The Twins have stumbled out of the gate with a 1-3 record in the second half and are beginning to more seriously weigh trades of their short-term players, reports Jon Heyman of the New York Post. Utilityman Willi Castro, outfielder Harrison Bader and left-handed reliever Danny Coulombe are the team’s three most appealing free agents, but the Twins also have righty Chris Paddack, first baseman Ty France and backup catcher Christian Vazquez set to hit the market at season’s end.
[Related: Minnesota Twins Trade Deadline Outlook]
Of course, more of the focus for contending clubs will be on Minnesota’s more controllable and higher-profile talents. Top starter Joe Ryan and high-leverage relievers Jhoan Duran and Griffin Jax will draw widespread interest. Heyman notes that Twins brass won’t turn interested clubs away without hearing them out, but the they would understandably need to be bowled over to consider moving anyone from that group. All three pitchers are controlled for two additional seasons beyond the current campaign.
Among the rental players, Castro fits the broadest number of teams, given his versatility. The 28-year-old switch-hitter is enjoying a nice season at the plate, hitting .258/.350/.435 with 10 homers, 14 doubles, two triples, eight steals (ten attempts) and a career-best 10% walk rate. He’s been productive from both sides of the dish, has above-average speed (74th percentile, per Statcast) and is capable of playing second base, shortstop, third base and the outfield (although defensive metrics have panned his work at shortstop and in center). Castro is earning $6.4MM, making him affordable for virtually any contender.
Bader’s defensive excellence and bounceback year at the plate ought to garner plenty of interest as well. He’s hitting .249/.330/.438 as Minnesota’s primary left fielder, but he’s only in left because of Byron Buxton’s presence in center. Bader still grades out brilliantly at any outfield slot, and while he’s typically showed notable platoon splits, he’s posted nearly identical numbers against righties and lefties alike in 2025. By measure of wRC+, Bader has been 15% better than average at the plate. He’s sporting his highest walk rate in a 162-game season since 2019 and hitting for more power than he has since 2021 (12 home runs, 11 doubles, .189 ISO in 282 plate appearances). He’s on a one-year, $6.25MM contract with a mutual option that obviously won’t be exercised by both parties.
Coulombe has been quietly terrific. He missed three weeks earlier in the season with a forearm strain but has shown no ill effects. His 0.65 ERA in 27 2/3 frames is the best in baseball among the 433 pitchers who’ve tossed at least 20 innings, and Coulombe has fanned 26.9% of his opponents against a 6.5% walk rate. He doesn’t throw hard (90.2 mph average fastball) and isn’t going to make it the whole season without surrendering a home run — he’s currently yet to do so — but there aren’t many better left-handed options on the market. He’s playing on a one-year, $3MM contract.
The rest of the Twins’ rental options have some track record but are in the midst of poor seasons. Paddack still has good command, but he’s sitting on a 5.14 ERA and career-worst 16.4% strikeout rate. He had a nice run from mid-April to mid-June, but Paddack has never really held up for a whole season under a starter’s workload and has been hit hard since mid-June. He looked impressive in relief when he came back from Tommy John surgery in 2023 and is making a relatively affordable $7.5MM this season, so perhaps a club might roll the dice on him as a bullpen option. Otherwise, his appeal as a fifth starter is fairly limited.
France had a nice start but has seen his role decrease and is now mired in an awful 5-for-41 slump that’s dropped his previously solid batting line to .245/.309/.348. He’s not striking out and has played a strong first base, but he’s a bat-first player who’s in his third straight down year at the plate. France’s $1MM salary is low enough that another club could well roll the dice on adding him to its bench, but he’s not going to net the Twins anything of substance in a trade.
The 34-year-old Vazquez is in the final season of a three-year, $30MM contract that hasn’t gone as hoped. He was always signed to be a glove-first catcher and remains a plus defender, but his once-passable offense has cratered and he’s been thoroughly outplayed by Ryan Jeffers, who has long since claimed the starting role in Minnesota. Vazquez’s .182/.249/.260 batting line in 159 plate appearances is among the least-productive in baseball. He’s still such a good defender that another club might take him on if the Twins ate most of the money he’s owed, but like France and Paddack, he’s not going to net a prospect of any real note.
There are other players the Twins could conceivably market. Right-handed reliever Justin Topa has pitched decently on a $1MM salary and has a cheap $2MM club option for the 2026 season. The aforementioned Jeffers is in his penultimate season of club control, but the Twins lack an heir apparent in the upper minors and starting catchers rarely change teams midseason. Trevor Larnach has been a roughly league-average bat at DH and in the outfield corners and is controlled two more seasons beyond the current one. Righty Brock Stewart has been excellent since the Twins signed him to a minor league deal a couple years back (2.44 ERA, 32.6 K% in 73 2/3 innings since 2022), but he’s frequently been injured. He’s being paid $870K and has two seasons of club control remaining. He could be a nice bullpen piece in future Twins seasons, but if a team is willing to make a decent offer, there could be some temptation to sell high as well.
One player clearly not going anywhere is Buxton. The 2025 All-Star is signed for three more seasons, has a full no-trade clause, and during last week’s All-Star break called himself a “Minnesota Twin for the rest of my life.”
Bader has had a great season, would be a nice add. He managed to keep it going despite his platoon status. He’s a guy who likes run everyday and is best when he gets regular playing time. He’s a competitor, if you give him everyday at bats he will hit. Doesn’t have a significant righty / lefty split but gets out of sync when he doesn’t get regular playing time.
He would be an upgrade for the Tigers, Jays, and Phillies.
The Jays are good, Lukes is having a good season and Varsho will be back soon. The Tigers have a good OF too Wenceel Perez, Matt Vierling, and Jahmai Jones has hit well. Meadows hasn’t he it but he is going to get run.
Padres are a good fit for Coulombe and Bader. Phillies too but Philly is probably looking at Luis Robert. I think they are more willing to take a risk on his upside than the Padres.
With all the teams holding on to their controllable players, could be a slow deadline.
It is a good oportunity to steal good prospects from the Yankees!!!
Coulombe might get a reasonable return but Castro won’t net much. Yankees have zero need for Bader.
What “good Yankees prospects” are those?
Jones is a strikeout machine at AAA.. Lombard is the only decent prospect, and they need him to replace the overhyped, declining Volpe.
Heyman says they are serious and don’t call him Shirley.
The Mets would love to trade for the Twins whole bullpen. What’s the record for relievers traded at once?
Sure they would. Problem is, the Mets can offer only AAAA guys and failing middle infield prospects.
Duran to the Dodgers for Jackson ferris
Knowing the twins they’ll give Duran away to anyone who pays of Vazquez’s contract.
Trade: Royce Lewis, Justin Topa, Danny Columbe to Mets
for Mauricio and Baty
Why would the Twins deal those guys for junk?
Counter offer. Lindor (the Mets pay the entire contract), Sproat, and Baty. The twins send Justin Topa and a had drawn picture of Byron Buxton taking a dump on Cohen’s wife’s chest.
I get why Minnesota wouldn’t just easily part with their controllable guys. Especially Ryan. But I look at Duran, Jax, Stewart, and Varland and think that they could probably afford to trade from that group. Especially in a seller’s market where relievers are going to be high demand. Their rentals should return some pieces, but probably not high end prospects and those rentals represent roster spots to fill next year for a team that hasn’t seemed capable of spending money recently. I also look at Minnesota’s relievers and think they do a pretty good job of getting results out of the raw ingredients so I’d bet they could replenish the bullpen reasonably cheap if they parted with one or two of those guys.
If they were bold and listened on Duran and Jax, they could really do well I would think. Even if you aren’t going to get what you want for Duran or Jax, it maybe starts the conversation for Stewart. Bryan Baker got the O’s the 37th pick in the draft. Stewart should be worth as much.
Could see Duran on the move as much as it would hurt to never see the fire beginning the 9th ever again. Maybe someone is interested in larnach? Why trade for Tommy Pham 3 times when you can trade for Trevor larnach once?
Keep in mind, all these stories about “players under control through 2027”…there probably won’t be much baseball in 2027.
No, it’s just you.
Vazquez > Boston, please 🥹👉👈
Tack Coloumbe and Castro onto him, please.
Castro would definitely fetch some nice prospects back, he’s having a good season and plenty of teams need infield help. Bader is having a very nice season too, they definitely have options.
Houston could use an upgrade on McCormick…
A straight-across trade, Coulombe for Banda. Long ago the Dodgers drafted Coulombe — twice! With Scott seemingly injured, the Dodgers can use another reliable LH reliever. Banda just isn’t that guy, but he is controllable for two more seasons.
Okay, hate to let you guys get Coulombe, but that’s fine as long as we get Joe Ryan
Good luck with that!
If the Phillies offered up RHP Andrew Painter (MLB Pipeline #9 overall prospect) with a cheap controllable 40 man guy like CF Johan Rojas or RHP Max Lazar – plus a top 10 organizational prospect like RHP Jean Cabrera (#9) INF Aroon Escobar (#7) or OF Gabriel Rincones Jr. (#10) – would that be enough to convince the Twins to part with Duran, Jax AND Bader? Because that is the kind of move I think the Phillies need to make. A 5 for 3 type of deal where they knock out all 3 needs in one shot, without trading from the core and disrupting the clubhouse. Painter’s value will
probably never be higher. I contend that they should trade him right now for multiple pieces that can help the Phillies this year, and beyond. The only untouchables to me are Aiden Miller (RH bat that plays a premium position) and Justin Crawford (CF has been a black hole for over 10 years), who can be the Phillies speed guy off the bench for the playoffs – if not play a bigger role.
I think it would take one more piece the get both Duran and Jax, especially since they are controllable for 2 more years. But being the Twins, they’d instead throw in Joe Ryan too so they don’t have to pay any of the 3 in a couple years
The Twins need a catcher. Its a giant hole in their system big league and minor league. The Mariners have a catcher to trade who is big league ready right now in Harry Ford. The Mariners could use Coulombe and Castro for sure. I think it would take more than that for Ford. Perhaps Jax as well.
Harry Ford won’t be moved in a deal for rentals. He’s the 2nd best catching prospect in baseball right now.
Jax isnt a rental.
The Mariners have holes to fill. They have a catcher they dont need at all. The Twins are most likely going to be sellers and they need a catcher badly. A deal can be worked out. Like I said already the Twins would need to give up more than just Coulombe and Castro. I already said that.
Every single team has a need for 2+ catchers, especially ones as talented as Big Dumper and Ford. They’re both usable in the DH/1B sense, too. Ford will not be moved for scraps.
Raleigh plays more than just about any catcher in baseball. No you don’t need 2 stud catchers. The Padres don’t even have 1 good catcher come on dude.
Yes, having two stud catchers is an absolute bonus. I can’t help you if you can’t see that. Should we talk about my Padres now? Why mention them?
You don’t need a bonus catcher when your team has other needs. Raleigh plays as much as any catcher in baseball. Ford is never going to get a chance to play full time in Seattle. He will somewhere else. This is why trades happen fella.
Ford’s bat has potential to work full-time at C/1B/DH. He’s only moved for the right reasons, not *just because* the M’s have apparently depth at a position. Stay hard, K.O.C.!
*apparent
🙂
You only take a catcher and play him at 1b or DH if hes a bad defensive catcher. Ford is not. Ford is like Raleigh hes the kind of guy that plays a lot.
Stay hard? Maybe I should date women half my age like you do. That helps right?
No, quite the opposite. You play your secondary stud C at 1B/DH when your other stud C is playing C. Massive strategery in play, I understand it might take awhile for you to wrap your noodle around the concept.
Stay hard = be cool
And yes. Yes it does. Aloha!
The Padres dont even have 1 good catcher and you are telling me teams need 2 of them?
Get a clue grandpa
“Get a clue”
Hilarious coming from you! You don’t know how funny that is!!! Hahaha
At this point can you really call Vazquez a backup when he and Jeffers basically split time 50-50?
Rushing for Duran. The Dodgers need a closer, now and Rushing is controllable for six years behind the plate or first base.