The Twins are bringing old friend Taylor Rogers back on a one-year, $2MM contract, per Ken Rosenthal and Aaron Gleeman of The Athletic. Rogers, who’s represented by Frontline Athlete Management, spent the 2016-21 seasons in Minnesota, spending the latter three as their closer and earning an All-Star nod in 2021. Minnesota has a full 40-man roster and will need to make a corresponding move to create space for Rogers (and another one for recently signed catcher Victor Caratini).
A reunion with the 35-year-old Rogers makes sense for a Twins club that’s in dire need of steady arms in the bullpen. While the left-hander isn’t close to the peak form he showed late in his original run with Minnesota, he pitched to a solid 3.38 ERA with an above-average 24% strikeout rate in 50 2/3 innings between the Reds and Cubs in 2025. Rogers’ 10.4% walk rate was the second-highest of his lengthy career and more than double the 4.3% mark he posted over his best three seasons as a Twin (2019-21), but he was a useful middle relief arm in both Cincinnati and Chicago this past season.
Beyond the decline in command, Rogers has seen a fundamental decline in the strength of his repertoire. He averaged 95.7 mph on his sinker and 84 mph on his slider back in 2021. In 2025, those pitches were carried respective average velocities of 92.7 mph and 78.4 mph. Accordingly, Rogers has seen a notable drop in his swinging-strike rate and significant upticks in his opponents’ contact rate.
Rogers was traded from the Twins to the Padres just prior to Opening Day in 2022 — a deal that brought Chris Paddack and Emilio Pagan back to Minnesota. (Brent Rooker was also shipped to San Diego in that deal, but he was cut loose by both the Friars and Royals before breaking out with the A’s.) He went on to sign a three-year, $33MM deal with the Giants, who traded him to the Reds late last offseason.
The Giants seemed to quickly sour on using Rogers in high-leverage spots. He collected a dozen holds and a pair of saves while pitching decently in year one of his contract but was moved to a middle-relief capacity the following season. In terms of leverage index, Rogers has worked primarily in low-leverage spots over the past two seasons. On the whole, the results over the life of that three-year contract were sound (3.16 ERA), but Rogers’ rate stats have faded steadily.
Even a lesser version of Rogers than the one remembered and beloved by many Twins fans will be an improvement to a Minnesota bullpen that was gutted at last year’s trade deadline. The Twins traded five relievers — Jhoan Duran, Griffin Jax, Louis Varland, Danny Coulombe, Brock Stewart — as part of a fire sale that netted a combination of MLB-ready young players (e.g. Mick Abel, Taj Bradley, Alan Roden) and well-regarded prospects (e.g. Eduardo Tait, Kendry Rojas). That slate of trades decimated what had been one of the best bullpens in the sport; Twins relievers posted the fourth-worst ERA in the sport following last year’s deadline.
There’s virtually no certainty in the Twins’ bullpen at present. Rogers immediately becomes the most experienced member of the group and, for now anyway, could be an option for high-leverage spots or even save opportunities. He’ll join Justin Topa, Cole Sands and Kody Funderburk (who excelled down the stretch following last year’s fire sale) as the only current members of the bullpen with even one full year of major league service time.
The Twins have a deep collection of young starters, several of whom could end up in the ’pen over the long run, but there’s clearly room to add another veteran arm here — if not multiple arms. Rogers’ modest $2MM guarantee bumps Minnesota’s payroll to just under $109MM, per RosterResource’s estimates.
That’s around $25MM lower than last year’s mark, so even with ownership scaling back payroll, the front office should still have sufficient resources to bring in another arm. Hard-throwing righty Seranthony Dominguez is among the relievers to whom the Twins have reportedly spoken, while other yet-unsigned relief options of note include Michael Kopech, Nick Martinez, Tommy Kahnle, Paul Sewald and Coulombe.


Couldn’t be happier I really liked this guy and for 2 million not bad at all even though he fell off second half he still should be solid this year.
Should have got both the Rogers twins.
Made so much sense for them.
I wish so too but our ownership wouldn’t be willing to give Tyler his 37 million unfortunately.
I Hate how everything is swing and miss generated. Wouldn’t throwing hard put extra strain on the arm? I’m concerned with the ability to mix up pitches and altering the velocity to get weak contact that should result in outs. Only time swing and miss matters is situational and if your defense is porous.
I love what my Pirates have done but they could have signed this guy for 2 million instead of Soto, I dont think anyone could make the case that Soto is a better pitcher than Rogers
John, I gave you a thumb’s up but it could have been a situation where Rogers is happy to return to Minnesota.
Yeah, Soto certainly doesn’t look 5M better than him. Pros and cons of waiting out the market. They seem to really believe in their ability to work with power arms with good K rates and harness them into quality pitchers. Offering arbitration to Ramirez, fixing Justin Lawrence, Mattison, and still working on Nicholas and now Mason Montgomory.
Minnesota getting a “twin”! He is “Taylor-made” for them!
Looks like a bargain to me as long as he doesn’t continue his second half 2025 performance. If he does, oh well, it is only $2 mill. and a 1 year commitment. Good pickup.
What’s better? Having the Rogers twins on the Twins or having the Rogers twins play at the Rogers Centre?
The marketing potential for that would have probably helped pay for Tyler’s salary. At least they got one, but really should have went for both.
According to Meatloafs half brother, one out of two ain’t bad.
Man, I’m jealous. Would rather the Pirates got Rogers than Soto for $7M. Good pickup.
Future Pirates HOF member
Yes! He had an amazing 1-2 days on the team, I can’t forget his impact.
Great move! It will help them push for a postseason that they will get instantly eliminated from, or a more likely 98.988888888888888% chance, trade him at the deadline.
Reliever market is even more stripped
hot potaylor. nobody ever wants this guy. gets traded every year. is no better than your best AAA reliever.
This really is a blah blah blah
Orioles should be doing deals like this especially if they don’t bring in a bonafide starter. If the rotation isn’t going to be solid top to bottom then they better fortify the back end. But who knows what they’re thinking.
What a bargain
Ooooh friend! Thumbs up friend!
Price seems very steep. He would be the 5th highest paid player on the White Sox. Yours truly, Jerry:)