Giants Just Got A Little Relief From The Padres Mess

In a surprising turn of events, the San Diego Padres' missteps offer a silver lining to the San Francisco Giants' otherwise dismal season.

The SF Giants’ season has been a mess, but the Padres have managed to make the division picture feel a little less humiliating.

San Diego opened the year looking like a club that could actually chase down the Dodgers in the National League West. That idea didn’t last long. The Padres are 44-46 now and have dropped nine of their last 10, a slide that has knocked them into third place in the division behind the Arizona Diamondbacks, who sit at 45-45.

That still leaves the Giants in a strange spot. They are technically alive for second place in the division, though that would look a lot more realistic if they hadn’t been so thoroughly handled by Arizona this season.

What makes San Diego’s collapse stand out is how much talent is sitting in that lineup. On paper, the Padres looked built to be a problem. In reality, their stars have been just as disappointing as the Giants’ high-profile bats, if not worse.

Manny Machado has been the biggest shock. He’s hitting .190/.282/.408 with 18 home runs and 51 runs batted in, a far cry from the All-Star production San Diego has come to expect from him over the years.

Fernando Tatis Jr. has been more productive overall, but the power has vanished. He’s batting .282/.343/.382 with five home runs and 34 runs batted in, and that lack of punch has been one of the strangest parts of the Padres’ season.

Jackson Merrill and Xander Bogaerts have also taken steps backward, and the result has been an offense that has simply fallen apart.

The pitching side hasn’t offered much help, either. San Diego has been dealing with injuries to key rotation arms Yu Darvish and Joe Musgrove, and the loss of Dylan Cease in free agency has only made the staff thinner.

There’s one more wrinkle for the Giants: the Padres’ struggles make Tony Vitello’s rough debut season look a little less isolated. San Diego took a chance on rookie manager Craig Stammen, and he hasn’t had much success so far. That leaves Vitello as the only new manager in the NL West who is enduring a difficult first year.

For a Giants team that has spent years trying to move past San Diego and claim the division’s No. 2 spot, this was supposed to be the season to do it. Instead, their lack of investment in the pitching staff may have cost them that opening.

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