Twins, Luis García Agree To Minor League Deal

The Twins and veteran right-handed reliever Luis García are in agreement on a minor league contract, reports Bobby Nightengale of the Minnesota Star Tribune. He’ll report to their Triple-A club in St. Paul for the time being. García is repped by agents Larry Reynolds, Rosie Lopez-Herrera and Noah Herrera.

García, 39, opened the season with the same Mets team against whom the Twins will open a road series tonight. He signed a one-year, $1.75MM contract in the offseason but was cut loose after only six appearances. In that time, García was knocked around for six runs (five earned) on 11 hits and a pair of walks with four strikeouts. The resulting 7.11 ERA wasn’t pretty, but García posted a hearty 3.42 earned run average just last year between the Dodgers, Nats and Angels. In 55 1/3 frames last season, García fanned 20.9% of his opponents, issued walks at an 11.2% clip and kept 49.7% of batted balls against him on the ground.

While last year’s results were generally solid, García’s early work with the Mets did raise some red flags. His average sinker velocity plummeted from 96.9 mph in 2025 to a flat 94 mph in 2026. His splitter and changeup experienced similar velocity drops. He still induced chases at a massive 46% rate and posted a strong swinging-strike rate, but the Mets were apparently disheartened enough by the nearly three mile-per-hour drop in his sinker to quickly move on.

The Twins can use all the help and experience they can get in the bullpen. Minnesota’s 2025 trade deadline sell-off centered around dismantling what had been one of the game’s best relief corps in order to bring in a host of prospects and controllable young big leaguers. The Twins then did little to address the ‘pen in the offseason, with their primary adds being Taylor Rogers (on a one-year, $2MM deal), Anthony Banda (in a small trade after he’d been designated for assignment by the Dodgers) and Eric Orze (in a trade with the Rays).

Predictably, the Twins have had one of the worst bullpens in baseball this year. Minnesota relievers rank 23rd in the game with a 5.07 earned run average, but there’s reason to think even that might be the product of some good fortune. The Twins’ bullpen has the fourth-worst strikeout rate in MLB. They’re tied for the third-slowest average fastball (93.4 mph) and have the third-worst swinging-strike rate (8.7%) of any relief corps in the game.

Adding a 39-year-old García to the mix isn’t going to fix that collection of issues, but given the righty’s 3.86 ERA from 2021-25, it’s not a stretch to think he could right the ship and help a bullpen that generally lacks experience. García’s velocity is down this year, but there’s little harm in taking a nearly free look at a veteran reliever who, in addition to that 3.86 ERA over the past five seasons, has punched out a solid 22.3% of his opponents against a sharp 7.8% walk rate and a huge 53% ground-ball rate.

Twins Promote Kendry Rojas, Activate Royce Lewis

April 21: The Twins formally announced that Rojas has been recalled for his MLB debut and that Funderburk has been placed on the paternity list. Minnesota also formalized its previously reported placement of righty Mick Abel on the 15-day IL due to elbow inflammation. To take his spot on the active roster, the Twins reinstated third baseman Royce Lewis from the injured list.

At least for now, Prielipp has not been added to the big league roster, so it seems he’ll remain on the taxi squad. Minnesota’s Wednesday starter is still listed as TBD, so perhaps that could go to Prielipp or to Rojas — depending on how tonight’s game plays out.

April 19: The Twins will promote left-hander Kendry Rojas from Triple-A to the active roster prior to Tuesday’s game with the Mets, according to Declan Goff and Darren Wolfson of SKOR North.  Rojas was already added to the 40-man roster last November in advance of the Rule 5 Draft, and Bobby Nightengale of the Minnesota Star Tribune writes that the corresponding 26-man roster move is Kody Funderburk‘s placement on the paternity list.

In addition, left-hander Connor Prielipp will also be joining the Twins for the start of their series with the Mets, as per The Athletic’s Dan Hayes.  It isn’t an official call-up yet, as Prielipp is only part of the taxi squad.  Prielipp joined Rojas as two of the six 40-man additions Minnesota made back in November, so the Twins would just have to make another 26-man roster move if Prielipp is officially promoted.

Both Rojas and Prielipp will be making their Major League debuts whenever they appear in a game.  In Rojas’ case, this might just be a cup of coffee while Funderburk is absent, though the Twins’ relief corps has struggled enough that adding a raw but talented young arm could help spark the pen.  Funderburk, Taylor Rogers, and Anthony Banda are the bullpen’s current trio of left-handers, and Banda in particular has gotten off to a rough start in 2026.

Tuesday’s game in New York begins a stretch of 13 games in 13 days for the Twins, so it is possible Rojas or Prielipp might receive a spot start in order to help preserve the rotation.  The club could look to use either southpaw as a traditional starter or as a long reliever, or perhaps Minnesota could deploy a piggyback with Rojas and Prielipp paired with another starter.

Rojas missed time due to a hamstring injury this year and has only pitched 7 1/3 total innings, though the 23-year-old has yet to allow a run in that small sample size.  (Six innings were with Triple-A St. Paul, and 1 1/3 IP were with A-ball Fort Myers on a rehab assignment.)  In those 7 1/3 frames, Rojas has posted seven strikeouts, but also four walks.  Over 38 1/3 career innings at the Triple-A level, Rojas has a 14.06% walk rate, along with a 20.31% strikeout rate and a 6.10 ERA.

How well Rojas can harness his control appears to the chief question facing the lefty’s future as a viable big league arm.  Baseball America ranks Rojas as the eighth-best prospect in the Twins’ farm system and MLB Pipeline has him tenth, with both outlets noting that he projects as a back-end rotation arm if he remains a starting pitcher.  As per BA, Rojas “has a balanced arsenal with all his pitches projecting as at least average,” though he doesn’t have a true plus pitch.  His fastball might be his top offering, as the pitch usually sits around 95mph and Nightengale writes that Rojas hit the 99mph threshold during his time in St. Paul.

The Blue Jays landed Rojas as an international signing in 2020, and his time in Toronto’s farm system was hampered by lat, shoulder, and abdominal injuries.  Prior to last summer’s trade deadline, the Jays shipped Rojas and outfielder Alan Roden to the Twins in perhaps the most surprising move of Minnesota’s deadline fire sale, as controllable reliever Louis Varland and Ty France went the other way.  Varland immediately became a critical piece of Toronto’s pen, but Rojas and Roden fit the Twins’ trade model of obtaining players that were at or close to big league readiness.

Prielipp is a homegrown product, selected by the Twins in the second round of the 2022 draft.  BA ranked him as the 96th-best prospect in baseball prior to the 2026 season and slotted him fourth on their list of Twins prospects, while Pipeline put Prielipp fifth.  Both outlets give 60-grades to the southpaw’s changeup and slider, and Prielipp generates a ton of spin on the latter pitch.  Prielipp also has a mid-90s fastball that can hit 98mph.

After reaching Triple-A ball for the first time last season, Prielipp had some struggles but has now looked sharper over 15 2/3 innings for St. Paul in 2026.  Over 36 2/3 innings of Triple-A ball, Prielipp has a 3.93 ERA, a 30.13% strikeout rate, and a 13.46% walk rate, so control is also a concern on his end.  Staying healthy has been Prielipp’s largest issue, as he underwent a Tommy John surgery in college at Alabama and then an internal brace surgery that sidelined him for big chunks of the 2023-24 seasons.  Prielipp has thrown only 128 1/3 total innings of minor league ball.

Twins Place Mick Abel On Injured List

The Twins announced this morning that they’ve placed rookie right-hander Mick Abel on the 15-day injured list due to inflammation in his right elbow. A corresponding move wasn’t announced, though it’s already been reported that prospect Kendry Rojas is joining the major league roster tomorrow and that top prospect Connor Prielipp has been added to the major league taxi squad. Abel’s IL placement is surely related to those forthcoming moves (which the team has yet to formally announce). The Twins will take advantage of today’s off-day by moving up right-hander Simeon Woods Richardson, who’d been slated to start Wednesday, to start in place of Abel tomorrow, per Betsy Helfand of the St. Paul Pioneer Press.

Selected by the Phillies with the No. 15 overall draft pick back in 2020, Abel has long been hailed as a quality pitching prospect. He went from Philadelphia to Minnesota alongside top catching prospect Eduardo Tait at last year’s trade deadline in the deal sending star closer Jhoan Duran (also currently on the injured list) back to Philly.

Now 24 years old, Abel has seen his stock rise and fall over the years. He slipped off most top-100 rankings prior to the 2025 season but enjoyed a resurgent year that saw him both make his major league debut in Philadelphia and pitch well enough to be included as a key component in one of the deadline’s most notable trades.

Abel has gotten out to a nice start in 2026. He entered camp without a rotation spot assured to him but won a job with a dominant performance in the Grapefruit League: 22 innings, 2.05 ERA, 32.9% strikeout rate, 4.9% walk rate. The right-hander was hit hard in his first two appearances with the Twins this season but bounced back with 13 shutout innings and a 16-to-3 K/BB ratio across his last two starts (against the Tigers and Red Sox, respectively). He’s currently sitting on a 3.98 ERA, a 24.7% strikeout rate and a 10% walk rate in 20 1/3 frames. Metrics like FIP (2.79) and SIERA (3.93) agree, to varying extents, that he’s been a quality arm.

With Abel on the shelf, the Twins will have four starters locked into spots: Joe Ryan, Taj Bradley, Bailey Ober and Woods Richardson. Candidates to take Abel’s spot on the staff include Rojas, Prielipp and Zebby Matthews — the latter of whom Abel beat for a spot on the Opening Day staff. Matthews, however, has pitched to a 7.71 ERA in his first four turns through the Triple-A rotation. The former top-100 prospect is still only 25, but he’s slid down the depth chart a bit with a rough spring and even rockier start with Triple-A St. Paul. Minnesota also recently recalled 24-year-old starting pitching prospect Andrew Morris and plugged him into the major league bullpen. He’s still stretched out enough to make a start, follow an opener or work in some hybrid/piggyback role if the team sees fit.

It’s not yet clear how long the Twins expect Abel to be sidelined. His IL placement is retroactive to April 17. If it’s indeed just a minor bout of inflammation — and the Twins have yet to indicate the potential that anything more serious is at play — he’d be eligible to return as early as May 2. Presumably, the team will provide more information on Abel’s status in the near future, although with an off-day on the calendar today, a formal update may not happen until tomorrow, when skipper Derek Shelton addresses reporters prior to Tuesday’s series opener against the Mets in Queens.

Twins Place Royce Lewis, Cody Laweryson On Injured List

TODAY: The Twins officially announced the IL placements, with Laweryson retroactive to April 9 and Lewis to April 10.  Kreidler and right-hander Andrew Morris were called up to take Lewis and Laweryson’s places on the active roster, and the 24-year-old Morris will be making his big league debut whenever he appears in his first game for Minnesota.

Morris was a fourth-round pick for the Twins in the 2022 draft, and he has a 3.78 ERA, 21.45% strikeout rate, and 7.27% walk rate over 135 2/3 innings at Triple-A.  Morris started 28 of his 30 Triple-A appearances, though the scouting reports at both MLB Pipeline and Baseball America view Morris perhaps more as a swingman or multi-inning at the Major League level.  Pipeline and BA each rank Morris as the 13th-best prospect in Minnesota’s system, and he has a five-pitch arsenal highlighted by a 55-grade slider and a fastball that can reach 99mph but usually sits in the 95-96mph range.

APRIL 10: The Twins will make a couple roster moves before tomorrow’s game at Rogers Centre. Manager Derek Shelton said tonight (relayed by Twins TV’s Audra Martin) that third baseman Royce Lewis and reliever Cody Laweryson are each headed to the injured list. Lewis has a left knee sprain, while Laweryson suffered a right forearm strain. Shelton didn’t specify return timelines for either player.

Lewis suffered his injury during Thursday’s win over Detroit. He came up limping after a swinging strike in his final at-bat of that game. Lewis was able to gut out the plate appearance and hit an infield single. He finished the contest but felt more discomfort today. Bobby Nightengale of The Minnesota Star-Tribune writes that Lewis went for imaging this evening that revealed the sprain.

This will be the ninth injured list stint of Lewis’ four-year MLB career. He has twice torn the ACL in his right knee, once before his big league debut, and battled various left leg injuries. That included a pair of hamstring strains last year. Lewis narrowly topped 100 games for the first time in his career.

The former first overall pick had been out to a nice start. Although he’s only hitting .222, he has taken eight walks and collected four extra-base hits (two doubles and homers apiece). Lewis was at the hot corner for 12 of Minnesota’s first 14 games. Utilityman Tristan Gray has gotten the other two starts and projects as the regular there for the time being. Gray has a homer and a double in the early going but is a .220/.279/.394 hitter over 53 career contests.

Laweryson made his first Opening Day roster this year. The 27-year-old righty made five appearances last season as a September call-up. He has worked 6 1/3 frames of four-run ball (three earned) with eight strikeouts in five outings this year. Laweryson has a save and a hold as part of a wide open Minnesota bullpen.

Minnesota will announce their corresponding call-ups tomorrow. Ryan Kreidler and Eric Wagaman are on the 40-man roster as depth infielders. Kreidler offers more defensive value and is hitting better in Triple-A to begin the season. Zak Kent, who was optioned earlier in the week, seems likeliest to take the bullpen spot if the Twins don’t want to designate anyone for assignment.

Twins Acquire Garrett Acton

The Marlins announced that they have traded right-hander Garrett Acton to the Twins for minor league righty Logan Whitaker. Acton was designated for assignment by Miami a few days ago when they acquired infielder Leo Jiménez. Minnesota transferred righty David Festa to the 60-day injured list in a corresponding 40-man roster move.

Acton, 28 in June, has a very limited major league track record. He made six appearances for the Athletics in 2023 and then one more with the Rays last year, with Tommy John surgery wiping out his 2024. He has allowed eight earned runs in 6 2/3 innings. In the offseason, he went to the Rockies and then Marlins via waivers.

The Twins are surely more focused on his minor league track record, where he has shown intriguing strikeout stuff, though home run troubles have led to lot of runs crossing the plate. Dating back to the start of 2022, he has thrown 160 minor league innings, mostly at the Triple-A level. In that time, he has a 4.56 earned run average. His 10% walk rate was a bit high but he managed to strike out 29.5% of batters faced.

Acton still has a pair of options, meaning the Twins can send him to the minors for some extra bullpen depth or add him immediately to the active roster. In either case, he may shuttle between the majors and minors throughout the season whenever the Twins need to freshen up the relief corps.

For the Marlins, they just claimed Acton off waivers two months ago. They are presumably happy with that sequence of events, which has netted them Whitaker. Minnesota took Whitaker with a 19th-round pick in 2024. Last year, he tossed 38 1/3 innings between High-A and Double-A. His 2.11 ERA in 2025 looks good but he only punched out a pedestrian 21% of batters faced. His 6.4% walk rate and 44.5% ground ball rate were a bit better than average. He seemed to get some help from a 78.9% strand rate. He doesn’t really show up on prospect lists but, as mentioned, Miami should be pleased to get a lottery ticket prospect for a guy they just grabbed from the waiver wire two months ago.

As for Festa, he was injured in February and began the season on the 15-day injured list. The Twins listed his injury as a triceps strain and shoulder impingement. His current timeline is unclear but this transaction indicates the Twins don’t expect him back before late May, which would be 60 days from his initial IL placement.

That doesn’t necessarily indicate bad news about his recovery. Even if he were declared healthy today, since he missed all of spring training, he would effectively have to start ramping up from scratch. The Twins should provide more details about his status in the future.

Photo courtesy of Jim Rassol, Imagn Images

Twins Sign John Brebbia To Minor League Deal

The Twins have signed right-hander John Brebbia to a minor league deal, according to a report from Aaron Gleeman of The Athletic.

Brebbia, 36 next month, is coming off back-to-back down seasons. The righty made his big league debut with the Cardinals back in 2017 and was a solid reliever for the club immediately, with a 3.14 ERA and 3.39 FIP across his first three seasons in the majors. He struck out 27.4% of his opponents in 175 innings of work while walking just 7.5%. Brebbia went under the knife for Tommy John surgery in 2020, and that caused him to not only miss the 2020 campaign but also be non-tendered by St. Louis, bringing his time with the Cardinals to an abrupt end despite his success on the mound.

The right-hander caught on with the Giants on a big league deal during the 2020-21 offseason. His 2021 season was lackluster as he worked his way back from surgery, and in his 18 appearances that year he struggled to a 5.89 ERA. He remained with the Giants despite that poor performance, however, and San Francisco was rewarded for its faith by a pair of much more successful relief seasons. Brebbia posted a 3.47 ERA and 3.54 FIP across 106 1/3 innings of work from 2022 to ’23, though his strikeout rate dipped to 22.5%.

Following his three-year stint with the Giants, Brebbia returned to free agency and eventually caught on with the White Sox. Chicago offered him a one-year, $5.5MM deal during the 2023-24 offseason, and Brebbia jumped at the healthy payday. Unfortunately, the deal didn’t work out well for either side. Brebbia struggled badly as the club’s top veteran reliever and was torched to the tune of a 6.29 ERA in 54 appearances for the White Sox. That’s in spite of a perfectly strong 26.9% strikeout rate and an acceptable 7.7% walk rate. Brebbia’s issues with the White Sox came down to the long ball, as he allowed a whopping nine homers in 48 2/3 innings of work. That’s nearly one home run per five innings pitched, and so it was hardly a shock when the White Sox opted to cut ties with the veteran.

Brebbia caught on with Atlanta to finish the 2024 season and pitched quite well for the down the stretch, but upon returning to free agency found a smaller one-year deal with the Tigers in February of last year. Unfortunately, Brebbia wound up appearing in just 18 games for the Tigers after being sidelined by a triceps strain and struggling to a 7.71 ERA when he did return to the mound. He once again was scooped up by Atlanta after being released, but this time his struggles continued and he finished the year with an identical 7.71 ERA to the one he had in Detroit.

That left Brebbia to settle for a minor league deal this winter, and he initially signed with the Rockies in free agency before failing to make their roster out of camp. His 7.00 ERA in nine innings of work during camp wasn’t exactly something to write home about, but the Twins are in need of bullpen depth after dealing away Jhoan Duran, Griffin Jax, and Louis Varland last summer. Brebbia figures to head to Triple-A and attempt to break into a bullpen that currently relies on Taylor Rogers and Cole Sands in the late innings.

Twins To Sign Drew Smith To Minor League Deal

Reliever Drew Smith has landed with the Twins on a minor league deal, reports Dan Hayes of The Athletic. The Roc Nation client was in camp with the Nationals. Smith didn’t allow a run in the spring, but Washington released him last week. As an Article XX(B) free agent, Smith was on the verge of an opt-out opportunity when the Nats cut ties with him.

The 32-year-old Smith has spent his entire big-league career with the Mets. He pitched in parts of six seasons with New York. Smith posted career highs in innings (56 1/3) and appearances (62) in 2023. He picked up his first three MLB saves that season and was primed to be a key cog in the Mets’ bullpen the following year. Smith got off to a strong start, recording a pair of saves with a career-best 29.1% strikeout rate, but went down with an elbow sprain in July 2024. He missed all of the 2025 campaign after undergoing his second Tommy John surgery. The Mets held a $2MM club option on Smith for 2026, which they declined.

Smith performed well in Spring Training with Washington, tossing 5 1/3 scoreless frames with a 35.0% strikeout rate. The right-hander was vying for a spot in a Nats bullpen lacking proven arms. He’ll encounter a similar situation in Minnesota.

The Twins sent out every notable member of their bullpen at the 2025 trade deadline. Jhoan Duran, Griffin Jax, Louis Varland, Brock Stewart, and Danny Coulombe all found new homes. The club was active this offseason in the relief market, albeit on the cheaper side. Minnesota brought back lefty Taylor Rogers on a one-year deal. Anthony Banda and Eric Orze came aboard through trades with the Dodgers and Rays, respectively. Zak Kent‘s whirlwind offseason ended with a roster spot in Minnesota. It’s not an impenetrable depth chart, particularly given that the group skews left-handed and Smith is a righty.

Photo courtesy of Sam Navarro, Imagn Images

Offseason In Review: Minnesota Twins

Following a 2025 trade deadline fire sale, the Twins idled for half the offseason then feigned an effort at putting together a contender — all while slashing payroll to its lowest levels in a decade.

Major League Free Agent Signings

2026 commitments: $16MM
Total commitments: $23MM

Option Decisions

  • Team declined $2MM option on RHP Justin Topa in favor of $225K buyout (Topa remained under control via arbitration, agreed to $1.225MM salary for 2026)

Trades and Waiver Claims

Notable Minor League Signings

Notable Losses

To call the past 18 months or so tumultuous for the Twins would be an understatement. After spending more than a year looking for a buyer, the Pohlad family pivoted and instead brought in several new minority stakeholders. They’d piled up more than $400MM in debt borrowing against the franchise, and that served as a major impediment to securing a buyer for the majority stake in the team. It was clear last summer — shortly after the team’s 11-player fire sale in July — that the Pohlads planned to keep the team in the family after failing to find a buyer. They originally announced that two new limited stakeholders were joining the ownership group, but the process of formally introducing those new partners dragged out for months.

The process was so elongated that as of the GM Meetings in November, longtime president of baseball operations Derek Falvey conceded that he had yet to be given a budget for the 2026 season. Falvey contended from the jump that he hoped to be able to add to the roster, but the Twins’ early inertia seemed to signal that the entire organization was in a holding pattern, from ownership on down to baseball operations.

One thing that became clear almost immediately was the need for a new manager. Rocco Baldelli was fired after seven seasons on the job. No manager would’ve succeeded with the collection of arms masquerading as a bullpen following last year’s deadline teardown, but Baldelli and Falvey had both seen speculation about their job security in recent seasons. Would that have been the case had ownership not slashed payroll immediately following 2023’s division title and playoff run? Perhaps not, but the Twins never really found the continuity for which they hoped under that leadership pairing even before the budget cuts.

A full-fledged search for a new skipper brought the Twins to … Baldelli’s former right-hand man, Derek Shelton. He’d served as bench coach for Baldelli prior to being hired as the manager in Pittsburgh, where he was fired last May. The Twins also considered former Minnesota hitting coach James Rowson (now with the Yankees), former Mariners skipper Scott Servais and Padres bench coach Ryan Flaherty before settling on Shelton.

By the time the ownership situation was finally resolved in December, we were already nearly halfway to spring training. The changes proved more substantial than expected. Minnesota announced three, not two, new limited partners. More notably, Tom Pohlad was named the team’s new executive chair and league-approved control person, taking over daily oversight of the team from his younger brother, Joe, who’d only ascended to that role about three years prior. Joe Pohlad is still listed as a board member on the Twins’ web site, though Charley Walters of the St. Paul Pioneer Press wrote earlier this month that Joe is no longer with the organization in any capacity.

As if the Pohlad family palace intrigue wasn’t confounding enough, the Twins would soon see their entire baseball operations outfit upended. After spending nearly the entire offseason as the Twins’ baseball ops leader, Falvey was suddenly and unexpectedly ousted on Jan. 30 — just two weeks before spring training commenced. He’d held his post as the Twins’ baseball operations leader since 2016.

The Twins announced it as a “mutual parting of ways.” Both Falvey and Tom Pohlad made public statements that struck the general tenor one would expect. Pohlad thanked Falvey for his years of service and his work to modernize the club; Falvey thanked the family for the opportunity and voiced a love for the organization. Both parties publicly stated that a change was likely best. In the aftermath, Falvey conceded that he and Joe Pohlad had a different working relationship and that Tom wanted to run things “a little differently.” Jeremy Zoll, who’d been promoted from assistant general manager to GM the offseason prior (after GM Thad Levine left the organization), is now running baseball operations.

All of that behind-the-scenes drama left the Twins in an odd spot. Once new ownership was in place, it seemed there was a green light for some modest spending, but that’s a much different revelation in mid-December than in early November. The Winter Meetings had come and gone by the time the front office had any sort of direction on spending. A significant portion of the offseason’s free agent and trade options had come off the board.

Between Tom Pohlad’s ascension to executive chair and Falvey’s departure, the Twins did make some small additions. Josh Bell inked a one-year deal to help plug a gap at either first base or designated hitter. Victor Caratini signed a two-year deal to both give the club a credible backup to Ryan Jeffers and to provide a catching option in 2027 — an important factor to consider with Jeffers up for free agency at season’s end. Old friend Taylor Rogers returned on a low-cost $2MM deal — a bargain price with which it’s hard to find fault.

The earlier stages of the offseason had presented some smaller-scale additions. The Twins picked up reliever Eric Orze in a trade with the Rays and a right-handed corner bat, Eric Wagaman, in a small swap with the Marlins. They also added glove-first, out-of-options catcher Alex Jackson in a bit of a head-scratching trade with the Orioles. They didn’t give up a prospect of great note to get him (5’5″ utilityman Payton Eeles), but Jackson has never hit in the majors and wasn’t going to stick on the Orioles’ roster all winter. The Twins could perhaps have picked him up as a minor league free agent or signed a comparable player to a minor league deal in free agency. Instead, they locked Jackson in on a $1.35MM salary, and he’ll now open the season in Triple-A and off the 40-man roster; the eventual Caratini signing left him with no role on the roster, and he’s now been passed through waivers.

When the calendar flipped to February, it was fair to wonder whether the Twins might have some late splashes up their sleeve. Payroll was down more than $30MM from the prior season and more than $50MM from the 2023 peak. The Twins reportedly showed at least cursory interest in Framber Valdez before he signed with the Tigers and in Freddy Peralta before he was traded from the Brewers to the Mets. Tom Pohlad publicly confirmed that he made a multi-year offer to Valdez, though further details aren’t clear. Still, on Feb. 1, Pohlad publicly stated that there were “still some investments to be made” in the roster prior to Opening Day. A couple weeks later, he told the team’s beat, “I want to be aggressive.”

The Twins had ample opportunity to act on some of those statements. Beyond Valdez, names like Eugenio Suárez, Zac Gallen, Nick Martinez, Zack Littell and Chris Bassitt remained unsigned. (Giolito still hasn’t signed.) The Twins seemed like a decent fit to land one of the remaining arms, continuing their trend of being an active February shopper that we’d seen in recent seasons. When top starter Pablo López suffered a UCL tear during his first spring bullpen session and former top prospect David Festa incurred a shoulder injury not long after, the fit grew even more obvious.

The Twins, however, not only stood pat on adding a starter. They opted to forgo making almost any more additions whatsoever. The Twins picked up left-hander Anthony Banda after he was squeezed out of the World Series champion Dodgers’ bullpen and designated for assignment, swinging a small trade sending international bonus pool space in the other direction. It was a nice enough value move, but it was hard to imagine a club that traded five relievers the preceding summer would go the entire offseason with its only notable bullpen acquisitions being Banda, Orze and Rogers.

That’s precisely how things played out, however. The Twins never added another starter after losing López for the season and Festa for at least the short term. Despite a wide-open bullpen mix and the clear ability to entice a veteran reliever by offering an easy path to ninth-inning work, Rogers and Banda were the lone veteran arms brought in. The Twins added Liam Hendriks, Andrew Chafin and Dan Altavilla on minor league deals, but none made the club. The former two have already been released. Waiver claim Zak Kent joined in March and won a spot in what can charitably be described as one of the five or six worst on-paper bullpen groups in the game.

Instead, the Twins are betting almost entirely on in-house upgrades and breakouts. It’s more than fair to want to get long looks at righties Taj Bradley and Mick Abel after both were focal points of the returns in last year’s deadline sell-off. But the Twins really only have six viable rotation options to begin the season, and that’s giving a lot of credit to three pitchers (Bradley, Abel and the already-optioned Zebby Matthews) who were once touted prospects but haven’t proven anything in the majors yet.

They Twins are a Joe Ryan injury away from the rotation being a bounceback hopeful (Bailey Ober), an out-of-options former top prospect who almost lost a roster spot last year (Simeon Woods Richardson) and that Bradley/Abel/Matthews trio. It should be noted, too, that the team’s inability to pick a lane led to holding onto Ryan, who entered the offseason as an obvious trade candidate and would have fetched a massive haul. It’s possible he’s the most sought-after trade chip at the deadline, but if Ryan suffers an injury of note, the decision to both hold onto him and forgo even a half-hearted effort to build out a competitive roster will be one of the great missed opportunities in recent memory.

There are prospects behind the current group of starters, many of whom will be ready this season. Connor Prielipp is already a top-100 prospect, and the Twins are quite high on fellow southpaw Kendry Rojas. Left-hander Dasan Hill has gotten some top-100 love, and righty Andrew Morris lacks ceiling but is a near-MLB-ready back-of-the-rotation option. It’s not as though the organization is wholly lacking depth, but the Twins’ inaction and sole reliance on these untested arms doesn’t square with Pohlad’s assertion that there is/was room to invest and that he hopes to be aggressive.

The bullpen with which the Twins will break camp includes Rogers, Banda, Orze, Kent, Justin Topa, Cole Sands, Kody Funderburk and Cody Laweryson (who made his MLB debut with the Twins last year, briefly went to the Angels on waivers, and is now back with the Twins). It’s frankly hard to fathom that a team that shipped out Jhoan Duran, Griffin Jax, Louis Varland, Brock Stewart and Danny Coulombe last July would do so little to add to the relief corps in a meaningful way. As with the rotation, it simply doesn’t gel with the comments Pohlad has made since Falvey’s departure.

In the lineup, there’s a bit more cause for hope, but the group is still underwhelming. Byron Buxton had his best season ever in 2025, slugging 35 homers and swiping 24 bags. Top prospect Luke Keaschall has done nothing but hit since being taken in the second round of the 2023 draft, and he burst onto the MLB scene with a .302/.382/.445 slash that was followed by an even bigger spring performance (.377/.411/.717). Jeffers is quietly one of the better offensive catchers in the game. Bell isn’t a great hitter, but he’s been above average every season of his career other than 2020 and is annual 20-homer threat. Caratini is coming off a solid offensive showing in Houston.

There’s upside beyond the veterans. Matt Wallner has immense power (and an equally immense strikeout rate). Royce Lewis and Brooks Lee are former high picks and top prospects who have battled injuries but have notable ceilings, at least at the plate. Consensus top-100 prospects Walker Jenkins, Emmanuel Rodriguez and Kaelen Culpepper are all close to MLB-ready.

There’s no immediate room in a crowded Twins outfield for either Jenkins or Rodriguez, however, which begs the question as to why a budget-crunched Minnesota club tendered a $4.475MM contract to a plodding lefty corner outfielder, Trevor Larnach. Perhaps they felt they’d be able to trade him for a bullpen arm, but Larnach looks like a square peg on a roster that’s already full of defensively limited hitters with glaring platoon issues. His presence on the roster surely helped push Alan Roden, who came over alongside Rojas in the Varland trade and outperformed Larnach this spring, to Triple-A St. Paul.

The bench is also something of an island of misfit toys. Caratini is nominally part of that group as the backup catcher, but he’s a better hitter than many of the actual bench players and will probably see a fair bit of run at DH. Kody Clemens went on an otherworldly tear after being acquired early last season but cooled off later in the year. James Outman‘s lack of minor league options always made him an odd target for the Twins last summer, particularly considering his long-running contact issues and his status as yet another left-handed outfielder on a roster chock-full of them. Tristan Gray, 30, and the since-optioned Eric Wagaman, 28, were acquired in small trades and are fringe big leaguers. Austin Martin was once a top pick but is now more of a utility player with a limited MLB track record.

It’s technically not out of the realm of possibility that with good health and plenty of breakouts/rebounds for young players (e.g. Abel, Bradley, Jenkins, Lewis, Lee) that the Twins silence doubters and take advantage of the weak AL Central to hang around the Wild Card chase in the first half. (If they do so, Pohlad could get another crack at making good on converting his words into actual action.) It is, however, extremely unlikely. The Twins look like one of the weakest teams in the majors, entirely reliant on young players exceeding expectations that were set in place by a gutted roster and an ownership group seemingly unable to get out of its own way.

“I’d love to get off this payroll thing for a second. Let’s judge the success of this year on wins and losses, and on whether we’re playing meaningful baseball in September,” Pohlad said in February. Based on the way the remainder of the offseason played out following those comments, it’s hard to imagine he’ll actually have to wait until September for that introspection.

How would MLBTR readers grade the Twins’ offseason? Have your say:

How would you grade the Twins' offseason?

  • F 42% (741)
  • D 39% (696)
  • C 15% (258)
  • A 2% (40)
  • B 2% (34)

Total votes: 1,769

Twins Outright Alex Jackson, Re-Sign Matt Bowman

The Twins outrighted catcher Alex Jackson to Triple-A St. Paul, reports Dan Hayes of The Athletic. Although Minnesota had announced this morning that he’d been designated for assignment, it seems they began the waiver process earlier in the week. Hayes also reports that righty reliever Matt Bowman is back with the club on a new minor league deal.

Jackson is expected to accept the assignment and start the season in the minors. He has the three years of service to elect free agency but hasn’t crossed the five-year threshold at which he’d keep his salary if he does so. Jackson avoided arbitration on a $1.35MM salary that he’d almost certainly not match if he tested the market and signed a minor league deal elsewhere.

Minnesota acquired Jackson from the Orioles in November. He had a path to the backup catching job behind Ryan Jeffers at the time. The Twins subsequently added Victor Caratini on a two-year deal, pushing the out-of-options Jackson off the roster. He has easily the most experience of any of their non-roster catchers, so he’d probably be first back up if Jeffers or Caratini suffer an injury.

Bowman is an organizational favorite who has had multiple stints with the club as a middle reliever. He was back in camp this year as a non-roster invitee. Bowman tossed 7 1/3 innings without allowing an earned run, striking out seven against two walks. Despite the strong showing, he lost out on a middle relief spot to Cody Laweryson and triggered an opt-out at the end of Spring Training. Bowman evidently did not find an immediate MLB roster spot elsewhere, so he’ll head to St. Paul and try to pitch his way into the big league bullpen during the season.

Twins Designate Alex Jackson For Assignment

The Twins announced Wednesday that they’ve selected the contract of right-hander Cody Laweryson and opened a spot on the 40-man roster by designating catcher Alex Jackson for assignment. They’d been shopping the out-of-options Jackson in recent days but didn’t find a taker. They can continue to explore trades for five days before they’ll have to place him on waivers. Minnesota also placed righties Travis Adams and David Festa on the 15-day IL due to a triceps strain and shoulder impingement, respectively.

Jackson, 30, came over from the Orioles in a November trade sending minor league infielder Payton Eeles to Baltimore. At the time, the Twins’ ownership situation was somewhat in flux, leaving the front office uncertain as to what sort of budget they’d have throughout the winter. Jackson was acquired and signed to a $1.35MM deal, avoiding arbitration and giving the Twins a glove-first backup catcher with some power but immense strikeout and OBP concerns.

The Twins eventually introduced a trio of new minority stakeholders and shuffled up the ownership hierarchy, with Tom Pohlad stepping in as the new control person in place of his younger brother, Joe. That shift came with the apparent green light for some modest investments in free agency, which led to Minnesota signing Victor Caratini on a two-year deal. Caratini became the new backup to starting catcher Ryan Jeffers, leaving Jackson with no path to a 26-man roster spot. Since he can’t be optioned, he’s been designated for assignment and will spend up to a week in limbo waiting to learn his next steps.

Jackson was once a top-10 draft pick and ballyhooed top prospect, but he’s never found his stride in the majors. He’s taken 440 plate appearances dating back to his 2019 MLB debut but mustered only a .153/.239/.288 slash. He’s slugged 11 homers but fallen victim to a strikeout in a disastrous 40.7% of his plate appearances. Jackson draws good marks for his pitch framing and throwing, but his anemic offensive profile makes him better suited to be a third or fourth catcher on any team’s depth chart.

It’s possible he’ll stick with Minnesota in just that role. Jackson’s lack of production, lack of minor league options and $1.35MM salary create a good chance that he’ll pass through waivers unclaimed. He has enough service time to reject an outright assignment to the minors but not enough service to do so while retaining his guaranteed salary. As such, if he clears, he’ll surely accept an assignment to Triple-A and open the season over in St. Paul.

Laweryson, 27, made his big league debut with the Twins last season. He held opponents to a run on four hits and no walks with seven punchouts — a nice follow-up to the 2.86 ERA, 24.6% strikeout rate and 7.7% walk rate he logged across 44 Triple-A innings. The Twins tried to pass him through waivers in the offseason, only for the Angels to claim him.

The Halos designated Laweryson for assignment in February and released him, at which point he returned to the Twins on a minor league pact. He’s allowed one run on five hits and a walk with six strikeouts in 6 2/3 spring innings.

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