Look around the sports landscape, and it’s evident that good owners are necessary for success and stability, and the state of Minnesota is no exception.
Dave St. Peter, the 20-plus-year president of the Minnesota Twins, thinks the 2025 ball club can be really good and compete in the playoffs.
Despite trade speculation surrounding the former All-Star third baseman this offseason, St. Louis could enter the season with him on their 26-man roster. If so, could their roster crunch lead to the Twins poaching a hard-hitting left-handed bat?
Walker Jenkins reached Class AA at 19 years old, totaled more walks than strikeouts while accumulating only 11 plate appearances against pitchers who were younger than him, and he’s now rated as a consensus top-10 prospect in the minor leagues.
A week or so ago, Dan Hayes wrote that the Padres were interested in Christian Vázquez, and added (almost as an afterthought) that the Twins were also discussing trading for Dylan Cease. For many fans,
For the Minnesota Twins on-field product, no news is not good news. Cash-strapped by the Pohlad family’s self-imposed budget, the team awaits a savior owner with pockets deep enough to keep them competitive.
Watching the Minnesota Twins in 2025 will cost fans $99.99 for the entire season or $19.99 a month. Twins games will be available via cable, satellite and streaming providers through MLB's direct-to-consumer option. Twins.TV will be the place to sign up once subscriptions are offered to consumers starting Feb. 11.
Joe Ryan, missed the end of the 2024 season with a shoulder injury, is fully healthy and throwing bullpens ahead of Minnesota Twins spring training.
The Minnesota Twins need Royce Lewis to be better in 2025 but according to insiders, they are very concerned about "overwhelming" him again.
"There's no denying that. Yes, there is change coming," Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said during the annual Twins Fest. "But I also would say, to the stability part of the question, we still have exceptional stability here, and there can be change and also stability."
Minnesota Twins shortstop Carlos Correa spent the entire offseason getting his feet right. Correa, who missed two months last season due to plantar fasciitis in his right foot, an issue that ...
MINNEAPOLIS — The Minnesota Twins have revealed the pricing plan for the team's new streaming television service for games this season. Twins President Dave St. Peter told reporters at TwinsFest that the new Twins.TV will be available for $99.99 for a full-season subscription or $19.99 a month.