Whats Really Behind The Padres Frustrating First Half

With a mixed season so far, the San Diego Padres face critical decisions and strategies to turn potential into performance as they aim for a playoff spot in the second half of 2026.

Halfway through the 2026 season, the San Diego Padres are living in that awkward space where the record says one thing and the underlying story says another.

At 43-39, they’re still hanging around the Wild Card picture, but the case for optimism and the case for frustration are both easy to make. Starting pitcher Michael King put it bluntly: “We've definitely underachieved in all aspects, probably besides the bullpen.

So, you look up with the record and you're, I guess, satisfied with how poorly we would all say we've been playing to still be above .500,” says starting pitcher Michael King. “I think we definitely have a lot that we can turn around and be the ballclub that we want to be.”

The pitching staff has been forced to patch things together for most of the year. San Diego has gotten just 75.1 innings total from Nick Pivetta, Joe Musgrove, German Marquez, Lucas Giolito, and Yu Darvish. Even with that mess, Walker Buehler has become one of the club’s steadiest starters, and the bullpen has been exactly the kind of weapon the Padres hoped it would be, with Mason Miller handling the late innings as a dynamic closer.

That relief group has also had to carry a heavy burden. The Padres’ relievers have already thrown 344 innings, sixth-most in MLB, and manager Craig Stammen knows exactly why that matters.

“We've tried to be a little creative with it with the openers and, you know, all that stuff is still on the table, with bullpen games and things like that,” says manager Craig Stammen. “Everything's on the table to try to make it better.

You think of it, we'll probably try it.”

Offensively, there have been a few unexpected bright spots. Ty France, Gavin Sheets, and more recently Samad Taylor have given San Diego better production than most people would have projected back in Spring Training. Those are the kinds of contributions that have helped keep the Padres afloat while so much else has sputtered.

But the bigger problem is impossible to ignore. San Diego ranks last in the league in runs scored, hits, and batting average, and the heart of the lineup has been a major reason why. Manny Machado, Fernando Tatis Jr., Xander Bogaerts, and Jackson Merrill have combined for a .663 OPS, well below the league average of .718, and their 34 home runs together are just four more than Kyle Schwarber.

That imbalance is what makes the second half feel so uncertain. The Padres need more from the top of the order, and they need more innings from the rotation if they want to avoid leaning even harder on a bullpen that has already done a ton of lifting.

Stammen knows the danger. He was part of the 2021 Padres bullpen that got overworked and faded in September, and he doesn’t want a repeat.

“That’s my biggest worry because I lived it and I know what that was like,” says Stammen, who was a member of the 2021 Padres bullpen that was asked to cover too many innings and collapsed in September. “I know how we were feeling at the end of the season.

We felt good, but it just wasn't the same. My job as manager is to try to protect the bullpen in that way so that they are a strength for the entire season, not just in May and June.”

That leaves the Padres with a pretty clear shopping list heading toward the August 3 MLB Trade Deadline: starting pitching depth and offense. President of Baseball Operations A.J. Preller will be looking for both.

Still, there’s belief in the room that the stars can find their form before it’s too late. King pointed to what happened in 2024 as proof of what this group can look like when things start clicking.

“Absolutely. I mean, I felt like you saw it in 2024,” says King.

“We were probably the best team (in the league) post-All-Star break. It's all about getting hot and making sure that we keep our cold streaks as short as possible.

I feel like we've had guys step up while other guys are cold. The bullpen stepped up while the starting pitchers were cold and, hopefully, it all comes together.”

That 2024 club finished with the best record in baseball after the All-Star break and came close to knocking off the Dodgers in the NLDS. Reaching that kind of level again is still on the table. The problem is, the Padres can’t afford to wait forever for it to show up.

In Other News...

Padres Are Trusting Jake Cronenworth Again In A Spot Fans Fear

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Cronenworth did show some positive signs in rehab, and the Padres are banking on that momentum carrying over as he re-enters a lineup that has needed more reliable production from the infield. The corresponding shuffle sent Will Wagner back to Triple-A El Paso for continued development, while David Morgan landed on the 15-day injured list with left knee inflammation, leaving San Diego to sort through both the present and the next wave of options. [Read more 🡒]

Padres Bring Back A Veteran Bat As Bench Frustration Grows

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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 🡒]