Twins Video
When the Minnesota Twins traded Griffin Jax to the Tampa Bay Rays in exchange for Taj Bradley, the move immediately sparked debate about upside versus certainty. At the time, the Twins appeared to be dealing from a position of strength. Jax had become one of the most reliable relievers in the American League, while Bradley looked like the type of high-upside starter Minnesota’s rotation desperately needed. Early returns made the deal appear heavily tilted in the Twins’ favor. Bradley pitched like the club’s ace before a right pectoral injury landed him on the injured list.
Still, baseball trades have a funny way of evolving over time, especially when pitchers are involved. Now, the Rays are attempting something Minnesota talked about and quickly abandoned: turning Jax back into a starting pitcher. The funny part is, it might actually work.
Twins fans probably remember Jax’s rookie season well enough to understand why the organization gave up on the idea initially. During the 2021 campaign, Minnesota used him in 18 games, including 14 starts. The results were ugly. Jax posted a 6.37 ERA with a 67 ERA+ and a 1.35 WHIP while allowing nearly a hit per inning. Too often, lineups punished him the second and third time through the order.
At the time, he looked like a pitcher without a clear identity. His fastball command wavered, the secondary stuff lacked consistency, and he simply did not miss enough bats to survive in a rotation role. Then everything changed.
Beginning in 2022, the Twins shifted Jax into the bullpen full-time, and suddenly, he became one of the best relief weapons in baseball. From 2022 through 2024, he posted a 3.06 ERA with a sparkling 2.77 FIP while striking out 241 batters across 208 2/3 innings.
The transformation was dramatic. His slider became a legitimate wipeout pitch. The fastball played up significantly in shorter outings. More importantly, Jax started attacking hitters with confidence, rather than simply trying to survive. By the time the 2025 season rolled around, there was legitimate discussion about whether Minnesota should revisit the starter experiment. Unlike his rookie self, the more seasoned Jax actually looked equipped for it. His pitch mix had evolved considerably since moving to relief. He had sharpened his command, developed swing-and-miss stuff, and learned how to sequence hitters far more effectively. Frankly, he barely resembled the pitcher who struggled through 2021.
The idea made sense on paper. Unfortunately for Jax, the Twins needed him too badly in the bullpen. Minnesota entered 2025 leaning heavily on him as a high-leverage weapon, and the organization ultimately decided stability in relief outweighed the risk of another rotation conversion.
Then the season unraveled. The Twins collapsed under the weight of injuries, inconsistent pitching, and mounting clubhouse frustration. Jax’s final chapter with the organization included a tense interaction with former manager Rocco Baldelli on the mound at Target Field. Shortly afterward, his representation informed the club that a trade would be preferred. A few days later, he was headed to Tampa Bay.
Naturally, the Rays decided to get weird with it. Rather than fully stretching Jax out during spring training and immediately placing him into the rotation, Tampa Bay spent the early portion of 2026 using him in relief appearances, while gradually increasing his workload. It is a very Rays approach to pitcher development.
Recently, however, the Rays have started letting Jax work deeper into games. Across five starts, he has allowed only three earned runs over 19 innings with a 14-to-8 strikeout-to-walk ratio. His most recent outing against the Baltimore Orioles may have been his most encouraging yet. Jax tossed five innings, allowed three hits, surrendered just one earned run on a solo homer, struck out six, and walked only one batter.
Equally importantly, his workload continues to climb. Over his last three starts, he has averaged just over 60 pitches per outing, suggesting Tampa Bay is slowly removing the training wheels.
It's difficult not to play revisionist history with the trade. Earlier in the 2026 season, the Twins looked like clear winners. Bradley emerged as Minnesota’s top starter before his injury, while Jax remained somewhat of a question mark as a long-term rotation candidate.
But that equation may no longer be so simple. If Bradley’s injury impacts his long-term durability, while Jax successfully transitions into even a mid-rotation starter, the narrative around this deal could shift dramatically. Starting pitching carries far more value than relief pitching, even elite relief pitching. The Rays know that better than almost anyone. Bradley is back, and he looked like himself in his first appearance after the stint on the shelf, but it won't feel like he's out of the woods until he gets back to throwing full starts and puts that injury scare in the rearview mirror.
There's also an uncomfortable reality attached to all of this from Minnesota’s perspective. The Twins may have actually developed Jax into a starter without ever getting to enjoy the payoff themselves. His failed rookie stint likely came too early in his development. By the time he became polished enough to handle a rotation role, the Twins were too reliant on him in relief to make the switch. Tampa Bay, meanwhile, inherited the finished version of the pitcher and now gets to test the final stage of the experiment.
That does not make the trade a mistake. Bradley still has front-line starter upside when healthy, and the Twins desperately needed rotation help. Still, Jax’s resurgence as a starter adds an entirely new layer to the conversation. If he keeps pitching like this, Twins fans may soon find themselves wondering what could have been—although so far, Bradley is pitching well enough in his own right to deter those intrustive thoughts.
What sticks out about Jax’s transition back to a starter? How should the Twins view this trade? Leave a comment and start the discussion.







Recommended Comments
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now