The Twins activated right-hander Taj Bradley from the 15-day injured list, and Bradley is expected to start today’s game with the Red Sox. To make room for Bradley on the active roster, Minnesota designated right-hander Luis Garcia for assignment.
Bradley’s placement was retroactive to May 6, so he’ll return to the mound after slightly longer than a minimal 15-day stint. Right pec inflammation sent Bradley to the IL in what seemed like mostly a precautionary move on the Twins’ part, and he made one rehab start with Triple-A St. Paul during his brief time on the sidelines.
The injury threw a minor wrench into what has otherwise been a very solid start to Bradley’s 2026 campaign. The right-hander has a 2.87 ERA and a 26.1% strikeout rate over his first 47 innings and eight starts, and his 8.5% walk rate is also slightly above the league average. Bradley’s 3.66 SIERA is reflective of both that uninspiring walk rate and some good fortune in the form of an 84.3% strand rate, but overall, Bradley’s contributions have helped a Twins rotation that has been hampered by injuries.
This is already the second DFA of the season for Garcia, who was designated and subsequently released by the Mets in April. Minnesota signed Garcia to a minor league deal shortly thereafter and selected him to the 26-man roster in late April, but the veteran righty struggled to a 10.38 ERA over nine appearances and 8 2/3 innings in a Twins uniform. Over 15 total innings with New York and Minnesota, Garcia has a 9.00 ERA and an equal number of walks and strikeouts (six apiece).
Garcia signed a one-year, $1.75MM free agent deal with the Mets this past offseason, and New York remains on the hook for the majority of that salary. The Twins had to pay Garcia only the prorated portion of an MLB minimum salary during his time on their active roster, and that sum is subtracted from his overall $1.75MM figure. Since a waiver claim would mean Garcia’s new team would absorb all of Garcia’s remaining salary, it’s likely that he clears waivers and then elects free agency over an outright assignment to Triple-A St. Paul.
It is at least worth wondering if this could be the end of the line for Garcia, given how he is 39 years old and in his 14th Major League season. Consistency has been an issue for Garcia over his long career, but he has balanced things out with a respectable 4.20 ERA, 21% strikeout rate, and 10% walk rate over 598 1/3 innings in the Show. It was only a season ago that Garcia posted a 3.42 ERA across 55 1/3 innings with the Dodgers, Nationals, and Angels, and it looks like the right-hander is in for another nomadic season as he again enters DFA limbo.
