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Minnesota Twins owners considering selling the team after 40 years in the Pohlad family

Updated

The Pohlads said they decided during the summer to explore a sale. The family has hired Allen & Company, a New York-based investment bank, to direct the process

Minnesota Timberwolves forward Jaden McDaniels
Minnesota Timberwolves forward Jaden McDanielsAP

After 40 years and three generations of owning the Minnesota Twins, the Pohlad family announced Thursday it's considering selling the team.

The Pohlads said they decided during the summer to explore a sale. The family has hired Allen & Company, a New York-based investment bank, to direct the process.

"For the past 40 seasons, the Minnesota Twins have been part of our family's heart and soul," Twins executive chair Joe Pohlad, the third-generation owner, said in the statement. "This team is woven into the fabric of our lives, and the Twins community has become an extension of our family. The staff, the players, and most importantly, you, the fans — everyone who makes up this unbelievable organization — is part of that. We've never taken lightly the privilege of being stewards of this franchise."

The process of selling pro sports teams can take months or even years, in the case of the NBA's Minnesota Timberwolves across the street. The Pohlads indicated they weren't in a rush: "After four decades of commitment, passion, and countless memories, we are looking toward the future with care and intention — for our family, the Twins organization, and this community we love so much."

With the late Hall of Famer Kirby Puckett leading the way, the Twins won World Series titles in 1987 and 1991. Since the turn of the century, the Twins have won the American League Central Division nine times and claimed a wild card spot once. Manager Rocco Baldelli has won three division titles in six years.

The team has had plenty of lean years, too. The Twins finally broke an 18-game postseason losing streak, a record for North American professional sports, last year by sweeping Toronto in the Wild Card Series. That was their first series win since 2002.

Falling short in the fall with talented teams has fueled a frustration within the fanbase. Attendance at Target Field, which opened in 2010 to rave reviews, has been in decline. After the feel-good 2023 season that felt like a breakthrough, the Twins were caught like many other major league clubs in the bankruptcy proceedings around Diamond Sports Group that held their local television rights.

The steep decline in revenue this year preceded a spending cut on the roster, with the 2024 payroll nearly $30 million less than 2023. That rankled some fans who have long been frustrated with the family for a conservative approach to player spending. The skepticism dates back decades to multiple times that the family patriarch, Carl Pohlad, tried to sell the club. With no traction at the time on a new stadium, he also offered the Twins up for contraction in 2001 before the plan was blocked by a local judge.

The Twins went 82-80 this season, missing the playoffs after a late-season collapse, which only enhanced the disappointment.

"Everybody owns this a little bit, and I played a role in that," Joe Pohlad said in an interview with reporters last month. "We were at an all-time high last year, right? Fans were all in. Players were all in. We were headed down a great direction, and I had to make a very difficult business decision, but that's just the reality of my world. I have a business to run, and it comes with tough decisions."

The Twins moved to Minnesota in 1961 after Washington Senators owner Calvin Griffith moved the team east. The franchise has been owned by only two families for more than 100 years, starting with the Griffith family before the 1920 season. The Senators won the World Series in 1924.

Carl Pohlad, who built his fortune in the banking industry, bought the Twins in 1984 for $44 million. He died in 2009. The only major league teams held by the same ownership longer than that are the New York Yankees and Chicago White Sox. One of his three sons, Jim Pohlad, succeeded him as chairman. Jim Pohlad's nephew, Joe Pohlad, stepped in two years ago.