And so the Twins' shortstop on Opening Day next March 31 in Kansas City will be the same one it has been for the past couple of decades: TBD.
This is a franchise, after all, that has used 14 different starting shortstops over the past 19 Opening Days, more than any other team, and only twice in that time the same one in two consecutive seasons.
That's the state of affairs, and not an unexpected one, the Twins find themselves in after Carlos Correa auctioned off the remainder of his so-far-stellar major-league career — 13 more years if the Giants want him that long, but the paycheck is guaranteed either way — for $350 million, the second-richest commitment in MLB history.
The Twins, according to MLB Network, were willing to lavish $285 million on Correa, $101 million more than Joe Mauer's franchise-record contract, but still were outbid by $65 million.
It's disappointing, certainly, for a team that, after lucking into a star player who needed a short-term landing spot last spring, watched him post the second-highest OPS of any shortstop in Twins history. His team-leading .834 ranked behind only Jorge Polanco's .841 in 2019, when he started the All-Star Game at the position.
But if there's a salve to the pain of losing Correa, it's this: It was the Twins' plan from the start. Or at least, their expectation.
The team had no illusions, particularly as they paid Correa the highest salary for an infielder ever, $35.1 million, that agent Scott Boras would offer any discounts to Minnesota if they pursued Correa beyond 2022. And the bidding, they understood, figured to reach a stratosphere the Twins are unfamiliar with.
"Listen, Carlos 'works' for 30 clubs," Derek Falvey, president of baseball operations, said on the day Correa signed his Twins contract. "Some teams have really good shortstops, that's no disrespect to anyone. But Carlos fits on every team in baseball."