Giants Just Got A Tough New Reality On Hayden Birdsong

Giants prospect Hayden Birdsong is focused on a comeback as he navigates the challenges of Tommy John recovery, with an eye on strengthening both his arm and resolve.

PHOENIX - Hayden Birdsong’s days right now are built around the basics: lifting, eating and waiting for the next step in a long Tommy John rehab.

That’s where the Giants right-hander is after season-ending surgery on March 25, and the routine at the Papago Sports Complex in Scottsdale is still pretty stripped down. He’s rehabbing six days a week, usually getting there around 12:30 p.m. and heading out about 4 p.m., depending on the day. For now, he’s not throwing until September, though he expects to begin working with plyoballs in two to three weeks.

“A lot of lifting. A lot of eating,” Birdsong laughed.

The recovery process has also come with a front-row seat to a Giants pitching staff that could use every healthy arm it can get. Birdsong said the hardest part is being stuck on the outside of it all.

“I’m just sitting here, and I have no chance of helping,” Birdsong said in an interview at Papago. “That’s the annoying thing.

I’m just sitting here watching things happen and I’m like, ‘(Expletive).’ I can’t do anything to help.

I can’t do anything in the clubhouse. I can’t hang out with the guys.

I can’t bring anything to the table. I’m just kind of out here.”

Birdsong’s season took a sharp turn after he entered spring training competing for an Opening Day job. He lost that battle early because of poor performance, but on March 10 he flashed the kind of stuff that had the Giants intrigued. He threw a scoreless inning with a strikeout, averaged 97.8 mph with his four-seam fastball and hit 99.6 mph, the hardest-tracked pitch of his professional career.

Then came the last pitch.

“I was excited mid-outing,” Birdsong said. “I was like, ‘Oh, this feels right.’ And then, it just obviously didn’t go my way.”

Birdsong said he felt “a pop, like a rip” on his penultimate pitch. An MRI showed a Grade 2 forearm strain and UCL sprain, and after a second opinion from Dr.

Keith Meister, he chose surgery. The procedure came the same day the Giants opened the season against the New York Yankees.

The timeline is the tough part. Birdsong is expected to miss all of 2026 and likely some of 2027, lockout permitting.

Still, he says he’s handling the rehab well mentally, helped by conversations with Logan Webb and Robbie Ray during spring training. Their message was simple: take it one step at a time.

“You’ve got to have a positive mindset about it,” Birdsong said. “You can’t sit there and be like, ‘Oh, hopefully I come back however I’m supposed to be,’ and all this stuff.

It could take me a whole other year after this just to get back to where I need to be. You never know.

That’s happened. I mean, Keaton (Winn).

Keaton took another year to find his stuff back. He still had the velo, but now, when he comes out of the bullpen, it’s electric.”

Birdsong has also found ways to stay connected during the grind. He’s gone camping up north in Payson, Arizona with other members of the organization, including former first-rounder Reggie Crawford. And while he knows he’s going to be on the sidelines for a while, he’s already looking ahead to the offseason, when he can start throwing again.

“I’m excited to get to the offseason because that’s when I get to start throwing,” Birdsong said. “I know there’s a lot of season left, but I know I’m going to be here.

It’s fun to watch and root them on. At the same time, I’d love to be there.”

There is one more complication hanging over the recovery: the expected MLB lockout when the Collective Bargaining Agreement expires on Dec. 1.

Because Birdsong is on the Giants’ 40-man roster, he wouldn’t be allowed to train at Papago if that happens. He said he’s been against working at training facilities before, but he’s open to it now.

For Birdsong, the goal is clear.

“Ideally, I come back and my arm’s stronger than it ever has been, body’s stronger than it ever has been and I’m ready to go as soon as the season starts, whenever that may be.”

In Other News...

Giants Pitching Depth Concern Just Took Another Frustrating Turn

Wilkin Ramos is headed back to Triple-A Sacramento after clearing waivers, giving the Giants a way to keep the right-hander in the organization without using a major league roster spot. The move comes after his designation for assignment, and because he does not have enough service time to elect free agency, San Francisco can outright him and let him work to get back on track in the minors.

For a Giants club still trying to sort through pitching depth, the decision is another reminder of how quickly bullpen plans can change. Ramos was promoted to the big leagues in June for the first time, and the organization is now hoping the reset in Sacramento can help him regain form while keeping him available if the need arises again. [Read more 🡒]

Giants Need Answers On Which Relievers Can Actually Be Trusted

The Giants have spent much of this season trying to patch together a bullpen that still looks far too familiar from a year ago. Injuries have pushed the front office to add a handful of pitchers, and a few minor trades have brought in fresh arms, but the overall picture has not changed much: there are still too many late-inning questions and not nearly enough reliable answers.

Dylan Smith has at least given them a competent look in a limited sample since coming over from the Tigers, and the search for usable depth continues to matter because the left side remains especially murky. Erik Miller may be the closest thing to a steady option there, but the Giants are still sorting through how much they can trust him, Matt Gage, and Sam Hentges, while Caleb Kilian and Keaton Winn look like the main names with a chance to fit into the longer-term solution. For a club that needs more than stopgaps, the next move may have to come from outside the obvious pool. [Read more 🡒]