“How do we make this look like a long-term partnership?” said Derek Falvey, the Twins’ president of baseball operations. “We recognize that takes work and time and we’re going to invest and get to know each other. The contract structure is creative and unique and we’ll address that at the right time. But we’re just excited about having him now and building that relationship and seeing where it takes us.”
The Twins signed their wondrous but fragile center fielder, Byron Buxton, to a seven-year, $100 million contract extension in November. They have added the right-handers Sonny Gray and Dylan Bundy to a young rotation, and will pursue starting help from Oakland if the A’s make Sean Manaea or Frankie Montas available. To help afford Correa (who will make more by himself than the entire roster of the Baltimore Orioles, according to Spotrac), the Twins traded Josh Donaldson, their expensive third baseman, to the Yankees for catcher Gary Sánchez and infielder Gio Urshela.
“I see the talent in the clubhouse and I get excited when I talk to the guys,” Correa said. “With the right information and the right work we can put in as a team, I think we can get so much better.”
Correa arrived in the majors in 2015 as a natural leader; “We all have to learn from him,” said Jose Altuve, then a three-time All-Star, about a month into Correa’s career. Correa would help Houston to six playoff appearances and three pennants, including a 2017 title that was marred by an illegal sign-stealing scheme.