Santa Cruz Sentinel

Giants could be one of MLB’s most active teams

- By Kerry Crowley

During Farhan Zaidi’s first spring as the Giants’ president of baseball operations, it seemed as if the home clubhouse staff at Scottsdale Stadium welcomed a newcomer every morning.

The Giants signed veterans Rene Rivera, Gerardo Parra, Yangervis Solarte and Cameron Maybin all within the same week, and each day, former manager Bruce Bochy was greeting another player with a solid major league track record who had mixed emotions about joining the club.

All of the players were happy to have an opportunit­y to compete for a job with the Giants, but none were thrilled that they had to sign a minor league contract to do so.

“Hopefully our Players Union, we can put our heads together and figure out something so we won’t continue to have to go through things like this,” Maybin said in February 2019. “I’ve got a lot of buddies still unsigned. Quality guys.”

Two years later, not much has changed.

With about five weeks remaining until the expected start of spring training, it appears more than 80% of free agents are unsigned. Owners will cite financial losses from the coronaviru­s pandemic as a reason

spending is low, but the game’s elite players aren’t expected to struggle to find homes.

An example: The Chicago White Sox made Liam Hendriks one of the highest-paid relievers in baseball Monday by giving the former A’s closer more than $50 million in guaranteed money.

For every high- profile free agent like Hendriks, who has a 1.79 ERA in his last 110 innings, there are 10-to-20 players like John Brebbia wondering if they’ll receive any major league offers or be left to consider minor league deals. Brebbia, who owns a career 3.14 ERA but had Tommy John surgery last June, signed a one-year, $800,000 contract with the Giants, but many of his peers won’t be as lucky.

Assuming spring training starts on time, we’re still a month away from seeing more widespread frustratio­n from free agents who deserved major league contracts and reluctantl­y agreed to minor league deals. During the early days of spring training, a number of veterans will likely sift through identical minor league offers from teams and sign with whatever club gives them the best opportunit­y to break camp on a major league roster.

And once again, the Giants should be in position to sign several of these players.

When spring training opens, MLB teams will be able to free up roster spots by placing players on the 60- day injured list. Brebbia is one candidate to land on the list while starter Tyler Beede (Tommy John surgery) and outfield prospect Alexander Canario (shoulder surgery) are others.

It’s uncertain how many spots the Giants will open up, but they did wait to make a multi-year deal with Wilmer Flores official last spring until they placed reliever Reyes Moronta on the 60- day injured list.

The Giants may have a few openings on their major league roster to pursue additional starting pitchers (think Jose Quintana or James Paxton), but they’ll also keep open lockers in Scottsdale for players who won’t command major league contracts.

 ?? NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? San Francisco should be an attractive destinatio­n for many relief pitchers, especially considerin­g the Giants could be light on depth at the beginning of the year.
NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP San Francisco should be an attractive destinatio­n for many relief pitchers, especially considerin­g the Giants could be light on depth at the beginning of the year.

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