Baseball America gave the SF Giants a small boost in its latest midseason farm system rankings, moving them from No. 14 before the season to No. 10 on Tuesday.
The update comes with four Giants prospects on Baseball America’s top-100 list: Josuar Gonzalez, Luis Hernández, Jhonny Level, and Bo Davidson. Bryce Eldridge is no longer included after graduating from prospect status.
Gonzalez and Hernández remain consensus top prospects, while Level has shown up on more lists in recent months. Davidson is a different case.
He has not been viewed as highly by other outlets, but Baseball America has been more bullish on him than most. The left-handed hitter has also taken another step forward in the Eastern League over the past month, and there’s a good chance he gets a promotion before the season ends.
Baseball America also sees a pretty clear shape to the Giants’ system: the middle infield is the strength, while pitching depth is the weak spot.
Gonzalez, Hernández, and Level headline that middle-infield group, but the organization has talent there at every level. On the pitching side, the concern is more obvious, especially in the upper minors. The Giants do not have much immediate rotation help on the way, though they do have a few arms who could fill a rotation spot.
There is still some pitching talent in the lower minors, including Jacob Bresnahan, Keyner Martinez, Luis De La Torre, and Argenis Cayama.
The draft could also shape the picture quickly. The Giants hold three early picks on Saturday - No.
4, No. 29, and No. 55 - and while teams usually do not draft strictly for need, it would not be a surprise if they used at least one of those selections on a pitcher. The No. 4 pick in particular often becomes a top prospect, and the Giants should also have a chance to add value at the trade deadline.
For now, though, Baseball America’s ranking leaves the Giants in the top 10, with the system’s biggest strength and biggest question mark both easy to spot.
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Giants Face A Draft Defining Problem They Still Havent Fixed
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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 🡒]
