Rafael Devers made the first start of his career at first base for the Giants this week and, coincidentally or not, belted his first two home runs in nearly a month the following day. The recently acquired Giants infielder has now tallied three straight multi-hit games an looks to be emerging from a lengthy slump. He said after his first base debut that he briefly felt a bit nervous at his new position but quickly settled in (link via Shayna Rubin of the San Francisco Chronicle).
With Devers now ticketed for more regular work at first base, Wilmer Flores seems likely to pick up more DH at-bats. He’d been struggling at the plate while playing the infield corners (primarily first base) over the past month. For a player who struggled through knee troubles all last season before that knee ended his 2024 campaign, getting off his feet a bit more in the DH spot could prove beneficial. Devers is also playing through a back issue, but the two can perhaps now share time between the two spots in the short term. Devers added after last night’s game that he thinks he’s a better hitter when playing in the field, noting that it “keeps my head out of just thinking about the next at-bat.”
While Devers will surely be their biggest acquisition of the summer, there’s still room for the 54-49 Giants to upgrade the roster. They’ve been looking into second base options (Isiah Kiner-Falefa reportedly among them), and some recent struggles near the back of the rotation — coupled with lefty Kyle Harrison’s inclusion in the Devers return — have created some questions on the starting staff as well.
[Related: San Francisco Giants Trade Deadline Outlook]
San Francisco optioned right-hander Hayden Birdsong to Triple-A Sacramento earlier this week after a start in which he yielded five runs to the Braves (in large part because of four walks) without recording an out. That proved to be the tipping point, but Birdsong’s struggles extended well beyond that one nightmare outing. The 23-year-old was the talk of spring training thanks to a dominant performance and looked like a revelation out of the bullpen early in the season. San Francisco moved him into the rotation in late May, and the early returns were good: five starts, 25 innings, 3.24 ERA, 24.3% strikeout rate, 8.4% walk rate.
Things went downhill from there. Birdsong was tagged for 14 runs in 12 1/3 innings across his next three starts. He bounced back with a strong performance against the A’s but then bottomed out with this week’s collapse versus Atlanta. All told, he has a 10.38 ERA (22 runs, 20 earned) over his past five starts — a span of just 17 1/3 innings.
The Giants are still weighing their options to replace Birdsong, but the back of the rotation’s struggles don’t end there. Justin Verlander finally picked up his first win as a Giant yesterday but did so while scattering five walks over five scoreless innings. He’s started 17 games and pitched to a 4.70 ERA over the life of 84 1/3 innings. Since returning from a monthlong IL stint due to a pectoral strain on June 18, Verlander has a 5.29 ERA with a 19.2% strikeout rate.
Verlander is the clear fourth starter behind Logan Webb, Robbie Ray and breakout righty Landen Roupp at the moment. In-house alternatives like Trevor McDonald, Carson Ragsdale and Mason Black have posted underwhelming results in Triple-A. Righty Carson Seymour has been working in long relief but pitched pretty well as a starter in Triple-A. There’s certainly room to add a starter to solidify the back of the staff and provide some insurance against an injury to Webb or Ray — either of which would be a devastating loss.
Both Rubinand John Shea and Kerry Crowley of the San Francisco Standard called out a right-handed-hitting outfielder as a potential area for upgrade this week. It’s a sensible pursuit, given Mike Yastrzemski’s longstanding struggles against left-handed pitching. The Giants have given 110 plate appearances to 23-year-old Luis Matos this year, but he’s posted just a .173/.218/.375 batting line in that time.
Righty-swinging outfielders expected to be available include Minnesota’s Harrison Bader, Luis Robert Jr. of the White Sox, the Orioles’ Ramon Laureano and perhaps Chas McCormick of the Astros or Adolis Garcia of the Rangers. Not all of those outfielders will change hands, of course. The White Sox would very likely need to pay down some of Robert’s salary, but they’re willing to do so and he’s caught fire at the plate recently, making him a more interesting option than he might’ve been even one month ago.
Devers actually made his 1B debut on 7/22. He hit two homers yesterday, 7/23, as the DH.
coincidentally or not, belted his first two home runs in nearly a month the following day
hayzee – I think it’s more a case of his back injury getting better.
Now that he’s feeling better … Raffymania is running wild, brother!
RIP Hulkster.
FPG: David Lynch, Ozzy and now Hulk. What a year it’s been.
Yeah this idea that playing 1b suddenly makes him a better hitter is silly. He was stricktly a DH in Boston and put up a 900 OPS.
Steve – Yes, and all in their 70’s ….. too young.
I think Melvin just had enough personally
worth – Wasn’t mentioned in the article, but he was DH yesterday when he got the 3 hits and 2 HR.
worthington, it’s not as silly as you might think. For example, Frank Thomas spoke openly about how much harder he found it to sustain his hitting approach when only being a DH, and his splits over his career illustrated a *stark* difference in line with his feeling, too large to just be a fluke. Also, Devers was only “strictly a DH in Boston” this year, over a relatively short sample size, so that doesn’t tell us much.
The player himself said it.
Not credible enough for you ? He is just making it up ?
Hulk’s coffin has already grown to the size of an office building.
soxu – Some guys can adjust to fulltime DH better than others. I did have concerns about Raffy adjusting, and I was proven right as he had that horrific start to the regular season, but to his credit he adjusted and performed just as well as he did through August of last year.
Obviously plenty of guys have made that adjustment successful, EdMart and Papi and JDM etc. This is where “not every player is the same” comes into play.
The player himself said it. Even explained it. Keeps him in the moment and helps with the overthinking.
What more do you need ?
Every year.
If he played 2B would he hit 3 the next day?
4 at catcher
he is finally healthy enough to play the field and that means he is also healthy enough to hit
The Devers trade can be win/win for both teams. No need to wish him ill will.
I’m pro devers.
The ones that aren’t look past Cora and are pro breslow.
Aw, isn’t that nice: Devers has settled in at first base after throwing a hissy fit and refusing to do what was in the best interests of his previous team because they hurt his feelings by installing an infinitely better defender at third base. Devers proved himself to be a selfish team mate, and Breslow was 100% correct to dump him. Now I’ll be looking forward to his annual collapse at the plate down the stretch..
Lol cope
Man those grapes must be so sour.
Andy – Yeah probably a Yankee fan scarred for life because of how Raffy owned the Yankees and especially Cole.
I think it’s understandable that some Red Sox fans are unhappy with Devers.
Jack – Career .955 OPS in the postseason …. yeah, some collapse. LOLOLOL!!!
No lies told here. The Giants were idiots to want him and Boston bailed out of one of their biggest and stupidest contracts in recent memory.
kpd – The stupidest part was the Red Sox refusing to let Raffy even learn first base, should have happened years ago. But that’s Cora & Company for you.
Yep. Worked out great. Raffy is happy, the Giants are happy, and as you say, the Red Sox are happy. Everyone’s a winner.
Makes you wonder why grown men are commenting like teenage schoolgirls that just got dumped by their first boyfriend.
fopp – Well, the Sox are indeed happy but we don’t know yet if they will end up a winner. If Raffy continues to have injury issues and therefore struggles, then sure. If the Sox can replace some of his production and make the postseason, then sure.
You’ve made an excellent analogy on the dumped girlfriend, I’ve used similar in the past. Really it’s a juvenile coping mechanism, they can’t deal with one of the team’s best and most popular players leaving therefore they try to convince themselves it’s “no big loss” by trying to paint them as having no value.
Kinda like the guy who gets dumped by his longtime girlfriend, and then tries to convince himself she’s not all that and he’s better off without her blah blah blah. This after 11 years of him saying she’s the greatest girlfriend in the world. Go figure.
And Red Sox may have done quite well with Harrison, Hicks and (especially) Tibbs.
Devers is saying the right things, playing first and hitting one handed bombs. Jack is crying on the internet a month after the break up.
Enough said.
Pete – Harrison and Hicks are essentially lottery picks.
Harrison has been struggling in AAA with a near 5 ERA and 1.6 WHIP.
Hicks has already imploded a couple times with the Sox, and is due another $25M for the next two years because he’s a RP who was foolishly given a SP contract.
Don’t give up on Hicks. He is a competitor. It won’t be for lack of trying.
fopp – Yes I agree, he’s obviously got a gifted arm but so many others have had one too, however they could never get the ball over the plate.
According to Baseball Reference,for the Red Sox Hicks has a 3.38 ERA and a 131 ERA+.
EBJ – With pitchers, especially relievers, it’s important to look beyond the ERA.
For instance in Monday’s game he started the bottom of the 10th inning.
He walked the leadoff batter on 4 pitches.
Next batter, first pitch was literally about 7 feet off the plate … one of the worst pitches you’ll ever see. That forced him to then intentionally walk the batter.
They end up losing the game.
There was also the game against Cincy where he gave up 3 hits, 1 walk and 3 runs while getting only 2 outs.
They end up losing that game too.
Both games were total implosions.
Are you okay? Sounds like you need a hug. Annual collapse lol
Jack: Most of Red Sox Nation agrees with you.
Then stop crying about it
Kei-Wai Teng will get promoted and get the start on Sunday
Roupp will pitch on Sunday. Won’t need a 5th starter until Tuesday with the off day today
I’m guessing sarcasm, or a joke? Kei-Wai Teng isn’t even on the 40-man.
And has been used mostly in relief.
Tengs last 4 appearances were starts. 20inn, 1er, 7 hits, 35 ks. He’s hot. DFA Johnson or Bivens, clear 40 man spot. He’s the hottest starter in Sac.
5 PA and a wRC+ of 182? Guy’s a natural 1B man. Good on the Giants finding their man.
Please no try-hard Bader in black & orange. He looks like he would enjoy doing that stupid dance the dodgers do.
Couldn’t agree more with this. He’s a gamer and a definite upgrade over Ramos, who I love to pieces but is always an adventure in the outfield. Bader isn’t afraid of walls and takes better routes on difficult fly balls.
No talk of Carson Whisenhunt?
Whisenhunt sounds like a character from The Hobbit.
Whisenhunt isn’t on the 40-man roster. I doubt they want to DFA someone when there are other guys as options.
Harrison Bader would be a perfect pick-up for the Giants…..perfect rental. He’s athletic, has a GG, crazy good OAA this season, solid 115 wRC+…and he can play every outfield position. And he’s excellent against left handed pitching – SFG’s worst nightmare this season.
Giants do not have a ton of prospects to deal and that makes Bader an even more attractive target.
Great value with Bader. Get em’ Buster!
The trouble with Bader is that it seems he’s always injured. He’s averaged just over 100 games per season since becoming a full-time player. A full season is about 150-155 games per season.
Luis Robert Jr. is the guy I’d like to see the Giants get. Despite the recent struggles, the tools are there, and he’s only 27. Small sample, but he’s absolutely crushed the ball this month.
Same here, he’s the one I’m hoping for the most. Hopefully his last week or two hasn’t raised his price too much. He has shown what he can do and is only….27? Definitely still has the speed. Getting away from the WhiteSox could help a bit too.
And he’s ALWAYS hit left handers. Problem is Chris Getz (White Sox GM) still seems to be holding out for a ransom, and he’s not going to get it. In fact, if he waits much longer on dealing Robert Jr., he may be lucky to get a low-level lottery ticket.
I’m not sure Getz is still holding out for a ransom. He was a couple years ago, but the fact that he’s willing to eat some salary suggests he’s no longer expecting a haul.
Robert is a FA at the end of the season unless they pick up a $20M option, which is doubtful. There’s another team option next season, but then he’s free and clear.
The Sox aren’t going to be good in the next 2 years, so they have to be motivated to move him. They need to get something for him now. It will take a certain amount of prospect capital. multiple teams would be interested, but it won’t be huge.
Ok then. Sold at crushing the ball this month.
It’s not about what he did this month. It’s about the tools, and the expectations that came with them. I could be wrong, but at his age he might not develop further, or he might break out in all-star fashion. IMO, he’s worth the gamble to find out
Jack Marshall, it’s time you stick with the BoSox articles and move along. Rafi can do his own proving. Had I been hired as 3B and then another guy was hired to replace me, without a word…welp. Baseball players are human. Let’s close this door and you move on to your BoSox news and trades.