Until Aaron Nola signed a seven-year, $172 million contract with the Phillies on Sunday, it was a relatively quiet start to Major League Baseball's offseason.
The beginning of the Twins' winter, after claiming their first postseason series in 21 years, started with President of Baseball Operations Derek Falvey confirming the club will lower its payroll for the upcoming season. The Twins carried a club-record payroll above $155 million this year, and indications are it could drop by about $30 million, which will likely lead to some trades to create some payroll flexibility.
The Twins already have about $125 million committed toward their roster for the upcoming season, which makes players such as Jorge Polanco, Kyle Farmer, Max Kepler and Christian Vázquez trade candidates.
Payroll questions were the theme of this Twins mailbag. Questions can be submitted through email to bobby.nightengale@startribune.com or through X (formerly Twitter) to @nightengalejr.
Onto the mailbag:
If/when the Twins land a new broadcast/streaming deal, will that change the math on how much they're willing to spend in free agency? Or are Falvey's comments just assuming a deal won't affect it much regardless? — @JohnLanoVoice
The expiration of the Twins' TV contract with Diamond Sports Group, Bally Sports North's parent company, is a factor for the Twins shedding payroll, but it's not the only reason they're cutting back. Falvey said there is a "natural ebb and flow" when payroll is pushed to a club-record level, so they were already looking at reducing it.
Diamond Sports paid the Twins $54.8 million during the 2023 season, and it's difficult to imagine a new broadcast/streaming deal that would pay them that much up front. Their next TV deal should make them much more available on cable and satellite providers, and there will likely be a direct-to-consumer option without blackouts, but the TV landscape changed a lot since the Twins agreed to their last TV deal in 2011.