OPINIONS: Grading which Minnesota owners have thrived and which have stumbled

Grading which Minnesota owners have thrived and which have stumbled

What the Twins and Wolves have to hope for is ownership that is rich enough to fund a winner, and humble enough to let the experts run the show.

Owners/leaders of some of Minnesota’s sports teams, who have experienced varying levels of success (clockwise from top left): Andrea Yoch (Aurora), Glen Taylor (Wolves/Lynx), Mark and Zygi Wilf (Vikings), Joe Pohlad (Twins).

The Timberwolves are eight months removed from the greatest achievement in franchise history, a Game 7 victory in the arena of the defending champion Nuggets, yet their employees are seeking legal ways to calm their nerves.

The Twins’ brain trust not long ago engineered the first playoff victory for the franchise since 2002, despite payroll restrictions, yet they can’t be sure that they’ll keep their jobs.

The Vikings have won exactly one playoff game since 2017, yet their organization is the picture of stability.

Owners matter.

With the Wolves nearing the resolution of their ownership dispute and the Twins nearing the sale of their franchise, here’s one observer’s ranking of local sports owners:

Minnesota Aurora

Andrea Yoch gathered friends in a beer garden and suggested starting a women’s soccer club. The Minnesota Aurora persuaded the Vikings to lend them the stadium at TCO Performance Center. The Aurora sold out their first game, kept selling out games, and turned what could have been a cool cult experience into a national story and a Minnesota phenomenon.

This story is the opposite of a billionaire buying an existing franchise because they don’t know what else to do with their riches. The Aurora owners created something unique and unexpected.

Minnesota Vikings

The Wilfs have become ideal NFL owners — stable, wealthy, willing to spend, capable of dramatically upgrading facilities from U.S. Bank Stadium to TCO Performance Center.

Advertisement

Advertisement

They run a cohesive and quality organization, but have produced only one playoff victory since 2017.

Stability is admirable. Winning big would be better.

Minnesota Lynx/Timberwolves

Glen Taylor had his best year as an owner after he decided to sell his franchises.

The Minnesota Lynx became the most surprising WNBA finalist in years, and came within one shot (or foul call) of winning it all, not long after the Wolves had their most impressive playoff run ever.

Taylor, who also owns the Minnesota Star Tribune, made mistakes for many years, but the current iteration of his ownership has proved that he wants to keep the franchise in town and is willing to lose large sums of money in an attempt to win.

Alex Rodriguez and Marc Lore did well to persuade Taylor to hire basketball boss Tim Connelly. Otherwise they have done nothing to inspire trust.

C-plus

Minnesota United

The game-day experience is excellent. The franchise has produced three playoff game victories in its existence, probably because it relied too heavily on Adrian Heath.

The franchise appears to be headed in the right direction.

C

Minnesota Twins

Early Carl Pohlad deserved an A, because he hired Andy MacPhail, who hired Tom Kelly, and the team won two World Series in five years.

The version of Carl Pohlad who ran the Twins from 1995 on deserved an F for stripping the payroll, offering the team up for contraction and making untrue or dubious offers while lobbying for a new ballpark.

Pohlad’s sons — primarily Jim — provided stability and spent large sums on infrastructure. He kept Target Field updated and pristine, and oversaw dramatic improvements in spring training facilities and overseas academies.

But the Pohlads’ willingness to cut payroll after the first playoff victory in 20 years was destructive.

The Twins need the next owners to combine the Pohlads’ management stability with Taylor’s willingness to spend.

D

Minnesota Wild

The Xcel Energy Center remains an ideal home arena and entertainment venue. The Wild proved brave in cutting Zach Parise and Ryan Suter to clear the way for Kirill Kaprizov, the best player in franchise history.

But zero playoff series victories since 2015, in a league that lets just about anyone into the playoffs?

Hard to praise.

Incomplete

Minnesota Frost

The Frost get an A for winning a title in their first year, but an overall incomplete because of the firing of General Manager Natalie Darwitz, and the infighting indicated by their willingness to make such a move.

Look around the sports landscape, and it’s evident that good owners are necessary for success and stability.

What the Twins and Wolves have to hope for is ownership that is rich enough to fund a winner, and humble enough to let the experts run the show.

Jim Souhan

Jim Souhan is a sports columnist for the Minnesota Star Tribune. He has worked at the paper since 1990, previously covering the Twins and Vikings.

Related Posts

Report: Twins Can’t Expect Fans to Be Happy About Rocco Baldelli Sticking Around for 2026

Amid one of the worst stretches in recent memory, the Twins qlet it be known that they’ve already committed, in some sense, to more of the same.

Breaking: Twins blasted by local radio host in brutally honest rant

Tuesday night continued spiral of the Minnesota Twins’ 2025 season. While the Twins rallied back to make the final score close, their 6-5 loss to the Seattle…

BRAVO!!! Twins shutout Mariners, ending losing streak

The Twins’ pitching staff has endured a turbulent month of June, so much so that pitching coach Pete Maki called a meeting on Tuesday afternoon to address the group. It’s been especially noticeable…

MLB Rumors: Marcell Ozuna dark horses, Phillies dream, Cubs rotation answers

Summer baseball is in the air, meaning October is right around the corner. Teams all across the MLB are beginning to formulate their rest-of-season plans based

Phillies shut out again, waste another strong pitching performance

The Phillies wasted a gem by Ranger Suarez on Tuesday night, a nearly spotless start from Zack Wheeler on Wednesday night and have been shut out back-to-back games in Houston.

Philadelphia Phillies’ offense struggles again in second-straight loss to Houston Astros

Victor Caratini homered, Isaac Paredes drove in a run and the Houston Astros shut out the Philadelphia Phillies for a second straight game in a 2-0 victory.