Padres Are Trusting Jake Cronenworth Again In A Spot Fans Fear

Will Jake Cronenworth's return ignite a turnaround for the Padres amid roster reshuffling and performance concerns?

The Padres are banking on Jake Cronenworth finding something fast.

On June 29, San Diego made a handful of roster moves, and Cronenworth was the biggest name in the mix. The club also recalled right-hander Bradgley Rodriguez, put David Morgan on the 15-day injured list with left knee inflammation, and sent Will Wagner to Triple-A El Paso.

Cronenworth’s return comes after what was a surprisingly short rehab assignment, and on paper it gives the Padres a few things they need. He’s another left-handed bat.

He’s a reliable defender. He brings veteran stability.

But the bigger question is whether any of that matters if the bat doesn’t come with it.

Before the injury, Cronenworth was stuck in a brutal stretch at the plate. He was hitting .144/.272/.196 with one home run, four RBI, 14 hits in 97 at-bats, along with a 34 OPS+ and -0.3 WAR.

He did at least show some life in rehab, going 3-for-12 with a home run and two RBI. That first rehab homer was clearly the kind of sign the Padres wanted to see. Still, one good swing in the minors doesn’t wipe away two months of rough production.

So San Diego isn’t just bringing back a familiar name. It’s bringing back a player with a real question attached to him.

Can Cronenworth be more than that right now?

The Padres don’t have much room for another dead spot in the lineup, and if he comes back looking like the same hitter he was before the injury, the problem could snowball quickly.

The move also shuts the door on Wagner for now. He wasn’t forcing his way into an everyday role, but he was holding his own.

In 35 at-bats, he hit .257/.422/.286 with a 104 OPS+. He didn’t hit a home run or drive in a run, but he was getting on base and giving the Padres solid at-bats.

Even so, the Padres went with Cronenworth and blocked Wagner at second base. The sense is that San Diego would rather have Wagner playing regularly in El Paso while Cronenworth and Tatis Jr. split time at the keystone.

That’s the bet here: track record over small sample, established major-league résumé over short-term production, upside over uncertainty. It’s a move plenty of teams would make. It just doesn’t come without risk.

In Other News...

Padres Bring Back A Veteran Bat As Bench Frustration Grows

Nick Solak is back in the Padres organization after a brief trip onto the free agent market, giving San Diego another experienced name to lean on as it tries to shore up its bench. The 31-year-old was outrighted by the club, but his return keeps a right-handed bat in the system that the Padres believe can provide useful depth if they need help at the big league level.

Solaks case has been built more on what he did in Triple-A than on any extended major league run. He hit .333 with a .412 on-base percentage, nine home runs, 40 RBIs and a .924 OPS there, production that at least gives San Diego something to point to if it keeps searching for steadier bench answers. The remaining question is how much of that form can actually translate into meaningful opportunities in a crowded Padres mix. [Read more 🡒]

Craig Stammen Just Drew A Line For Padres Starters

The Padres have spent too many recent nights asking the bullpen to clean up after the rotation, with starters not lasting long enough to keep games from tilting early. Craig Stammen didnt dress it up, either, acknowledging the need for the group to pitch deeper and at least leaving open the possibility that the club could keep leaning on creative fixes while it waits for healthier arms to rejoin the mix.

There is still a path to relief in the second half, with several starters expected back from injury and the front office likely to look for help before the trade deadline. Until then, the pressure on the current group is obvious: San Diego needs more stability from the front of games, because the alternatives can only patch over so much. [Read more 🡒]