The Minnesota Twins’ decision to release Liam Hendriks, Andrew Chafin, and Gio Urshela isn’t just roster trimming—it’s a definitive declaration of a new era, sacrificing experienced depth for a high-stakes bet on pitching phenom Mick Abel and a quiet acknowledgment that Hendriks’ heroic comeback from cancer has run its course for this team.
In a move that speaks louder than any spring training stat line, the Minnesota Twins have released Liam Hendriks, Andrew Chafin, and Gio Urshela from their minor league contracts. This is more than a simple final roster cut; it is the clearest signal yet of the front office’s priorities following a disappointing 2025 season and the loss of Opening Day starter Pablo López for the year. The team is choosing immediate, controlled youth over expensive, injury-prone veteran depth.
The Hendriks Conundrum: Heart vs. Hardball
The story of Liam Hendriks is one of the most inspiring in modern sports. His battle with Stage 4 non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma diagnosed after the 2022 season, followed by Tommy John surgery in 2023, made his return to the mound a narrative of pure resilience. The Twins signed him in February on a minor league deal with a $2.25 million major league salary attached, a relatively low-risk bet on a legacy. However, the results were not there. He posted a 6.59 ERA in 14 games with Boston in 2025 and allowed three runs, nine hits, and five walks in just seven spring innings. For a team needing to shave payroll and maximize every roster spot, Hendriks’ comeback run with Minnesota is over. The business of baseball, inevitably, overrides the human triumph.
The Rotation is Set, and the Gambit is Named Mick Abel
With López out, the fifth and final rotation spot became a high-stakes audition. The Twins traded star closer Jhoan Duran to the Philadelphia Phillies last summer for a top pitching prospect, and that bet is now being realized. Mick Abel—not Zebby Matthews, who was optioned to Triple-A—has won the job. This is the day the trade shifts from “future asset” to “present-day contributor.” The rotation is now officially: Joe Ryan, Bailey Ober, Taj Bradley, Simeon Woods Richardson, and the rookie Abel. Abel beat out Matthews, who had a solid spring but lacks the pedigree and trade pedigree that now defines the Twins’ rebuild timeline. This is a clear statement: the future is now, even if it’s unproven.
Chafin and Urshela: The Depth That Wasn’t
Veteran left-hander Andrew Chafin had a fine spring (3.00 ERA, 6 IP, 5 K), but his $2 million salary is the type of veteran relief cost the Twins are clearly shedding. Infielder Gio Urshela, a .192 hitter this spring with just one RBI, represented a defensive insurance policy the team no longer feels it needs or can afford at a $1.5 million price. Their releases, less publicized than Hendriks’, are equally telling. The Twins are constructing a roster with a lower financial floor and a higher ceiling of potential, accepting defensive and left-handed matchup risks for the sake of budget and promoting internal options.
Why This Matters for the Fanbase and the Playoff Push
This isn’t just a minor league cleanup. It directly impacts the Twins’ 2026 viability in a competitive AL Central. After a shocking collapse from a 2023 playoff team, patience is thinning. Fans will debate if abandoning a proven if declining reliever in Hendriks and a steady glove in Urshela for rookies is bold or reckless. The Abel decision is the core of it all. Are they properly supporting a young rotation with an inexperienced bullpen? The bullpen now consists of young arms and scrap-heap signings, a risky proposition for a team expecting to contend. The memory of Duran’s dominance is fresh, and trading him for a starter is a huge vote of confidence—and pressure—in Abel.
The ripple effect is profound. With a rotation starting a rookie and two other relatively young arms, the margin for error is razor-thin. The offense, led by stars like Royce Lewis and Byron Buxton, will need to be elite to cover potential early-game struggles. For fans, this is the moment the front office’s philosophy becomes clear: they are building for a future controlled by homegrown pitching, even if it means enduring growing pains in 2026.
The Verdict: A Calculated, High-Variance Gamble
Releasing Hendriks closes a chapter on a feel-good story that never fully materialized on the mound for Minnesota. Letting Chafin and Urshela walk removes established, if uninspiring, depth. By locking in Mick Abel, the Twins are betting their season—and the return of the Jhoan Duran trade—on one prospect’s ability to handle a major league rotation from Day 1. It’s a move of clarity and conviction, but one that raises the team’s overall risk profile significantly. The 2026 Twins will live or die with the health and performance of their young pitchers, and the path they’ve chosen starts today.
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