Alan Roden’s first season with the Twins has been a constant fight against bad timing.
Since coming over from the Blue Jays at last summer’s trade deadline in the deal that sent Louis Varland and Ty France to Toronto, Roden has spent more time battling setbacks than settling into a role. Injuries have interrupted him, roster traffic has blocked him, and just when one opening appeared, another obstacle showed up.
His first look in Minnesota lasted only 12 games before a season-ending thumb injury shut him down. The production wasn’t much to write home about - a .463 OPS in that stretch - but the sample was so small it barely told the story. The bigger takeaway was that his real chance would have to wait.
When spring training arrived, Roden made a strong push to change that. He was one of the Twins’ better hitters in camp, batting .302 and reaching base at a steady clip.
The power numbers weren’t loud, but that was never really the point with Roden. The appeal has always been his strike-zone control, his ability to put together good at-bats and his dependable defense in the outfield.
Even that wasn’t enough to crack the Opening Day roster. He was sent to Triple-A, where the season took another turn about a month in.
After a solid start, Roden tore the labrum in his throwing shoulder and missed roughly six weeks. Another injury.
Another pause. Another delay.
Still, he kept producing once he got back. And when Byron Buxton went on the injured list, Roden finally got another shot with the big club.
He made it count immediately, lining a walk-off single off the wall in right-center against Cleveland in his first game back. It was one of the Twins’ most memorable moments of the season.
Now the question is what happens next.
Buxton is eligible to return from the IL any time as the second half begins, and that puts Roden in a vulnerable spot. He could be sent back to the minors, or at the very least see his playing time shrink in the outfield.
There’s a case for keeping him around. Roden works counts, makes hard contact and gives you solid defense.
That kind of player can help a team even without big home run totals. The issue isn’t really the skill set.
It’s whether the timing ever lines up long enough for those skills to matter.
At 26, Roden is no longer a brand-new name, and the major league track record is still thin: 169 plate appearances, a .193/.266/.287 slash line and a .553 OPS. That doesn’t close the book on him.
Plenty of hitters need time to figure things out. But it also doesn’t leave a lot of room for blind optimism.
The best-case scenario for Roden would be getting the rest of the 2026 season to show what he can do. There may be room for that if the Twins move Trevor Larnach or Kody Clemens before the trade deadline, or if either player leaves in the near future. That would open up more at-bats in the corner outfield spots, which is exactly the kind of runway Roden has rarely had since joining the organization.
But the competition is real, and it’s coming fast.
Walker Jenkins, Emmanuel Rodriguez and Hendry Mendez are all waiting in the wings, and Roden has spent much of the year around them in Triple-A. Each one hits left-handed, just like Roden.
Jenkins and Rodriguez have played center field in the minors, though it’s hard to picture either one taking over there while Buxton is healthy. Short of an injury, or the much less likely possibility of a Buxton trade, their path is probably through a corner spot.
Of that group, Rodriguez still looks like the most likely to debut later this season if he gets back from injury soon. Jenkins, and especially Mendez, are a little less likely to arrive before year’s end, though the Twins could still decide they want a longer look at either one before 2027. That’s what makes the coming months so important for Roden.
He isn’t just trying to prove he belongs. He’s trying to hold off three of the organization’s top prospects for playing time. That’s a steep climb, especially when those players are viewed as part of the franchise’s future.
Roden has enough going for him to make the idea of a productive big-league outfielder easy to see. The problem is that baseball doesn’t wait around forever.
The Twins have talent on the way, and those players will need opportunities too. For Roden, the next stretch may decide whether he’s still in the picture when that future arrives.
In Other News...
Cubs Fans Cant Believe What Live TV Caught At Wrigley
A routine Twins-Cubs matchup at Wrigley turned into something much stranger when a fan in the crowd drew more attention than the baseball on the field. Minnesota had its own highlights in the game, with Ryan Jeffers delivering a three-run homer and Bailey Ober working through a solid outing, but the broadcast ended up catching a moment that quickly took on a life of its own once viewers started talking about it online.
The shirt at the center of the buzz was provocative enough to set off a wave of disbelief and jokes from fans who saw the clip circulate on social media. For a game that already had enough going on between two familiar opponents, the unexpected bit of background theater became the side story people could not stop discussing, and it added another odd chapter to a day that will be remembered for more than just the final score. [Read more 🡒]
Twins Could Cash In On One Breakout Piece At Deadline
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Matt Wallner fits that description neatly after a breakout stretch that has put him on the radar as a possible sell-high piece, and his club control only adds to the appeal for any team looking beyond this season. Spencer Tait is another name to watch if the Twins decide to use their catching depth as leverage, while Luke Keaschall remains more of a longshot unless a truly massive offer changes the conversation. [Read more 🡒]
Twins Suddenly Have Another Royce Lewis Concern As Buxton Hope Builds
Royce Lewis was back in the Twins lineup at first base the previous day, but he was out again against the Cubs because of left hamstring soreness, another reminder of how fragile Minnesotas infield picture can get when one of its most dynamic bats is less than 100 percent. The timing matters, too, because the club is still trying to manage Lewis carefully while keeping his offense in the lineup as much as possible.
There was at least a more encouraging sight elsewhere in the organization, with Byron Buxton doing baseball activities as part of his rehab from a right hip strain. Minnesota also has several pitchers working back on rehab assignments, including Cole Sands, Julian Merryweather and Garrett Acton, giving the Twins a few more moving parts to monitor as they wait for healthier days. [Read more 🡒]
