Creativity to drive Twins' offseason goals

November 6th, 2024

This story was excerpted from Do-Hyoung Park’s Twins Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.

What does the Twins’ road map to this winter look like?

As president of baseball operations Derek Falvey spoke with media at the General Managers Meetings in San Antonio on Tuesday, he obviously mentioned the need to move on from the 12-27 finish that plummeted the Twins out of contention in 2024 -- but he also indicated that much of their assessment of their core group indicates those players will pave a large part of the path forward.

At the same time, he noted the uncertainties around the specifics in how those pieces will fit together -- and if that picture is to be shaken up, he acknowledges the math of the situation. If his budget remains largely similar to that of 2023 -- and that’s with the backdrop of a potential ownership sale -- there will need to be give and take.

“The math is fair, right?” Falvey said. “Like, I think that we're going to have to be creative if we want to make a lot of tweaks to the group. But in some ways, I do believe that the group we have as constituted is a really good team, a really competitive team.”

Falvey described the Twins as approaching the offseason from a “pretty good baseline” of a full group of starting pitchers that they hope will be bolstered by a healthy and , in addition to a bullpen anchored by , and .

will be in place to step in for the departing -- and with having surpassed 100 games last season for the first time since 2017, they hope to have a blueprint from which to build on in ‘25.

As for specifics? It will depend on how creative they can get.

“From a financial standpoint, you know, that's our level of commitment right now that we have to look at,” Falvey said. “We have to remain creative through the offseason. That might mean exploring trades. That might mean looking at ways that we can reconfigure some spots, so we can't rule anything out.”

For one, they have internal options like or to slide to the now vacant first-base spot due to ’s free agency and ’s retirement -- but Falvey said the Twins are “not ruling out” a reunion with Santana, the club’s '24 home run leader and AL Gold Glove Award winner at his position.

How will presumably transfer to the bullpen as the Twins look to replace , along with a host of acquisitions made ahead of the ‘24 season that didn’t work out? Falvey said that such positional switches and specifics, too, would depend on how the offseason shook out.

But for the Twins to have that level of flexibility, trades seem like a necessity, with , Paddack and perhaps standing out due to the salaries they would presumably free up in trades. The Twins could obviously seek such moves for financial flexibility or, particularly in Castro’s case, bring back MLB pieces to fill their needs if they find a willing suitor on a need-for-need deal.

But the bottom line, as always, is creativity -- the mantra that Falvey has stressed over the last few offseasons.