Walker Jenkins reached Class AA at 19 years old, totaled more walks than strikeouts while accumulating only 11 plate appearances against pitchers who were younger than him, and he’s now rated as a consensus top-10 prospect in the minor leagues.
Despite trade speculation surrounding the former All-Star third baseman this offseason, St. Louis could enter the season with him on their 26-man roster. If so, could their roster crunch lead to the Twins poaching a hard-hitting left-handed bat?
The consensus prospect rankings around Major League Baseball make it clear that Minnesota has three prospects who stand out above the rest: Walker Jenkins, Emmanuel Rodrguez and Luke Keaschall. However,
For the Minnesota Twins on-field product, no news is not good news. Cash-strapped by the Pohlad family’s self-imposed budget, the team awaits a savior owner with pockets deep enough to keep them competitive.
The Minnesota Twins must find a new right fielder after Max Kepler signed with the Philadelphia Phillies this offseason. Coaches and the front office need to get creative to decide who will take over for Kepler in right field.
A week or so ago, Dan Hayes wrote that the Padres were interested in Christian Vázquez, and added (almost as an afterthought) that the Twins were also discussing trading for Dylan Cease. For many fans,
The Minnesota Twins are going with a familiar Opening Day starter again when they kick off their 2025 MLB campaign.
With all that out of the way, let's get to ranking the top three prospects in the Minnesota Twins system.
A year ago around this time Cory Provus was being introduced as the new broadcast voice of the Minnesota Twins. That news was exciting, but became watered down after his proclamations of no blackouts proved to be untrue.
Baseball America is the first major outlet to drop their top 100 prospects list for 2025. The Minnesota Twins remain well-represented, landing FOUR players in the top 100. Most im
The package can be purchased by the month or for the season, and it can be Twins games or nearly every major league game.
Watching the Minnesota Twins in 2025 will cost fans $99.99 for the entire season or $19.99 a month. Twins games will be available via cable, satellite and streaming providers through MLB's direct-to-consumer option. Twins.TV will be the place to sign up once subscriptions are offered to consumers starting Feb. 11.