The Twins have called up right-handed pitcher Travis Adams , a 25-year-old who’s quietly put together one of the most intriguing developmental arcs in the system. After years of being a starter and overcoming a rollercoaster minor-league path, Adams now finds himself on the cusp of contributing in a meaningful way in the big leagues.
Adams spent three collegiate seasons at Sacramento State, where he was used primarily as a starter. His junior season in 2021 was solid, if unspectacular on paper, with a 4.31 ERA, 1.24 WHIP, 8.2 strikeouts per nine innings (K/9), and just 1.8 walks per nine innings (BB/9). He wasn’t blowing away the competition, but his ability to fill up the strike zone and limit free passes stood out. The Twins, always on the lookout for high-floor college arms they could develop internally, scooped him up in the sixth round of the 2021 MLB Draft. The thinking was simple: Adams already had the command, and with the proper adjustments, the Twins hoped to unlock more velocity and induce more swings and misses in his game.
His pro debut with the FCL Twins was not precisely what you’d script. One appearance, two walks, two hits, three earned runs. It was over almost as quickly as it started. But one poor outing in the Florida heat was hardly a reason to panic, and Adams showed why in his first full professional season.
Fast Start in 2022
Adams opened the 2022 season in Fort Myers and immediately looked like a polished college arm, making easy work of low-A hitters. In 15 starts, he posted a 3.50 ERA and a crisp 1.04 WHIP over 69 1/3 innings, showing strong command (5.5 BB%) and missing more bats (25.1 K%) than he had in college.
The Twins bumped him to High-A Cedar Rapids in late July, and though hitters made more contact (9.8 H/9), his strikeout numbers climbed again (28.5 K%), suggesting that swing-and-miss upside was starting to emerge. By the end of 2022, Adams had built a compelling case as a solid mid-tier arm in the system. He wasn’t flashy, but he was dependable and improving.
A Step Back in 2023
Then came the struggles. Adams spent all of 2023 with Double-A Wichita, and it proved to be a humbling experience. His ERA ballooned to 5.66, his WHIP jumped to 1.47, and both his strikeout rate (20.3%) and walk rate (9.0%) went in the wrong direction. Suddenly, whispers began that Adams might be destined for the bullpen. For a pitcher who had built his profile around command and consistency, it was a setback. But it also prompted a turning point.
Adjustments and Breakthrough
During spring training in 2024, Adams made headlines, but it wasn’t for anything he did on the field. He was in the right place at the right time and was able to save a resident from a house fire. He was staying in a house nearby and heard a loud bang. He and three other local residents had to find a way into the back of the house to get a man to safety.
Adams told reporters, “My goal was just to help him out of the house because I didn’t know like how much of the house is on fire or, you know, what was on fire. I saw a big old blaze and fire and smoke coming from the house.”
To open 2024, Adams was back in Wichita, where he was still in the rotation and still facing questions. His first nine appearances didn’t inspire much confidence. Opposing batters hit .291 off him, and his on-base percentage against was north of .330. Then, seemingly overnight, Adams flipped a switch.
Over his subsequent 13 appearances, Adams posted a 2.38 ERA and limited batters to a .544 OPS. He struck out 72 and walked only 17 in 68 innings, showing the kind of efficiency and pitch execution the Twins had been waiting for. His velocity ticked up slightly, but more importantly, he improved the shape and location of his pitches. He worked up in the zone more effectively, added deception with his delivery, and leaned into sequencing that emphasized his strengths.
The righthander currently stands as the Wichita individual franchise leader in three pitching categories: innings pitched (217.2), strikeouts (206), and starts (44). Minnesota rewarded his dominance with a late-season promotion to Triple-A St. Paul and added him to the 40-man roster this past winter. In their 2024 end-of-year report, MLB Pipeline called Adams “the best performing pitcher in the system in the second half.” For a former sixth-rounder with some minor-league struggles, it was a remarkable turnaround.
Embracing the Hybrid Role
While Adams had always been a starter in college and the minors, the Saints took a different approach in 2025. Instead of using him in a traditional five-man rotation, Adams began serving as a hybrid long-reliever and piggyback option. He often followed high-upside arms like Marco Raya or Zebby Matthews, providing two to four innings of quality work to bridge the gap to the back of the bullpen.
The results have been consistently strong. Through the first two months of the season, Adams has maintained a sub-3.50 ERA and a WHIP of around 1.15. His strikeout rate has climbed to 21.3%, a significant jump from the 11.4% mark he posted during his brief Triple-A stint in 2024. He’s been especially impressive at limiting damage, giving up more than two runs in just three of his appearances. That kind of reliability has made him one of the Saints’ most trusted arms. And now, it’s earned him a ticket to the big leagues.
What Can Adams Bring to the Twins?
With the Twins entering a tough stretch of games and battling a string of bullpen wear and tear, Adams offers a valuable safety net. His recent experience in a piggyback role mirrors what he’ll likely be asked to do in the big leagues: eat innings, keep the score close, and avoid walks.
The Twins have Zebby Matthews and David Festa in the rotation, who are young and will be limited in the amount of innings they can throw in their first big-league campaign. Adams will likely need to serve in a similar role to the one he held in St. Paul by piggybacking on these young starters. He may not light up the radar gun, but he mixes well, competes in the zone, and has shown he can adjust when hitters catch on.
In the long run, it’s unclear whether Adams will carve out a permanent role in the bullpen or get another chance to start. His fastball sits in the mid-90s and can flash in the upper 90s. His slider has increased in velocity with the Twins, now reaching the mid-80s. He has a cutter and a changeup that he also uses. But his emergence as a flexible, multi-inning option gives the Twins exactly what they need right now: a stable arm with command, experience, and the ability to adapt.
It’s always satisfying when a player grinds through setbacks and earns a call-up not because of hype but because of steady, earned performance. Travis Adams isn’t a top-100 prospect or a former first-rounder. But he’s a reminder that player development is rarely linear, and sometimes, those mid-round arms with college polish and quiet grit are precisely what a team needs.
What stands out about Adam’s development in the Twins system? Can he succeed in a piggybacking role? Leave a comment and start the discussion.
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