9:39am: Bell’s 2026 salary will be $5.5MM, per Bobby Nightengale of the Minneapolis Star Tribune. He also receives a $250K signing bonus, and there’s a $1.25MM buyout on the mutual option.
9:25am: The Twins and free agent first baseman Josh Bell are reportedly in agreement on a one-year, $7MM contract that contains a mutual option for the 2027 campaign. Bell is represented by the Boras Corporation.
Bell, 33, has been at least an average bat in every season of his decade-long MLB career, with the exception of a poor showing in the shortened 2020 campaign. At times, the former second-round pick and top prospect has looked on the cusp of breaking out as a star-level slugger — most notably in 2019 and 2021 — but he’s never quite produced as the steady power bat one might expect from a hulking 6’3″, 260-pound first baseman.
That’s largely due to the switch-hitting Bell’s penchant for hitting the ball on the ground. Despite his sizable frame and clearly plus raw power, Bell has struggled to maintain a swing path that allows him to elevate the ball. He’s cut his grounder rate in recent seasons, to be fair; last year’s 45.7% mark was actually the second-lowest of his career, ahead of only the 44% mark he posted during a 37-homer campaign back in 2019. However, that 45.7% mark was still well above the 41.8% league average. For a hitter like Bell, whose average sprint speed ranked in just the seventh percentile of big league position players, per Statcast, that much contact on the ground is a clear detriment.
When Bell does elevate the ball, he does so with tremendous authority. Statcast ranked his 96.4 mph average exit velocity on liners/fly-balls 25th among 251 qualified hitters. Bell’s isolated power (slugging percentage minus batting average) of .507 on fly-balls isn’t elite but is well north of the .436 league average. He popped 22 round-trippers this past season and has averaged 26 homers per 162 games over the past seven seasons — despite his proclivity for hitting the ball into the ground. It’s long been thought that if Bell could consistently elevate the ball, he’d be a high-end slugger, but six teams have now tried to get him to do so consistently and been unable to make it happen.
The end result is typically above-average but not elite offense. Bell hit .237/.325/.417 this past season with the Nationals. His 10.7% walk rate was comfortably north of average and roughly in line with his career 11.2% mark. His 16.5% strikeout rate was the second-lowest of his career. Bell had uncharacteristic struggles with his right-handed swing last season but has traditionally been a solid hitter from both sides of the dish (albeit with better production from the left side). His 90.4 mph average exit velocity and 47% hard-hit rate were his best marks since a strong 2021 season (also spent with the Nats).
The Twins and their fans can perhaps find some optimism in the trajectory of Bell’s 2025 season. He was one of the worst hitters in either league through the end of April but busted out of that slump with a huge showing in May. He took a step back in June and then delivered terrific production over the final three months of the year. Setting aside Bell’s awful first 125 plate appearances of the season (when he had a bloated 50% grounder rate, it should be noted), he hit .278/.358/.462 with 17 homers, 16 doubles, an 11.1% walk rate and a 14.6% strikeout rate. In 250 plate appearances from July 2 onward, he slashed .284/.371/.486 (with a ground-ball rate sitting at 42%).
That’ll be the sort of production for which the Twins hope in 2025. Bell figures to be the primary first baseman for new manager Derek Shelton, who briefly overlapped with Bell during his first season as manager in Pittsburgh. Like most teams, the Twins don’t have a set designated hitter, so Bell could get some looks there, too, if the Twins want to free up some first base time to get Edouard Julien or Kody Clemens into the lineup there. Some additional DH reps for Bell would benefit the team defensively; he posted solid grades at first base back in 2021-22, but Bell has been dinged for -20 Defensive Runs Saved and -16 Outs Above Average over his past 1551 innings in the field. He’s not a skilled defender.
Even with those defensive shortcomings, Bell adds a legitimate bat to the middle of Minnesota’s order. He’s a durable veteran, having appeared in 91.5% of his teams’ possible games dating back to his first season as a full-time regular. That’s an average of better than 148 games per year, and it’s reasonable to expect at least 20 home runs based on his track record, with 25 to 30 not out of the question depending on the extent to which he can avoid falling into another grounder-heavy malaise.
Bell joins Byron Buxton, breakout rookie Luke Keaschall and catcher Ryan Jeffers in the top portion of a Twins lineup that’ll hope for better results from talented but inconsistent young hitters like Royce Lewis, Matt Wallner, Brooks Lee and (if he’s not traded) Trevor Larnach. Top prospects Walker Jenkins, Emmanuel Rodriguez and Kaelen Culpepper could force their way into the mix next season. Alan Roden will get another chance to prove his big Triple-A production can play in the majors, too.
The signing of Bell only reinforces the fact that despite a deadline fire sale, the Twins are intent on adding back to the roster in an effort to be as competitive as possible in 2026. President of baseball operations Derek Falvey plans to hold onto stars like Buxton, Joe Ryan and Pablo Lopez rather than trade them. The Twins were reportedly shopping in the middle tiers of the free agent market at first base, and they’ll presumably use some of the modest budgetary space granted by ownership to add some low-cost relievers as well.
Bell adds $5.75MM to the 2026 payroll, boosting the Twins just north of $100MM in the process, per RosterResource. Dan Hayes of The Athletic has previously reported that the front office has about $20MM to spend this winter. That should mean Falvey, GM Jeremy Zoll and the rest of the front office still have a around $15MM to help deepen the bullpen and perhaps the bench. Given that the Twins shipped out a stunning five relievers at July’s deadline, it seems fair to presume they’ll bring in multiple arms (though they already added one with November’s acquisition of Eric Orze from Tampa Bay).
Overall, payroll will still be down considerably from last year’s $142MM Opening Day mark and certainly from 2023’s franchise-record $153MM. Major additions on either side of the ball shouldn’t be expected. If the Twins compete next season, it’ll be due to big steps forward from in-house talents like Lee, Keaschall, Jenkins, Roden, Taj Bradley, Mick Abel and others. If they fall short of contending in a perennially competitive AL Central, then players like Bell and any of the forthcoming bullpen acquisitions could emerge as trade chips alongside Ryan, Lopez, Jeffers and others.
ESPN’s Jeff Passan first reported that the two sides had agreed to a one-year deal with a mutual option. Jon Heyman of the New York Post reported the $7MM guarantee.


Frank the Tank has breathed a sigh of relief
Didn’t know this guy was still around… Good for him
Thought so as well.
This guy must be the coolest dude around because he’s a mediocre ball player, at best. He has, however, legged out 20 triples in his career which is quite admirable for the big fella.
It’s not like he is The Refrigerator Perry
No, but at 6-3 and 261 lbs (probably more) he’s not exactly Spud Webb either.
Otis Nixon was pretty slight for a ballplayer.
Canuckball…I’m really confused why Bo has not signed yet…I figured if the feelings were mutual that the contract should have been done a long time ago. It shouldn’t take Bo this long to figure out his market & options. Something strange is going on, no?
Now that was a guy that could motor. 11 consecutive seasons of 37+ stolen bases from age 29 through 39.
Also, bRef has him listed at 6-2, 180, so he was really just average build, although I suppose during the steroid era, he would have looked slight compared to many of his fellow players.
He seemed interested in coming back, or at least he said so publicly. Maybe the team feels differently. Maybe they can’t find common ground on a number. Maybe they want him at 2nd and he wants to stay at SS.
Who knows. I’d like to see him back in Toronto at 2nd, but not if he stays at short.
No. Nothing strange. Currently, no one is willing to meet his demands. He may be wanting too many years, too much money, insisting he play SS, or wanting opt outs.
In other words, the feelings are not mutual.
Exactly. He’s looking for the best contract, as he should be. So many fans think that team and player loyalty is such a big factor, when it clearly isn’t.
And I’m thinking Bo & Vladdy are more rivals than “best buds” but that’s a hunch on my part.
That’s a name you don’t hear thrown around often. He was fun to watch.
Filthy McNasty’s 11% walk rate and 1:8 HR/PA vs RHP says the kids kinda nice. He’s a perfect fit for a lefty bat in a platoon DH situation. Keep in mind there are far more RHP than LHP so his ability to hit them is valuable.
Tempting to skewer $5.5m for a sub-replacement level slowpoke since the start of 2023, but his expected 2025 numbers were an impressive .261/335/475.
20 triples? Since he’s one of the worst baserunners in MLB (worst 1%) I wonder how many doubles ended in tears at third base when Bell tried to stretch?
I wonder how many of Bell’s triples were hit to Nick Castellanos or other DH-level defenders opposing teams were trying to hide in the corner outfield.
He’s just good enough to catch onto bad teams.
Remember everyone, the Twins are “going for it” this year
Cue the “there’s always next season” in about 6 months…
Depending on CBA….
If they can build a .500 team on paper they could get into the playoffs just because the AL Central is that kind of division.
Dude can still slug a bit though the contact is not as good anymore. But it works for a small market team.
Small market teams and their fans deserve lower expectations
Sarcasm
Unfortunately the case under the RSN fiasco and the current screwed up system.
Actually, I have no expectations.
Josh Bell like a Timex keeps on ticking!
Twins picked up a ringer.
Related to Albert Belle or nah? (I meant Joey Belle, I think )
Since their surnames are spelled differently I would think nah 🙂
Well I had just awoken and it was before coffee and orange juice so please excuse the bad pun.
Albert Belle is another who should IMO be in the Hall. I try to be objective and he was every bit feared as a hitter as Jim Rice. That said, I would love for MLBTR to have a comparison of an actual HOF and one like Belle, Munson, Evans, etc. who is not in. I think it would be a fun thing to do it say every Monday. Another who is deserving and doesn’t get talked about is Reggie Smith. Imagine if he never left Boston. An OF of Smith, Lynn and Evans with Rice DHing and an aging but still productive Yaz at first…
Okay Dewey here’s one for you to think about for your list , now this guy was before my time , not a big power guy, I don’t know much about him at all but he accrued 71+ WAR for his career which seems high, won a few awards, but his name gets lost in the fog of time: Bobby Grich.
Guy’s a so-so hitter and a horrendous fielder. And somehow he’s made $68 million for his career. Pop a few homers now and then and watch the money flood in.
He’s never been a hot starter, so if you can hang with him the first half of the season, he usually goes on a tear from July on. When CLE signed him a few years ago they couldn’t hang.
Except in 2022 when the Padres traded for him in the Soto trade with the Nats.
Before trade: .301/.384/.493 – 152 OPS+ in 103 Games, 3.3 bWAR
After trade: .192/.316/.271 – 73 OPS+ in 53 games
To top it off that year Soto hit a rather limp .236/.388/.390 after the trade as well.
One of the few players who could still play 163 games in a season after being traded before deadline, but hasn’t yet done that. Maybe 2026 or 2027 will be the year for that.
I like that he is available almost everyday to play, switch hits and just 3 errors playing 1B all season in 2025 with Nationals isn’t bad at all because of who he had throwing him the ball at the other infield positions.
Shelton will rest him once a week whether he needs it or not.
Would rather have hoskins or get the orioles to pay down mountcastle a bit.
Could still happen, Bell is a DH.
Surprising that they signed someone who can hit right-handed. I thought they were going to go for an all-lefty lineup.
He isn’t very good hitting righthanded though, he might be better off to just bat lefty all the time.
I can’t believe this dude’s only 33. It feels like he’s been in the league for 15 years.
Well it is going on 15 since he was a high profile pick
This guy signals they’re going for it!
…
@@
Time marches on.
He’s an okay bat that will have his highs and lows. Probably cost less than Hoskins, that would be my guess.
Bell tied the NL record for home runs by a rookie switch hitter with the Pirates in 2017 with Chipper Jones.
He is a bad first baseman who throws with a rubber band arm.
Him and Hopkins are the worst that I have currently seen.
He always struck me as somewhat non chalant but still has the talent to be good.Not that he does not hustle,but I think has generally underperformed except during his hot streaks which have been very very good.
Bell is an example of a large man who if he got down to about 235 pounds could still be a fine MLB hitter.
Would be better as a closer: Saved By the Bell, who all fared well except for Screech or the dame who became a stripper
This dude makes a good living for being 🗑️ half the year 😂😂
That’s cheap for someone with a 110 OPS+ last year. At least in this insanely overpriced market.
Probably cause they know he won’t do 💩 for half the Year
I wish the Pirates would pay $5.5M to a guy who hits 22 HRs in a half a year
Well bell used to be a pirate😂
Bell and now Garcia off the board. These are the players the Pirates should have been targeting. Power hitters on 1yr deals
Yeah they ain’t getting no one. Polanco off the board too. They’re just posturing unfortunately
I’m holding out hope for either Suarez or Murakami. I didn’t necessarily want them to sign Bell or Garcia over a bigger free agent but both of them would have been good secondary pieces to bolster the lineup.
Suarez is probably your last chance honestly
Brandon lowe trade wise too
Suarez and Lowe are still possible, though I have a sinking suspicion that Pittsburgh is more likely to sign a post-release Nick Castellanos.
Should be a good value at this price. The first half of 2025 he was tinkering with his swing, in an unsuccessful attempt to find more power. Once he gave that up and reverted to his old approach, he significantly upped his OBP without sacrificing his (limited) power.
@SandlotBenchWarmer Sub-replacement level since the end of 2022, not enough of a platoon edge, career, to overcome the expected decline at age 33, worst one percentile in baserunning, and truly bad defense with an arm that’s actually worse than Pete Alonso’s,
The only reason he’s getting an MLB contract is that his expected numbers for 2025 were solid.
If you’re paying $5.5m to man the easiest positions to fill, 1b/dh, in a year when you don’t expect to do anything at all, giving away the opportunity to play any number of prospects, that’s a bad sign for your organization.
His WAR is decreased because of his defense. OPS+ is basically average. I’d take an average DH and not put him out in the field unless forced. A sub-$6M DH that basically always puts up at least 20 HRs is not a bad investment for a team like the Pirates to make. Sign him for DH and then invest that savings into a 3B and corner outfielder.
A DH is an easy position to fill but teams typically need to put up at least $10M to get anyone with some power like Bell.
Well there goes my second choice for the Rockies to sign as a stop gap at first base. Number one choice is still Luis Arraez.
Arreaz going for Ted’s record😂
Why do people act as if having a high batting average is a bad thing? I get that BA is not the most favored stat by certain crowds anymore, but it still shows how good a hitter someone is. It might not be the ONLY stat worth looking at, but only a fool will ignore it completely. Same with wins.
It can go both ways. Some people overvalue too. I personally don’t ignore it. I think it’s more valuable when you’re evaluating prospects who might have a high OBP but a low BA in the minors. Take a Luke Adams from my brewers. There’s a legitimate concern for him as he continues to climb
I get that. To me with regards to walks, it just seems like the pendulum has swung way too far. Walks do have value, but hits are better than walks. For the team and especially for the fan. I don’t watch baseball to see an 11 pitch at bat that ends in ball four. That is SO boring. Strikeouts are the exact same. I want to see the ball put in play. But that is my issue and I guess it is not changing back anytime soon.
I get it. There’s more variables that can happen when a ball is put in play. Walks are valuable to tire out pitchers
You are not the only one with that issue.
I think that since singles are included in both slugging and on base % it takes care of giving them more significance than walks in OPS calculation.
Since most teams are putting the home run hitters up first and maybe second the importance of the high OB % for the old time way of using leadoff and second hitters to get on base for the power hitters has lessened the importance of OB% in general.
I would hope that these teams would analyze the runs that they have lost by maximizing the at bats for the power hitters since many of these home runs have been with no one on base since the hitters are leading off then having the bottom of the batting order in front of them.
They could readily calculate this number based on real past results for say the last five years.
I didn’t mean that statistically they are more important, even if they are. I meant actually in the game singles are more important than walks. Yes it is true that both actions equal you getting on first base, so in a way they could be seen as the same, especially with no one on base. The difference is with men on base. If you are batting with a guy on second, the difference is a walk gives you guys on 1st and 2nd while a single likely gives you a run and a guy on first. And since runs, and not guys getting on base, are what decides winners and losers in the game, singles matter more.
It’s because in many instances a walk IS as good as a hit, and sometimes better, because they often add appreciably more to the hurler’s pitch count. And I don’t know if this has any statistical backup, but nothing feels worse late in a game than when a pitcher gives up a lead-off walk. It seems to rattle him more because it’s HIS fault, whereas when a hitter gets a lead-off single, the pitcher threw a strike and the ball just found grass. Bad luck that he can more easily shake off.
However, in another sense, the aggressive approach of looking for a pitch to hit, not take, serves to create momentum in a lineup, and hitting is contagious, no matter what anyone says. Again, I don’t exactly know why or if it can be determined, but rallies are almost mystical in their origin.
As far as batting average goes, sure, it’s not a “modern analytical metric” but let’s be honest here, it correlates somewhere around 93% with the best hitters out there, so it’s still useful no matter how much it’s derided, and only the purely pedantic insist it shouldn’t even be used anymore. But I certainly understand why it shouldn’t be the last word on whether a guy is a good offensive player or not.
I’ll say this though, with two out and the winning run on third, I’d rather face a guy who hits .220 with an OBP of .330 rather than a guy who can reliably get the bat on the ball and hits .285 with an OBP of .310. Context always matters.
Your move, Taco Bell.
Move and Taco Bell in the same sentence 😂. Well done.
For $7M using 2025 stats, Bell is a 16 OPS+ improvement over Kody Clemens. Should be interesting to see the lottery ticket prospect they get come July.
Terry Ryan should sue Falvey for copyright infringement. Im sure that guy still has the receipts for Tony Bautista, Rondell White, Phil Nevin, Ruben Sierra, blah blah
This is a very twins move at the moment. They claimed to have $20 mil to spend and they aren’t rebuilding but they need to rebuild. Like desperately need to rebuild. This is a move that you make when ur rebuilding but that’s not what their other roster decision suggest this offseason. You clean majority of ur team at last years deadline, just finish the job, overload on prospects and reset with that poor financial state the organization is in. The farm is strong, make it stronger and begin to call up guys all at the same time and see what they do.
This is a move you make when your organization is in such bad shape you don’t even have replacement level DHs or 1Bmen to give PA and playing time to in the hope that 2-4 years from now they can meaningfully contribute.
Build around Pablo, Joe, and Byron. This is a move for them
By the time the Twins have enough additional talent to build around those three, those three will be too old to help or will be gone in FA.
Bell has never made the playoffs with the team he signed a contract with. Only through trades. Signing him is waiving the white flag imo. Poster child for being traded at the deadline
Downvote for being a dumb statement. Bell played for a last place Pirates team and a rebuilding Nats team for most of his career. He was on the Padres roster because he was part of the Soto trade. And the next year Cleveland gave up early and traded him to a middling Miami team that caught fire. Those are his lone playoff appearances
Really hard to ever predict how Josh Bell is going to do in a year. He is always good for only half of the year for some reason. This past season though he had a 87th percentile xwOBA, 82nd percentile xSLG%, and a 75th percentile barrel rate. Those are some of the best numbers he’s put up in his career, so maybe it’ll carry over into 2026.
2023: Replacement Level
2024: Replacement Level
2025: Replacement Level
So not actually that difficult to predict.
Still, his xBA and xSLG numbers were pretty good in 2025. The problem is that you can expect age-related decline in 2026 to eat up any improvement you might see in his results.
I mean he’s hard to predict in terms of which half of the season he’s going to be good in.
His defense is pretty bad ..
.but at the dish he’s slightly above average
If slightly above average hitter is the best you can do for a full time DH it’s not a good sign
He’s not going to be an all star but solid for the cost.
It’s only December….
Not that I wanted Pirates to go after him. Im not even sure who our DH is right now. Assuming Garcia and Griffin start in AAA (cause, you know, service time), we got Triolo, Gonzalez, Yorke, Horowitz, and Bart infield, Cruz, Reynolds, Suwinski (ouch) outfield. Guess that leave Henry Davis to DH? This lineup somehow is worse than last years worst offense in the league. But, It’s only December right….
I guess Okamoto was too expensive?
@ItzJuztAPrankBro
Bell at 1B and Okamoto at 3B.
Twins are plain lost
While i think the article might be reading a little much into the signing, Bell is no different than them signing Ty France last year. If Bell is having a decent year at the deadline he’ll probably be dealt like France was too. Twins still have to field a team and i expect several minor league signings to fill out the bullpen yet to come
Hopefully for the Twins, ownership doesn’t force Levine to trade a controllable reliever with Bell just to save money like Minnesota stupidly did with France and the very good Louie Varland.
For someone I thought retired that’s a heck of a payday.
Guy’s gonna rake…
Josh Bell is punching the clock and gobbling up service time on the way to 10 years. Tip of the cap to Mr. Bell
Josh Bell gonna get comfortable at some point, after he thaws out…
And he’s going to slugg 30 Hrs this year !!!
Josh Bell is a really nice guy. To Nats fans, he is beloved. But the guy could never be the big bat they desperately needed, and he was never in a lineup where his complementary power could translate into wins. Then he looked like crap last year and took months to get going and to finally find his productive self. People bash his defense, but I always thought he was underrated. Never flashy but he could surprise you with good reflexes and better than average play around the bag. He’s a decent ballplayer with certain gifts but his BA is low and he has spent his career in mediocrity. I’m glad the Nats didn’t re-sign him because maybe, somehow, just maybe, they can find a better situation at 1B.