Twins Pitching Depth Suddenly Has A Farm System Development To Watch

As the Minnesota Twins' minor league pitchers make impressive strides, standout performances in June spotlight the depth and potential of the team's rising stars.

June brought a clear theme for the Twins’ farm system: pitching depth mattered, and a few arms answered the call in a big way. Some were rewarded with promotions, others settled in after uneven starts, and Minnesota kept getting useful innings from across the ladder.

The month’s top spot went to left-hander Aaron Rozek, who turned in the kind of stretch that makes an organization take notice. The Burnsville native split time between Double-A and Triple-A earlier in the season before landing in the Saints’ rotation as injuries opened the door in the upper levels.

Once he moved into a starting role, the results sharpened fast. His ERA as a starter has been 1.39 runs lower, and his WHIP has dropped by 0.67 compared to his relief work.

Rozek’s June line was strong across the board: 2.89 ERA, 28 innings, 27 strikeouts, 11 walks, 1.18 WHIP and a .220 batting average against in six games. He held opponents to a .706 OPS and gave up two earned runs or fewer in five of his six starts.

He also posted a season-high 11 swinging strikes on June 19. At 30, he’s more than two and a half years older than the average International League player, but that didn’t make the month any less valuable.

With the Twins already leaning hard on their pitching depth, Rozek put himself in position to help if the major league club needs innings later.

Right behind him was Jason Reitz, whose profile is impossible to miss. The 6-foot-11 right-hander, selected in the fourth round out of Oregon last summer, didn’t pitch after signing, so 2026 has been his professional debut.

The Twins have handled him carefully, but the workload has started to stretch out. In June, he pitched into the fourth inning in three of his four starts and showed the kind of extension on the mound that has scouts intrigued.

Reitz finished the month with a 1.88 ERA over 14 1/3 innings, along with 11 strikeouts, five walks, a 0.84 WHIP and a .149 batting average against. His stuff kept missing bats, too, including a season-high nine swinging strikes on June 20. He also limited opponents to a .507 OPS for the month, another sign that the early professional returns are trending in the right direction.

St. Paul right-hander Grant Hartwig checked in at No. 3 after a month that looked a lot more like the pitcher the Twins expected to have in the upper minors.

His previous major league experience showed up in the best way: calm, efficient, and dependable. Opposing hitters had been over .320 against him in the season’s first two months, but June flipped everything.

He held hitters to a .132 average and a .353 OPS while not issuing a walk in 11 1/3 innings.

Hartwig’s month included eight appearances, a 0.79 ERA, 11 strikeouts, a 0.44 WHIP and no runs allowed in seven of those outings. He also gave the Saints length, working more than one inning in four appearances. That kind of versatility makes him a useful upper-level option, and the Twins could certainly think about him for a bullpen role in the second half.

Marco Raya came in at No. 4 after a major turnaround of his own. The right-hander has been on Minnesota’s prospect radar since the Twins drafted him out of high school in 2020, and 2026 is his first full season working strictly out of the bullpen after years developing as a starter. The early returns were rough, with an ERA north of 11.00 in April, but he trimmed that to 4.08 in May and then took another big step in June.

Raya threw eight scoreless innings across eight games, striking out nine and walking two while posting a 0.83 WHIP and a .190 batting average against. He earned his first call to the major leagues after that stretch.

Command has long been the hurdle for Raya, even though the arm talent has never been in doubt. If he keeps limiting walks and throwing strikes the way he did in June, his bullpen outlook gets a lot more interesting.

The month also included a few honorable mentions. C.J.

Culpepper of the Saints posted an 8-game line of 1.54 ERA, 11 2/3 innings, 11 strikeouts and six walks. Sam Armstrong of the Wind Surge logged six games with a 3.12 ERA over 26 innings, 21 strikeouts and nine walks.

Justin Mitrovich of the Mighty Mussels turned in four outings with a 3.44 ERA in 18 1/3 innings, 25 strikeouts and eight walks.

June showed how much better Minnesota’s pitching pipeline has looked when several arms are moving in the right direction at once. Raya reached the majors after his rebound, Hartwig re-established himself as reliable depth, Reitz kept building through a careful debut, and Rozek emerged as one of the Saints’ most dependable starters. With two months left in the minor league season, there’s still time for more movement, and these four have already made a strong case to be part of what comes next.

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