As the Aug. 3 Trade Deadline gets closer, the Twins don’t look like a club that has to choose between buying and selling. They may have enough moving parts to do a little of both.
That’s the reality facing general manager Jeremy Zoll and Minnesota’s front office, with the possibility of dealing a veteran or two while also plugging holes on the big league roster. A straight prospect-for-pitching move is still on the table, but so is the harder, more complicated kind of deal: a Major League player going out and a Major League player coming back.
The market around them only adds to the uncertainty. In the American League, no team is more than eight games out of a playoff spot, and 11 of the 15 clubs are within 4 1/2 games.
At the top, no division leader is ahead by more than 2 1/2 games. That kind of crowded race blurs the line between buyers and sellers, and the Twins sit right in the middle of it.
“How many teams have truly declared a position,” Zoll said, “whether they’ve literally said it publicly? You can probably say three, maybe four. And beyond that, everyone’s going to wait as long as they can."
Minnesota’s roster shape makes the picture even more unusual. The pitching side has been stretched thin, while the lineup side has a different problem: too many big league-ready bats and not enough places to put them. The outfield is the clearest example, though the infield has some of the same issue.
That opens the door to a Deadline that doesn’t fit the usual labels. The Twins could deal for help on the mound and still move a position player from an area of depth. That would make sense in a system where several hitters are waiting for a path to playing time.
Trevor Larnach or Matt Wallner could be moved to help address pitching. Wallner, Alan Roden and the Twins' No. 1 prospect Walker Jenkins are all in the mix for future opportunities, and the current production from Larnach, Byron Buxton and Kody Clemens, among others, has kept those openings from materializing. In the infield, Kaelen Culpepper, the No. 2 prospect, has dealt with injuries, but he would also appear ready for a role if one became available.
That leaves Minnesota with a third option that feels very real: not purely buying, not purely selling, but threading the needle between the two. The Twins could move an infielder or outfielder, trust their internal replacements, and still add the pitching depth they need.
It sounds simple in theory, but it rarely works out that way. There’s a reason “old-fashioned baseball trade” is still a phrase people use. Matching up needs is hard, and making a Major League-for-Major League deal is even harder.
“I agree with that for sure,” Zoll said. “It … might create some unique opportunities, or just help in conversations where teams aren’t trying to trade for a set of A-ball prospects or things along those lines.
“But we’ve also seen the last couple of offseasons, where 27 of the 30 teams are buying, and there’s not true sellers. You spend a lot of time talking Major League for Major League trades, and it’s really hard to line up.”
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