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Everything posted by Cody Christie
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The Twins have been very quiet on Jenkins.
- 13 replies
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- royce lewis
- matt wallner
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I think they like McCusker getting regular at-bats in the minors. I think they are fine with Keirsey getting sporadic playing time with the Twins. The late inning outfield with Buxton, Bader, and Keirsey is fun to watch.
- 17 replies
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- ryan fitzgerald
- cole peschl
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He is in Fort Myers ramping up for an eventual rehab assignment. I don't have a specific timeline as to when that might happen.
- 17 replies
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- ryan fitzgerald
- cole peschl
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Earlier today, I wrote about some of the expected timelines for those players returning from injury.
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- ryan fitzgerald
- cole peschl
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Multiple injuries have thinned out the Twins roster in recent weeks. Thankfully, some help may be on the horizon. When could Royce Lewis and others rejoin the parent club? Image courtesy of William Parmeter The Twins are back out on the road, after winning five of six games on their recent homestand. The next portion of the schedule is significantly tougher with series against the Guardians, Red Sox, Orioles, and Giants. The Twins will need all hands on deck to make it through this gauntlet. Unfortunately, not all of the team’s key players will be able to return over the next two weeks. Twins president Derek Falvey was on Inside Twins on Sunday, and was asked about some key injured players and when they are expected to return. Let’s examine each player's injury and what a reasonable timeline would be for their return to the roster. Royce Lewis, 3B Injury: Moderate left hamstring strain IL date: March 27 (10-day IL, retroactive to March 24) Lewis injured his hamstring while running to first base during a spring training game, so he has yet to play in a game for the Twins this season. This level of strain is expected to cost a player 6-8 weeks, and he’s on pace to return during that window (even though the Twins never supplied that return estimate). On Friday, he played in his first rehab game and went 1-for-3 with a double while playing six innings at third base. After the game, Lewis told reporters he “felt really good”, even after some tough defensive plays. He went 2-for-3 on Sunday with two runs. “The part with a player like Royce is he got hurt in spring training, so he didn’t even have his full complement of spring training games and the build-up through,” said Falvey. “He’s back into the progression of building into games, and you just don’t want to rush that.” “You want to make sure that when he is back at the big-league level, you know he can go every night when he needs to,” he continued. “We will see him play throughout the course of this week, certainly. Once we get to the weekend, we make decisions as to what the next step is.” Expected Return: Lewis will likely play multiple games with the Saints throughout the week, with the potential to join the Twins for some part of this weekend’s Boston series. Willi Castro, UTIL Injury: Right oblique strain IL date: April 24 (10-day IL, retroactive to April 21) Castro is doing everything except swinging all-out from the left side. When he was placed on the IL, the Twins limited his baseball activities for a few days before he started ramping up again. Minnesota’s handling of Castro’s injury was strange because he sat on the active roster for more days than was necessary. Still, the Twins didn’t necessarily have anyone to help the roster in the minors. Minnesota has recently added multiple infield options, including Kody Clemens and Jonah Bride. “Even when he was active, he was a day-to-day guy on the roster even dealing with this because he could hit right-handed,” said Falvey. “It was a little harder for him to hit left-handed. He could go play defense if we needed him to. We hope this is really close to a minimum time frame.” Notably, though, Castro told reporters the plan was to shut him down from all activities for about a week once he went on the shelf, to let the injury calm down. In the wake of that, we might expect it to be another week or two before he's ready to handle the big leagues again. Expected Return: Castro will be eligible to return when the Twins return to Target Field for the Orioles series and should be back on the roster shortly thereafter. Matt Wallner, OF Injury: Moderate left hamstring strain IL date: April 17 (10-day IL, retroactive to April 16) Like Lewis, the Twins have intentionally been vague with Wallner’s return timeline. However, the similarities between the injuries likely place his return timeline at the 6-8 week window. He has begun playing catch but has yet to begin other baseball activities. He must ramp up those activities, begin running the bases, and go on a rehab assignment. “You need to make sure it heals in full. Because it’s moderate, we are looking more at that longer range timeline [6 weeks]. He’s on track, but we need to make sure he continues to heal before he starts moving into the progression of running.” Expected Return: The end of May is likely the earliest he will go on a rehab assignment, pushing his return to the Twins in early June. Both Lewis and Castro could be back with the Twins by Tuesday of next week. Wallner will likely be on a rehab assignment near the end of next month, and return to Minnesota in early June. Minnesota’s offense showed some life over the last week, but getting key players back can always boost the lineup—especially when another injury is just one pitch away. What player can most help the Twins? Leave a comment and start the discussion. View full article
- 13 replies
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- royce lewis
- matt wallner
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Derek Falvey Provides Injury Updates on 3 Key Minnesota Twins
Cody Christie posted an article in Twins
The Twins are back out on the road, after winning five of six games on their recent homestand. The next portion of the schedule is significantly tougher with series against the Guardians, Red Sox, Orioles, and Giants. The Twins will need all hands on deck to make it through this gauntlet. Unfortunately, not all of the team’s key players will be able to return over the next two weeks. Twins president Derek Falvey was on Inside Twins on Sunday, and was asked about some key injured players and when they are expected to return. Let’s examine each player's injury and what a reasonable timeline would be for their return to the roster. Royce Lewis, 3B Injury: Moderate left hamstring strain IL date: March 27 (10-day IL, retroactive to March 24) Lewis injured his hamstring while running to first base during a spring training game, so he has yet to play in a game for the Twins this season. This level of strain is expected to cost a player 6-8 weeks, and he’s on pace to return during that window (even though the Twins never supplied that return estimate). On Friday, he played in his first rehab game and went 1-for-3 with a double while playing six innings at third base. After the game, Lewis told reporters he “felt really good”, even after some tough defensive plays. He went 2-for-3 on Sunday with two runs. “The part with a player like Royce is he got hurt in spring training, so he didn’t even have his full complement of spring training games and the build-up through,” said Falvey. “He’s back into the progression of building into games, and you just don’t want to rush that.” “You want to make sure that when he is back at the big-league level, you know he can go every night when he needs to,” he continued. “We will see him play throughout the course of this week, certainly. Once we get to the weekend, we make decisions as to what the next step is.” Expected Return: Lewis will likely play multiple games with the Saints throughout the week, with the potential to join the Twins for some part of this weekend’s Boston series. Willi Castro, UTIL Injury: Right oblique strain IL date: April 24 (10-day IL, retroactive to April 21) Castro is doing everything except swinging all-out from the left side. When he was placed on the IL, the Twins limited his baseball activities for a few days before he started ramping up again. Minnesota’s handling of Castro’s injury was strange because he sat on the active roster for more days than was necessary. Still, the Twins didn’t necessarily have anyone to help the roster in the minors. Minnesota has recently added multiple infield options, including Kody Clemens and Jonah Bride. “Even when he was active, he was a day-to-day guy on the roster even dealing with this because he could hit right-handed,” said Falvey. “It was a little harder for him to hit left-handed. He could go play defense if we needed him to. We hope this is really close to a minimum time frame.” Notably, though, Castro told reporters the plan was to shut him down from all activities for about a week once he went on the shelf, to let the injury calm down. In the wake of that, we might expect it to be another week or two before he's ready to handle the big leagues again. Expected Return: Castro will be eligible to return when the Twins return to Target Field for the Orioles series and should be back on the roster shortly thereafter. Matt Wallner, OF Injury: Moderate left hamstring strain IL date: April 17 (10-day IL, retroactive to April 16) Like Lewis, the Twins have intentionally been vague with Wallner’s return timeline. However, the similarities between the injuries likely place his return timeline at the 6-8 week window. He has begun playing catch but has yet to begin other baseball activities. He must ramp up those activities, begin running the bases, and go on a rehab assignment. “You need to make sure it heals in full. Because it’s moderate, we are looking more at that longer range timeline [6 weeks]. He’s on track, but we need to make sure he continues to heal before he starts moving into the progression of running.” Expected Return: The end of May is likely the earliest he will go on a rehab assignment, pushing his return to the Twins in early June. Both Lewis and Castro could be back with the Twins by Tuesday of next week. Wallner will likely be on a rehab assignment near the end of next month, and return to Minnesota in early June. Minnesota’s offense showed some life over the last week, but getting key players back can always boost the lineup—especially when another injury is just one pitch away. What player can most help the Twins? Leave a comment and start the discussion.- 13 comments
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- royce lewis
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I thought the same but I think it is part of managing his innings. Last week, Dasan Hill didn’t make an appearance. Perhaps they are on similar pitching plans.
- 17 replies
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- ryan fitzgerald
- cole peschl
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I think he could crack into the Twins Daily top 20 later this year. He’s a very unconventional prospect because he is older than most.
- 17 replies
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- ryan fitzgerald
- cole peschl
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Nearly every affiliate had a winning week in the organization. Strong pitching and even better hitting highlighted the week that was in the Twins farm system. Let’s dive in. Image courtesy of Rob Thompson, St. Paul Saints (McCusker), David Malamut (Culpepper), William Parmeter (Chourio) TRANSACTIONS 1B Yunior Severino placed on the 7-day injured list. Strained right hamstring. 3B Royce Lewis sent on a rehab assignment to St. Paul. C Diego Cartaya sent outright to St. Paul. Wichita activated RHP Pierson Ohl from the 7-day injured list. Cedar Rapids activated SS Kaelen Culpepper from the 7-day injured list. RHP Michael Tonkin sent on a rehab assignment to St. Paul. RHP Matt Canterino released by the Twins. TWINS DAILY MINOR LEAGUE CONTENT Twins Release Matt Canterino. What’s Next for the Once-Promising Prospect? Twins Minor League Report (4/27): Jose Salas, Kaelen Culpepper Drive Mussels, Kernels to Wins Twins Minor League Report (4/26): Close Losses in the Afternoon, High-Ceiling Lefties Dominate the Night Games Twins Minor League Report (4/25): Royce Lewis Rehabs; Cole Peschl Demands Attention Twins Minor League Report (4/24): Jay Thomason, Maddux Houghton Muscle Fort Myers to Extra-Inning Win Twins Minor League Report (4/23): Ricardo Olivar Can't be Contained Scouting the Saints: Zebby Matthews, Carson McCusker, Emmanuel Rodriguez Show Their Stuff Catcher Diego Cartaya Isn't Long for Minnesota Twins' 40-Man Roster Twins Minor League Report (4/22): Grand Slams, A Walk-Off, and a Gong Show Twins Minor League Week in Review (4/15-4/21): Mighty Mussels Shutout Parade WEEK IN REVIEW Triple A: St. Paul Saints Overall: 11-13 (8.5 Games Out of First) Last Week: 4-3 Toby Gardenhire earned his 300th win as manager of the Saints. The only manager with more victories in the entire history of the franchise is George Tsamis, who won 954 games from 2003-20. Zebby Matthews failed to make it through the fifth inning for the second consecutive start. In 4 2/3 innings, he allowed two runs on two hits and five strikeouts. He issued a career-high four walks. Patrick Winkel and Anthony Prato hit back-to-back homers in Saturday’s game. For Winkel, it was his second of the season, and second in as many games. For Prato, it was his first of the year. On Friday night, Royce Lewis made his first rehab game appearance for the Saints. He went 1-for-3 with a double. On Sunday, he went 2-for-3 with an RBI and two runs. Darren McCaughan pitched 5 shutout innings and Anthony Misiewicz tossed the final 2 innings as the Saints pitched a 3-0 shutout to split a doubleheader on Friday night. McCaughan allowed just one hit in his appearance, while walking two and striking out seven—four of them looking. Misiewicz allowed one hit and struck out two. Patrick Winkel hit his first home run of the season, a solo shot, as part of the team’s Friday night victory. St. Paul split a doubleheader on Wednesday. In Game 1, Mickey Gasper cracked his second home run in as many games to put the Saints up 2-1. Later that inning, Carson McCusker continued his hot start to the year with an RBI double. He is second in Triple A in average exit velocity. Mike Ford capped the team’s scoring in the third. Emmanuel Rodriguez walked to start the frame, before Ford delivered a two-run blast, his third longball of the season. Andrew Morris started Game 1 of the doubleheader and went 4-plus innings, allowing one unearned run on five hits while walking three and striking out two. Tuesday started the week with a bang—or several of them. They mashed four home runs (two grand slams) and racked up 16 runs scored. Eight of nine Saints collected a hit, with five having multi-hit days. Eight of nine scored a run, and seven of nine knocked home a run as the Saints pounded out 16 hits. McCusker and Ryan Fitzgerald hit the grand slams. Fitzgerald went 3-5 with a career high-tying five RBIs and three runs scored. Reliever Travis Adams pitched the final 4 innings; did not allow a run on three hits, while striking out four; and picked up his second four-inning save in as many appearances. What’s Next: The Saints head to Omaha to face the Storm Chasers for the start of a six-game set on Tuesday. These two teams split a six-game series earlier in the month. Double A: Wichita Wind Surge Overall: 12-9 (2.0 Games Out of First) Last Week: 4-2 Congratulations to Wind Surge broadcaster Tim Grubbs, who broadcast his 4,000th Minor League Baseball game this week. Connor Prielipp, Mike Paredes, Michael Martinez, and Angel Macuare combined for a shutout on three hits on Saturday night. The Wind Surge infield also turned three double plays, two of them being inning-enders. Paredes has thrown 17 2/3 innings without an earned run this season, and leads the team in wins (3). Darren Bowen retired 13 of the first 14 batters he faced in his fourth start of the season. He finished with one earned run allowed on four hits, with three strikeouts and no walks. Pierson Ohl returned from the injured list and picked up his first victory. He relieved Bowen and pitched three shutout innings with four strikeouts and only one hit allowed. Jarret Whorff has yet to surrender an earned run in Wichita this season, over 7 2/3 innings pitched. Tanner Schobel reached base in 17 consecutive games before his streak ended on Friday. On Sunday, he recorded his second three-hit performance of the season. He has a team-leading seven multi-hit games. On Wednesday, Wichita trailed 6-2 heading into the bottom of the eighth inning, before rattling off five unanswered runs to win their fourth straight game. Kyler Fedko drove in the winning run with a single in the 10th inning. John Stankiewicz earned the victory, his first decision of the season, after throwing a scoreless 10th inning with a strikeout. Wichita produced their highest winning margin of the season on Tuesday, winning 12-1. Kala’i Rosario started the scoring with a solo home run, and Aaron Sabato hit a go-ahead double later that inning. In the eighth, the Wind Surge sent 12 men to the plate and scored nine runs. Jorel Ortega connected for a pinch-hit grand slam, the first in franchise history. Mike Paredes earned the win to improve to 2-0 on the season after three innings of one-hit baseball with a walk and a strikeout out of the bullpen. What’s Next: Wichita will open a six-game road series against the Frisco RoughRiders on Tuesday at 12:05 PM CST. High A: Cedar Rapids Kernels Overall: 12-8 (2.0 Game Out of First) Last Week: 3-3 Kaelen Culpepper drove in five runs on two hits and a three-run homer on Sunday. He finished the week hitting .353/.450/.529 after coming off the IL. Tanner Hall pitched five strong innings, allowing one unearned run on five hits with two walks and three strikeouts. Cedar Rapids got caught in a pitchers’ duel on Friday night. Alejandro Hidalgo got the start and posted his best outing of the season. He pitched five shutout innings, allowing just one hit while striking out seven. In his third start of the season, Ty Langenberg posted his best outing of the campaign. He did not allow a run across four innings of work with three strikeouts and no walks, facing just 12 batters to record 12 outs. Logan Whitaker took over for Langenberg and did not allow a run in two innings of relief, retiring the side in order in both frames while notching three strikeouts. Kyle DeBarge got the week started with a bang for Cedar Rapids. Trailing by a run with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning, he crushed a walk-off three-run home run. Earlier in the game, he had connected for a triple. Jose Olivares did not allow a run across three innings of work with five strikeouts while issuing just one walk and one hit. Danny De Andrade slashed .333/.474/.733, with three doubles, one home run, and three steals. What’s Next: Cedar Rapids continues the second half of their 12-game homestand on Tuesday night with the first of six games against South Bend at 6:35 PM CST. Low A: Fort Myers Mighty Mussels Overall: 12-9 (Tied for First) Last Week: 4-2 Jose Salas drove in six runs on Sunday, the most in a game for a Mussels hitter this season. Dasan Hill tossed 3 1/3 scoreless innings and struck out a season-high eight batters, which included a stretch of five consecutive strikeouts. The only hit he allowed was an infield single. Hill touched 98 MPH on the radar gun for the first time this season. Byron Chourio has been masterful at the top of the Fort Myers lineup. On Sunday, he reached base three times to extend his on-base streak to 18 games. It was also the 12th time he reached base safely to start the game. Cole Peschl dominated in his third appearance of the season. He struck out a season-high nine batters while throwing five scoreless innings for the second outing in a row. His 80 pitches matched the most by a Mussel pitcher this season. Peschl has now thrown 14 innings without allowing an earned run to start his career. Yasser Mercedes stole four bases in one game, the most by a Mussel this season. Maddux Houghton came off the bench on Thursday to deliver the game-winning hit, a three-run home run in extra innings. He added an incredible catch in the bottom half of the inning to rob an extra-base hit. Earlier in that game, Jay Thomason launched a moonshot home run (421 feet). He homered again on Sunday, a three-run shot. He leads the team in home runs this season. Jason Doktorczyk pitched four solid innings, as he allowed one unearned run on a wild pitch. He limited batters to two hits with two strikeouts and a walk. His season ERA dropped to 1.15. Ivran Romero continued his scoreless streak to start the season. On Wednesday, he pitched two scoreless innings with only one hit allowed. He has seven shutout innings for the year. Fort Myers got their week started with a solid performance on both sides of the ball. Yasser Mercedes and Jose Rodriguez both hit two-run homers in the same inning with triple-digit exit velocities. For Mercedes, it was his first of the year. Rodriguez hit his homer at 113 mph. Dylan Questad allowed a two-run homer and then settled in. He retired the next six men he faced. The homer was the lone hit Questad would yield in his five innings of work. The bullpen of Hunter Hoopes, Liam Rocha, and Tyler Stasiowski combined to allow one run on four hits while striking out seven batters across four innings. Fort Myers pitching totalled 13 strikeouts to three walks on the night. What’s Next: Fort Myers heads home for a quick three-game series against Jupiter before finishing the week with a three-game set at Tampa. PROSPECT SUMMARY Check out the Prospect Tracker for much more on our Twins Top 20 prospects. And, be sure to note the new, updated Top 20 rankings. Roster assignments below are subject to change as some players have yet to be assigned or are in Extended Spring Training. Walker Jenkins (Wichita): On injured list Emmanuel Rodriguez (St. Paul): 2-8,1 R, 1 BB, 3 K, 2 SB Luke Keaschall (Minnesota): 7-19, 3 2B, 2 RBI, 4 R, 5 BB, 2 K, 5 SB Charlee Soto (Cedar Rapids): Did not pitch Andrew Morris (St. Paul): 4 IP, 5 H, 0 ER, 3 BB, 2 K Marco Raya (St. Paul): 1.2 IP, 6 H, 7 ER, 3 BB, 1 K Kaelen Culpepper (Cedar Rapids): 6-17, 1 HR, 7 RBI, 2 R, 3 BB, 1 K Brandon Winokur (Cedar Rapids): 4-20, 2 2B, 1 BB, 6 K, 1 SB Cory Lewis (St. Paul): 3.2 IP, 5 H, 3 ER, 1 BB, 4 K Connor Prielipp (Wichita): 3 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 4 K Dasan Hill (Fort Myers): 3.1 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 2 BB, 8 K C.J. Culpepper (Wichita): On injured list Kyle DeBarge (Cedar Rapids): 5-22, 1 2B, 1 3B, 1 HR, 5 RBI, 3 R, 2 BB, 5 K, 3 SB Eduardo Beltre (DSL Twins): In Extended Spring Training Yasser Mercedes (Fort Myers): 4-19, 1 2B, 1 HR, 3 RBI, 2 R, 3 BB, 7 K, 5 SB Rayne Doncon (Cedar Rapids): On injured list Billy Amick (Cedar Rapids): 4-18, 2 RBI, 2 R, 2 BB, 6 K Kala’i Rosario (Wichita): 8-24, 2 2B, 1 HR, 4 RBI, 5 R, 3 BB, 6 K Gabriel Gonzalez (Cedar Rapids): 4-20, 2 R, 1 BB, 2 K Ricardo Olivar (Wichita): 9-23, 2 2B, 1 HR, 4 RBI, 5 R, 2 BB, 6 K PLAYERS OF THE WEEK Hitter of the Week: Ryan Fitzgerald (St. Paul) 9-for-21, .429/.520/.667 (1.187), 2 2B, 1 HR, 14 TB, 6 RBI, 6 R, 4 BB, 3 K Pitcher of the Week: Cole Peschl (Fort Myers) 5 IP, 3 H, 0 ER, 2 BB, 9 K, 80 pitches (51 strikes), 63.8 strike% View full article
- 17 replies
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- ryan fitzgerald
- cole peschl
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TRANSACTIONS 1B Yunior Severino placed on the 7-day injured list. Strained right hamstring. 3B Royce Lewis sent on a rehab assignment to St. Paul. C Diego Cartaya sent outright to St. Paul. Wichita activated RHP Pierson Ohl from the 7-day injured list. Cedar Rapids activated SS Kaelen Culpepper from the 7-day injured list. RHP Michael Tonkin sent on a rehab assignment to St. Paul. RHP Matt Canterino released by the Twins. TWINS DAILY MINOR LEAGUE CONTENT Twins Release Matt Canterino. What’s Next for the Once-Promising Prospect? Twins Minor League Report (4/27): Jose Salas, Kaelen Culpepper Drive Mussels, Kernels to Wins Twins Minor League Report (4/26): Close Losses in the Afternoon, High-Ceiling Lefties Dominate the Night Games Twins Minor League Report (4/25): Royce Lewis Rehabs; Cole Peschl Demands Attention Twins Minor League Report (4/24): Jay Thomason, Maddux Houghton Muscle Fort Myers to Extra-Inning Win Twins Minor League Report (4/23): Ricardo Olivar Can't be Contained Scouting the Saints: Zebby Matthews, Carson McCusker, Emmanuel Rodriguez Show Their Stuff Catcher Diego Cartaya Isn't Long for Minnesota Twins' 40-Man Roster Twins Minor League Report (4/22): Grand Slams, A Walk-Off, and a Gong Show Twins Minor League Week in Review (4/15-4/21): Mighty Mussels Shutout Parade WEEK IN REVIEW Triple A: St. Paul Saints Overall: 11-13 (8.5 Games Out of First) Last Week: 4-3 Toby Gardenhire earned his 300th win as manager of the Saints. The only manager with more victories in the entire history of the franchise is George Tsamis, who won 954 games from 2003-20. Zebby Matthews failed to make it through the fifth inning for the second consecutive start. In 4 2/3 innings, he allowed two runs on two hits and five strikeouts. He issued a career-high four walks. Patrick Winkel and Anthony Prato hit back-to-back homers in Saturday’s game. For Winkel, it was his second of the season, and second in as many games. For Prato, it was his first of the year. On Friday night, Royce Lewis made his first rehab game appearance for the Saints. He went 1-for-3 with a double. On Sunday, he went 2-for-3 with an RBI and two runs. Darren McCaughan pitched 5 shutout innings and Anthony Misiewicz tossed the final 2 innings as the Saints pitched a 3-0 shutout to split a doubleheader on Friday night. McCaughan allowed just one hit in his appearance, while walking two and striking out seven—four of them looking. Misiewicz allowed one hit and struck out two. Patrick Winkel hit his first home run of the season, a solo shot, as part of the team’s Friday night victory. St. Paul split a doubleheader on Wednesday. In Game 1, Mickey Gasper cracked his second home run in as many games to put the Saints up 2-1. Later that inning, Carson McCusker continued his hot start to the year with an RBI double. He is second in Triple A in average exit velocity. Mike Ford capped the team’s scoring in the third. Emmanuel Rodriguez walked to start the frame, before Ford delivered a two-run blast, his third longball of the season. Andrew Morris started Game 1 of the doubleheader and went 4-plus innings, allowing one unearned run on five hits while walking three and striking out two. Tuesday started the week with a bang—or several of them. They mashed four home runs (two grand slams) and racked up 16 runs scored. Eight of nine Saints collected a hit, with five having multi-hit days. Eight of nine scored a run, and seven of nine knocked home a run as the Saints pounded out 16 hits. McCusker and Ryan Fitzgerald hit the grand slams. Fitzgerald went 3-5 with a career high-tying five RBIs and three runs scored. Reliever Travis Adams pitched the final 4 innings; did not allow a run on three hits, while striking out four; and picked up his second four-inning save in as many appearances. What’s Next: The Saints head to Omaha to face the Storm Chasers for the start of a six-game set on Tuesday. These two teams split a six-game series earlier in the month. Double A: Wichita Wind Surge Overall: 12-9 (2.0 Games Out of First) Last Week: 4-2 Congratulations to Wind Surge broadcaster Tim Grubbs, who broadcast his 4,000th Minor League Baseball game this week. Connor Prielipp, Mike Paredes, Michael Martinez, and Angel Macuare combined for a shutout on three hits on Saturday night. The Wind Surge infield also turned three double plays, two of them being inning-enders. Paredes has thrown 17 2/3 innings without an earned run this season, and leads the team in wins (3). Darren Bowen retired 13 of the first 14 batters he faced in his fourth start of the season. He finished with one earned run allowed on four hits, with three strikeouts and no walks. Pierson Ohl returned from the injured list and picked up his first victory. He relieved Bowen and pitched three shutout innings with four strikeouts and only one hit allowed. Jarret Whorff has yet to surrender an earned run in Wichita this season, over 7 2/3 innings pitched. Tanner Schobel reached base in 17 consecutive games before his streak ended on Friday. On Sunday, he recorded his second three-hit performance of the season. He has a team-leading seven multi-hit games. On Wednesday, Wichita trailed 6-2 heading into the bottom of the eighth inning, before rattling off five unanswered runs to win their fourth straight game. Kyler Fedko drove in the winning run with a single in the 10th inning. John Stankiewicz earned the victory, his first decision of the season, after throwing a scoreless 10th inning with a strikeout. Wichita produced their highest winning margin of the season on Tuesday, winning 12-1. Kala’i Rosario started the scoring with a solo home run, and Aaron Sabato hit a go-ahead double later that inning. In the eighth, the Wind Surge sent 12 men to the plate and scored nine runs. Jorel Ortega connected for a pinch-hit grand slam, the first in franchise history. Mike Paredes earned the win to improve to 2-0 on the season after three innings of one-hit baseball with a walk and a strikeout out of the bullpen. What’s Next: Wichita will open a six-game road series against the Frisco RoughRiders on Tuesday at 12:05 PM CST. High A: Cedar Rapids Kernels Overall: 12-8 (2.0 Game Out of First) Last Week: 3-3 Kaelen Culpepper drove in five runs on two hits and a three-run homer on Sunday. He finished the week hitting .353/.450/.529 after coming off the IL. Tanner Hall pitched five strong innings, allowing one unearned run on five hits with two walks and three strikeouts. Cedar Rapids got caught in a pitchers’ duel on Friday night. Alejandro Hidalgo got the start and posted his best outing of the season. He pitched five shutout innings, allowing just one hit while striking out seven. In his third start of the season, Ty Langenberg posted his best outing of the campaign. He did not allow a run across four innings of work with three strikeouts and no walks, facing just 12 batters to record 12 outs. Logan Whitaker took over for Langenberg and did not allow a run in two innings of relief, retiring the side in order in both frames while notching three strikeouts. Kyle DeBarge got the week started with a bang for Cedar Rapids. Trailing by a run with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning, he crushed a walk-off three-run home run. Earlier in the game, he had connected for a triple. Jose Olivares did not allow a run across three innings of work with five strikeouts while issuing just one walk and one hit. Danny De Andrade slashed .333/.474/.733, with three doubles, one home run, and three steals. What’s Next: Cedar Rapids continues the second half of their 12-game homestand on Tuesday night with the first of six games against South Bend at 6:35 PM CST. Low A: Fort Myers Mighty Mussels Overall: 12-9 (Tied for First) Last Week: 4-2 Jose Salas drove in six runs on Sunday, the most in a game for a Mussels hitter this season. Dasan Hill tossed 3 1/3 scoreless innings and struck out a season-high eight batters, which included a stretch of five consecutive strikeouts. The only hit he allowed was an infield single. Hill touched 98 MPH on the radar gun for the first time this season. Byron Chourio has been masterful at the top of the Fort Myers lineup. On Sunday, he reached base three times to extend his on-base streak to 18 games. It was also the 12th time he reached base safely to start the game. Cole Peschl dominated in his third appearance of the season. He struck out a season-high nine batters while throwing five scoreless innings for the second outing in a row. His 80 pitches matched the most by a Mussel pitcher this season. Peschl has now thrown 14 innings without allowing an earned run to start his career. Yasser Mercedes stole four bases in one game, the most by a Mussel this season. Maddux Houghton came off the bench on Thursday to deliver the game-winning hit, a three-run home run in extra innings. He added an incredible catch in the bottom half of the inning to rob an extra-base hit. Earlier in that game, Jay Thomason launched a moonshot home run (421 feet). He homered again on Sunday, a three-run shot. He leads the team in home runs this season. Jason Doktorczyk pitched four solid innings, as he allowed one unearned run on a wild pitch. He limited batters to two hits with two strikeouts and a walk. His season ERA dropped to 1.15. Ivran Romero continued his scoreless streak to start the season. On Wednesday, he pitched two scoreless innings with only one hit allowed. He has seven shutout innings for the year. Fort Myers got their week started with a solid performance on both sides of the ball. Yasser Mercedes and Jose Rodriguez both hit two-run homers in the same inning with triple-digit exit velocities. For Mercedes, it was his first of the year. Rodriguez hit his homer at 113 mph. Dylan Questad allowed a two-run homer and then settled in. He retired the next six men he faced. The homer was the lone hit Questad would yield in his five innings of work. The bullpen of Hunter Hoopes, Liam Rocha, and Tyler Stasiowski combined to allow one run on four hits while striking out seven batters across four innings. Fort Myers pitching totalled 13 strikeouts to three walks on the night. What’s Next: Fort Myers heads home for a quick three-game series against Jupiter before finishing the week with a three-game set at Tampa. PROSPECT SUMMARY Check out the Prospect Tracker for much more on our Twins Top 20 prospects. And, be sure to note the new, updated Top 20 rankings. Roster assignments below are subject to change as some players have yet to be assigned or are in Extended Spring Training. Walker Jenkins (Wichita): On injured list Emmanuel Rodriguez (St. Paul): 2-8,1 R, 1 BB, 3 K, 2 SB Luke Keaschall (Minnesota): 7-19, 3 2B, 2 RBI, 4 R, 5 BB, 2 K, 5 SB Charlee Soto (Cedar Rapids): Did not pitch Andrew Morris (St. Paul): 4 IP, 5 H, 0 ER, 3 BB, 2 K Marco Raya (St. Paul): 1.2 IP, 6 H, 7 ER, 3 BB, 1 K Kaelen Culpepper (Cedar Rapids): 6-17, 1 HR, 7 RBI, 2 R, 3 BB, 1 K Brandon Winokur (Cedar Rapids): 4-20, 2 2B, 1 BB, 6 K, 1 SB Cory Lewis (St. Paul): 3.2 IP, 5 H, 3 ER, 1 BB, 4 K Connor Prielipp (Wichita): 3 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 4 K Dasan Hill (Fort Myers): 3.1 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 2 BB, 8 K C.J. Culpepper (Wichita): On injured list Kyle DeBarge (Cedar Rapids): 5-22, 1 2B, 1 3B, 1 HR, 5 RBI, 3 R, 2 BB, 5 K, 3 SB Eduardo Beltre (DSL Twins): In Extended Spring Training Yasser Mercedes (Fort Myers): 4-19, 1 2B, 1 HR, 3 RBI, 2 R, 3 BB, 7 K, 5 SB Rayne Doncon (Cedar Rapids): On injured list Billy Amick (Cedar Rapids): 4-18, 2 RBI, 2 R, 2 BB, 6 K Kala’i Rosario (Wichita): 8-24, 2 2B, 1 HR, 4 RBI, 5 R, 3 BB, 6 K Gabriel Gonzalez (Cedar Rapids): 4-20, 2 R, 1 BB, 2 K Ricardo Olivar (Wichita): 9-23, 2 2B, 1 HR, 4 RBI, 5 R, 2 BB, 6 K PLAYERS OF THE WEEK Hitter of the Week: Ryan Fitzgerald (St. Paul) 9-for-21, .429/.520/.667 (1.187), 2 2B, 1 HR, 14 TB, 6 RBI, 6 R, 4 BB, 3 K Pitcher of the Week: Cole Peschl (Fort Myers) 5 IP, 3 H, 0 ER, 2 BB, 9 K, 80 pitches (51 strikes), 63.8 strike%
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The Minnesota Twins officially released right-handed pitcher Matt Canterino on Apr. 22, 2025, following his designation for assignment after undergoing season-ending shoulder surgery in mid-March of Spring Training. Because injured players cannot be placed on outright waivers, Minnesota had to either trade or release Canterino after the DFA. The Twins opted to cut him loose, with a trade deemed unlikely based on the uncertainty of Canterino's prognosis. Canterino will become a free agent, with the right to sign anywhere. However, if both sides are amenable, Minnesota could circle back with a two-year minor-league offer. He was out of minor-league options, and injuries caused him to fall out of the team’s long-term plans. Once one of the organization’s most highly regarded arms, the Rice University product once had a mid-90s fastball and a plus slider, but a litany of injuries has cost him nearly every season of his pro career. Now, at age 27 (turning 28) this December, he embarks on free agency, looking to reestablish his health and promise. Midway through spring training, Canterino underwent surgery to “tighten” ligaments in his right throwing shoulder, effectively ending his 2025 campaign before it began. The Twins announced the procedure on March 16th, revealing that the rotator cuff strain from camp required a formal surgical repair. This was following earlier Tommy John surgery, which sidelined him for all of 2023. A Once-Promising Arm A second-round pick (54th overall) by Minnesota in the 2019 MLB Draft, Canterino was lauded for his power arsenal and pitchability. He dazzled in college, with a fastball that sat in the mid-90s and a tight, wipeout slider. Scouts projected this arsenal would allow him to become a mid-rotation starter or high-leverage bullpen arm at the major-league level. Between 2020 and 2024, Canterino consistently appeared in the top half of Baseball America’s Twins top-30 prospect rankings, peeking inside the top 15 midseason list before being shelved by injuries. Even after going unranked in the 2024 midseason update due to inactivity, evaluators still recognized his upside, lamenting that he’d only thrown 85 (dominant) innings since being drafted. There Is No Such Thing As a Pitching Prospect (TINSTAAPP) Right elbow inflammation derailed Canterino’s professional path early in 2021, culminating in Tommy John surgery in August 2022, after a dominant Double-A stint. He missed the remainder of 2022 and all of 2023 recuperating from the procedure. In 2024, just as hopes rose for his return, Canterino suffered a right rotator cuff strain during spring training, prompting another IL stay that kept him out for the entire season. Despite the interruptions, Canterino’s flashes were remarkable. Across 85 career minor-league innings, he posted a sparkling 1.48 ERA with a 39.1% strikeout rate, illustrating his ability to miss bats and generate weak contact when healthy. He pitched exclusively as a starter early on, then began to be evaluated as a potential bullpen weapon. His repertoire lends itself to shorter bursts of high-impact potential. Now, the Twins are left wondering what could have been. What’s Next: Free Agency and Options When Canterino clears waivers, he immediately becomes a free agent, free to field offers from any organization. For the Twins, there’s precedent for bringing back released pitchers on minor-league deals, and they could offer a two-year contract designed to let him fully rehab under club supervision. Health remains the paramount question. If he recovers well from this latest setback, there might be time for one more team to take a shot at him and bet on his raw stuff. Come the 2026 season, a healthy, effective Canterino could be a difference-maker for a big-league staff looking for affordable, controllable pitching. Canterino’s release marks the end of one chapter, where unrelenting injuries hampered a storied prospect career. However, one ending is another beginning in which he controls his path. It's possible he'll elect to move on to the next chapter, beyond his playing career, but should he attempt yet another comeback, the task is straightforward: stay healthy, showcase that high-leverage arsenal, and reignite the potential that once made him one of Minnesota’s brightest pitching prospects. Should the Twins try to re-sign Canterino to a two-year minor league deal? Will he make it to the big leagues with another organization? Leave a comment and start the discussion.
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Baseball can be a cruel game. Matt Canterino’s recent release marks the end of one chapter and the beginning of another. Image courtesy of Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images The Minnesota Twins officially released right-handed pitcher Matt Canterino on Apr. 22, 2025, following his designation for assignment after undergoing season-ending shoulder surgery in mid-March of Spring Training. Because injured players cannot be placed on outright waivers, Minnesota had to either trade or release Canterino after the DFA. The Twins opted to cut him loose, with a trade deemed unlikely based on the uncertainty of Canterino's prognosis. Canterino will become a free agent, with the right to sign anywhere. However, if both sides are amenable, Minnesota could circle back with a two-year minor-league offer. He was out of minor-league options, and injuries caused him to fall out of the team’s long-term plans. Once one of the organization’s most highly regarded arms, the Rice University product once had a mid-90s fastball and a plus slider, but a litany of injuries has cost him nearly every season of his pro career. Now, at age 27 (turning 28) this December, he embarks on free agency, looking to reestablish his health and promise. Midway through spring training, Canterino underwent surgery to “tighten” ligaments in his right throwing shoulder, effectively ending his 2025 campaign before it began. The Twins announced the procedure on March 16th, revealing that the rotator cuff strain from camp required a formal surgical repair. This was following earlier Tommy John surgery, which sidelined him for all of 2023. A Once-Promising Arm A second-round pick (54th overall) by Minnesota in the 2019 MLB Draft, Canterino was lauded for his power arsenal and pitchability. He dazzled in college, with a fastball that sat in the mid-90s and a tight, wipeout slider. Scouts projected this arsenal would allow him to become a mid-rotation starter or high-leverage bullpen arm at the major-league level. Between 2020 and 2024, Canterino consistently appeared in the top half of Baseball America’s Twins top-30 prospect rankings, peeking inside the top 15 midseason list before being shelved by injuries. Even after going unranked in the 2024 midseason update due to inactivity, evaluators still recognized his upside, lamenting that he’d only thrown 85 (dominant) innings since being drafted. There Is No Such Thing As a Pitching Prospect (TINSTAAPP) Right elbow inflammation derailed Canterino’s professional path early in 2021, culminating in Tommy John surgery in August 2022, after a dominant Double-A stint. He missed the remainder of 2022 and all of 2023 recuperating from the procedure. In 2024, just as hopes rose for his return, Canterino suffered a right rotator cuff strain during spring training, prompting another IL stay that kept him out for the entire season. Despite the interruptions, Canterino’s flashes were remarkable. Across 85 career minor-league innings, he posted a sparkling 1.48 ERA with a 39.1% strikeout rate, illustrating his ability to miss bats and generate weak contact when healthy. He pitched exclusively as a starter early on, then began to be evaluated as a potential bullpen weapon. His repertoire lends itself to shorter bursts of high-impact potential. Now, the Twins are left wondering what could have been. What’s Next: Free Agency and Options When Canterino clears waivers, he immediately becomes a free agent, free to field offers from any organization. For the Twins, there’s precedent for bringing back released pitchers on minor-league deals, and they could offer a two-year contract designed to let him fully rehab under club supervision. Health remains the paramount question. If he recovers well from this latest setback, there might be time for one more team to take a shot at him and bet on his raw stuff. Come the 2026 season, a healthy, effective Canterino could be a difference-maker for a big-league staff looking for affordable, controllable pitching. Canterino’s release marks the end of one chapter, where unrelenting injuries hampered a storied prospect career. However, one ending is another beginning in which he controls his path. It's possible he'll elect to move on to the next chapter, beyond his playing career, but should he attempt yet another comeback, the task is straightforward: stay healthy, showcase that high-leverage arsenal, and reignite the potential that once made him one of Minnesota’s brightest pitching prospects. Should the Twins try to re-sign Canterino to a two-year minor league deal? Will he make it to the big leagues with another organization? Leave a comment and start the discussion. View full article
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Luke Keaschall has gotten significant attention over the last calendar year for his breakout performance and quick ascension through the organization. Now, another recent draftee may be following in Keaschall’s footsteps. Image courtesy of Colby Gaines, Cedar Rapids Kernels Kyle DeBarge has quietly emerged as one of the Minnesota Twins’ most intriguing young bats, following a familiar developmental path once walked by breakout infielder Luke Keaschall. The Twins selected DeBarge out of Louisiana-Lafayette in the supplemental first round (33rd overall) of the 2024 MLB Draft. He signed for just under $2.4 million and was immediately tested in Low‑A Fort Myers, where he showed flashes of the same contact prowess and speed that defined his collegiate career. In 26 games with the Mighty Mussels, he posted a .235/.322/.343 (.665) slash line with six extra‑base hits and swiped 15 bases. Rewarded with a promotion to High‑A Cedar Rapids to begin 2025, he has since lifted his performance to .273/.367/.455 (.821) with eight extra‑base hits, 10 stolen bases, and a solid walk‑to‑strikeout ratio (12 walks vs. 15 Ks) in 18 games. This performance is even more impressive, given that 80% of his plate appearances have come against pitchers older than him. He currently sits on a .821 OPS through 90 plate appearances at Cedar Rapids, demonstrating his advanced feel for the strike zone and ability to make consistent contact against more polished competition. Like Keaschall, DeBarge’s defensive flexibility (capable of playing both infield and outfield spots) and strong baserunning add layers to his profile, making him a candidate for Minnesota’s next breakout impact bat. Tools and Approach Changes DeBarge’s offensive profile centers on an advanced contact approach, as he rarely chases pitches out of the zone. He also maintains one of the lowest swing‑and‑miss rates among his prospect peers. Last season, he had a 24.1 K% in his professional debut, dropping to 16.7% in 2025. He’s done this while also increasing his BB% by over 3%. His twitchy hands and flat swing generate gap power, and there have been signs of a makeover in his mechanics. DeBarge is pulling the ball significantly more this season, with a 13.4 Pull% increase compared to last year. He’s also hitting the ball more regularly in the air, with his FB% increasing from 24.6% to 39.3%. This has helped him to post a .386 wOBA and a 131 wRC+ to start the year. It’s been a small sample size, but these are positive signs of his long-term prospect development. “I feel like I’m making adjustments at the plate and some stuff has definitely helped,” DeBarge said. “Tightening up my approach, just swinging at the pitches I can hit. Defensively just been working hard on that, too. Clean up the kind of like dumb errors, make the plays that you really should make all the time. It’s just making sure I’m making those. I feel really good right now. What sets him apart is a blend of plus speed and defensive adaptability. He’s capable of manning both middle‑infield and outfield spots, allowing the Twins to maximize his skill set much like they did with Keaschall. This versatility, combined with his threat on the bases, creates a multi-play asset that can use his college experience to move up the organizational ladder. Following in Keaschall’s Footsteps Keaschall’s meteoric rise provides a clear blueprint for DeBarge. He had a swift ascent through the Twins’ system and a willingness to embrace multiple positions. Keaschall’s blend of on‑base savvy, athleticism, and defensive flexibility allowed him to carve out a role in Minnesota’s lineup sooner than most. DeBarge mirrors that trajectory, showcasing an elite hit tool in college (1.112 OPS in 2024) and already passing key developmental milestones in his first full professional season. If his early promise in Cedar Rapids holds and he continues to perform well against older competition, the Twins may soon have a young, high‑floor contributor in the mold of their other breakout bats. Outlook and Next Steps With his ceiling initially defined by hit‑for‑average potential and plus speed, DeBarge’s focus moving forward will be on generating consistent extra‑base power and honing the mechanics needed to drive the ball in the air more frequently. Minnesota’s development staff has encouraged him to maintain his strike‑zone discipline while adding loft to his swing, a refinement that could transform gap doubles into occasional home runs. Defensively, continued reps across multiple spots will enhance his floor and accelerate his timeline. He has seen less time at shortstop this season but continues to play second base and outfield. Should he maintain his current trajectory, DeBarge could find himself at Double-A in the season’s second half, which could put him on a path to debut in 2026. “He’s a gritty, gritty baseball player,” said Kernels Manager Brian Meyer. “Just all-around talented: defense, hitting, can run the bases really well. He’s a gamer, an absolute gamer. One of those kids who you are glad he’s on your team. If he was on the other team, he’s just a pain in the butt to deal with." In the wake of Keaschall’s breakout, DeBarge represents the Twins’ next wave of multi‑tool prospects. He has on‑base skills, a strong speed tool, and the defensive chops to stick at multiple positions. Watch closely: his ascent through Cedar Rapids and beyond may soon accelerate, making him one of the organization’s most compelling breakout candidates. What stands out about DeBarge so far this season? Can he continue to follow in Keaschall’s footsteps? Leave a comment and start the discussion. View full article
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The Athletic Reporter Accidently Added to Center Field Group Chat
Cody Christie posted an article in Just For Fun
Earlier this week (on the latest episode of Gleeman and the Geek), Aaron Gleeman and John Bonnes riffed on a fictional “Center Fielders United” group chat where every snagged line drive and every towering no-doubter gets instant applause. Cue the cosmic joke: Gleeman’s phone binged with an invite link, and before he could text back his trusty “Let me check my schedule,” he was in. Suddenly, the guy who usually writes about the Twins’ outfield upgrades found himself among the best in the business. He was just one message away from Byron Buxton bragging about his latest highlight-reel catch. Buxton’s Brag (and Flashy GIF) Byron Buxton wasted zero time. As soon as the “Welcome!” ping faded, Buxton dropped a slo-mo clip of his game-saving catch from Tuesday night, accompanied by the ominous caption: “Sorry y’all, that line drive wasn’t falling in tonight. #DidItForTheNorthSide.” Buxton has put some of the best numbers of his career against the White Sox, and that has played out this week. He then followed up with a flex: “A healthy Buxton is the game’s best center fielder.” Harris II Fires Back Michael Harris II, who was fresh off turning the Twins’ lineup into his personal highlight reel this past weekend, didn’t let Buxton hog the spotlight: “Nice snag, Byron. But how many hits did you take away from the Twins? I’ll wait.” Harris also bragged about his own defensive metrics: “8 outs above average in 48 innings versus Minnesota. Someone send me their group chat link for where to submit MVP votes.” And just like that, the chat was ablaze with smack-talk. Trout’s “Greatest Ever” Interruption No elite-defender pow-wow would be complete without Mike Trout making it all about Mike Trout: “Hey lads, congrats on the catches. But let’s not pretend any of y’all have done it more consistently than me. 12 consecutive seasons of 8+ dWAR, uncatchable homers listed in WWE moves…come on.” Trout punctuated his message with a shrug emoji and a link to his Hall of Fame résumé. The other members collectively groaned at the humblebrag. Julio’s Chill Check-In Julio Rodríguez, who was MLB Network’s top-ranked center fielder entering the season, weighed in with perspective: “You guys coolin’ on the highlight-worthy catches, but I’m just here making sure the grass is mowed and the sun’s in the right spot. @MikeTrout, maybe save some GOAT talk for after we finish the season?” Julio’s dry humor kept things from devolving into a pure ego-fest—at least until the next round of video highlights. The Bader Bye-Bye Mid-conversation, a new notification popped up: “Harrison Bader removed from group.” Naturally, Gleeman, now deeply invested in this quorum of outfield royalty, asked why. The consensus: Position Shift: Bader’s recent left field duties in Minnesota mean he’s no longer a full-time center fielder. Chat Guidelines: Rule 1—actually play CF regularly; Rule 2—don’t make us miss your defense. Buxton piped up: “Bader, thanks for the memories, but you can’t sit with us.” Trout added, “Maybe try the ‘Left Fielders’ chat?” And just like that, Bader vanished into the void, until an injury forces him to take over in center field. Gleeman is reportedly considering his next move: request an exit from the group chat or start taking notes based on his unprecedented access to the game’s best defenders. Either way, this accidental clubhouse pass may be the best clubhouse story he’s ever covered. -
These days, reporters being accidentally added to a group chat is nothing new. Now, a prominent Twins writer has been added to one of MLB’s most exclusive text chains. Image courtesy of © Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images Earlier this week (on the latest episode of Gleeman and the Geek), Aaron Gleeman and John Bonnes riffed on a fictional “Center Fielders United” group chat where every snagged line drive and every towering no-doubter gets instant applause. Cue the cosmic joke: Gleeman’s phone binged with an invite link, and before he could text back his trusty “Let me check my schedule,” he was in. Suddenly, the guy who usually writes about the Twins’ outfield upgrades found himself among the best in the business. He was just one message away from Byron Buxton bragging about his latest highlight-reel catch. Buxton’s Brag (and Flashy GIF) Byron Buxton wasted zero time. As soon as the “Welcome!” ping faded, Buxton dropped a slo-mo clip of his game-saving catch from Tuesday night, accompanied by the ominous caption: “Sorry y’all, that line drive wasn’t falling in tonight. #DidItForTheNorthSide.” Buxton has put some of the best numbers of his career against the White Sox, and that has played out this week. He then followed up with a flex: “A healthy Buxton is the game’s best center fielder.” Harris II Fires Back Michael Harris II, who was fresh off turning the Twins’ lineup into his personal highlight reel this past weekend, didn’t let Buxton hog the spotlight: “Nice snag, Byron. But how many hits did you take away from the Twins? I’ll wait.” Harris also bragged about his own defensive metrics: “8 outs above average in 48 innings versus Minnesota. Someone send me their group chat link for where to submit MVP votes.” And just like that, the chat was ablaze with smack-talk. Trout’s “Greatest Ever” Interruption No elite-defender pow-wow would be complete without Mike Trout making it all about Mike Trout: “Hey lads, congrats on the catches. But let’s not pretend any of y’all have done it more consistently than me. 12 consecutive seasons of 8+ dWAR, uncatchable homers listed in WWE moves…come on.” Trout punctuated his message with a shrug emoji and a link to his Hall of Fame résumé. The other members collectively groaned at the humblebrag. Julio’s Chill Check-In Julio Rodríguez, who was MLB Network’s top-ranked center fielder entering the season, weighed in with perspective: “You guys coolin’ on the highlight-worthy catches, but I’m just here making sure the grass is mowed and the sun’s in the right spot. @MikeTrout, maybe save some GOAT talk for after we finish the season?” Julio’s dry humor kept things from devolving into a pure ego-fest—at least until the next round of video highlights. The Bader Bye-Bye Mid-conversation, a new notification popped up: “Harrison Bader removed from group.” Naturally, Gleeman, now deeply invested in this quorum of outfield royalty, asked why. The consensus: Position Shift: Bader’s recent left field duties in Minnesota mean he’s no longer a full-time center fielder. Chat Guidelines: Rule 1—actually play CF regularly; Rule 2—don’t make us miss your defense. Buxton piped up: “Bader, thanks for the memories, but you can’t sit with us.” Trout added, “Maybe try the ‘Left Fielders’ chat?” And just like that, Bader vanished into the void, until an injury forces him to take over in center field. Gleeman is reportedly considering his next move: request an exit from the group chat or start taking notes based on his unprecedented access to the game’s best defenders. Either way, this accidental clubhouse pass may be the best clubhouse story he’s ever covered. View full article
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A series of rapid-fire transactions involving righthander Scott Blewett have laid bare MLB’s growing roster‑management dilemma. In barely over a week, he joined three clubs, each expecting him to contribute on the mound. Beyond wins and losses, the human cost of such churn (frequent relocations, housing hunts, uprooted families) often goes unseen. This revolving‑door reality is baked into the collective bargaining‑era waiver rules, but it’s time for the league to consider guardrails that balance team flexibility with players’ welfare. Blewett’s Whirlwind Week On April 12th, the Twins designated Scott Blewett for assignment, to open a roster spot for left‑hander Kody Funderburk. Blewett, 29, had logged two scoreless outings early in the season, but he became the odd man out with the Twins reshuffling their bullpen. Baltimore pounced on April 14th, claiming Blewett off waivers and immediately adding him to its 40‑man roster. Manager Brandon Hyde viewed him as low‑leverage depth, and Blewett responded by tossing two innings over two games, striking out three and walking none. It wasn’t enough to keep him on the roster. Despite his solid performance, the Orioles designated Blewett for assignment after just one week, trading him to the Braves on April 20th for cash considerations. Atlanta, seeking bullpen stability, activated him on April 21st, making them the third team to count on his arm in eight days. Each claim and DFA moved Blewett through a new clubhouse, new coaching staff, and new expectations almost overnight. This roster shuffling is just one example of something that happens regularly in baseball. The Human Toll The grind of constant exposure to waivers and trades extends beyond stat lines. Each new designation forces players to find temporary housing, navigate club‑arranged apartments or hotels, and often relocate children and spouses on short notice—or leave their families behind. While MLB has improved minor‑league housing guarantees, big‑league call‑ups and players floating on the fringes of rosters still shoulder relocation costs themselves or rely on precarious team assistance. This upheaval can fracture family routines, disrupt schooling, and erode mental health, especially for journeymen who know it's a cycle that is likely to last as long as their career does. Scott Blewett’s week‑long tenure in three cities is emblematic of a system that values roster flexibility over player stability. The DFA Conundrum So, how do these moves work? Designating a player for assignment removes him from a club’s 40‑man roster, giving the team seven days to trade, release, or place him on waivers. If another club claims him, he joins the new team’s 40‑man roster. If not, he can be outrighted to the minors or released. (If a player has been outrighted before, upon clearing waivers again, they have the right to elect free agency.) Waiver claims follow a reverse‑order priority based on winning percentage, meaning struggling teams have first dibs. But when a player like Blewett is in demand, multiple teams can place a claim on him. Whichever is in worst shape will get him, only to put him through the wringer again when their roster needs shift. This churn benefits front offices seeking short‑term depth, but it leaves players in limbo. Solutions and Potential Reforms Mandatory retention window: Requiring teams to keep a claimed player on the 40‑man roster for a minimum span (like 10 days) would discourage quick turnaround claims aimed purely at depth. A retention rule could reduce hurried moves and give players time to settle in. The rule against recalling a player within 15 days of optioning them to the minors is a good precedent. Waiver‑claim bonus: Instituting a modest bonus, perhaps prorated per day each time a player is claimed, could offset moving costs and acknowledge the player’s contribution. For example, a $10,000 stipend upon each claim would help cover travel and housing expenses. The CBA already requires teams to pay amounts ranging from $1,200 to $2,200 (depending on the distance between the player's old and news teams' home cities) to players who change teams via waiver claim or trade between mid-March and the trade deadline, but a more robust amount would more fairly reflect the upheaval involved in these types of moves. Centralized relocation assistance: While MLB now guarantees minor‑league housing, big‑league journeymen still face gaps. A central fund administered by the Players Association could provide interest‑free relocation loans, short‑term furnished apartments, and counseling services to those shuttling between clubs. Cap on claims per season: Limiting the number of waiver claims a player can incur in one season, akin to service‑time protections, could prevent endless carousel cycles and encourage teams to commit more fully to each claimed player. The latest CBA is the first to stipulate that a team can only option a player to the minor leagues five times within a season. Next, a similar (hopefully, even more restrictive) rule should protect players from being shuttled between big-league teams without the right to elect free agency. Blewett’s recent odyssey underscores a growing tension between roster agility and player well‑being in modern baseball. As teams exploit DFA rules for competitive advantage, the league and union should collaborate on reforms that temper roster churn and shield players from the whirlwind. Balancing organizational needs with humane considerations will stabilize players’ lives and enrich the game’s integrity and spirit. What other solutions can MLB offer players facing the same situation as Blewett? Leave a comment and start the discussion.
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The league office and the MLBPA have an issue that needs to be addressed in the next collective bargaining agreement. Players can’t continue to be thrown around the waiver wire. Let’s examine the problem, and some potential solutions. Image courtesy of Brad Rempel-Imagn Images A series of rapid-fire transactions involving righthander Scott Blewett have laid bare MLB’s growing roster‑management dilemma. In barely over a week, he joined three clubs, each expecting him to contribute on the mound. Beyond wins and losses, the human cost of such churn (frequent relocations, housing hunts, uprooted families) often goes unseen. This revolving‑door reality is baked into the collective bargaining‑era waiver rules, but it’s time for the league to consider guardrails that balance team flexibility with players’ welfare. Blewett’s Whirlwind Week On April 12th, the Twins designated Scott Blewett for assignment, to open a roster spot for left‑hander Kody Funderburk. Blewett, 29, had logged two scoreless outings early in the season, but he became the odd man out with the Twins reshuffling their bullpen. Baltimore pounced on April 14th, claiming Blewett off waivers and immediately adding him to its 40‑man roster. Manager Brandon Hyde viewed him as low‑leverage depth, and Blewett responded by tossing two innings over two games, striking out three and walking none. It wasn’t enough to keep him on the roster. Despite his solid performance, the Orioles designated Blewett for assignment after just one week, trading him to the Braves on April 20th for cash considerations. Atlanta, seeking bullpen stability, activated him on April 21st, making them the third team to count on his arm in eight days. Each claim and DFA moved Blewett through a new clubhouse, new coaching staff, and new expectations almost overnight. This roster shuffling is just one example of something that happens regularly in baseball. The Human Toll The grind of constant exposure to waivers and trades extends beyond stat lines. Each new designation forces players to find temporary housing, navigate club‑arranged apartments or hotels, and often relocate children and spouses on short notice—or leave their families behind. While MLB has improved minor‑league housing guarantees, big‑league call‑ups and players floating on the fringes of rosters still shoulder relocation costs themselves or rely on precarious team assistance. This upheaval can fracture family routines, disrupt schooling, and erode mental health, especially for journeymen who know it's a cycle that is likely to last as long as their career does. Scott Blewett’s week‑long tenure in three cities is emblematic of a system that values roster flexibility over player stability. The DFA Conundrum So, how do these moves work? Designating a player for assignment removes him from a club’s 40‑man roster, giving the team seven days to trade, release, or place him on waivers. If another club claims him, he joins the new team’s 40‑man roster. If not, he can be outrighted to the minors or released. (If a player has been outrighted before, upon clearing waivers again, they have the right to elect free agency.) Waiver claims follow a reverse‑order priority based on winning percentage, meaning struggling teams have first dibs. But when a player like Blewett is in demand, multiple teams can place a claim on him. Whichever is in worst shape will get him, only to put him through the wringer again when their roster needs shift. This churn benefits front offices seeking short‑term depth, but it leaves players in limbo. Solutions and Potential Reforms Mandatory retention window: Requiring teams to keep a claimed player on the 40‑man roster for a minimum span (like 10 days) would discourage quick turnaround claims aimed purely at depth. A retention rule could reduce hurried moves and give players time to settle in. The rule against recalling a player within 15 days of optioning them to the minors is a good precedent. Waiver‑claim bonus: Instituting a modest bonus, perhaps prorated per day each time a player is claimed, could offset moving costs and acknowledge the player’s contribution. For example, a $10,000 stipend upon each claim would help cover travel and housing expenses. The CBA already requires teams to pay amounts ranging from $1,200 to $2,200 (depending on the distance between the player's old and news teams' home cities) to players who change teams via waiver claim or trade between mid-March and the trade deadline, but a more robust amount would more fairly reflect the upheaval involved in these types of moves. Centralized relocation assistance: While MLB now guarantees minor‑league housing, big‑league journeymen still face gaps. A central fund administered by the Players Association could provide interest‑free relocation loans, short‑term furnished apartments, and counseling services to those shuttling between clubs. Cap on claims per season: Limiting the number of waiver claims a player can incur in one season, akin to service‑time protections, could prevent endless carousel cycles and encourage teams to commit more fully to each claimed player. The latest CBA is the first to stipulate that a team can only option a player to the minor leagues five times within a season. Next, a similar (hopefully, even more restrictive) rule should protect players from being shuttled between big-league teams without the right to elect free agency. Blewett’s recent odyssey underscores a growing tension between roster agility and player well‑being in modern baseball. As teams exploit DFA rules for competitive advantage, the league and union should collaborate on reforms that temper roster churn and shield players from the whirlwind. Balancing organizational needs with humane considerations will stabilize players’ lives and enrich the game’s integrity and spirit. What other solutions can MLB offer players facing the same situation as Blewett? Leave a comment and start the discussion. View full article
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For years, the Minnesota Twins have been plagued by poor baserunning. Whether it was missed opportunities to take the extra base, ill-timed steals, or grounding into double plays at alarming rates, the Twins' deficiencies on the bases were a constant source of frustration for fans and an Achilles' heel for a club in the middle of a winning window. But in 2025, something strange and refreshing has happened. The Twins have become a competent—even good—baserunning team. According to FanGraphs’s Baserunning Runs (BsR), the Twins rank fifth in all of baseball. That’s a welcome step forward for a team that finished 26th in the same category last year. Even more impressive, no American League team ranks ahead of them, with the Boston Red Sox trailing by over a full run. Statcast tells a similar story: the Twins again come in fifth for baserunning value, the highest rank of any AL club. To say this turnaround was unexpected would be an understatement. In 2023, Minnesota finished 20th in BsR at -5.3, and things got worse in 2024, with a -11.2 mark. Statcast pegged their decline similarly, going from 21st (-5 runs) in 2023 to 24th (-8 runs) last season. It’s the kind of performance that usually draws internal reviews and a potential change to the roster pieces. Instead, the Twins largely returned the same roster, and have found a way to improve. So, what changed? A healthy Byron Buxton certainly helps. When he’s on the field, few players are more dynamic. Through the first month of the 2025 season, Buxton has already been worth 2 Baserunning Runs, tying him for first in all of baseball. This isn’t just about stealing bases (although he is 5-for-5 in stolen base attempts). It’s about how he reads balls in play, takes the extra base, and forces defenders into rushed throws. His impact is felt even when he doesn’t touch the ball. Based on Statcast modeling of this play, for instance, Buxton earned 0.19 runs added, because about a fifth of the time, a runner either has to stop at third or is thrown out, rather than scoring from first on this well-struck double. (Notably, Buxton got such a good read and is so fast that there wasn't even a play on him. He cruised home with ease.) Buxton isn’t the only surprise contributor, though. Matt Wallner, long known more for his power than his foot speed, has also been quietly effective on the bases. He’s already tallied 1 Baserunning Run, showing better instincts and smarter decisions, particularly when going first to third or scoring from second. He isn’t going to rack up stolen base totals with his player type, so it's critical for him to be a smart baserunner to help the team win. Adding Luke Keaschall to the roster has also helped the team’s baserunning dynamic. Keaschall was known as a strong baserunner in the minors, with MLB Pipeline giving him a 55 run grade entering the 2025 season. “Keaschall runs well, with good instincts, so he should continue to be a base-stealing threat,” the scouting report said at the time. He’s already stolen three bases in four games for the Twins and had 23 steals in 103 games last year. Keaschall adds a dynamic that has been sorely missing from Minnesota over the last two seasons. The team’s approach seems to have shifted from reckless to refined. Gone are the head-scratching stolen base attempts and basepath blunders that defined previous seasons. (Forget about that one specific Jose Miranda play at second base, if you please.) In their place: competent, calculated aggression. That’s not to say every player has made the leap. Willi Castro, the team’s best baserunner in 2023 with 33 steals and 3 BsR, took a step back last season, costing the team three runs on the bases. So far, in 2025, he hasn’t returned to his 2023 form, but isn’t hurting the team, either. He’s hovering around neutral, and for a team that’s seen him yo-yo in value, that’s a win. Carlos Correa, meanwhile, remains an enigma on the bases. The numbers suggest he’s improving. He’s worth a neutral 0 BsR in 2025, after finishing with negative values in the previous two seasons. But the eye test tells a more complicated story. Correa still jogs out too many routine ground balls, and though he can turn on the jets when needed, those moments are inconsistent. That said, the improvement is worth noting, especially when you remember he grounded into a league-leading 30 double plays in 2023 while playing through plantar fasciitis. He cut that number to just five last year, and while he’s already matched that mark in 2025, the trend (overall) is positive. Perhaps the most important takeaway is that this year’s success isn’t built solely on one or two players. It's a collective effort. From young players making smarter decisions to veterans avoiding costly mistakes, the Twins have become a team that rarely gives away outs on the bases. It’s a marked change from past seasons, where the team’s offensive production was often undone by a running game that seemed stuck in quicksand. This year, those extra bases are turning into runs, and those runs have the potential to turn into wins if the Twins can get back on track. It’s still early, and there’s always room for regression. But the Twins’ new identity on the bases may be more than just a blip. With Buxton healthy and a roster of players who’ve bought into a more disciplined approach, Minnesota is quietly building an advantage in an area that doesn’t always make headlines, but often decides games. This shift is a much-needed change for a team that’s long struggled to stay out of its own way on the bases. Can the Twins continue their baserunning resurgence? Leave a comment and start the discussion.
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The Minnesota Twins are the AL’s best baserunning team. Here’s how it happened. Image courtesy of William Parmeter For years, the Minnesota Twins have been plagued by poor baserunning. Whether it was missed opportunities to take the extra base, ill-timed steals, or grounding into double plays at alarming rates, the Twins' deficiencies on the bases were a constant source of frustration for fans and an Achilles' heel for a club in the middle of a winning window. But in 2025, something strange and refreshing has happened. The Twins have become a competent—even good—baserunning team. According to FanGraphs’s Baserunning Runs (BsR), the Twins rank fifth in all of baseball. That’s a welcome step forward for a team that finished 26th in the same category last year. Even more impressive, no American League team ranks ahead of them, with the Boston Red Sox trailing by over a full run. Statcast tells a similar story: the Twins again come in fifth for baserunning value, the highest rank of any AL club. To say this turnaround was unexpected would be an understatement. In 2023, Minnesota finished 20th in BsR at -5.3, and things got worse in 2024, with a -11.2 mark. Statcast pegged their decline similarly, going from 21st (-5 runs) in 2023 to 24th (-8 runs) last season. It’s the kind of performance that usually draws internal reviews and a potential change to the roster pieces. Instead, the Twins largely returned the same roster, and have found a way to improve. So, what changed? A healthy Byron Buxton certainly helps. When he’s on the field, few players are more dynamic. Through the first month of the 2025 season, Buxton has already been worth 2 Baserunning Runs, tying him for first in all of baseball. This isn’t just about stealing bases (although he is 5-for-5 in stolen base attempts). It’s about how he reads balls in play, takes the extra base, and forces defenders into rushed throws. His impact is felt even when he doesn’t touch the ball. Based on Statcast modeling of this play, for instance, Buxton earned 0.19 runs added, because about a fifth of the time, a runner either has to stop at third or is thrown out, rather than scoring from first on this well-struck double. (Notably, Buxton got such a good read and is so fast that there wasn't even a play on him. He cruised home with ease.) Buxton isn’t the only surprise contributor, though. Matt Wallner, long known more for his power than his foot speed, has also been quietly effective on the bases. He’s already tallied 1 Baserunning Run, showing better instincts and smarter decisions, particularly when going first to third or scoring from second. He isn’t going to rack up stolen base totals with his player type, so it's critical for him to be a smart baserunner to help the team win. Adding Luke Keaschall to the roster has also helped the team’s baserunning dynamic. Keaschall was known as a strong baserunner in the minors, with MLB Pipeline giving him a 55 run grade entering the 2025 season. “Keaschall runs well, with good instincts, so he should continue to be a base-stealing threat,” the scouting report said at the time. He’s already stolen three bases in four games for the Twins and had 23 steals in 103 games last year. Keaschall adds a dynamic that has been sorely missing from Minnesota over the last two seasons. The team’s approach seems to have shifted from reckless to refined. Gone are the head-scratching stolen base attempts and basepath blunders that defined previous seasons. (Forget about that one specific Jose Miranda play at second base, if you please.) In their place: competent, calculated aggression. That’s not to say every player has made the leap. Willi Castro, the team’s best baserunner in 2023 with 33 steals and 3 BsR, took a step back last season, costing the team three runs on the bases. So far, in 2025, he hasn’t returned to his 2023 form, but isn’t hurting the team, either. He’s hovering around neutral, and for a team that’s seen him yo-yo in value, that’s a win. Carlos Correa, meanwhile, remains an enigma on the bases. The numbers suggest he’s improving. He’s worth a neutral 0 BsR in 2025, after finishing with negative values in the previous two seasons. But the eye test tells a more complicated story. Correa still jogs out too many routine ground balls, and though he can turn on the jets when needed, those moments are inconsistent. That said, the improvement is worth noting, especially when you remember he grounded into a league-leading 30 double plays in 2023 while playing through plantar fasciitis. He cut that number to just five last year, and while he’s already matched that mark in 2025, the trend (overall) is positive. Perhaps the most important takeaway is that this year’s success isn’t built solely on one or two players. It's a collective effort. From young players making smarter decisions to veterans avoiding costly mistakes, the Twins have become a team that rarely gives away outs on the bases. It’s a marked change from past seasons, where the team’s offensive production was often undone by a running game that seemed stuck in quicksand. This year, those extra bases are turning into runs, and those runs have the potential to turn into wins if the Twins can get back on track. It’s still early, and there’s always room for regression. But the Twins’ new identity on the bases may be more than just a blip. With Buxton healthy and a roster of players who’ve bought into a more disciplined approach, Minnesota is quietly building an advantage in an area that doesn’t always make headlines, but often decides games. This shift is a much-needed change for a team that’s long struggled to stay out of its own way on the bases. Can the Twins continue their baserunning resurgence? Leave a comment and start the discussion. View full article
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The Danger of Losing the Next Generation for the Minnesota Twins
Cody Christie posted an article in Twins
Over the last year and a half, the Minnesota Twins have gone from the emotional high of their first postseason series win in 21 years to the uneasy realization that an entire generation of fans may be drifting away. As attendance and engagement plummet, Target Field now feels more like an empty cathedral. Television issues and the offseason payroll retrenchment have only deepened the disconnect between the team and its community. Unless the franchise finds a way to reignite that spark (on the field, on the airwaves, and in the front office), it risks losing young fans forever, imperiling the franchise’s long‑term vitality. Attendance Crisis at Target Field This April, the Twins announced a paid crowd of just 10,240 for a game against the New York Mets. It was the smallest attendance for a non‑COVID season since Target Field opened in 2010. The bleachers in left field were embarrassingly sparse, a stark contrast to the sellouts and energy surrounding the team’s 2023 postseason run. During that run, fans proved they would show up at Target Field if there were something to cheer about. Perhaps even more alarming is the evaporating core of season‑ticket holders. Based on the attendance for the Mets series, the Twins’ season‑ticket subscriber base sits below 10,000, which is one-fourth of the ballpark’s capacity. Some teams have played poorly in the Target Field era, but this might be the lowest point in Target Field history when it comes to fan morale. Management has kept season ticket renewal figures under wraps, but future attendance will only sink lower without a solid base of committed fans. Minnesota averaged only 17,995 tickets sold per game through their first nine home dates, ranking 25th out of 30 MLB clubs. This trend threatens the pipeline of tomorrow’s supporters. If children and young adults don’t experience the magic of Target Field now, the Twins will face an even steeper climb in decades to come. Television Issues and Youth Engagement In 2024, a bitter carriage dispute left many Comcast Xfinity subscribers unable to watch Twins games on Bally Sports North. Fans tuning in saw only a “Bally Sports is no longer available” graphic, a fiasco that left households dark for months. During that stretch, the Twins played some of their best baseball of the season, which added insult to injury. That blackout certainly didn’t help cultivate new fans. Amid the bankruptcy proceedings for Diamond Sports Group, MLB assumed production and distribution of Twins broadcasts in 2025 via its own local media arm. And while MLB’s direct‑to‑consumer approach may broaden availability by getting rid of archaic blackout rules, it also generates far less revenue than traditional RSNs, raising concerns about budget cuts down the line. Baseball endures, at its roots, as a game of childhood wonder, but if young fans can’t catch a single pitch on television, they’ll never develop that passion. In an era of on-demand streaming and bundled sports packages, the Twins’ recent broadcast missteps have driven away potential lifelong supporters before they even picked up a glove. Ownership on the Sidelines Coming off the elation of October 2023, the Pohlads stunned fans by trimming payroll by $30 million before the 2024 season. More dollars don’t guarantee on‑field success, but investment signals ambition in the underfunded AL Central. Instead, the payroll rollback whispered that baseball is just another balance sheet line item for ownership. Dwelling in the middle of the AL Central, the Twins have made remarkably few roster upgrades over the past two seasons. Minnesota stood pat even at the 2024 trade deadline, when a bold swing could have electrified the fanbase. There was no impactful free-agent acquisition or blockbuster trade, just roster inertia that echoed from the front office to the stands. Fans rally around new faces and renewed hope. Change for its own sake is rarely advisable, but stagnation born of a dearth of better ideas is even worse. Here, the silence of the phones in Derek Falvey’s war room has fostered only apathy. When fans have no reason to pay attention, families choose cheaper, more reliable forms of entertainment, and kids lose interest in the game’s narrative. The team sometimes seems to forget that its fans are awake and hungry for entertainment year-round, rather than only during the season, and that transactions freshen the vibes in both the grandstand and the clubhouse. Reigniting Hope Baseball’s beauty lies in the ebb and flow of the season, the promise of a comeback forged out of adversity. The Twins need that narrative again, through meaningful payroll commitments, bold midseason moves, and a broadcast plan that ensures no child is left without a window into the action. It will take more than tactical tweaks. It will require genuine communication, transparency, and a renewed partnership with the community. Right now, the Twins can’t be trusted to do this. Many fans have seen firsthand how a game can capture a child’s imagination. The crack of the bat, the roar of the crowd, and the butterflies before a big pitch are memories that last a lifetime. But without that spark kindled early, baseball becomes just another note on the page of youth’s digital distractions. The Twins must remember that their truest investment isn’t a free agent contract or a broadcast fee. It’s in every first‑time fan who thrills at a homer, who dreams of stealing bases and calling “let’s go!” in a stadium full of strangers. Target Field has a chance to once again pulse with life. If the organization can reconnect with that emotional core by filling the stands, helping fans with their broadcast coverage, and showing that payroll reflects purpose. If not, new owners will soon look back and see they lost more than games. They'll have lost a generation. -
The Minnesota Twins are facing a generational crisis. With a protracted ownership problem burbling and the on-field product suffering, a wave of young people are passing the team by—or leaving it behind. Image courtesy of Melissa Berman, Twins Daily Over the last year and a half, the Minnesota Twins have gone from the emotional high of their first postseason series win in 21 years to the uneasy realization that an entire generation of fans may be drifting away. As attendance and engagement plummet, Target Field now feels more like an empty cathedral. Television issues and the offseason payroll retrenchment have only deepened the disconnect between the team and its community. Unless the franchise finds a way to reignite that spark (on the field, on the airwaves, and in the front office), it risks losing young fans forever, imperiling the franchise’s long‑term vitality. Attendance Crisis at Target Field This April, the Twins announced a paid crowd of just 10,240 for a game against the New York Mets. It was the smallest attendance for a non‑COVID season since Target Field opened in 2010. The bleachers in left field were embarrassingly sparse, a stark contrast to the sellouts and energy surrounding the team’s 2023 postseason run. During that run, fans proved they would show up at Target Field if there were something to cheer about. Perhaps even more alarming is the evaporating core of season‑ticket holders. Based on the attendance for the Mets series, the Twins’ season‑ticket subscriber base sits below 10,000, which is one-fourth of the ballpark’s capacity. Some teams have played poorly in the Target Field era, but this might be the lowest point in Target Field history when it comes to fan morale. Management has kept season ticket renewal figures under wraps, but future attendance will only sink lower without a solid base of committed fans. Minnesota averaged only 17,995 tickets sold per game through their first nine home dates, ranking 25th out of 30 MLB clubs. This trend threatens the pipeline of tomorrow’s supporters. If children and young adults don’t experience the magic of Target Field now, the Twins will face an even steeper climb in decades to come. Television Issues and Youth Engagement In 2024, a bitter carriage dispute left many Comcast Xfinity subscribers unable to watch Twins games on Bally Sports North. Fans tuning in saw only a “Bally Sports is no longer available” graphic, a fiasco that left households dark for months. During that stretch, the Twins played some of their best baseball of the season, which added insult to injury. That blackout certainly didn’t help cultivate new fans. Amid the bankruptcy proceedings for Diamond Sports Group, MLB assumed production and distribution of Twins broadcasts in 2025 via its own local media arm. And while MLB’s direct‑to‑consumer approach may broaden availability by getting rid of archaic blackout rules, it also generates far less revenue than traditional RSNs, raising concerns about budget cuts down the line. Baseball endures, at its roots, as a game of childhood wonder, but if young fans can’t catch a single pitch on television, they’ll never develop that passion. In an era of on-demand streaming and bundled sports packages, the Twins’ recent broadcast missteps have driven away potential lifelong supporters before they even picked up a glove. Ownership on the Sidelines Coming off the elation of October 2023, the Pohlads stunned fans by trimming payroll by $30 million before the 2024 season. More dollars don’t guarantee on‑field success, but investment signals ambition in the underfunded AL Central. Instead, the payroll rollback whispered that baseball is just another balance sheet line item for ownership. Dwelling in the middle of the AL Central, the Twins have made remarkably few roster upgrades over the past two seasons. Minnesota stood pat even at the 2024 trade deadline, when a bold swing could have electrified the fanbase. There was no impactful free-agent acquisition or blockbuster trade, just roster inertia that echoed from the front office to the stands. Fans rally around new faces and renewed hope. Change for its own sake is rarely advisable, but stagnation born of a dearth of better ideas is even worse. Here, the silence of the phones in Derek Falvey’s war room has fostered only apathy. When fans have no reason to pay attention, families choose cheaper, more reliable forms of entertainment, and kids lose interest in the game’s narrative. The team sometimes seems to forget that its fans are awake and hungry for entertainment year-round, rather than only during the season, and that transactions freshen the vibes in both the grandstand and the clubhouse. Reigniting Hope Baseball’s beauty lies in the ebb and flow of the season, the promise of a comeback forged out of adversity. The Twins need that narrative again, through meaningful payroll commitments, bold midseason moves, and a broadcast plan that ensures no child is left without a window into the action. It will take more than tactical tweaks. It will require genuine communication, transparency, and a renewed partnership with the community. Right now, the Twins can’t be trusted to do this. Many fans have seen firsthand how a game can capture a child’s imagination. The crack of the bat, the roar of the crowd, and the butterflies before a big pitch are memories that last a lifetime. But without that spark kindled early, baseball becomes just another note on the page of youth’s digital distractions. The Twins must remember that their truest investment isn’t a free agent contract or a broadcast fee. It’s in every first‑time fan who thrills at a homer, who dreams of stealing bases and calling “let’s go!” in a stadium full of strangers. Target Field has a chance to once again pulse with life. If the organization can reconnect with that emotional core by filling the stands, helping fans with their broadcast coverage, and showing that payroll reflects purpose. If not, new owners will soon look back and see they lost more than games. They'll have lost a generation. View full article
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MONDAY’S TRANSACTIONS -St. Paul Saints placed RHP Randy Dobnak on the 7-day injured list. TWINS DAILY MINOR LEAGUE CONTENT -Prospect Retrospective: Luke Keaschall -Minor League Report: Mussels Shut Out Bradenton for a Third Time and All Other Games are Washed out -Twins Minor League Report (4/19): López Sharp in Rehab Start -Zebby Matthews and the Next Frontier of Pitching Development -Twins Minor League Report (4/18): Jason Doktorcyk Ks 10 -Mighty Mussels See Early Returns from Twins’ Willingness to Draft High-School Arms -Twins Minor League Report (4/17): Eli Jones Dominates and Kyler Fedko's Power Surge -Three Up, Three Down: Fast Start Preferred -The Twins Have a Stud Pitching Prospect Almost Nobody Is Talking About -Twins Minor League Report (4/16): Fort Myers Rehabbing Pitchers Dazzle -Twins Minor League Report (4/15): Zebby Matthews and Travis Adams Blow Away the Iowa Cubs WEEK IN REVIEW Triple-A: St. Paul Saints Overall: 7-10 (5.5 Games Out of First) Last Week: 2-3 The Saints were rained out on Sunday, and now have a franchise record five doubleheaders on their 2025 schedule. On Saturday, Pablo López was sharp in his rehab start, as he tossed 4 2/3 innings while allowing one earned run on a solo home run. He threw 63 pitches (43 for strikes) and got eight swings and misses. The Saints offense exploded in Friday night’s victory. Eight of nine Saints collected a hit, seven of nine scored a run, and six of nine drove in a run in an 11-8 win. Marco Raya made his third start of the season and looked sharp. He’s been on a strict pitch count at the beginning of the year. Across three shutout innings, he gave up four hits while walking one and striking out three. On Wednesday, the Saints slugged four home runs, including back-to-back homers in the eighth from Armando Alvarez and Carson McCusker. McCusker was the team’s best hitter this week. He went 7-for-18 (.389 BA) with three home runs, one double, and 8 RBIs. Andrew Morris set a new personal best by topping out at 99.3 miles per hour. Zebby Matthews also set a personal best with a 99.5-mph fastball on his final pitch of Tuesday’s game. He went 5 innings, allowing one run on four hits while walking one and striking out seven. He threw 71 pitches, 49 for strikes. Travis Adams took over for Matthews and didn’t allow more than one runner in any of his four innings, including retiring eight of nine from the sixth through the eighth innings. He went 4 shutout innings allowing two hits while striking out two in picking up the save. What’s Next: The Saints return to action on Tuesday morning at 11:07 a.m. against the Indianapolis Indians (Pittsburgh Pirates) for the start of a six-game set. Double-A: Wichita Wind Surge Overall: 8-7 (3.0 Games Out of First) Last Week: 2-4 The Wind Surge swept a Saturday doubleheader. A trio of home runs was enough to get by while four Wichita pitchers combined for 13 punchouts. Connor Prielipp pitched three innings and allowed one run (a solo home run) on two hits. He struck out five batters and 33 of his 48 pitches were for strikes (68.75%). Darren Bowen earned his second win of the season, giving up just two hits with three walks and four strikeouts out of the bullpen. Kyler Fedko is tied for the Texas League lead in home runs (4) alongside Tulsa’s Jose Ramos. He finished the week going 6-for-16 (.375 BA) with three home runs, one double, and seven RBI. On Friday, the Wind Surge hit a trio of home runs in a loss. Tyler Dearden, Kala’i Rosario, and Aaron Sabato each connected for a homer. Rosario’s was the strangest as the right-fielder grabbed at the ball and somersaulted over the short wall into the bullpen, where the ball popped out of his glove and flung itself back onto the field of play. After a meeting with all of the umpires, they awarded Rosario a two-run home run, his second long ball of the season. Aaron Rozek started Friday’s game and spun a strong five innings as the starter. He gave up just two earned runs on three hits with eight strikeouts, tying the most he’s had in an appearance as a member of the Wind Surge. Trent Baker started on Thursday and pitched 4 2/3 innings while allowing four runs (two earned) on five hits with just one walk to a season-high seven strikeouts. Aaron Sabato started hot after coming off the IL. He went 6-for-14 (.429 BA) with a double and a home run. What’s Next: Wichita will open a six-game home series against the Springfield Cardinals on Tuesday at 6:05 PM CST. High-A: Cedar Rapids Kernels Overall: 9-5 (1.0 Game Out of First) Last Week: 3-2 Like the Saints, the Kernels were rained out on Sunday which shortened their week. Logan Whitaker picked up his first professional win as part of Saturday’s double-header. In two innings, he allowed one run on one hit. On Thursday, Charlee Soto was handed his first loss of the season despite pitching well. In four innings, he allowed two earned runs on six hits with four strikeouts and a walk. He has a 1.38 ERA for the season. The Kernels had a nail-biting, back-and-forth game on Wednesday. Trailing by a run in the top of the ninth, Cedar Rapids tied the game to force extra innings and won it in the 11th.Khadim Diaw hit an infield fly that dropped in the ninth to score a runner from second. Brandon Winokur lined an RBI double in extra-innings for the win. Paulshawn Pasqualotto gets a lot of credit for the extra-innings victory. In his fourth outing of the year, the right-hander did not allow a run across the eighth, ninth and tenth innings, collecting four strikeouts with just two hits allowed. Nate Baez was the team’s best hitter this week. He went 8-for-13 (.615 BA) with one double, four walks, and seven runs scored. What’s Next: Cedar Rapids opens a 12-game homestand Tuesday night with the first of six games against Wisconsin at 6:35 PM CST. Low-A: Fort Myers Mighty Mussels Overall: 8-7 (1.0 Games Out of First) Last Week: 4-2 On Sunday, the Mighty Mussels tossed their third shutout of the week. It was the second consecutive shutout, as Fort Myers took the series four games to two. Mussels’ pitching now has a 2.69 ERA on the season, good for second in all of Class-A, behind just the Stockton Ports of the California League at 2.36. Fort Myers leads all of Class-A with 179 strikeouts on the season. Making his first professional start, Fort Myers right-hander Jakob Hall tossed three scoreless frames. The eighth-round pick in 2024 allowed one hit and issued one walk, while punching out a pair. Jacob Kisting came on in relief of Hall. He tossed three hitless innings, while hitting a batter and walking another for the only two baserunners of his outing. Devin Kirby followed Kisting out of the Mussel bullpen. The knuckleballer tossed a pair of scoreless frames, scattering two hits and striking out one batter. Kade Bragg earned his first save of the season as he finished off Sunday’s shutout by striking out the side. It was the second career save for Bragg. Making his first professional start, Cole Peschl picked up the win after five scoreless innings. The 15th-round pick in 2024 surrendered two hits and issued one walk on the night. He struck out six batters while throwing 47 of his 65 pitches for strikes. Zander Sechrist closed down the game tha Peschel started. He earned the save after tossing three shutdown innings, allowing two hits while striking out three. Jay Thomason was on a tear this week. He had three long balls in the six-game series and they all had an exit velocity of 111 mph. He has now recorded an extra-base hit in four of the five games to start the week. On Friday, Jason Doktorczyk combined for a 10-strikeout performance. He surrendered three unearned runs across five innings, while allowing four hits and no walks. The 10 strikeouts is a new season high for a Mussels’ pitcher. Michael Tonkin, on rehab, allowed an unearned run across two innings, while striking out three batters. Eli Jones put together a solid outing on Thursday. He tossed five shutout innings and struck out six batters. He carried a no-hit bid into the fifth inning, before a one-out, broken bat single found the grass in center field. The Fort Myers pitching staff tied a Mighty Mussels era record with 19 strikeouts on their way to a 1-0 shutout victory over the Bradenton Marauders on Wednesday night. Christian MacLeod, on a rehab assignment from Double-A Wichita, started on the mound for Fort Myers. The lefty spun two perfect innings, striking out four batters in the process. Pierson Ohl, also on a rehab assignment from Double-A Wichita, dominated the middle three innings. He allowed the only hit of the night on a bunt single, but fanned eight batters and didn’t issue a walk in his outing. Dylan Questad earned a three-inning save to complete the shutout while striking out four and issuing a pair of walks. Fort Myers started their week well with a season-high 12 hits on Tuesday night. Michael Carpenter made the second start of his professional career, allowing one run on the solo homer, while striking out three Marauder batters over two-plus innings of work. Jose Rodriguez hit his first triple since he hit three in the 2022 Dominican Summer League. The two-run three-bagger was critical to the team’s win on Tuesday. Fort Myers’s bullpen was great on Tuesday. Liam Rocha, Brock Stewart, Kade Bragg, Brady Feigl and Jacob Kisting combined to allow just one earned run while striking out nine hitters across seven frames. What’s Next: Fort Myers heads on the road for a six-game series against the Clearwater Threshers. PROSPECT SUMMARY Check out the Prospect Tracker for much more on our Twins Top 20 prospects. And, be sure to note the new, updated Top 20 rankings. Roster assignments below are subject to change as some players have yet to be assigned or are in Extended Spring Training. Walker Jenkins (Wichita): On injured list Emmanuel Rodriguez (St. Paul): 4-19, 1 RBI, 1 R, 4 BB, 7 K Luke Keaschall (Minnesota): 4-12, 2 2B, 2 RBI, 1 R, 1 BB, 2 K Charlee Soto (Cedar Rapids): 4 IP, 6 H, 2 ER, 1 BB, 4 K Andrew Morris (St. Paul): 3.2 IP, 9 H, 7 ER, 1 BB, 6 K Marco Raya (St. Paul): 3 IP, 4 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 3 K Kaelen Culpepper (Cedar Rapids): On injured list Brandon Winokur (Cedar Rapids): 4-23, 2 2B, 4 RBI, 3 BB, 5 K, 2 SB Cory Lewis (St. Paul): 2.2 IP, 8 H, 6 ER (4 HR), 0 BB, 4 K Connor Prielipp (Wichita): 3 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 0 BB, 5 K Dasan Hill (Fort Myers): Did Not Pitch C.J. Culpepper (Wichita): On injured list Kyle DeBarge (Cedar Rapids): 4-22, 2 2B, 1 HR, 8 RBI, 3 R, 3 BB, 4 K Eduardo Beltre (DSL Twins): In Extended Spring Training Yasser Mercedes (Fort Myers): 2-21, 1 2B, 5 BB, 9 K, 3 R, 1 SB Rayne Doncon (Cedar Rapids): On injured list Billy Amick (Cedar Rapids): 6-18, 1 RBI, 4 R, 3 BB, 7 K Kala’i Rosario (Wichita): 4-25, 1 HR, 2 RBI, 12 K, 0 BB, 2 SB Gabriel Gonzalez (Cedar Rapids): 5-20, 2 2B, 2 RBI, 3 R, 2 BB, 2 K Ricardo Olivar (Wichita): 4-13, 1 HR, 1 RBI, 3 R, 3 BB, 2 K PLAYERS OF THE WEEK Hitter of the Week: Kyle Fedko (Wichita) 6-for-16 (.375 BA), 3 HR, 1 2B, 7 RBI, 4 BB, 3 K, 1.500 OPS Pitcher of the Week: Jason Doktorczyk (Fort Myers) 5 IP, 0 ER (3 R), 4 H, 0 BB, 10 K
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