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  • What Would an Ideal Trade Deadline Look Like for The Twins?


    Nick Nelson

    We've been covering the upcoming trade deadline from every angle here at Twins Daily, with a regular stream of articles exploring various targets, and series of PDFs for Caretakers breaking down each division. 

    After taking it all in, and making a realistic assessment of the Twins' situation and needs, here's way I've landed as a perfect plan.

    Image courtesy of Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

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    Now, to be clear: this plan is designed to make the Twins credible postseason contenders, not World Series favorites. I'm not of the mind that they should go "all in" and trade premium future capital for the sake of a short-term push, because I don't think they're at a point of overall team quality where it makes sense to significantly sacrifice the future.

    With that said, opportunities like this are not guaranteed to come along often, and when you find yourself in this position you've got to take a shot. I think these moves would help the Twins address their key weaknesses in a meaningful way and set themselves up for postseason success without selling the farm.

    Here are five completely speculative ideas for hypothetical trades:

    Acquire SP Noah Syndergaard from Angels for INF Keoni Cavaco and LHP Devin Smeltzer

    I'll be honest: I have no idea what it'll take to get Syndergaard. He'll have a market, for sure, but he's nowhere near the top of the value chart among available starters. Having signed a one-year, $21 million deal with the Angels during the offseason, he's due about $7 million in the final two months, and a free agent in waiting.

    Syndergaard has been solid this season, but far from his electric pre-surgery norm. His velocity hasn't fully returned since 2020 Tommy John surgery and his strikeouts are way down. In some ways, you're betting on him clicking down the stretch, kind of like Justin Verlander did in 2017.

    Is it likely? No, especially to that extent. But even if he stays the current course Syndergaard is a solid pitcher – a clear upgrade over anyone in the Twins rotation not named Gray or Ryan – and a respectable postseason option. And the cost can't be that high.

    Like I said, I have no idea what a realistic return for Syndergaard looks like, but the one suggested above feels plausible. The Angels get back 2019's #13 overall draft pick in Cavaco, who has struggled early in the minors but is still only 21 and showing signs of breaking through at Single-A. The Angels are likely familiar with SoCal native and former prep star. Smeltzer adds a bit of floor to the ceiling-focused deal for LA – a solid MLB starter or swing man with three years of team control remaining.

    If this package proves to be too light, I'm okay giving up a bit more. I really want Syndergaard on the Twins, and this feels like a once-in-a-lifetime chance to make that happen..

    Acquire RP Daniel Bard from Rockies for LHP Cade Povich

    David Robertson is the biggest prize among deadline relief rentals, and that means someone's gonna have to grossly overpay for him. That might also be true of Bard, who's probably the second-best closer among impending free agents, but less so. As great as he was in the first half for Colorado, Bard can't escape the shadow of his track record, which includes a seven-year break from the major leagues after he got the yips in his late 20s and lost the strike zone. 

    That history is out of sight, with Bard back to dominating this year behind triple-digit heat ... but it's not out of mind. Last year he posted a 5.21 ERA out of the Rockies bullpen with the same top-notch fastball velo. He's the definition of a volatile asset. And giving up Povich – a third-rounder from last year's draft, averaging 12.1 K/9 at High-A ball and Twins Daily's #10-ranked prospect in the organization – for such a volatile short-term asset is a tough pill to swallow. But with the competition for back-end bullpen arms, it may take something like that. 

    It's worth it to get the high-impact late-inning weapon that the Twins need to protect and complement Jhoan Duran. But I'm not stopping there.

    Acquire RP Matt Moore from Rangers for INF Edouard Julien and RHP Sawyer Gipson-Long

    The Rangers hit gold on their spring signing of Moore to a minor-league deal, seeing him blossom in a full-time relief role with a 1.61 ERA, 2.57 FIP, and 10.1 K/9 rate in 44 ⅔ innings through 33 appearances. 

    Just like with Bard, the Twins would be buying high on a veteran impending free agent with a wobbly track record, but as in that case, the metrics fully back up his excellence up to this point. The lefty Moore has been extremely effective, and could bring much-needed length to a bullpen that's been leaned on heavily. Moore has recorded more than three outs in more than half of his appearances for Texas (17) including two full innings in 13 of them.

    Julien and Gipson-Long are both intriguing players having good seasons in the 15-20 range of Minnesota's top prospect list. The Rangers would likely be very happy to get this kind of future capital in exchange for a flier they snagged on a minor-league deal.

    Acquire LHP Rich Hill from Red Sox for 1B Miguel Sano

    Okay, I'm trying to think creatively with this shot in the dark. The Twins are clearly ready to move on from Sano, so I tried to figure out a scenario where trading him might be remotely plausible. I can't see anyone giving up a prospect for him, but this feels like kind of a "why not" move for both sides.

    The slumping Red Sox – now in last place! – are longshots to make the playoffs. They need a huge spark to go on a run and overcome the many other wild-card contenders in the American League. They're not going to get that from Hill, a back-of-rotation starter who's currently rehabbing from a knee injury and expected to return in early August. But let's say Sano hits a couple homers over the next week and inspires some small belief that he could come in and bang the ball over the Green Monster for a couple months. The Twins pay off half of Sano's remaining ~$5M commitment so the money is basically a wash.

    Hill is not an ace that's going to turn around the staff's fortunes or anything, but he could be useful for the Twins down the stretch and into the playoffs. He's pitched reasonably well this year (102 ERA+, 1.29 WHIP in 70.2 IP) and has familiarity here from the 2020 season. The 42-year-old would probably appreciate the opportunity to go to a more legitimate contender for what might be his last chance for a championship run.

    Acquire C Kurt Suzuki, Tucker Barnhart, Austin Hedges, or otherwise for PTBNL

    The Twins need a dependable veteran catcher to bridge the gap until Ryan Jeffers returns. The above are examples of of no-hit, glove-first guys who are impending free agents on teams going nowhere. They'll be available for nothing of consequence, so I don't even feel the need to hypothesize a return, but it's definitely something they need to get done.

    The End Result

    By carrying out the plan above, the Twins would address three key needs -- the rotation, the bullpen, and backup catcher -- without giving up any truly indispensable prospects, although they would be parting with a quantity of good young talent.

    Syndergaard joins Gray and Ryan atop the rotation to form a viable postseason core. Hill could become part of that picture if he throws well, otherwise simply provides some innings down the stretch. Bard and Moore power up the bullpen significantly, pushing Griffin Jax and Caleb Thielbar into seventh-inning roles, and the rest of the questionables (Tyler Duffey, Emilio Pagan, Joe Smith, etc.) into lower-leverage middle relief or possibly even DFAs.

    You can quibble with the specifics, but the overarching thought is that the Twins avoid giving up critical assets by aiming lower than the top names on the market (but not much lower) and not targeting additional years of team control. For me, that's the perfect deadline approach. 

    What are your thoughts on this plan? Are the prices I've laid out too light? Too steep? What would you do? Sound off in the comments!

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    Quite honestly, outside of trading players that will be lost anyway in the 40 man crunch, stand pat and continue to assess our internal assets the rest of the year (time to start seeing who can help in the bullpen... especially Sands)

    This team has too many holes to fill at one deadline to be relevant this post season even if they do make it (which is still very much debatable)

    And it is going to be a seller's market with the additional playoff spots keeping more teams with the mirage of contention 

    Progress is being made this year. If it continues, there will be a more reasonable number of holes to fill at the 2023 deadline. If not... we were headed toward a complete rebuild anyway. 

    I know this is not what any of us want to hear (me included) and there is no guarantee of progress next year, but it IS the most rational decision.  

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    More on topic, I think your proposal is reasonable Nick and wouldn't have heartburn if the Twins end up doing something similar.

    It would improve the team a bit without mortgaging the future when we will (hopefully) be better prepared for the post season with another year of development for our promising young core

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    Although the Angels are arguably the worst decision-making team at the trade deadline year-in-year out (worse than the Twins), they have to be thinking about moving Ohtani. As Jeff Passan has mentioned, it is highly unlikely that they will be able to keep him because he won't want to sign after 2023 after another -.500 year with the Angels looming, which is likely to be the storyline for at least a couple of more years beyond that. The Angels, maybe more than any other team, have been such poor decision-makers over the years that their farm-system is years away from producing any MLB talent. Are they ready to infuse the upper level of their farm system with some talent that is closer to being ready for the big leagues along with a couple of players that are already at the MLB level?

    I would say the Twins should throw in the kitchen sink to get Ohtani to sign for 3-5 years. Yes, that would be a bit painful, but that duel threat is something one could only dream about. What would it take? A lot! And the payout would be quite large, but it would be worth it IMHO. I also think Ohtani-san would be more than willing to come to the Twins with Maeda already in the fold. Having another Japanese player to talk with is a hidden advantage.

    Here is my proposal: Kepler, either Larnach or Kiriloff, and two pitchers from the minors with high upside. Would this move the Angels? Four for one player? Is it enough? (I'm sure some teams would be willing to go down this road.) 

    What do you think?

     

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    3 hours ago, D.C Twins said:

    Quite honestly, outside of trading players that will be lost anyway in the 40 man crunch, stand pat and continue to assess our internal assets the rest of the year (time to start seeing who can help in the bullpen... especially Sands)

    This team has too many holes to fill at one deadline to be relevant this post season even if they do make it (which is still very much debatable)

    And it is going to be a seller's market with the additional playoff spots keeping more teams with the mirage of contention 

    Progress is being made this year. If it continues, there will be a more reasonable number of holes to fill at the 2023 deadline. If not... we were headed toward a complete rebuild anyway. 

    I know this is not what any of us want to hear (me included) and there is no guarantee of progress next year, but it IS the most rational decision.  

    How will next year be better? They likely have no SS.... And need to replace Bundy and Archer. They won't have a built in lead in the division. I'm genuinely curious why anyone thinks next year is likely to be better. 

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    Nick, totally agree with the philosophy:  make some improvements to help with the chances this year but don’t sell the farm. A few tweaks;  

    1. I think Povich is too high a price to pay for Bard so I would try to get him for someone lesser (and maybe needing to be added to the 40-man this Fall) or pass on the trade. 
    2. I would hold onto Smeltzer and use in bullpen. Not sure who my substitute is for him in the proposed trade…but I do like the Noah idea.

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    2 hours ago, Mike Sixel said:

    How will next year be better? They likely have no SS.... And need to replace Bundy and Archer. They won't have a built in lead in the division. I'm genuinely curious why anyone thinks next year is likely to be better. 

    Ok, I’ll bite:

    both Archer and Bundy  have options for next year so they can still be here (the tone of your comment suggests you want them back).  Palacios plays short until Lewis is ready.  He is competent defensively and that should be sufficient for the first couple of months until Lewis arrives. Losing Correa frees up $35M that can be spent in a variety of ways. Some youngsters may regress but as a whole it is reasonable to expect them to be better overall next year (Kiriloff, Winder, Miranda, Celestino, Larnach…). Maeda is back. And there could be some additional help from the farm…

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    4 hours ago, Mike Sixel said:

    How will next year be better? They likely have no SS.... And need to replace Bundy and Archer. They won't have a built in lead in the division. I'm genuinely curious why anyone thinks next year is likely to be better. 

    It starts with them getting some injured pitchers back.  They are missing Ober / Paddack / Alcala / Maeda and Dobnak.  Hard to say what Dobnal provides but it's worth mentioning.  Get Winder back as a permanent addition and replace Archer / Bundy with a top of the rotation free agent and add a back of the BP free agent and you have a very different pitching staff.  Of course, the response will be that the Twins won't spend on pitching.  I would suggest they have not spent big on pitching but they have never been in the position they will be next season.  They will only have roughly a $73M payroll and they will already have Gray / Ryan / Wider / Ober / Maeda, eventually Paddack plus Smeltzer / Dobnak for depth.  

    The only hole to fill among position players is catcher and who knows maybe Hamilton impresses the remainder of the season.  It's not like Palacios is horrible and Lewis should be inserted by mid-season.  Miranda and Kirilloff are night and day better than they were to start this season so their emergence makes us better next year.   Those two also collectively save us $30M which could be invested in pitching.  They could also afford Willson Contreras.

    Yes, they need to execute on landing a free agent SP and RP but that's all they need to do to make this a darn good team next year.  So, we will see if they are just dead set against spending on pitching.  Keep in mind, I am the guy who was against such a move in previous years.  I have a totally different opinion now because of the situation I just outlined.  There is a reasonable chance the FO will also be much more open to spending on a top free agent SP.

    How does Musgrove / Gray / Ryan / Maeda / Winder sound for a rotation with Ober / Paddack / Smeltzer / Dobnak for depth?  An infield of Kirilloff / Polanco eventually Lewis and Miranda.  BP of Duran a LH free agent / Alcala / Jax and three among Thielbar / Megill / Hamilton / Moran / Sisk / Schulfer / etc.  We could also use Two of Ober / Paddack / Smeltzer / Dobnak could be used as multi-inning RPs.  This all fits within a roughly $130M budget.  This looks like a better team than we have at the moment to me.

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    Ideal deadline

    1) Trade Larnach and Miranda for Lopez and Bass from Miami

    2) Trade Ober and Steer for Montas and Trivino

    Both these deals meet the value match on MLB Trade Values. Imagine a rotation of Montas, Lopez, Gray, Ryan. All controlable through the end of next year. We keep our top pitching prospects and Royce + Alex. Walner is close to ready and Alex can handle first or LF. We extend our RP and both can be retained for next year.

    This also buys time for Balazovic, Winder, and Conner and Caterino. 

     

     

     

     

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    I like how you've laid that out Major League Ready.  The Twins have a "core" that can be pretty competitive.  But Archer & Bundy are getting by on smoke and mirrors and Smetlzer's magic is done.  They need reinforcements for this season and they need them NOW.  The Twins really have plenty of depth in their minor league system to sell of some assets for enhanced major league performance. 

    Thor is interesting.  He would be MORE interesting if there was ANY indication he could start throwing 98 next year year and reclaim that power slider.  If Castillo, Montas or even Mahle are not brought in, I could see taking a chance on Blake Snell.  Underlying metrics show he's "close" to what could be VERY effective.  Someone has to unlock that talent.  Why not the Twins??  

    I really like the Ohtani idea, but just can't see the Twins pulling off a trade like that under the radar.  Dodgers, Yankees or Padres seem like more probable destinations (but Ohtani in a Twins uniform?  That would be pretty Awesome).  

    Finally, I see Palacios as a viable SS next year.  He's certainly got the glove and for Pete's Sake, Lewis HAS to catch a break sometime...Right ??  But I'm not so fatalistic that Correa won't be back next year.  And look, all Correa does is WIN.  Retaining him may prevent the Twins from going for a stud #1 like Musgrove, but having Blake Snell and Maeda to go with Ryan and Gray is not a bad starting point, and I'd be just fine with Winder as a #5. 

    The bullpen needs help.  Badly.  There is no reason someone like Barb and Moore cannot be acquired.  All the better if they are retained for next year.  But if something isn't done to significantly improve this BP, the Twins will NOT make the playoffs.  In fact, the longer Bundy and Archer are in the rotation or throwing any significant amount of innings the Twins season is in dire peril.  I'd DFA Bundy and move Archer to long relief--2-3 innings at a time ASAP.   

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    2 hours ago, Major League Ready said:

    It starts with them getting some injured pitchers back.  They are missing Ober / Paddack / Alcala / Maeda and Dobnak.  Hard to say what Dobnal provides but it's worth mentioning.  Get Winder back as a permanent addition and replace Archer / Bundy with a top of the rotation free agent and add a back of the BP free agent and you have a very different pitching staff.  Of course, the response will be that the Twins won't spend on pitching.  I would suggest they have not spent big on pitching but they have never been in the position they will be next season.  They will only have roughly a $73M payroll and they will already have Gray / Ryan / Wider / Ober / Maeda, eventually Paddack plus Smeltzer / Dobnak for depth.  

    The only hole to fill among position players is catcher and who knows maybe Hamilton impresses the remainder of the season.  It's not like Palacios is horrible and Lewis should be inserted by mid-season.  Miranda and Kirilloff are night and day better than they were to start this season so their emergence makes us better next year.   Those two also collectively save us $30M which could be invested in pitching.  They could also afford Willson Contreras.

    Yes, they need to execute on landing a free agent SP and RP but that's all they need to do to make this a darn good team next year.  So, we will see if they are just dead set against spending on pitching.  Keep in mind, I am the guy who was against such a move in previous years.  I have a totally different opinion now because of the situation I just outlined.  There is a reasonable chance the FO will also be much more open to spending on a top free agent SP.

    How does Musgrove / Gray / Ryan / Maeda / Winder sound for a rotation with Ober / Paddack / Smeltzer / Dobnak for depth?  An infield of Kirilloff / Polanco eventually Lewis and Miranda.  BP of Duran a LH free agent / Alcala / Jax and three among Thielbar / Megill / Hamilton / Moran / Sisk / Schulfer / etc.  This all fits within a roughly $130M budget.  This looks like a better team than we have at the moment to me.

    Hope that injured Pitchers come back as good or better than they were,

    Hope pitchers that have been hurt in the past don't continue to get hurt.

    Hope the Twins sign a top starting pitcher and change their starting pitching philosophy for said guy.

    Hope the Twins sign a really good bullpen guy.

    Hope that that is no regress from Miranda.

    Hope a 26 year old minor league SS (not even currently on the 40 man) gets us to the SS of the future in Lewis and hope Lewis is what he showed this year in 41 plate appearances.

    Hope they sign a catcher and Jeffers come back and is better than he was this year.

    Hope Buxton is at least  as healthy as he is this year and that Arraez is in the top 5 in batting average and on base percentage.

    Hope that Jax and Moran do what they have done so far this year.

    Hope that two rookies in Sisk and Schulfer are viable bullpen arms.

    Hope that the following players are at their best Larnach (Pre-June), AK (Post April but with some power), Celestino (pre-July) and Gordon (pre-July) and are healthy.

    And hope both Cleveland and Chicago play like they did in 22 or at least close to as bad as they played.

    First I would like to say I hope everyone of those things happen, But lets be honest that is a lot of things that need to fall into place (Now I understand they don't need all that to happen to compete for a division title next year, but if most of it doesn't happen we could be sitting in the same spot next year claiming that 24 is the real year to compete)

     

     

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    8 hours ago, D.C Twins said:

    More on topic, I think your proposal is reasonable Nick and wouldn't have heartburn if the Twins end up doing something similar.

    It would improve the team a bit without mortgaging the future when we will (hopefully) be better prepared for the post season with another year of development for our promising young core

    The Twins MO.  Not this year.  Go get C-D players just to do something.  Yes they got Correa last year but all that did is give us a bit of hope for this year and get people to buy tickets but the short lived Correa era is nearly over so why not go out and buy big.  Sick to death of waiting for the promising young core that never seem to get here MLB ready and when they do get here they are too injured to last a season.  

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    Thor is just a bandaid for this year and doesn’t solve anything beyond this year. I’m not a big fan of Montas but I’d rather target him because you get him for 2023. 

    My ideal trade deadline is acquiring a SP with at least 1.5 years of control. The pipe dream is Pablo Lopez, and I would offer something like this:

    Headliner: Either Larnach or Miranda

    Near MLB-ready bat: Either Steer or Wallner 

    MiLB Arm: Either SWR or Varland

    Then acquire 2 rental bullpen arms because in 2023 I have a feeling a number of our younger pitchers will be transitioning to the pen full time. Ober, Balazovic, Sands, and Canterino. 

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    Winder has been shut down.....sent back for rehab work.  No one is going to trade for him right now.

    You can't give up Miranda....he's been our most productive hitter/run producer over the last month.  He's a cornerstone. I don't know if Larnach holds value while injured (hernia surgery shouldn't be a huge red flag).  

    If Arraez can play a serviceable 2B, why isn't Polanco a trade chip?  Will it screw with team chemistry too much?  

     

     

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    Could not agree more, Nick, with your premise that the Twins should not go all in as they have too many needs to realistically make a run this fall.  Other than low cost moves for a reliever and backup catcher rental, any moves should help for 2023 and beyond.  

    Have no interest in getting into specific players as I suspect I will know little or nothing about whomever the Twins bring in over the coming days.  I will say, however, that I am not high on Syndergaard or trading Povich.  Ever since watching Seth's interview of this kid last winter, I have a feeling that he just might end up being good, very good.

     

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    I just want a shutdown closer.  And the guy leading the league right now in that category was is in a Twins uniform less than 12 months ago and is probably a week(end) away from exceeding his career high in saves.  All of that is to say the front office isn't giving me a lot of hope right now to take care of the bullpen the way we all have been begging for.  Bard seems to be the right target... maybe we can entice them with the idea of Miguel Sano hitting for half the games in the thin air of the Rockies.

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    6 hours ago, Mike Sixel said:

    How will next year be better? They likely have no SS.... And need to replace Bundy and Archer. They won't have a built in lead in the division. I'm genuinely curious why anyone thinks next year is likely to be better. 

    I would be happy going into the off-season with the following:

    Outfield: Buxton, Larnach, and Kepler 

    Infield: Kirilloff, Polanco, Palacios/Lewis, and Miranda 

    DH: Arraez 

    ? TBD 

    Pitchers: Gray, Maeda, Ryan, Winder, Duran, Moran, and Jax 

    Bench: Alcala, Celestino, Jeffers, and Gordon 

    That's a payroll of around $67M.  Assuming a budget of $130M, that leaves $63M remaining to add two starters, two relievers, and an additional bat or two.  The surplus of talent in the minors (rule 5 eligible players and multiple infielders) can be used to trade for some additions and $$$ used for the rest. 

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    8 hours ago, bean5302 said:

    Twins trade Keoni Cavaco and Aaron Sabato for Mike Trout and Shohei Ohtani. That would be pretty ideal.

    Trout and Buxton in the OF and Ohtani pitching and DHing, WS HERE WE COME.

    I would add Kepler, Martin, Sano, Cave, Celestino  and a couple more. Angles get 3 players capable of CF since they are loosing there CF. Throw in a couple of high upside low flow pitching prospects from the lower minors and some cash and I think we can get this done. 

    Trout would have to wave his no trade clause to come her.  I would move Trout off of CF when Buxton is playing, this should help with his own wear and tear. 
    The rotation of Ohtani, Ryan, Gray, ???, should be good enough for the Playoffs don't need all five of the rotation for that. Maeda would be another Japanese player in the dugout and bull pen that may be an advantage in getting Ohtani to stick around. If we can keep Correa for the next 2 years with Miranda at 3rd and Kirilloff at 1st and Polanco at 2nd, and Arraez as SU that would be one heck of a Team.  

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    8 hours ago, bean5302 said:

    Twins trade Keoni Cavaco and Aaron Sabato for Mike Trout and Shohei Ohtani. That would be pretty ideal.

    An OF of Mike Trout and Byron Buxton would be an all-time "talented but can't stay healthy" duo

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    I was writing up a similar type of thing yesterday then my job got in the way I couldn't finish.  But my hope was to go after a front line starter like Lopez from Miami and give up something like Steer, Larnach & Encarnacion-Strand.  They need hitters Twins need pitchers and in my opinion good hitting prospects are somewhat disposable for the right pitchers in trades.   That would get them a nice top of rotation take Bundy's spot for sure.  Then I was hoping they would move on to the bullpen help and get two arms that are better than what they currently have, which if you read this message board shouldn't be too hard.  But either or both Bard and Moore would be great and Nick laid that out nicely.  If that would come to fruition it would hopefully stabilize the pen and rotation.

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    31 minutes ago, terrydactyls said:

    I would be happy going into the off-season with the following:

    Outfield: Buxton, Larnach, and Kepler 

    Infield: Kirilloff, Polanco, Palacios/Lewis, and Miranda 

    DH: Arraez 

    ? TBD 

    Pitchers: Gray, Maeda, Ryan, Winder, Duran, Moran, and Jax 

    Bench: Alcala, Celestino, Jeffers, and Gordon 

    That's a payroll of around $67M.  Assuming a budget of $130M, that leaves $63M remaining to add two starters, two relievers, and an additional bat or two.  The surplus of talent in the minors (rule 5 eligible players and multiple infielders) can be used to trade for some additions and $$$ used for the rest. 

     

    So the same team minus Correa and a few other vets and the hope (fingers crossed) the Twins go out and do something they have never done before and are going to do it Twice (Sign a high end starting pitcher)?

    Free Agents next year, Price, Sale, Rodon, Syndergaard, Morton, Wainwright, Eovaldi, Kersahw, Greinke, Nola, Severino, Manaea, Gibson, Bassitt and Musgrove are the top guys available.

    I can assume we can count out Price, Morton, Wainwright, Greinke, Gibson and Kershaw from the list.

    That leaves Sale, Rodon, Syndergaard, Eovaldi, Nola, Severino, Manaea, Bassitt and Musgrove.

    Sale and Bassitt are both over 33, so probably can assume if they were to be brought in, it would be for a 1 or 2 contract, maybe 3, but do we really see the Twins pay 20 million a year for these two.

    Are Syndergaard, Eovaldi and Manaea top end pitchers?

    Down to Rodon, Nola, Severino and Musgrove. (and the Twins are going to outbid everybody for not just 1 of those guys but 2 of them?, sorry I don't see that happening)

    Then they are going to go out and get a bat for the bench because there is no room for a starter and two expensive relief pitchers. Man I wish I could live in a world where I would believe those things could happen.

    In my world they try to get Correa back (or sign Swanson to a deal similiar to what they did with Correa if he doesn't have the interest he wants), maybe get Wilson Contreras, bring in a relief pitcher like a Joe Smith and sign a starting pitcher like Jose Quintana or something like that.

    Also the team you envision is no more a contender then the team they have this year is.

     

     

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