The SF Giants’ bullpen problems in 2026 didn’t start this year. The cracks go back to the Tyler Rogers trade, and the numbers make that hard to ignore.
Before Rogers was dealt, San Francisco’s relief corps had a 3.26 ERA, second-best in baseball. Rogers was a central part of that group alongside Camilo Doval, Randy Rodríguez and Erik Miller. Miller, though, missed the second half with an elbow sprain, and the whole unit eventually unraveled from there.
By the time the season wound down, that core had been broken apart. Doval and Rogers were moved at the trade deadline, while Rodríguez had Tommy John surgery.
Rodríguez had earned an NL All-Star nod, and Doval and Miller each flashed effectiveness, even if the underlying numbers weren’t always as strong. Rogers, though, stood out as the most reliable piece.
He could take the eighth inning every other day and keep doing it without losing much, which is a rare kind of value in a bullpen.
Since the trade, the Giants have posted a 4.28 ERA out of the bullpen, which ranks 20th in baseball over that span. That slide isn’t all on one transaction, but it does show how important Rogers had been for years.
San Francisco still hasn’t found much stability in the relief mix over the last 11 months. The club has kept cycling through arms, but no real answers have stuck.
Rogers, meanwhile, landed with the Toronto Blue Jays on a three-year, $37 million deal that includes a team option for a fourth year. Toronto is in town for a three-game series, and Rogers has been excellent in his first season there, putting up a 1.77 ERA in 42 appearances. Only a handful of relievers have appeared in more games, and only Brent Headrick of the New York Yankees has a better ERA at 1.45.
The Giants had to act because Rogers was on an expiring deal, and the return was Drew Gilbert, Blade Tidwell and José Buttó. If Gilbert develops into a role player for a couple of seasons, the deal will have worked out well.
It could look even better later if Tidwell finds a spot on the pitching staff. This isn’t really about reopening the trade.
It’s about recognizing just how important Rogers was to that Giants bullpen.
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