The San Francisco Giants have been bitten by the injury bug all season long, most recently placing shortstop Marco Luciano on the injured list. However, as they try to climb up the Wild Card standings, help is on the way in the form of three players who have begun rehab assignments.
The San Francisco Giants, who have been bitten by the injury bug all season, have yet another player hitting the injured list. The team placed their rookie shortstop, Marco Luciano, on the injured list on Friday with a hamstring strain.
Lately, the San Francisco Giants’ work in the minor-league system has been paying off. Two of their Top 100 prospects are contributing at the Major League level this year — pitcher Kyle Harrison and shortstop Marco Luciano.
The Giants placed starter Keaton Winn on the 15-day injured list, retroactive to May 15, due to a forearm strain. San Francisco also optioned infielder Casey Schmitt to Triple-A Sacramento.
Hey, 2 is more than 1. Thanks to Andrew Baggarly & co., we have news of the latest churn transactions by the San Francisco Giants and it’s an interesting pair of trades!
Yesterday’s action on the Giants farm. The San Francisco Giants have an off day today, which seems like a good time to talk about their four Minor League Baseball affiliates, who were all in action on Wednesday.
Things are getting interesting. There’s no need for me to rush into the meat and potatoes of this article, because the headline makes it pretty clear what we’re here to talk about.
The new frontrunner spent the past 10 seasons in Arizona as a regular fixture at shortstop, earning back-to-back Gold Glove awards for his superlative defense in 2018 and 2019.
The SF Giants released an update on several injured players at the start of the week on Monday. The vast majority of the players listed are continuing to rehab previously disclosed injuries.
After a disappointing 79-83 finish in 2023, the San Francisco Giants enter 2024 looking to make only their second postseason appearance since 2017.
The current regime is counting on the last regime to save its bacon. Sustainable? Please note: this post is about position player prospects. Position players.
As the SF Giants round the corner toward the final stretch of the offseason, president of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi has consistently said the team hopes acquiring some shortstop depth.
Please, Marco, please. The minor leagues are less about season long averages and more about potential. What can you do? And how can an organization make that possibility a consistent reality?
Last season was a failure for the San Francisco Giants. There are no two ways around it. The Giants looked to be in great shape for a postseason berth, then completely fell apart and missed out.
With longtime shortstop Brandon Crawford’s contract having run its course, the Giants will be looking at a new starting shortstop in 2024 for the first time in over a decade.
During his final press conference of the season, SF Giants president of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi was asked about the team's plans at shortstop this offseason.
The SF Giants brought up youngsters Marco Luciano and Tyler Fitzgerald for a last-gasp series with the Los Angeles Dodgers. Unfortunately, it couldn't stop the trend of bad fielding and weak hitting that have derailed the Giants' underpowered stretch drive, and the Dodgers triumphed 7-2.
The SF Giants recalled shortstop Marco Luciano (Giants Top 4 Prospect), shortstop Tyler Fitzgerald (Giants Top 13 Prospect), and right-handed pitcher Tristan Beck from Triple-A Sacramento on Thursday.
Plus, Kyle Harrison will start on Thursday. Wednesday was a very bad day for the San Francisco Giants. A very, very bad day. A lopsided loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks gave them five losses in their last six games, pushed them into “almost need to win out” territory, and saw them squander their tiebreaker with the Diamondbacks.
With injuries and lack of offensive production leaving a void on the roster, it was yet another burst of energy supplied by a young player when the SF Giants decided to promote their top position player prospect, Marco Luciano, on July 27.
One of the San Francisco Giants key strengths this year has been the ability to get strong performances from their prospects. They know how to call up the right player at the right time.
The San Francisco Giants are hoping that top infield prospect Marco Luciano can provide a little spark for their offense while their regulars heal from injury concerns.
The San Francisco Giants promoted top prospect Marco Luciano from Triple-A Sacramento on Wednesday. The 21-year-old shortstop is No. 15 in the MLB Pipeline rankings and No.
The Giants are planning promote top infield prospect Marco Luciano prior to Wednesday’s game against the A’s, per Alex Pavlovic of NBC Sports Bay Area.
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