The SF Giants look like clear sellers heading into the trade deadline, and that gives them a real chance to turn a handful of big-league pieces into a much deeper farm system.
That’s the path Jeff Passan of ESPN laid out when he identified three Giants players as the “best match” for three contending clubs. If San Francisco plays it right, those kinds of deals could push its minor league system into a far stronger spot by the time the draft dust settles.
One of the cleanest fits Passan pointed to is Luis Arraez with the Tampa Bay Rays. Tampa Bay needs more production at the top of the lineup, and Arraez fits that mold as a leadoff or No. 2 bat in just about any order. A return built around right-handed pitchers Brody Hopkins and Ty Johnson would give the Giants two arms close to the majors.
Hopkins, ranked No. 4 in Tampa Bay’s system, has a 4.77 ERA in Triple-A and has issued 70 walks in 71 and 2/3 innings while striking out 87. Johnson has been far sharper in Triple-A, posting a 2.74 ERA in 10 starts over 49 and 1/3 innings, with 65 strikeouts and 19 walks. For a Giants club looking to add pitching depth, that kind of package would make sense.
Robbie Ray is another name Passan tied to a contender, with the St. Louis Cardinals viewed as the best match.
Ray has looked strong in his last few starts, and St. Louis could use help in the rotation.
A proposed return of catcher Leo Bernal and left-handed pitcher Ivan Anderson would give San Francisco two different kinds of value.
Bernal, the Cardinals’ No. 5 prospect, is hitting .268/.358/.444 with 10 home runs and 47 runs batted in for Triple-A. Anderson, a Fresno native, put together a strong 2024 in Double-A with a 2.59 ERA in 25 starts, but he has missed most of this season because of injury. He has just begun a rehab assignment, which could put him on a path toward a big league debut next season.
The third name is Jung Hoo Lee, whom Passan linked to the Philadelphia Phillies as a fit for their outfield need. Trading a fan favorite would be a tough call, but the Giants would have a chance to bring back a serious haul. The package suggested here includes right-handed pitcher Aidan Miller, outfielder Gabriel Rincones Jr. and right-handed pitcher Jean Cabrera.
Miller is ranked No. 2 in the Phillies’ system, Rincones Jr. is No. 6 and Cabrera is No. 13. Lee is under contract for next season and has been snubbed of an All-Star nod this year after what has been a career-best season so far, which only adds to the appeal of a deal from the Giants’ perspective.
If San Francisco were to move all three players, the organization would come out of the deadline with a much more fortified prospect base. After a disappointing regular season, that kind of reset would go a long way toward easing concerns about what comes next.
In Other News...
Giants May Already Be Facing A Rafael Devers Reality Check
Rafael Devers has started to show some offensive improvement, but the Giants are still weighing a much bigger question about whether the fit ever really works in San Francisco. The club is reportedly exploring trade possibilities, a sign that the conversation around Devers has moved beyond production alone and into the harder issues of contract, clubhouse reputation and how he fits into the roster the Giants are trying to build.
For a team that expected more when it brought him in, the tension is obvious: Devers has not matched franchise expectations, and the longer this drags on, the more it shapes the rest of the lineup picture. There is even speculation about a possible trade partner if San Francisco is willing to take on a hefty share of the remaining salary, but nothing has been finalized yet, leaving the Giants with a decision that could say plenty about where they think this relationship is headed. [Read more 🡒]
Phillies Trade Idea Would Test How Far They Will Go For Help
A speculative trade pitch has put the Phillies in a familiar spot: weighing whether a midseason fix is worth the price of doing business. The idea, floated by Bleacher Reports Kerry Miller, would give Philadelphia help in a few areas at once, including a right-handed bat for the outfield and more stability on the mound, while also keeping the club from having to dip into the very top of its prospect stack.
The catch is the money, which is always part of the conversation when a deal starts to look this ambitious. Jung Hoo Lee is attached to a long-term contract, Robbie Ray is still carrying a hefty salary, and any team trying to make the math work has to decide how much flexibility it is willing to sacrifice for immediate help. For the Phillies, the appeal is obvious, but so is the question that lingers over any proposal like this: how far are they really prepared to go? [Read more 🡒]
Giants Face A Draft Defining Problem They Still Havent Fixed
The Giants are heading into this draft with a chance to do something their farm system has struggled to do for years: stock the organization with real outfield power. San Francisco has generally done a better job developing pitchers and infielders, while corner outfield help has too often come from outside the system through free agency, trades or international signings. With two first-round picks and five total day-one selections, this is the kind of draft that can change the conversation if the club identifies the right talent.
The need is especially clear because the pipeline is still thin, even with a few recent bright spots. Heliot Ramos has become a rare homegrown outfielder to stick as an everyday big leaguer for the Giants, while former top pick Hunter Bishop never got the momentum the club hoped for. There are names in the system who give San Francisco something to build on, but the larger question remains whether this draft finally gives the Giants the kind of outfield depth they have been chasing for so long. [Read more 🡒]
