Taylor Rogers-Minnesota Twins Agree To 1-Year Contract
After a few years wandering the National League wilderness, racking up frequent flyer miles between San Diego, Milwaukee, San Francisco, Cincinnati, and Chicago, left-hander Taylor Rogers is coming home. According to reports from The Athletic, the Twins are bringing the 35-year-old reliever back on a one-year, $2 million deal. Will this move work out?
The Long Road Back To Minnesota
To understand why this reunion matters, you have to look at how Rogers left. He was a homegrown success story, an 11th-round pick out of Kentucky in 2012 who ground his way up to become an All-Star closer. But the business of baseball is cold. In 2022, on the eve of Opening Day, Minnesota shipped him and Brent Rooker to the Padres.
The return? Emilio Pagán and Chris Paddack. If you just felt a shiver go down your spine, you’re likely a Twins fan. That trade is widely viewed as one of the more painful swaps in recent franchise history. Bringing Rogers back doesn’t undo the past, but it certainly feels like a poetic correction of the universe.
Since leaving, Rogers has been a bit of a nomad. He had a stint with his literal twin brother, Tyler, in the Giants’ bullpen, which was a nice narrative moment. Last year was particularly chaotic. He started with the Reds, pitched well (2.45 ERA), got traded to the Pirates, and then, in a move that belongs in a slapstick comedy, was flipped to the Cubs the very next day without ever throwing a pitch for Pittsburgh.
Analyzing the Fit For 2026
So, what exactly are the Twins getting for their $2 million? They aren’t getting the 2019 version of Rogers, who locked down 30 saves with dominant velocity. That guy is gone. But they are getting a savvy veteran who has learned how to survive without elite heat.
Rogers has evolved into a two-pitch pitcher. He relies almost exclusively on a sinker-sweeper combination now. While the velocity on the sinker has dipped for four straight years, the movement is still there. He induces ground balls, which is a necessity given the Twins’ defensive alignment.
His 2025 season was a tale of two cities. In Cincinnati, he was lights out. In Chicago, things got a little rocky, finishing with a 5.09 ERA on the North Side. However, the aggregate numbers tell a better story: a 3.38 ERA over 50.2 innings with 53 strikeouts. If he can replicate that production in a medium-leverage role for Minnesota, this contract is a bargain.
Why The Bullpen Needed This Move
The Twins’ bullpen needed an adult in the room. Before signing Rogers, the only major move the front office made was trading for Eric Orze from the Rays. That’s fine for depth, but it doesn’t exactly scream “contender.”
The bullpen is often the most volatile part of a roster. Relievers are like tires; you never know when one is going to blow out. Adding a guy like Rogers raises the floor of the entire unit. He brings 10 years of MLB experience and 83 career saves to the mound. He’s seen the postseason. He knows the coaching staff.
Furthermore, Rogers gives Manager Derek Shelton a legitimate weapon against left-handed hitting. Even with his diminished velocity, Rogers held opponents to a .168 average against his sweeper last year. That plays in any ballpark, but especially in the AL Central.
The Verdict
This isn’t the type of signing that guarantees a World Series parade, but it’s the type of move that smart teams make. For $2 million, the Twins have reacquired a fan favorite, a clubhouse leader, and a pitcher who, despite the mileage on his arm, still knows how to get outs.
