The Padres are expected to activate Xander Bogaerts from the 10-day injured list prior to Monday’s game with the Brewers, Kevin Acee of the San Diego Union-Tribune writes. The shortstop might’ve already been back this weekend except a planned on-field workout on Friday was canceled due to rain, delaying Bogaerts’ return until the start of the six-game homestand that will conclude the Friars’ regular season.
A left foot fracture has kept Bogaerts out of action since August 27, and it wasn’t clear if he would be able to play again before the postseason, even if the injury wasn’t expected to keep Bogaerts out of any October action. Bogaerts has hit .262/.330/.387 with 10 home runs over 534 plate appearances, for a decent but unspectacular 103 wRC+. He has displayed some good plate discipline and augmented his work at the plate with 20 steals (in 22 attempts) and very good defense in the view of the Outs Above Average metric (+7). Jake Cronenworth and Jose Iglesias have handed most of the shortstop duty over the last four weeks, and with Bogaerts back, Cronenworth should return to his usual second base position.
Returning Monday gives Bogaerts six games to ramp up for a postseason trip that has been all but officially clinched. San Diego seems likely to finish as the NL’s second wild card team, unless the Padres can overcome the Dodgers’ three-game edge in the NL West race, or if the Padres somehow fritter away their five-game edge over the Reds (who hold the third and final wild card slot).
Though the Padres surely wish they’d been able to overtake Los Angeles for the division lead, a 25-22 record since the trade deadline has at least helped San Diego more or less lock up its fourth playoff berth in the last six years. President of baseball operations A.J. Preller was his typical active self at the deadline, swinging five trades in July to add a variety of roster upgrades.
The many players actually acquired were just the tip of the iceberg, as the New York Post’s Jon Heyman writes that “the Padres were in on every top player” even somewhat available at the deadline. Most of those trade targets were cited on MLBTR’s pages, but Heyman adds that the Padres also had interest in Harrison Bader, who instead went from the Twins to another NL power in the Phillies.
San Diego’s interest in Bader was logical, as the Padres had a clear need in the outfield. Rather than Bader, the Padres ended up acquiring both Ramon Laureano and Ryan O’Hearn from the Orioles for a six-prospect trade package, addressing both left field and first base in one fell swoop. O’Hearn’s bat has cooled off since the deal while Laureano has played really well, so there probably aren’t any regrets in the Friars’ front office about missing out on Bader, who has exploded since arriving in Philadelphia.
The largest of the Padres’ deadline deals saw Mason Miller and JP Sears acquired from the Athletics for four minor leaguers, including elite prospect Leo De Vries as the headliner. De Vries was far and away the most prominent prospect moved at the deadline, and it took the inclusion of a controllable young arm like Miller to convince the Padres to move the young shortstop.
This doesn’t mean that other teams didn’t ask. San Diego was known to have made a push to pry MacKenzie Gore away from the Nationals, even though Washington wasn’t going to move Gore for anything less than a haul. Heyman writes that the Nats’ ask from the Padres was a five-player package that included De Vries, so it isn’t too surprising that the Padres turned elsewhere.
Steven Kwan was another outfielder on the Padres’ wishlist, and a De Vries-for-Kwan trade was floated between the Padres and Guardians even though Heyman says that neither team wanted a straight-up swap. Kwan (like Gore) is arbitration-controlled through the 2027 season, so while two-plus years of control is still a lot of an established player, it perhaps wasn’t enough of a long-term add to convince Preller to move De Vries.
From Cleveland’s perspective, the Guardians often pursue at least one MLB-ready piece when trading their veteran assets. De Vries only just made his Double-A debut after his move to the Athletics’ farm system, and while he is posting strong numbers, he doesn’t turn 19 until next month and isn’t expected to reach the majors until 2027. While the Guards were only 54-54 on July 31, keeping Kwan has paid dividends, as has helped contribute to the September surge that has now given Cleveland a chance at not just a playoff spot, but even the AL Central title.

Cincy tied with the Mets.
Bader gets hurt too much.
Gore is a headcase.
They’ll be the 2nd wildcard and head to Chicago to face the Cubs. Now will they make it to the divisional round? Who knows but these last 6 games would be a great time to go on a winning streak…
Cincy is actually ahead of the Mets since they own the tiebreaker with New York. The Mets have to finish with a BETTER record than the Reds to get in. Cincy only has to tie the Mets.
“Gore is a headcase.”
Proof?
I cannot disclose patient files…hahahaha!
Confuscius say….Life moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop And look around once in a while, you could miss it
Confuscius AKA Ferris Beuller
Prove it 1 year contract. Something like Mike Soroka got this offseason. He’ll get millions guaranteed based on what he’s done previously but he won’t sniff $15MM+.
It’s striking to read an article about Ben Cherrington and AJ Preller in the same day. Preller is exactly what the Pirates need. He’s a fearless gambler who’s willing to get creative to solve his club’s problems. Cherrington is a box inside a box placed exactly in the middle of a painted square.
One of these days the Padres are going to face a terrible season with an aging core and a bloated payroll. But for a franchise that has been mostly non-competitive for it’s entire existence, they will forgive the rough years for the extended period of relevance that Preller gave them.
Preller is exactly the guy you want around to be able to draft to replace that core on the cheap.
That said, Nando and Merrill have many prime years left, and Manny and Bogaerts should at least be serviceable for the next three to four years. Paying their tax to not have them playing anymore will suck whenever that day comes, but good drafting can mitigate it.
Locking up Merrill through 2034 like Tatis was such a coop for the future.
I also wouldn’t be the least bit surprised if Manny is still at 3b as his deal is wrapping up. It’s reassuring how great both he and Xander take care of themselves. Manny joined the Padres at 26, just turned 33, and looks the same as when he arrived.
Cronenworth putting up a .371 OBP this year has been very nice, being owed 5/61m.
Best of all the dollars owed to their pitchers is going down Musgrove (40m), and Darvish (46m).
Thrilled to be getting Boegarts back, he’d been an asset the past 2-3 months. Stealing a career best 20 bags in his 13th season and was one of their better hitters going back to mid June.
I think it’s possible Yu retires after this year. I would like to see Yu develop a knuckle ball like Phil Niekro. It would be nice to finally get some production out of Musgrove after paying him so much money.
Yu isn’t retiring lol
Anyone in recent years who has attended a Petco Park sellout witnessed the universal Pads fan joy over the product. They appreciate how AJ Preller relentlessly goes for it.
No trophy yet. No parade. Who knows if that ever happens.
But Preller sees to it that the club is always competitive and talented, thus the nightly entertainment is off the charts. Timid Scott Harris he is not.
As A Dodgers fan living in San Diego since 1988, totally agree. Love him or hate him, Preller and current ownership has definitely kept things interesting the last half-decade or so. Sometimes the wheeling and dealing works out, sometimes it doesn’t. Ballpark experience is electric. Last game attended vs the Giants was a nothing/boring game but it was a Tuesday night with 30k+ in attendance about a month ago. it was still a good time. Crowd was amped. As baseball fans, we will always second guess the gm/ownership moves. I can still remember exactly where I was when I heard about the Pedro Martinez for Delino DeShields (whom I liked) deal go down. Noooooooooooooooooooo!!!!!!!! As a baseball fan first, can’t quibble with what the Pads are doing regarding the game day/night experience at home. Preller has done a remarkable sales/hype job of flipping farmhands elsewhere and most haven’t worked out for the acquiring teams. The occasional Trea Turner and (potentially) James Woods pop out but no one bats 1000. Preller has done an excellent job acquiring short term pitching (Lugo, Manaea, Pavetta, Cease, Martinez, King, Wacha) via trade and FA the last few years to stay competitive. Only viable complaint on my end is developing and keeping more from the team’s farm system. Jackson Merrill is an outlier.
Chris antontteni would give preller a run for his money.
The Padres system is now very light on position players; however, they are building very good depth in both starting pitchers and elite bullpen pitchers. The bullpen pitchers are closer to MLB with 3 [Rodriguez, Pena and Hawkins] of them most likely MLB ready in 2026. It may be 2027 before we see a starting pitcher make the rotation, although I think Menedez is a possibility in 2026.
If I were the Padres I would just cut Yuki and eat his contract [ hope Wandy opts out, Suarez most likely opts out] and use Haynes as a reliever for a year or two then make him a starter [Mendez might also work well as a reliever in the beginning]. I think it makes a lot of sense to break in the young pitchers as reliever’s first.
@libertyfighter If you hope Wandy opts out, he’s not opting out.
Don’t forget Bryan Hoeing, Sean Reynolds, Jacob and Morgan (currently IL). Marinaccio (sp) doing all right. Brito will be back in 26.
There are a bunch of near ready BP arms after all of these.
Bring back King (or similar guy), Pivetta, Joe, Yu, Randy and as always, some 4/5 FA project guy that AJ always seems to find and rotation should be good enough. Sears and a few others as depth.
All guys with MLB success.
Nutting wouldn’t allow Preller to sign/extend players like Manny Machado, Xander Bogaerts or Fernando Tatis Jr.
I gotta give huge kudos to Dombro for acquiring both Jhoan Duran and Harrison Bader. I don’t think they envisioned Bader being their everyday CF, but all he has done since he arrived is hit and then hit some more.
Unless the Phillies suffer a 1964ish like collapse in their remaining six games, we’re gonna be the #2 seed and will get a first-round bye. Still have a shot, albeit a small one, to unseat the Brewers for the #1 seed but doubt it will happen.
Elsewhere, two early season division leaders (Tigers and Mets) have fallen on hard times. Once a lock for the AL Central title the Tigers now have to fend off the Guardians (1 game behind). The Mets, who on June 12th were 21 games over .500 with the best record in all of baseball, have been awful since then. They’re the baseball equivalent of a M*A*S*H episode, only without the laugh track, and are now tied with the Reds for the last invite to the October dance.
No real difference between the 1 seed and 2 seed other than home field down the road. But usually one of the two teams with a bye gets beaten in the first round, so it becomes negligible.
I still think the bye is more of a curse than a reward. I know both #1 seeds made it last season, but most of the time they haven’t. Baseball players have been playing all season long with basically very little down time other than the ASG. And with the best teams, many players didn’t even get a break then. Taking a week off can be jarring and can definitely throw off your rhythm. The best example I can come up with is the 2007 Rockies. They were the hottest team in baseball throughout September and won their way in much like Cleveland this year. Onece they got in they kept rolling and swept both Philadelphia and Arizona to win the NL pennant. The problem was that the ALCS was not decided so quickly. Boston needed 7 games to beat Cleveland that year and the Rockies had nothing to do but sit and wait for over a week. That killed their momentum and the Red Sox swept them in the World Series. Breaks are not usually good for baseball teams.
Trading De Vries for a relief pitcher, no matter how good Miller is, will be one of the worst trades of all time. He is 18 and passing the AA test. Would be like if Cleveland traded Lindor for Craig Kimbrel
Hard to argue with you on this; however, should Miller become an elite starter [very possible] like Crotchett the last 2 -3 years of his control the trade could even out a bit. I wish Preller would have planned out his rotation better so he could have traded both King and Cease before the season [could have gotten some decent prospects in return]. Perhaps the Musgrove injury prevented that. Either way Cease should have been traded [I did advocate for this last winter]. I am glad they waited to sign King long term to see how the heavy 2024 innings load affected his 2025 season.
I think the Padres will keep King long term, Musgrove comes back to replace Cease. The 26 rotation: 1. King 2. Pivetta 3. Musgrove 4. Yu [if he retires AJ will bring in another Pivetta/Lugo type to replace him]. 5. Mendez
But King is a FA and if the Pads want to keep him they’ll have to out-spend every other offer. I’m not sure they will.
Brew – if it’s crazy numbers, I hope they don’t. That said, SD will definitely bring a TOR guy and a project / conversion guy for the rotation.
Need to add, Miller may be either one of those needs so, if he converts to SP, only 1 of those guys needed.
Merrill Kelly, Buehler, carrot top – a bunch of 1 year/option guys on the market that could find a home with Rueben.
Devries trade in the future will go down as 1 of the worst ever
He gonna be next soto acuna woods julio
Kemp, Myers, Upton, Soto part 1 and Miller trades all in the “WOAT” category.
vast difference between Soto and Acuna (superstars), and Wood and Julio
Could I disagree more? Miller is an All-Star with 4 years of control on his rookie contract. DeVries will likely be a good player in the bigs and I hope he is. But we have seen a number of can’t-miss prospects disappear in the bigs. Plus every time Preller clears out the system, he usually restocks it pretty well.
“the Guardians often pursue at least one MLB-ready piece when trading their veteran assets.” Well they didn’t get an MLB-ready player for Bieber, just a guy probably two years away who was maybe Toronto’s fifth best pitching prospect. And if they just miss the playoffs, or make the layoffs and face the Jays, they’re going to be sorry they’re without Shane Bieber.
I believe they’ve talking about players with a longer rope than Bieber’s two remaining months, which by the way was preceded by zero MLB exposure in 2025 after TJ surgery. To get a prospect like Khal given where the team was situated in the standings was a real coup. I doubt anyone will really second guess it, seeing how they’ve managed to go 14 games over .500 since then on the strength of young starting pitching.