The Twins on Monday became the last major league team (of the 28 taking part) to unveil their new Nike-branded City Connect uniforms. But it seems more accurate to consider them the first team to take the project in a different direction.
“We did this as a State Connect” uniform, said Heather Hinkel, the Twins vice president of brand marketing, who helped coordinate the three-year-long design process with Nike. “We didn’t pick a city, we leaned into the whole state of Minnesota.”
The result is a predominantly blue uniform, with bright yellow highlights, meant to represent the “Land of 10,000 Lakes” nickname of the Twins’ home state.
The sobriquet is even sewed into the back of the new blue caps, and nowhere on the uniform do the words “Twins,” “Twin Cities” or “Minnesota” appear. The front of the jersey simply uses the postal code MN to identify the team, with the North Star between the white letters, and the cap features the outline of the state, with waves, northern lights and the North Star within.

Like each of the City Connects rolled out since the program began in 2021, the jerseys include numerous details, some subtle and some obvious, meant to reflect the unique qualities of each team’s market. In the Twins’ case, the most conspicuous touch is the pattern of undulating stripes, in a variety of blue shades, across the jerseys, meant to evoke the ripples and waves of a lake’s surface.
The yellow on the bill of the cap, belts, socks and a stripe down the side of the blue pants — oh, and the Nike logo — suggests the reflection of the sun on a lake’s water, Hinkel said.
An image of a loon, the state bird, adorns a sleeve patch, and on the underside of the cap’s bill, the outline of Lake Minnetonka — a nod to Prince, Hinkel said, who in the movie “Purple Rain” tells Apollonia, “You have to purify yourself in the waters of Lake Minnetonka.”

“It’s cool they integrated the lakes, and the vision is to bring the whole state together. That’s a really great idea,” said righthander Joe Ryan, who offered some ideas of his own during the design process. “They did a good job capturing Minnesota, and I’m excited to put them on.”