Despite some in-fighting among ownership, the Padres brought back one of their key free agents. The Friars took their usual approach of signing a notable player from an Asian league and adding a bunch of cheap veteran free agents just before Spring Training. As has frequently been the case, they’re also heading into the season with a new manager.
Major League Signings
- RHP Michael King: Three years, $75MM (includes opt-outs after ’26 and ’27 seasons)
- 2B/3B Sung-mun Song: Four years, $15MM (includes opt-out after ’28 season and mutual option for ’30)
- DH/LF Miguel Andujar: One year, $4MM (including buyout of ’27 mutual option)
- RHP Griffin Canning: One year, $2.5MM (including buyout of ’27 mutual option)
- RHP Germán Márquez: One year, $1.75MM (including buyout of ’27 mutual option)
- LHP Kyle Hart: One year, $1.2MM (including buyout of ’27 club option)
- 1B/OF Nick Castellanos: One year, $780K league minimum (Phillies covering remainder of $20MM salary)
- RHP Daison Acosta: Major league deal (later outrighted)
- RHP Ty Adcock: Major league deal (pre-arbitration)
2026 commitments: $24.5MM
Total future commitments: $99.45MM
Trades and Claims
- None
Option Decisions
- RHP Robert Suarez opted out of two years and $16MM
- RHP Michael King declined $15MM mutual option in favor of $3.75MM buyout (later re-signed)
- LHP Wandy Peralta exercised two-year, $8.9MM player option (can opt out after ’26)
- Team exercised $6.5MM club option on LF Ramón Laureano
- Team declined $7MM mutual option on C Elias Díaz in favor of $2MM buyout
- Team declined $5MM club option on LHP Kyle Hart in favor of $500K buyout (later re-signed)
- Team declined $1MM club option on SS Tyler Wade in favor of $50K buyout
Notable Minor League Signings
- Jase Bowen, Sean Boyle, Walker Buehler, Omar Cruz, Ty France, Marco Gonzales, Blake Hunt, Triston McKenzie, Jose Miranda, Pablo Reyes, Carlos Rodríguez, Nick Schnell, Nick Solak, Samad Taylor, Alex Verdugo, Justin Yeager
Extensions
- None
Notable Losses
- Dylan Cease, Robert Suarez, Ryan O’Hearn, Luis Arraez, Jose Iglesias (still unsigned), Elias Díaz, Tyler Wade, Martín Maldonado (retired), Nestor Cortes (still unsigned), Sean Reynolds (non-tender)
The Padres’ offseason began in usual fashion. Immediately after being bounced by the Cubs in the Wild Card Series, San Diego faced questions about their leadership continuity. President of baseball operations A.J. Preller was headed into the final year of his contract. Manager Mike Shildt had led the team to consecutive playoff appearances, but that didn’t ensure he’d be back.
After initial reporting that the Padres planned to retain Shildt, he stepped down in the middle of October. Excellent reporting from Kevin Acee of The San Diego Union-Tribune contextualized that decision. Acee’s column goes into detail about how Shildt’s managerial style wound up alienating many of his assistant coaches, while the 57-year-old skipper said he’d become worn down by the position. (Shildt would remain in baseball but in a lower-profile role by accepting a player development job with the Orioles six weeks later.)
This wasn’t quite the same situation as the Padres’ previous two managerial changes. The 2024 move to allow Bob Melvin to leave for the Giants reportedly stemmed from an acrimonious relationship between Melvin and Preller. Jayce Tingler’s ouster at the end of 2021 came after he’d seemingly lost the clubhouse amidst a second half collapse. In any case, the result was a fourth managerial hiring process in seven years — and a remarkable sixth full-time skipper during Preller’s lengthy run at the top of baseball operations.
Preller’s own contract status would linger over the offseason, but it was apparent early on that he’d be back for 2026 at least. The Padres conducted their managerial search throughout the postseason and into the first few days of the offseason. They settled on former reliever Craig Stammen, who had been in the organization’s player development department but had no coaching or managerial experience. It was an unexpected hire considering initial reporting suggested the likes of Ryan Flaherty, Nick Hundley, Ruben Niebla, and Albert Pujols were in the running.
San Diego kept the well-regarded Niebla on staff as pitching coach despite passing on him for the managerial vacancy. The Padres brought in Randy Knorr as bench coach and tabbed former outfielder Steven Souza Jr. as a first-time hitting coach. Stammen had ties to both men (Knorr as a coach, Souza as a teammate) from his time in the Nationals bullpen.
Once the manager was settled, the front office could turn its attention to the roster. They faced a handful of free agent losses. Dylan Cease and Robert Suarez obviously weren’t coming back. Cease was going to price himself out of San Diego, while the Padres had prepared for Suarez’s departure by trading for Mason Miller last summer.
The Padres had a number of option decisions. Most of them were obvious: Suarez’s opt-out, Michael King declining a mutual option, the team exercising a bargain $6.5MM option to keep left fielder Ramón Laureano. The club bought out depth starter Kyle Hart but quickly circled back on a cheaper one-year deal. They dropped Elias Díaz and Tyler Wade, while lefty reliever Wandy Peralta passed on the chance to opt out of the remaining two years and $8.9MM on his deal.
San Diego issued qualifying offers to Cease and King, both of which were expected. They opted not to make a QO to Luis Arraez, setting the stage for him to join the division rival Giants on a $12MM deal. Ryan O’Hearn was ineligible for a qualifying offer as a midseason trade pickup, not that the Padres would have given much thought to offering him a $22.025MM salary. O’Hearn’s production after the trade was just alright and it doesn’t seem like San Diego made much effort to bring him back before he signed a two-year deal with Pittsburgh.
Of their impactful free agents, King became the priority. Some of that was driven by a glaring need for rotation help beyond Nick Pivetta and Joe Musgrove, the latter of whom missed all of last season rehabbing Tommy John surgery. Although San Diego’s interest in re-signing King was natural, it came as a moderate surprise they got the deal done. The Padres have curtailed free agent spending since Peter Seidler’s 2023 passing. Even last offseason’s four-year, $55MM deal with Pivetta came late in the winter when the righty was amenable to a heavily backloaded contract with opt-outs after the second and third seasons.
The Padres were also facing some geographic disadvantages. King attended high school in Rhode Island, played collegiately at Boston College, and spent the first five seasons of his career with the Yankees. He said he entered the offseason preferring to land with an East Coast team. That changed when the Padres put forth a three-year, $75MM offer that included opt-out chances after the first and second seasons. King might’ve been able to land a bigger guarantee elsewhere, but he’s able to remain with a team he knows well with a chance to cash in next offseason.
King pitched at a borderline ace level during his first season in San Diego. He was out to an even stronger start to the ’25 campaign before encountering a troublesome nerve issue in his throwing shoulder. That shelved him for nearly three months, and he battled knee inflammation upon his late-season return. Although a fully healthy King is clearly one of the team’s three best starters, the Padres used him out of the bullpen in their playoff series.
It’s an upside play for pitcher and team alike. The Padres are hopefully paying King $22MM ($12MM signing bonus, $5MM salary, and a $5MM option buyout) for one excellent season. He’d be positioned to retest the market at age 32 without being attached to a qualifying offer. He’d likely try to max out the contract length and guarantee at that point.
Slotting King back into the #2 spot in the rotation is far more valuable to the Padres than the fourth round pick they would have received as compensation for his departure. They did land one compensatory draft choice when Cease signed his seven-year deal with the Blue Jays — a deal that shattered whatever the Padres would have been willing to offer.
Even with King in the fold, the rotation remained the roster’s biggest question. Yu Darvish missed a couple months last season with an elbow issue. He looked a shell of his former self when healthy enough to pitch, allowing a 5.38 ERA in 15 regular season starts (plus two runs on four hits in one playoff inning). There were early whispers that the 39-year-old Darvish could walk away from the remaining three years on his contract.
That may still be the case, but all that’s known for now is that the righty won’t be available in 2026. Darvish underwent an internal brace surgery to address UCL damage in his elbow. He made his most recent statement on his long-term future in January, saying that he and the team have had conversations about terminating his contract (presumably with some kind of deferral or buyout structure). He hasn’t made any decisions on retirement. Darvish is signed through his age-41 season for a combined $43MM: $15MM this year, followed by $14MM salaries in 2027-28.
The Padres poked around the market for a second significant rotation move. They reportedly made a three-year, $50MM offer to Merrill Kelly. He opted to return to Arizona on a two-year deal at a higher annual rate. The Padres were loosely tied to Framber Valdez as his free agency lingered but never seemed likely to make the money work.
They’ll round out the rotation with internal arms and reclamation projects. Randy Vásquez is expected to get the fourth starter role on the heels of a decent 2025 season. They added Griffin Canning on a $2.5MM deal after last June’s Achilles tear. Canning had posted a 3.77 ERA across 16 starts with the Mets before the injury. He’ll probably be on the injured list into May but should be locked into a rotation spot once he’s healthy.
San Diego signed longtime Rockies righty Germán Márquez to a $1.75MM contract to round out the staff until Canning returns. Márquez hasn’t been good since undergoing Tommy John surgery in 2023. He’s coming off a near-7.00 ERA over 26 starts last season. He was bombed for a 7.32 mark outside Coors Field. The big league deal is less about projecting improved performance at normal altitude and more a flier on a fastball that still sits around 95 mph.
It’s a similar situation for Walker Buehler, who came aboard on a minor league contract. Buehler’s fastball sat around 94 mph last season, well down from the upper 90s heat he brought before undergoing his second Tommy John procedure in 2022. He’s in the 92 mph range this spring, though it’s common for pitchers to add a tick or two as they build up into game shape.
Buehler isn’t guaranteed a roster spot but could push Márquez for the fifth starter role. It’s also possible the Padres start Musgrove on the injured list to avoid pushing him too quickly, which would open another early-season rotation spot. The Padres tendered JP Sears a $2.75MM arbitration contract even though he was a non-factor after coming over in the Miller trade. He’s on the 40-man roster and likely starting the season in the minors. That’s also true of Hart and minor league signee Marco Gonzales, while they’ll face a decision on the out-of-options Matt Waldron once he’s back from the injured list.
The Padres understandably felt good about the bullpen despite losing Suarez. Miller is probably the best closer in MLB. Jeremiah Estrada, Jason Adam, Adrian Morejon, David Morgan and Bradgley Rodriguez could all find themselves in setup roles. Peralta and Yuki Matsui are under contract as lefty middle relievers. San Diego’s only 40-man roster moves were depth fliers on Daison Acosta and Ty Adcock, both of whom will open the season in Triple-A.
There was more work to do on the position player side. The Padres have one of the most top-heavy offensive groups in the league. That isn’t going to change, but they made a few moves to deepen a lineup losing Arraez and O’Hearn.
The most notable was a four-year deal for KBO infielder Sung-mun Song. The 29-year-old has had an excellent last two seasons for the Kiwoom Heroes after a middling career until that point. Scouting reports project him as a utility player at the MLB level. That’s the role he’ll play in San Diego at a modest $2.8MM average annual value.
Song, a lefty hitter, has spent most of his career at second or third base. He’ll back up Jake Cronenworth and Manny Machado at those respective positions. The Padres also planned to get him shortstop and outfield work this spring, though that’s been halted by some oblique trouble that seems likely to delay his team debut by a few weeks.
The Padres wanted to balance the lineup by adding a pair of veteran right-handed bats. San Diego signed lefty masher Miguel Andujar to a one-year, $4MM deal. He’s coming off an excellent .318/.352/.470 showing between the A’s and Reds. The market was nevertheless cold on him because of his lack of defensive value, injury history, and aggressive offensive approach.
Andujar will get the majority of the designated hitter work while backing up Laureano and Fernando Tatis Jr. in the corner outfield. The Padres wanted another righty hitter to platoon with Gavin Sheets at first base. Paul Goldschmidt would have been an ideal fit, but he declined an offer from San Diego to return to the Yankees. The Padres pivoted to Nick Castellanos after he was released by the Phillies.
The move comes at literally no cost financially. Castellanos is playing for the league minimum salary in San Diego (which the Padres would have paid to whoever else was taking that roster spot regardless). The Phillies are eating the rest of his $20MM salary. Castellanos should still be a decent power bat against lefty pitching. Any risk is in adding a player who had no first base experience until this spring and whose time in Philadelphia ended with a highly publicized rift with manager Rob Thomson.
The Padres opted not to make a move behind the plate, where they’ll rely on the Freddy Fermin/Luis Campusano pair. They don’t have clear backups behind Xander Bogaerts and Jackson Merrill at shortstop and in center field, respectively. They’d been hoping to get Song up to speed for that role by Opening Day. A season-opening injured list stint would create a spot for one of Will Wagner, Mason McCoy or minor league signee Ty France as a utility infielder. The out-of-options Bryce Johnson probably wins the fourth outfield role.
They could benefit from one more depth move in the final two weeks of Spring Training, but it doesn’t seem to be a priority. San Diego didn’t make a single waiver claim for a second straight offseason. They also didn’t make any trades despite Preller’s affinity for massive swings. There was a rumor out of the Winter Meetings about talks with the Mets concerning a potential blockbuster involving Miller, Pivetta and Laureano. There’s no indication that progressed, and the Padres stood pat from a trade perspective.
That surely won’t be the case this summer. The Padres mostly sat out last offseason’s trade activity as well before making three big deadline trades (Miller/Sears, Laureano/O’Hearn, and Fermin). If they’re in the running for a playoff spot, it’s in their nature to be aggressive. With Pivetta and King both able to opt out next winter, adding a controllable starting pitcher figures to be a priority. If the team underperforms, either or both veteran righties could be on the trade block themselves.
Preller will lead the deadline with long-term financial comfort. He and the organization finally reached agreement on a multi-year extension last month. That’s of particular importance given the likelihood of a major shakeup at the ownership level. In early February, the Seidler family resolved most of their litigation against one another. That paves the way for the family to move forward with a sale that could be in place as soon as Opening Day. The most recent reporting indicated they were weighing five offers and could pull north of $2.5 billion for the franchise.
The repercussions of a potential sale won’t really be felt until next offseason at the earliest. Last winter was a fairly typical Padres offseason, one they’ll hope was sufficient to maintain their status as the Dodgers’ top challenger in the NL West.
How would you grade the Padres' offseason?

Not the splashy moves from other off-seasons but still pretty good. Locking up King was big. I am baffled by the lack of trades though.
Preller will probably make trades at the deadline to help bolster the team. He is very good at getting trades done, the guy is at least trying to make the team better and that’s all you can ask for.
Nobody wants what the Braves have on their funny farm with the exception of a few pitchers. Unfortunately, they’ll need those pitchers as depth (what little they have) to prevent Elder and Cookie Carrasco from making meaningful starts.
Baseball is better with AJ Preller in it.
“He is very good at getting trades done”
When you are willing to trade one of the 5 or 10 best prospects in baseball for a closer it’s very easy to get trades done.
AI- yes that is the only trade Preller has made.
“a closer””
Well, he is one of the best in the game and also, has 4 years of control very cheap.
Prospects are suspects- I’m not going to bother you with the details of the percentage of 18 year olds that don’t even make the show or if they do, don’t impact it.
1 in 5 top 100 prospects become MLB average players in the majors. Less than 3% have a 4+ WAR season in their career.
It is higher for Top 10 overall prospects, but not enough that trading a guy 2 years away from the majors for 4 years of a proven commodity such as arguably the best closer in baseball would be a questionable move.
Canning looked like he figured some things out last season under Jeremy Hefner (who is now with the Braves). Too bad The Chopaholics non-tendered him in before throwing a single pitch for them. They could really use some actual pitchers to prop up that house of cards they call a pitching staff.
As a Dodger fan, you kinda have to admire that at least Preller goes for it. I think he has made some boneheaded moves but who hasn’t.
In his position, it’s gotta be tough having the Dodgers in your division and the machine they have become over the last decade. I guess kinda like being an NBA team in the 90’s and trying to win with Jordan’s Bulls teams. You are almost certainly playing for 2nd from day one.
Overall, MLB needs more Prellers from the aspect of a guy wanting to win and trying anything outside of voodoo dolls to make it happen. Hell, he probably has an Ohtani doll with straight pins in it.
I’m so mad at all 28 other general managers for not being as serious as Preller and Friedman (although the Mariners and Blue Jays both seem serious too). Something seriously needs to be done.
Seriously
They are fun for sure. Make some good trades. But when they do something awful it is obviously awful.
We’ve seen how adept Preller can be on a tight budget.
I feel like they spent big, turned the Padres into a Mercedes, but now neglect going to the mechanic and when they do they use refurbished parts. That is not on Preller. He has shone lately.
He sure finds gems at the pick-n-pull every year!
Grading on a curve gets them a generous C. Hard to envision the Padres winning more games this year than last.
With the exception of Cease and Bobby Fastballs, they are better across the board. Talk to me in September. Compared to opening day 2025 Laureno- upgrade. Fermin- upgrade Castellanos- upgrade. Musgrove healthy- upgrade, andujar- upgrade, We lost some swing and miss which we dont lack and upgraded the bench , DH, LF, and catcher.
Opening day featured Yuli Gurriel at DH, Brandon Lockridge in LF (with Jason Heyward chomping at the bit) and one of the worst catching tandems in baseball with Elias Diaz and Mandy Maldonado only being saved from the cellar by the Nats lot.
If you would have told me that team got worse performances from Cease, King and Darvish then expected and they would still win 90 games I doubt I’d believe you.
Good point padrepapi, I need to remember it when I look at this roster and perceive it to be less than inspiring. Just recall how the team looked Day 1 last season. And also imagine how different the roster will be in September…which will likely look different in ways we can’t even fathom right now.
Might score some more runs, but the rotation (after King) is a series of question marks. So yeah, I will talk to you in September.
Minus Cease, plus Musgrove . Tell me where im wrong. Ill wait
No need to wait. Musgrove is coming off TJ. Even if he’s in good shape, he will be innings limited.
I don’t see them as a better team this year. They may be as good if a lot of things go right.
I wish they had added another quality SP as I’m greedy that way, but it’s quite possible that one of Canning, Buehler, or Marquez works out as a #5. AJ might not be done either – he’s done trades in March and April before. But let’s hope King and Musgrove this year exceed what they got from King and Cease last year. It wouldn’t take much for that to happen (King injured, Cease just generally bad).
This team didn’t have a lot of holes to fill this offsesaon. Most of those were filled when the traded for Fermin, Laureano and Miller at trade deadline last year.
The roster top to bottom is much better than this time last year. And one could argue the bullpen is even stronger. I frankly don’t understand the negative outlook on this team vs. what they trotted out last season.
Not very impactful but I’m surprised Ty Adcock managed to score a major league deal. He’s been shaky in the minors the last two seasons and his K numbers dipped a bit in 2025. His decent WHIP in AAA last year was bolstered by a .198 BABIP. The Padres have had some good success with relievers but I’m surprised it took a major league deal to get Adcock.
Adcock got a split deal and since he has an option, he can start the season in the minors.
Right now with major question marks still in the Padres starting rotation I gave us a C grade this off season. I love the bullpen quality depth and likely improved hitting.
If some of the current Padres minor league prospects drive up their value over the first half of 2026 that might give Preller enough trade juice to acquire actual decent starting pitchers for the stretch run. There’s a real danger though – before the deadline – that the Padres unstable starting pitching forces the bullpen into more innings and that could exhaust some of the considerable depth (and quality) there. Bottom line is the Padres are walking a tight-rope this year with their iffy (injury comebacks) starting pitching. It will likely require Preller’s best magic-act to date to get them in the playoffs.
I don’t know why both New York teams especially the Yankees didn’t want King. I’m guessing he didn’t want to come back to New York
Watching the start of Padres/Royals game, and Marquez didn’t make it out of the first, and that was against a KC lineup that only has 3 players I’ve ever heard of in it. Buehler will have to screw the pooch pretty hard not to make the 5 slot to start the season.
Marquez looks hurt too me
His bullpen didn’t look good and he only topped out at 94 once before getting pulled
Well they sent him back out there
Guess he’s not hurt
But seriously shaky
Today Marquez gave up 2 runs in the first and then after throwing 27 pitches and with 2 outs and the bases loaded he was replaced by Whiting who came in and gave up 3 runs on a walk and two hits. A bad throw by Fermin gave up another run. Marquez then came back into the game in the 2nd inning and after 2 outs gave up a single, a walk, and a single which drove in a run. He hit 95 mph to that last batter and had 7 pitches of 94 or higher. his problem was not velocity, it was control. Only 28 strikes out of 56 pitches.
Buehler can’t top 93 MPH. He has already, in your words, screwed the pooch. He might make the team as a long reliever, but not in the rotation.
What question marks?
Which Padres starting pitcher ISN’T a big question mark at this time?
Which ones ARE a big question mark at this point? Pivetta isn’t. King isn’t. Musgrove isn’t. Vazquez isn’t. Marquez isn’t.
Musgrove may not pitch until the 2nd week in April, but the Padres only need 4 starters up to that point with 2 days off in the first 8 games. Certainly does not make him a question mark. That is prudent in limiting his innings. Rather have him healthy in September than pitching in March.
Early spring training game results mean nothing. The only starts worth noting results in are the ones they go 5+ innings in. Meaning the last one or maybe two.
Hey Web. Just wanted to let you know it’s fine we disagree. It’s okay. I like reading your messages.
C sounds about right.
I wouldn’t say Dylan Cease moving on was a loss.
Won’t have to make Ohtani toss his bat in celebration again.
Ohtani wasn’t the only one hitting tanks off him, the rest of the league was too.
“…it’s common for pitchers to add a tick or two as they build up into game shape.”
Does that mean Musgrove will be throwing 96-97, Marquez will be throwing 97-98, and McKenzie about 99-100 by opening day?
Not unusual doesn’t apply to all. Usually depends on what shape they came into spring.
It was an opinion by the writer that doesn’t typically apply to any pitcher that is in line for a spot in a starting rotation. These guys have been throwing off a mound for a month before they got to camp. By the time they get to 60 pitches, which is where all of them are at today, they are at their normal velocity and are just building up stamina to throw 90-100 pitches.
With ownership change coming, the signings (2 ’27 optouts,1 ’28 optout, 4(?) Mutual options) may put the Padres in a good financial position for the coming years. For that I gave a B grade.
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Branch absolutely horrendous comment. Also has no place here.
Coming into spring training the Padres were looking to replace 73 starts of 5.05 ERA.
Cease – 32 starts – 4.55 ERA
Darvish – 15 starts – 5.38 ERA
Kolek – 14 starts – 4.18 ERA
Bergert – 7 starts – 3.86 ERA (in his starts)
Cortes – 6 starts – 5.47 ERA
These two are still in the system
Hart – 6 starts – 6.66 ERA (in his starts)
Sears – 5 starts – 5.47 ERA
With King and Musgrove coming back that is a minimum of 30 additional starts at around a 3.50 ERA combined.
Vasquez had a 3.84 ERA last season and 4.04 as a starter in his career.
That means the Padres are looking for around 40 starts from the group that includes Marquez, Canning, and the rest of the NRI candidates at less than a 5.08 ERA. That is eminently doable with that group.
Agreed. And Buehler, Canning and Marquez are nice wild cards who will fill that 40 start gap quite nicely.
If Buehler doesn’t make the roster, he will most likely become a free agent, and not take a minor league assignment.
I disagree. He doesn’t have many, if any, alternatives. If he did, he would have had MLB offers already, before the Padres ever signed him. I think he’ll find a nice groove in San Diego.
The only scenario where this happens is if he looks ineffective in spring training. Then maybe he takes the assignment. Otherwise, he leverages a good spring training showing to pursue better opportunities. We’ve seen this play out hundreds of times.
I’ll agree to disagree. Padres need him.
He will accept for the short term with the usual opt outs for mlb players.
He can’t get an mlb deal today that he couldn’t get a month ago.
Take it and spend a month showing improvement and then either get called up or opt out.
Longtime – Spot on.
So you think he’s going to make the roster?
Not necessarily.
Ah, then my scenario still applies. Thought so.
All I’m saying is he will be on the team, whether that means he makes the team out of Spring or he starts in the minors while the pitching lab works with him.
All I’m saying is what I’ve already said.
FWIW, it seems his work in spring training so far is underwhelming, which is the scenario in which I’d expect him to accept assignment to the minors.
Understood. We’re aligned then.
Buehler is throwing with 2 mph less velocity than last season and he was totally ineffective then. If he opts out, he might get another minor league deal, but then why not stay and see what happens until his next opt out comes in May?
Are you trying to repeat everything that has already been said? If so, consider yourself a successful.
Also, Mendez and Mayfield are exciting prospects who could potentially contribute this season.
While the numbers are correct the issues will be nobody makes it through the season healthy. So they will likely need more innings than that.
Should have stopped at the numbers are correct. I covered the rest in my post. They won’t need to REPLACE more innings than what I noted.
Very odd reply. Your choices are always the same. You pay your fair share by paying a small amount, or by having to see the ads.
C+. They still have enough to make the playoffs.
Yea, King, Song & the rest of the transient, malcontents they signed is not gonna cut it. The Padres need prayer. 🤣
After today can we safely say the Márquez experiment is dead? Getting crushed by minor leaguers.
He could be working on his ‘hit’ pitch so he knows what not to throw once the regular season begins.
Marquez had no control tonight. Threw way too many pitches and exactly half of them were balls. He will be fine and unless his final two starts are bad he will the #5.
He wasn’t even announced as the starting pitcher until after we were already in the ballpark and both he and Sears were in the pen warming up prior to the start. I am wondering if he was sick or has a minor injury that almost caused the Padres to skip his start.
I thought certain you would have been on here whining after Littell signed with the Nats. Your pet pitcher won’t be a Padre, thank goodness.
We can dump Sears too
6 strike outs vs no walks and a bunch of dink and dunk singles including a single on a fly ball to the infield in spring training and you think the Padres should dump him? Can we dump you? Ban you from calling yourself a Padres fan?
The padres offense should be better than last years. The pen should be about the same which is one of the best in baseball.
So it all comes down to starting pitching.
Pivetta, king and Musgrove really need to stay healthy. Vasquez looks improved and should be able to hold down the number 4 spot.
Then you have a few guys you can throw a dart at hoping to rebound. At least until canning is back.
Sounds like they could have a new owner in the next couple of weeks or so. One would have to think the new owner will see the current and future financial roster situation. If they look at it and are willing to spend more than the current group (which is still a high payroll) perhaps they can add enough to get the team over the hump.
The starting pitching situation is so dependent on health. I’m not sure Musgrove is going to be ready to go and then if they’re also not getting Canning back until May, they’re going to have somewhere between 6-10 starts the first 5 weeks of the season (depending on how long Musgrove is out) that need to be covered by some combination of Buehler, Marquez, Gonzalez, Sears…. which is not ideal.
I see that group as fine being #7-10 starters on the depth chart, just handling an occasional spot start here or there or filling in on the short term, but having multiple of them in the rotation for a prolonged period of time looks dangerous.
I like Michael King a ton and I’m glad the Padres signed him. That alone justifies a B (showing how much I like King).
The Padres have 5-6+ serious options for #5 Starter.
The Padres also have some possible “break out” candidates
like Miguel Mendez, Marquez, Canning, Buehler etc.
Some of these Padres pitchers may respond to pitching coach Ruben Niebla’s
skill at unlocking the very best of his staff’s pitching skills and the advatage of pitching in a pitchers ballpark like Petco Park.
Marquez, Canning and Buehler all have the skills to pitch much better than prior years.
If 1 or 2 of the Padres depth options force their way into the Padres 2026 rotatoin plans, then it changes the entire equation and opens up a
more interesting path like the Padres trading from their starting pitching depth.
If the Padres rotation candidates perform better than extpected, then I would not be surprised to see Nick Pivetta moved in a AJ Preller style “blockbuster deal” for a nice package of top young talent with big upside’
including at least one young starter.
Pivetta is in his walk year.
A trade that fortifies the Padres rotation with a younger cost controlled starter and other young promising players for ’26,’27 and beyond
is something I would expect from AJ Preller.
And, it could happen well before the Trade Deadline.