About two dozen members of the Twins front office moved around a suite-level board room on July 31. From that spot, a room renamed after the Twins community fund, they engineered the largest trade deadline sell-off in modern baseball history.
The dealmaking was stunning in its scope. Carlos Correa, signed to the largest free-agent contract in team history, was gone. Closer Jhoan Duran, setup man Griffin Jax and three other top relievers were among others sent out of town.
In a little more than 96 hours, the Twins traded away 11 players. The moves stunned the baseball industry, stripping down more than a third of a roster midseason, and triggered more anger from the fan base.
With the Pohlad family exploring a sale of the club, the Twins slashed up to $26 million from their 2025 payroll and saved $70 million from Correa’s long-term contract.
Derek Falvey, the team president, labeled the moves as an organizational reset.
Really, it was a shock to the system.
This is an inside look at the four days and unprecedented trade deadline action that reshaped the Twins.
Monday, July 28
Trade: Pitchers Chris Paddack and Randy Dobnak to the Tigers for catcher Enrique Jimenez.