The Mercury News

Melvin's job appears safe, has `full support' of owner

- By Bernie Wilson

You can probably cross off Bob Melvin's name from the list of potential candidates to become the new Giants manager.

Melvin's job as manager appears to be safe with the underwhelm­ing San Diego Padres after owner Peter Seidler said in a statement Monday morning that the current leadership team “continues to have my full support.”

The announceme­nt came less than 24 hours after the Padres finished the most disappoint­ing season in franchise history at 8280. They were eliminated from playoff contention on Friday night, a bitter result for a team that came into the season with World Series expectatio­ns after making a stirring run to the NL Championsh­ip Series last fall and then increasing their payroll to around $250 million, the third highest in baseball.

There have been numerous reports of a fractured relationsh­ip between Melvin, the former A's manager who finished his second season with San Diego and 20th overall as a big league manager, and general manager A.J. Preller, who has had just two winning records in a full season since being hired in August 2014.

Melvin, who grew up in Palo Alto and played at Cal and later for the Giants, appeared to be a possible

candidate to replace Gabe Kapler, who was fired Friday as San Francisco's manager after four years.

But Seidler put a lot of rumors to rest on Monday.

“We entered 2023 with expectatio­ns that we would build on last year's NLCS

appearance and contend for a World Series championsh­ip,” Seidler said in the statement. “We fell short of that goal. The Padres organizati­on will learn from this season and emerge in 2024 with the pieces in place to compete for San

Diego's first World Series title.

“Our current leadership team continues to have my full support, and I have asked them to perform a thorough assessment of our organizati­on, beginning today. We will make the changes necessary to play championsh­ip-caliber baseball for our extraordin­ary fans in 2024,” the statement concluded.

Seidler, who recently had an unspecifie­d medical procedure, wasn't available for further comment, the team said. Neither Melvin nor Preller immediatel­y returned calls seeking comment.

It took a strong run during the final 2 ½ weeks, mostly against four of the worst teams in the majors — including three 100-loss teams — for the Padres to get back above .500 for the first time since early May.

The Padres struggled offensivel­y despite having a lineup highlighte­d by stars Manny Machado, Fernando Tatis Jr., Juan Soto and Xander Bogaerts.

Melvin was hired away from the A's on Nov. 1, 2021, less than a month after Jayce Tingler was fired following a brutal September collapse that cost the Padres a playoff spot. Tingler, a friend of Preller's from when they were both in the Texas Rangers organizati­on, lasted only two seasons. He replaced Andy Green, who was fired after the Padres collapsed down the stretch in 2019.

 ?? JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bob Melvin of the San Diego Padres managed a team with high expectatio­ns to an 82-80record, and no playoffs.
JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bob Melvin of the San Diego Padres managed a team with high expectatio­ns to an 82-80record, and no playoffs.

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