Minnesota Twins 2026: The $30M "Ghost Payroll" Crisis Explained
How do the Minnesota Twins compete with the 27th ranked payroll in MLB? In this episode of This Week in Twins, we deep dive into the "Ghost Payroll" gamble—the staggering $30 million tied up in dead money for Carlos Correa and Pablo Lopez.
We break down the opening series in Baltimore, from the agonizing 2-1 loss on Thursday to the cathartic Saturday victory powered by Royce Lewis’s 101.0 MPH home run. We also look at the "Internal Pitching Lab" success stories, including Joe Ryan’s new Aaron Nola-style curveball and Taj Bradley’s 97.4 MPH fastball velocity increase.
Is hoarding veteran assets like Trevor Larnach over high-upside rookies like Alan Rhoden a smart move for Derek Shelton’s squad, or a sunk-cost fallacy? Join the conversation as we analyze the economic and mechanical structure of the 2026 Twins.
00:00 The $30 Million Ghost Payroll Dilemma
01:14 The Cost of Losing Pablo Lopez ($21.5M Impact)
03:17 Opening Day Disaster: 1-for-12 with RISP
06:45 The Return of the King: Royce Lewis 101 MPH HR
09:59 Byron Buxton's Elite Sprint Speed in 46° Weather
11:08 Joe Ryan’s "Pitching Lab" Evolution
13:43 The Mechanics of the 79 MPH Curveball
15:16 Taj Bradley’s 97.4 MPH Velocity Jump
18:40 The Trevor Larnack vs. Alan Rhoden Controversy
25:02 The "Value Twins" Bullpen Experiment
30:32 Is the 2026 Twins Model Actually Sustainable?