The narrative heading into the 2019 Twins season was a case of perception and reality diverging.
The Twins won 78 games in 2018, and fans spent much of last winter grumbling that they hadn't done much to upgrade their roster. In reality, they had made a lot of medium-sized moves (and one that looks larger in retrospect with a deal for Nelson Cruz) that revamped their batting order and helped lead to an MLB-record 307 home runs, 101 wins and their first AL Central title since 2010.
That raised expectations higher for this offseason, and so far there has been plenty of grumbling about the results of the Twins' free agent pursuits.
The complaints are justified on a base level. The Twins' biggest area of need going into the offseason was upgrading their rotation with as close to a sure thing as possible, and they have not done that.
Free agency is a tricky two-way street, but missing out on the top tiers of free agent starting pitchers is a failure of execution.
Of particular concern is the casual approach the front office appears to be taking toward the first two months of the season.
Still, what looks disappointing in mid-January can look shrewd as the summer lingers on. Here are some ways the Twins can still salvage both the perception and the reality of 2020:
*Add another impact player via trade or free agency: Yeah, that's pretty vague. And it seems like the Twins are out of the free agent market, at least for now, on both starting pitchers (after signing Homer Bailey and Rich Hill) and third baseman Josh Donaldson. The latter still hasn't signed elsewhere, but the Twins were reportedly pessimistic about landing him as recently as a week ago.