They are back from their best road trip in a year, back looking like the team they thought they would be all spring, so now is the time to appreciate what the Twins are becoming before our eyes:
A bunch of guys the front office might be able to trade.
Even their belated burst of competence leaves the Twins with the third-worst record in baseball, still in last place in a weak division. What General Manager Terry Ryan must be willing to acknowledge is what Bill Smith was unwilling to admit last summer, that this team is useful to the future of the organization only if it is stripped for parts.
Smith provided the template for what not to do last year. He had a bad team. He was encouraged, or fooled, by a midseason hot streak. He delayed attempting to trade core veterans, hoping the team would vault into contention or that keeping them around could encourage them to re-sign with the Twins.
The Twins should have traded Michael Cuddyer, Jason Kubel and Joe Nathan last season. All left in free agency.
In previous summers, the Twins could have traded Delmon Young at his peak value in 2010 and instead waited until he had little value. They could have traded Francisco Liriano for the likes of Ricky Romero or Ivan Nova, and misjudged Liriano's value and mental toughness.
The Twins rushed the Johan Santana trade, accepting a poor group of players from the Mets instead of holding him until the trading deadline and trying to create a bidding war.
The 2011 and 2012 Twins have failed, in part, because of the organization's inability to trade the right player at the right time for the right price. Ryan has to do just that this summer.