Sept. 30: Keaschall will indeed undergo thumb surgery tomorrow, per Dan Hayes of the Athletic. He is expected to be ready for spring training.
Sept. 24: Twins rookie infielder Luke Keaschall is weighing surgery to address a left thumb injury, manager Rocco Baldelli told reporters (including Dan Hayes of The Athletic and Matthew Leach of MLB.com). That decision will be made after Keaschall visits a specialist next week.
Keaschall jammed his thumb diving into second base on a steal during last night’s win in Texas. He exited the game and went for imaging this morning. The Twins haven’t officially placed him on the injured list, but there’s no reason to have him playing through pain for their final few games against the Rangers and Phillies. Ryan Fitzgerald drew into the lineup at second base tonight.
The 23-year-old Keaschall is one of Minnesota’s most promising players. A second-round pick in 2023, Keaschall hit at every minor league stop. The Twins called him up in the middle of April. He got out to a strong start to his MLB career when a Kyle Hendricks pitch broke his right arm in his seventh game. Keaschall was out of action until early August, at which point the team had fallen out of contention and sold off much of the roster.
Keaschall picked up where he left off once he returned from the forearm injury. He slashed .294/.359/.436 with four homers and 11 doubles over his final 181 plate appearances. The righty hitter struck out in fewer than 15% of his trips, continuing the plus contact ability he’d shown against minor league pitching. Keaschall didn’t post huge exit velocities, but he has shown an impressive understanding of the strike zone for any hitter, especially a rookie.
That should be enough to have a hold on the Opening Day second base job. The Twins will presumably provide more specifics on his recovery timeline and offseason plan once he makes the official decision on whether to undergo surgery. Keaschall’s promotion came a little too late in the season for him to get a full service year. Minnesota controls him for six seasons after this one.

Ryan Fitzgerald has been looking like a nice bench piece. And that slide to not get picked off? That was slick af
Sure, for a 30-year-old playing in the majors for the first time for a team who had a fire sale two months ago, he is looking like a nice bench piece.
The movie critics give this idea two thumbs up.
Ugh. Have the surgery. If he doesn’t and it lingers on the fingers, it will impact him for all of 2026.
Off topic. Does Baseball reference not have wRC and wRC+? I was just looking what his would be and I couldn’t find if which made me wonder why BR would be preferred over Fangraphs? No disrespect meant just curious because I prefer Fangraphs
Nvm I found my answer. I guess they kinda show it but they don’t. The formula for wRC+ is
wRC+ = (((wRAA/PA + League R/PA) + (League R/PA – Park Factor * League R/PA))/(AL or NL wRC/PA excluding pitchers))*100
In other words I’ll just stick to fangraphs doing the work for me 🙂
Anyone else curious he put up a wRC+ of 134
How’s Hunter Greene doing, (Not) Razor Ramon? I thought you looked forward to him “shutting out the Dodgers” in the opener article. Lol
He did great for the Dodgers…
Who? He plays for the twins. Unless it’s something that Yankee dude said, he’s a troll I have him muted
Someone asked how Hunter Greene was doing.
Oh I ate crow on that one already. Damn you Teo and Ohtani. Why didn’t the Reds pinch hit for Ke’Bryan Hays when they had the bases loaded? They had the Dodgers reeling.
The six teams playing earlier scored 11 total runs. Dodgers scored 10. And the Dodgers bullpen gave up 5. Can’t say the Dodgers aren’t givers…
Hayes is in a 3-41 slump. No way you can let him hit there. The Reds needed this game to have any chance in the series
Just imho, BR is easier to manipulate data. It’s not necessarily better data, but it is easier to come up with some answers. If I want to see how Keaschall did from arbitrary starting points, like 6/7-8/31, BR makes it pretty easy.
The correct choice. Don’t have it linger.