As the Twins complete their three-game series today against a familiar-looking Cincinnati team, they should have no regrets.
They have spent this week at Great American Ball Park facing the revitalized Reds, who have gone from 100 losses last season to battling for a National League wild-card spot thanks to an injection of talent that will keep them relevant for the near future. This talent wave includes two former Twins prospects and one pitcher they passed on in the draft who was considered a generational talent.
Of course, Spencer Steer greeted the Twins with three hits on Monday. No one with his former organization is surprised that Steer has 22 home runs, 89 RBI and an .815 on-base-plus-slugging percentage. He showed that potential at Oregon and was selected by the Twins in the third round in 2019.
The Twins traded Steer in a package deal for righthander Tyler Mahle in August of last season. Christian Encarnacion-Strand and Steve Hajjar joined him in the trade.
That deal makes you cringe now, based on what the Twins got out of Mahle, which was nine starts and a 3.64 ERA before needing season-ending Tommy John surgery as his contract expires.
Encarnacion-Strand, who had some eye-popping games in 2022 as a Twins minor leaguer, tore up the International League this season before getting called up in July. He has five multi-hit games in September and is batting .273. Hajjar is now in Cleveland's organization. Steer and Encarnacion-Strand are under several years of contract control by the Reds. That's enough time for the club to determine their best defensive positions.
I would make that trade today under the same conditions.
No one knew that Mahle, whose Twins career is likely over, was about to break down when the deal was made. Reds manager David Bell told Twins manager Rocco Baldelli that Mahle could pitch deep into games, which was desperately needed. And the Twins were dealing from their strength. Edouard Julien, a fine hitter who needs to work on his defense, was moving up the chain. Jose Miranda, who was promising last season but perplexing this season before he was injured, looked like the future third baseman. And Royce Lewis was going to fit in somewhere.