Below is an analysis of the prospects in the farm system of the Minnesota Twins. Scouting reports were compiled with information provided by industry sources as well as my own observations. As there was no minor league season in 2020, there are some instances where no new information was gleaned about a player. Players whose write-ups have not been altered begin by telling you so. For the others, the blurb ends with an indication of where the player played in 2020, which in turn likely informed the changes to their report. As always, I’ve leaned more heavily on sources from outside the org than within for reasons of objectivity. Because outside scouts were not allowed at the alternate sites, I’ve primarily focused on data from there. Lastly, in effort to more clearly indicate relievers’ anticipated roles, you’ll see two reliever designations, both in lists and on The Board: MIRP, or multi-inning relief pitcher, and SIRP, or single-inning relief pitcher.
For more information on the 20-80 scouting scale by which all of our prospect content is governed, you can click here. For further explanation of Future Value’s merits and drawbacks, read Future Value.
All of the numbered prospects here also appear on The Board, a resource the site offers featuring sortable scouting information for every organization. It can be found here.
Rk | Name | Age | Highest Level | Position | ETA | FV |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Alex Kirilloff | 23.2 | AA | RF | 2021 | 60 |
2 | Royce Lewis | 21.6 | AA | SS | 2022 | 60 |
3 | Trevor Larnach | 23.9 | AA | RF | 2021 | 55 |
4 | Ryan Jeffers | 23.9 | MLB | C | 2021 | 50 |
5 | Jordan Balazovic | 22.3 | A+ | SP | 2021 | 50 |
6 | Jhoan Duran | 23.0 | AA | SP | 2021 | 50 |
7 | Matt Canterino | 23.1 | A | MIRP | 2022 | 50 |
8 | Aaron Sabato | 21.6 | R | 1B | 2024 | 45 |
9 | Misael Urbina | 18.7 | R | CF | 2023 | 45 |
10 | Gilberto Celestino | 21.9 | AA | CF | 2021 | 45 |
11 | Keoni Cavaco | 19.6 | R | 3B | 2024 | 45 |
12 | Brent Rooker | 26.2 | MLB | 1B | 2021 | 40+ |
13 | Josh Winder | 24.3 | A | SP | 2022 | 40+ |
14 | Cole Sands | 23.5 | AA | SP | 2021 | 40+ |
15 | Matt Wallner | 23.1 | A | RF | 2022 | 40+ |
16 | Alerick Soularie | 21.5 | R | 2B | 2024 | 40 |
17 | Blayne Enlow | 21.8 | A+ | MIRP | 2022 | 40 |
18 | Chris Vallimont | 23.8 | A+ | SP | 2023 | 40 |
19 | Emmanuel Rodriguez | 17.9 | R | CF | 2025 | 40 |
20 | Jose Miranda | 22.5 | AA | 2B | 2021 | 40 |
21 | Edwar Colina | 23.7 | MLB | SIRP | 2021 | 40 |
22 | Bailey Ober | 25.5 | AA | MIRP | 2021 | 40 |
23 | Marco Raya | 18.4 | R | SP | 2025 | 40 |
24 | Ben Rortvedt | 23.3 | AA | C | 2021 | 40 |
25 | Spencer Steer | 23.1 | A | 2B | 2022 | 40 |
26 | Jovani Moran | 23.7 | AA | SIRP | 2021 | 40 |
27 | Will Holland | 22.7 | R | 2B | 2023 | 40 |
28 | Travis Blankenhorn | 24.5 | MLB | 2B | 2021 | 40 |
29 | Edouard Julien | 21.7 | R | LF | 2023 | 40 |
30 | Seth Gray | 22.6 | A | 3B | 2023 | 35+ |
31 | Luis Rijo | 22.4 | A+ | SP | 2022 | 35+ |
32 | Yunior Severino | 21.3 | A | 2B | 2023 | 35+ |
33 | Yennier Cano | 26.9 | A+ | SIRP | 2021 | 35+ |
34 | Willie Joe Garry Jr. | 20.6 | R | CF | 2023 | 35+ |
35 | Wander Javier | 22.0 | A | SS | 2022 | 35+ |
36 | Nick Gordon | 25.2 | AAA | SS | 2021 | 35+ |
37 | Jair Camargo | 21.5 | A | C | 2021 | 35+ |
38 | Charles Mack | 21.2 | R | C | 2023 | 35+ |
Other Prospects of Note
Position Player Pu Pu Platter
Kala’i Rosario, OF
Jeferson Morales, C
Carlos Aguiar, OF
Gabriel Maciel, CF
DaShawn Keirsey, CF
Michael Hellman, 2B
Malfrin Sosa, OF
Caleb Hamilton, C/3B
Rosario was a 2020 high school draftee from Hawaii who had a vanilla showing for me during the summer of 2019. He’s a right/right power-hitting corner outfielder with limited physical projection. Most teams couldn’t get to Hawaii before the shutdown but the Twins think they have something here. Morales, age 21, is a very muscular 5-foot-8; he’s got some twitch, average raw, and more walks than strikeouts so far. He has a good body but it has no projection. He has plus raw arm strength but he’s mechanically inconsistent exiting his crouch so his pop times vary. That inconsistency extends to the defense. Aguiar missed 2019 with an elbow injury. He’s a physical projection/visually pleasing swing corner outfield prospect who signed for $1 million back in 2017. He was young for the class but has now missed two consecutive seasons and his body isn’t as cut as it was when he popped onto the radar. Maciel is a 70 runner but I don’t see an offensive impact enabling anything more than a fifth outfielder there. Keirsey could maybe be a 60 run and center field glove with doubles power, but he had hip issues again in 2019 after suffering a pretty severe hip injury while in college. Sosa is also a young-for-the-class power projection bat who signed for $900,000 last year. Caleb Hamilton is an older guy who might end up in the Tuffy Gosewisch, upper-level org guy role. He was a great defensive third baseman at Oregon State and converted to catcher in pro ball but doesn’t make enough contact.
Pitching Depth and Wild Cards
Dakota Chalmers, RHP
Griffin Jax, RHP
Charlie Barnes, LHP
Derek Molina, RHP
Sean Mooney, RHP
Ben Gross, RHP
Cody Lawyerson, RHP
Chalmers has 40+ FV stuff (94-97, 60-grade power mid-80s changeup, above-average low-80s curveball) but 20-grade control. Jax is a sinkerballer who lives in the low-90s and has a deep, vanilla repertoire. Barnes has a great changeup but the rest is below-average. Molina is a fastball-only type whose heater generated a 17% swinging strike rate in 2019. Mooney (95 mph), Gross and Lawyerson (both around 93) have had pretty substantial upticks in velocity over the last year even though they were training remotely.
System Overview
This Twins regime has now been in place since 2016 and some clear talent acquisition trends are emerging. The amateur side appears focused on drafting college hitters who show measurable power in their TrackMan data. Sprinkled among them are often a couple sleeper-ish, six-figure high school prospects with sexy tools or projection. Meanwhile, the pro department seems good at picking off guys they know the player dev group can tweak and change for the better, especially pitchers.
Because Ops President Derek Falvey comes from Cleveland, expect Minnesota to employ some of the roster building tactics that club has used to build a sustainable contender. Letting a productive player like Eddie Rosario go because of his arb projection is evidence of this, though it certainly helps that the Twins have guys like Kirilloff and Larnach waiting in the wings to take over. I bet they’d be content platooning someone like Jake Cave with Brent Rooker if they had to, though.
Also somewhat similar to Cleveland’s operational style is a pattern of age-related talent preference internationally. Though they’re not laser-focused on switch-hitting infielders, Minnesota’s international signees are often young for their class and yet are typically described as polished hitters and instinctive defenders. I think you could make the argument that gaps in age between prospects are more important the younger they are, and Minnesota behaves as if that’s true, since some of the college hitters they’ve drafted recently are actually old for their class.
I think this system needs to add some actual middle infield depth. Not more chonky guys who can kind of play second base, but actual up-the-middle athletes for what seems to be a good dev group to work with. Part of the reason the team is feeling around for a big league shortstop right now is because there’s nobody like that in the system.
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