Giants Have A Chance To Bring Back A Legendary Family Name

Could the SF Giants make a strategic move by drafting Peyton Bonds, nephew of legendary Barry Bonds, in the upcoming MLB Draft?

The Giants enter this weekend’s MLB Draft with plenty of eyes fixed on the No. 4 overall pick, but the picks that come after Round 1 could matter just as much. And buried in that middle stretch is a name that would be impossible for Giants fans to ignore: Peyton Bonds.

Bonds is the nephew of Barry Bonds and the son of Bobby Bonds Jr., who played in the minors with the Giants. He is projected to go in the mid-to-late rounds and is not considered a consensus top-100 talent, though most analysts view him well. Keith Law of The Athletic recently pointed to his strong exit velocity, solid contact rate and above average speed, while also noting that he can get a little swing-happy.

The production at Rutgers backs up the interest. Last season, the soon-to-be 21-year-old hit .352/.436/.535 with six home runs and 29 runs batted in, while also stealing 13 bases. In 36 games, he struck out 21 times and walked 16 times.

At 6-foot-5 and 225 pounds, Bonds bats and throws right-handed and could develop into an outfield option down the line if the Giants decide to take him.

The draft board makes the fit even more intriguing. ESPN has Bonds ranked No. 118 overall, and the Giants hold the No. 118 pick in Round 4.

MLB slots him at No. 81 overall, while San Francisco owns the No. 90 pick in the third round. So there’s a real chance the timing lines up.

Of course, the Giants can’t draft him just because of the last name. But strip that away, and he still looks like the kind of player this front office has shown interest in under Buster Posey: some speed, a high contact rate, and a game that could translate well at Oracle Park.

There’s even a dream scenario where Bonds lands in the organization and, a few weeks later, the Giants swing a trade with the New York Yankees for prospect Kaeden Kent, the son of Jeff Kent. Five years from now, that could lead to a dugout spat that nods to their famous family ties.

That’s obviously a long way off. For now, the simple case is this: if Peyton Bonds is still on the board when the Giants are picking in rounds 3-5, they should strongly consider making him theirs.

In Other News...

Patrick Bailey Trade Suddenly Looks Bigger For Giants Than Fans Realized

The Giants draft haul gave the front office a chance to frame the Patrick Bailey trade as more than a simple subtraction. By taking right-hander Jackson Flora at No. 4 overall and adding another arm later in the first round, San Francisco kept leaning into a pitching pipeline that has become central to how it wants to build, especially after moving a homegrown catcher in a deal that was always going to be judged by what came next.

Baileys first stretch in Cleveland has been uneven, and the early returns on the Giants side are still being measured in the minors, where lefty Matt Wilkinson has already logged work at two levels. The bigger question now is whether the extra draft capital from that trade can keep turning into real depth, because for a club that values run prevention as much as this one does, the answer may matter long after the original headline fades. [Read more 🡒]

Giants Bullpen Disaster Just Made A Bad Problem Feel Even Worse

The Giants got encouraging work from the bullpen earlier in the night, with Dylan Smith escaping a bases-loaded jam and Keaton Winn making his return from the injured list to get outs in his first appearance back. But a 4-3 loss still left the club staring at the same sore spot it has been trying to patch all season, and Caleb Kilians failed save only added to the frustration after a game that had been there to be won.

It came against the backdrop of a busy roster shuffle, too, as San Francisco activated Winn, optioned Carson Whisenhunt to Triple-A, recalled Grant McCray and placed Victor Bericoto on the injured list. The bigger-picture concern remains just as clear: the Giants also said Matt Chapman will not be back until the second half because of an abdominal strain, leaving a lineup already trying to hold together while the bullpen keeps making the margin for error feel even thinner. [Read more 🡒]

Giants Draft Peyton Bonds And Revive One Of Franchise History's Biggest Names

The Giants added a familiar name to their draft haul, taking Peyton Bonds in the third round of the 2026 MLB Draft. The right-handed hitter and center fielder brings the kind of athletic profile San Francisco tends to covet, with defensive ability in the middle of the diamond and enough bat-to-ball skill to keep him on the radar as he begins his pro career.

Bonds also carries a surname that still resonates around the franchise, as the nephew of Barry Bonds and grandson of Bobby Bonds, both former Giants players. His college path took him from Campbell to Rutgers, and an April hamstring injury ended his season early, but the organization is betting on the upside that made him one of the more intriguing names available when its turn came at No. 90 overall. [Read more 🡒]