    Cedar Rapids Kernels - A+, RHP
    The 22-year-old made his first Kernels start on Wednesday afternoon. He threw four scoreless innings and gave up 1 hit, walked none and had five strikeouts. That's 4 starts, 12 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 3 BB, 18 K, 0.00 ERA, 0.42 WHIP, .054 Opp BA.

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    1 hour ago, LambchoP said:

    I still say the catcher we got in the rule 5 draft, Susac?, would have been a legit backup catcher. Had great AAA numbers for OAK. Much better than the automatic out that is Jackson. Can anyone explain why we grabbed Susac who would've helped this year, just to immediately dump him for a teenage catcher years and years from contributing? This team seemingly has no idea what they are doing, it really is sad and frustrating as a fan...

    Because SF asked them to pick him and trade him to them. Probably some cash sent with the A ball prospect they got in return.

    1 hour ago, LambchoP said:

    I still say the catcher we got in the rule 5 draft, Susac?, would have been a legit backup catcher. Had great AAA numbers for OAK. Much better than the automatic out that is Jackson. Can anyone explain why we grabbed Susac who would've helped this year, just to immediately dump him for a teenage catcher years and years from contributing? This team seemingly has no idea what they are doing, it really is sad and frustrating as a fan...

    The Twins desperately need a second catcher if they're trying to compete. Desperately. Falvey can't help himself, though. The trade was utterly stupid. The Twins had a legitimate, major need they potentially addressed. A need which was created by Falvey's incompetence in the first place. Instead of continuing to try to correct his mistakes, he made another. If Falvey really wanted Caraballo, it's not like he couldn't have packed something up and swung a deal for him separately.

    On 1/9/2026 at 9:31 PM, old nurse said:

    You are complaining someone isn’t using your definition of the word. 

    With absolutely zero context, sure, the Twins possess a pipeline, and the flow rate doesn't enhance or diminish its existence. 

    If we're talking about a pipeline within the context of baseball, production is implied. That's a logical connection. 

    Semantics aside, it's clear the Twins' catcher development system is barren.

    There's nobody in the system who could be expected to potentially fill a starting catcher role (or backup) role within reasonable reach of the MLB club in the next two years and Jeffers is gone at the end of the year.

    Cardenas is a long shot, at best, despite surface level output in AAA which would suggest there is something potentially there. Tons of weak contact despite being selective (passive) at the plate means he's likely to get eaten up by MLB pitchers, and though he showed pop, his max EV suggests below average raw power.

    Cosetti took a big leap forward at the plate last year, but at age 25 in his second trip through AA and nearly 1500 plate appearances in MiLB since being drafted out of college, it's likely all polish, and the 40% swing rate won't play at MLB just like the near 30% pop up rate suggests whiffs will skyrocket against better pitches. A total inability to control the run game remains, but at least he stopped letting balls fly past his glove to the backstop so regularly. Still, he projects as MiLB roster filler.

    The rest of the high minors guys aren't worth mentioning.

    4 hours ago, KirbyDome89 said:

    With absolutely zero context, sure, the Twins possess a pipeline, and the flow rate doesn't enhance or diminish its existence. 

    If we're talking about a pipeline within the context of baseball, production is implied. That's a logical connection. 

    A pipeline is a mechanism.  The quality and quantity of the product flowing through that mechanism is an entirely different story.  It would make perfect sense to me to say that there is not much in the pipeline, Why is it logical to assume a delivery mechanism is full or is providing high quality.  I don't see how that is logical.   If it were logical, every team would have a number of high-quality catching prospects in their pipeline.

    20 hours ago, Major League Ready said:

    A pipeline is a mechanism.  The quality and quantity of the product flowing through that mechanism is an entirely different story.  It would make perfect sense to me to say that there is not much in the pipeline, Why is it logical to assume a delivery mechanism is full or is providing high quality.  I don't see how that is logical.   If it were logical, every team would have a number of high-quality catching prospects in their pipeline.

    A baseball "pipeline," is metaphorical. If nothing is being delivered the metaphor begins to fall apart. hence my "within the context of baseball, production is implied," line from the post you quoted. 

    4 hours ago, KirbyDome89 said:

    A baseball "pipeline," is metaphorical. If nothing is being delivered the metaphor begins to fall apart. hence my "within the context of baseball, production is implied," line from the post you quoted. 

    I have heard members of baseball media say something like team X does not have much in their pipeline for a given position on many occasions.  While you may assume it means they have an ample supply, others commonly and correctly in my opinion describe a pipeline to be what a team has coming regardless of how great, poor, or somewhere in between that pipeline happens to be.  

    3 hours ago, Major League Ready said:

    I have heard members of baseball media say something like team X does not have much in their pipeline for a given position on many occasions.  While you may assume it means they have an ample supply, others commonly and correctly in my opinion describe a pipeline to be what a team has coming regardless of how great, poor, or somewhere in between that pipeline happens to be.  

    I'm happy to default to the position that if we're using a metaphorical pipeline to describe the C situation within the organization, functionality is implied. 

    "The (insert terrible farm system for random MLB team here) is a veritable treasure chest. I didn't say there was any actual treasure in the chest..." Eye Roll. 

     




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