Twins Could Cash In On One Breakout Piece At Deadline

As the trade deadline looms, the Minnesota Twins face intriguing decisions over several underrated talents who could significantly alter their playoff trajectory.

With the August 3 trade deadline drawing closer, the Twins are no longer easy to label. After last summer’s major sell-off and a quiet offseason, they looked like obvious sellers again. Instead, they’ve hung around, stayed afloat, and put together a better stretch heading into the All-Star break than plenty of people expected.

That has left Minnesota in a murkier spot, and it has also widened the conversation beyond the obvious names. Joe Ryan and Ryan Jeffers have drawn plenty of attention as possible trade chips, while Byron Buxton is not on this list, no matter how many times he gets asked about waiving his no-trade clause.

But the Twins have other pieces that could matter if they decide to move in a different direction. A few of them sit a little further under the radar.

Randy Clemens is one of the most interesting. The Bottle Rocket has been a key part of Minnesota’s lineup for the last two seasons, and his 2026 season has helped drive the club’s offensive improvement.

He’s hitting .242/.303/.482 with 16 home runs, production that has been roughly 14% better than league average. He also brings defensive value on the right side of the diamond and across the outfield, which broadens the market for him.

The appeal is obvious. Clemens has been exactly the kind of affordable win the Twins have needed in recent years. The harder question is whether this is as good as it gets.

If it is, then Minnesota may want to sell high on a 30-year-old who is still under club control for three more years. That could mean using him as the centerpiece of a mid-level deal or as a secondary piece in something bigger. A move like that would also open the door for prospects such as Kaelen Culpepper and Walker Jenkins to move closer to MLB opportunities.

Then there’s 19-year-old catcher Thaddeus Tait, who arrived in last year’s sell-off when the Twins landed him and Mick Abel from the deal that sent superstar closer Jhoan Duran away. At the time, Tait looked like a long-term answer behind the plate and a player who wouldn’t be near the majors for years. His name has shown up on plenty of global top-100 prospect lists, which made him a useful piece for a rebuilding club.

The picture has changed some since then. Minnesota drafted Vahn Lackey, 21, this year, and he’s a year older and closer to the big leagues. The source material says Lackey brings a higher floor and ceiling, stronger defense, and a bat that stood out over three collegiate seasons to the point that he was in the discussion for best overall talent in this year’s draft pool.

The Twins also added another college catcher, Carson Tinney, whose raw power is described as among the best in this year’s draft class. With those two now in the system, Tait may not be quite as essential as he once looked. That doesn’t make him expendable by default, but it does make him a name worth watching if Minnesota decides to explore the market while his prospect shine still carries weight.

The return would have to be right, of course. If another club views Tait as its catcher of the future, the Twins could use him to help land a marquee reliever or veteran starter, just as they did a year ago.

Luke Keaschall is the wild card. This one is a longshot, and his name has not really been floated as a trade piece. Still, the idea becomes more interesting the more you look at Minnesota’s situation.

The Twins are in a more competitive spot than expected, but if they want to separate from the crowded middle of the American League standings, they would need a true difference-maker. That kind of addition would cost real prospect capital. Keaschall is no longer technically a prospect, but at 23 and under club control for at least five more years, he still fits that general bucket.

He’s also playing better after a slow start. Over the last month, Keaschall has hit .304/.434/.455, which has been 54% better than league average. His move to the outfield is still being sorted out, but the early signs suggest he may fit better on the grass than on the infield dirt.

There are also roster pressures that could shape his future. Culpepper and Marek Houston are pushing up through the upper minors, which could move Keaschall out of the infield for good. At the same time, the eventual arrivals of Jenkins and Emmanuel Rodriguez, along with an already crowded big-league outfield, could make him harder to fit into Minnesota’s long-term plans.

So yes, a selling club could absolutely ask about Keaschall in a blockbuster. And yes, Jeremy Zoll would be wise to listen if another team comes calling. Whether the Twins would actually move such a talented young player with that much cheap control is the real question.

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