Frank Anderson is leaving the University of Tennessee’s coaching staff for an unspecified role on the Giants’ coaching staff, according to Baseball America’s Jacob Rudner. Anderson had been working as the Volunteers’ pitching coach since 2017, and was acting as the interim head coach after Tony Vitello left the team to become the Giants’ new manager last month.
Now, the 66-year-old Anderson will join Vitello in San Francisco, looking to continue the success the duo shared in Tennessee. This will be Anderson’s first coaching job in the majors, but he isn’t exactly a stranger to the Show, as his son Brett Anderson pitched 13 MLB seasons from 2008-21.
Reports emerged earlier this week that Justin Meccage will be the Giants’ new pitching coach, so Anderson could be taking on an assistant pitching coach job or perhaps could be moving into the bullpen coach vacancy. There has been plenty of turnover on the coaching staff with Vitello coming in, and the new hires have included Meccage, hitting coach Hunter Mense, Jayce Tingler in an unspecified role, and now Anderson.
Like Vitello, Anderson brings a wealth of experience from the collegiate ranks, as Rudner writes that “Anderson is regarded as one of the premier pitching developers in college baseball.” Anderson has over four decades of experience as an assistant and head coach in college ball, including nine seasons as Oklahoma State’s head coach from 2003-2012.

A 2026 season more in line with Imanaga’s impressive 2024 rookie campaign will easily land a multi-year contract worth far more than $8.475MM next winter, even though the lefty turns 33 in September. He’ll be able to re-enter next year’s free agent market without the QO compensation attached to his services. This removes one obstacle for Imanaga in free agency next winter, but more consistency on the mound will be the deciding factor.