In what can only be described as a perfectly Twins moment, Derek Falvey and the front office apparently accidentally sent their entire offseason blueprint to the local beat writers earlier this week. The plan, which reportedly included color-coded spreadsheets, a 37-slide PowerPoint, and a section titled “How to Pretend We’re Spending Money Without Actually Doing It,” was intended to stay in-house until at least December (or forever, depending on how things went).

Instead, Aaron Gleeman of The Athletic, Betsy Helfand of the Pioneer Press, and Matthew Leach of MLB.com all received the same email from Derek.Falvey@twinsbaseball.biz with the subject line: “CONFIDENTIAL: Operation Moderate Competence 2026.”

The Accidental Leak
According to multiple sources (and Gleeman’s now-deleted tweet of the PDF), the leaked document outlined the Twins’ offseason priorities as follows:

Trade at least one starting-caliber player for a prospect who will debut in 2028.

Explore “value signings” of players who peaked during the Obama administration.

Pretend to be in on top free agents for leverage purposes.

Hire a new hitting coach named “either Dave or Jason, doesn’t matter which.”

Consider offering Byron Buxton a lifetime contract, but only if he promises not to slide headfirst ever again.

Falvey’s office quickly sent a follow-up email labeled “URGENT: Please Delete Previous Message.” It reportedly contained the same attachment.

Reactions from the Beat
Gleeman seemed amused by the situation. “Honestly, I just thought it was one of those fan surveys about beer prices again,” he said. “But once I got to the section titled ‘2025 Payroll Targets: The Floor Is Lava’, I knew it was real.”

Helfand took a more measured approach. “I’ve covered this team long enough to know that any time you see the word ‘creative solutions’ next to ‘rotation depth’, it’s time to update your offseason bingo card,” she noted.

Meanwhile, Leach of MLB.com was reportedly stunned. “They had a bullet point that said, ‘Sign a reliever who throws 94 and hope for the best.’ That’s not a plan, that’s a coping mechanism.”

The Wicked Confusion
In a hastily arranged press conference, a visibly flustered Falvey attempted to explain the fiasco.

“This is… uh, clearly a misunderstanding,” Falvey stammered. “We meant to send out a press release about the upcoming special showing of Wicked at Target Field later this month. Apparently, someone, possibly me, attached the wrong file.”

Falvey then added, “That’s what happens when you’re in charge of both baseball and business operations at 1 Twins Way. Sometimes the lines get crossed.”

According to sources close to the situation, the intended press release was supposed to promote the Twins’ latest attempt to merge sports and box office smashes, titled ‘Defying Gravity (and Payroll Constraints)’.

A Familiar Tune
Fans on social media wasted no time mocking the organization. One post read: “Only the Twins could turn a musical into a metaphor for their roster-building: all high notes and no chorus.”

Another simply said: “Can’t wait to see the team’s new motto: No bad contracts, just misunderstood lyrics.”

While Falvey insisted the leak would not impact the team’s offseason strategy, insiders say several rival executives are already preparing offers for Twins players “expected to be part of next July’s midseason ‘retool.’” Still, Falvey tried to put a positive spin on the debacle. “Look, accidents happen,” he said. “At least this time, it wasn’t another arbitration case gone viral.”

For now, the Twins’ offseason plan (part mystery, part musical) remains one of baseball’s great unsung comedies. And as Falvey walked off the podium, a microphone picked up what might go down as his most honest line yet:

“At least Wicked has a happy ending.”