All Things 2026 Minnesota Twins In-Season Thread

I don't get it either. How can you be so talented throughout the minors and then "burst onto the scene" in the Majors like he did, and now hardly be playable?

A large part of it are the physical ailments. 2 ACL surgeries, torn quad and several other stints on the Injured List.

Feels like he is 26 going on 37.
 


Injuries are certainly a part of Lewis failing to progress. I'd wager another part of it is that his entire Twins career, he played for a manager who wasn't real big on pushing players to get better or hold them accountable when the fail or make mistakes.
 

Injuries are certainly a part of Lewis failing to progress. I'd wager another part of it is that his entire Twins career, he played for a manager who wasn't real big on pushing players to get better or hold them accountable when the fail or make mistakes.

Pretty hard for Rocco to influence Lewis who was injured way more than half the time going back to when he slipped on his ice in his driveway back in February 2021.

Even when he flashed for the Twins win they beat the Blue Jays in the Wild Card round and pushed the Astros to 4, Lewis could only hit. Not healthy enough to play 3B.
 




Marty Cordova syndrome.

I'd like to apologize to all the posters that previously suggested trading Royce while his value was still relatively high and I scoffed at you.

The sooner we bring up Jenkins, Rodriguez and Culpepper, the sooner I'll start watching Twins baseball.
Even Marty Cardova didn't fall off this hard. The problem with trading Royce is we'd gotten two more Allan Roden's.
 

And Reusse's column the day before was about how many times the Twins have had really good seasons when expectations were low.

Yesterday was bad enough for him to completely throw in the towel, I guess.

I think the last graph in the column on "how many times the Twins have had really good seasons when expectations were low" was a major clue that 2026 would be highly unlikely in Patrick's opinion:


I say the frontrunner for surprise season is 2027, with a lockout that would put the Dodgers in MLB’s new second apron, where they couldn’t draft or sign any international youngsters for the crime of giving Kyle Tucker $60 million a season.

I suspect Reusse did not throw in the towel yesterday. It was heaved back in early February the second Pablo Lopez was rendered unavailable for 2026. Spring Training. Day 1.

Not alone.
 






For those of you keeping score at home (and let's be honest for the Immaculate Grid degenerates such as myself), here are the homes of the Twins alumni to start the season:
D-Backs
Carlos Santana

Athletics
Brent Rooker

Braves
Kyle Farmer

Red Sox
Danny Coulombe
Sonny Gray
Jovani Moran

Rockies
Edouard Julien
Willi Castro

Cubs
Caleb Thielbar

Reds
Emilio Pagan

Astros
Carlos Correa
Steven Okert
Christian Vazquez

Marlins
Chris Paddack

Brewers
Trevor Megill
Gary Sanchez

Twins (new to the Twins, coming from other organizations)
Anthony Banda (previous MLB stops: Rays, Dodgers, Pirates, Mets, Yankees, Nationals, D-Backs, Blue Jays)
Zak Kent (Guardians)
Erik Orze (Rays)
Taylor Rogers (Padres, Brewers, Cubs, Giants, Reds)
Victor Caratini (Cubs, Brewers, Astros, Padres)
Josh Bell (Pirates, Nationals, Padres, Guardians, Marlins, D-Backs)
Tristan Gray (Rays, Marlins, Athletics)

Mets
Jorge Polanco

Yankees
Brent Headrick

Phillies
Jhoan Duran

Padres
Ty France

Giants
Luis Arraez
Tyler Mahle
Harrison Bader

Mariners
Mitch Garver
Rob Refsynder

Rays
Griffin Jax

Nationals
Zack Littell

Blue Jays
Jose Berrios (starting season on disabled list)
Louis Varland

You may or may not have noticed, of the Twins relief pitchers brought on after the purging at the trade deadline (Noah Davis, Erasmo Ramirez, Thomas Hatch, Brooks Kriske, Jose Urena, Genesis Cabrera, and Anthony Misiewicz) none of them are on MLB rosters and Ramirez and Urena are not connected with any MLB team in the minors.

It should be noted, other than Berrios, I didn't check to see if other ex-Twins were starting their seasons on the DL with their new franchises.
 





The Wild give the Twins a run for their money in terms of Post-Season flops this century.

Probably a draw.
I give a slight edge to the Wild, for the simple reason they didn’t lose 18 consecutive postseason games.
 


Buxton just tagged up and advanced to 2nd base on a fly ball to center. Very much in favor of Shelton's philosophy that this team needs to be much more aggressive on the bases.
FWIW- they have the most SB as a team the last 6 weeks of last season - so the Genesis of it started then based on a desire to play more athletic baseball, vs. long ball/launch angle.
 
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From Dam Hayes’ column Thursday regarding Lewis’ spring- it sounded pollyannish to me at the time, but maybe it wasn’t 🤷‍♂️

— There was a stretch where Royce Lewis went 21 at-bats and 11 days without getting a hit this spring. However, Lewis found a little rhythm after a high hop resulted in a gift hit on Saturday. Lewis, who is working with a new hitting coach and is still making constant swing adjustments, homered and doubled in his next two games.

Even though he batted .133, Lewis said he’s optimistic about how the ball is coming off his bat after playing games on four straight days.
 

I give a slight edge to the Wild, for the simple reason they didn’t lose 18 consecutive postseason games.
That was unfathomably bad.

Plus the Twins had a full century head start as a franchise prior to the year 2000.

However, the Wild getting bounced from the 1st Round now 7 times in a row plus the '20 Qualifier is pretty feeble in its own right. The Wild also have the benefit of being on equal footing financially with their competitors in a Salary Cap league.

Both teams have just 1 appearance in the round that would have gotten them to their Championship series.

Bottom line for both franchises...Uffda.

Pretty amazing that despite a 10 year run of being an NBA Lottery mainstay in the 21st Century, the Timberwolves have gotten gotten closer more often than the Twins & Wild combined. Thrice.
 

Buxton just tagged up and advanced to 2nd base on a fly ball to center. Very much in favor of Shelton's philosophy that this team needs to be much more aggressive on the bases.

Here’s a nice blurb (from The Athletic last week) regarding the base running and focusing on fundamentals in camp, which should lead to more run scoring opportunities and fewer unforced errors -

One way the Twins hope to squeeze more out of the roster is by continuing the aggressive base running they adopted after the trade deadline last season. Over the final six weeks, the Twins were the most aggressive base-running team in baseball.

In camp, Shelton had the Twins — who stole seven more bases as a team this spring versus a year ago — participate in more interactive drills. The team brought minor leaguers over to play defense while Twins major leaguers received instruction and ran the bases “at full tilt,” Shelton said. Coaches didn’t hesitate to correct mistakes or ask for multiple attempts.

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After seeing a taste of it last year, Joe Ryan is intrigued to see how dedication to a new style on the base paths plays out over a full season.

“We played a little more athletic and we were close in a lot more games than we got credit for,” Ryan said. “We’ve taken care of some of those pieces and guys are in a pretty good spot. … I feel good about where the guys are at.”

Multiple players mentioned there was a different feel to the way spring training was run under their new manager. Shelton’s desire for precision was felt throughout, with the team focused more on fundamental play and accountability.

Early in camp, pitchers went through more fielding practice, echoing the days of Tom Kelly, Ron Gardenhire and Paul Molitor. The Twins also took advantage of a reduced roster during the World Baseball Classic to drill down on cutoffs and relay plays. Additionally, coaches emphasized infield and outfield drills, running them before most exhibition games.

“Shelty did a real good job orchestrating his vision this camp,” veteran Josh Bell said. “Attention to detail, some of the finer details, playing the game the right way, but also having a purpose for each workday. Each day has a different plan of what we want to work on.”
 


32 Os ABs today and 16 retired via the whiff.

As long as Ryan, Bradley or Abel don’t have an extended absence of a month or longer, this will be a Top 10 rotation and give our Ragamuffins lots of competitive games/chances to win.
 



Lot of missed bats. Great stuff. Just a little issue with control and high pitch count.
Crazy little nugget I read about today: Bradley right now with 74 career starts is about 1.5 years younger than the age Griffin Jax was when he made his debut.

He’s still young.
 

32 Os ABs today and 16 retired via the whiff.

As long as Ryan, Bradley or Abel don’t have an extended absence of a month or longer, this will be a Top 10 rotation and give our Ragamuffins lots of competitive games/chances to win.
So you're saying three of our pitchers will be traded by the deadline. 🤔
 


Saints win again, 9-7. Going for 1st undefeated season in pro baseball history. Our future SS off to a great start. Go Saints!
 


Idiotic challenge by Wallner. Not smart to look at it to begin with.
 




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