Giants Are Heading For Another Outfield Squeeze They Really Didnt Need

The impending return of a forgotten outfielder could leave the SF Giants scrambling to balance their roster amidst a crowded and competitive outfield lineup.

The Giants are about to run into the same problem from a different angle: too many outfielders, not enough room.

Heliot Ramos is back from his rehab assignment after being sidelined since mid-May with a quad strain, and he wasted little time rejoining the mix. In Sunday’s 3-2 win over the Braves, he went 1-for-3 with a walk in the DH spot. During his rehab stint, he hit .346/.452/.577 in 31 minor league plate appearances, which only adds to the pressure on a roster that already has more bodies than it can comfortably fit.

That’s because Jung Hoo Lee has been holding down one side of the outfield as one of the club’s best players this season. After Sunday, he was hitting .323/.355/.465 with a 129 wRC+ and 1.5 WAR, and he’s been the clear headliner among Giants outfielders. Casey Schmitt has also been filling in capably in left field while Ramos was out, even though he’s not really an outfielder.

The immediate roster move to activate Ramos was simple enough: Buddy Kennedy was designated for assignment, and that cleared the way without much fuss.

But the real squeeze is still coming.

With Schmitt, Lee and Ramos currently looking like the outfield alignment from left to right, the Giants are carrying a setup that doesn’t exactly scream defensive comfort. It could help the offense, though, and the club still has Victor Bericoto, Jonah Cox and Drew Gilbert available as backup outfielders.

Schmitt is the only one who can credibly cover the 4-6 spots, and unless the Giants decide they need more infield depth before the trade deadline, Bericoto and Gilbert may have done enough to keep their jobs for now. Cox, on the other hand, looks like the most likely casualty once Harrison Bader returns.

And Bader is still very much part of this puzzle, even if he’s been easy to forget. The Giants are paying him eight figures this season and next year, but he’s spent most of the year unavailable.

He missed nearly a month with a hamstring strain in April and May, then landed back on the injured list for another month because of plantar fasciitis in his left foot. That’s a rough combination for a player whose main selling point is his range in center field.

When Bader has played, the results haven’t exactly forced the issue. His .170/.198/.358 slash line will be hard to work back into the lineup, even if moving him to center and shifting Lee to right would help the defense.

The contract makes any clean exit nearly impossible, so the more realistic roster move would be optioning Cox to get Bader back on the 26-man roster. Even then, the Giants would still have more outfielders than practical at-bats.

That’s why this could be a spot for the Giants to think bigger than a simple shuffle. Optioning one of Gilbert or Bericoto would help with flexibility, but the roster logjam is only part of a larger issue.

The team has been stuck in ineptitude for too long, and the organization should be open to moving pieces that don’t have the surnames of Webb, Eldridge or Schmitt. Buster Posey already showed a willingness to reload last season when he traded Tyler Rogers, Camilo Doval and Mike Yastrzemski, and this deadline could call for at least that level of movement, maybe more.

Robbie Ray is one player who should be on the move after stringing together a very strong couple of starts. At least one position player, and preferably two, ought to be dealt as well to clear the congestion.

Ramos may end up being part of that conversation if he performs over the next few weeks. The Giants haven’t missed him all that much during his absence, and his former All-Star status could still catch another club’s attention.

Sunday offered another reminder of how the roster can tilt depending on the matchup, with Ramos in the DH spot and Eldridge on the bench against left-hander Chris Sale. But Eldridge, platoon advantage or not, ought to be in the lineup every day except for the occasional rest day, and he doesn’t need many of those since he’s usually the DH anyway.

If Ramos heats up, his value may be greater elsewhere than in San Francisco. The Giants already have Lee, Schmitt, Bericoto, Bader, Gilbert, Cox, Jesus Rodriguez and other depth options in the mix.

That’s a crowded room, and if the right deal comes along, Ramos could be the piece that helps unclog it. And if the Phillies suddenly decide they need Harrison Bader again, well, maybe that reunion would make sense too.

In Other News...

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Buddy Kennedys stop with the Giants was short and fairly ordinary, which is part of why the move was easy to read. The 27-year-old veteran infielder had been used around the diamond this season, and his limited run in San Francisco never gave the club much reason to keep him in the mix after a handful of quiet games. His major league track record has been that of a depth piece more than a fixture, and the Giants have now chosen to clear the spot.

What makes the move worth noting is the contrast between his big-league struggles and the bat he showed in Sacramento, where he put together a much better stretch at Triple-A. Kennedy has bounced through several organizations since Arizona drafted him in 2017, which makes this latest change feel more like another turn in an already winding career than a surprise. Still, the timing suggests the Giants were ready to pivot, even if his next opportunity now belongs to another club. [Read more 🡒]

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Cavanaugh also checked off the first-hit box in the fifth inning, giving his debut the kind of finishing touch that tends to stick with a clubhouse and a fan base. After the game, he handed the authenticated ball to his mother, a simple gesture that fit the moment and made the whole night feel a little bigger than a standard roster move. [Read more 🡒]

Giants Grind Out Another Tight Home Win To Take The Series

Robbie Ray gave the Giants exactly the kind of start they have been leaning on during this home stretch, working deep enough to keep the game in their hands and limiting Atlanta to one unearned run. San Francisco did just enough behind him, with Luis Arraez picking up a run scored and an RBI and the Giants turning two Braves errors in the sixth inning into the lead they would not give back in a 3-2 win.

The finish still had plenty of tension. Atlanta kept pushing late enough to force San Francisco to guard every pitch, but Caleb Kilian handled the ninth and closed it out as the Giants continued to stack one narrow home win after another. It was the kind of series-clinching result that can quietly matter in the bigger picture, especially for a club that keeps finding ways to win games that stay tight deep into the night. [Read more 🡒]