August is within sight and the Twins still are competitive and relevant, so the narrative of this surprising summer remains unchanged: Buyers or sellers as the trade deadline looms?
Seems like an easy answer at present.
"I'd love to be a buyer and get a little help," closer Brandon Kintzler said after pitching a clean but wet ninth inning in a 4-2 victory against the New York Yankees on Monday at Target Field. "I don't want to be a seller."
This conversation suddenly comes against the backdrop of Bartolo Colon's scheduled start Tuesday. A strange juxtaposition this is, debating whether the Twins should buy or sell, knowing their leadership signed a pitcher close to AARP eligibility.
Colon's arrival represents a remarkable display of desperation by executives Derek Falvey and Thad Levine. The bottom of the rotation has been a revolving door of failed experiments so Falvey/Levine went two time zones outside the box in signing Colon.
And yet, the Twins can't sell. Not now. Not when a playoff spot is still a realistic objective.
The Twins stayed 1 ½ games behind Cleveland in the AL Central and moved to within a half-game of the Yankees in the wild-card standings with the win. Everyone keeps waiting for Cleveland to put its foot on the gas and run away with the division, but that remains a theory at present.
Nobody seems willing to grab control of the division. That's why the Twins should consider making moves to bolster their short term vs. selling off with an eye on their future. That line of thought could change over the next two weeks if the Twins nose-dive, but team officials should act accordingly as long as the standings reflect hope.