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Twins Avoided a Rotation Nightmare

The Minnesota Twins were staring at a nightmare scenario Sunday afternoon. Two days later, they are breathing again.

When Joe Ryan walked off the mound after only nine pitches with elbow soreness against the Toronto Blue Jays, the fear inside Minnesota’s organization felt immediate. The Twins already lost Pablo López to Tommy John surgery during spring training. Losing Ryan too could have shattered the one part of the roster still keeping the season afloat.

That is why the clean MRI changed more than just Ryan’s medical outlook.

It may have saved the Twins from watching their season spiral before May even reached the halfway point.

According to reporting from USA Today and the Associated Press, Ryan threw without issue Tuesday and remains on track to potentially make his next scheduled start Saturday against Cleveland.

For a 15-20 team still hanging around a weak American League Central race, that update carries enormous weight.


The Twins Cannot Afford Another Rotation Collapse

GettyJoe Ryan #41 of the Minnesota Twins leaves the game with an apparent injury against the Toronto Blue Jays in the first inning at Target Field on May 03, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images)

The panic surrounding Ryan’s exit was understandable.

Minnesota’s rotation already operates under pressure. López is out for the year. Bailey Ober’s velocity remains a concern. Simeon Woods Richardson has struggled badly. Young pitchers like Connor Prielipp are still learning on the fly.

Ryan represented the one constant.

That is why his reaction Sunday stood out immediately. He did not try to grind through the discomfort. He did not gamble with another inning. After feeling soreness against Kazuma Okamoto, Ryan quickly alerted the dugout and left the game.

That decision may prove critical.

Manager Derek Shelton later praised Ryan for understanding his body and communicating clearly what he felt. In today’s game, where elbow injuries can derail careers and destroy seasons overnight, that awareness matters as much as velocity.

The Twins have already seen what happens when a frontline starter disappears. They could not afford another situation where optimism outweighed caution.

Ryan himself admitted the uncertainty became difficult mentally while waiting for imaging results.

“You never know until imaging comes back,” Ryan told USA Today.

That uncertainty hung over the organization for nearly 48 hours.


Joe Ryan Has Become Minnesota’s Safety Net

GettyJoe Ryan #41 of the Minnesota Twins throws a pitch in the first inning against the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium on September 06, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images)

Ryan’s value now extends far beyond his 3.72 ERA.

He has become the stabilizer for a roster still searching for consistency.

Last season, Ryan emerged as an All-Star after posting 194 strikeouts and a 1.04 WHIP over 171 innings. More importantly, he consistently took the ball every fifth day and gave Minnesota a chance to win.

That reliability suddenly became essential once López went down.

The Twins no longer view Ryan as simply their best healthy starter. He has become the pitcher protecting the entire structure of the rotation.

Without him, the pressure on Bradley, Ober, and the younger arms would increase dramatically. The bullpen would absorb more innings. Minnesota’s already thin margin for error would shrink even further.

That is why this situation matters so much despite the positive medical news.

The clean MRI offers relief. It does not eliminate the pressure surrounding this staff.


The Next Few Weeks Still Matter

GettyJoe Ryan #41 of the Minnesota Twins reacts after giving up a home run to Shea Langeliers #23 of the Athletics in the third inning of the game at Target Field on August 19, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

Ryan avoiding structural damage does not suddenly fix the Twins’ biggest problems.

Minnesota still needs more consistency from the back end of the rotation. Woods Richardson continues to battle command and contact issues. Ober still depends heavily on precision because his diminished velocity leaves little room for mistakes.

Even the encouraging developments come with caution.

Prielipp has flashed upside, but young pitchers often experience turbulence once the league adjusts. Bradley has looked like a foundational arm, yet Minnesota now needs him to sustain that production over a much larger workload.

That leaves Ryan carrying enormous responsibility moving forward.

The good news for the Twins is not simply that their ace appears healthy. It is that Ryan recognized the danger early enough to potentially avoid something far worse.

That awareness may end up becoming one of the most important moments of Minnesota’s season.

Now the Twins must prove they can finally turn relief into momentum before another scare pushes the rotation back into crisis mode.

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This article was originally published on HEAVY


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