Camilo Doval’s latest comments are the kind Giants fans can’t help but chuckle at.
The former San Francisco closer, now with the Yankees, told reporters recently, “In my career as a pitcher, I’ve never felt this good.” That line lands a little differently when you look at the numbers. Doval carries a 4.67 ERA this season, and that follows a 4.82 mark in the regular season last year after New York acquired him.
Yankees manager Aaron Boone is backing him up, saying, "I know nobody likes hearing it, but he's been throwing the ball really well." Maybe there’s a little self-talk at work here, but the production hasn’t matched the confidence.
Doval has been a bit better over his last seven outings, posting a 2.84 ERA in that stretch, yet he still hasn’t looked dominant. In his last two appearances, he allowed no earned runs, but he also gave up five hits in two innings, which hardly screams overpowering stuff.
That’s a far cry from the version Giants fans remember. In 2022 and 2023, Doval was one of the best closers in baseball and made the All-Star team in 2023. But relievers can fall off fast, and Doval did exactly that in 2024, which led to a demotion to the minors.
He bounced back in 2025 and reclaimed the closer role, but by then the Giants had already limped toward the trade deadline. Doval became the kind of piece a contending club would gladly buy for bullpen help, and New York took the shot.
From the Giants’ perspective, dealing him was one of the better decisions the front office has made under Buster Posey. Plenty of other moves have gone sideways, but this one came at the right time, with Doval’s value still intact before the decline fully set in.
That said, the trade doesn’t erase how badly the Giants handled the bullpen overall. They went the cheap route in the offseason, piling up inexpensive arms and pitchers coming off injuries, often both. The results have been ugly, and Sunday’s loss to the Colorado Rockies was just the latest reminder of how badly that plan has gone.
There’s even a strange twist still out there: maybe the Yankees move on from Doval someday and the Giants bring him back on the cheap. That would be the irony of all ironies.
But with the way he’s pitched, it’s fair to wonder whether he’d even move the needle much in San Francisco’s bullpen anyway, no matter how good he says he feels.
In Other News...
Giants Draft Plans Just Got Shaken Up By A Pitching Scare
The Giants entered draft season with real flexibility at No. 4 overall and a bonus pool that gives them room to be aggressive, which is why a hard-throwing high school arm like Brody Bumila had been on the radar. San Francisco has been linked to plenty of pitching possibilities, and Bumilas fastball made him the kind of upside play that can fit in a draft where the club could choose to chase ceiling or spread its money around.
Now the calculus looks different after the elbow scare that knocked Bumila off the board for the early rounds. He had been a name worth watching for the Giants, but with his stock suddenly clouded, San Francisco may have to pivot toward other arms or a different kind of prospect altogether as draft day approaches. [Read more 🡒]
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Rogers has also looked right at home in Toronto, where his new deal has given the Blue Jays a long-term piece and his results have backed up the investment. For San Francisco, the harder part is not just watching a former bullpen anchor thrive elsewhere, but seeing the innings he used to cover turn into a wider problem back home. The Giants knew they were moving a valuable reliever, but the size of the gap left behind has been sharper than expected. [Read more 🡒]
Heliot Ramos Just Delivered The Kind Of Night Giants Needed
Heliot Ramos gave the Giants the kind of jolt they have been waiting for in the middle of a long season, turning his return from a right quad strain into a statement night against the Blue Jays. Back in the lineup after a rehab assignment, Ramos has wasted little time getting comfortable again, and his power has shown up immediately, with four home runs in his first eight games since coming off the injured list.
The bigger picture for San Francisco is encouraging, too, because the outfield is almost whole again and the club is starting to see what it can look like when Ramos is healthy and driving the offense. Harrison Bader remains the lone holdout while he works back from plantar fasciitis, leaving the Giants with one last health question in the grass even as Ramos keeps giving them reasons to feel better about the lineup. [Read more 🡒]
