Funny thing about twist rates in muzzleloaders is that they can vary considerably depending on what you intend to shoot out of it. From what I understand, back in the day, you either had a very slow twist rate (dependent on caliber, but most .50s were 1:60-1:77) for patched round balls (PRBs) or extremely fast twist rates (1:18-1:22) for the long, solid lead conicals.
Somewhere along the line, T/C started producing their rifles with a 1:48 twist, that was supposedly a compromise that would give you decent accuracy from both PRBs and Conicals. When saboted bullets came along, they shot alright out of the 1:48s, which had sort of become the standard, but they found that they shot much better out of a faster twist barrel. Most manufacturers today making "modern inlines" have settled for a 1:26-1:28 depending on barrel length, but they could probably go with a much faster rate of twist if they wanted. Saboted bullets are kind of a retrofit anyway, being a little easier to load than a conical and, at the time, using an existing projectile to fire out of a muzzleloader.
I speculate that the reason why they settled on this 1:26-1:28 twist rate was that it was also a compromise. Most people aren't shooting conicals out of their inlines, and too fast of a twist would probably shred the plastic sabot and leave half of it in the rifling of the barrel, so they lowered the twist rate to something that would stabilize the bullet without causing issues with the sabot.