Twins star Carlos Correa and his wife Daniella Correa Rodriguez have been happily married for more than five years.
After a relatively quiet offseason for the Twins, star Carlos Correa speaks about the lack of activity and his own health.
Injuries are a never-ending theme for the Twins. Over the weekend, the team provided key updates on a trio of core pieces returning from injury.
Now, it’s a matter of keeping it that way after two consecutive years of dealing with the injury in each foot. Correa has spent the offseason focusing on what he can control, namely his health.
In 2024, the Twins had a rookie trio in the starting rotation, and new position players joined the lineup. While they may have lost prospect eligibility, the team’s young core is one of baseball’s best.
After signing Correa for $200 million and ending a two-decade playoff drought, the Twins have all but stopped making trades and signings.
Carlos Correa has been dubbed an honorary assistant general manager during his Twins tenure because the shortstop is willing to share ideas with the front office on players he thinks the team should add and his thoughts on the best ways to develop players.
Dave St. Peter, the 20-plus-year president of the Minnesota Twins, thinks the 2025 ball club can be really good and compete in the playoffs.
For the Minnesota Twins on-field product, no news is not good news. Cash-strapped by the Pohlad family’s self-imposed budget, the team awaits a savior owner with pockets deep enough to keep them competitive.
Walker Jenkins reached Class AA at 19 years old, totaled more walks than strikeouts while accumulating only 11 plate appearances against pitchers who were younger than him, and he’s now rated as a consensus top-10 prospect in the minor leagues.
Here's a list of Yankees players who could be part of a trade package for the potential acquisition of All-Star Puerto Rican Carlos Correa.