As Pitching Injuries Mount, Pressure and Burden Transfer to Twins Lineup
FT. MYERS, FL – Fans were riding high when the 2023 Minnesota Twins concluded their season with a postseason series sweep over the Toronto Blue Jays and a hard-fought elimination at the hands of the Houston Astros. The organization had seen heights it hadn’t reached in decades, and 2024 would bring promise.
Reinforcing that promise didn’t have to mean giving Sonny Gray a gaudy contract or retaining Kenta Maeda. In some fashion, though, their production had to be accounted for. Leaning on Chris Paddack to throw 140-plus quality innings felt a bit like a pipe dream, and giving someone of Anthony DeSclafani’s caliber an unchallenged rotation spot couldn’t happen. However, the ownership group chose this rotation path, and now it will be on the lineup to pick up the inevitable slack.
When Derek Falvey announced the Twins’ injuries heading into the season on Monday, the hits just kept coming. DeSclafani has been behind all camp, but with a visit to a surgeon on tap, pitching at all is a real question. Jhoan Durán and Caleb Thielbar are out, and that takes two prominent arms from what could be a bullpen that could contend for the best in baseball. Matt Canterino being injured again was just a cherry on top.
So, less than two weeks before Opening Day in Kansas City, Rocco Baldelli must turn to Louie Varland as his fifth starter. He’s been great this spring and probably is a better option than DeSclafani, but the depth is immediately in use. The bullpen loses two high-leverage arms, and a group that would need to cover more innings than last year is now thinner than it should be.