Twins would have to fall apart completely to miss expanded playoffs

A 60-game season magnifies every game, but MLB has eased the intensity by expanding the playoff field from 10 teams to 16 for this season.

July 24, 2020 at 4:27PM
Missing the playoffs is unlikely under the new postseason plan announced Thursday afternoon.
Missing the playoffs is unlikely under the new postseason plan announced Thursday afternoon. (Howard Sinker/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

CHICAGO -- Happy Opening Day, folks.

Finally, right?

The Twins begin their 60-game sprint tonight against the White Sox in what feels like a big spot for both.

The Twins enter the season with heightened expectations after improving a roster that won 101 games and the AL Central last season. The lineup has the potential to be special after producing a MLB record for home runs and a franchise-record for runs scored in 2019.

The White Sox generated a lot of buzz with their offseason moves to bolster a nucleus of young talent, highlighted by heralded rookie centerfielder Luis Robert, who signed a $50 million contract in January before he made his MLB debut.

The headline in the Chicago Tribune today is a quote from tonight's starter Lucas Giolito: "Our talent's through the roof."

This should be a fun series to kick things off.

A 60-game magnifies every game, but MLB eased the intensity Thursday by expanding the playoff field from 10 teams to 16 for this season. Things would have to fall completely apart for the Twins not to make the postseason under this new format -- the top two teams in each division qualify, plus two teams with the best records after that.

I'm guessing players won't admit that this change affects their mental approach, but a three-game sweep or a bad week won't have the same impact knowing teams have more margin for error now. The day-to-day pressure won't be the same.

I like this format change because it gives teams that get off to a bad start or encounter a rough stretch some cushion. It feels like a fair compromise that acknowledges the uniqueness of this condensed season.

about the writer

about the writer

Chip Scoggins

Columnist

Chip Scoggins is a sports columnist and enterprise writer for the Minnesota Star Tribune. He has worked at the Minnesota Star Tribune since 2000 and previously covered the Vikings, Gophers football, Wild, Wolves and high school sports.

See More

More from Twins

card image

Justin Verlander and the San Francisco Giants have agreed to a $15 million, one-year contract, according to a person with direct knowledge of the negotiations.

Minnesota Twins' Ehire Adrianza (13).