The Minnesota Twins checked off another vital offseason box by avoiding arbitration with Ryan Jeffers. According to KSTP’s Darren Wolfson, the two sides agreed to a one-year deal worth $6.7 million, covering Jeffers’ final season of arbitration eligibility.

The number landed almost exactly where industry expectations pointed. MLB Trade Rumors projected Jeffers to earn $6.6 million. With free agency now looming next winter, both sides secured cost certainty while keeping flexibility for what comes next.

That flexibility matters because Jeffers’ name continues to surface in trade speculation. Rumors have linked the Philadelphia Phillies to the Twins catcher if they are unable to come to terms with longtime backstop J.T. Realmuto. Minnesota could theoretically hold Jeffers into the regular season and revisit trade discussions closer to the trade deadline. Still, most teams prefer stability at catcher from the first day of spring training. Catchers need time to build trust with a pitching staff, and that reality often pushes deals earlier rather than later.

While Jeffers is not Realmuto, the gap between the two is smaller than it might appear at first glance. During the 2025 season, Jeffers slashed .266/.356/.397, adding nine home runs and 47 RBI across 119 games. Realmuto produced a .257/.315 /.384 line, along with 12 home runs and 52 RBI in 134 games. The larger body of work still favors Realmuto, who owns a .270/.328/.447 career line over 1,373 games, while Jeffers sits at .239/.321/.419 through 515 contests. Even so, Jeffers has quietly grown into a better-than-average offensive catcher, especially over the last three seasons.

Minnesota has leaned on a tandem behind the plate in recent years, splitting time between Jeffers and Christian Vazquez, who is now a free agent. The Twins have indicated that Jeffers will see more regular work moving forward, though few catchers reach 120 games caught in a season. Depth remains a concern. Alex Jackson and Jhonny Pereda currently profile as the next options, leaving the organization thin at the position with no clear answers knocking on the door in the upper minors.

For now, the arbitration agreement keeps things simple. Jeffers remains the Twins’ top catcher, the payroll stays predictable, and the front office retains options. Whether Jeffers spends all of 2026 in a Twins uniform or becomes a trade chip later on, Minnesota has positioned itself well. Avoiding arbitration was not just about dollars and cents. It was about buying time, and in this case, time may prove to be the most valuable asset of all.

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