
Panic isn't quite the right word to describe the reaction of Twins fans Tuesday to the news the Ervin Santana, their best and most dependable starting pitcher in each of the last two seasons, underwent a procedure on his right middle finger that figures to sideline him for roughly the first month of the 2018 season.
Concern, though? Yes, there was concern. This offseason has fueled visions of adding to the rotation, not subtracting. And now here we are, less than a week before pitchers and catchers report to Fort Myers for the start of spring training, and the Twins are down their version of an ace without another one on the way.
If we can link these two things together, this question comes into play: Should Santana's injury create more of a sense of urgency for the Twins to make a move in free agency?
The answer is yes, though maybe not for the reason you think.
Suggesting the free agent pitching market is moving at a glacial pace would be an insult to the relatively swift speed of glaciers. But that's not necessarily a bad thing for the Twins.
More immediate dives into free agency, before the market has been set, do not tend to end well. This is just one example, but the pitching-desperate Twins gave Ricky Nolasco a four-year, $49 million contract in late November of 2013. That was a different market in a different year, but it shows what can happen when a team reaches too soon for a non-ace.
The Twins can afford to be patient still because none of the dominoes are falling in a very strange offseason. "We think there are a number of guys in that mix who can help us," Twins boss Derek Falvey said last week when I chatted with him on radio row at the Super Bowl. "Ultimately we'll see where things shake out."
The Twins have signed three relief pitches as well as Michael Pineda, a starter recovering from Tommy John surgery who projects in the rotation in 2019 "and maybe the bullpen at the end of this year," Falvey said.