The San Diego Padres are walking a familiar tightrope: expensive, top-heavy, and barely clinging to a playoff spot, but all the while still too talented and too close to fold. With just over a week left until the July 31 trade deadline, the Padres sit a couple of games out of first in the NL West and hold the third and final NL Wild Card spot. Their run differential sits at a modest +16.
The reality right now is that this is a flawed team, sustained by elite bullpen performance and top-line star power, and pretty much exposed everywhere else due to a severe lack of depth.
Team Offense
Despite big-name bats, San Diego has just three players with double-digit home runs, and none with 20+. Fernando Tatis Jr. (16 HR, .262 AVG, 4.3 bWAR) and Manny Machado (18 HR, .826 OPS) have carried the offense. But overall depth has cratered.
Luis Arraez (hitting sub-.300 for the first time since 2021, .713 OPS), Xander Bogaerts (.727 OPS), and Jackson Merrill (.728 OPS) have lacked impact. Merrill, in particular, has seen his OPS hover around .600 since June.
Against right-handed pitching, the Padres rank 28th in slugging percentage, ahead of only the Pirates and White Sox. That makes a left-handed (or righty who mashes righties) outfielder their most glaring need.
Team Pitching + Defense
The bullpen has saved San Diego’s season to this point, but the rotation, weakened by injuries, remains just average. The defense has been middling overall, despite stellar play from Tatis in right field.
Jarren Duran (Red Sox)
Cedric Mullins (Orioles)
Wilyer Abreu (Red Sox)
Marcell Ozuna (Braves)
Adolis García (Rangers)
Ramon Laureano (Orioles)
San Diego’s catching duo (Maldonado and Díaz) has combined for sub-.200 averages and OPS marks below .580. It’s a defensive-first tandem, but the offensive hole is widening.
Danny Jansen (Rays)
Travis d’Arnaud (Angels)
Dream Targets (Unlikely)
Even with King returning, rotation insurance is needed.
Mitch Keller (Pirates)
Adrian Houser (White Sox)
Trevor Rogers (Orioles)
With a shaky offense, thin rotation, and stars underperforming, the Padres don’t look like a powerhouse, but they’re still in the race. And that means A.J. Preller is likely to push in chips once again.
The question is how aggressive Preller will be, and whether the thin trade market will let him fill the many holes on this expensive, enigmatic roster.
If history is any indication, expect San Diego to make noise. And if they hit on the right bat or arm, the Padres could go from barely in… to all the way in.
More must-reads:
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!