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The Chicago White Sox did what the Minnesota Twins couldn’t in 2005

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In the summer of 2010, I was walking through the gargantuan Miller Park AmFam Field parking lot with my aunt. While navigating the rows of tailgaters leading up to the House That Selig Built, we were approached by a guy in a Chicago White Sox jersey. Why a South Sider was present for a Twins vs Brewers clash: unclear.

Anyway, he was a chatty fella and though I don’t recall the exact verbiage, he said something akin to “you guys beat us at the Metrodome all those years—but we got it done when it mattered”. I was almost physically ill.

For all the hitless nights and Bret Boone-induced trauma of 2005, there is one final—and intensely depressing—reckoning for Twins fans: the one year the Pale Hose slipped by the Twinkies and into the postseason, they hoisted the Commissioner’s Trophy.

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I don’t want to sell the Sox short—they were a 99-63 AL Central steamroller in ‘05 that could swing with the best of ‘em and were surprisingly deep pitching-wise. They swept fellow footwear Boston—no repeat magic in Beantown—in the ALDS & only dropped a single game to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim in the ALCS.

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Their World Series opponent: the clearly-inferior (yet sneakily dangerous) 89-73-1 Houston Astros.

Though 11 games behind St. Louis for the NL Central crown in ‘05, the ‘Stros took out the Redbirds in the NLCS. Two Killer B’s—Lance Berkman & Craig Biggio—remained, bolstered by uncommonly strong offensive seasons from Morgan Ensberg & Jason Lane. A rotation fronted by Roy Oswalt, Andy Pettitte, and Roger Clemens—and a bullpen anchored by dominant closer Brad Lidge—was also nothing to sneeze at.

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It mattered little against Ozzie Guillen’s gentlemen…

  • Game 1: The only normal game of this series—Jermaine Dye & Joe Crede went deep & Jose Contreras was solid on the bump.
  • Game 2: Houston tied the game off Sox closer Bobby Jenks (RIP)—but then the unlikeliest guy on the roster to hit a walk-off home run did exactly that.
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  • Game 3: Tied 5-5 after the requisite nine, this one went to the 14th—5 hours & 41 minutes in all—before a ChiSox homer (Geoff Blum) & bases-loaded walk (Chris Widger) allowed Damaso Marte to slam the door.
  • Game 4: Goose-egged through seven innings, Freddy Garcia vs Brandon Backe had Jack Morris vs John Smoltz vibes. But in T8, Dye delivered Willie Harris to the dish with an RBI single off Lidge. It would prove all that was needed:

In an extreme rarity for me, I have no memories of watching any of this World Series. Perhaps I boycotted out of revulsion at the Sox sealing what the Twins could not. Maybe starting my sophomore year at college and having Survey of Calculus & Intercultural Communication Theory on my plate had something to do with it.

Either way, I still cringe a bit at that ‘05 Chicago championship. For as solid and exciting as the ‘02, ‘03, ‘04, ‘06, & ‘09 Twins seasons were, their biggest nemesis only needed a single postseason to nab the ultimate prize.

Source: https://www.twinkietown.com/minneso...go-white-sox-world-series-2005-houston-astros
 
Monday Morning Minnesota: The “Managerial Rumors” Edition

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Game 3 of the World Series is tonight, with the series shifting to Los Angeles tied 1-1. Meanwhile, rumors abound regarding the Twins’ open manager position, with the top four candidates identified as Derek Shelton, James Rowson, Ryan Flaherty, and Scott Servais.

The Past Week on Twinkie Town:


Elsewhere in Twins Territory:


In the World of Baseball:


Source: https://www.twinkietown.com/general/49793/monday-morning-minnesota-the-managerial-rumors-edition
 
Greatest Twins Moments & Performances: A Twinkie Town Definitive List (Round 1)

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Two offseasons ago, Twinkie Town christened the top Minnesota Twins players of all time. Last year, we looked at franchise ephemera & eccentricity—from managers to broadcasters to an honorable Judge (not Aaron).

This baseball-less period, I’ll be spearheading an accounting of the greatest Twins moments & performances from 1961-Present. As a fanbase, we need some positivity at the moment.

Important Note: It would be easy to load this list with ‘87 & ‘91 World Series moments—and those will certainly be strongly represented. But considering I’ll pass the big 4-0 during this poll’s duration and my World Series memory is my Dad telling me about Kirby’s heroics before taking me to kindergarten, there are two entire generations of fans whose favorite moments may not have occurred in October. So, this won’t be all ‘87/’91.

The first five moments are pretty “chalk”, so let’s dive right in…

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The last out of the first title (1987)​

  • “Bouncing ball to Gaetti—throws to Hrbek—and the Twins are baseball’s world champions!”, per Herb Carneal. For the first time in franchise history, Minnesota was on top of the MLB heap.
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Puckett’s Pinnacle (1991)​

Welcome home AL champs (1987)​

  • After defeating the Detroit Tigers to claim American League superiority in ‘87, MN returned to the Twin Cities to a full Metrodome crowd. Not for Game 1 of the subsequent World Series—but for a “welcome home” rally. Yes, that’s right—Twins fans turned out in force simply to show (and vocalize) their appreciation for the first AL champion Twins squad since 1965.
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Black Jack goes the distance (1991)​

  • One could argue that Jack Morris’ 10-inning Game 7 shutout in the ‘91 World Series was the single greatest pitching performance in postseason history. 126 pitches, 7 H, 2 BB, 8 K over 10 IP to give the Twins their second championship in five seasons.
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Game 163 (2009)​


Source: https://www.twinkietown.com/minneso...eries-kirby-puckett-jack-morris-2009-game-163
 
Twins to Hire Derek Shelton as Manager

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According to Dan Hayes of The Athletic, among many others, the Twins will announce Derek Shelton as their manager for the 2026 season. The team is likely waiting until the conclusion of the World Series to make the move official, as MLB asks teams to withhold substantial news until after the Fall Classic.

Sources: Derek Shelton will be introduced as the #MNTwins manager next week. @JonHeyman on it first.

— DanHayesMLB (@DanHayesMLB) October 29, 2025

Shelton has a history with the organization, serving as the Twins’ bench coach in 2018 under Paul Molitor and 2019 under his predecessor Rocco Baldelli. Shelton was selected from a group of finalists including former Twin and current Yankee hitting coach James Rowson, former Minnesota infielder Nick Punto, and ex-Seattle Mariners manager Scott Servais.

Shelton was the manager for the Pittsburgh Pirates from 2020 until he was fired 6 weeks into the 2025 season after another dreadful start. While that may seem discouraging for Twins fans, most of a manager’s work goes on behind the scenes and the Pirates’ ownership situation makes the Pohlads look like a godsend in comparison. His familiarity with the Twins franchise and processes likely gave him an advantage on the competition.

Additionally, while Shelton is a “retread” for an organization seemingly in need of a fresh voice, it’s worth noting that only a single current Twin (Byron Buxton) was coached by Shelton in his previous stint. He has a positive reputation around the league and was a candidate for top bench coach positions if the Twins had gone in a different direction.

The last remaining organizational block to fall is the staff around Shelton. Assistant coach contracts are typically not made public, so it’s unclear who among the 2025 staff remains under contract for next season and who Shelton, Derek Falvey, and the Twins will want to retain. Pete Maki has done an admiral job since being thrust into the pitching coach role after Wes Johnson’s shocking departure in the middle of the 2023 season. Additionally, Hank Conger is a rising name in coaching circles and is likely on the inside track for a head job of his own in the near future. Base coaches Tommy Watkins and Ramon Borrego have both been with the Twins for over 20 years between their playing and coaching careers, and are likely to remain with the organization in some capacity.

Source: https://www.twinkietown.com/minnesota-twins-news/49818/twins-to-hire-derek-shelton-as-manager
 
North Star Stature Showdown, Game 2: Short pitchers got no reason

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Many a Mauer knock this game. | SPX / Diamond Images / Getty Images
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I’ve already mentioned that I am short (5’3”). On that account, you might assume that I cannot stand the Randy Newman song “Short People,” but it is one of my favorite songs:

The song is a brilliant satire against bigotry, using exaggerated stereotypes of the short to point out the ridiculousness of hate against any subgroup of humans. Of course, people thought Newman actually hated the underheighted. (In a similar vein, “I Love L.A.” is making fun of the shallowness of Los Angeles, and people took it as a straight praise of the city. Satire is lost on far too many.)

But in the case of Game 2 of the North Star Stature Showdown, the Tall Tales were happy to have short people ‘round here, clobbering the Stories to a 22-13 victory and 2-0 series lead.

Despite an early 3-1 lead from the short crew, the tall gents hammered Lee Stange in the third, taking the lead on a Gene Larkin grand slam (immediately followed by a Cotton Nash homer), before breaking the game open in the fourth. Against Stange and Danny McDevitt, the Tales sent 14 to the plate, a Dave Winfield three-run home run (that would have been a grand slam were it not for a wild pitch during the at-bat) setting the tone for the inning. By the time McDevitt got out of the inning, the Tales had scored eight runs and were up 14-3.

Before the Stories scored another run, the Tales put up another crooked number with a six-spot in the sixth. After they got three runs off Eddie Bane and loaded the bases, the Stories brought in Bill Pleis from the bullpen; Terry Jorgensen promptly cleared the bags with a double, making the score 20-3.

Only once they were down 17 did the short batsmen revive, finally knocking Mike Smithson from the game. Thanks to a few more hits off Aaron Slegers, they doubled their own score before lighting up the 6’10” reliever in the seventh, scoring six runs (doubling their score again!) highlighted by Ben Revere’s three-run triple.

The Tales also scored a pair of runs in the seventh, an inning that included Joe Mauer’s fifth hit of the game, and the late offensive effort was not enough for the Stories. The home team added a run in the ninth, but Slegers got Jarvis Brown to fly out to end the game, producing this box score line for Slegers: 3.2 IP, 12 hits, eight runs (all earned), one walk, one strikeout… one save.

The Short Stories now have to try to save the series on the road, and they have their best chance to do so with Sonny Gray taking the hill in Game 3 against Bailey Ober.

Source: https://www.twinkietown.com/general...-pitchers-got-no-reason-joe-mauer-gene-larkin
 
Will Derek Shelton get the first year boost of recent Twins skippers?

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The Minnesota Twins announced Derek Shelton as manager yesterday. So, it’s a good time to look at the last four MN baseball skippers and see how they fared in Year 1. Surprisingly, the results have been almost exclusively positive in my lifetime (1985+)…

Tom Kelly​

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  • Previous Season (1986): 71-91 (full disclosure: TK coached the ‘86 squad to a 12-11 finish). The Twins had not made the playoffs since 1970.
  • First Full Season (1987): 85-77; won the World Series.

Ron Gardenhire​

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  • Previous Season (2001): 85-77. The Twins had not made the playoffs since 1991.
  • First Season (2002): 94-67. Won AL Central title and advanced to ALCS.

Paul Molitor​

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  • Previous Season (2014): 70-92. Four consecutive 92+ loss seasons in a row.
  • First Season (2015): 83-79. Competed for a Wild Card postseason berth until the season’s final weekend.

Rocco Baldelli​

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  • Previous Season (2018): 78-84.
  • First Season (2019): 101-61. Won AL Central title with second-best record in franchise history.

The four newest Twins managers all produced instant success from the dugout’s top step.

Of course, one could argue that TK, Gardy, & Molly all inherited a youthful nucleus of talent, while Rocco had the rabbit ball in ‘19. Shelton will have a collection of spare parts and an ownership group that likely wants to remove the engine & transmission. But perhaps the Beginner’s Luck will continue in 2026.

Source: https://www.twinkietown.com/minneso...aldelli-paul-molitor-ron-gardenhire-tom-kelly
 
TwinkieTown Movie Night next Friday!

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So, as I mentioned a few weeks ago, there’s another site (mostly a political one) that does a Movie Night every Saturday. No, we all don’t go to see Rocky Horror together, although it did play at the Grandview in Saint Paul last night; I didn’t go, because I wasn’t sure if there would be anybody squirting water during the rainstorm scene, as is good and proper. There WAS a live version some years ago where audiences were encouraged to participate in the customary rituals, and it had retired news anchor Don Shelby in it:

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Here’s the way this works. You play the movie on yer TV. (If you have a smart TV, this should be pretty easy; if you don’t, but you have a PlayStation or XBox, that works as a smart TV by itself. I’ve got a dumb TV hooked up to a PlayStation and Blu-Ray player.)

We all start the movie at 7 PM (just like a baseball game!) and make comments during the movie. Comments like “this part is cool” or “this person is kinda weird-looking” or “um, there’s a boom mike in the shot,” anything goes, so long as you’re basically cool to others.

I’ve been participating in this on the other website for a little over a year, and it’s generally really fun, unless the movie either A) is really dull or B) is a depressing bummer.

It’s no fun if nobody participates, though — just like GameThreads are no fun when the Twins stink and I’m the only one making comments.

So we’ll be trying this for a few weeks, and see if it works out, or if anybody wants to suggest a few changes.

Here’s the schedule:

November 7: The Jackie Robinson Story (1950)

The version 42 with Chadwick Boseman and Harrison Ford is pretty good; so’s the original, with Robinson as himself. Free on YouTube and Internet Archive.

November 14: Long Gone (1987)

TV movie about a fictional last-place minor-league team. I’ve never seen this, but it’s also free on YouTube. The Wiki page says “it’s the best baseball movie most of you never saw.”

November 21: Angels in the Outfield (1951)

A mean, cussy manager learns to be nicer, with the help of some divine intervention and a very-lovely Janet Leigh. This is free on Internet Archive. Spanish subtitles you can’t turn off, but they won’t hurt you.

November 28: Bull Durham (1987)

About a experienced catcher and experienced groupie who teach a young pitcher a thing or two. Written/directed by Ron Shelton, no relation to Twins manager Derek Shelton… but Ron DID play on a team with Derek’s dad. It’s available on Bezos Prime, but also on free streamers Plex, Pluto, Roku, and Tubi (with commercials, I’d imagine). It’s on the free library streamer Kanopy, and on library DVD.

So, that’s the lineup, for now. Two YouTubers, one Internet Archive, one that’s available on multiple platforms.

I’m open to suggestions like changing the regular day/time, and of course any movie suggestions. Free ones are best, but I’m not opposed to ones we’d all have to go get the library DVDs for. Any baseball movie counts; I’d say we can also do movies about other sports, too. I haven’t seen Hoosiers in a zillion years.

I’ll put the posts up at 6 PM, with appropriate links where there’s a YouTube or Internet Archive version available. And I’ll try to have a few facts about the making of the movie for you. Showtime, again, starts at 7 PM.

If people like it, I’ll extend the schedule out further. If not, well, these are all movies I don’t mind watching again. Except if Long Gone really stinks, then I’m coming for the bum who suggested it! (I’m sure it’ll be better than some of the Saturday movies we watched at the other site. Creature From the Black Lagoon was… really, pretty bad. Neat monster suit design by Millicent Patrick; Ricou Browning wore the suit underwater, sometimes holding his breath while swimming for up to four minutes at a time while wearing a big rubber monster suit! But the movie was… booooring.)

So, join us next Friday, if you like! Make some popcorn! Or drink beer! Or both, or neither! It’s up to you!

I’d like to leave you with a movie to watch, but it’s Halloween, and there aren’t any baseball horror movies. Not any good ones, anyways — there’s been some cheapo slasher films. So instead, I’ll give you the silliest horror-rock song I’ve ever heard, “D.O.A.,” by Fort Worth metal band Bloodrock:

Yes, it is eight minutes long. It is told in the first person, by a guy who’s just experienced a mid-air plane collision. He’s describing falling to the ground, his body parts missing, corpses all around him, etc. It was actually a mild hit, reaching #36 in the charts. 1971 was a weird year.

I heard this two years ago, driving to rehab therapy a few weeks after breaking the s**t out of my arm. At like, 6:30 in the morning, and it was dark & snowing outside, and since it was the first snow dusting of the season, cars were crashing, you could hear ambulances in the distance.

It was perfect.

See you next week for the Jackie Robinson movie!

Source: https://www.twinkietown.com/book-club/49837/twinkietown-movie-night-next-friday
 
Rival Roundup, Vol. 70: Willis or Won’tis

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The 2025 baseball season will officially end tonight! With the improbable, Dodger-centric finish to Game 6, the series is knotted up at three apiece, which means this evening’s contest will be the final game of a very interesting ‘25 campaign. It’s the first Game 7 since 2019, a rare taste of November baseball, and a sober reminder that it feels like Twins baseball ended three months ago.

All eyes are on Toronto tonight, but it doesn’t mean we can’t find a few regional nuggets to invest our interest into. Come, invest with me. Give me your attention money.

  • Longtime Cleveland Guardians pitching coach Carl Willis will be returning for at least one more season. His reputation speaks for itself — five Cy Young winners have pitched under him, and he’s been the head of the Guardian pitching factory since joining the big-league club for his second time in 2017. At 64 years old, and with little left to prove in the realm of major-league coaching, Willis has taken over the Terry Francona-esque role of legendary coach suiting up on a year-by-year basis, but has confirmed his involvement for another season working alongside hot young thing, Stephen Vogt.
  • The baseball gods demand a sacrifice, which is why the Orioles hired away Cleveland’s number-two guy to be their new skipper in return.
The Baltimore Orioles are finalizing a deal to hire Craig Albernaz as manager, sources tell ESPN. Albernaz, 42, was previously associate manager with Cleveland and was a widely sought-after candidate for open managerial jobs. He joins a O's team coming off a 75-87 season.

Jeff Passan (@jeffpasan.bsky.social) 2025-10-27T01:47:35.793Z

Source: https://www.twinkietown.com/general/49845/rival-roundup-vol-70-willis-or-wontis
 
MLB 2025-2026 Offseason Calendar: Key Dates to Know

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After rallying to win games six and seven and becoming the first repeat champions since the 2000s Yankees, the baseball world is out to take down the mighty Los Angeles Dodgers. The work begins now in the offseason.

It’s still unclear what the Minnesota Twins plan to do this offseason. They have the core talent and financial flexibility to compete for a playoff spot again in a weak division, but Derek Falvey and Co. may opt to go a different route after back-to-back disappointing seasons in the wake of 2023’s achievements. There’s also the Pohlad factor as both managing owner Joe Pohlad and Derek Falvey have been non-committal on a payroll figure for 2026. Whatever route the Twins choose, it’s bound to be an eventful offseason.

November 6: Free Agency Begins​


Technically, free agency is already underway, but players aren’t eligible to sign with new teams until November 6th. Players on the 40-man roster are also eligible to be traded again. Players and teams with contract options must also make those decisions by this deadline.

Twins Players Impacted: Justin Topa ($2M club option for 2026)

  • Topa carries a $2M club option with a $225K buyout if the option is declined. With Topa projected to make around $1.75M in arbitration anyway, it’s likely the Twins pick up Topa’s option to keep his veteran presence in an inexperienced bullpen.

November 10-13: GM Meetings​


There won’t be as much player movement in these initial gatherings as in the Winter Meetings in December, but the groundwork for future moves is often laid here. Regardless, this is around when the dominoes begin to fall and teams start to zone in on their targets for this offseason.

November 18: Roster Protection Deadline​


By the 18th, MLB teams will have to add players to the 40-man roster if they want to protect them from the Rule 5 Draft. The Twins have quite a few interesting players who could be added before the deadline.

40-Man Locks

  • Gabriel Gonzalez, OF
  • Hendry Mendez, OF/1B
  • Connor Prielipp, SP
  • Andrew Morris, SP
  • Kendry Rojas, SP/RP

Coin Toss

  • Kyler Fedko, OF/1B
  • Kala’i Rosario, OF
  • Andy Lugo, UTIL
  • Cory Lewis, SP
  • CJ Culpepper, SP

Other Notable R5 Eligible Players

  • Ricardo Olivar, C
  • Aaron Sabato, 1B
  • Tanner Schobel, SS
  • Danny De Andrade, SS
  • Jose Olivares, SP
  • Darren Bowen, SP
  • Alejandro Hidalgo, SP

The Twins currently only have 2 open 40-man roster spots, but can easily create 5-7 more by non-tendering/DFA-ing players like Genesis Cabrera, Thomas Hatch, Michael Tonkin, and Jose Miranda.

November 21: Non-tender Deadline​


Speaking of non-tendering, teams must decide whether to offer contracts to their arbitration-eligible and pre-arb players by this date. You don’t have to agree to a specific contract, just tender a contract with the final figure to be decided at a future date either via negotiation or the arbitration process. There’s typically of flurry of deals around this date for teams that prefer not to settle salaries in court. The Twins announced deals with all of their arbitration-eligible players on the deadline last year.

Arbitration-Eligible Twins

All estimates are via MLB Trade Rumors.

  • Genesis Cabrera: $1.4M (non-tender candidate)
  • Ryan Jeffers: $6.6M
  • Justin Topa (only if contract option declined): $1.7M
  • Michael Tonkin: $1.4M (non-tender candidate)
  • Bailey Ober: $4.6M
  • Joe Ryan: $5.8M
  • Trevor Larnach: $4.7M (non-tender candidate)
  • Royce Lewis: $3M
  • Anthony Misiewicz: $1.1M (non-tender candidate)
  • Cole Sands: $1.3M

December 7-10: Winter Meetings​


Everyone gather ‘round the robust kingdom of Orlando, FL and get those checkbooks out. The busiest week of the offseason will undoubtedly bring a slew of moves, particularly from higher profile free agents. Teams that miss out on the big ticket players will start moving to the trade market, meaning this could be where we start hearing rumors about Joe Ryan, Pablo Lopez, and Ryan Jeffers, among others.

December 9: MLB Draft Lottery​


The Twins have been the beneficiaries of lottery luck in the past, allowing them to jump up the rankings and draft Walker Jenkins and Brooks Lee over the past three years. This season, they’ll hope lady luck is in their favor again.

All teams that miss the playoffs are eligible for the lottery with the worst teams having the best chance of landing the top pick in the draft. Thanks to CBA-regulated competitive balance measures, the Rockies, Nationals, and Angels are all ineligible for top 10 picks, giving the Twins the second-best odds to land the #1 pick in the 2026 draft, trailing only the Chicago White Sox. You can see the full lottery odds below.

White Sox (.370) — 27.73%
Twins (.432) — 22.18%
Pirates (.438) — 16.81%
Orioles (.463) — 9.24%
A’s (.469) — 6.55%
Braves (.469) — 4.54%
Rays (.475) — 3.03%
Cardinals (.481) — 2.35%
Marlins (.488) — 1.85%
D-backs (.494) — 1.51%
Rangers (.500) — 1.34%
Giants (.500) — 1.01%
Royals (.506) — 0.84%
Mets (.512) — 0.67%
Astros (.537) — 0.34%
Rockies (.265) — ineligible
Nationals (.407) — ineligible
Angels (.444) — ineligible

December 10: Rule 5 Draft​


Players eligible who weren’t protected by the previous deadline will be entered into the Rule 5 draft. Each team will have the opportunity to select unprotected players in reverse standings order, with the draft continuing until no players are selected in a round. Anyone selected in the Rule 5 draft must remain on the 26-man roster for the duration of the 2026 season or be offered back to the original organization. The Rule 5 draft marks the end of the Winter Meetings

January 15: International Signing Period Begins​


Everyone’s favorite 16-year-old Dominican prospects are once again eligible to sign with teams. Most of the top prospects have already agreed with their future teams by the time the period opens, but every once in a while a renowned Japanese or Korean prospect will force themselves to the US ahead of their expected timeline and throw a wrench in teams’ plans. (See: Shohei Ohtani, Roki Sasaki)

Other Notable Dates​

  • November 10-13: award winners announced
  • November 18-20: Owners meetings in NYC. Commissioner Rob Manfred typically speaks to the press and reveals how much he hates baseball.
  • December 7: Veterans Committee Hall of Fame announcement
  • December 15: Closing of 2025 international signing period
  • January 21: BBWAA Hall of Fame announcement
  • February 11: pitchers and catchers report to Spring Training
  • March 5-17: 2026 World Baseball Classic
  • March 25: Opening Night for Yankees @ Giants
  • March 26: Opening Day for everyone else

Source: https://www.twinkietown.com/minneso...025-2026-offseason-calendar-key-dates-to-know
 
Greatest Twins Moments & Performances: A Twinkie Town Definitive List (Round 2)

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Results​

  • R1: Jack Morris 1991 Game 7 Shutout

George Strait once crooned “you’ve got to have an ace in the hole”. Well, in the winner-take-all Game 7 of the 1991 World Series, the Twins’ ace was a Black Jack.

A ten-inning shutout of the Atlanta Braves for St. Paul’s own Jack Morris just might be the single greatest postseason pitching performance of all time. As such, little surprise to see it atop this list.

The newbie: An unlikely clinching after a ferocious comeback.

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The last out of the first title (1987)​

  • “Bouncing ball to Gaetti—throws to Hrbek—and the Twins are baseball’s world champions!”, per Herb Carneal. For the first time in franchise history, Minnesota was on top of the MLB heap.
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Puckett’s Pinnacle (1991)​

Welcome home AL champs (1987)​

  • After defeating the Detroit Tigers to claim American League superiority in ‘87, MN returned to the Twin Cities to a full Metrodome crowd. Not for Game 1 of the subsequent World Series—but for a “welcome home” rally. Yes, that’s right—Twins fans turned out in force simply to show (and vocalize) their appreciation for the first AL champion Twins squad since 1965.
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Game 163 (2009)​

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Last Day Division Title (2006)​

  • On 8/6/06, the Twins were 10.5 GB the Detroit Tigers for the AL Central top spot. Going into Game 162? Tied with the striped cats. After the Twins polished off the Chicago White Sox on the season’s final day, the entire Metrodome crowd stuck around to watch the Tigers lose to the Kansas City Royals on the Jumbotron scoreboard—triggering a celebration as massive as it was unlikely for the Smell ‘Em & Piranha Crew.

Source: https://www.twinkietown.com/minneso...t-metrodome-2009-game-163-2006-division-title
 
Tuesday Morning Minnesota: The “Welcome Back Derek Shelton” Edition

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The Twins chose to interrupt the World Series with the news that former bench coach and Pittsburgh manager Derek Shelton would be returning to the organization as the new manager for 2026. Shelton was in Minnesota between 2018 and 2019, under both Paul Molitor and Rocco Baldelli, before going to Pittsburgh to manage for almost six seasons, finishing with a 306-440 record.

In other news, former Twin Brock Stewart is now a World Series champion, after the Dodgers and Blue Jays played one of the more memorable Game 7s in recent memory. That being said, I think we can all agree that Jack Morris’ CGSHO in Game 7 in 1991 is still probably the best Game 7 ever.

The Past Week on Twinkie Town:


Elsewhere in Twins Territory:

  • Dan Hayes at The Athletic talks with LaTroy Hawkins about his dream job: “Twins pitching coach”. ($)
  • La Velle E. Neal III at the Star Tribune doesn’t have a positive outlook for the Twins in Year 1 of the Shelton Era.
  • The benefit (or curse) of the Twins’ freefall in August and September was that it afforded the team a chance to look at all their major league-ready arms. Theo Tollefson at Zone Coverage checks in on the chances of two of those arms – Travis Adams and Pierson Ohl – making the team next season.

In the World of Baseball:

  • The World Series is over, with the Dodgers winning a thrilling Game 7 over the Blue Jays to repeat as champions for the first time since the Yankees’ three-peat earlier this century. That being said, award season is now beginning with finalists for the MVP, Cy Young, Rookie of the Year, and Manager of the Year awards. In case you’re wondering, no Twins were nominated.
  • The Gold Glove Award winners were announced on Sunday night, with former Twin Ty France, who led all American League first basemen in Outs Above Average and Defensive Runs Saved, winning the award for first base.
  • Silver Slugger Award winners will be announced on November 6th. Byron Buxton is the only Twin that was nominated.
  • Yoshinobu Yamamoto joins Christy Mathewson, Randy Johnson, and 12 other pitchers who have won three games in the World Series. Tyler Kepner, at The Athletic, chronicles how Yamamoto was able to join the elite group.
  • Martín Gallegos reviews the three homers given up by the Blue Jays in Game 7.

Source: https://www.twinkietown.com/general...nesota-the-welcome-back-derek-shelton-edition
 
North Star Stature Showdown, Game 3: Two turtle doubs

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We miss our Tortuga. | David Berding / Getty Images
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With Sonny Gray on the mound, the Short Stories could keep the Tall Tales off the scoreboard.

With Willians Astudillo at the plate, they could plate run after run of their own.

The Stories entered the win column with a 10-3 win keyed by their starting pitcher and catcher. Gray pitched seven shutout innings before being tagged for two runs in the eighth, and Astudillo went 3-5 from the cleanup spot, driving in five runs with two doubles and a homer.

Astudillo was key to several moments of momentum: he opened the scoring for the Stories with an RBI double in the first, added another double in the sixth to extend the lead to three, and launched a three-run blast in the eighth to extend the lead to 6-0.

It was only then that the Tales rallied back, getting two singles off Gray before Brandon Kintzler took the mound. Walt Bond loaded the bases with a single, Dave Winfield brought in a run with a sacrifice fly, and Gene Larkin doubled in two before Kintzler got out of the inning.

But the game did not remain close for long with the Stories putting up four runs in the ninth, their outburst keyed by a two-run Nick Punto triple.

With the margin in games down to one, Darrell Jackson will take on Kyle Gibson in a pivotal Game 4.

Source: https://www.twinkietown.com/general...oubles-home-run-willians-astudillo-sonny-gray
 
A big month for Canadian baseball

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If you were a baseball fan channel-surfing during the past month, there was a decent chance you’d tune into Canadian baseball programming of some kind.

Without burying the lede, the Toronto Blue Jays played in their first World Series since they were back-to-back champs in 1992-1993. Alas, Toronto could not quite get Louie Varland his ring. But it took a dramatic 7-game series (including an 18-inning contest the Blue Birds lost) for the Los Angeles Dodgers to clip their wings and retain possession of the Commissioner’s Trophy.

I’m happy for Toronto fans, they having waited roughly as long as Minnesota Twins fans have to be in the MLB Final Two come October (or November, as it were). The Jays could have pulled back from their recent run of contention after a last-place finish in the 2024 AL East. Instead, they went all in on Vlad Guerrero Jr and developed a solid top-to-bottom roster to give themselves a chance in the postseason. What a concept.

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Meanwhile, the documentary “Who Killed the Montreal Expos?” dropped on Netflix around World Series time. It tells the story of the Expos franchise and theorizes on the biggest reasons for its downfall—lack of cash flow, inability to procure public financing for a new stadium, the 1994 strike (neutering the best team Montreal ever rolled out onto Olympic Stadium), the Jeffrey Loria & David Samson regime, and a complete lack of a TV deal by the end (2004) before they moved to become the Washington Nationals.

Truth be told, it isn’t the greatest doc you’ll ever watch from a technical perspective. But seeing how Montreal still holds a yearly “Expos Fest” to this day made the hair on the back of my neck stand up a bit thinking about how close we all here at Twinkie Town were to being that displaced fan base. Would we still be having Twins Fest 20-some years after a franchise dissolution? Thank you, Harry Crump!

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Heck, even Canadian comedy hero John Candy got a recent prestige doc! All in all, quite a fall for the benevolent land of Mounties and maple syrup.

Source: https://www.twinkietown.com/general...blue-jays-world-series-montreal-expos-netflix
 
TwinkieTown Movie Night: The Jackie Robinson Story

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Hiya, folks! By not-so-popular demand, we’re starting TwinkieTown Movie Night!

Cue up the movie at 7:30, watch and make comments!

Yes, last week, I proposed 7:00. But one good soul suggested 7:30, and nobody disagreed, so 7:30 it is. Don’t worry, I’ll give you things to watch in the meantime.

1950’s The Jackie Robinson Story is available on about a zillion platforms — IMDb lists them all for you. Because it’s public domain. The studio just didn’t give enough of a darn to get the copyright renewed. The free streaming ones will have commercials.

Unfortunately, most of the free options without commercials are kinda crummy video quality. Not bad enough that it bothers me — this was a low-budget movie shot really fast (in three weeks), visuals weren’t exactly a priority. So here are those “no commercials” links, that’s how I’ll be watching. This is a YouTube link. This is an Internet Archive link. Whatever works best for you.

This interesting SABR article by Tom Lee really goes to town on the movie, on its omissions, inaccuracies, and how it makes Robinson into a passive figure, with the real “hero” being owner Branch Rickey. There’s a lot of good points in the article and nothing I’d disagree with.

However, I know a bit more about movie history than the average SABR writer. And so what I’d say about this one is you have to consider when it was made.

1949/1950 is really the time of a major change in how Hollywood depicted Black people onscreen. If you’ve seen movies from the 30s and 40s, you’ll notice that Black people are almost always maids, railway porters, and the like. And if they have more than a few lines of “yessir” dialogue, it’s usually going to be portraying them as backwards, slow-witted, lazy, etc.

There were exceptions. There were some “dumb” Black characters who were playing dumb as a way to fool the bosses. There were independent Black filmmakers like Oscar Micheaux, who made movies about hot-topic issues of the day — but that was totally 100% outside the studio system. And there were what’s now referred to as “race movies,” which are a really curious sub-genre in themselves. These were super-low-budget movies made exclusively for Black audiences, and because they were shot so cheap, so fast, they tend to be pretty lousy… but the people in them talk normally. They aren’t made to talk like dimwits. And that’s pretty refreshing in itself.

Most of the time, though, in most mainstream movies, Black characters were there to be servants, or foolish comic relief, or both. And it really hurts the films. Something like The Palm Beach Story is very near a perfect movie, it’s really a blast… until the “drunk guys on train shooting at the slow-witted Black porter” scene, which is as bad as you could imagine. The 30’s and 40s had a LOT of stuff like this.

Things were starting to change in the late 40s, though. WWII had showed how vile and hateful Nazi-style bigotry could be. President Truman had officially desegregated the U.S. military in 1948. And Hollywood slowly started to respond. 1949 had at least four movies dealing with racial equality issues — and one of them I’ve seen, Intruder in the Dust, is quite good.

In 1950, the year The Jackie Robinson Story came out, we are in the middle of a transition from how Black people were portrayed in the past, and the (sometimes) more realistic way they would be portrayed in the future. (It’s also the year that Sidney Poitier had his first starring role, in No Way Out.)

So I don’t judge this movie by modern standards — I judge it as a movie of its time. And while keeping in mind that Hollywood is ALWAYS totally behind the times and totally cowardly about taking any serious stand on anything. It’s the movies, folks. Film studios have never exactly been known for their high-minded principles.

By the standards of the time, The Jackie Robinson Story is pretty advanced. No Black character is shown as a fool for comic relief. There’s outright racism shown as evil and ugly. Yes, you wish Robinson was shown as less of a passive figure. But for 1949, I’ll take it as a step forward.

And the movie was written by a guy, Arthur Mann, who was Branch Rickey’s biographer. So of course it’s gonna make him the hero!

Incidentally, both this movie and the modern 42 omit my favorite Robinson story. There had been a threat to shoot Robinson during a game. Quite nicely, teammate Pee Wee Reese suggested that all the players wear #42, so an assassin couldn’t tell which one was Robinson.

And Robinson replied, thanks, but, it wouldn’t have been hard for the assassin to figure out which one he was.

The strongest argument in Lee’s SABR essay is about Robinson’s HUAC testimony. Which is shown (sort of) in the movie. The HUAC (House Un-American Activities Committee) wasn’t run by crazed “secret Commies are everywhere” senator Joe McCarthy, but it was an offshoot of the Commie Panic that McCarthy started and fed on for a few years. Which turned a worthless joke of a dishonest senator into a national figure for awhile.

Robinson was asked to comment on whether the great Black singer/activist Paul Robeson was a Commie agent bent on destroying America. (Which Robeson wasn’t, and the whole thing was worked up over comments that Robeson never actually made.)

Robinson told the HUAC that he didn’t agree with Robeson’s comments (the ones Robeson didn’t say), but that American Black people under Jim Crow didn’t need Commies to tell them to be mad. They were already mad, and would be mad until segregation was ended. Commies had nothing to do with it.

Robinson regretted it, later — he wished he’d stood up for Robeson more. Yet if you ask me, that’s a pretty fair answer. For a baseball player being dragged into this stuff, yeah! Who already was dealing with a lot of racist crap, yeah!

But the movie changes Robinson’s comments, makes them more rah-rah ‘Murica, and leaves out Robeson’s name altogether. Lee’s essay describes this in detail. I think Lee’s right; I think the movie flubbed this. Yet, in 1949, I sorta understand why. I don’t like it, but I understand it.

Robeson continued catching crap from the Commie hunters, and, in 1949, a little while after Robinson’s testimony, gave a concert in Peekskill, NY. Rabid racists showed up to start s**t and scream horrible things.

You can see footage of this in the excellent 28-minute documentary, Paul Robeson: Tribute To An Artist. Narrated by Sidney Poitier. The trouble in Peekskill begins at the 23:02 mark. It looks like something from Alabama in 1965 or so. No, it’s Peekskill, which isn’t far from Woodstock. (There’s also a link here.)

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I rewatched this documentary a few days ago, and caught something I hadn’t noticed the first time. A shot of the cops preparing for violence, in front of a store of some sort:

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Wait… that’s not any relation to the modern actor, is it?

Per Wiki: “Tucci was born on November 11, 1960, in Peekskill, New York.”

So, yeah! That’s like his granddad’s store, or an uncle’s or something! Ain’t that flippin’ wild!

But, I’m not gonna leave you with bigots screaming insults at Paul Robeson. That’s ooky. I’ll give you something MUCH better.

So we’ve mentioned earlier movies where Black characters were servants and/or morons. And “race films” where they were normal people, but those movies were super-low-budget and not very good, in most cases (not all).

There’s another type of movie.

There were movies that were sort of hybrids. Featuring incredibly talented Black music performers. They generally had “comic” buffoons, but they also had some of the most gifted Black artists of their time, in musical numbers that were actually filmed very well with decent budgets.

Ever hear of the name Fred Astaire? You have. He was a good dancer. Well, Fred Astaire said the single greatest dancing he ever saw on film was this, from 1943’s Stormy Weather. Behold the Nicholas Brothers (who had no formal training: they taught themselves by watching and adapting from other dancers they saw). OH. MY. GAWD!!!:

Guess how many takes that took? It was ONE TAKE. Much rehearsing, and multiple cameras. But one take. (The director was kind of a real d**k most of the time, yet he knew how to shoot this scene right, and had the budget to do it justice.)

It was ONE TAKE. That boggles my mind. Although, if you re-watch this after having your jaw drop completely from your skull, you might notice the sax player ducking his head multiple times to avoid getting kicked in the cranium by tap shoes. This was obviously rehearsed quite a bit.

Forgive me for the heavy political stuff above… but I think you’ll agree that clip makes up for it. Don’t watch the full Paul Robeson documentary if you don’t want to (although it is really good), but you MUST WATCH that Nicholas Brothers dancing scene, and I promise it will make you happy you clicked on this link, even if you don’t feel like watching tonight’s movie.

The Jackie Robinson Story is nowhere NEAR as good as that magnificent clip; it’s super-low-budget, it’s was shot fast and cheap. Yet, for its time, I think it’s alright. I like it. And that’s good enough for me.

I promise a shorter intro for future Movie Nights! We won’t be having any theological ramblings when God convinces a mean cussy manager to get Nicer for Angels In the Outfield. I just thought a longer intro was appropriate for the first Movie Night. And definitely appropriate for the great Jackie Robinson.

Here’s the upcoming schedule:

November 14: Long Gone (1987)

TV movie about a fictional last-place minor-league team. I’ve never seen this, but it’s also free on YouTube. The Wiki page says “it’s the best baseball movie most of you never saw.”

November 21: Angels in the Outfield (1951)

A mean, cussy manager learns to be nicer, with the help of some divine intervention and a very-lovely Janet Leigh. This is free on Internet Archive. Spanish subtitles you can’t turn off, but they won’t hurt you.

November 28: Bull Durham (1987)

About a experienced catcher and experienced groupie who teach a young pitcher a thing or two. Written/directed by Ron Shelton, no relation to Twins manager Derek Shelton… but Ron DID play on a team with Derek’s dad. It’s available on Bezos Prime, but also on free streamers Plex, Pluto, Roku, and Tubi (with commercials, probably how I’ll watch it). It’s on the free library streamer Kanopy, and on library DVD.

I’ve got some good ideas for future ones if we do this more, and all movie suggestions are absolutely welcome & wanted!

But, until then, pop your popcorn, and let’s start the show at 7:30!

Source: https://www.twinkietown.com/book-club/49940/twinkietown-movie-night-the-jackie-robinson-story
 
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