Derek Shelton News - MinnesotaSportsFan https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/tag/derek-shelton/ Minnesota sports, but different Mon, 22 Dec 2025 19:27:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/cdn-cgi/image/width=32,height=32,fit=crop,quality=80,format=auto,onerror=redirect,metadata=none/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/cropped-cropped-MSF-favicon-1.jpg Derek Shelton News - MinnesotaSportsFan https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/tag/derek-shelton/ 32 32 MN Twins Take Trophy for MLB’s Unhappiest Fanbase https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/minnesota-twins/most-frustrated-fanbase-award-first-place/ Mon, 22 Dec 2025 17:24:53 +0000 https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/?p=76307 Last week, the Minnesota Twins announced their new minority owners, clarified the organization’s debt situation, and officially pushed Joe Pohlad out of the spotlight.

Now, Tom Pohlad is their front man and the latest family member to promise real change in an ownership group that almost always falls short of promises and expectations. Unfortunately for the Twins and their expanded ownership family, fans aren’t interested in lip service anymore.

Joe Pohlad said all the right things when he was introduced as executive chair in November, 2022. He followed through for a couple of seasons, before suddenly having to “right-sized” payroll.

Fans Need Better From the Minnesota Twins

The last couple years of incompetence is hardly a surprise to MN Twins fans. The Pohlads have shown little care for their fanbase for years now, if not decades.

And when you repeatedly fail and frustrate your fans like our favorite baseball team has recently, well… that’s how your fanbase lands the No. 1 spot on ESPN’s most frustrated MLB fanbases.

Let’s turn back the clock to 2019. The Twins won 101 games, smashing an MLB-record 307 home runs, on their way to the AL Central title. Then consider where the rest of the division was. The Kansas City Royals were a mess. The Detroit Tigers were a bigger mess.

The Chicago White Sox had lost 89 games. Cleveland was about to embark on a rebuild of sortsThe Twins had the most talent in the division. They should have dominated the AL Central the next six years.

But that didn’t happen…Then came the 2025 trade deadline, when the Twins had a historic sell-off, dealing away 11 players in a series of moves that stunned the baseball industry.

David Schoenfield – ESPN

As Schoenfield points out, Minnesota fans have been climbing his list for years. Last season, they ranked fourth. One year later, their fans are even worse off than those cheering for the 102-loss Chicago White Sox.

Is there hope? Kind of. The AL Central is hardly a gauntlet, which should give the Twins a chance to compete in the short term, as long as team president Derek Falvey can put a decent budget squad together.

Trying to find hope in Twins’ future

But really, this is lipstick service for a pig. Because, as Schoenfeld points out, the moment this ownership group decided not to sell the franchise back in August, any real feeling of optimism for the future went along with it.

[After the trade deadline] The Twins went 19-35 the final two months and attendance fell to 1.77 million, the lowest full-season figure for the franchise since 2000.

In the midst of this, the Pohlad family, which has owned the Twins since 1984 and had been exploring a sale, took the team off the market in August — crushing the hopes of Twins fans everywhere.

David Schoenfield – ESPN

The addition of Josh Bell is a step in the right direction, but the bullpen still needs a complete rebuild. More than likely, Dan Altavilla isn’t the piece that gets it done.

Even with a new influx of cash, it would be unrealistic to expect the Twins’ payroll to rise significantly by 2026. That means Derek Shelton and the front office must squeeze more out of the talent already in place.

If the Pohlads truly want fans back at Target Field, it won’t be about what they say, it will be about what they do.

If there’s a glimmer of good news for a franchise that has just one playoff series win since 2002 (a wild-card series win in 2023) and last appeared in the World Series in 1991, it’s that the Twins will apparently hold on to Joe Ryan, Pablo Lopez and Byron Buxton, despite trade rumors at the beginning of the offseason.

Hey, in the AL Central, anything is possible. Maybe the Twins find a way to get off this list next year.

David Schoenfield – ESPN
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Mon, 22 Dec 2025 13:27:06 +0000 Minnesota Twins
Key MN Twins Youngster Head Over Heels After Meeting New Manager https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/minnesota-twins/royce-lewis-impressed-by-derek-shelton-mn-twins/ Sat, 15 Nov 2025 15:40:00 +0000 https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/?p=71971 The Minnesota Twins are going through one of the more difficult starts to an offseason in recent franchise history. After the Pohlad ownership group made team president Derek Falvey sell off a third of the active MLB roster last trade deadline, there’s been an eerie silence regarding the financial future of the organization.

Of course, we all wonder what the long-term future looks like, and whether it will include the Pohlads at all (hopefully not). But for now, there’s no time to worry about that because MN Twins fans are stuck concerning themselves with the more immediate future.

As of this morning, we still have no idea what the 2026 player budget will look like. And we found out earlier this week thanks to Ken Rosenthal (The Athletic) week that Falvey doesn’t know either, because the Pohlads haven’t told him, as they await approval of two new minority ownership groups they hope to bring on ASAP.

While the roster is frozen in time, however, the Twins have been shuffling around their managerial staff like a worn out deck of cards. There will be a ton of new faces in Minnesota’s dugout next season, but the headliner is at manager where former bench coach Derek Shelton has replaced his former boss (and good friend), Rocco Baldelli.

Royce Lewis 100% in on MN Twins new manager

Derek Shelton, Derek Falvey, Jeremy Zoll - Minnesota Twins
Credit: Photo courtesy of Minnesota Twins on X (@Twins)

But if there’s one guy who’s already buying whatever Shelton is selling as this team’s new manager in bulk, it’s former No. 1 overall pick Royce Lewis. Dan Hayes (The Athletic) is reporting Saturday that Lewis met for dinner (BBQ) this week with his new skipper.

How did it go? Well, the only way to describe Royce’s feelings for Shelton after their first meeting is “head over heels”. And that might be understating it because the 26-year-old oft-injured third baseman is talking like a giddy teenager who thinks he just met “the one”.

“We started off building a really good relationship. [Shelton] told me I was important to him and our organization. I told him at points last year I didn’t feel like that. It was really important to me to feel that kind of confidence. I told him that part of me is a little bit of a wide receiver mentality, to where I need to be talked to and just told what’s going on, what the plan is for myself, for the organization, and to be involved just a little bit.”

Royce Lewis (via The Athletic)

There’s really no questioning the type of hire Shelton is. He’s a comfort hire. Falvey’s friendship with Derek was undoubtedly a huge factor in his hiring. Nonetheless, it became clear the moment he cracked the mic during his opening press conference that Derek Shelton is NOT Rocco Baldelli.

The Minnesota Twins’ new manager is loud, has a deep voice and the type of personality that commands a room — none of which were qualities used to describe his predecessor. Only time will tell whether or not any of that will lead to success, and the odds are certainly stacked against that happening.

Royce Lewis pumped for fresh start with Derek Shelton

If you’ll remember, a frustrated Royce Lewis has been quoted multiple times over the past couple seasons voicing issues with a variety of things that rubbed him the wrong way playing for the Minnesota Twins.

With Hayes, and in his conversation with Shelton, Lewis went as far as to compare himself to an NFL wide receiver — a position group notoriously known for diva behavior, though he didn’t describe the analogy that way.

Instead, Royce Lewis equated his clubhouse temperament to someone who needs to be communicated with on a regular basis. He wants to feel wanted, needed even. Beyond that, the California kid wants a window into what those in charge are thinking.

“It just feels like there’s something new about the culture [Shelton]’s trying to build. I just look forward to some of his ideas he had for us. Whether it’s implementing them in spring or in season, I loved the mentality he had — the ‘It’s going to take every man’ approach. It was unbelievable.”

Royce Lewis (via The Athletic)

Royce Lewis started his big league career like a rocket, immediately inserting himself as one of the team’s best and most clutch hitters when he debuted in 2022, slashing .300/.317/.550 in his first twelve games, until he tore his ACL colliding with the centerfield wall.

But in the past couple seasons, he’s fallen off a cliff. In 106 games last season, Lewis hit .237 with a .671 OPS and 83 OPS+. So whatever communication or coddling Derek Shelton has to deploy in order to bring the old Royce Lewis back, I’m all for it.

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Sat, 15 Nov 2025 09:40:08 +0000 Minnesota Twins
Twins Trying to Hire Another Former Coach https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/minnesota-twins/james-rowson-bench-coach-derek-shelton-staff/ Sat, 08 Nov 2025 21:22:40 +0000 https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/?p=71396 The Minnesota Twins tabbed former bench coach and fired Pittsburgh Pirates manager Derek Shelton to lead the post-Rocco Baldelli era. Since Shelton’s hire became official, multiple changes have already been announced on his coaching staff.

The role of bench coach, however, has yet to be filled. In Major League Baseball, bench coaches are usually second in-command to the manager so it’s a very important position to fill. And unsurprisingly, it sounds like the Twins are going to choose more familiarity. Jayce Tingler is gone, and Minnesota’s managerial runner up could be the answer.

James Rowson in play for Minnesota Twins bench coach

Former bench coach, Jayce Tingler, is headed to the San Francisco Giants, to fill the same role for Tony Vitello. His replacement in Minnesota, if the Twins have it their way (per Aaron Gleeman (The Athletic), will be Yankees hitting coach James Rowson, who was the hitting coach here from 2017-2019.

“I have heard from multiple people that the the Twins would like James Rowson, who finished runner up for this job and was also a finalist in 2019 when the job went to Baldelli, they would like James Rowson to be the bench coach. He’s very close to Shelton also.”

Aaron Gleeman – Gleeman and The Geek podcast

James Rowson was a front-runner to land the MN Twins manager job, before it was awarded to Derek Shelton. Hiring one of his runners-up to now be second in command would probably be weird in most situations.

However, team president Derek Falvey and Shelton both have have a personal relationship with Rowson, so the hope is that he’d be able to look past that reality. Being promoted from hitting coach to bench coach would be another step in James Rowson’s coaching progression too, which has to be appealing

If the Minnesota Twins wanted to show a willingness to change this offseason, they certainly have not shown it with these manager/coaching hires. Then again, par for the course is what the Twins are known for.

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Sat, 08 Nov 2025 15:43:35 +0000 Minnesota Twins
Minnesota Twins Hire Familiar New Manager https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/minnesota-twins/derek-shelton-next-manager-rocco-baldelli-replacement/ Wed, 29 Oct 2025 23:48:50 +0000 https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/?p=70533 There’s no smoke coming out of the building at 1 Twins Way, but the Minnesota Twins have hired their new manager. After dismissing Rocco Baldelli following a 70-92 season, President of Operations Derek Falvey had to figure out his next move.

A final group of four candidates earned second round interviews. That was after Twins legend Torii Hunter turned down any idea of interest, before things even got off the ground.

When the last crop of names were announced, familiar faces in the form of Derek Shelton and James Rowson stood out as logical choices.

Derek Shelton takes over as next MN Twins manager

When we last saw Derek Shelton he was managing the Pittsburgh Pirates. After being fired earlier this season following a 12-26 start, he makes his way back to the clubhouse where he operated as Baldelli’s bench coach. Shelton becomes the 14th manager in Minnesota Twins history.

Shelton left the Twins after the 2019 season and started in Pittsburgh during the 60-game Covid-19 season. His team went just 19-41 that year. After 61 and 62 win seasons, Shelton pushed the bar and had the Pirates win 76 games in each of the 2023 and 2024 years. Across parts of six seasons, Shelton finished with a 306-440 record (.410%) with Pittsburgh.

Similarly to the Twins, Pittsburgh is a desolate place for a manager to succeed given the kneecapping of a front office by ownership. Of course that is what the Pohlads continue to do in Minnesota, but the extent is a bit less.

Shelton will now return to manage a team that has plenty of familiar faces. That’s probably a positive from a place of rapport, but it remains to be seen what level of impact he will truly have.

An uninspiring managerial choice for the Minnesota Twins

This sort of outcome is about as unfortunate as things can get, at least on paper. It’s entirely possible that Shelton provides a fresh voice and sees immediate success with the Twins. However, he is a retread and returns to the same organization he once was hired to a lesser position by.

When Derek Falvey chose Rocco Baldelli to be his handpicked manager, Shelton very well could have been tabbed as the leader at that point. The front office decided that Falvey was the better choice.

Derek Shelton
Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

It has also been reported that Minnesota would likely consider finances when picking their next skipper. Baldelli had his contract option for 2026 exercised by the Twins. In what would have been his eighth season for Minnesota, he will unquestionably make more from the team for not coaching them than Shelton will in his place.

At the end of the day, the manager has not been the problem for the Minnesota Twins in recent seasons. The blame starts at the top and trickles down. Now Falvey’s next pick as manager though, Shelton will be the guy that either bails out the front office, or forces ownership to pin blame on someone else and clean house.

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Wed, 29 Oct 2025 22:42:25 +0000 Minnesota Twins
Twins Zeroing In on Next Managerial Hire https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/minnesota-twins/managerial-search-four-candidates-rowson-shelton-flaherty-servais/ Sat, 25 Oct 2025 00:55:50 +0000 https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/?p=70240 The Minnesota Twins fired Rocco Baldelli after a 70-92 season in 2025. Derek Falvey is tasked with finding the next leading for his big league club. Organization legend Torii Hunter turned down the club before ever actually being a consideration.

Former Seattle Mariners manager Scott Servais was the latest name to be presented, and he’s now among the final group to be considered. It seems likely that Minnesota will name a manager within the next week, and they have a final group of four.

Final countdown for Minnesota Twins manager

The Minnesota Twins have interviewed a handful of candidates for their managerial opening. Dan Hayes and Brittany Ghiroli of The Athletic are reporting that the group under consideration is now down to four.

Several weeks into their managerial search, the Minnesota Twins appear to have reduced the field of candidates to four.

After multiple rounds of discussions, the search appears to be focused on a group that includes ex-Twins bench coach and Pittsburgh Pirates manager Derek Shelton, New York Yankees hitting coach James Rowson (who held the same title with the Twins from 2018-19), former Seattle Mariners manager Scott Servais and Chicago Cubs bench coach Ryan Flaherty, according to multiple league sources.

Sources believe the Twins are leaning toward hiring a candidate with whom they’re familiar. Given their previous experience working with Twins president Derek Falvey and general manager Jeremy Zoll, Shelton and Rowson appear to be the strongest candidates.

The Athletic

Both Shelton and Rowson have previously worked for the Minnesota Twins. The former was Rocco Baldelli’s bench coach before leaving to manage the Pittsburgh Pirates. The later worked as the hitting coach before taking that same role with the New York Yankees.

It’s understanding that Derek Falvey would have a desire to hire a person that he has previously employed. That said, either Shelton or Rowson should be seen as an underwhelming outcome in that each has previously worked in the organization and not been thought highly enough of to supplant the man in charger.

If the Twins were to employ either Rowson or Shelton as their manager, it’s possible their voice would hold more weight as the leader of the clubhouse. It’s also entirely plausible that an organization retread will do little to push the envelope, and Falvey will simply be hiring someone to push his message onto the field.

Both Ramon Vazquez and Vance Wilson were initially part of the Minnesota Twins managerial search. They are no longer under consideration, and former piranha Nick Punto has experienced the same fate.

39-year-old infielder Ryan Flaherty is a new name to enter the fold. He last played in 2019 with the Guardians, but was made part of the search following Chicago’s playoff exit.

Flaherty, who joined the search after the Milwaukee Brewers eliminated the Cubs in the National League Division Series, also interviewed well, according to a team source. An infielder for eight seasons with the Baltimore Orioles, Atlanta Braves and Cleveland Indians, Flaherty was a coach for the Padres and a finalist for that job that ultimately went to Mike Shildt. He was named Craig Counsell’s bench coach in Chicago for the 2024 season and has been with the Cubs since.

The Athletic

Like Baldelli, Flaherty would be a green hire. Servais is the opposite and has a track record of success with the Seattle Mariners. If there’s a former manager who has been tied to the Twins opening that has a level of intrigue, then Servais is it.

The World Series started on Friday night and Major League Baseball doesn’t like announcements on game days. That won’t stop Minnesota from finding a way to make a hiring in between action.

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Fri, 24 Oct 2025 19:55:53 +0000 Minnesota Twins
More Minnesota Twins Manager Candidates Surface, Both Familiar https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/minnesota-twins/manager-candidates-mn-twins-james-rowson-derek-shelton/ Tue, 14 Oct 2025 20:20:49 +0000 https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/?p=69642 It’s official. A couple of weeks after kicking Rocco Baldelli to the curb, the Minnesota Twins are on the hunt for a new manager. On Tuesday morning, news broke that a request had been put in to the Boston Red Sox, to interview their bench coach.

Hours later, that same MLB Network and New York Post reporter, Jon Heyman, put out two more realistic candidates that the MN Twins have touched base, both of whom will sound very familiar to the local fanbase.

Minnesota Twins trying to bring the Bomba Squad back?

According to Heyman and his confidant at The Post, Joel Sherman, Falvey and his front office have received permission from the New York Yankees, to interview their hitting coach, James Rowson, for their vacant manager position.

The Yankees have granted the Twins permission to speak with Rowson about their vacant managerial position, league sources confirmed to The Post…on Tuesday.

The upbeat, well-regarded 49-year-old remains a popular figure in Minnesota, as he spent plenty of time catching up with members of his former organization when the Yankees visited Target Field in September.

NY Post

Rowson — who has never been an MLB manager — took over as the Bronx Bombers’ hitting coach before the 2024 season. Prior to that, he was the assistant hitting coach for the Detroit Tigers (2023), a temporary job he held for one season, after being let go as Miami Marlins bench coach, a job he held for two seasons, from 2020-2022.

For four seasons from 2017 to 2019, however, James Rowson made a name for himself as the hitting coach of the Minnesota Twins Bomba Squad, which set an MLB record for team home runs his final year on the job, before he was hired away for a promotion in Miami.

Twins speaking to Bomba Squad coaches James Rowson and Derek Shelton

James Rowson - Kansas City Royals at Minnesota Twins
Credit: Ben Ludeman-Imagn Images

Coincidentally, the other candidate the Twins have been in contact with, according to Heyman, is another assistant coach who left after that 2019 season, Derek Shelton. The now 55-year-old served as Rocco Baldelli’s bench coach from 2018-2019, before he was hired away to be manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Former Pirates manager Derek Shelton and Red Sox bench coach Ramon Vazquez are among the other candidates for the job, which opened up when the Twins fired Rocco Baldelli following their 70-92 season.

NY Post

Related: ALCS Favorite Thankful for Fired Twins Coach

Shelton held that position for the start of five seasons, until the Pirates fired him 38 games into 2025. Clearly, he wasn’t the biggest problem in Pittsburgh, being the Pirates went on to finish with a 71-91 record, just one game better than the MN Twins’ 72-90.

As manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates, Derek Shelton went 306-440. Before he worked for the Minnesota Twins for two seasons, Shelton coached in the Cleveland (2005-2009), Tampa Bay (2010-2016) and Toronto (2017) organizations.

Interesting enough, both Rowson and Shelton were seriously considered for the Twins manager job back in 2018, before they landed on Baldelli. Both guys stayed/came on as assistants — advanced their careers from there — and now find themselves in the same situation.

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Tue, 14 Oct 2025 15:20:52 +0000 Minnesota Twins
Minnesota Twins Have Identified Next Manager Type https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/minnesota-twins/next-manager-type-player-development/ Wed, 01 Oct 2025 19:54:41 +0000 https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/?p=69130 Derek Falvey remains in charge of the Minnesota Twins organization after making Rocco Baldelli his fall guy following the putrid 70-92 finish in 2025. The Pohlads have the same steward to lead the franchise forward, and the team president is now tasked with finding a new manager.

It would be easy to categorize Baldelli as a player’s manager, and traditionally after a firing, clubs go in the opposite direction with their next leader. It isn’t going to be that cut and dry for the Twins though, as they reportedly have identified the goal for their next skipper.

Player development is a must for MN Twins new manager

A few years ago, moving from a manager like Rocco Baldelli to someone like Doug Mientkiewicz might make sense. The former Twins first basemen has a reputation as a “red ass”, but the current regime chose not to keep him as a manager in the minors. Even though he won games, his style didn’t align with their philosophy. That same approach isn’t what they’re aiming for at the major league level, either.

One of the intended goals of bringing on a new manager is to hire someone well-versed in player development, Falvey said.

“I don’t think there is a one-size-fits-all to this,” Falvey said. “We have to be very open-minded. … If you look around baseball, and you look at the postseason right now, there are all kinds of different managers. There are lots of very successful managers that have come from different backgrounds, different playing experiences, different coaching experiences, even just non-coaching experiences in and outside of the game.”

The Athletic

A strong background in player development, though, could hold importance. The Twins didn’t see many of their young hitters take a step forward this year. Royce Lewis and Matt Wallner didn’t hit as well as they did in past seasons. Brooks Lee has yet to establish himself. Edouard Julien and Jose Miranda seemingly fell out of the team’s plans.

“If you’re in a market like ours and you’re going to bring up players, you’re going to bring up guys that aren’t quite there yet,” Falvey said. “They need to be given runway, need to be given development and need to grow at this level.”

Star Tribune

Both Dan Hayes of The Athletic and Bobby Nightengale of the Star Tribune suggest that the Twins are looking for someone adept in player development. This is interesting because that doesn’t typically fall on the shoulders of a manager.

Managers are typically a reflection of the coaches around them from a performance standpoint. They are tasked with pulling levers, but they aren’t traditionally going to be directly credited for results.

It seems as the Twins want someone who has accomplished those feats previously before installing them as the leader of their clubhouse. If that is the case, someone like Torii Hunter could certainly be cast aside due to a lack of previous coaching experience.

If this is the channel for the Twins, then previous managers or high-level coaches all fit the bill. That goes back to the group of previously connected names like Derek Shelton, James Rowson, and Brandon Hyde.

New Twins manager will need to overhaul staff

While Rocco Baldelli was the name publicly announced as having been let go on Monday, the coaching staff is likely to take the fall as well. That could mean Tommy Watkins, Hank Conger, Jayce Tingler, and plenty of others are on the outs.

Whether any of them are ultimately retained remains to be seen. The reality for a newly identified manager is that they have to get the support staff right too.

Minnesota has looked to both the professional and college ranks when filling out the leaders of their clubhouse. That should be expected to remain the case going forward. The collective must be aligned on the direction and decisions for the future though.

No matter who is leading the charge, 2026 doesn’t look entirely promising. The more impact the next group of leaders can have on that, the better.

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Wed, 01 Oct 2025 15:29:57 +0000 Minnesota Twins
Twins Insider Names Possible Rocco Baldelli Replacements https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/minnesota-twins/nightengale-tribune-managerial-candidates-torii-hunter/ Tue, 30 Sep 2025 16:48:05 +0000 https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/?p=69076 The Minnesota Twins were almost guaranteed to fire Rocco Baldelli on Monday. That decision was likely made back in July when the front office, mandated by ownership, sent nearly 40% of the roster packing.

Someone had to take the fall for a 92-loss season. Ownership already decided to halt the sale of the team and instead invite new limited partners to buy down their debt. Derek Falvey was recently promoted to one of the highest ranking front office roles across the sport. Fault wasn’t going to be felt there.

With Baldelli being ousted though, the powers at the top must now find a new name. There have been candidates discussed previously, but we’re now starting to see some floated by local sources.

Bobby Nightengale offers new names for MN Twins manager role

Earlier this summer Buster Olney highlighted some candidates that could be considered to take over a vacancy at manager for the Minnesota Twins. Easy ties are made to former hitting coach James Rowson, and former bench coach Derek Shelton. The Star Tribune’s Bobby Nightengale mentions both of them as well.

The more intriguing names are those that hadn’t been previously considered or stated publicly. Seven of those exist in Nightengale’s mind.

NamePositionFranchise
Brandon HydeFormer ManagerBaltimore Orioles
Skip SchumacherSenior AdviserTexas Rangers
Craig AlbernazAssociate ManagerCleveland Guardians
Torii HunterSpecial AssistantLos Angeles Angels
David BellAssistant General ManagerToronto Blue Jays
Davis RossFormer ManagerChicago Cubs
George LombardBench CoachDetroit Tigers

Of them, there are four former managers. Skip Schumacher seems to be in line for the Texas Rangers job after they parted ways with future Hall of Famer Bruce Bochy. Both Hyde and Ross were out of the dugout and clubhouse this season. Bell formerly managed the Cincinnati Reds, and his brother Mike was the Twins bench coach in 2020 prior to his death.

Albernaz is a name that ESPN has also brought up, along with Kai Correa, as potential matches from the Guardians franchise. Falvey’s connections there continue to run deep, and he could look to poach from the AL Central Division champions.

Lombard was a candidate for the White Sox managerial job last season. Speaking of the White Sox, former Twins catcher Drew Butera was released from their coaching staff on Monday, and could be a candidate as well. So too could current bench coach Jayce Tingler.

Of the names Nightengale mentions though, it’s Torii Hunter that continues to generate some real steam.

Torii Hunter as the Minnesota Twins manager?

Hunter played 19 years at the Major League level. He has yet to manage in any capacity, but has worked in a coaching capacity with both the Twins and the Angels. At 50 years old, he could be the next former player to immediately step into the role.

The Twins Hall of Famer, a five-time All-Star and nine-time Gold Glove winner, has expressed interest in managing. Hunter, 50, was a popular player inside and outside the clubhouse, and he’s worked as a special assistant in the Los Angeles Angels front office for the last two years. Hunter, who works with Twins third baseman Royce Lewis during the offseason, interviewed to be the Angels manager in 2023.

Bobby Nightengale – Star Tribune

Rocco Baldelli was seen as a player’s manager and typically a firing then swings the pendulum the other way. I’d guess Hunter would fall more in line as a player’s manager as well, but shouting and yelling can fall on deaf ears.

The reality is that great managers can carry messages between the front office and roster while effectively communicating in a way both sides are receptive to hearing. Hunter has the experience working with both sides, and he has been an integral part of generating positive clubhouse cultures as well.

Although Hunter does not have previous managerial experience, his fit is one that continues to gain steam.

Going with Hunter would be taking a risk. The Cleveland Guardians did so with a 39-year-old Stephen Vogt last season though, and he won 92 games while finishing first in the division. This season they repeated, and overcame a 12.5 game deficit to chase down the Detroit tigers.

Previous experience shouldn’t be the lone determining factor, and Hunter has been intrigued by different managerial jobs previously. He’s currently engrained in the Angels system, and makes sense as a successor to Ron Washington. Minnesota may be best served to poach him first.

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Tue, 30 Sep 2025 11:48:09 +0000 Minnesota Twins
Top MLB Insider Floats Possible Rocco Baldelli Replacements… https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/minnesota-twins/buster-olney-names-rocco-baldelli-manager-replacements-rowson-shelton/ Wed, 10 Sep 2025 17:59:04 +0000 https://www.minnesotasportsfan.com/?p=68214 Last season the Minnesota Twins fell apart down the stretch and they fired their hitting coaches. This season the Twins have fallen apart basically out of the gate. Rocco Baldelli had his 2026 option picked up, but a change somewhere higher has to happen.

The Pohlads aren’t going to fire themselves, and they have since taken the team off the market. Though warranted, it doesn’t seem like they’ll fire the front office either after promoting Derek Falvey. That leaves the manager in a precarious position.

There is a level of blame to be placed on Baldelli, even if he is being used as the scapegoat. Should he be sent packing, a new voice will be needed and Buster Olney is already compiling a list.

Options for Minnesota Twins at manager

As The Athletic’s Aaron Gleeman so eloquently put it, “what is going to change if nothing changes?” That’s the question Derek Falvey and Jeremy Zoll have to ask themselves this offseason. Buster Olney knows a change could be coming at manager, and he outlined a pair of options to consider.

Baldelli just had his 2026 option picked up in June, timing that might suggest he’s safe for next season, as Twins ownership could simply plow ahead with him at the helm. But a lot has changed with the Twins since that decision was made: The team unloaded veterans and salary at the trade deadline, angering fans.

Baldelli is concluding his seventh year with the team and could face the same reality that every manager does: If an organization wants to signal change — and the Twins might want to do that after a messy 2025 season — one of the cheapest ways to do that is to fire the manager. Sometime in the next few weeks, Minnesota’s ownership will make that choice.

If the Twins do switch managers, then Derek Shelton — a former Twins coach who was the Pirates’ skipper before he was fired earlier this season — could be among those considered, along with former Twins hitting coach James Rowson (now with the Yankees) and others.

Buster Olney – ESPN

When the Twins picked up Baldelli’s option, they were not yet in a free fall. They went through a deadline fire sale, and the play on the field continues to get worse.

Short of the Pohlads firing Falvey, who they recently promoted to the most senior front office leader in the game, it’s going to fall on the staff. If Baldelli goes, then it’s probably likely all of his assistants do as well.

Related: Rocco Baldelli Takes Responsibility Minnesota Twins Bosses Won’t

Olney tabs a pair of former Minnesota Twins coaches as replacements. Both Derek Shelton and James Rowson worked with the organization while Falvey has been in charge. That lends itself to a quick acclimation process, but it could just be a reflection of greasing the wheel with another level of groupthink.

If there is a recent voice that sounds intriguing, it’s a guy who appeared on former Twins general manager Thad Levine’s Rosters to Rings podcast. Scott Servais has managed some very successful teams, and it’s hard not to think his background may fit.

At some point the Twins have to stop shuffling deck chairs and figure out how to address the actual problems. A manager may do that in the short term, but they are far from the overarching cure.

How do the MN Twins fix this?

“This” is a very complicated set of circumstances. There isn’t just one thing that the Minnesota Twins need to address, and some deep soul searching within the organization has to take place.

Regardless of how the blame is distributed, there’s plenty to go around, and the Twins have gone five seasons struggling to win despite playing in MLB’s weakest, lowest-spending division. And it’s gotten difficult to even point to anything they do particularly well.

Aaron Gleeman – The Athletic

We saw no roster shakeup this offseason, and there are still too many players from a failed core to open up spots for the future. That can be addressed this offseason, but the vision for the future needs to be more clear. After a failed 2024 stretch run, the Pohlads responded by promoting both Falvey and Zoll.

Related: Royce Lewis Credits This “Change” for Fueling His Hot Streak

If this is the front office to both orchestrate the turnaround and pave a path for the future, then deviating from what they have been doing is a must. They have made the playoffs in just one of the last five seasons, and the immediate excitement from the 2016 front office turnover has all but worn off.

I’m certainly not paid well enough to have all the answers for Minnesota. The ship needs to steer in a different direction though, and soon.

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Wed, 10 Sep 2025 12:59:08 +0000 Minnesota Twins