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Offseason Outlook: Minnesota Twins

By Steve Adams | November 12, 2021 at 5:51pm CDT

The 2019-20 AL Central champs faceplanted in a 2021 season that was disastrous enough for the Twins to trade away longtime top starter Jose Berrios. Owner Jim Pohlad has made clear that the Twins will not go into a rebuild, so president of baseball operations Derek Falvey and general manager Thad Levine will be looking for immediate help to remedy the roster.

Guaranteed Contracts

  • Josh Donaldson, 3B: $50MM through 2023 (includes $8MM buyout of $16MM 2024 club option)
  • Max Kepler, OF: $16.25MM through 2023 (includes $1MM buyout of $10MM 2024 club option)
  • Jorge Polanco, 2B/SS: $12.5MM through 2023 (includes $1MM buyout of $10.5MM 2024 club option; contract also contains $12MM 2025 club option)
  • Miguel Sano, 1B/DH: $12MM through 2022 (includes $2.75MM buyout of $14MM 2023 club option)
  • Randy Dobnak, RHP: $8.55MM through 2025 (includes $1MM buyout of $6MM 2026 club option)
  • Kenta Maeda, RHP: $6MM through 2023
  • Total 2022 commitment: $45.8MM
  • Total long-term commitment: $105.3MM

Arbitration-Eligible Players (projected salaries via MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz)

  • Byron Buxton – $7.3MM
  • Taylor Rogers – $6.7MM
  • Tyler Duffey – $3.7MM
  • Mitch Garver – $3.1MM
  • Caleb Thielbar – $1.2MM
  • Jake Cave – $1.1MM
  • Danny Coulombe – $800K
  • Willians Astudillo – $1.2MM
  • Juan Minaya – $1.1MM
  • Luis Arraez – $2.0MM
  • Non-tender candidates: Cave, Coulombe, Astudillo, Minaya

Option Decisions

  • Alex Colome, RHP: Twins declined their end of a $5.5MM mutual option (paid $1.25MM buyout)

Free Agents

  • Michael Pineda, Andrelton Simmons, Nick Vincent*, Kyle Barraclough*, Luke Farrell*, Ian Gibaut*, Andrew Albers*, John Gant*, Rob Refsnyder* (*=outrighted and elected free agency after the season ended)

Very little went right for the Twins in 2021. Byron Buxton looked like an MVP candidate when healthy but played just 67 games thanks to a hip flexor strain and broken hand. The 2020 Cy Young runner-up, Kenta Maeda, pitched through hip and elbow troubles before undergoing Tommy John surgery. Mitch Garver, Michael Pineda and Max Kepler all had lengthy IL stays.  Top prospect Royce Lewis tore his ACL before the season began. The similarly touted Alex Kirilloff tried to play through a torn ligament in his wrist before he, too, went under the knife. There was a team-wide Covid outbreak in late April. Nearly every free-agent pickup — J.A. Happ, Matt Shoemaker, Andrelton Simmons, Alex Colome — fell well short of expectations. Things snowballed quickly.

The end result was not only a 73-89 record but also a deadline sell-off that few would’ve expected on Opening Day. Jose Berrios, Nelson Cruz, Hansel Robles and Happ were shipped out for younger players — a series of trades that netted the Twins a trio of prospects who are all featured on at least one prominent Top 100 ranking. Austin Martin, Simeon Woods Richardson and Joe Ryan are now among the team’s top farmhands, and Ryan has already gotten his feet wet in the Majors.

That series of trades and a few free-agent departures leaves the Twins with quite a few holes on the big league roster. Based on the previously mentioned no-rebuild stance from ownership, it seems likely the Twins will seek to fill those holes this winter rather than completely tear down a roster that recently won a pair of division titles.

That does not, however, preclude the Twins from making further subtractions from the current group. Among the team’s prominent trade candidates are the aforementioned Buxton, Kepler, Garver and perhaps younger backstop Ryan Jeffers. Josh Donaldson’s name came up at the trade deadline and could do so again this winter.

The Twins and Buxton’s reps at Jet Sports discussed an extension this summer but were unable to come to terms on a deal. Reports indicated that Minnesota had been willing to commit $80MM over a seven-year term — a baseline framework amenable to both sides. However, Buxton’s camp sought a richer package of incentives in the event that the ultra-talented but oft-injured center fielder began to show more durability.

The Twins and Buxton figure to rekindle extension talks this winter, and Buxton’s case can only be buoyed by the fact that he closed out the season with a .314/.375/.686 slash in his final 112 plate appearances after returning from that ill-timed hand fracture. If the two parties can’t find a middle ground, it’s plenty feasible that the Twins will field offers on one of the more dynamic talents in the game.

In many ways, the difficulties in finding a common ground during extension talks would be mirrored in theoretical trade talks. Other clubs, particularly those seeking defensive upgrades, would relish the opportunity to install Buxton in center field. At the same time, he’s a free agent next winter, and his ongoing injury troubles will make teams wary of parting with too much in a potential trade. Buxton’s prodigious talent and repeated IL stints present the Twins with something of a conundrum, regardless of which path they explore.

Elsewhere on the roster, the Twins could look to capitalize on affordable control and organizational depth. Kepler’s huge 2019 season looks like an outlier at this point, but he’s a terrific defender in right field who can handle center and has 25- to 30-homer pop. He may not be an All-Star, but his blend of walks, power and defense are appealing even if aggressive shifting and an extreme-pull approach will continue to suppress his batting average. With a healthier Kirilloff, a more-experienced Trevor Larnach and the looming debuts of top prospects Lewis and Martin — both can play shortstop and center field — the Twins have some depth to explore outfield trades.

Behind the plate, both Garver and Jeffers have appeal as starting-caliber options. Garver has been one of the game’s most productive offensive catchers since his 2019 breakout (combined .254/.348/.546 slash, 135 wRC+). Jeffers entered the 2021 season as a Top 100 prospect, and while he didn’t hit like he did in his brief 2020 call to the Majors, he’s a strong defender with plenty of pop and untapped potential at the plate. He’s also 24 years old and under club control another five seasons. Garver is controlled through 2023. There’s room for both on the roster, particularly if Garver can spend some additional time at DH. Still, catching-needy clubs with pitching to spare (e.g. the Marlins) will surely be checking in with the Twins.

However the Twins proceed on the trade market, they’ll likely focus on young pitching in return. The trade of Berrios, the injury to Maeda and the potential free-agent departure of Michael Pineda leave the rotation in a threadbare state. Joe Ryan, acquired from the Rays in the Cruz trade, ranks as Baseball America’s No. 91 prospect and posted a 4.05 ERA with a 30-to-5 K/BB ratio in 26 2/3 frames down the stretch. (Ryan also won a Silver Medal with Team USA in this year’s Olympics.) Rookie Bailey Ober had a quietly strong showing, rounding into form after a rough start (3.59 ERA, 20.9 K-BB% through 67 2/3 innings from July 1 onward).

Beyond that pair of promising youngsters, there’s no certainty. That’s in large part due to the fact that the Twins’ injury troubles extended to the upper echelon of their pitching prospects, too. Each of Jhoan Duran, Jordan Balazovic, Matt Canterino and Josh Winder missed time due to injury, as did fifth starter/swingman Randy Dobnak. The club will hope to extract some quality innings from that group, and perhaps Woods Richardson, in 2022.

The lack of current rotation pieces, however, will push the Twins to not only target controllable young arms in trade but also some veterans to plug right into the mix. The offseason trade market will include the likes of Sean Manaea, Chris Bassitt, Luis Castillo and Sonny Gray — any of whom could appeal to Minnesota. (Castillo and Gray, in particular, have multiple seasons of control remaining.) The Twins also have the means to be active in free agency; it’s just a question of the extent to which they’ll spend.

First and foremost, coming off a disastrous season, the Twins aren’t likely to appeal to a Max Scherzer or Justin Verlander type — an older, high-end free agent seeking to jump right into an obvious contender’s rotation. It’s true that we’ve never seen the Twins sign a free agent for more than Ervin Santana’s four-year, $55MM contract back in 2014, but Minnesota has made $100MM+ offers to both Yu Darvish and Zack Wheeler in the past.

With that in mind, it’s worth taking a quick high-level look at next year’s payroll. Minnesota has just $45.8MM in guaranteed money on the books for 2022. Even after factoring in around $25MM of arbitration salaries and pre-arb players to round out the roster, the Twins will be some $50MM south of their record $129MM payroll. Non-tenders and trades of current players could create further space, but there’s already a good bit of room to spend.

It’d rank as something of an upset if they actually won the bidding on a Robbie Ray, Kevin Gausman or Marcus Stroman, but the Twins at least have the payroll capacity to compete for those types of names. They were reportedly very interested in Stroman at the 2019 deadline, when he was traded to the Mets, and they’d be a plausible landing spot for a free-agent arm who’s still relatively young, such as Eduardo Rodriguez. There’s some mutual interest in a Pineda reunion, and other mid-rotation options include Anthony DeSclafani, Alex Wood and Jon Gray, among many others. The Twins need at least two, if not three options to stabilize the starting staff this winter.

Looking to the relief corps, things are similarly hazy. Taylor Rogers has been one of the game’s best left-handed relievers in recent years, but he ended the season on the injured list with a sprained ligament in his pitching hand. If the Twins are confident he’ll be good to go come Opening Day, a $6.7MM projected salary is plenty affordable. If there’s more doubt about his health, one can imagine they’ll at least debate whether to tender him a contract.

With Colome’s option being declined and uncertainty about Rogers’ health, the Twins will be on the hunt for an arm or two. The current front office regime has only signed one free-agent reliever to a notable multi-year deal — Addison Reed’s ill-fated two-year, $16.75MM pact — so there’s little chance they’ll play at the top of the market, where Raisel Iglesias should command a three or four-year deal with an eight-figure annual salary. Kendall Graveman, too, could be in position for a three-year pact, but it’s reasonable enough to expect the Twins could be in on just about any other relief arm this winter. History suggests they’re likelier to ink a couple of lower-cost veterans than dole out a hefty two-year deal — perhaps bailing out a reliever whose market didn’t develop as hoped (much like they did with Colome last winter).

Turning to the lineup, the Twins’ bevy of trade possibilities opens the door for any number of free-agent pursuits. They’re a clear fit for a shortstop now that Jorge Polanco has moved to second base and enjoyed a career year there. At the same time, when pitching is such a dire need, it’s worth wondering whether the best use of resources would be to plop down a nine-figure guarantee to one of the market’s top-end shortstops. Minnesota did have interest in Marcus Semien last winter, but there’s a difference between pursuing him as a potential bargain and paying top-of-the-market dollars on a five- or six-year deal this time around.

If Buxton and/or Kepler is moved this winter, the Twins have the payroll space to pivot and bring in a veteran outfielder. Nelson Cruz’s departure could open the door for Minnesota to move Miguel Sano to DH and explore first base options — be it a free agent like Anthony Rizzo or a potential trade candidate such as Luke Voit. Sano himself is a candidate to be shopped, though it’s worth noting that he hit .251/.330/.503 with 21 homers in his final 375 plate appearances. Perhaps it’s just coincidence, but that production began the day after the league’s memo announcing foreign-substance checks for pitchers. It also stands to reason that Minnesota will at least talk to the 40-year-old Cruz about a 2022 return after two and a half very productive years at Target Field.

If all of that seems rather ambiguous, it’s largely a reflection of the nature of the Twins’ current roster. While some of their division rivals have more straightforward paths this winter — the Royals will focus on bullpen help to supplement a young core; the Tigers are going to aggressively pursue a shortstop and a starting pitcher — the Twins are in a different spot. The core that emerged from their last rebuilding process is beginning to turn over, but the farm system is strong enough and the payroll clean enough that another multi-year rebuilding effort doesn’t seem necessary.

Acquiring pitching is likely to be a focal point, but the open-ended nature of the Twins’ lineup gives Falvey, Levine and the rest of the front office the ability to get creative in building out the roster. A straightforward pursuit of rotation help could result in signing multiple veteran free agents, but the Twins could also focus on the trade market for their starting pitching needs and surprise as a landing spot for someone like Rizzo or Trevor Story. Buxton could be traded for even more controllable young talent or signed to serve as a franchise centerpiece in spite of durability concerns. The Twins don’t have to trade Kepler or have to trade a catcher, but other teams will inquire. The possibilities here are much more plentiful than with most clubs, and the reality is that the front office can’t even know for certain how it’ll play out.

It all makes for a fairly fascinating offseason in Minnesota. As was the case with the 2021 trade deadline, Minnesota will be heavily involved in a broad-reaching number of storylines. The Twins might blur the lines between “buyer” and “seller” this offseason, but whatever shape their winter takes, they’ll be active.

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2021-22 Offseason Outlook MLBTR Originals Minnesota Twins

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View Comments (48)
Post a Comment

48 Comments

  1. tstats

    4 years ago

    Astudillo is not a non tender canidate

    Reply
    • The Mets "Missed WAR"

      4 years ago

      The Twins are toast. They seem to be following the same plan the Arizona Diamondbacks did last year. “We thought we would be a good team. Instead we were one of the worst teams in the league. Instead of admitting we suck we are just going to pretend this formula works and try it again next season.”

      Teams that win it all with the same core don’t go through a year of being one of the worst teams in baseball with those same players. If you want to try this you might as well be the Colorado Rockies.

      Hindsight is 20/20 but clearly the rebuild should have started last offseason. Pushing it off another year isn’t going to help the Twins franchise win a World Series.

      You’re highest paid player is Josh Donaldson of all people. That’s a terrible sign. What are you thinking?

      7
      Reply
      • Chipper Jones' illegitimate kid

        4 years ago

        Hey! You found the enter button. This is big for you!

        6
        Reply
        • Samuel

          4 years ago

          The putdown petty troll style avoiding discussing baseball seems familiar – including the immediate 2-4 upvotes – but the handle and picture are new.

          Reply
        • Chipper Jones' illegitimate kid

          4 years ago

          Nah, I like missed WAR. It’s a playful jab between bros.

          4
          Reply
      • stymeedone

        4 years ago

        I seem to recall the Red Sox bouncing between first and last for a few years. Minnesota wasn’t the favorite to win the division last year because they lacked talent.

        3
        Reply
      • Twinsfan79

        4 years ago

        Read the paragraph that starts with
        “Very little went right for the Twins in 2021”
        It explains their season to a T.
        They won the division the 2 previous years. That need to build around the core not rebuild it. The biggest issue in 2021 was health.

        1
        Reply
      • Kayrall

        4 years ago

        That’s cool and all, but what does it have to do with tstats’ comment?

        Reply
    • srsbryzness

      4 years ago

      He absolutely is. He’s too much of a free-swinger to be a good hitter and his defense is below-average in spite of his ability to play C, 1B, and 3B. His only real asset is that he’s a great clubhouse guy.

      Reply
    • WolvesSufferer

      4 years ago

      Astudillo will be non tendered. He hits like a catcher but can’t play there for more than a few games. As a backup corner infielder/outfielder he’s a AAA level player. He shouldn’t make more than the league minimum.

      2
      Reply
  2. User 4245925809

    4 years ago

    Scherff might be worth something in a couple of years picked up in the Robles trade. finally used in relief in 2021 and no longer being forced to try using the abysmal change up he was getting hammered with.. FB sits mid-upper 90’s, with a tail for 1-2IP and has nasty curve.. most of the time.. Should have been moved to pen cpl yrs back was my 2c. Could be decent middle guy

    1
    Reply
  3. bobtillman

    4 years ago

    No team that releases Rob Refsnyder will ever win. It’s a violation of the space-time continuum.

    5
    Reply
    • Monkey’s Uncle

      4 years ago

      And a violation of the Prime Directive too, I think.

      1
      Reply
  4. Chipper Jones' illegitimate kid

    4 years ago

    The Twins must trade for Tyler Rogers this offseason. Otherwise they should change their name to just Twin because they don’t have twins.

    11
    Reply
  5. RobM

    4 years ago

    They seem like an early candidate for at least a partial rebound season.

    Reply
  6. George Greenleaf

    4 years ago

    They can’t.

    1
    Reply
  7. Samuel

    4 years ago

    Picked them to win the AL Central last year.

    To some degree they were hurt by the some of the juice coming out of the baseballs. They’d lived off of HR’s the previous 2-3 years, and never played particularly good fundamental baseball. Yankees-lite. But to have so many players fall apart and get injured was crazy.

    Don’t see a way in the world they contend for anything in 2022…but I was wrong about them in 2021, so there’s that.

    3
    Reply
    • misterlol

      4 years ago

      Lol

      2
      Reply
      • Samuel

        4 years ago

        I always upvote your posts.

        Great job!

        Now get back to being chipper.

        Reply
  8. DarkSide830

    4 years ago

    #FreeLaTortuga

    Reply
  9. Monkey’s Uncle

    4 years ago

    You just can’t non-tender Willians Astudillo and still call yourself a real baseball team. In fact I’m pretty sure that if the Twins do non-tender him, they’ll get relegated to AAA a la European football.

    3
    Reply
  10. JOHNSmith2778

    4 years ago

    Maybe the Wilpons will buy the team

    Reply
  11. deuceball

    4 years ago

    Akil baddoo had a really good breakout season, lamonte wade Jr was great, graterol and Rosario were really clutch when it mattered. The future is bright.

    4
    Reply
  12. Cora the Destroya

    4 years ago

    Twins are an above average team but not super. They’ve been like that for years. They might be able to win out in a weak division, but come postseason, the better teams will continue to feast on them.

    They have a lower winning percentage in the postseason than the Oakland A’s do. That’s saying something.

    You can always go with the argument the postseason is a crapshoot and every year is a new year but when you consistently put together an above average team with no real superstar or #1 pitchers, you’re bound to get swept by the Yankees in the postseason.

    I’m not trying to be harsh. They’ve got some good talent but the Twins just don’t have enough to get over the hump. I hope that will change because it sucks to see them get swept by the Yankees every postseason.

    And don’t get me started on Byron Buxton… guy can be as much a superstar as anyone but he fails to stay on the field. I laughed when he was a high fantasy pick because as good as he is, he is so brittle. He should be traded to get something back

    2
    Reply
    • Baldkid

      4 years ago

      Agree with everything you stated.

      Reply
  13. Dumpster Divin Theo

    4 years ago

    Contract

    Reply
  14. Bdd1967

    4 years ago

    It’s already time to say next year (2023)…but that’s a given year in year out with this club. The life of a Minnesota sports fan…

    Reply
  15. Backup Catcher to the Backup Catcher

    4 years ago

    Gonna be tough for the Twins to sign a top FA. In addition to having a lousy 2021, the city of Minneapolis, and its moronic leadership, made too many headlines the past two years for all the wrong reasons.

    Baseball players have families, and no matter the money, they aren’t gonna subject their families to a city that could explode like a tinder box in a moment’s notice. Of course, Minneapolis isn’t the only city that is home to an MLB teams that the aforementioned negatives would apply.

    Might mean teams like Pittsburgh, Arizona, Kansas City and Denver, all home to losing baseball teams, have more of a shot at a star type player than previously thought.

    1
    Reply
    • WolvesSufferer

      4 years ago

      You’re aware professional athletes make millions of dollars and Minneapolis has dozens of spectacular suburbs, right? The people that politicize everything are always so misinformed, it’s sad.

      4
      Reply
      • HubertHumphrey

        4 years ago

        Yeah. Plus, as a player living in one of those communities, you’ll have one of MLB’s easiest commutes.
        The stadium is right at an exit of a major freeway, leading to the western suburbs, and the players won’t be coming to work during rush hour.

        2
        Reply
    • Baldkid

      4 years ago

      Your entire 3 paragraph rambling is misinformed and has not truth to it what so ever.

      2
      Reply
    • masisk33

      4 years ago

      Jesus Lou,
      Do you ever turn off Fox News? You probably listen to Fox while on the toilet.

      1
      Reply
    • Col. Taylor

      4 years ago

      Flagged

      Reply
  16. 1984wasntamanual

    4 years ago

    I think they’ll probably be healthier, but it seems like they missed their window. The White Sox are going to be pretty good next year, the Indians should also have some better injury luck, the Tigers look to be a young team that’s improving and KC is sorta treading water for now. If everything goes right for them I guess they could maybe challenge the WS (I think the WCs probably come out of the other divisions), but I don’t consider it to be all that likely.

    Reply
  17. Tdat1979

    4 years ago

    The Twins and Guardians are going to be bottom feeders the next few years. The white sox have passed them and the Royals and Tigers are not far behind. The twins hit a bunch of home runs and thought they were contenders. But one dimensional teams don’t last long. When the home runs stop the strikeouts pile up and the on base percentage drops. Hard to win games when you have no offense

    Reply
    • Baldkid

      4 years ago

      ehhh, I disagree with this in every aspect. The Twin problems begin and end with pitching. Full. Stop.

      3
      Reply
      • masisk33

        4 years ago

        Want to upgrade your entire pitching staff? Extend Buxton.

        Reply
        • Baldkid

          4 years ago

          For the 60-80 games he plays a season? What about the other 80-100 games he’s not there? It isn’t an outlier, it isn’t a trend, it’s who he is – the last year or so he’s great when plays – WHEN HE PLAYS. He’s the baseball version of JJ Watt.

          Reply
  18. fudd5150

    4 years ago

    Kinda funny that Donaldson went to the twins and missed a ring by a year. Over a few million. But his replacement was in talks for the NL MVP.

    1
    Reply
    • masisk33

      4 years ago

      The Twins really overpaid for him

      Reply
  19. jerry_maguire

    4 years ago

    Why don’t they start looking internally for pitching, guys like Ryan Mason…kid has been lights out at every level…time to give him and others a look…because what they’re doing isn’t working

    1
    Reply
  20. masisk33

    4 years ago

    Fantastic write-up here by Steve Adams. The Twins certainly are facing some big decisions right now.

    BYRON BUXTON

    Buxton is the best payer on the roster, and the Twins should be eager to extend him with whatever incentives his side demands. Buxton would be worth every extra, incentivized penny if healthy. Higher incentives should not be a contract issue with Buxton!! If he is willing to take a lower base salary with heavy incentives, that should be in the Twins’ best interest!

    The Twins would do well to start the off-season by extending their best player (and best defensive CF league-wide) while he can still run like this. He makes the entire pitching staff better when healthy. And don’t forget the 40-homer potential!

    1
    Reply
    • Baldkid

      4 years ago

      Don’t forget about the 60-80 games he plays a season!!!

      Reply
      • masisk33

        4 years ago

        Nobody plays those 60-80 games like Buxton.
        Ahem…he has agreed to a lower base salary. How is this an issue? He is the best outfielder in the game. Give him the NON-GUARANTEED incentives that his camp wants. It’s a no-brainer. If you trade him, you’ll get 2-3 pieces that will never be as good as Buxton is right now.

        Reply
        • Baldkid

          4 years ago

          I agree with some of what you said. Other teams would NOT trade much for him based on his injury history. If the Twins sign him to (is it 7 year, $80M?) plus incentives and he only plays 80 games a year, are you ok with that? Buxton is an interesting case – I don’t know the answers and anything the Twins do, could come back and bite them or it could work out great.

          Reply
  21. Paul Griggs

    4 years ago

    I think 2021 was more of an outlier nd the beginning of some trends. I would keep a core of Polanco, Arraez, Kepler, Buxton (sign him for Pete’s sake), Kiriloff, Larnach, Garver, Taylor, and Duffey. Let Cave go. Resign Pineda and go after a big time starter (not Scherzer but not Happ–maybe Stroman). Fill the remaining spots in the rotation with the hot hand from the AAA starters–Jax, Ober, Ryan, et. al. and Dobnak. Make a decision at SS and I’d say my choice is try either Lewis or Martin rather than bring back Simmons. I’d look to either move Sano to DH if Cruz can’t be resigned or trade him and sign a 1B that doesn’t strike out 200 times with RISP and then hit solo HRs in games that are over. Sano has never matured and I’m ready to give up on him, even if he turns into the next David Ortiz.

    2
    Reply
  22. mp9

    4 years ago

    Please sign Kershaw! he anchors the staff then maybe a guy like Marcus Stroman” will go from there..

    2
    Reply
  23. PohladsHaveToGo

    4 years ago

    The Twins need to trade Donaldson to free up money and then attack the pitching market. If you can’t land the pitching then everything else is mute. Ideally they should have been in on E-Rod and Syndengaard. With those off they need to target 2 from Ray(would be a stretch since the Twins would lose a pick), Gausmann, Gray, Stromen, and Rodon. Add one from the level of Pineada, Wood, Desclafani, Then go get E. Escobar, promote Miranda and Lewis. Won’t win the world series but should make them competitive in the Central Lastly sign Buxton to an incentive laden contract and hope the other prospects produce in Larnach, Kiroloff, and Jeffers

    Reply

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