Twins show desperation by adding struggling pitcher for postseason push

Vinnie Portell

Twins show desperation by adding struggling pitcher for postseason push image

The Minnesota Twins entered the penultimate week of the Major League Baseball regular season clinging to a 2.5-game lead over the Detroit Tigers and Seattle Mariners.

That made the team’s acquisition of left-handed pitcher Cole Irvin on Monday afternoon understandable.

But it also made it clear that they’ve entered desperation mode.

What to know about Irvin
Most baseball fans are plenty familiar with Irvin by now.

Now 30 years old, Irvin is in his sixth MLB season and is already on his fourth team.

Though he did have an impressive 2022 campaign with the Oakland Athletics (3.98 ERA, 1.16 WHIP, and 2.1 WAR over 181 innings), he’s been a fringe starter at best over the majority of his career.

The Baltimore Orioles traded for Irvin before the 2023 season to shore up their rotation, but he made it just three disastrous starts before earning a demotion to the minor leagues.

Back then, it was looking like his 2022 season was a breakthrough, but it's now merely looking like an anomaly, and his stuff backs that up.

Irvin ranks in the bottom 20 percent of MLB pitchers this season in expected ERA, expected BA, fastball velocity, average exit velocity, chase percentage, whiff percentage, strikeout percentage, and barrel percentage per MLB Statcast

How Irvin fits for the Twins
Irvin was designated for assignment by Baltimore last week and will be added to the 40-man roster on Tuesday, with right-handed Randy Dobnak being designated for assignment to make room for him.

However, he will not be postseason eligible for Minnesota because he was claimed after the Sept. 1 deadline.

That means that Irvin is being only brought in to add pitching depth for the next two weeks — at least as far as this season is concerned, as he has two years of arbitration control left.

The fact that Minnesota might need him to contribute substantial innings to hold onto its American League Wild Card spot is a risky gamble.

The rotation has been shaky behind Pablo Lopez and Bailey Ober, with the 3-5 starters (Simeon Woods-Richardson, David Festa, and Zebby Matthews) each owning an ERA north of 4.00 this season.

At the least, Irvin is likely to be better than Dobnak (5.00 ERA and 1.40 WHIP in 37 career games), but it might not be by much.

More MLB: Red Sox might shut veteran outfielder down for the rest of the season

Vinnie Portell

Vinnie Portell Photo

Vinnie Portell is a career sportswriter who graduated from the University of South Florida with a Bachelor’s degree in journalism in 2017. 

He’s covered sports at every level, from Little League all the way to MLB. His work is typically featured in southwest Florida newspapers such as The Daily Sun, the Sarasota Herald-Tribune or the Naples Daily News, as well as digital media sites such as FanSided.com and The Sporting News.

A lifelong fan of Detroit sports, he is patiently awaiting the city’s first championship in over 15 years.