The Twins made their first trade of the summer Wednesday, swapping reliever Jorge López for Marlins reliever Dylan Floro, and they will continue to be active in trade talks leading into Tuesday's 5 p.m. deadline.
Adding more depth to the bullpen is a priority for all contenders, but one of the primary questions surrounding the Twins is how they will address their offense. Inconsistency ruled throughout the first half of the season, but they're averaging 5.9 runs per game following the All-Star break.
Even before the offense surged, Derek Falvey, the Twins' president of baseball operations, said they were primarily searching for a "complementary bat" — likely a righthanded-hitting outfielder. That continues to be an option, but it's possible they may not make a move for a position player with Jorge Polanco returning from the injured list as early as Friday and Royce Lewis progressing from an oblique strain.
"We obviously want to find ways to upgrade our team, but as we look at our group, you think about the bench that we have, [Polanco and Lewis] coming back, and who that might squeeze off," Falvey said. "There's always ways you're trying to augment the roster, but there are really good guys that have been complementary players for us this year and have really stepped up and played well."
Players in every clubhouse want their team to be a buyer at the trade deadline, a show of support from the front office in their playoff odds, but Twins players believe their offense is in a good spot with Polanco back and Lewis a possibility for August.
They are both righthanded hitters and can help solve the Twins' offensive woes against lefty pitching.
"Royce and Polanco are guys that teams trade for to boost their offense," Twins infielder Kyle Farmer said, "and we already have them."
Catcher Ryan Jeffers added: "You look around this clubhouse, for the most part, especially offensively, you're like, 'We have everything we need.' You can always improve a team. There is always something you can do. But is it our biggest area of need? Probably not."