Buster Posey’s most significant moves in his first season as president of baseball operations came on the hitting side, signing shortstop Willy Adames to a franchise-record seven-year, $182MM deal and landing third baseman Rafael Devers in a midseason trade. Posey will now turn his attention to pitching, the former catcher told Alex Pavlovic and Laura Britt of NBC Sports in an interview this week. “I think our focus is going to be on pitching, to try to fortify our starting staff. The same goes with the bullpen.”
San Francisco got solid contributions from the ever-reliable Logan Webb and a strong year from Robbie Ray in his first full season after Tommy John surgery. Behind Webb and Ray, the Giants’ rotation was largely a mess. Jordan Hicks opened the season as a starter, but posted a 6.55 ERA over nine starts and was bumped to the bullpen. He was then dealt to Boston in the Devers trade along with Kyle Harrison, a rotation mainstay in 2024. Landen Roupp shook off a rough April to deliver decent results for a couple months, but missed the final six weeks of the season with a knee injury. Justin Verlander was the lone offseason addition, joining the team on a one-year, $15MM pact. He didn’t earn his first win as a Giant until mid-July, but ultimately delivered decent results, especially considering his advanced age. Hayden Birdsong seemed destined to lock down a rotation spot after beginning the season in the bullpen, but he found himself in Triple-A after struggling with control.
The Giants tried a handful of youngsters in the rotation, with varying results. Top prospect Carson Whisenhunt debuted in late July. He stumbled through five starts, posting a 5.01 ERA with an untenable 16:12 strikeout-to-walk ratio. Carson Seymour got the call in late June and made 16 appearances with the big-league club. He was tagged for nine home runs in just 36 innings. Seymour did earn his first MLB win in August, beating St. Louis in his second of three starts. Kai-Wei Teng was recalled in August and made eight big-league appearances. He notched a strong 28.1% strikeout rate over 29 2/3 innings, but was knocked around for 21 earned runs. Trevor McDonald was the last to arrive, though he offered the most intriguing results. The right-hander recorded a pair of quality starts in three outings, including a dominant 10-strikeout performance in the final series of the season.
Roupp should be healthy to begin the 2026 season. Verlander is a free agent, though Posey said he’s open to bringing him back. That still leaves at least one rotation spot up for grabs heading into the upcoming campaign. McDonald certainly made a solid case, though a 5.31 ERA at Triple-A last season casts doubt on his long-term outlook. Ray also struggled to close the season, allowing at least four earned runs in four of his final five appearances. His performance down the stretch, along with his injury history, could spur the Giants to add more depth.
Posey will have plenty of choices on the free agent market to fill out the rotation. Dylan Cease, Framber Valdez and Ranger Suarez headline the 2026 starting pitching class. They’re likely to seek nine-figure deals. Zac Gallen and Merrill Kelly represent durable alternatives with potentially less upside. Brandon Woodruff, Michael King, and Tyler Mahle performed well when healthy in 2025, but health remains a question. Jack Flaherty and Lucas Giolito could join the fray depending on how their current contract situations pan out. There is no shortage of veteran inning-eating types like Aaron Civale and Zack Littell. The Giants could also take a swing at reviving guys like Zach Eflin, Walker Buehler, Dustin May, and Michael Soroka.
The bullpen was actually a strength for San Francisco this past season, at least until the trade deadline. The Giants ranked second in bullpen ERA through July. They were third in xFIP and fifth in SIERA. The team then sent Camilo Doval to the Yankees and Tyler Rogers to the Mets. Randy Rodriguez entered the closer role with Doval gone, but his dominant season (1.78 ERA) was cut short due to an elbow injury that ultimately required Tommy John surgery. San Francisco’s bullpen slipped to 13th in ERA over the final two months of the season.
Ryan Walker is currently atop the closer depth chart, which might be why Posey is searching for bullpen help. After losing the job to Doval, Walker continued to scuffle as the stopper following Rodriguez’s injury, blowing two saves and losing another game in September.
There are several high-profile closers on the market, including Devin Williams, Ryan Helsley, and Raisel Iglesias. Edwin Diaz and Robert Suarez could join them if they elect to opt out of their current deals. On the cheaper side, Kenley Jansen, Luke Weaver, Kirby Yates, Ryan Pressly, and Kyle Finnegan have plenty of closing experience. Emilio Pagan and Gregory Soto are coming off bounce-back seasons. Both of the Rogers brothers are available. It’s a robust group, giving Posey plenty of routes to reload on the reliever front.
Spending shouldn’t be an issue for the Giants in 2026. Devers’ megadeal is now on the books, and the team still has healthy commitments remaining to Adames, Ray, and Matt Chapman, but FanGraphs’ RosterResource tool has them at around $140MM for next year’s payroll. San Francisco only has a small handful of players heading to arbitration, so that payroll estimate shouldn’t budge much ahead of 2026. While they were at around $178MM in payroll last season, the Giants were up over $200MM as recently as 2024. There’s plenty of room to add multiple high-priced pitchers, whether in the starting rotation, the bullpen, or both.

Nah gimme King Tuck
Shane Bieber wasn’t mentioned in the article. He should be at the top of the Giants list.
No QO. Looks good for the Jays. He’s from Cali. Make it happen Buster.
Trading for Mitch Keller would be a great move for the Giants
Yes. Buccos need bats.
Giants have Ramos and Matos as trade candidates to build a package around. Ramos smacked over 20 HR in both ’24 and ’25, even making the all-star team last year. Giants would likely move him for pitching if they go that route rather than just opening the wallet.
Yeah I think Keller is exactly what they need. They need a reliable mid rotation guy. Emphasis on reliability.
Imagine if posey trades Eldridge for Mitch Keller and O’Neil Cruz
Eldridge is untouchable. His floor is way to high
His ceiling is high, but his floor is very low.
@joe
Yeah, exactly what I was going to say. Like Coby Mayo, Eldridge could be an extremely valuable power bat. He could also K so much that he doesn’t amount to anything. High variance-high ceiling low floor guys.
Joe, he cleared two full leagues to break the majors in age 20 season. High K rate comes with his age. OPS 850, 25 homers and 94 rbi in a 100 games. That’s a sky high floor my friend !
“There’s plenty of room to add multiple high-priced pitchers, whether in the starting rotation, the bullpen, or both.”
Amen to that!!
Call the Twinkies on Lopez.
Maybe you can FLEECE them like the Giants did in the Sam Dyson & Shaun Anderson trades.
See what it would take to get Buxton as well and put him in RF
If that’s a no go, what about Matt Wallner?
Twins are so sad right now and they might not even be willing to let buck escape purgatory
stnmf, It’s the other way around. They’d probably love to get back some good talent in a trade. It’s Buxton that doesn’t want to leave, and he has the final say
Giants need another outfielder as well. Perhaps another couple outfielders.
Ramos and Lee are fine
Yeah thats 2. You need 3 or 4.
Lee is fine, Ramos hasn’t been.
Gilbert is also a keeper.
I would be OK bringing Verlander back, but the downside would be that he’s a hall of famer, and if he struggles you can’t just move him to the pen, Good or bad, he takes up a rotation spot which could go to a young SP.
On the other hand, I don’t love the top free agents this year. Cease and Framber are gonna get silly contracts. Might prefer JV, honestly.
Verlander is also chasing 300 wins and may want to go somewhere he thinks he has a better shot.
After this year in SF, where the team didn’t score runs for him or the bullpen let him down, I think JV chooses to go elsewhere.
Ranger Suarez. If I was a GM likely the only pitcher out of those four I would sign. The other guys are too old or meh or some combination of old/meh not to be worth it.
1-2 starting pitchers, at least two high leverage bullpen arms, an outfielder who can hit and an “insurance” hitter in case Eldridge isn’t ready/goes back to AAA to develop. And this is assuming Rodriguez will be the backup catcher and can hit ML pitching. Let’s get to work! Oh wait, hire a manager first…
Merrill Kelly and the “reviving guys” should be the focus. Kelly would make an excellent #3, and Walker Buehler will get back on track. May and Soroka could also be interesting upside plays.
Why would the giants be interested in any of those dudes ? They got the money for best on the market
Too much dumpster diving. Even Kelly is short of what the Giants need.
I wholeheartedly endorse the Giants signing Kirby Yates. Possibly with the intention of stretching him out to a starter like Crochet.
Just trying to help. 🙂
Yeah, we was great for you. Really appreciate the tip.
I’m here to help.
Zack Litell might be a sneaky good pickup for them.
Littell was a sneaky good Giant until he showed up Kapler and got punted for the indiscretion.
I wouldn’t be against it. He was solid.
Wait, what is this story?
He was having a tough stretch as a reliever and Kap took him out of a game before the job was done. Zac got a bit mouthy as he handed Kapler the ball. Kapler took him down the tunnel for what I assume was a rather stern discussion. 2 days later he was gone. Rays picked him up from memory.
And since then, Littell has turned himself into a solid 3rd or 4th rotation guy. He’s made 61 starts over the last 2 seasons, with a combined ERA of 3.73.
So, if the Giants got him to be maybe their 4th or 5th starter, AND get a legitimate front of the rotation guy, I’d be good with that. Then also add one more mid/back of the rotation piece to the mix (because pitchers ALWAYS break), along with all of their talented young’uns – who could certainly force the issue at any point – and will absolutely be needed at some point.
If the Twins trade Jow Ryan this is my team to do it. Buster wants an impact move, and the Twins want guys for 2027 or 2028.. Seems like a good fit.
2 AA+ pitchers
2 position players
for Joe Ryan
Just guessing
I think we all remember the Joe Nathan trade between San Francisco and Minnesota that worked out so well.
Carl W. — I think you’re expecting too much unless they’re all prospects. But I’d like to see Ryan in a Giants uni. He’d be coming home too! (Giants drafted him & he went to the same high school my kids went to.)
I think the Twins could get better offers from other teams who have deeper farm systems.
But the Giants just might offer them a starting position player—I won’t say who—but it’s a player the Twins would want. And, no, it’s not Ramos.
Raffy Devers? Matt Chapman? Adames? Oh, Twins need a catcher, must be Bailey.
There’s a 1st baseman that’d fit the bill. No not the expensive one.
So you traded away a bunch of pitching and now you need pitching.
Great first year, Buster.
Yeah. It’s been great. Super impressive. Imagine how good he will be with a bit of a trial and error time on his resume. Exciting times for sure.
He won’t be more successful than the front office that drafted him; that’s for sure.
Nope. That’s no surety at all. You’re making that up.
He is a real good chance.
There is no such thing as having a “real good chance” of winning 3 world series and going to 4.
Pretty happy with trading Jordan Hicks and Kyle Harrison to get Devers, personally.
Sadler —
Seemed like a pretty impressive POBO in his first year. Don’t know what you’re whining about.
Sadler, I guess you’re ignoring who they got with the pitching they traded. Are you suggesting they should have held on to those pitchers instead of trading them for probably the 5th best bat in MLB. The last time I looked pitching was a lot easier to acquire than an elite bat.
He’s also not accounting for how dreadful Hicks was or how middling Harrison is.
They added $60M a year in payroll to remain the same .500 team they were before and I’m supposed to be excited about the future?
They have a middling offense, middling defense, middling starting pitching, and a middling bullpen, all for a cool $170M..
Framber Valdez is a good fit for them he either pitches a no-hitter or gets pissed off and gives up 5 earned
Because of the park, the Giants shouldn’t have a problem attracting pitchers, like they do hitters. It would seem they’ll have an advantage with the specific guys they’ll target.
I would hope so.
Off-topic: Is there an actual owner of the Giants or are they controlled by one of those mystical ownership groups who could have 900 different owners but elect one of those 900 as the “ownership spokesperson”??
Multiple owners yes, but majority owner is scumbag Charles Johnson.
Id love Zac Gallen, bring back Rogers to close, another decent reliever. MAYBE sign Luis Robert if he’s cheap enough. Find a good trade for Ramos if you can, dude looks like he’s running a maze trying to track down balls in the outfield
Maybe the Zac Gallen from 2-3 years ago, but he was a mid-rotation arm at best last season, and awful this season. His ERA+ has dropped 69 points since 2022.
And there’s no signing Luis Robert. A trade is the only way to get him. The W Sox have options for the next 2 years. The Sox have been asking for the moon, and teams are hesitant to spend prospect capital with the injury risk.
Yeah, Robert gets hurt every year – and now he’s put up back-to- back seasons of sub-par production, I mean, when he’s actually been in the line-up.
So, I don’t think the ChiSox will be asking for (or getting) the moon this offseason – and I do think they’d really like to trade him. The question is, would the Giants really want to add yet another questionable guy to their already shaky outfield mix? I’m not sure that’s the way forward for them.
I agree that the ChiSox will have to drop the ask if they want to move him. He’s always been an intriguing talent so there will be some interest from teams. But so far, no team has been willing to spend prospect capital on such a high risk guy, and wisely so.
Oh baby!
Says Posey when he tries to help
Sure hope we see a turn around for SF. As a fan for 70 years, yup 70, I’ve seen plenty of years of downs and a few nice ups. It is time for Posey to pull together a winning team, including the new manager, that takes SF deep into the playoffs, at the least.. The many SF fans, no matter where they live, and they are all over, deserve nothing less.
“Deserves got nuthin’ to do with it.”
I’ve been a Giants fan for 50 years now, so I’m just a baby Giants fan, compared to you.
Sounds like you just did miss out on their last trophy in NYC, then. That’s so unfair! 🙂
Just no Walker…………………………..please!
I don’t mind a spot on the staff for Walker, he could still be useful. He just needs to be kept out of high leverage situations. The 9th is not when he should ever be used.