Twins setup man Griffin Jax has quietly emerged as one of the top relievers in the sport, having just wrapped up a career year that included a 2.03 ERA, 34.4% strikeout rate and 5.4% walk rate in 71 innings. Jax, a former third-round pick out of the Air Force Academy, broke into pro ball as a starter, however, and still works with a starter’s repertoire even in short relief stints. The Twins are at least open to the possibility of seeing what Jax would look like back in a more traditional rotation setting, bench coach Jayce Tingler told Mike Ferrin of MLB Network Radio on SiriusXM. There’s no indication of any firm plan to move him from his current role right now, to be clear.
Certainly, there’s risk in taking Jax out of a role in which he’s come to excel. The right-hander’s 2024 season was among the best of any reliever in baseball and set new career-best marks in most notable categories, but Jax has been a quality setup piece in Minnesota even before this past season.
Dating back to 2022, the 29-year-old Jax sports a 3.06 earned run average with 15 saves, 65 holds, a 28.7% strikeout rate and a 6.4% walk rate in 208 2/3 innings. He’s added 3 2/3 shutout innings with one hit, no walks and five strikeouts in postseason play during that time. Jax averaged a career-high 97.1 mph on his four-seamer this season, and his gargantuan 18.4% swinging-strike rate ranked second in all of MLB among pitchers (starters and relievers) with at least 70 innings pitched, trailing only Josh Hader.
Unlike most relievers, many of whom narrow their arsenal to two pitches, Jax works with a five-pitch mix, throwing four of those offerings around a 10-30% clip. He uses his slider as his main offering (37.5%, per Statcast), followed by a four-seamer (29.9%), changeup (16.7%), sinker (9.8%) and an occasional show-me curveball (6.2%). There are some instances of starters getting by with two-pitch repertoires — more than 90% of Dylan Cease’s pitches are either a slider or four-seamer; Kevin Gausman is similar with a four-seamer/splitter combo — but most have at least a third offering that’s mixed in with some degree of regularity.
Just yesterday at The Athletic, Eno Sarris took a data-driven look at six relievers who could be particularly well-suited to make the jump from the bullpen to the rotation, prompted by recent news that Jeff Hoffman (one of the six) has been drawing some free agent interest as a starter. Jax was featured prominently due to his five-pitch selection, his velocity, two plus breaking balls and his standout command.
The Twins have tried Jax as a starter in the majors previously, but that was a different version of Jax. The right-hander started 14 games in 2021 and was shelled for a 6.37 ERA with an 18.1% strikeout rate and 8.1% walk rate. As Sarris observes, however, Jax has gained nearly five miles per hour on his heater — far more than the standard bump received when moving from the rotation to the ’pen — and added three inches of ride to the pitch. He’s also added the sinker, changed the shape of his curveball and made other gains of note. (Readers are highly encouraged to check out Sarris’ piece in full for detailed breakdowns of Jax, Hoffman and four other relievers.)
From a pure roster and payroll perspective, there are reasons to consider the move. The Twins’ payroll has been crunched in 2024-25 after ownership unexpectedly slashed it by $30MM last offseason amid broadcast uncertainty and, now, the exploration of a potential sale.
Pitching depth was an issue in 2024, as Joe Ryan and Chris Paddack missed the final two months of the year. The Twins relied on rookies (Simeon Woods Richardson, David Festa, Zebby Matthews) who were all pushing well past their prior career-high workloads. Jax could have similar workload concerns, but he’d also take some stress off those young arms. It’s also possible that the payroll crunch leads the Twins to trade Paddack and his $7.5MM salary — a spendy fifth starter for a team undergoing payroll reduction mandates — and a starting role for Jax would add some innings and depth without further adding to the budget.
Beyond that, Jax is controllable for three more years. If he’s able to make a successful return to the rotation in 2025 — even he’s capped around 120-130 innings — he could be a full-fledged rotation option in 2026 and 2027. That could give the Twins a rotation headlined by Pablo Lopez, Bailey Ober, Ryan and Jax all the way through 2027, which clearly carries the potential to be formidable. And, because Jax has been a reliever to this point, his first-year salary projection in arbitration (via MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz) is just $2.6MM. He’d be an affordable hedge against an injury to the Twins’ top three or perhaps a trade from the bunch somewhere down the road.
Of course, moving Jax to the rotation would thin out the late-inning relief corps. Closer Jhoan Duran would still be tasked with shutting down most games, but he had some red flags in 2024, including a dip in average fastball (to a still-elite 100.5 mph), a drop in strikeout rate and an uptick in line-drives. Former starter Cole Sands had an under-the-radar breakout of his own (3.28 ERA, 29.1 K%, 4.1 BB%), and the Twins can hope for better health from Justin Topa and Brock Stewart. Jax’s departure would create a void — but adding a quality reliever to replace him would likely be less costly than adding rotation depth with similar upside.
It’s always possible the Twins could simply take a look at Jax as a starter in spring training and go from there. If he shows well and seems up to the challenge, the experiment can carry into the season. It’s always easier to stretch a pitcher out before the season and then ramp him back down to a relief role than it is to build him up as a starter on the fly in the season, so that scenario could hold appeal. All of it will depend, to an extent, on what opportunities present themselves this offseason as the Twins look to deepen their pitching and reshape their lineup amid ongoing budgetary issues that don’t seem likely to be alleviated during the sale process (and are far from guaranteed to improve even after a potential sale).
TF4L
As a Twins fan, I am staunchly against this. I hope they keep him where he is. He’s just too good as a reliever
mlb fan
“Too good as a reliever”..The only way teams should even consider this type of move is if the player is the driving force behind the change. I can’t see even considering a move if the player is not “all in”.
All that being said, teams probably shouldn’t look a gift horse in the mouth, by changing the position of a player who already excels in his current role.
Tigers3232
@MLB He is not changing a position, he’s changing a roll. I do agree though it comes with risk. But as the article states he’s gained 5 MPH on his fastball since last starting games. He’s 29 years old and been in MLB for a decent time now, so I don’t think eroding his confidence should come into play. His experience though knowing when to throw pitches and added velocity could very well let him thrive in this role. I don’t think it ll cause much harm trying to transition him starting in Spring Training and seeing where it goes. Ultimately it’s home just managing arm to pitch more on a given day opposed to short more frequent appearances.
crise
Role, not roll. I mean, sure, a little extra fiber and he could be doing some of both, but for sure this is about changing his role.
Tigers3232
Thank you for the correction, surely nobody would ve understood what I intended to say without the correction.
Sadly I have to admit I don’t proof read my comments here as I neither get paid or graded on them. I hope you forgive me for this cardinal sin Ive regular committed…
bwmiller79
I disagree, move him into the rotation, even if he has moderate success, it’s a scratch, if he shines, it’s a plus.
Sure lock down RP aren’t a dime a dozen, far from it, but go into it with a set expectation, a move back to the bullpen isnt a complete failure, it will define him as a pitcher more completely. If he is on board with starting I say let him rip, the only failure is the modest risk that he doesn’t regain his form as a relief pitcher should he not perform well in a starting role.
Tigers3232
@bw Well said. I personally like the idea. I’d have to assume it’s been discussed with him to some degree as well before it was made public. I’m sure he’s all for it as well. If he thrives as a SP he ll command much more $ when he becomes a free agent. And ultimately nearly every pitcher entered MLB as a SP. Most RPs Id assume would much rather b starters. Closers being the exception here and the handful of pitchers vying for a closing role. But by and large the majority of RPs make far less than starters or the even fewer top RPs in the game.
crise
Or severe injury and he doesn’t come back as the same pitcher in any role. Jax has been incredibly resilient, consistent and brilliant and hoping that he can move from a top relief role to a fourth starter seems dumb.
Plus he is really the glue that makes that bullpen work at all. Brock Stewart is always hurt, I don’t even know who else would count as the third arm, and Duran is only as good as he is because Jax takes the tough stretch in the seventh or eighth so that the ninth is lined up. Go back and look, but Jax was quite a bit better than Duran last year.
letsholdemandgohome
Cool Name
LFGMets (Metsin7) #BannedForBeingABaseballExpert
It might be coincidence, but for the past 3 years whenever I’ve seen the Twins lose a close game, 90% of the time Jax’s name was on the boxscore as the guy who blew the save. He would be better as a starter, he doesn’t have the nerves to pitch in late close games
ForDoingNothing
Tell us more Mr box score watcher
Tigers3232
Less than 7% of his appearances resulted in a loss in 2024. In 2023 it was higher at nearly 10%. But still overall his #s looked good. Some of that could be attributed to poor defense, poor luck, etc. Overall though he’s pitched well the handful of times I’ve watched him pitch. Looking at stats just on the surface doesn’t tell the while story. Especially in a case like this where one set of statistics doesn’t really jive with the rest. His overall #s where pretty good the last few seasons.
rct
He only blew a save in 17 of his 208 appearances in the last three years and the Twins only lost 12 of those. That’s around once every 17 appearances. He’s doing great in that role and in close games.
Tigers3232
He does not close all that often nor did he ever have the role locked down. He did appear to have a decent amount of losses relative to his # of appearances in 2023. Overall tho his #s were still pretty good. It appears he had some bad luck that can be contributed to some factor(s) though.
Tigers3232
@LFG I hope I didn’t come across as being overly critical. I do have to compliment you on pointing out you came to that conclusion by watching. There are many on here who will try and claim to watch every single MLB game all season prior to getting off the hill they choose to die on before backing down from an opinion.
Hope this is a good offseason for your Mets. I for one loved the approach they took pay heavy for a few seasons and clear the ledger. Didn’t work in 2023 but bolstered the Farm and they look we d to have turned a corner at end of last season. To me they re hard to not root for the way they and Cohen have been vilified.
herethereeverywhere2
This has Rick Aguilera’s disastrous return to starting in 1996 written all over it.
Tigers3232
Yes clearly moving a 29 year old who has become much more effective and gained velocity as well as gained yrs on MLB experience is just like moving a 34 yr old back to the rotation…..
HopefulTwinsFan
It worked for Crochet and others; maybe it would work for Jax. The Twins’ bullpen is stretched too thin, though. It’d be better for him to stay where he is and for the Pohlads to be okay with investing in one more average or better starter.
For Love of the Game
Try him as a bulk innings guy – 3, 4, 5 innings. He wouldn’t go through the order a third time. His history as a starter in the majors was disastrous at age 26. In the minors his topline numbers as a starter were okay, but 7 k’s per 9 in the minors would get even worse in the majors.
jbigz12
The article states all the changes he’s made as a pitcher. He’s throwing different pitches and the ones he threw previously he’s reworked.
I wouldn’t read into old stats too much when a guy reworks his arsenal.
Non Roster Invitee
If he’s a good of a starter than he was in Game of Thrones then it’s a win-win situation.
Moneyballer
This isn’t being creative, this is being dumb!
darinc
The move the Twins should be making is to make Jax the closer in 2025 and trade Duran.
Moneyballer
Ohhhh no no no no no! Hell to the no!