NEW YORK – The Twins will trust their own rotation depth to get them to the playoffs and beyond, and they will stick with the outfielders they’ve got. Same goes for the bullpen, with one exception.
“We had a lot of time spent on deals that ultimately didn’t come to pass,” Twins President of Baseball Operations Derek Falvey said Tuesday after closing only one deal, to acquire Blue Jays reliever Trevor Richards for a Class A infielder, during one of the busiest MLB trade-deadline periods in years. “I believe in our group. Rocco [Baldelli, the manager] does. I know the players believe in themselves. I feel like this is a group that we want to go to battle with.”
Maybe so, but Falvey admitted he tried to upgrade certain areas of the team, particularly the rotation. But with so many competitors for the few pitchers available, the cost in prime prospects was high — higher than Falvey was prepared to pay.
“When you make those deals, you’re giving up something that could contribute down the line for something you hope will impact you in the short term,” Falvey said. “In many cases, [teams asked for] the top of our top [tier of prospects], and ultimately, we said that for short-term rentals and situations like that, that wasn’t something that we really wanted to touch.”
Falvey denied that the Twins’ payroll level scuttled any potential deals, saying that the Pohlad family that owns the team has never turned down a pending trade for financial reasons.
“That was not something that came to pass over the last 24 to 48 hours here, something that was presented to us that was limited financially,” he said. “We were definitely targeting certain types of players that we thought could really impact us and those deals didn’t come together. It wasn’t about financial conversations.”
In fact, he added, the Twins tried to put together a couple of deals that involved more than one other team — “spent a lot of time on those, actually,” he said — only to see them snag during negotiations.
As for the new piece
Richards cost the Twins 23-year-old Jay Harry, their sixth-round pick last summer from Penn State. Richards was a good pickup, Falvey said, for a bullpen that mostly lacks a multi-inning option.