Giants Face A Robbie Ray Deadline Question Fans Wont Ignore

The Giants face a critical decision on whether to trade for potential future assets or hold out for a more substantial offer for star pitcher Robbie Ray.

Robbie Ray looks like one of the most obvious names the SF Giants could move before the trade deadline. He’s headed for free agency, and with the way he’s been pitching lately, there should be no shortage of contenders looking for starting help.

That’s why Jim Bowden of The Athletic floated a Giants-Cardinals deal that feels a little too modest from San Francisco’s side. In Bowden’s proposal, the Giants would send Ray to St. Louis for right-handed pitching prospect Tanner Franklin and shortstop prospect Yairo Padilla.

On paper, that’s not nothing. Franklin is ranked as the Cardinals’ No. 9 prospect, while Padilla checks in at No.

  1. But for a rental arm like Ray, the Giants may be aiming higher than a mid-tier prospect package.

San Francisco probably won’t land a king’s ransom for a pitcher who could be gone after the season. Still, deadline pressure can push contenders into overpaying, and the Giants should at least see how far that market goes.

If things break right, they might be able to pry away a top-100 MLB prospect. Bowden suggested names like left-handed pitcher Liam Doyle or outfielder Joshua Báez would be the kind of return that would really get the Giants’ attention.

Franklin brings some intrigue, especially because the 22-year-old was drafted in the second round out of the University of Tennessee last year, giving him a connection to manager Tony Vitello. But his minor league results haven’t exactly jumped off the page.

He owns a 5.09 ERA in 15 starts for St. Louis’ High-A affiliate, with 63 strikeouts and 30 walks over 53 innings.

His fastball stands out, and there’s obvious upside there, but he isn’t projected to reach the majors until 2028.

Padilla offers a different kind of appeal. The Cardinals signed the Dominican Republic native a few years ago, and his numbers in the minors have been solid: a .292/.399/.406 line with two homers and 34 RBIs in 83 games, plus 50 stolen bases. He’s more known for speed and defense than impact power, though there’s still room for the bat to grow as he gets older.

If that were the return, it wouldn’t be a bad one. It just might not be the kind of package that makes the Giants feel like they’ve maximized Ray’s value.

In Other News...

Giants Just Lost A Bullpen Arm Fans Thought Could Help

Gregory Santos latest stint with the Giants has taken another turn, and it leaves San Francisco without a bullpen arm it had hoped might still provide some help. Santos, who has spent parts of six major league seasons in the game, had been working his way back through the organization after injury setbacks and a recent run in Sacramento, where the Giants were trying to keep him close as depth.

Instead, Santos is moving on after clearing waivers and declining an outright assignment to Triple-A Sacramento. His departure comes with the kind of familiar frustration that follows a pitcher with talent but an uneven health track record, especially one who had already drawn interest from other clubs as a minor league free agent. For the Giants, it is another reminder of how quickly bullpen options can disappear when a player has enough leverage to test the market. [Read more 🡒]

Giants Rotation Trouble Just Hit A Frustrating New Low

Trevor McDonalds start against Toronto quickly turned into the kind of afternoon the Giants have been trying to avoid as the rotation continues to wobble. He was hit hard from the outset, and San Francisco was left chasing the game in a 9-3 loss that put even more stress on a pitching staff already looking for stability.

Adrian Houser at least gave the Giants something to hang onto, covering 5 2/3 no-hit innings in relief and helping keep the bullpen from getting emptied out. Rookie Spencer Miles handled the start for the Blue Jays and allowed two runs over four innings, but the bigger concern for San Francisco remains the same: the rotation keeps putting the club in early holes, and this one felt especially frustrating. [Read more 🡒]

Giants May Already Be Giving Up On A Key Winter Signing

Tyler Mahle arrived in San Francisco as one of the winter additions meant to stabilize a rotation that needed help, but the season has not gone the way the Giants envisioned. The right-hander has struggled to find consistency, and his name is now surfacing in the same trade chatter as other veterans the club could move before the deadline as it tries to retool around a disappointing year.

Buster Posey is reportedly open to dealing established pieces for prospects, and Mahle fits the profile of a pitcher contenders might still believe in because of what he showed a year ago in Texas. Even with the uneven results and a recent hamstring issue slowing him down, there is still a case for clubs to look past the rough stretch and bet on a rebound, which is exactly why his market will be worth watching in the coming weeks. [Read more 🡒]