Two theories have become popular among vocal Twins fans in the past few months.
The first is that the franchise is too loyal to its employees. The second is that the team has little chance to win anytime soon. Both are wrong.
Friday afternoon, Terry Ryan met with the Twin Cities media alongside owner Jim Pohlad and President Dave St. Peter. Ryan announced that he was accepting the general manager job on a long-term basis, removing the word "interim" from his title. He was also tasked with explaining the reorganization of the team's coaching staff.
Ryan returned to the GM job last November. He signed a handful of free agents who reshaped and improved the roster, most notably three major success stories: Josh Willingham, Ryan Doumit and Jared Burton.
He also has made changes at these positions: Special assistant to the general manager. Class AAA manager. Traveling secretary. Visiting clubhouse manager. Media relations director. Bullpen coach. Head athletic trainer. Third base coach. Infield coach. First base coach. Outfield coach. Hitting coach.
Ryan is about to hire his second manager for Class AAA Rochester in two years, after Gene Glynn joins the big-league staff. If the Twins fail to show progress in 2013, Ryan will fire manager Ron Gardenhire and the rest of the big-league coaching staff.
Too loyal? Nobody who fires Rick Stelmaszek, the bullpen coach who decades ago became the most popular fixture in the organization, can be accused of thinking with his heart. If Ryan worked for any other team or had earned less respect over the years, he would be accused of trying to clean house to scapegoat lesser employees.
And anyone who believes that Ryan is either incapable of reviving the franchise, or faces an even tougher job than the one he undertook during his first tenure, has a head harder than Trevor Plouffe's hands.