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The baseball offseason lasts forever, especially for those of us who look out our windows in Minnesota with a Blizzard on the other side of the window. The Twins season ended before October, so it has been nearly two months since we have watched them play. The Twins haven’t been terribly active this offseason, adding just one free agent to a big-league contract. The team did make a Rule 5 draft pick, catcher Daniel Susac, but subsequently traded him before the draft was even completed. They have added a few pitchers as minor-league free agents. 

But as the calendar soon changes from 2025 to 2026, the Minnesota Twins still have work to do to complete their 2026 spring training roster. And while Derek Falvey has been known to make moves, even significant moves, well into spring training, time will move quickly over the next two months. 

By next week, the dorms at the Twins complex in Fort Myers will start filling up. Minor Leaguers will start arriving to prepare for their seasons. Some big leaguers will be in Fort Myers, but they will really start amping up the intensity of their workouts. Pitchers will start doing more throwing, and more throwing with purpose now. Twins Fest will take place in one month, and because of the WBC, spring training starts early, in mid-February. 

With that, if the season was to start today, what might the roster look like? 

The Catchers (2): Ryan Jeffers, Alex Jackson.
There was some thought that the Twins would attempt to trade Jeffers at the trade deadline, and then possibly this offseason. Technically it could still happen, but I would hope not. Jeffers is solid behind the plate. He won’t be winning a Gold Glove, but he does a nice job working with pitchers, calling a game. He also spent most of 2025 hitting in the top half of the Twins lineup. Jackson came to the Twins in November in exchange for infielder Payton Eeles. The sixth-overall pick in the 2014 draft hasn’t hit much in his career, but he can provide a little power from time to time. His defense is what has kept him employed with a variety of teams over the years. 

Catcher Depth
40-Man Roster: Johnny Pereda, Mickey Gasper
Triple-A: Noah Cardenas, Patrick Winkel
Double-A: Ricardo Olivar, Andrew Cossetti, Nate Baez, Khadim Diaw (#20 Prospect)
High-A: Eduardo Tait (#3 Prospect), Poncho Ruiz, Daniel Pena, Luis Hernandez
Low-A: Enrique Jimenez, Irvin Nunez, Ryan Sprock, Ian Daugherty,
FCL/Extended Spring Training: Ricardo Pena, Carlos Silva, Miguel Caraballo

The Twins have clearly made catching a priority this offseason. They lost veteran Christian Vazquez and traded for veteran Alex Jackson. Gasper showed again in 2025 that he is a terrific Triple-A hitter who is fine as a team’s third or fourth backstop. Pereda joined the Twins organization late in the season and got to spend some time in the big leagues. He looks the part of a AAAA catcher. I am fine with him being the #2 guy if needed. 

The exciting “prospects” are a lot of the recently acquired players. Eduardo Tait came to the team in the Jhoan Duran deal. Enrique Jimenez came from Detroit in the Chris Paddack deal. When the Twins took Daniel Susac in the Rule 5 draft, they traded him immediately to the Giants for Miguel Caraballo. All three are high ceiling, low floor types with plenty of development in front of them. But they are exciting. I believe the Twins would be confident calling up Cardenas and Winkel as needed just because they are strong defensively.  Khadim Diaw is very exciting as an athlete. He is a solid catcher, but he can also play center field. Likewise, Olivar is a decent backstop who can also play left field in a pinch. 

The Infielders (7): Josh Bell, Kody Clemens, Luke Keaschall, Brooks Lee, Royce Lewis, Ryan Kreidler, Edouard Julien (Out of Options) 
The Twins added veteran slugger Josh Bell to the roster, and likely to the middle of their lineup, recently. He will get some time at first base, but it’s just as likely that Clemens will get just as much time there. Frankly, I wouldn’t mind the Twins giving Keaschall some time there. After a solid, though injury-plagued rookie campaign, Keaschall certainly would like to stay on the field as much as possible. Getting him time at first base in the right matchup could allow Julien to get some playing time. Out of options, he had newcomer Kreidler will need to make the roster first and then let Derek Shelton figure out how he wants to get them into games. While both former top picks struggled much during the 2025 season, I’d put them both in the lineup almost every day and hope that the talent that made them first-rounders shined through and they put up numbers to impress. I include Kreidler because he is out of options. I much prefer Ryan Fitzgerald in a utility role because he is terrific defensively no matter where he is put in the infield. 

Infielder Depth 
40-Man Roster: Ryan Fitzgerald,  
Triple-A: Aaron Sabato, Ben Ross, Tanner Schobel, Kaelen Culpepper (#2 Prospect), Jake Rucker
Double-A: Nate Baez, Kyle DeBarge (#16 Prospect), Brandon Winokur (#12 Prospect), Danny De Andrade, Andy Lugo, Jose Salas, Jorel Ortega, Miguel Briceno,
High-A: Billy Amick, Dameury Pena, Rayne Doncon, Marek Houston (#11 Prospect), JP Smith, Shai Robinson, Jay Thomason, Harry Genth,
Low-A:  Jayson Bass, Bruin Agbayani, Bryan Acuna, Quentin Young (#17 Prospect), Ramiro Domingues, Ryan Daniels, Yilber Herrera, Ryan Sprock.
FCL/Extended Spring Training: Victor Leal, Santiago Leon, Daiber De Los Santos

Certainly Kaelen Culpepper, the top pick in the 2024 draft, is the name to watch early in the season. He had a very strong season between High-A and Double-A in 2025 and could be ready for the big leagues sometime in 2026. I’m sure the Twins hope that he gives them some difficult decisions to make. Fellow former first-round pick Aaron Sabato has done alright in his time with the Saints, and he has shown good power. I could see him debuting if needed. I believe Ben Ross can play defense in the big leagues, anywhere in the infield, and maybe a little outfield too. 

High draft picks like DeBarge and Winokur showed promise in 2025, but they’re likely at least a year out. 2026 top pick Marek Houston is known more for defense at shortstop as well. I don’t expect him to advance as quickly as Culpepper, but that will depend on if he hits. And at the lower levels, there are some very intriguing, talented player including 2025 prep picks Bruin Agbayani and Quentin Young. 

The Outfielders (5): Trevor Larnach, Byron Buxton, Austin Martin, James Outman (out of options), Matt Wallner
This group is certainly up for grabs. Byron Buxton is the lone true “Given” in the group. He is coming off of a season in which he generally stayed healthy and put up terrific numbers, earning his first career Silver Slugger Award. Wallner should be a given too. He struggled, striking out a ton, and getting on base less than 30% of the time. However, he is a power threat in the lineup who can turn a game around on any pitch. Defensively, he’s decent out in right field and has one of baseball’s strongest outfield arms. Larnach is another former top pick who had a relatively disappointing 2025 season. Some were surprised that the Twins tendered him a contract in November, but that was an easy decision. He is perfectly adequate, can get on runs offensively, and he hits around 20 homers each season. He could still be traded. He struggles defensively (more in left than in right field, at least in my mind’s eye). He likely DHs when Bell is in the field.

Austin Martin was hurt and in St. Paul most of the year. But when he finally got an opportunity late in the season, he took advantage. He got on base. He ran. He looked solid defensively in left field. And finally, I went with James Outman as a fifth outfielder, and again, primarily because he is out of options. He looked so good in his first seasons with the Dodgers, hitting a lot of homers. He’s put up big Triple-A numbers, but he really struggled to make contact in the big leagues, Alan Roden is certainly a candidate for a spot on the roster. In addition, Clemens can play in the outfield as needed. 

Outfield Depth 
40-Man Roster: Emmanuel Rodriguez (#4 Prospect). Alan Roden, Gabriel Gonzalez (#9 Prospect), Hendry Mendez 
Triple-A: Walker Jenkins (#1 Prospect), Kyler Fedko (#18 Prospect), Kala’i Rosario,
Double-A: Garrett Spain (MILB Rule 5), Caden Kendle, Ricardo Olivar, Maddux Houghton, Brandon Winokur, Jose Salas, Kyle Hess,
High-A: Jacob McCombs, Yasser Mercedes, Jaime Ferrer, Miguel Briceno,
Low-A:  Jayson Bass, Byron Chourio, Eduardo Beltre, Yandro Hernandez,  
FCL/Extended Spring Training: Luis Fragoza, Yovanny Duran, Carlos Tavares, Murphy Hernandez, Jhomnardo Reyes

There are certainly intriguing players that are nearly ready for the big leagues in the Twins outfield. Emmanuel Rodriguez has fought injuries and missed a lot of time the last two seasons, but when healthy, he splashes potential. Gabriel Gonzalez had a breakout season, impressing with his bat at the three highest levels, and all while still being just 20 years old. Roden appeared in some Top 100 lists. He came to the organization in the trade with the Blue Jays. Mendez is also intriguing. He’s a big, long, strong kid who needs to work on driving the ball for more power, but he has a fantastic approach at the plate. He came to the Twins in the Harrison Bader deal. 

Not on the 40-man roster but potentially closing in on the big leagues are Kyler Fedko and Kala’i Rosario. Both provided power and speed in 2025. But clearly the top prospect in the organization remains Walker Jenkins, the Twins top pick in 2023. Despite missing a little time early in the season, Jenkins reached Triple-A for about a month at the end of the season and held his own. 

Questions to Consider
1) How would you fill out the 26-man roster if you had to today? (Since we just looked at hitters today, assume that 13 hitters and 13 pitchers will be on the roster. Tomorrow, I’ll give my thoughts on the opening day pitching staff.)
2) When looking at the offense only, what do you think could be considered “positions of strength?” In other words, if the Twins are talking trade, which positions could the Twins feel OK about trading from?
3) Then, what are the Twins positions of need? What do they need at the big-league level? What positions could they use more MLB-ready depth at?

 

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