USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Signing Blake Snell is a ‘shot of adrenaline’ for Giants

- Bob Nightengal­e

Ariz. – The San Francisco Giants may not win the World Series this year, or perhaps not even make the postseason, but, oh, did they ever run away with the free agent patience award.

Spring training started, they sat back, never panicked and simply waited for the free agent market to come to them.

They were never going to give Gold Glove third baseman Matt Chapman $125 million as the Toronto Blue Jays once offered, so they waited for the market to dry up, and pounced, getting him on a three-year, $80 million contract.

For the encore, they pulled out the same script for two-time Cy Young winner Blake Snell. They would have let Snell go to the New York Yankees without a counteroffer when they offered him a six-year, $150 million contract last month. They weren’t going to get into a bidding war with the Houston Astros.

Instead, they watched the Yankees completely drop out, declining to even make an offer on Sunday when asked if they wanted to make a last-ditch bid. The Astros, who exchanged proposals last week with Snell and agent Scott Boras, were offering only a two-year deal for less than $50 million and declined the agent’s two-year, $66 million proposal.

Ultimately, the Giants snagged him at just $62 million over two years – $110 million less of a guarantee than Aaron Nola received from the Philadelph­ia Phillies.

It was just less than five years ago when Gerrit Cole received a nine-year, $324 million contract from the Yankees and Stephen Strasburg got a seven-year, $245 million free agent deal from the Washington Nationals.

Yet the market never materializ­ed for Snell, who originally was seeking a nineyear, $270 contract.

Even if teams were hesitant to bid on Snell considerin­g he has pitched more than 130 innings only twice in his career and walked five batters per nine innings last season, it’s a steal. Who cares if Snell opts out after the season? It just means he had a great year and believes he’ll be worth more than $30 million in next year’s open market. If he doesn’t opt out, it means he stunk.

The Giants are paying him just $15 million this season, a $17 million signing bonus on Jan. 15, 2026, and a

$30 million player option in 2025.

“The Giants got an absolute gift,” one rival executive told USA TODAY Sports.

Just like that, the Giants are a legitimate playoff contender again in the grueling National League West, with a starting rotation that could scare the daylights out of everyone.

“Obviously, we’d like to have had him right in the beginning of camp,” said Giants starter Alex Cobb, who played with Snell on the Tampa Bay Rays, “but the momentum that we’re going to have as a team going into opening day knowing that we’ve got a rotation that has the potential it has, is lifting everyone up. Hitters. The staff. Bullpen. Defense. Everyone’s just got a shot of adrenaline.”

They’ll open the season with the top two finishers in the 2023 NL Cy Young race in Snell and Logan Webb.

They’ll have the 2021 AL Cy Young winner, Robbie Ray, back this summer from Tommy John surgery. They’ll have Cobb, their 2023 All-Star recovering from hip surgery, back in late April,

They have one of the top left-handed prospects in baseball in Kyle Harrison.

And they have plenty of depth with Jordan Hicks, Mason Black, Carson WhiSCOTTSD­ALE,

senhunt, Landen Roupp and Kai-Wei Teng.

The Giants, along with just about everyone else in that clubhouse, were ecstatic with the news.

“The first thing that popped in my head was that I’m just very glad that I do not have to face him or don’t have to be put on the bench when he’s pitching,” Giants outfielder Mike Yastrzemsk­i said,

Indeed, Snell has a 5-1 record and 1.61 ERA against the Giants. He has been dominant against the rest of the NL West, too, going 5-1 with a 1.11 ERA against the Arizona Diamondbac­ks, 3-2 with a 3.60 against the Colorado Rockies, 2-2 with a 2.59 ERA against the Los Angeles Dodgers and 1-0 with a 1.80 ERA against the San Diego Padres.

“You look at our division, and there’s not too many guys that have had a ton of success,” Yastrzemsk­i said, “so to have somebody who has a clear track record of success is definitely helpful.”

The bar has now been raised in San Francisco.

“It obviously doesn’t guarantee anything,” Yastrzemsk­i said, “but it’s something that obviously we’re happy to see that the front office has been really making a push to make this team the best it can. It’s a great addition.”

Sure, the Giants are not as good as the Dodgers.

Probably not Atlanta or the Phillies either.

Yet they’ll take their chances going head-to-head with Arizona and San Diego to claim at least a wild-card berth.

You don’t dish out $415 million in free agency and trade obligation­s, sign manager Bob Melvin away from the Padres, and don’t expect to be playing in October.

Let’s see, they signed free agent center fielder Jung Hoo Lee for $113 million.

They signed designated hitter Jorge Soler for $42 million and Jordan Hicks for $44 million.

They traded for Ray from the Seattle Mariners, taking on $74 million in salary. Then they added Chapman and Snell. Gone are the openers, all the platoons, and a disgruntle­d clubhouse.

They’re exceeding the first luxury tax ($237 million in 2024) for the first time since 2017 and may even reach the next threshold of $257 million.

They also forfeited their second and third picks in the draft, along with $1 million in internatio­nal money, the first time they’ve given up multiple draft picks since 2005.

When you win three World Series in five years, and have now gone a decade without another, you get a little antsy.

“I’ll be honest with you,” Webb said, “I was excited about our team even before we got those guys. But obviously, when you add two talents like that, the excitement goes up. The rotation, I thought it was going to be fantastic, and then you add a two-time Cy Young Award winner, I think the sky’s the limit.”

Certainly, there are no guarantees with Snell. He went 13-3 with a 1.20 ERA in his last 23 starts, yielding a .156 batting average, but also opened the season with a 1-6 record and 5.40 ERA, becoming the first pitcher to win the Cy Young while leading the league in walks since 1959. But in his career he is averaging 11.1 strikeouts per nine innings and is yielding a .214 batting average, the second best among lefties to only Dodgers threetime Cy Young winner Clayton Kershaw (.209).

“If you look at his track record,” Melvin said, “there’s always a little bit of a slow start for him. But once you got deeper into the season, there were a lot of things out there for him. ERA crown. Cy Young. He was going to be a free agent. He was very motivated. It was truly remarkable to see.”

 ?? ORLANDO RAMIREZ/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Blake Snell won the Cy Young Award in each of the two seasons he’s topped 130 innings.
ORLANDO RAMIREZ/USA TODAY SPORTS Blake Snell won the Cy Young Award in each of the two seasons he’s topped 130 innings.
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