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Trade grades for Guardians-Giants Patrick Bailey deal
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The drowning San Francisco Giants (15-23) are reaching for a life raft, as they try to turn the tides and save their sinking season. Three-time World Series champion and current president of baseball operations Buster Posey acknowledged the dire situation on Saturday, as illustrated by his decision to trade away catcher and former first-round draft pick Patrick Bailey.

The Cleveland Guardians (21-19), who currently lead the American League Central, are hoping to capitalize on the Giants’ desperation. They sent the No. 29 selection in the upcoming MLB Draft (can be moved because it is a competitive balance pick) along with left-handed pitcher Matt “Tugboat” Wilkinson to San Francisco in exchange for a two-time Gold Glove Award winner who is still not even 27 years old.

Although the Giants and Guardians are both risking plenty with this deal, especially since it is only may, they obviously believe that a crucial opportunity presented itself. We will have to wait a bit before finding out who truly wins the trade, but premature speculation and predictions have never hurt anyone before, right?

We are going to scan the evidence in front of us and hand out grades to the Giants and Guardians for this early-season swap. It’s report card time!

Did the Guardians give up too much?

Cleveland had enough of Bo Naylor, who was promptly optioned to Triple-A Columbus after this trade, and management clearly feels Austin Hedges is a short-term option. Therefore, president of baseball operations Chris Antonetti prioritized a younger, defensively-elite catcher who is still under team control for a few more years.

Whenever the Guards acquire talent, the natural inclination is generally to give the front office the benefit of the doubt. In this instance, it is especially easy to see why this specific organization would value Patrick Bailey. His skill set nicely fits with Cleveland’s identity.

Jose Ramirez is a future Hall of Famer and one of the franchise’s greatest players ever, but the Guardians are a pitching-first ballclub. Much of their recent success has been tied to this philosophy, which is complemented by scrappy at-bats, deft base-running and dependable defense. Two-time reigning American League Manager of the Year Stephen Vogt has received inconsistent production from his hurlers in the early portion of the 2026 season, however.


Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

Cleveland ranks 17th in MLB with a 4.01 ERA. Although Bailey’s best ability is arguably his unmatched framing, the hope is that he can get the best out of his new pitching staff. He boosted the Giants’ starting rotation and should be equipped to seamlessly transition to the Guardians. While it is true that he is a liability offensively — .611 OPS and .224 batting average in 383 games — Bailey might have a better chance of hiding in Vogt’s small-ball lineup.

Though, one has to wonder if Antonetti is taking a gamble by once again downplaying the importance of hitting at the catcher position. This team’s biggest issue is insufficient firepower. Hedges already brings fundamental soundness behind home plate, and rising prospect Cooper Ingle is raking in Columbus. The Bailey move could complicate things.

Matt Wilkinson is also an interesting talent, and an unknown late first-rounder could possibly become a difference-maker. Cleveland is lauded for its development and could have theoretically molded that No. 29 pick into another valuable asset. However, it is that exact quality that should have fans feeling optimistic about Bailey.

The former NC State star is currently tied for fourth in fielding run value, according to Baseball Savant. If he can just slightly improve in the batter’s box, then Chris Antonetti will be labeled a thief.

I have questions about how the Guards handle their long-term catcher situation, and there is no denying his offensive shortcomings, but I also believe Patrick Bailey increases Cleveland’s playoff odds in 2026. Moreover, it just feels like he belongs on this club.

Guardians Grade: B

Giants needed to shake things up


Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

Bailey, the No. 13 overall selection in the 2020 MLB Draft, had been one of the most important members of the San Francisco Giants. His nifty glove work and stellar pop time (currently ranks second at 1.86) brought vital stability to the pitching staff, but there is no place in the lineup for another ice-cold bat. Besides notching an exhilarating walk-off home run on occasion, the North Carolina native provided very little at the dish.

He is slashing .146/.213/.183/.296 through 89 plate appearances this season. Although the rotation could regress without him, it is painfully obvious that roster changes are urgently required. Buster Posey knows the kind of impact that a steady catcher can have on a franchise, but he also knows the kind of impact that an offensively-threatening catcher can have on a franchise.

If the Giants great is comfortable with losing Bailey, perhaps fans should trust his judgment.

Furthermore, both Jesus Rodriguez and Daniel Susac have flashed promise in small sample sizes. The former is 5-for-11 with one homer and two RBIs, and the latter posted two doubles, a triple, five RBIs and a 1.151 OPS before landing on the injured list with right elbow neuritis. Why not have a little faith in these two 24-year-olds?

The Giants also get the No. 29 pick and a seemingly capable arm in Matt Wilkinson. The man they call Tugboat has a 1.59 ERA and 36 strikeouts in 28 1/3 innings pitched in Double-A Akron. The southpaw is 23 years old and has yet to arrive in Triple-A, so his ceiling might be limited. That being said, he could contribute in the near future.

San Francisco is giving up a premium defensive catcher for a mystery box, but if MLB fully commits to the Automated-Ball-Strike Challenge System, Bailey’s value could decrease. Posey is looking ahead while trying to light a spark in the present. There have been questionable decisions aplenty, but I do not think this is one of them.

Giants Grade: B+

This article first appeared on MLB on ClutchPoints and was syndicated with permission.

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