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DiamondCentric

DiamondCentric

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  1. Here at the start of 2026, we're taking stock of talent in the Twins organization by ranking their top 20 player assets. You can read the ground rules in our introductory post from Monday, but the short version is this: We're trying to answer the question, "Which current players in the organization are most indispensable to fulfilling the vision of building a champion?" You can catch up on my picks for #16 through #20 in that post, but here's a quick glance at the list so far: 20. Marek Houston, SS 19. Ryan Jeffers, C 18. Brooks Lee, SS 17. Bailey Ober, RHP 16. Connor Prielipp, LHP Now let's keep the countdown moving as we break down the next five in my rankings The Top 20 Twins Player Assets of 2026: 11-15 15. David Festa, RHP Age: 25 Controlled through: 2030 2025 Ranking: 9 In 2024, Festa channeled his rapid minor-league ascent into an encouraging major-league debut, posting a 3.76 FIP with 77 strikeouts in 64 innings. But coming out of 2025, question marks loom large for the right-hander, causing a moderate drop in these rankings even as his ability and upside keep him firmly on the list of potential difference-makers. Festa battled on-and-off shoulder issues throughout the season before ultimately being diagnosed with thoracic outlet syndrome. While that's a scary phrase for any pitcher, there's a healthy optimism around the outlook for Festa, who didn't require surgery. It sounds like he's feeling better after resting up and is expected to be at full strength for spring training. Even while taking a step back in 2025, Festa showed the qualities of a standout, limiting opponents to a .240 batting average while averaging a strikeout per inning. Given the injury hiccups and the makeup of Minnesota's pitching personnel, I wouldn't be surprised if Festa transitions to the bullpen sooner than later, but there's a little question he could be a dominant force in the late innings. 14. Eduardo Tait, C Age: 19 Controlled through: 2031+ 2025 Ranking: NR It's tough to rank a player like this. Tait is still a teenager and hasn't played above Single-A. He has a long way to go and the flameout rate on this player type is high. But when the Twins made Tait a central part of their Jhoan Duran trade, they were investing in him as their future at catcher, and with valid reason. Tait was widely viewed as a top-100 prospect entering 2025. He more than held his own at 18 and 19 against advanced Single-A pitching and his catching skills are considered legit. Tait is still probably several years away from being an MLB regular if all goes well, but he's on the right track and if he emerges as a quality backstop in the big leagues this move will be a big win for the Twins. 13. Royce Lewis, 3B Age: 26 Controlled through: 2028 2025 Ranking: 2 In terms of what he can be, Lewis remains one of the very top players in the Twins organization. But we have to rank him based on what he is. And unfortunately the 2025 season only reinforced the third baseman's fade from upper-echelon stardom into mediocrity. He slumped frequently on the way to a career-worst .671 OPS, lamenting a swing that felt "horrible" while futilely grasping for answers. On the bright side, it was also the healthiest season of his career, in terms of both games played and how he looked visually down the stretch, stealing bases aggressively and making spritely plays at third. That seems to bode well as Lewis enters a pivotal 2026 season. The Twins are doing everything they can to remove his barriers (real or perceived) and set him up for success. I started putting these rankings together in 2018, the year after Lewis was drafted number one overall. In the eight annual lists I've compiled, he has never been outside of the top five, until now. Hopefully it'll prove to be an outlier in the larger story of his career, but it's hard to justify putting him any higher at this moment in time, especially as his salary starts ticking up in arbitration. Then again, knowing what he's capable of and what his resurgence would mean for this franchise, how could I rank him any lower? 12. Matt Wallner, OF Age: 28 Controlled through: 2029 2025 Ranking: 8 The 2025 season was Wallner's worst as a major-leaguer, but it was still ... pretty solid. That's the kind of floor you're working with when you've got power and patience like his. He posted a 110 OPS+ and ranked sixth among Twins position players in fWAR at 1.4. If it's a bump in the road, no problem, but if it's Wallner's new norm, he's not going to be a terribly valuable player going forward. There are some troubling signs — pitchers increasingly blowing him away up in the zone as his defense trends downward — but Wallner's core strengths should not be overlooked or downplayed. There are very few players who hit the ball as hard, and few hitters who've been more productive in general since he arrived in the majors. 11. Zebby Matthews, RHP Age: 25 Controlled through: 2030 2025 Ranking: 13 Good young starting pitchers with team control are inherently among of the most valuable assets in baseball, treasured by teams across the league. There's a reason why the Twins front office has focused so heavily on developing this particular type of player, and why they targeted several in their sell-off a the trade deadline. Matthews is shaping up as one of their biggest success stories, though he's yet to fully turn the corner. A spectacular run in the minors has led to a rocky introduction at the big-league level, where Matthews has a 5.92 ERA in 117 innings with too many home runs allowed. But he's also got a 131-to-35 K/BB ratio powered by a mid-90s fastball and sharp secondaries. Matthews needs to prove his shoulder can hold up and needs to unlock consistency in his performance on the mound, but if he can pull it together in 2026 he'll likely vault into the top five on these rankings. If that doesn't click in, a reliever transition could be in the cards sooner than later. What are your thoughts on the rankings so far? Which of these players do you think will be most important to the team's outlook? Should any of these five have cracked the top 10? Let us know in the comments, and check back in tomorrow when we count down 10 through six. View the full article
  2. The Kansas City Royals rarely shop in the same free-agent aisles as the sport’s biggest spenders. Their blueprint has always leaned more farm-to-table than fine dining, and when the big-league roster takes a step forward, it’s usually because someone arrived from Omaha or Northwest Arkansas rather than via a nine-figure contract. With that in mind, the 2026 Royals won’t be shaped solely by offseason headlines. They’ll be influenced by a group of prospects who are close enough to matter and talented enough to force decisions. Carter Jensen is the obvious name and doesn’t need repeating here. Instead, this group of prospects features four arms and one athletic outfielder who could all play real roles next season. Carson Roccaforte Brings Energy To The Outfield If the Royals are looking for a spark plug type, Carson Roccaforte fits the mold. Ranked 20th in the system by MLB Pipeline, the 23-year-old outfielder put together a breakout 2025, slashing .258/.373/.470 with 18 home runs and 43 stolen bases across High-A and Double-A. There are swing-and-miss concerns, as shown by his 29.4 strikeout rate, but the production outweighs the blemishes. A 138 wRC+ across two levels, including a 141 wRC+ in 212 Double-A plate appearances, paints the picture of a hitter who can impact games in multiple ways. Add in strong defense in center field, and Roccaforte starts to look like the kind of player who forces his way into the conversation sooner than expected. He’s not a finished product, but the power-speed combination, patience at the plate, and defensive value give him multiple paths to usefulness. Strikeouts will come, but so will damage. Ben Kudrna’s Future May Hinge On Role Ben Kudrna’s stat line from 2025 doesn’t jump off the page. A 5.30 ERA over 105 1/3 innings between Double-A and Triple-A isn’t exactly a calling card. Still, the Royals valued him enough to protect him from the Rule 5 Draft by adding him to the 40-man roster, which says more than the ERA ever could. The 22-year-old left-hander doesn’t overpower hitters, but he understands sequencing and pitch usage. In Double-A Arkansas, he logged a 4.21 ERA across 20 appearances, 19 of them starts, backed by a more encouraging 3.53 FIP. Triple-A was a different story, as he was hit hard in limited action, suggesting his development curve still has some bends. A bullpen transition could simplify things and allow his stuff to play up, but even if the Royals keep him stretched out, 2026 feels like a realistic window for him to contribute. Luinder Avila’s Arm Does The Talking Luinder Avila is the only name here with major league innings already logged. His brief 2025 MLB stint totaled 14 innings, and while small samples can mislead, a 1.29 ERA tends to grab attention regardless of context. The Royals’ 14th-ranked prospect spent most of last year in Triple-A, working as a swingman and posting a 5.23 ERA over 53 1/3 innings while striking out 61. It wasn’t a flawless performance, but the raw materials are hard to ignore. His fastball climbs into the high 90s, and the organization has been openly excited about how his stuff translates against big-league hitters. Whether Avila settles into the rotation or becomes a high-leverage reliever is still up in the air. Spring training in 2026 should offer clarity, but either way, his right arm looks ready to factor into the Royals’ plans. Steven Zobac Wins With Precision Steven Zobac doesn’t scream upside in the traditional sense, but his profile makes a lot of sense for a team that values command and reliability. The 25-year-old right-hander was protected from the Rule 5 Draft alongside Kudrna, a notable move given his age and injury-shortened season. Zobac made just 14 starts in 2025, three in the Complex League and 11 in Double-A, where he posted a 7.68 ERA in 36 1/3 innings. Those numbers are rough, but the Royals are betting on the underlying traits rather than the surface results. His walk rates have historically been low, and his pitchability gives him a higher floor than most. His four-seamer typically sits in the low 90s but can reach 96 or 97 on a good day. A mid-80s slider serves as his primary secondary pitch, complemented by a usable changeup. He’s not flashy, but pitchers like Zobac often stick around longer than expected. Hunter Owen’s Size & Versatility Stand Out Hunter Owen looks the part the moment he steps on the mound. At 6-foot-6 and 260 pounds, the left-hander brings a physical presence that hitters can’t ignore. Ranked 27th in the system according to MLB Pipeline, Owen represented the Royals in the 2025 Arizona Fall League and continues to trend upward. His arsenal is deep, featuring a low-90s fastball with carry, a hard slider-cutter hybrid, a slow curveball around 75 mph, and a mid-80s changeup. It’s a mix that keeps hitters guessing and allows him to adjust mid-game. Owen delivered a solid 2025 in Double-A, finishing with a 3.80 ERA and 107 strikeouts over 94 2/3 innings. Kansas City has every reason to keep him in the rotation mix for now, and if all goes well, his debut could come sometime in the middle or late stages of the 2026 season. View the full article
  3. The Boston Red Sox are no strangers to finding players who manage to overcome expectations and turn into top prospects. Roman Anthony comes to mind as an example of that based on his time with the then Salem Red Sox. For Anthony, his first 42 games in 2023 with Low-A Salem made some people question why he was promoted — the then-19-year-old hit just hit .228/.376/.316 in 42 games. Yet, the Red Sox pushed him to High-A Greenville as his underlying metrics and data were far more bullish on his potential. Anthony had a keen understanding of the strike zone and wasn’t overmatched as he put the ball in play quite often. He was just exhibiting bad luck when it came to balls in play. The organization also felt that once he got out of Salem and played at Fluor Field with the Greenville Drive, his numbers would improve thanks in part to it being more of a hitter-friendly park than Carilion Clinic Field. By taking a deeper dive into a player’s abilities and how they’re looking on the diamond, there’s a chance the Red Sox could have another young, breakout prospect in their system right now. And ironically, his first experience of baseball in the United States is playing out very similar to how Anthony’s first taste of professional baseball did. Keep an eye on 18-year-old Enddy Azocar, who is beginning to make a name for himself as a prospect. He has the potential to break out in a huge way. Signed as an international free agent out of Venezuela, Azocar played in 31 games for the Red Sox Dominican Summer League team in 2024, where, as a 17-year-old, he put up a slash line of .266/.397/.309. However, he lacked power, producing two doubles and a triple to go along with 11 RBIs. Still, that was more than enough for the Red Sox to justify bringing him stateside for the 2025 season, where he began in the Florida Complex League for just 14 games. Limited though the sample was, he proved that he was more than ready for tougher competition as he slashed .385/.448/.558 with seven doubles and a triple along with five RBIs despite being roughly a year and a half younger than the competition. The Red Sox decided to give him a shot for most of the 2025 season with Salem, where, as an 18-year-old, he was one of the youngest players in Low-A. It showed, at least if you looked at just his stats. Azocar’s hot start in the Complex League tailed off with Salem, appearing in 71 games for the team where he hit just .202/.273/.314 with nine doubles, a triple, six home runs and 26 RBIs. He also struck out 67 times to just 21 walks. However, when you take a deeper look at Azocar’s season, you'll begin to grow impressed. Azocar saw his 90th percentile exit velocity raise by seven mph, going from 98 mph in 2024 to 105.4 mph. Now, unlike regular exit velocity, the 90th percentile is the exit velocity that is pulled from the sample of the player's hardest hit balls. This is done to help measure a batter’s peak power potential along with their raw strength/ By using the 90th percentile over regular exit velocity, teams are able to project a player’s potential and ability to consistently hit for more extra-base hits as they grow older and mature into their frames. For someone playing in the majors, the average 90th percentile exit velocity tends to hover around 104 mph, while those above 105 mph help separate a player with elite power. Azocar had the largest gain in the system in 90th percentile despite being only 18 years old, makes his 105.4 mph mark rather impressive. To compare to Anthony, the young outfielder had a 90th percentile of 108.5 mph for the 2024 season while splitting time in more hitter-friendly parks. Azocar's max exit velocity was also impressive, his hardest hit baseball of the 2025 season being 110.6 mph. A number that ranked near the top for his age bracket. And while the strikeouts increased for Azocar during his time with Salem, the young outfielder showcased an ability to make solid contact, as his whiff rate for pitches in the strike zone sat at a low 18%. Despite making consistent contact and not chasing at an alarming rate, his lack of recognizing secondary pitches hurts, though at his age, the ability to differentiate between a fastball and an off-speed pitch or breaking ball will come with time and reps. Defensively, Azocar played all three outfield positions but saw the majority of his time come in center field upon his promotion to Salem. He has solid range, and thanks to his above-average speed, he can get to balls easily. However, he doesn’t seem likely to stick in center field in the long run as he continues to fill out and add strength to his game, with a move to one of the corner outfield positions seeming likely. Azocar’s power seems to be the real deal, but whether he can successfully utilize it will determine the kind of player he becomes. Right now, he needs to work on his launch angle and his attack angle at the plate. In 2025, he had a 44% groundball rate, a number too high for someone producing an elite 90th percentile exit velocity. Azocar will need to elevate the ball more to reach his full potential and truly break out in 2026. Growing pains are a natural part of the game, and development is rarely linear in baseball. Should Azocar show signs of improvement from his 2025 performance in Salem, though, it wouldn’t be a surprise to see him in Greenville at the age of 19. While predicting a player’s future can be tough, one thing is for certain: the Red Sox have a very intriguing prospect in their organization. He might be a few years away from realizing this potential, but Enddy Azocar has all the tools to become a top prospect in the team's farm system. View the full article
  4. The Miami Marlins are expected to trade Edward Cabrera before the Major League Baseball season begins. The rationale behind this stance is simple: Cabrera's market value has soared following his successful 2025 campaign and the club doesn't fully trust him to replicate that production. But what if they're wrong? Would the benefits of retaining Cabrera for a bit longer outweigh those provided by a package of presumably younger, more controllable players? His stuff looks better than ever. He just set a new career-high for average four-seam fastball velocity (97.0 mph) and his curveball has become a nasty complement to his signature changeup. Last season, the 27-year-old demonstrated a newfound willingness to fill up the strike zone, particularly early in counts, culminating in by far his lowest walk rate as a big leaguer. Working from a lower, more comfortable arm slot and once again collaborating with pitching coach Daniel Moskos, what's stopping him from continuing that? By any measure, Marlins starting pitchers were mediocre in 2025 even with Cabrera—the unit ranked tied for 18th in MLB in FIP, 24th in innings pitched and 26th in ERA. Why is it seemingly so widely assumed that the rotation will be fine without him? The eventual call-ups of top pitching prospects Thomas White and Robby Snelling could help, but look no further than Cabrera himself for a reminder that we shouldn't set expectations on players during their debut year (5.81 ERA and 6.63 FIP in 2021). Cabrera is still three full years away from free agency. What combination of assets could the Marlins realistically receive in exchange that would translate to more wins than Cabrera is projected to provide over that span? The most lopsided trades in recent memory that favored the team parting with its controllable starter—Rays trading Chris Archer, White Sox trading José Quintana—were consummated midseason when wannabe contenders had to throw caution to the wind. You can't manufacture that sense of urgency in January. All things considered, I actually do believe now is the appropriate time to trade Cabby! As the previous few paragraphs expressed, though, let's not lose sight of the fact that this is a risky and multi-layered decision. Marlins Opening Day is only 80 days away. 🔹 Right-hander Jack Ralston is the sixth confirmed Marlins minor league free agent signing of the offseason. He will have to be improve his control to earn a call-up from Triple-A Jacksonville. 🔹 Kevin Barral helmed our latest Fish On First Opening Day roster projection with the additions of Pete Fairbanks and Esteury Ruiz. 🔹 According to Ben Badler of Baseball America, international free agent infielders Ronny Muñoz and Santiago Solarte are expected to receive the 34th-largest and 45th-largest bonuses of the 2026 signing period, respectively. Both bonuses should land in the $1-2 million range. Badler is particularly bullish on Solarte, a "remarkably coordinated" shortstop with the potential for plus-plus raw power once he fills out his 6'6" frame. 🔹 Also from BA, Walter Villa spoke to Kevin Defrank about his background and pursuit of greatness. The 17-year-old could ultimately reach 6'7", doctors have told him. Defrank will experience his first stateside spring training beginning next month, and he's bringing his mother with him from the Dominican Republic. 🔹 dym explained why Kyle Stowers, Joe Mack, Josh White, Sandy Alcantara and Graham Pauley are particularly critical to the fate of the 2026 Marlins. 🔹 For those who couldn't attend the NHL Winter Classic at loanDepot park, South Florida Sports Historian captured the venue's transformation from all angles. 🔹 Agustín Ramírez returned to his hometown in the Dominican Republic. He and his mother reflected on how far they've come. 🔹 Congratulations to Deyvison De Los Santos and Edili Jiménez, who got engaged last weekend. 🔹Elsewhere around baseball, the Kansas City Royals signed manager Matt Quatraro to a three-year contract extension. The Philadelphia Phillies hired Don Mattingly as their new bench coach. Mattingly held the same position with the Toronto Blue Jays from 2023-2025. In other former Fish news, Joey Wiemer was claimed off waivers by the Washington Nationals and George Soriano was designated for assignment by the Baltimore Orioles. View the full article
  5. The Blue Jays will introduce Kazuma Okamoto at a press conference today at 1:00 pm ET. Joining Toronto's new free agent signing will be his agent, Scott Boras, and Blue Jays general manager Ross Atkins. One topic that's likely to come up at the presser is Okamoto's position. He was primarily a third baseman in NPB but also has experience at first base and in the outfield. Opinions about his skills at the hot corner range, with some evaluators believing he'll be just fine at the position in MLB and others suggesting he really belongs at the cold corner instead. As for his outfield defense, one source told The Athletic's Will Sammon that Okamoto "could be helpful in the outfield, given the right situation with limited ground to cover." On Monday, Bob Nightengale of USA Today wrote about Okamoto and the Blue Jays. He mentioned that the Jays "still want to add another power hitter" and that they "remain fully engaged in talks" with top free agents Kyle Tucker, Bo Bichette, and Alex Bregman. That lines up with additional reporting that suggests the Blue Jays aren't necessarily done making moves. Nightengale also threw in an interesting new nugget. "Their preference," he writes. "Is to make Okamoto a superutility player." It makes sense that the Blue Jays wouldn't want to lock Okamoto into one position. After all, they have two other capable third basemen, Addison Barger and Ernie Clement; a full-time first baseman, Vladimir Guerrero Jr.; and several options for the corner outfield, including Barger, Anthony Santander, Nathan Lukes, and George Springer. Being ready to play numerous positions will help Okamoto get as many at-bats as possible, and more lineup flexibility is never a bad thing from a team perspective, either. The question, however, is whether or not Okamoto is a strong enough defender to be able to handle such a role. Evidently, the Blue Jays think so. Either that, or they liked his bat (and his price) too much to pass up on him, and they're going to find a way to make things work defensively. Featured image courtesy of Darren Yamashita, Imagn Images. View the full article
  6. According to his Twitter profile, the Twins have hired Ozney Guillen as a minor-league hitting coach. On his LinkedIn page, Guillen wrote, "I'm excited and grateful to share that I've accepted a position as a Minor League Hitting Coach with the Minnesota Twins organization. Thankful for the opportunity and for everyone who has supported and believed in me along the way. I'm looking forward to continuing to learn, grow, and help develop players at the next level. Ready to get to work." La Vida Baseball. That includes the administrators, the coordinators, and of course, the minor-league coaching and managing assignments. We don't know what level Guillen will be coaching, but Ozney's track record is pretty impressive. But let's go back a little bit. Ozney Guillen is the youngest of White Sox legend Ozzie Guillen's three sons. He just turned 34 years old this week. Most Twins fans remember Ozzie Guillen as the White Sox manager from 2004 through 2011. Over that stretch, he had a record of 678-617 (.524). His club finished second in the division twice, and they won the AL Central in 2005 and 2008. That 2005 team went 11-1 in the playoffs and became World Series champions. He led the White Sox to two 90-win seasons, but to four 88+ win seasons. And, of course, there was the time in 2006 when Ozzie Guillen said of the Twins, "All those piranhas - blooper here, blooper here, beat out a ground ball, hit a home run, they're up by four. They get up by four with that bullpen? See you at the national anthem tomorrow. When I sit down and look at the lineup, give me the New York Yankees. Give me those guys because they've got holes. You can pitch around them, you can pitch to them. These little guys? (Luis) Casillo and all of them? People worry about the catcher, what's his name, Mauer? Fine, yeah, a good hitter, but worry about the little guys, they're on base all the time." And at that time, there truly was a rivalry between the Twins and the White Sox. During that same stretch between 2004 and 2011, Ron Gardenhire led the Twins to four division titles and finished second one other time. He had a record of 682-616 (.525), and that's counting a 99-loss 2011 season. There were moments such as Torii Hunter slamming into Jamie Burke, a move that Guillen praised later that night. In Game 163 of the 2008 season, White Sox slugger Jim Thome homered in the 7th inning of what turned into a 1-0 ballgame that sent the White Sox to the playoffs. Then, while only an August walk-off, Twins slugger Jim Thome hit a monster home run off his former teammates to add to the Twins division lead. The Guillen-Gardenhire years were so fun. That was a true rivalry, but it was a rivalry based on respect. Guillen wasn't bashing the Twins hitters for being 'wimpy.' Instead, he was praising the team for battling every pitch, putting the ball in play, hustling on everything. Guys like Luis Castillo, Jason Bartlett, Nick Punto and Jason Tyner were unsung heroes on the 2006 team in which Justin Morneau won the MVP, Joe Mauer won his first batting title, Torii Hunter's 31 homers were second to Morneau's, and Michael Cuddyer's 109 RBI was behind only the Canadian MVP. Both teams usually had strong hitters, good overall hitters, strong starting pitching, and dominant bullpens. Both managers were fiery, and in the days before replay, they were guys whose players knew they had their backs. Those were the days! Then again, Guillen referred to the 99-loss 2011 Twins hitters as "sardines", and in 2021, he called the Twins "guppies." By the way, some of us that are my age and older are also likely to remember him as a really solid big-league shortstop over his 16-season career. He broke into the big leagues as a 21-year-old in 1985 and was named Rookie of the Year. He was a three-time All-Star and won a Gold Glove. He spent 13 seasons with the White Sox and then played with the Orioles, Braves and Rays over the final three seasons of his playing career (2000). Alright, let's get back to the Twins new player development hire, Ozney Guillen. Eldest son, Ozzie Jr., hosted a radio show in Chicago for four-plus seasons during his dad's managerial tenure. He also worked as a translator for the White Sox and was the team's Spanish Radio Broadcaster. He fulfilled the same role with the Chicago Bulls for a year. He has worked in the public sector for about the past 15 years. Middle son, Oney, has worked for a few companies since he finished college a dozen years ago. He spent some time playing baseball. He was the White Sox 36th round pick in 2007 out of North Park University in Chicago. He played that summer and in 2008. He played 17 games in Class A ball and actually got one game in for the Sox Triple-A affiliate in Charlotte. He went 1-for-3 with a double in the one game he played. Ozzie Jr and Oney had a baseball podcast/show called Being Guillen, or La Vida Baseball. Ozney is the son that, at least to this point, has made a career in baseball. He played his high school baseball at Monsignor Edward Pace High School in Miami Gardens, Florida, where he was a teammate of former Twins pitcher (and minor league outfielder too) Dereck Rodriguez. Ozney was the 22nd round pick of the White Sox in 2010. Instead of signing, he went to Miami-Dade College where he would have played with the likes of former Twins pitcher Jharel Cotton, long-time big-league catcher Victor Caratini, After his college eligibility ended, he took a tour around various independent baseball leagues. He spent 2014 and 2015 in the Frontier League. In 2016, he played for Sioux Falls in the American Association. In 2017 and 2018, he played in the Atlantic League. He also played briefly in the Canadian-American Association. He spent three winters playing in Venezuela for Tiburones de La Guaira. He spent a lot of time working with their Baseball Operations department, player development and even signing players. He returned to school, now at St. Thomas University in Miami where he earned his Bachelor of Business. Administration and Sports Administration. All the while, he has worked in a variety of roles and jobs in baseball. Since he stopped playing, he has been a minor-league manager, a hitting instructor, worked for a sports management agency, earned a degree, was an assistant coach in college, has been a manager and general manager in Colombia. Since last June, he has taken on new roles for the team in Colombia, joined Tigres de Aragua as a third base coach and Quality Control Coach. And, last month, he joined the Twins organization full time. He has a really solid resume, but he's also got relationships around the game, in affiliated ball, in independent leagues, and throughout central and South America. He is bilingual which is clearly helpful. It will be fun to see how the Twins utilize him within the organization since he's got such a variety of experiences in and around the game. View the full article
  7. On Monday, Aram Leighton of Just Baseball reported that the Royals agreed to a Minor League deal with catching veteran Jorge Alfaro. The 32-year-old catcher started in the Phillies organization, but has played with the Marlins, Padres, Rockies, Red Sox, and Nationals. In 14 games in D.C. last season, he posted a 54 wRC+ and -0.3 fWAR in 39 plate appearances. According to his Statcast summary via TJ Stats, Alfaro showed some ability to launch the ball and hit the ball with some above-average exit velocity. That said, the rest of his metrics were paltry, especially in the plate discipline areas. Alfaro hasn't been exceptional defensively over his career. He has a -19 DRS, -2.1 FRM, and -17 FRV in 3,481 career innings behind the plate. Thus, even if Alfaro makes the Majors, it is likely that he wouldn't be a long-term option for the Royals. Though it isn't official, the Royals will likely invite Alfaro to Spring Training for catching depth. He will also likely begin the year in Omaha, serving as an emergency catcher who can be promoted and serve as a backup catcher if anything happens to Salvador Perez or top prospect Carter Jensen. Luke Maile served in this role last year and posted a 99 wRC+ and 0.3 fWAR. Like Alfaro, he was inconsistent with his plate discipline, but Maile was more patient at the plate (86th percentile walk rate) and showed more upside with his batted-ball metrics with the Royals a season ago. Maile is still a free agent, so it's possible that the Royals could still bring him back on a Minor League deal. Regardless, the Royals likely want some depth in Omaha, since top catching prospects Blake Mitchell and Ramon Ramirez are still a couple of years away from debuting in the show (at the earliest). Photo Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images View the full article
  8. Ryan Daniels, the Twins 11th round pick in 2025 out of UConn, has decided to retire from the game of baseball. As @Jamie Cameron wrote at Limestone Pipeline, Daniels has a history of hip injuries and surgeries. Before joining the Huskies, Daniels was a four-year letterwinner in baseball at St. Paul Catholic in Bristol, Connecticut. He was twice named an All-State player. Upon graduation, he made a 44-mile drive from Bristol to Storrs. He made 25 starts and played in 42 games as a freshman in 2023. He hit .273/.401/.409 (.810) with eight doubles, two triples and a home run. He also had 16 steals in 17 attempts. In 2024, he was limited to just 20 games (18 starts) because he had season-ending hip surgery. He came back at full strength in 2025 and had an incredible season. He started 53 of the 54 games he played. He hit .365/.476/.744 (1.220) with 15 doubles, four triples, 18 home runs and 75 RBI. He was named the BIG EAST Player of the Year, first-team all-conference, and was named second-team All American by a few outlets. The Twins made him their 11th-round pick in July and signed him with a $150,000. Unfortunately, he played in two games for the Fort Myers Mighty Mussels and went on the Injured List with a hip injury. In mid-December, he made the decision to retire from baseball. Best wishes, Ryan, in whatever is next for you! View the full article
  9. Now that the calendar has officially flipped, we can look forward to what the minor league prospects for 2026 will look like. With spring training just about six weeks away and a roster still undergoing some tweaks before pitchers and catchers report, let's move our attention to the future of what could be. The national media narrative that the Padres' farm system has been gutted is false. This article will provide a flipped script to such a narrative. Is it as good as it was at last year's trade deadline? No, it isn't. That doesn't mean it still doesn't possess some very interesting upside, however. We have heard the system has been in such a state almost every year for the past three or four years, yet every year with International signings and shrewd drafts, president of baseball operations and General Manager A.J. Preller has been able to rebuild it on the fly. Why else has he been able to trade for players such as Dylan Cease, Luis Arraez, Tanner Scott, Jason Adam, Ramon Laureano, Ryan O'Hearn, Freddy Fermin, and Mason Miller? It's because he's been able to sign the best players during international signing periods and has had some very good draft classes. Considering the hot stove season is still very much in full effect, we'll more than likely see some of the names listed on this prospect list traded away soon. It's what he does and what he's good at. With that being said, this list will consist of players who have the most upside, their minor league performance taken into account, and their proximity to making an impact at the major league level. Prospect lists are opinion pieces more than anything. We all have our own mindset of who we believe belongs on such a list. This will not be any different. We will provide a brief synopsis of each player in the top ten. It will also list the year and status of how the players were acquired for all players. It will be listed in reverse order, counting down from number 30. Let's begin, Friar Faithful. The back half: 30-21 #30) Cardell Thibodeaux, OF Drafted in Round 16-2025 #29) Dylan Grego, INF Drafted in Round 13-2025 #28) George Bilecki, OF Drafted in Round 12-2025 #27) Truitt Madonna, C Drafted in Round 11-2025 #26) Kerrington Cross, INF Drafted in Round 7-2025 #25) Ty Harvey, C Drafted in Round 5-2025 #24) Ryan Wideman, OF Drafted in Round 3-2025 #23) Yimy Tovar, INF Signed as an Amateur International Free Agent-2023 #22) Alex McCoy, OF Signed as an Undrafted Free Agent-2024 #21) Lamar King Jr., C Drafted in Round 4-2022 Level 2: 20-11 #20) Braedon Karpathios, OF Signed as an Undrafted Free Agent-2022 #19) Harry Gustin, RP Drafted in Round 18-2023 #18) Eric Yost, SP Drafted in Round 17-2023 #17) Luis Gutierrez, SP Signed as an Amateur International Free Agent-2019 #16) Romeo Sanabria, 1B Drafted in Round 18-2022 #15) Daison Acosta, RP Signed as a Minor League Free Agent-2026 #14) Marcos Castanon, INF Drafted in Round 12-2021 #13) Clay Dungan, INF Drafted as a Rule-5 minor leaguer-2023 #12 Manuel Castro, RP Signed as an Amateur International Free Agent-2021 #11) Rodolfo Duran, C Signed as a Minor League Free Agent-2025 Top Ten: 10-1 #10) Jagger Haynes, SP Drafted in the 5th round in the shortened Covid-19 draft of 2020. Haynes has slowly built himself into a top ten prospect in the organization after sitting out the 2021 and 2022 seasons following Tommy John surgery. He has progressed the last three years, moving from Low-A in 2023 to Double-A last season, Will more than likely be a part of the rotation options in Triple-A El Paso this year. Perhaps even getting a taste of the big leagues sometime this season. #9) Garrett Hawkins, RP Hawkins was initially a starter after being drafted in the 9th round in 2021. He has also missed an entire season due to surgery. Missing the 2024 season altogether. Coming back as a full-time reliever last season, he advanced from High-A ball to Double-A San Antonio, having a dominant comeback season in both stops. He was added to the 40-man roster earlier this offseason to be protected from the Rule-5 draft. Had a sub 2.00 ERA and averaged better than a strikeout per inning. #8) Nick Schnell, OF New to the organization after signing a minor league deal for the 2026 season. Schnell possesses some big-time power in his bat. Something the organization is in desperate need of. Originally drafted as a 1st round supplemental pick, 32nd overall by the Tampa Bay Rays in 2018, he comes to the Padres after having put up some serious Home Run production last year in the minors with the Washington Nationals. He'll provide outfield depth for Triple-A El Paso to begin his Friar tenure. #7) Tirso Ornelas, OF One of the longest tenured players in the entire organization. Ornelas was signed as part of the Padres' infamous 2016-17 International signing period. He and Adrian Morejon are the only two players left from that spending spree. After going through some growing pains, Ornelas has become one of the better prospects during that time. Having finally reached the big leagues last year with a cameo appearance. He could be the first outfielder called up if an injury occurs. #6) Kruz Schoolcraft, SP The Padres' 1st Round draft pick last season and #25 overall. Schoolcraft surprisingly saw action in his draft year. It's not something the Padres have usually done when drafting High school arms in the first round. They typically have them start their professional careers the following season in Low-A ball. Already a consensus top-100 prospect, #95 overall on MLB.com, he could be one of the faster-moving players in the entire organization in '26. #5) Kash Mayfield, SP Just like Schoolcraft last year. Mayfield was also drafted #25 overall in the first round of the previous draft in 2024. Unlike his predecessor, however, he started his career last year with the Low-A Lake Elsinore Storm. Not yet cracking the top 100 list on any national prospect publications, it should just be a matter of time before doing so. Especially if he remains on his current trajectory. He had a very good first year, averaging more than a strikeout per inning while sporting a sub-3.00 ERA. #4) Ethan Salas, C Signed as the top international free agent during the 2023 period. Salas has had an up-and-down career. He's a top-100 overall prospect on MLB.com, currently sitting at #78. His stock has fallen due to injuries and a very fast progression through the Padres organization. He missed almost the entire season last year for the Double-A San Antonio Missions with a stress reaction in his lower back. Now cleared with a clean bill of health, this could be a make-or-break year for the talented backstop. #3) Miguel Mendez, SP Mendez was originally signed as an International Free Agent during the 2022 period. Not on any Padres top 30 prospect lists to begin last season. He quickly rose through the system, dominating with the High-A Fort Wayne Tin Caps with a crazy sub-2.00 ERA and striking out better than a batter per inning. He finished the year at Double-A, not having the same success, however. He was also added to the 40-man roster earlier this offseason to avoid the Rule-5 draft. #2) Sung Mun Song, INF An International free agent signing. Song doesn't fit the normal circumstances for such a player. He comes with plenty of professional experience playing in the Korean Baseball Organization. It's hard to tell what his ceiling and floor are at this point. He's been compared to fellow countrymen and former Padre Ha-Seong Kim, perhaps with not as much upside. He did have two back-to-back seasons of excellence, however. Gaining player of the year honors in that league last season. Song probably projects as a utility player in 2026. #1) Bradgley Rodriguez, RP Perhaps not a typical number-one prospect for a top-30 list. Rodriguez came to the organization during the 2021 international signing period. He has been nothing short of excellent the past two years, moving up the hierarchy at a fast pace. Having reached the big leagues this past season after dominance at the minor league level. Rodriguez had a sub-2.00 ERA, albeit in a short cup of coffee with the Padres late in the season. Has every chance to crack the Opening Day roster and will more than likely make the biggest impact of any prospect on this list. There you have it, Friar Faithful. My Padres Pre-Season Top 30 Prospects for 2026. This was one of the harder lists to put together. As mentioned earlier, there is still a lot of upside in the minor league system. Please let us know in the comments what your Padres' top 30 Prospect list would look like! View the full article
  10. Steamer is one of the more widely used projection systems in baseball. They use a formula that weights recent seasons, along with attempts to predict regression for players based on several factors. Looking ahead to 2026, Steamer has a few interesting predictions for the Twins roster. Luke Keaschall Takes A Step Back... Offensively Luke Keaschall was one of the few bright spots in 2025, slashing .302/.382/.445 across 207 plate appearances, good for 34% better than league average. Not many players are capable of earning a projection anywhere near that performance, but Steamer predicts a step back across the board. Keaschall is projected for a .267/.350/.400 line. Steamer predicts a steep decline in batted-ball luck and power for him They still count on a solid 2.6 Wins Above Replacement, but interestingly enough, this is accounting for above-average defense from him. Anything is possible, but the defensive value is questionable, if Keaschall remains at second base. The Twins will be relying on Keaschall to repeat as a legitimately great player in 2026, and Steamer doesn’t quite see that happening. He did show some signs of regression, and it may be worth baking in a step back from his elite performance in 2025, given the small sample. Bailey Ober Is The #3 Starter, But Just Barely Joe Ryan and Pablo López project as the Twins' top two starting pitchers for 2026, and Bailey Ober still comes in third. After Ober, the rest of the rotation feels like a toss-up, with candidates such as Taj Bradley, Mick Abel, Zebby Matthews, David Festa, and Simeon Woods Richardson. Despite Ober having an ostensibly undisputed spot in the rotation, assuming he’s still on the team, his projected value is almost exactly the same as many of these other names competing for spots. Ober comes in at 2.0 WAR, with Bradley right behind at 1.9. Matthews and Woods Richardson project for 1.8 WAR. Ober’s lead on this group likely comes from the weight of his strong 2023 and 2024 seasons; his 2025 has only dragged his projections down. This will be a big season for Ober, after physical concerns and a lack of velocity plagued him in 2025. With so many options to replace him if he continues to struggle, his hold on a rotation spot is as weak as it has been since 2023. With the Twins in need of all the help they can get, they’ll need vintage Bailey Ober, or to be quick to move off of him if he looks like his 2025 self. The Bullpen is in Dire Straits It should be no surprise that the Twins' bullpen projects as a real problem, but Steamer outlines just how big a hole it is. With Cole Sands and Kody Funderburk tied with projections of 0.4 WAR apiece, the 2025 Twins’ roster included seven relievers who were more valuable. That included Sands himself and Justin Topa, who will both return, but the state of the bullpen is bleak. Steamer can only project based on the current roster, meaning the Twins can still drastically improve their outlook before the offseason is over by adding pieces. It’s also uncommon for Steamer to project potential relievers like John Klein, Marco Raya, Conner Prielipp, etc., for strong relief performances when they’ve been starters throughout the minor leagues and haven’t debuted yet. Nor should we ignore the possibility that one of Bradley, Matthews or Abel will move to the pen and have success. The Twins have talked internally about rebuilding the relief corps. That's one avenue they can use to beat their projections. That being said, given their starting point in the bullpen, it’s hard to imagine a respectable performance from the current group. They will likely still need several successful external additions (as well as many of these up-and-coming arms) to hit their 90th-percentile outcomes to come anywhere close to 2025’s bullpen. It’s worth noting that projection systems have been wrong about the Twins for several seasons now, typically predicting much more success than the team has actually achieved. Still, with some filling out of the roster still on the way, it’s interesting to look ahead and see what Steamer predicts for the Twins' 2026 roster. View the full article
  11. According to MLB.com's Mark Feinsand, the Toronto Blue Jays are still seen as the frontrunners to sign top free agent Kyle Tucker, even after signing Kazuma Okamoto. "Toronto remains the favorite to land Tucker," explains Feinsand, relaying information from sources. However, he adds that "the Mets can't be counted out." As for the Yankees, Feinsand believes Bellinger is their preferred target, presuming they're "prepared to spend big" at all. Adding fuel to this fire, FanSided's MLB insider Robert Murray also believes the Blue Jays remain a suitor for Tucker: "He is one of the options that they're considering, and they're one of the teams that he's considering as well." On the flip side, Sportnet's Ben Nicholson-Smith suggests that, while the Jays aren't likely to rule anything out, they no longer look like the very best candidate to give Tucker the long-term deal he's looking for. "Now I would say that's the Mets," he adds. Having said that, Nicholson-Smith does speculate that Tucker and the Blue Jays could be more likely to strike a deal if he's willing to sign a shorter contract with a high average annual value. What do Blue Jays fans think about the team going all-in to sign Kyle Tucker? Would you only do it on a shorter-term deal? Or would you rather the Jays forget Tucker and prioritize Bo Bichette? Chime in with your thoughts below. Featured image courtesy of David Banks, Imagn Images. View the full article
  12. The Brewers announced their coaching staff under Pat Murphy for the 2026 season on Monday morning, including significant shakeups from last year's group. Four existing coaches have assumed new roles, a few others have taken jobs elsewhere in the organization, and four have joined the big-league staff. The first notable takeaway is that several coaches who have been heavily involved in game planning have been promoted to roles centered on those duties. Jason Lane has been elevated from third-base coach to offense and strategy coordinator; Jim Henderson from assistant pitching coach to pitching coordinator; and Daniel de Mondesert from assistant coach to game preparation specialist. To fill the vacancies left by those changes, Matt Erickson will become the third-base coach, while continuing to coach infielders, and Juan Sandoval will be the new assistant pitching coach. The promotion continues Sandoval's quick rise through the organization's coaching ranks. He started as a pitching coach in the Dominican Republic in 2022, before becoming assistant coordinator of minor-league pitching, a role in which he roamed throughout the farm system. The most notable shakeups may be to the hitting and baserunning staffs. The Brewers announced that former lead hitting coach Al LeBeouf and first base coach Julio Borbón will transition to front-office roles with an emphasis on player development and scouting. Eric Theisen has been promoted from assistant hitting coach to lead hitting coach, where he'll be flanked by new hires Daniel Vogelbach and former Toronto Blue Jays hitting coach Guillermo Martinez. Former director of player development Spencer Allen will be the new first-base coach. Vogelbach may be the most interesting hire. He's the youngest of the bunch, and his emphasis on swing decisions as a player could gel nicely with how the Brewers coach plate discipline. He swung at just 47.7% of in-zone pitches during his career, preferring to offer only at those in his wheelhouse. Milwaukee hitters have baseball's lowest in-zone swing rate over the past two seasons (62.1%), with Murphy saying that his young players must know which strikes not to swing at based on their bat paths. Allen, who was previously the organization's outfield and baserunning instructor, will look to lead a bounce-back at stealing bases. Coincidentally or not, the Brewers took a significant step back in that department last year, when Borbón replaced baserunning guru Quintin Berry. Murphy attributed it to more hesitant reads and jumps against opposing pitchers. Perhaps a new voice at first base will get them back to their more aggressive ways. Pitching coach Chris Hook, bullpen coach Charlie Greene, and field coordinator Nestor Corredor will all return for 2026 in their existing roles. The other notable members of the 2025 staff were Conor Dawson, who left for a hitting coach job with the Royals, and Rickie Weeks, who also moves back to a front-office role after two years as Murphy's lieutenant in the dugout. View the full article
  13. If Minnesota Twins fans feel like they've heard this story before, it is because they have. Nearly 30 years separate the current financial messaging from the late 1990s, but the current posture from ownership feels almost identical. The numbers have grown, the league has changed, and revenues have exploded, but the Pohlad family continues to rely on the same explanations and expectations. In December 1998, Jim Pohlad and Twins president Jerry Bell attempted to justify a dramatic rollback in spending by saying, “We’re open to suggestions.” Those suggestions came alongside the revelation that the Twins would operate on a payroll as low as $10 million for the 1999 season, easily the lowest in Major League Baseball. The Pohlads claimed losses of up to $60 million over the prior five seasons, despite the team carrying a $27-million payroll in 1998. At that time, 10 individual MLB players were earning higher average salaries than the Twins' entire roster. To be fair, ownership did have a tangible grievance in that era. The Metrodome lease was widely viewed as one of the worst stadium deals in baseball. Revenue streams were limited, premium seating was minimal, and the Twins had little control over key income sources. That poor stadium arrangement was often cited as a primary reason for the team’s financial struggles, and it was not without merit. The economics of baseball in the 1990s were far different, and Minnesota was genuinely operating at a disadvantage compared to teams with modern facilities. That context, however, came with a darker edge. The Pohlad family did not simply plead poverty. They openly flirted with contraction. The Twins were repeatedly floated as a candidate for elimination, a threat that hung over the fan base and the state. It was leverage then, just as financial distress often feels like leverage now. It might well be that the intention to contract was never real, but the elaborate charade the team and league undertook was proof of their commitment to extracting money and power from the community. The baseball operations side of the organization leaned into the same logic. Then-general manager Terry Ryan attempted to normalize the payroll gap. “After this season, everyone could see that the teams that were paying $40 million weren’t doing any better than the teams paying $15 million," he said. "Right now, if you’re at $60 million, you might as well be at $20 million.” It was a convenient argument, at the dawn of an era that would soon prove spending absolutely mattered. Fast-forward nearly three decades, and the justifications sound hauntingly familiar. The Twins reportedly accumulated more than $500 million in debt (much of it, whether the family cares to admit it or not, freighted onto the Twins as the Pohlads' commercial real estate investments took huge post-COVID hits) and were put up for sale in late 2024. When a full sale failed to materialize, the team was pulled off the market, and minority shares were sold to multiple investment groups to stabilize finances. Once again, the Pohlad family has suggested that operating the team itself costs more than they make. That explanation lands far differently in 2026. The Twins now play in a publicly funded, revenue-friendly ballpark that dramatically altered the franchise’s financial outlook. Target Field was supposed to put an end to the Metrodome excuses. There is no bad lease to point to now. There is no outdated facility suppressing revenue. There is no legitimate comparison to the late 1990s environment. Yet, the same talking points persist. For 2026, the Twins are projected to have a payroll of around $100 million. In today’s MLB landscape, that places them uncomfortably close to the bottom. Eight teams are currently projected lower, and four more are within $5 million and could easily surpass Minnesota before Opening Day. Cleveland, Tampa Bay, and Miami all sit below $80 million, and the Twins would likely only join them by trading Pablo López (and his $21-million contract) and further thinning the roster. For a franchise that insists it wants sustained competitiveness, the margin for error remains razor-thin. Ownership continues to rely on the same narrative it has used for decades. They say (implausibly) that the team is losing money. They say the economics are complex, and that spending must be restrained. If that is truly the case, the solution is obvious: Sell the team. Owning a Major League Baseball franchise is not a civic obligation. Other organizations are making money while fielding competitive teams, year after year. If the Twins are a financial burden rather than a viable business, then it is time for the Pohlad family to step aside. They aren't, of course; that's a lie. If the family is dedicated to that lie, though, they still ought to sell. For fans searching for hope, it may exist beyond the 2027 season and the potential for another lockout. A reset of baseball’s economic structure could create a more favorable environment and allow the Pohlads to sell the franchise at a price they consider acceptable. That outcome might finally close a chapter that has dragged on far too long. Until then, Twins fans are left watching the same movie on repeat. The excuses are familiar. The stakes feel lower than contraction, but the frustration is just as real. Is this simply history repeating itself, or is there still a path forward with the current ownership group? Share your thoughts in the comments. View the full article
  14. Frank Cairone, a left-handed pitcher who was a second-round draft choice by the Milwaukee Brewers in 2025, is in a New Jersey hospital following a car crash on Friday. In a statement released Saturday, the Brewers said, "Frank is currently being cared for at a hospital in New Jersey with the support of his family. The Brewers’ thoughts and prayers are with Frank and his family during his difficult time." No other information has been released. According to NJ.com, Cairone was injured during the collision new his home in Franklinville, N.J. Cairone had to be flown to a hospital in Atlantic City, N.J., for treatment, a source close to the family told NJ.com. Police said Cairone was driving a vehicle when another driver failed to stop at a stop sign and slammed into Cairone's car. Cairone is a 6-foot-2, 195-pound left-hander who was taken by the Brewers with the 68th pick of the 2025 draft, a supplemental choice the Brewers received for not signing 2024 pick Chris Levonas, a right-handed pitcher also from New Jersey who instead honored his commitment to Wake Forest. Cairone, who turned 18 in September, signed for a $1.1 million bonus instead of going to Coastal Carolina, but did not make his professional debut, instead spending time at the Brewers' complex in Arizona. Cairone is the 26th-ranked prospect in the Brewers' system, per MLB Pipeline. View the full article
  15. Heading into last year’s trade deadline, I wrote an article about the areas in which I thought the Brewers needed to upgrade. One of the things I pointed out was that at the time, Milwaukee ranked near the bottom of MLB for OPS and Defensive Runs Saved from shortstop. I went on to write that based on this figure, Joey Ortiz’s defensive abilities had slipped, a statement which was met with quite a bit of pushback from commenters. One reader pointed out that -7 DRS didn’t match the eye test, and others generally agreed that the figure didn’t seem to be an accurate representation. In an effort to save what little journalistic reputation I currently have, I tried my best to explain what was going on, but to be honest, I was starting to get as confused as everyone else. His numbers at the end of the season only made things worse. After playing 1,217 ⅔ innings at shortstop in 2025, Ortiz ended with 12 Outs Above Average (5th among shortstops) and -2 Defensive Runs Saved (14th among qualified shortstops). So how is it that these numbers, which should theoretically give us a quick idea of whether someone is a good, great, or bad defender, are telling two different stories? Interestingly enough, he wasn’t even the only Brewer for whom this was true. I wrote another article about Brice Turang’s diverging defensive narratives in August. So, since I wasn’t the only one who was confused by exactly what these numbers meant and how to interpret them, I figured a deeper dive into each was necessary. Defensive Runs Saved (DRS) In the beginning, the main way to assess a player’s defensive abilities was fielding percentage. It was a simple formula (putouts divided by total chances), but it was far too basic to capture any of the nuance of fielding. A great example is Nick Castellanos, who had a perfect 1.000 fielding percentage in 2022, 2023, and 2025 as a starting outfielder, but is also a notoriously bad defender. The DRS framework was first introduced in 2009 by John Dewan and Bill James, who had used data from Sports Info Solutions dating back to 2003 to consider more variables in the field. In their modern forms, these are: ART (Airballs, Range, and Throwing) Runs Saved (All Fielders) Good Plays/Defensive Misplays and Errors Runs Saved (All Fielders) Bunt Runs Saved (Corner Infielders, Catchers, Pitchers) Double Play Runs Saved (Middle Infielders and Corner Infielders) Outfielder Arm Runs Saved (Outfielders) Pitcher Stolen Base Runs Saved (Pitchers) Catcher Stolen Base Runs Saved (Catchers) Strike Zone Runs Saved (Catchers) Catcher Adjusted Earned Runs Saved (Catchers) To calculate all of this, each component of a play is assigned a bucket and a difficulty value. The bucket depends on which aspect of defense is being tested. For example, a right fielder throwing out a runner going first to third would receive credit to this rARM, while a smooth double play by two middle infielders would go into their rGDP buckets. This value is based on the percentage of similar balls in play that were successfully converted to outs. So, if the throw from the right fielder to third base was made into an out in 99% of similar situations (unlikely, but go with me), it would get an expected value of 0.99, while a tough diving stop to start a double play that was made by 1% of shortstops would have a value of 0.01. If the play is successfully made, the player receives (1 - expected value) to the respective bucket. If they botch it, they lose that much value. So a successful routine grounder with an expected success rate of 85% would net a fielder 0.15 plays above average, but flubbing it would leave them with a -0.85. The value of each bucket then gets converted to a run total, based on context and a run expectancy matrix. The final DRS for a given player is the difference between the total value of their plays made and missed in all buckets relevant to their positions and the league average. Most are pretty straightforward, but I wanted to highlight two that sound pretty darn similar: rGFP and rPM. rPM stands for Runs from Plus-Minus, which primarily tracks range and assigns a value to each batted ball based on characteristics like location and historical success rates. rGFP is used in special circumstances where a defensive action contributes or costs value based on playmaking or intellect, rather than sheer ball-chasing. Examples include a first baseman scooping a bad throw or a batter being held to a single instead of a double because of an outfielder’s actions. This also counts against the player for doing things like missing the cutoff man or messing up a double play to get one out instead of two. The numbers are broken down by category on the Fielding Bible website, so (for instance) we can see that Ortiz was much better moving to his left than to his right; got value from his strong arm but struggled on turning double plays; and came out essentially even in defensive misplays and good plays, though that doesn't mean that he made the same number of them. He just had a roughly average ratio between them for a shortstop. We don’t get to see which plays moved the needle the most, though, so a negative DRS may mean that they’re average but regularly struggle with more difficult plays, or it could mean they’re messing up routine plays. Like WAR, DRS attempts to factor in every detailed aspect of fielding a baseball and arrive at a somewhat definitive number, but we tend to get summary judgments from it, rather than play-by-play breakdowns. For more information, feel free to check Fielding Bible’s FAQ on DRS. Outs Above Average (OAA) Outs Above Average was one of Statcast’s ways of gauging a player’s defense. It came out shortly after the system was introduced league-wide in 2015. Like DRS, it’s calculated slightly differently depending on which position you’re assessing. In the outfield, each ball in play is assigned a catch probability value based on the distance an outfielder has to cover, the direction he must travel, and the time he has to get to his destination. Like DRS, the fielder receives credit for each play made equal to (1 - catch probability) and loses value equivalent to the catch probability for failing to make the play. The infield is similar, but uses a more complex formula to handle the additional defensive intricacies. It considers distance covered and time, but it also accounts for the distance from the fielder at the “intercept point” (position after getting to the ball) to the base the runner is heading for. On force plays, it also factors in the sprint speed of the hitter. The biggest difference between OAA and DRS is that the former almost solely measures range, while the latter uses range as one of several ingredients in the recipe. This allows OAA to be calculated without video review, as the calculation is purely number-based. Furthermore, OAA is context-neutral, as it’s purely outs, not runs. This means a play made with the bases empty and one with the bases loaded counts the same. This partially explains why some players have such a disparity between their OAA and DRS figures. One good example is Bobby Witt Jr., who had 24 OAA and just 3 DRS in 2025, a disparity of 21. He and Zach Neto were the only two players I found to have a disparity this significant between the two metrics last season. Witt had a fairly high number of Defensive Misplays and Errors (33, which was eight more than Ortiz), but rated very well with his arm and was great going to his right, which made up for some weaknesses on balls up the middle. That pattern (good arm, better right than left, a few more mistakes than would be ideal) maps neatly to DRS; OAA just viewed him as making more plays above average than DRS's system estimated. Given what we now know about DRS and OAA, we could state that a play that would negatively impact DRS more than OAA could look something like: A mistake made in a higher run expectancy situation (e.g., runners in scoring position) A fair hit that was fielded in a way that allowed a runner to advance further than he should’ve A double play that resulted in just one out Based on this criteria, one example could be this play against the Athletics, where a soft flip to second baseman Jonathan India recorded an out but a better throw could’ve allowed the Royals to pick up an additional out. This play may fall into the higher run expectancy situation category, because a late spinning throw by Witt results in a run scored (and a game lost). Ah, but one other issue is that OAA and DRS are not calculated on the same scale. You can hear it in their names, right? One is runs saved; the other is outs added, or hits saved. For instance, Witt's 3 DRS came on 6 Plays Saved; there's a remaining conversion to be made. Each play made saves part of a hit, and thereby saves a fraction of a run. The OAA model's cousin makes that conversion from outs added to runs saved, to put Statcast and Sports Info Solutions's metrics on the same footing. Fielding Run Value (FRV) FRV is Statcast’s answer to DRS. It's largely based on OAA, which is why most players who have high OAA figures will also have high FRV figures, even if they score poorly in DRS. It also bakes in throwing; framing and blocking for catchers; and other subtle skills. FRV converts underlying metrics into runs, but it shouldn’t tell you a story that’s different from OAA. Because many fans don't understand that it's the final form of OAA (and because of its hellaciously awkward name), FRV is cited less often than either of the other two. Whereas OAA is easy to find (it shows up on every player’s Savant summary), and whereas DRS is the original advanced defensive metric, it's hard to immediately grasp the utility of FRV. Nonetheless, to properly compare two players, look either at their PART Plays Saved (on the Fielding Bible site) and their OAA, or at their DRS and their FRV. Offensive metrics have always been far easier to assess than defensive ones. Even with a head start, though, there’s disagreement over which metrics truly describe how good a hitter is. Things have now been refined enough where for many, using OPS or wRC+ is usually sufficient to get your point across, but things are not so simple for defensive numbers. OPS+ and wRC+ never diverge significantly, but that’s because they more or less measure the same thing and are made up of very similar inputs. On the other hand, DRS and OAA/FRV do some things materially differently. Subjectively, DRS makes the most sense to me as a solid measure of cumulative defensive production. That doesn’t mean that OAA and FRV are wrong; they just make some different assumptions and incorporate human help to a lesser degree. There’s only so much we can unpack without getting access to more granular data on individual plays, but at the very least, we can now translate numbers to meaning. Choose your fighter according to your new, improved understanding about these numbers and what forms them. View the full article
  16. The Chicago Cubs bowed out early in the bidding for top starting pitcher Dylan Cease. They came much nearer to landing Japanese import Tatsuya Imai, but ultimately, Imai signed with the Astros instead. Michael King re-signed with the Padres, and Merrill Kelly returned to the Diamondbacks after they traded him to Texas in July. Trades have moved Mike Burrows to Houston and Sonny Gray and Johan Oviedo to Boston, Some of the top reclamation projects and below-the-radar starters (Dustin May, Tyler Mahle, Cody Ponce, and more) have found their new homes. The market has moved, and the only movements the Cubs have made with it were the proactive choice to extend Colin Rea and the half-welcomed return of Shota Imanaga. In Rea, Imanaga, Cade Horton, Matthew Boyd and Jameson Taillon, the Cubs have five pitchers penciled into their rotation for the coming season. A healthy Javier Assad and a returning Justin Steele would push that number to seven. By the end of last season, that group was insufficient to power the team past the Brewers in the NLDS, but the biggest reasons for that (Horton getting hurt in mid-September and Steele having undergone elbow surgery in April) will be out of the way by the middle of this year. Boyd will pitch for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic in March, further reducing what were already slim chances of another 180-inning campaign from him. Imanaga inspired so little confidence in October that the team didn't use him at all in the decisive Game 5 of that NLDS, but they did then make the decision to extend him the qualifying offer, so they have demonstrated some faith in his durability and performance. It's not hard to find places where the team might still need innings from a starter, but there's no obvious vacancy in that corps. In fact, with Jaxon Wiggins on the cusp of the majors and more pitchers capable of providing length already in the mix, their depth is their strength. As we've discussed several times this winter, that doesn't mean Jed Hoyer shouldn't or won't add another starter. The Cubs remain engaged in both trade and free-agent starter markets, because beyond Horton, their starters all come with important questions about either durability or quality. Should they bring in a starter like Zac Gallen, Ranger Suárez or MacKenzie Gore, though, they'd begin to face a roster crunch in the rotation—especially because they've committed themselves to several out-of-options relief pitchers this winter. Let's imagine, then, that they do make an addition. Will it come with a subtraction? Trading a starter could give the team a much-needed crumb of added depth in the farm system; free up some money for the offensive improvements they also want to make before Opening Day; and clarify the plan for the starting rotation in 2026. It would be complicated, but it might be necessary. Imanaga can't be traded without his permission until June 15; he was technically a free agent before accepting the qualifying offer. Rea doesn't enjoy that protection, but he would save the team less money than most of the alternatives and they've already made an active decision to retain him. Boyd is the type of pitcher the Cubs systematically value more highly than the rest of the league, and was so important to last year's team that trading him feels unimaginable. Trading Horton actually is unimaginable. Steele, coming off surgery, would be hard to trade and isn't going to make that much money, either. The candidates to be dealt are Taillon and Assad. Entering the last year of his four-year deal with the team, Taillon has made some important strides, increasing the utility of his cutter and discovering the kick-change that changed his game in 2025. He's due $18 million this year, and he only has partial no-trade protection, in the form of a 10-team list he can tweak each fall and to which he can block deals. He makes the most sense as a trade chip, because his low strikeout rate and multiple minor injuries in 2025 leave more question marks about his future than are attached to most of the team's other options. Assad comes with just as many questions, but his salary for 2026 will be much lower than Taillon's. He can be traded without restriction, and he has three years of team control remaining, so his trade value will be higher. The key downside of moving him is simple: Assad can be optioned to the minors. He's the most flexible piece of their projected rotation picture, so dealing him would leave them with very little optionality. Because they re-signed Rea and fell back into a short-term arrangement with Imanaga, the Cubs aren't desperate to improve their rotation. Arguably, they should be, but that hasn't been the sense either agents or teams discussing trade candidates with Chicago have gotten. Instead, Hoyer appears to be focused on finding the right way to bolster his offense and build more medium-term upside for a team facing a fistful of free-agent departures after 2026. The team is still open to adding a starter, though, and if they do, it could mean a Taillon trade is in the offing. Such a trade would probably feel much like a salary dump than a win in itself, the same way the team traded Cody Bellinger for little return last winter. In doing that, though, they upgraded from Bellinger to Kyle Tucker, which helped them reach the NLDS for the first time since 2017. This time, the upgrade could be from Taillon to a player like Gallen or Suárez, giving them more team control, this time, as well as a short-term increase in playoff odds. View the full article
  17. The Toronto Blue Jays signed yet another premier free agent in Kazuma Okamoto, but does his presence get in the way of another pact with Bo Bichette? View the full article
  18. The Boston Red Sox have announced important dates for spring training. as the team stated pitchers and catchers will report to Fort Myers on February 10. Pitchers and catchers will hold their first workouts before the rest of the team arrives; Sunday. February 15 will be the first full squad workout for the team before spring training swings into full motion. Before players arrive, however, the yearly tradition known as Truck Day has to take place. The team announced that the festive day will take place February 2. The team also announced that spring training tickets will be available for sale on Thursday, January 8. The Red Sox will play an exhibition game Friday, February 20 against Northeastern University before opening spring training play against the Minnesota Twins the following day. View the full article
  19. As they await an answer from Alex Bregman, might the Boston Red Sox pivot to Bo Bichette in free agency after his former team replaced him with Kazuma Okamoto? View the full article
  20. This section of our top 25 San Diego Padres player assets is quite diverse and perhaps reflects why the team is still trying to get over the hump. From a top prospect to a fan favorite to a newcomer to the U.S., these five players range across the whole spectrum of expectations. This list ranks the 25 Padres players and prospects with this in mind: Who are the most valuable in the organization's pursuit of building a champion? To make this list, we considered age, upside, and contract. Each player's age and control years are based on his Baseball Reference age for the 2026 season and when Baseball Reference says he can become a free agent. For what we wrote in this series previously, check out Nos. 16-20 and 21-25. 15. Jake Cronenworth, 1B/2B 2026 season age: 32 Controlled through: 2030 Everyone loves Cronenworth, especially when he hits the Crone Zone (h/t Don Orsillo). But is it time to have the conversation about Cronenworth's production? Let's start with the obvious: his positional versatility makes him a flexible piece to move around the infield. In 2025, he was mainly the starting second baseman, but also slid over for some first base and even saw action at shortstop. The right side of the infield seems to be his best fit, although new manager Craig Stammen is likely to lean into Cronenworth's ability to play multiple positions. But, are Cronenworth's offensive contributions — which have been lacking since he signed a seven-year, $80 million contract extension following the 2023 season — enough to move the needle? The move was a bit surprising in that it was in the 2023 season where Cronenworth's offense took a step back. After a combined slash line of .256/.338/.431 from 2020-22, his 2023 slumped to a .229/.312/.378 mark with 10 homers and 48 RBIs, both the lowest of any of his full MLB seasons. Of course, he missed all of September that year with a fractured right wrist, but the ink was mostly dry on his stats. Cronenworth bounced back slightly with .241/.324/.390 with 17 homers and 83 RBIs and .246/.367/.377 with 11 homers and 59 RBIs in 2024 and '25, respectively. His most recent campaign was marred by an early-season non-displaced rib fracture that cost him about a month. Still, he put up a 2.4 bWAR this past season, his highest since 2022's 3.9 figure. With his contract running through 2030 while making $12.3 million per year, the Friars could use more offense from him. That price tag also makes Cronenworth a valuable trade chip if the Padres decide to go that route. 14. Sung Mun Song, IF 2026 season age: 29 Controlled through: 2029 Song is the great unknown for the Padres at the moment. Where will he play? Will he move around? Is the outfield a real possibility? How will his offense translate from South Korea to MLB? The good news for the Friars is that the investment in the 29-year-old infielder is low-level, more on par with a backup. The fact that Song, primarily a third baseman in the Korean Baseball Organization, can also play second and first will help with lineup flexibility. In particular, that will give Stammen a presumably reliable option to either rest third baseman Manny Machado or allow Machado to be the designated hitter. It will also provide more matchup opportunities. It was also floated by president of baseball operations A.J. Preller at the press conference announcing the signing that Song could see time in the outfield. That would only add to his and the team's versatility and depth. But offensively is where Song could make the biggest difference. After being rather nondescript in most of his KBO career, Song took off in 2024 and 2025, with slash lines of .340/.409/.518 (19 homers, 104 RBIs) and .315/.387/.530 (26 homers, 90 RBIs), respectively. He also had 21 and 25 steals in those seasons. The lack of previous noteworthy production could mean Song could take time to adjust to MLB. 13. Jason Adam, RHP 2026 season age: 31 Controlled through: 2026 Adam is one of the more unsung relievers in all of MLB. Since joining the Tampa Bay Rays to begin the 2022 season, he has put up a 3.20 FIP, 0.939 WHIP and 196 ERA+. But his 2025 ended Sept. 1 due to a ruptured left quadriceps. Initially, it was thought Adam could miss Opening Day, but an optimistic update in mid-November suggested that he could be ready to go for beginning of the season. That would be huge, as the Padres are expected to have six of their top seven relievers in terms of appearances from 2025 returning, with only closer Robert Suarez exiting the mix after joining Atlanta as a free agent. But Mason Miller will replace Suarez in that closer role, and Adam should be a premier set-up man once again. He uses a good mix of pitches, favoring his slider and changeup while factoring in a four-seamer and sweeper. This is a big season for Adam, as he is arbitration-eligible for the final time before hitting free agency. 12. Ramon Laureano, OF 2026 season age: 31 Controlled through: 2026 Laureano will be one of those guys that you see from a "Remember that Guy" social-media account in about 10 years and you will smile while remembering that he played for the Padres. Laureano is a solid defensive outfielder, with an elite arm and good-enough range that allows him to play any of the three spots, though he's probably more suited for either of the corners. With Fernando Tatis Jr. entrenched in right field following his second NL Platinum Glove in three seasons and young Jackson Merrill holding down center, Laureano will be a lockdown left fielder. He also puts up pretty good offensive numbers. While playing for four teams over the last two seasons, Laureano has logged a .272/.330/.483 slash line with 35 homers and 109 RBIs for a 125 OPS+. That included a .269/.323/.489 mark with nine homers and 30 RBIs in the final two months of the 2025 season with the Padres after coming over at the trade deadline from the Baltimore Orioles with Ryan O'Hearn. That all made it a no-brainer for the Padres to exercise their $6.5 million club option on Laureano for 2026. As long as he performs up to what he has done recently, he could be a candidate to stick around after becoming a free agent after next season. 11. Ethan Salas, C 2026 season age: 20 Controlled through: TBD Salas doesn't turn 20 until June 1, but 2026 marks his fourth season in affiliated ball. Some of the luster has come off of Salas since being the No. 1 prospect in the international free-agent class of 2023, but he still ranks at the very top of the Padres' organization. The Padres have pushed Salas, who appeared at Low-A Lake Elsinore, High-A Fort Wayne and Double-A San Antonio in 2023 as an 18-year-old. In 2024, Salas spent the season back at Fort Wayne, where he was still more than four years younger than the average player. He also played in the Arizona Fall League. Salas only played in 10 games in 2025, all at Double-A, after sustaining a stress fracture in his lower back in spring training. While his defense has been his calling card, his offense still needs a lot of work. In 2023 at High=A, Salas had a .206/.288/.311 slash line with four homers and 53 RBIs in 113 games. He did draw 47 walks, but also struck out 98 times. Salas then hit four more homers in 23 games in the Arizona Fall League, although his slash line was .228/.327/.424. Salas is likely to return to Double-A in 2026. He might be best served to stick the entire season at San Antonio just to build confidence in his approach at the plate. It doesn't make any sense to rush Salas at this point, with Freddy Fermin and Luis Campusano capably holding down the catcher spot in 2026. Also, Fermin is under club control through 2029, Let Salas mature and become the offensive threat the Friars dreamed on when they signed him. The defense is already there. View the full article
  21. Dating back to 2018, I've created these rankings every year in early January. The idea is to take stock of talent throughout the Twins organization to understand what the front office has to work with, and to contextualize how their best players fit in — either as building blocks or trade candidates. In essence, we're trying to answer the question, "Which current players in the organization are most indispensable to fulfilling the vision of building a champion?" We account for age, contract, controllability, upside, etc. It's not exactly a ranking of trade value, because that would be more team-agnostic, whereas this list aims to capture a very Twins-specific point of view. As such, players at areas of scarcity (i.e. shortstop) get elevated, while those at areas of abundance (i.e. lefty-hitting corner outfielders) get downgraded a bit. Going back through the lists year by year (linked below) provides a progressive glimpse into Minnesota's evolving talent landscape. We've seen players rise and fall. We've seen some young players fulfill their promise while others have fallen far short. Putting together the rankings this year, in the aftermath of a major talent overhaul at the trade deadline, has proven to be fascinating. One thing to note up-front is that despite the big purge, the Twins actually didn't trade any of the players who we viewed as most being their most essential (yet). Although Griffin Jax, Jhoan Duran and Carlos Correa were among the team's best players, the first two are relievers and the second is a 30-year-old underperformer on a huge contract, which are big detractors in this analysis. They ranked 10th, 12th and 18th respectively on last year's list. You can review that list, plus the previous seven, below. From there we'll kick off our 2026 list with a look at the players I chose to rank 16th through 20th. Past organizational rankings: Top 20 Minnesota Twins Player Assets of 2025 Top 20 Minnesota Twins Player Assets of 2024 Top 20 Minnesota Twins Player Assets of 2023 Top 20 Minnesota Twins Player Assets of 2022 Top 20 Minnesota Twins Player Assets of 2021 Top 20 Minnesota Twins Player Assets of 2020 Top 20 Minnesota Twins Player Assets of 2019 Top 20 Minnesota Twins Player Assets of 2018 Okay, now let's dive into the 20 Twins players and prospects who are — in my humble opinion — most critical to making this rebuild effort a success, starting with their top draft pick from this past season. The Top 20 Twins Player Assets of 2026: 16-20 20. Marek Houston, SS Age: 21 Controlled through: 2031+ 2025 Ranking: NR When the Twins traded Correa and his contract at the deadline, they committed to a new future course at shortstop. Right now it's not clear exactly how that course will take shape, at least long-term, which is one of the biggest question marks surrounding the team's outlook. In terms of pure ability to play the position, Houston is pretty much unparalleled in the organization. His glove was his ticket to being selected in the mid-first round. Many evaluators believe he could play shortstop defensively in the majors right now. Hitting is where the developmental challenge lies for the Wake Forest product. He held his own at two levels of Single-A, batting .270 in 24 games after being drafted, but posted a .680 OPS with no power. Currently he projects as a light-hitting defensive specialist. That can play at short, but his ceiling will be capped unless he can turn a big corner at the plate. 19. Ryan Jeffers, C Age: 28 Controlled through: 2026 2025 Ranking: 11 Jeffers is on the opposite end of the spectrum from Houston: his value is all tied up in the short-term, but he is proven and essential. The Twins replaced Christian Vazquez with Alex Jackson, leaving Jeffers as the only catcher in the organization with a modicum of hitting ability or track record as a starter. Although his production has been unspectacular the past couple years, Jeffers remains a high-end offensive player at the position: Since 2023 his .772 OPS ranks fifth in the majors among catchers with 1,000+ plate appearances. His defense has declined, detracting from his overall value, but Jeffers is so far-and-away the team's best all-around catching option for the immediate future that losing him would feel like a complete white flag for 2026. There aren't many other players you can singularly say that about. 18. Brooks Lee, SS Age: 24 Controlled through: 2030 2025 Ranking: 6 I want to believe. He just hasn't given us much concrete reason up to this point. Lee's 12-spot drop in the rankings from last year reflects an extremely discouraging first full season in the majors. The production was lackluster and the underlying metrics were uninspiring. Lee has physical limitations — speed and arm strength chief among them — and has shown no capability of offsetting them in the majors. At the same time, he's 24 years old, and a former top draft pick and top prospect. The book is far from closed on him. Lee has shown occasional bursts of power and he can definitely make contact with consistency. He's a credible shortstop and likely a strong defender at second or third. Those are good ingredients to build around. But his overall game is trending the wrong way. 17. Bailey Ober, RHP Age: 30 Controlled through: 2027 2025 Ranking: 3 Another free-fall in the rankings from one year ago. The 2025 season saw Ober struggle with mechanics and health, lose precious ticks of velocity, and post an ERA that was 16% below league average. His strikeout rate plummeted and batters teed off for a career-high 30 home runs in just under 150 innings. Now past 30, Ober no longer has youth on his side. What he does have, though, is a superb track record prior to last year. Ober's ERA was above average in each of his first four MLB seasons and he had developed into a legit frontline starter heading into 2025, which is why this list had him ranked as a top-three organizational asset at the time. His drop-off is alarming in several ways, but we can't dismiss the possibility of a turnaround driven by a velocity uptick or arsenal tweak. 16. Connor Prielipp, LHP Age: 24 Controlled through: 2031+ 2025 Ranking: NR From down-and-out to up-and-coming. Prielipp has yet to make his major-league debut, but it's likely to come this year (maybe even on Opening Day) if he can stay healthy. That's the big hitch: Prielipp originally fell in the draft due to concerns over his health, which have been validated. He's thrown only 113 innings in the minors since joining the Twins org in 2022, after logging just 28 official innings in college at Alabama. Prielipp turns 25 in a few days, and hasn't even thrown 85 innings in a season. That puts him on a pretty surefire relief path, which the Twins haven't really shied away from. But in that role, there seems to be little doubt he can be a major difference-maker, with his explosive fastball/slider combo drawing loose comparisons to Josh Hader. If Minnesota is able to field a capable bullpen in 2026, I believe Prielipp will be a big part of the reason. He just needs to stay healthy. How important do you view these five players to the future of the Minnesota Twins? Share your thoughts in the comments, and check back tomorrow to find my picks for 11th through 15th in the rankings. View the full article
  22. Owen and Jesse break down the Blue Jays' signing of Japanese star Kazuma Okamoto. They dig into why he’s going to help the Jays in the near term, and how it shifts the roles of other players like Addison Barger and Anthony Santander. The guys also talk about how his signing impacts the Blue Jays’ pursuits of other free agents like Kyle Tucker and Bo Bichette. Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-jays-centre-podcast/id1846108462 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3Bi7SzfpcqMo5xYWnbCeoL Listen on iHeartRadio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-the-jays-centre-podcast-300304824/ Listen on Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/2qk9wqxd Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@jayscentre View the full article
  23. The Toronto Blue Jays made their four-year, $60 million contract with NPB star Kazuma Okamoto official on Sunday, just before his posting window closed. A six-time NPB All-Star, Okamoto was one of the top hitters on the free agent market. data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAPABAP///wAAACH5BAEKAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw== To make room for Okamoto on their 40-man roster, the Jays designated right-handed pitcher Paxton Schultz for assignment. The 28-year-old has been in the organization since May 2021, when he arrived from the Brewers as the player to be named later to complete the Derek Fisher trade. The Jays had acquired Fisher two years earlier in a deal that sent Aaron Sanchez, Joe Biagini, and Cal Stevenson to the Astros. (You can read more about active Blue Jays trade strings at this link.) Schultz made his MLB debut with Toronto in 2025, pitching to a 4.38 ERA and 3.83 xERA over 24.2 innings. He struck out 28 batters (25.5%) and walked only eight (7.3%). In his very first outing, Schultz threw 4.1 innings of scoreless relief against the Mariners, striking out eight of the 16 hitters he faced. Unfortunately, he never looked that sharp again. Following a mid-summer IL stint with middle finger inflammation, the righty only made one more appearance for the major league club, a scoreless inning on August 24. He was recalled once more in September but did not pitch in a game, nor did he pitch for Toronto in the playoffs. With all that in mind, it's not a shock to see Schultz DFA'd. He gave the Blue Jays some good innings in 2025, but roster spots are a valuable commodity. The Jays have significantly improved their pitching staff this offseason, not only with the likes of Dylan Cease, Cody Ponce, and Tyler Rogers, but also more promising depth arms like Chase Lee and Spencer Miles. Eventually, Schultz became the odd man out. If Schultz clears waivers, the Blue Jays will be able to outright him to the minors and keep him in their organization. However, considering the promise he flashed in 2025, it wouldn't be surprising to see another team put in a claim. Featured image courtesy of Dan Hamilton, Imagn Images. View the full article
  24. The Winter Meltdown returns bigger and better than ever. New venue. New surprises. New 2026 pint glass. Same electric Twins Daily energy you look forward to every year. This is the offseason celebration built by fans, for fans — and you’ll want to be there when it all melts down (in the best way possible). Fresh details will drop soon right here on Twins Daily. Consider this your official heads-up: mark your calendar now. Sign up to take care of Twins Daily. Tickets sell fast. Memories last forever. When & Where Date: Saturday, January 24 Time: 4:00 – 9:00 PM Location: A brand-new spot in downtown Minneapolis — just blocks from Target Field. And yes, it’s the same weekend as TwinsFest. That means you can soak up the full fan experience at Target Field, then stroll over to the Meltdown to top off the day with the ultimate afterparty. Each ticket includes: Two complimentary craft beers An exclusive Winter Meltdown 2026 pint glass Automatic entry into door prize raffles Five hours of premium Hot Stove hangouts with your people Live on-stage interviews hosted by Aaron Gleeman & John Bonnes Face time with special guests who mingle with the Twins Daily community Past guests have included Kent Hrbek, Trevor Plouffe, Joe Nathan, Michael Cuddyer, LaTroy Hawkins, John Bonnes, Aaron Gleeman, and more — plus rising stars like Simeon Woods Richardson and fan-favorite voice Cory Provus. Who’s stepping to the mic this year? Stay tuned. How/Tickets Hundreds of people have previously wanted to attend this exclusive event, but this year, we only have 250 tickets available. You will likely need to become (or know) a Twins Daily Caretaker to get a ticket. Each caretaker gets a free ticket to the Meltdown. Caretakers can buy up to three additional tickets for just $20 The Caretakers take care of Twins Daily, and we want to take care of them, so to give them the best chance, we're limiting the tickets to them, at least for now. If you want to join Twins Daily's Caretakers, you can do so for as low as $4/month. You get exclusive content, other benefits, and support from our hard-working writers, moderators, and tech guys. We would LOVE to have you join us. Can I Just Buy A Ticket? Maybe? If our Caretakers don't sell this thing out, we'll offer general admission tickets the week of the event. Last year we couldn't. But if we can, they'll be $60 apiece. Become a Caretaker here! If you're already a Caretaker, THANK YOU. We’ll get you your special link soon. But once we do, please don't delay in buying your ticket. We'll likely sell out, even limiting them to Caretakers and their friends. Looking for more details? Great! We'll reveal more about the Meltdown as it approaches, including our guests, special brewery, giveaways, and other sponsors. We'll soon reveal our new location, closer to TwinsFest and Target Field than ever before. You won't want to miss it! So follow us on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, or Bluesky for more news as it's released. Plus, stop by all week as we reveal details. View the full article
  25. Welcome to part five of North Side Baseball’s offseason series covering the 1918 Chicago Cubs. You can find the first four parts here: Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Part 4 Today, we’ll be taking a look at the life and career of Les Mann. Mann was an outfielder for the Cubs from the 1916 season until he was dealt to the Boston Braves during the 1919 season. Coming off of an epic championship game in 2023 that pitted Mike Trout against Shohei Ohtani in the ninth inning, the 2026 World Baseball Classic is starting to gather a lot of hype. The United States will be bringing arguably their best collection of talent ever in an effort to avenge their loss in that 2023 final game to Japan. And that fails to mention the stacked lineup that the Dominican Republic may field. The World Baseball Classic is sanctioned by the World Baseball Softball Confederation, which was created from a merger earlier this century between the International Baseball Federation and the International Softball Federation. The International Baseball Federation was created in 1938, thanks in large part to the work of Leslie Mann. Mann was born in Lincoln, Nebraska on November 18, 1892. He attended the Y.M.C.A. College in Springfield, Massachusetts. It was there where he would begin an illustrious career in athletics. In November of 1916, The Pittsburgh Press declared Mann as “one of the best football players the training school ever had.” According to his Society for American Baseball Research biography, with Mann being so close by, the Boston Braves took note of his athletic prowess and signed him to a contract that would pay him $150 per month. After a rough first couple of seasons with the Braves, Mann signed with the Chicago Whales of the Federal League, where he helped them win the 1915 pennant. After the Federal League disbanded, the outfielder found himself with the Cubs. Mann was serviceable, but not great, in his three plus seasons with the Cubs, with his best season coming in 1918. He posted a .288/.342/.384 batting line, which was 18 percent above league average, according to wRC+ at FanGraphs. His 2.3 FanGraphs WAR for that season was a major-league career high. He also put up 2.3 fWAR in the 1921 season with the St. Louis Cardinals, and while he did manage a 4.3 fWAR season in 1915, that was during his lone season in the Federal League. In 1922, Mann was with the Cardinals. They found themselves in a battle for first place with the New York Giants when Mann received a letter from his old 1918 Cubs teammate, Phil Douglas. Douglas, who did not get along with his manager, John McGraw, told Mann to “send a man over here with the goods and I will leave for home on the next train.” Rather than taking Douglas up on his offer, Mann turned his former teammate in. Douglas was banned from baseball for life until he was posthumously reinstated last May. In total, Mann finished his career with 1,332 hits, however, it is his post-playing career that is truly remarkable. As reported by SABR, the Nebraska native had a passion for youth sports, and even organized a baseball school. At the Leslie Mann Coaching System, he was one of the first adopters of film to enhance baseball teaching. He invented the Mannscope, which was a patented device that could stop film on a specific frame to allow for teaching. The Mannscope, which the National Baseball Hall of Fame is currently in possession of, sounds to me like the earliest form of an edgertronic camera. As stated in the patent for the device, and as listed on the Hall of Fame’s website, the camera allows for “plenty of time to thoroughly explain each play or movement shown on the screen before passing to the next one.” Being a huge advocate for making baseball international, Mann was determined to make baseball an Olympic sport. His efforts led to an exhibition at the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, and Mann even convinced the International Olympic Committee to make baseball an official Olympic sport at the 1940 Games. Those Games, though, were cancelled due to World War II. The World Baseball Softball Confederation, which sanctions the aforementioned World Baseball Classic and is the governing body for baseball and softball internationally, credits Mann as the “father of international baseball” on their website, as well as with proposing and launching the original International Baseball Federation, where he was the inaugural president. A lot of baseball’s worldwide popularity now is thanks to Les Mann’s efforts back in the first half of the 1900s. View the full article
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