IndianaTwin
Verified Member-
Posts
6,315 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
27
Content Type
Profiles
News
Minnesota Twins Videos
2026 Minnesota Twins Top Prospects Ranking
2022 Minnesota Twins Draft Picks
Minnesota Twins Free Agent & Trade Rumors, Notes, & Tidbits
Guides & Resources
2023 Minnesota Twins Draft Picks
The Minnesota Twins Players Project
2024 Minnesota Twins Draft Picks
2025 Minnesota Twins Draft Pick Tracker
Forums
Blogs
Events
Store
Downloads
Gallery
Everything posted by IndianaTwin
-
Louis Varland: Painful Loss or Proof of Concept?
IndianaTwin replied to Nick Nelson's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
AAA salary as a starter = $45K-$90K if on the 40-man, plus $31.50 per diem (in 2025) while on the road. MLB salary as a reliever = $780k, plus $117.50 per diem (less if a meal is provided) while on the road. I don't think a move to the bullpen is an overly difficult sale if it presents a nearly guaranteed path to the majors. -
I'll go a step further and say you WILL have more than one "leader" in the clubhouse. With 26 guys it's inevitable that there are going to be different leadership styles and that people will respond differently to different leadership styles, etc. There's positional differences as well -- you hear regularly of guys who are leaders on a pitching staff, etc. Your picture captures the type of leadership I've perceived in Buxton as well. And while it's impossible to judge from the outside, my sense is that Lewis responds better to how Buxton seems to lead than to how Correa seemed to lead. That's not a knock on Correa, just an example -- others may benefit from more rah-rah than Buxton seems to provide. We're all different. Leadership isn't enough to get and maintain a spot on the roster, but if that's an aspect Bell brings to the roster, cool. I'm struck that leadership was perceived as something Santana brought to the roster a couple years ago. Bell's 110 OPS+ last year was better than the 101 Santana had in the year prior to joining the team. I think Bell's a solid add, but the key is still going to be the rest of the roster. As I've said elsewhere, for the Twins to be good offensively, Bell needs to be batting sixth or seventh, shoved down the lineup by a thriving Lewis/Wallner/Keaschall, etc. If he's batting fourth, they will struggle.
-
Twins, Trevor Larnach Avoid Arbitration
IndianaTwin replied to Cody Christie's topic in Minnesota Twins Talk
I'm not arguing for this, but in 2024 he played nearly as much CF as 2B. My understanding is that they didn't use him in the outfield in 2025 because of his return from Tommy John surgery. From a December story: “'It could be really valuable if he could run out to left field or center field along the way,' Twins General Manager Jeremy Zoll said. 'We’re going to have some more formal conversations on what all that is going to look like pretty soon.' In the minors Keaschall played 173 2/3 innings in the outfield, all of which came in center field. His speed makes him an ideal fit there, and his arm strength has never been an issue, prior to Tommy John." -
Twins, Trevor Larnach Avoid Arbitration
IndianaTwin replied to Cody Christie's topic in Minnesota Twins Talk
From the OP: "As things stand, the Twins favor Wallner and Roden for regular roles early in 2026, with Outman serving as the primary backup to Byron Buxton in center field." Have the Twins made statements to this effect? The word on TD is to expect Martin in the lineup and I've also read of speculation on Keaschall relocating to the outfield. -
Yikes. There have been so many Manny Margot sightings on TD that my mind subliminally went there on my initial very quick read. Needless to say, that changed my interpretation of your comments... 🤣
- 39 replies
-
- matt wallner
- royce lewis
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Twins and Phillies Linked in Ryan Jeffers Trade Rumors
IndianaTwin replied to Cody Christie's topic in Minnesota Twins Talk
Prior to the OP's quotes from the Gelb article, the Gelb article also says, "The prevailing sentiment is that the Phillies and Realmuto will find common ground again. He needs them. They need him. There is no single sticking point, according to major-league sources familiar with the talks. Realmuto wants more than the Phillies have offered; the club is believed to have discussed various multi-year scenarios with the catcher. As one of the more decorated catchers in the sport, Realmuto commands a level of respect, but the Phillies are again uncertain about what Realmuto’s market looks like." "League sources" also had Ryan, Lopez and Buxton on the trading block. Trading Jeffers doesn't fit with keeping those three and trying to contend. -
Good questions as well. Which speaks to the dilemma. Those of us with hope are optimistic about (to combine your two posts) a yes from many of Wallner, Lewis, Jeffers, Buxton, Keaschall, etc., while those of us without hope are assuming a no. The likely scenario is probably somewhere in between, but the cupboard isn't bare. Though I've wanted a good 1B signing, I've been saying all winter that success is more dependent on these guys than it is on the signing. To say it another way, if you assume Bell is going to play a lot, success is dependent on him being pushed into the No. 6 or 7 spot in the order rather than on him batting cleanup.
- 39 replies
-
- matt wallner
- royce lewis
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Probably because post-ASB he played in 64 of 66 games at 27 HR/29 SB pace, lifting his BA and slugging percentage significantly in the process. I'm not sure that I consider him "most likely to succeed," since I put as much or more stock in Wallner's OPS+ of 143 over 2023-24 as I do in his only 110 a year ago, but I'm willing to believe that both could easily be middle of the order bats. I agree with others that Keaschel's ability to maintain much of his offensive prowess over a full season is probably more of a difference maker than Lee's improvement to merely average, but having even a 95 or so OPS in Lee batting 8th or 9th would speak to having a pretty long lineup.
- 39 replies
-
- matt wallner
- royce lewis
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Can Austin Martin Become Steven Kwan-lite?
IndianaTwin replied to stringer bell's topic in Minnesota Twins Talk
I'd love to see Martin turn into a great player. What continues to baffle me is people seeing Martin as a given in the lineup based on his 181 PAs in 2025 with an OPS+ of 106, while ignoring his previous 257 PAs with an OPS+ of 89. Yet they simultaneously consider Wallner a question mark because he only had an OPS+ of 110 over 392 PAs in 2025, ignoring his previous 580 PAs with an OPS+ of 139.- 32 replies
-
- obp ability
- speed
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
I don't care if Harmon Killebrew, Tony Oliva AND Rod Carew had gone to Alabama, I'm still going to root against them in football.
- 7 replies
-
- andrew morris
- connor prielipp
- (and 5 more)
-
Actually, the piece I am intrigued by is... Cuddyer, drafted ninth, ranked in top 50 as a minor leaguer, bounced around a few positions after coming up before settling into being a regular at age 25; probably would have gotten ripped on for not developing quickly enough if Twins Daily had been around back then.. Lee, drafted eighth, ranked in top 50 as a minor league, bounced around a few positions after coming up before getting his first chance to start the season as a regular at age 25; has gotten ripped on for not developing quickly enough. They aren't perfect parallels, but there are similarities, enough to serve as a reminder that maturing into being even a solid major leaguer often doesn't happen overnight.
- 31 replies
-
- michael cuddyer
- jose berrios
- (and 3 more)
-
A Letter To Santa, From Twins Fans
IndianaTwin replied to Eric Blonigen's topic in Twins Daily Front Page News
I don't get the angst about needing another RH bat: C: Jeffers (R) 1B: Bell (S) 2B: Keaschall (R) SS: Lee (S) 3B: Lewis (R) LF: Martin (R) CF: Buxton (R) RF: Wallner (L) DH: Larnach (L) And if it's Jackson's (R) day to catch, you can DH Jeffers. So we're worried that in the 25 percent of games that they face a LH starter, we have one or two LH batters in the game? That assumes a bench of Jackson, Clemens, Fitzgerald, Roden, Outman in their current configuration. If you're looking to increase platoon advantage, the bigger issue is that several of the guys who are going to play every day (Buxton, Keaschall, Lewis, Catcher) are RH, so on the 75 percent of games when they face a RH starter, at most they will have five LH batters in the lineup. If they to force a platoon advantage, they would actually replace one or two of those with a LH batter. To maximize LH batters, you'd have to do something like: C: Jeffers 1B: Bell 2B: Clemens SS: Lee 3B: Fitzgerald LF: Roden CF: Buxton RF: Wallner DH: Larnach Which means benching Keaschall and Lewis. Said another way, the consistency in the lineup is already among the right-handed hitters. It's the left-handed side that needs improving. -
Given Robertson’s age and past effectiveness, I’d be into an incentive-driven contract, in the vein of $2M guaranteed and then an extra $1M at 30, 40, 50, 60 innings.
-
I don’t remember the exact arbitration projections on Duran and Jax, but it seems they were around $7M and $4M. Add Varland at pre-arb and they would have been looking at something like $12M, five or take. Given their history, I don’t think many of us would expect them to spend more than $7M on a single reliever, but I could see them approaching the $12M total with three or four Coulombe-level signings.
-
Doc, I agree with you in thinking that the potential is there to be above .500. I'm an optimist. But can you or someone help me understand the Martin love that seems to be on TD. I don't have MLB.tv. I listened to a lot of games on the radio, but frankly, following a Game Thread was a downer. I don't feel like I have a good handle on him. Martin's OPS+ was 106, which is above average, but how does a person get 181 plate appearances and only have 7 RBIs? If he were to get 543 plate appearances at that rate, it would be 21 RBIs. I know that RBIs are situation dependent and we're talking SSS, but his OPS was .917 with the bases empty in 112 plate appearances and .441 in the 69 plate appearances with runners on base. Ouch. The previous year he was slightly better with runners on base than with bases empty, but not with RISP. In the two seasons combined, he was at .737 with the bases empty, .639 with runners on and .533 with RISP. I know he was a huge disappointment in 2024 and clearly seemed to be better in 2025, but it was only 50 games. What makes it feel like he's turned the corner? I want to believe, but I need some help.
- 17 replies
-
- bailey ober
- byron buxton
- (and 6 more)
-
No. It's not that I'm against the idea of extensions, though I'm not convinced any of those listed are even to the point Kepler was in his career at the time of the extension. The biggest reason not to is that doing so probably adds $5M or so to this year's payroll. Use the $5M to sign an additional reliever instead.
- 25 replies
-
- matt wallner
- royce lewis
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
From an MLB.com article in October. It doesn't look like Hendry got any game action there, but... For now, Mendez is playing only the outfield, but he continues to get work at first base. The club would like to see how he works out at that position. He’s tall (6-foot-3) and rangy but has some defensive limitations in the outfield, meaning he could be an intriguing fit for first base at some point.
-
What Josh Bell's Signing Means for the Rest of the Twins Lineup? I think it means (further) trouble for Julien. Injuries leading to IL transactions tend to open things up, but if one assumes a roster of 2 catchers, 6 infielders and 5 outfielders, it's harder and harder to see Julien among the top six infielders, given his positional limitation. In the current mix, I'd see Bell, Keaschall, Lee, Lewis, Clemens and then Fitzgerald because of his ability to play on the left side. That Julien doesn't have options is a strike in favor of making the team so they don't lose him, but it's also strike against him when it comes to keeping him around vs. a Fitzgerald or Gasper, who both do. There's talk of Keaschall to the OF, but it seems the most likely way for that to happen is Culpepper thriving and forcing Lee to 2B. I suppose it's possible Julien runs with the position at 2B, but I'm not optimistic.
- 107 replies
-
- josh bell
- edouard julien
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
Open roster spot with the DFAing of McCusker and then acquisition and trade of Susac.
- 107 replies
-
- josh bell
- edouard julien
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
Per the same MLBTR article, which is good about adding additional detail as it comes available: 9:39am: Bell’s 2026 salary will be $5.5MM, per Bobby Nightengale of the Minneapolis Star Tribune. He also receives a $250K signing bonus, and there’s a $1.25MM buyout on the mutual option. So yes, guaranteed, but not all paid this year.
-
Per MLBTradeRumors and incorporating the part about $1.25M being in the form of an option: Bell adds $5.75MM to the 2026 payroll, boosting the Twins just north of $100MM in the process, per RosterResource. Dan Hayes of The Athletic has previously reported that the front office has about $20MM to spend this winter. So less than a third of the "very limited offseason budget," which also doesn't take into account the offloading of Larnach or anyone else. I'd also add that this info is being provided by the same person who was previously reporting that Lopez, Ryan and Buxton were likely to be traded so I take his precision with a reasonable amount of salt.
-
This was a new condition for me as well. I think the Reynaud's reference was not to Bell, but to someone suggesting reliever Pete Fairbanks. And my Googling tells me that Brandon Woodruff also deals with it, with may be part of why he (unexpectedly to a fair number of people) accepted the Qualifying Offer to stay with the domed Brewers.
-
I find it interesting that Falvey gets blasted because "he's not going to make any moves until January or February" and then when he does, he gets blasted for it not being a good enough move. It seems like people just want to rip on Falvey. I see it as a pretty significant floor move. It hopefully gets away from Clemens as the primary 1B. Maybe he's streaky WITHIN a season, but his OPS+ has been 108, 109, 111, 142, 82, 124, 127, 101, 100, 110. The high outlier was juiced-ball 2019. The low outlier was Covid-shortened 2020. I would have liked O'Hearn, but I'm not overly concerned that they didn't get a stud here. If they are going to be successful offensively in 2026, it's going to be because Lewis and Wallner rebounded, Keaschall maintained over a long season and Lee improved to average, etc. It's not going to be because the 1B is O'Hearn vs. Bell. One of the primary reasons I see it as a positive and that I haven't seen mentioned yet is that it's a tangible sign of addition. It may or may not be the addition people were clamoring for, but it's an addition. Hopefully this also communicates to Coulombe and his agent (or dare I even hope for Luke Weaver?) that the Twins are indeed not dumping Lopez/Ryan/Buxton and are going to be higher than the $90M some have been projecting. (EDIT to add: It also just got better in terms of money available for relievers. It's $5.5M for this year plus $250k bonus and $1.25M in a mutual option that gets paid later.)

