Twins minor league players of the week are Dasan Hill & Hendry Mendez

The Minnesota Twins have named High-A Cedar Rapids left-handed pitcher Dasan Hill and Double-A Wichita outfielder Hendry Mendez as the club’s minor league Pitcher and Player of the Week.

Dasan Hill, 19, made the start on Thursday versus Beloit, allowing two runs on two hits in 5.0 innings
pitched, with two walks and seven strikeouts. The Grapevine, TX native is ranked as the club’s eighth-best (3rd pitcher) prospect by MLB.com. This guy could well be the Twins minor league pitcher of the year.

Hendry Mendez, 21, played in six games for the Wind Surge, hitting .316 (6-for-19) with one triple,
one home run, three RBI, eight walks and a .536 on-base percentage. Mendez was acquired by the Twins in the Harrison Bader trade with Philadelphia and is ranked as the club’s 25th-best prospect by MLB.com.

July 2025: The Fire Sale That Redefined Twins Baseball

Ownership-Driven Upheaval In late July, the Minnesota Twins executed one of the most aggressive roster tear downs in franchise history—trading away 10 of 26 active players in just 72 hours. But this wasn’t simply a baseball decision. It was a directive shaped by ownership. A money grab by the Pohlad ownership.

With the Pohlad family actively pursuing a sale of the team, the front office was tasked with slashing payroll and clearing long-term commitments. The result: a fire sale that prioritized financial flexibility over short-term competitiveness. Carlos Correa’s contract was offloaded. Controllable relievers were moved. Rentals were shipped out. And the clubhouse was left with a skeleton crew and a pipeline of prospects.

This log documents the trades not as speculation, but as record—marking a pivotal moment in Twins history.

July 29 The Twins opened the deadline period by trading starters Chris Paddack and Randy Dobnak to the Detroit Tigers in exchange for catching prospect Enrique Jimenez, a promising teenage talent already showing advanced framing and plate discipline.

July 30 Minnesota sent closer Jhoan Duran to the Philadelphia Phillies in a deal headlined by right-handed pitching prospect Mick Abel and catching prospect Eduardo Tait. Abel, nearly MLB-ready, adds power to the rotation. Tait offers high upside behind the plate.

July 31 The deadline frenzy hit full speed with a series of rapid transactions:

  • Harrison Bader was dealt to Philadelphia for outfield prospect Hendry Mendez and rookie-league pitcher Geremy Villoria.
  • Brock Stewart headed to the Dodgers, returning big-league outfielder James Outman, a lefty bat with speed and defensive value.
  • Danny Coulombe moved to the Texas Rangers in exchange for hard-throwing Low-A arm Garrett Horn.
  • A package of Ty France and Louis Varland was sent to the Toronto Blue Jays, bringing back outfielder Alan Roden and starter Kendry Rojas, both thriving in Triple-A.
  • Willi Castro, fan favorite and utility wizard, was shipped to the Chicago Cubs for pitchers Sam Armstrong and Ryan Gallagher, each showing mid-rotation potential in Double-A.
  • Reliever Griffin Jax was traded to the Tampa Bay Rays for Taj Bradley, a high-ceiling starter recently bumped down from the majors.
  • And in the biggest move, Carlos Correa was sent back to the Houston Astros after waiving his no-trade clause. Minnesota received Matt Mikulski, a High-A lefty starter with strikeout stuff. Reports also have the Twins paying $30 million of Correa’s contract.

From the Bleachers: A Fan’s Reckoning For fans who’ve lived every pitch, every walk-off, and every heartbreak, the 2025 deadline didn’t feel like strategy—it felt like loss. Entire sections of Target Field emptied out not from attendance, but from identity. Jhoan Duran’s entrance music. Willi Castro’s hustle. Griffin Jax’s quiet efficiency. Correa’s flash, however fleeting. All of it—ripped out at once.

Social media went red with frustration. Some called for boycotts. Others simply grieved. For season ticket holders, it felt like a goodbye written in ink they never held.

But within the uncertainty, there is a stubborn kind of hope—the kind that animates every rebuild. The new names aren’t legends yet, but maybe they will be. And if not? Fans will remember this moment anyway, and mark it—not for what was lost, but for what might one day rise.