Twins president of baseball operations Derek Falvey and manager Rocco Baldelli met with the media Friday, speaking with reporters (including Betsy Helfand of the St. Paul Pioneer Press and The Athletic’s Aaron Gleeman) about what the club might be planning heading into the offseason. Minnesota returned to the postseason as AL Central champions and won their first playoff series since 2002, advancing past the Blue Jays before falling to the Astros in the ALDS.
Building that roster came with a higher price tag than usual for the Twins, as their Opening Day payroll of roughly $153.7MM was the largest in franchise history. It isn’t yet clear how much the Twins will be able to spend to address their roster needs, or if they’ll again approach their 2023 expenditures. Since the Twins were one of the 14 teams who had broadcasting contracts with Bally Sports, their TV situation is now up in the air since the Diamond Sports Group (Bally’s parent company) filed for bankruptcy last year, and the Twins haven’t yet found a new broadcasting partner.
“That’s a reality of our offseason. It’s not just for us. It’s for other clubs, too,” Falvey said. “That’s a piece of information we’re going to have to navigate. It’s a factor that there’s lack of clarity on TV revenue. That’s a fact, that’s no secret to anybody. That plays a role (with payroll), just like all of our revenue sources play a role to some degree.”
A good chunk of money is naturally coming off Minnesota’s books in the form of free agents, though Sonny Gray, Kenta Maeda, Michael A. Taylor, and Donovan Solano all played key roles last season and their departures would be felt. Likewise, the Twins could save more money in declining their club options on Jorge Polanco ($10.5MM) or Max Kepler ($10MM), but that creates two more holes to be filled.
As expected, Falvey didn’t share any real detail about whether or not the Twins would look to retain any of these players, speaking in generalities about how they liked their contributions and, more broadly, how the team would explore the possibility of retaining any of the group.
Speaking of Gray in particular, Falvey said “we’ll continue to have dialogue with Sonny, but that process is going to take some time to work through the part of the free agency process that he’s earned. I’m sure he’s going to be respected through this process by a whole host of clubs.”
Since Gray is expected to land one of the larger contracts of any pitcher in this winter’s free agent class, that might lean in favor of a deal with a team other than Minnesota, even though Gray has been open about his affinity for playing in the Twin Cities. Gray will surely receive a qualifying offer from the Twins and is likely to reject the one-year pact, leaving the Twins in position to recoup a compensatory pick if Gray did indeed sign elsewhere.
Maeda seems to be the likelier of the two pitches to re-sign, and Gleeman opines that a deal might be worked out between Maeda and the Twins if the Japanese righty is open to a shorter-term contract. In the event that both Gray and Maeda left, Falvey said he liked the Twins’ remaining rotation options, which arguably already make up a solid starting five in Pablo Lopez, Joe Ryan, Bailey Ober, Louie Varland, and Chris Paddack.
“That’s a good group to start with, but it doesn’t mean we’re not going to think about ways to get better….I would say we’ll see where the process takes us,” Falvey said. The PBO and Baldelli both also mentioned how well Varland pitched as a reliever last year, yet indicated that there’s plenty of time left in the offseason to determine Varland’s 2024 role.
Baldelli “would anticipate” Royce Lewis as Minnesota’s regular third baseman at least heading into spring camp. Despite his ability to play multiple positions, Lewis spent more of his time at the hot corner in 2023, so it makes sense that the Twins would stick with what seems to be working. With Lewis at third base, Carlos Correa at shortstop, Edouard Julien at second, Alex Kirilloff getting most of the first base at-bats, and the versatile Willi Castro and Kyle Farmer around for depth, this might leave Polanco out of playing time, and perhaps out of luck in getting his option exercised.
Kepler’s option is a little more in flux, in part because Byron Buxton’s ability to play center field is still in question after the former Gold Glover underwent another knee procedure. If Buxton is again limited to DH work or can’t play whatsoever, that leaves the Twins likely in search of another center field option if Taylor doesn’t re-sign. If Castro is called upon for at least part-time work in center field, that opens up another hole in the infield picture.
sesquiup
“Twins president of baseball operations Derek Falvey and manager Rocco Mediate met with the media Friday”
Did a bot write this? How do you accidentally get Rocco Baldelli’s name wrong and choose the name of a GOLFER?
Mark Polishuk
Mark-bot 3000 here. This is one of the sillier typos I’ve ever made, and it has been fixed. Why the 2008 U.S. Open was on my mind, I’ll never know.
LordD99
I figured you were writing about Rocco meeting with the media, and “media” became Mediate.
Kershaw's Lesser Known Right Arm
Shorthand writing. Trying to be more effective with his Twitter characters
LordD99
“Baldelli ‘would anticipate’ Royce Lewis as Minnesota’s regular third baseman at least heading into spring camp.”
——–
Just say the job is his. If he doesn’t play daily (outside of his penchant for injuries) at 3B, then where else will they play him? He’s not taking over SS from Correa, and they have other options for 2B. Hopefully they don’t consider him for the OF again so he can have another ACL injury. He’s the 3B’man. Let him know the job is his so he can focus mentally on being a regular next season and on his preparation for off season training.
srsbryzness
Well, Jose Miranda still exists, and he’ll probably be fighting Lewis for 3B if he’s over his shoulder problems next year.
mp9
Miranda is better suit for 1B
srsbryzness
True, but he’s not automatically out of the 3B mix yet.
martras
Maybe they’re thinking about moving Correa to 3B? Who knows?
CardsFan57
It will be interesting to see if media income affects payrolls and the free agent market. A lot of teams lost media deals last year. More may come this year. The Cardinals viewership dropped for obvious reasons. Bally may deem them unprofitable this year.
Oddball Hererra
They actually have remarkably few holes on offense. It’s this part that is problematic
“ Falvey said he liked the Twins’ remaining rotation options, which arguably already make up a solid starting five in Pablo Lopez, Louie Varland, and Chris Paddack.”
No, that is the make up of a solid starting one, not five. It’s also weird that Ober isn’t on the list as he is >>>> Varland or Paddack
ArrogantAnalyst
A starting 4 of Lopez, Ryan, Ober, and Paddack is objectively pretty good. I suspect they will try to give the last spot to Varland or another young guy. They might sign someone though.
martras
Ober performed excellently in the playoffs, right? Oh wait, no, he got shelled. Also, Ober’s FIP painted a very different picture of his value than his ERA down the stretch.
Lopez, Paddack, Ryan, Ober, Varland is what I’d expect from the Twins as the rotation next year. I could see Maeda coming back on a 2 year $25MM deal (he’ll be 36 next season) which would probably push Varland to the bullpen long term.
Steve(shs22)
No way maeda gets 2 for 25…
I could see 2 for 17 mill
martras
$8.5MM AAV on 2 years? 2010 is calling. That’s not even #5 starter money these days.
It’s tough to gauge how teams will view Maeda, but probably as a mid-rotation option entering his age 36 season.
Nobody is ignoring Maeda’s return after arm fatigue (somewhat expected as he ramped up after coming back from TJ). From his return on 6/23, Maeda put up this line:
16GS, 88.1 Inn, 3.36 ERA, 3.94 FIP, 3.82 xFIP, 10.49 K/9, 2.55 BB/9. 13% Swinging Strikes.
Based on his return numbers, starters with 100+ innings in 2023 Maeda would rank:
#23/127 in ERA
#48/127 in FIP
#40/127 in xFIP
2yrs at $25MM is very cheap for that and takes his age and injury history into account. If Maeda was a couple years younger, he’d get 3-4 years at $45-60MM, easy.
Baldkid
My preference is to have Brooks Lee win the 3B job out of spring training and for Royce Lewis to move to 1B. Polanco / Julien can rotate between 2B & DH. Castro / Farmer / Castro back up INF / OF. Wallner, Taylor, Kepler starting in the OF.
I would be ok with Larnach and Kirilloff to be moved for relief pitching or minor leaguers with years of control. I would fully expect Miranda to be moved.as well.
My expectation is that Polanco & Kepler’s options will be picked up. A question I have, would the Twins be interested in signing Mahle to a low, incentive laden deal or has that ship sailed? (Just wondering if they want to recoup from that trade with the Reds). .
ArrogantAnalyst
Not a chance they would move Royce to first just to give Lee a position right away. They arent just going to throw away Lewis’ value like that. Lee wasn’t exactly tearing up aaa either.
They almost certainly aren’t going to give away Larnach, Kirilloff, or Miranda.
Mahle will miss most of 24 so I wouldn’t expect anything even if they resign him.
Polanco’s and Kepler’s options will almost certainly be exercised. The interesting question will be if they trade one or both to save some money and clear some space on the roster.
stymeedone
They won’t exercise the options if they don’t have the money. Losing the TV deal has consequences.
martras
They’ll 100% absolutely exercise the options. There’s utterly no question about that. Whether or not they’ll trade Polanco (almost certainly) or Kepler (high probability) after exercising the options is the question.
ArrogantAnalyst
They will exercise the options regardless. If they don’t want to pay them they will trade them. Polanco especially has good value still.
refereemn77
He’s got to prove he can hit AAA pitching. He’s not even on the 40 man roster.
martras
Brooks Lee is better suited to 2B, but he’s down the depth chart a bit. I could see Lewis moving to CF or Correa moving to 3B and some shifting around from there. Lee also struggled in AAA after heating up before his promotion from AA.
.237/.304/.428 OPS .731 wRC+ 78 isn’t getting it done. 8.9% BB rate is too low and Lee wasn’t making very good contact with the ball. Lots of pop-ups in between solid contact. He’s very likely not making the roster out of the gate, but he did pick things up a bit as his time in AAA expanded. I think he’s maybe a mid season call up if there are some injuries.
Depth chart right now is probably something like this:
1B – Kirilloff, Julien, Farmer, Castro
2B – Castro, Farmer, Martin, Lee
3B – Lewis, Farmer, Castro, Lee
SS – Correa, Lewis, Farmer, Castro, Lee
The Twins could really use a healthy first baseman with some power and decent defense.
werbellik
Perhaps Miranda at first base with Kirilloff?
martras
Miranda’s way down the depth chart at this point. With offseason rotator cuff shoulder surgery to alleviate an impingement, he’s going to have to prove himself ready to play at the start of Spring Training. After that, he’s likely going to have to play his way back onto the roster.
I think the Twins are likely to seek outside help for a starting 1B. Kirilloff is too unreliable and poor defensively. Miranda is the same. Neither have plus power or a profile of a great 1B at the plate.
I could see the Twins moving Kirilloff back to LF, Buxton in CF and Wallner in RF to allow them to trade Kepler, but it’s tough to say.
Johnny Vegas
I don’t think there’s any question that Polanco and Kepler will have their options picked up by the team. When looking at the free agent hitters landscape, the Twins could easily trade them if they didn’t want to keep them on the books. $10 million there’s not a lot of money when talking about Major League Baseball salaries.
martras
Exactly.
deuceball
Most owners would be weary of the Bally sports mess but not the pohlad’s. Perfect excuse to cut the budget
In Seager/Hader We Trust > the 70 MM DH Ohtani
Why can’t MLB end blackouts? They can charge a much higher amount that fans would have to pay anyways to watch all the games on various sources. It would be more convenient. Why not pay MLB.com 200 instead of 100 and giving 10 dollars to 10 other sources, for instance?
Kershaw's Lesser Known Right Arm
Ahead of the (Sonny Gray) curve
martras
The payroll is $157MM this year. It was like $140MM last year. Time to snuff out the tired old arguments from the Carl Pohlad days.
Ignorant Son-of-a-b
Kepler & Polanco have never excited me and I really think the Twins should cut ties but with the sub-par options for hitting talent on the market I guess they might be kept instead…out of default. They were so underwhelming to watch in the postseason.
stymeedone
Just an opposing fans point of view, but Polanco always seems to hit in the clutch when I watch them play. So-so defensively, but an under rated bat.
ArrogantAnalyst
Polanco is objectively a very good hitter and is cheap.
The Einheri
Would the Twins really pay Kyle Farmer $6.5M? I love Farmer, but Twins have low-cost infield players ready to take up his role, don’t they?
I think they pick up both options on Kepler and Polanco, though, and then trade Polanco.
martras
Yep. Or trade him. Farmer was a catcher in the Dodgers system and he’s played behind the dish into his MLB career a bit. Not sure why teams don’t check in on that. Farmer would be a valuable catcher with a league average bat.
In any case, Farmer’s a legitimate 2.0 WAR starter in a full season. One year $6.5MM is a steal for a guy with infield utility and a stable league average bat. I think he’d probably get a 2-3 year deal on the open market at $8-10MM AAV.
northstar7
What about Joey Gallo?! Just kidding…
martras
Knowing Falvey, he’ll bring him back…
Farian
“As expected, Falvey didn’t share any real detail about whether or not the Twins would look to retain any of these players, speaking in generalities about how they liked their contributions and, more broadly, how the team would explore the possibility of retaining any of the group.”
This is a mouthful and includes a comma error with “more broadly.”
“As expected, Falvey didn’t share any real detail about whether or not the Twins would look to retain any of these players, speaking in generalities about how they liked their contributions, and more broadly, how the team would explore the possibility of retaining any of the group.”
The above is correct, but it still should be split up into two sentences.
WestVillageTiger
Good to see Willi Castro finally finding his niche.