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Bottom Line Brings Twins Changes


Ted Schwerzler

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The Minnesota Twins have just over a week's worth of baseball games left in 2016. As the season draws to a close, Paul Molitor's troops are certain to lose 100 games, and they may end up posting the worst record in team history. Although we've seen Jim Pohlad move on from long time General Manager Terry Ryan this season, the reality is that it's the bank account that reigns supreme.

 

Here's what we know right now. In the middle of the summer, the Twins gave Terry Ryan his walking papers. They were long overdue, and they should be considered performance related first and foremost. For far too long, his approach had become outdated and the results hadn't been fruitful. After firing his head man, Pohlad quickly went on record to suggest that Manager Paul Molitor would remain in 2017 regardless.

 

At that point, we were quickly reminded that Pohlad's expertise is solely rooted in dollars and cents. He's not a baseball man, Molitor isn't worthy of a vote of confidence, and the chips falling where they may still means that Pohlad's scope ends with the fans walking through the gates.

 

With six home games left, the Twins have a recorded attendance number of 1,831,020 fans. That boils down to roughly 24,400 fans per game. At capacity, Target Field tops out at 39,504 fans per game. That's a figure that the Twins haven't seen often at all this season. In reality, the stretch run has consisted of roughly 14,000 season tickets being accounted for every night, while the in game crowd likely falls somewhere below 10,000 people.

 

You can probably look at the numbers above and make the educated conclusion that the Twins aren't proud of those results. Target Field is a gorgeous venue, and baseball during a Minnesota summer and fall are some of the best ways to spend your time. What those numbers don't show on their own however, is a reality that has the current Twins club being less supported than any team in recent memory.

 

Since Target Field opened in 2010, the Twins have never had less than 2.2 million fans over the course of a season. That number came last year, when the Twins narrowly missed the playoffs after four straight 90 loss seasons. The first two years at their new digs saw the Twins draw over 3 million fans per year, and the third year brought in over 2.75 million. Minnesota's number for 2016 though, won't compare to anything Target Field has seen before.

 

When the dust settles on the year, the Twins will likely be right around 1.9 million for a final attendance figure. You'd have to go back to 2001 at the H.H.H. Metrodome to find a Twins team that drew that few fans over the course of an 81 game home slate. The 2001 Twins were coming off of four straight 90 loss seasons, but boosted their attendance to 1.7 million (after not topping 1.43 million since 1993) while winning 85 games and finishing second in the AL Central that year.

 

To Pohlad, and Team President Dave St. Peter, the fact that this collection of Minnesota Twins will draw the smallest crowd since 2001 is a problem. It's a problem because it doesn't even sniff previous Target Field attendance numbers, and it gets beat by the last eight seasons at the Metrodome (which was an absolute dump). The honeymoon phase with Target Field appears to be over, and expecting to draw simply because of the atmosphere is no longer a realistic proposition.

 

Over the winter, Pohlad and his business partners can roll out as many new food options, patios, and perks as they so choose, but without a commitment to a competitive product with a purpose on the field, the fans dollar will continue to speak. It's a great thing that the organization has decided to go in a different direction than the one Ryan was treading water in, but nothing forced them to make that decision more than the financial implications that this season presented. While wins and losses highly dictate the turnout, it's ultimately the turnout that continues to control operations.

 

As you make your last trips to Target Field in 2016, be glad that it's the paltry crowds that have forced change, and hope that change brings the people back. A new Baseball Operations President and General Manager will be tasked with righting the ship, and if they succeed, the Minnesota Twins will once again run like a well oiled machine.

 

For more from Off The Baggy, click here. Follow @tlschwerz

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And with the amount of no shows, you have all these concessions but no one to purchase them. 

 

Since Target Field opened, the Twins have tried to make it the venue, not the product. They got a boost last year with their play and Torii Hunter coming back. 

 

But short of winning games...they have no franchise player. Mauer is worn out. No one really cares about Molly. You can get excited about the rookies, but the common fan doesn't give a lick until the team starts to win. 

 

With Vikings grabbing all the spotlight, the Twins have to revert to grassroots. They have to take a hit on season tickets, maybe even roll back some prices for 2017.

 

They have to get out into the community. Not only the (new) front office, but the new players. The Twins need to conarct with a dozen current and an equal number of alumni to work ALL the small town events (and in-town events) that they can to keep word-of-mouth alive. They need to print up a ton of promotional material and get it out in an organized way to sell not only Target Field all over again (the honeymoon has now passed) but the concept of watching a baseball game

 

They do have to get the front office in place, but Dave St. Peter should be pulling back from on-field operations and concentrating solely on figuring out ways to reach out to the midwest. It will involve more little things to bring the people back to the dome. It will involve getting kids (and then parents) excited about baseball, to get youth, church, community groups to come to the game. 

 

But sadly, don't see that happening. Just announcements of more strange foods, killing off another section for some corporate monies. But who is giving a dead last club advertising money on a radio station that fades in and out when you drive around town and a team that can't even put on a good front at an event like The Minnesota State Fair (yes. I harp on that - the one BIG opportunity to promote Twins - giving away cats and jerseys and posters and stuff THAT YOU AS A TEAM PAY FOR -FORGET ALWAYS GETTING A SPONSOR to make people proud to wear the brand and think about supporting the brand.

 

Twins, you gotta produce 100,000 of your own caps to hand out at events - from church fun fairs to halloween gatherings to Christmas parties. You gotta tie in with The Winter Carnival (your crosstown Saints will). 

 

Otherwise, 10,000 fans in the stands makes for an empty park!

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I have been grumbling, virtually since I have been on TD that the Twins were just another line on the top of the Pohlad Companies stationary. And the two letters in the alphabet that conerned them were not WL, but PL. I also contended that Hunter was not a strategic move, but another "Experience" investment, like a new Polish Sausage stand. An attempt to lure the casual baseball rube into the clutches of Target Enterprises. The fact that the P&L finally forced a move is sadly not a sign that anything has changed. I really really hope I am wrong. I have been a fan since they moved here. But I fear that Ryan was simply another Hunter type move, to be replaced by someone else who will acquiesce to the Pohlad Way. Pohlads determination to keep Molitor will be a red flag to baseball oriented competent GM candidates, but will not deter someone who is bottom line inclined, and wants to work the ladder. JHC, I really hope I am wrong!

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I don't think Ryan will be replaced by anyone but a solid duo. The fact the Twins are bringing in both a baseball head and a GM is a good thing. That said, nether Pohlad nor St. Peter know enough about baseball to be having any real input on the team. Stick to the business and hire the rest out

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I hope you are correct in your belief that they will find the right people. But all you have to do is look at the rest of the Twin Cities ML spors teams, and college one, to see how very difficult it is, and what the odds are.the jury is still out on all of them except it seems the Vikings. That's beginning to look like a competent ML operation that will give itself a chance to win. The Wolves and Lynx are owned by the same guy, and are a perfect example of what happens when you make the wrong choice in the FO.

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What? The Wolves are the best young team in the league with a proven winner coach/head of basketball operations. The outlook is sky-fricking-high.

The Wild are extremely talented underachievers who just hires a coach known for getting crazy good output from talented players. Out look very good.

Vikings - A+

The Twins have two to four potential perennial all-stars to build around actually playing on the MLB roster right now. We fired an old school GM and are considering a handful or young, forward thinking leaders to replace.

 

Where is the downside for MN sports going forward?

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