A Twins season in which nothing has gone as planned has now claimed the job of its chief planner.
Terry Ryan, who retook the reins as general manager while the team floundered nearly five years ago, was fired Monday, the most visible victim of the franchise's historically bad start.
"He gets it," Twins President Dave St. Peter said of Ryan, a two-time MLB Executive of the Year. "We just didn't win enough games."
Ryan, 62, will be replaced by assistant GM Rob Antony on an interim basis. The Twins will undertake a search for a permanent replacement in the near future, owner Jim Pohlad said, a process they hope results in a hiring before the season ends in October. Antony will be considered for the job, but the team intends to solicit outside candidates as well.
"The challenge to make the organization better is exciting," Pohlad said. "We do believe, and I know [manager] Paul Molitor believes, we can win in 2017."
That remains to be seen, but Molitor definitely will be a part of it. Pohlad wants the Hall of Famer to remain in the dugout next year, saying he will make that clear to the team's next GM.
Pohlad decided a month ago to replace Ryan before next season, he said at an informal news conference at Target Field on Monday. According to people with knowledge of the situation, that decision came after Pohlad and Ryan couldn't agree on how to improve the last-place club.
Pohlad said he left it up to Ryan how to handle the transition. Ryan came to him Friday, at the end of the All-Star break, and said "OK, let's get on with it."