The Twins are going to be without Anthony Banda for a long stretch, and manager Derek Shelton made it clear this is not a short-term situation.
Minnesota placed the left-hander on the 15-day injured list today with what Shelton described to Matthew Leach of MLB.com as a significant lat strain. The recovery timeline is measured in months, not weeks. Right-hander Cody Laweryson was recalled in the corresponding move.
Banda, 32, came to the Twins in a February trade from the Dodgers and has worked 34 1/3 innings this season. He owns a 4.46 ERA, along with a 21.2% strikeout rate and a 9.6% walk rate, numbers that sit close to league average.
Even without elite production, losing Banda matters for a Minnesota bullpen that has already been stretched thin. The Twins dealt away most of that unit at last year’s deadline, sending out Jhoan Duran, Griffin Jax, Louis Varland, Brock Stewart and Danny Coulombe. They didn’t add much to the group before 2026, and the results have been ugly: Minnesota’s relievers have a 5.45 ERA, worst in the majors.
That backdrop makes Banda’s injury more painful than the raw stat line might suggest. The Twins are still hanging around in a weak American League race despite a 40-45 record, sitting just two games out of a playoff spot. For now, Taylor Rogers and Kody Funderburk are the club’s left-handed relief options.
The injury also clouds Banda’s own outlook. He was already a player on the roster fringe, and his path forward now gets even murkier.
He pitched for the Dodgers in last year’s postseason but struggled there, and Los Angeles tendered him an arbitration deal for 2026 at $1.625MM before designating him for assignment in February. That sequence opened the door to his move to Minnesota.
The Twins can keep Banda through 2027 via arbitration, but whether they will is an open question. His performance has been useful rather than overpowering, and with only three months left in the season, there’s a real chance he doesn’t return before the offseason. Since arbitration salaries almost never dip, Minnesota may soon have to decide whether Banda is worth another bump in pay.
In Other News...
Dodgers Suddenly Have A New Dalton Rushing Concern Against Padres
Dalton Rushing gave the Dodgers a boost in a 15-3 win over the Padres, going deep as part of a night that reinforced why the club has liked his bat. Even with the home run, though, the at-bat drew attention for reasons that had nothing to do with power, as the rookie looked uncomfortable enough for the Dodgers to take a closer look.
Dave Roberts and the team trainer eventually came out to check on him, and Rushing did not seem to want the interruption. He repeatedly waved them off and showed plenty of irritation in the moment, which leaves the Dodgers with at least a little concern heading out of a game that otherwise felt lopsided in their favor. [Read more 🡒]
Dodgers Make Another Statement Against Padres In Rivalry Win
The weekend finale between the Dodgers and Padres had the familiar edge of a division rivalry, and Los Angeles came away with another useful reminder of why these games still matter. A 4-2 win in San Diego gave the Dodgers the series edge for the season, with Emmet Sheehan working effectively on the mound and Mookie Betts providing the kind of multi-hit, run-producing night that keeps the offense moving in tight games.
Edgardo Henriquez finished it off with his first save of the season, a small but notable step in a bullpen role that can change quickly in a long summer. The Dodgers also had to keep surviving late pressure as the Padres kept finding ways to put runners in position to turn the game, which only added to the sense that this was less a tidy win than another hard-earned statement in a rivalry that rarely stays quiet for long. [Read more 🡒]
Dodgers Have One Lingering Pitching Question Fans Can't Ignore
The Dodgers are wrapping up a nine-game road trip in Sacramento with a three-game set against the Athletics, and the trip already has the feel of one that has done plenty to steady the club. They have clinched a winning road swing and keep sitting comfortably atop the NL West, so the focus is less on survival and more on fine-tuning the rotation as the schedule keeps moving.
Monday brings another look at the depth that has carried them through stretches of the season, with Lauer on the mound after six hitless innings in his last outing and a strong run since joining the Dodgers after being designated for assignment by Toronto. The middle game pairs Justin Wrobleski with Jeffrey Springs, who has been giving up too many home runs, and then Wednesday offers the part of the series that will draw the most attention as Shohei Ohtani is set to pitch while trying to bounce back from a rough stretch. [Read more 🡒]
