Derek Falvey held on to hope that this Twins team could still find success all the way up until the trade deadline.
The Twins had swept a four-game series with Detroit by a combined score of 30-18 heading into the All-Star break, and it felt like maybe the team was finally gathering some momentum for a late-season push.
That wasn't the case. The Twins faced the Tigers again out of the break and were swept in a three-game series, including two by shutouts. And that heralded to Falvey, the president of baseball operations, that this season was not turning in any direction but down.
"I really didn't like necessarily give up hope. And then it kind of got to a point we had to really start making decisions around the trade deadline," Falvey said. "And where we were focusing our efforts in terms of looking at whether we're acquiring major league talent or potentially really trying to acquire talent for the future. And that's, I think, when it really settled in."
With the Twins playing their final home game Thursday before ending the season this weekend in Kansas City, Falvey has started the somewhat painful reflection process on the Twins' 71-88 season when expectations were to vie for the division title and accomplish an elusive playoff victory. And he's also looking to the future, with the aim of learning from some of 2021's misfires.
One such folly Falvey owned up to was the state of the starting rotation, specifically on J.A. Happ and Matt Shoemaker, who both signed one-year free-agent deals last offseason, Happ for $8 million and Shoemaker for $2 million.
Happ was a trade deadline departure, with the 38-year-old going to the Cardinals with his 6.77 ERA. Shoemaker didn't even make it that far into the season, with the 35-year-old designated for assignment July 1 with an 8.06 ERA before his eventual release about a month later.
"Our pitching in aggregate, early on, guys didn't throw the ball," Falvey said. "… When you're talking about the one-year pitching market that's in that range of cost, there's a lot of outcomes there, and sometimes, they do line up that way without getting great outcomes. I would say that we have to come back and evaluate that because we didn't hit on those for sure. Those guys didn't pitch as well as we thought they could have."