MN Twins Sign New Backup Shortstop

Orlando Arcia
Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images

The Minnesota Twins have been relatively quiet in free agency this offseason, but they did make a trade to add a bat on Friday. Eric Wagaman looks like a platoon fit at first base alongside Josh Bell. The bullpen still needs attention, but Derek Falvey has time to continue adding talent.

After the Wagaman deal on Friday, the Twins lacked a backup shortstop on the 40-man roster. Ryan Fitzgerald was designated for assignment, leaving Brooks Lee without depth behind him. Falvey addressed that on Saturday by signing Orlando Arcia.

Orlando Arcia joins the Twins on a MiLB deal

Last season began with Carlos Correa as the unquestioned starter at shortstop. The Minnesota Twins dumped him for nothing at the deadline, opening the everyday role for Brooks Lee to assume. There still needs to be depth, though, and veteran Orlando Arcia provides that.

Orlando Arcia spent last season with the Atlanta Braves and Colorado Rockies. He’s a 10-year veteran that was once a top-10 prospect in all of baseball.

Across 76 games last season, Arcia batted .202/.238/.291. His 42 OPS+ was horrendous, and it’s a surprise he got the time at the major league level that he did.

In 2024, Arcia was the every day shortstop for the Braves. He had just a 73 OPS+, but still launched 17 home runs and had 24 doubles.

Arcia is a right-handed hitter, but has neutral splits. With Lee being a switch hitter, and possessing a higher ceiling, the expectation should be that Arcia would simply be a bench bat that fills in, like Ryan Fitzgerald did down the stretch last season.

The defensive ability is what the MN Twins are relying on here, and why he has had a decade-long career. As the Braves regular in 2024, he posted 4 OAA (outs above average) and 3 FRV (fielding run value).

Arcia brings MN Twins back in the family

It’s somewhat of a full circle moment for the Minnesota Twins to sign Arcia. He is 31 years old, and the younger brother of former Twins slugging outfielder Oswaldo Arcia. Oswaldo is just 34 years old, but has not played in the majors since 2016. He spent four seasons with the Twins.

The elder Arcia is still playing professionally, and was in the Mexican League last year. He had 15 home runs in 104 games, but batted just .190/.346/.382.

The ship has sailed on a return stateside for him given the declining production, but there was a two-season stretch in 2013 and 2014 where he hit 34 home runs with Minnesota. He had a career-best 113 OPS+ in 2014 before being sent to Triple-A in 2015, with brief call-ups afterward leading to his trade to the Rays in 2016.

Mentioned in this article:

More About: