Rookie Christian Koss hit a grand slam, Jung Hoo Lee and Willy Adames also went deep and the San Francisco Giants overcame a shaky start by unbeaten Robbie Ray to overtake the visiting Arizona Diamondbacks 10-6 on Tuesday night.
A big win deserves a bad pun. It’s impossible to draw up the blueprint for the perfect win for the moment. Impossible, yes, because you can’t script a baseball game (or at least you can’t expect it to follow the script; by all means, write away).
The San Francisco Giants have been one of the most pleasant surprises in baseball during the 2025 MLB regular season. Executives around the league have been impressed by their hot start and ability to keep pace in the daunting National League West.
The San Francisco Giants have jumped out to a strong 24-18 start to the 2025 season. It has been much better than anyone expected to this point, and some of their key players have not even lived up to their full potential yet.
Scheduled to join Burnham Square, the sixth-place finisher from the Kentucky Derby (G1), in the $400,000 Matt Winn Stakes (G3) June 8 at Churchill Downs is Coal Battle, 11th in the Derby.
The first six weeks of the MLB season have been full of surprising player performances. These 25 players stand out for their hot and surprising starts early in 2025.
The San Francisco Giants offense has been inconsistent at times thus far this season, but has done enough for them to keep within arm’s reach of the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres in the National League West race.
When the San Francisco Giants signed veteran righty Justin Verlander this past offseason, they did so in hopes that the future first ballot Hall of Famer would bring some stability and leadership to a young team on the rise.
The San Francisco Giants know that their level of success this season will be tied to how productive their offense can be. In the early going, it was center fielder Jung Hoo Lee playing at an incredibly high level alongside veteran outfielder Mike Yastrzemski and second baseman Tyler Fitzgerald, buoying the team’s success.
Shaking up the lineup did not have the desired effect for San Francisco Giants manager Bob Melvin, whose team has lost a season-high four straight games.
Both teams played their best... I don’t know if the San Francisco Giants are better than the Arizona Diamondbacks. Tonight’s 2-1 loss was sort of a noble defeat in that the Giants played as well as they could for the time being and Arizona did, too.
The San Francisco Giants have received some remarkable contributions from players in their lineup which has helped the team get off to an incredibly strong start.
The weekend action on the farm. After a hiatus of a few days, we’re back for another San Francisco Giants Minor League Baseball roundup, recapping all the action over a busy weekend.
New news to affirm old news about the Giants’ backed up backup catcher. We’re still in a transitional phase as beat writers shift social media platforms,
In 2024, Kyle Harrison was one of the most highly touted pitching prospects in all of baseball. He made the 2024 starting rotation for the San Francisco Giants as the 23rd-ranked prospect on the MiLB Top 100 Prospects list.
The Giants had a great April, but is May shaping up to be the defining month of the season? While working on the latest check-in with LaMonte Wade Jr.’s
The San Francisco Giants are off to a pretty good start this season. They are 24-17 and in third place in the very tough National League West division.
The Arizona Diamondbacks will face the Giants for the first time this season and will get acquainted with Justin Verlander in a new uniform when the National League West rivals begin a three-game series Monday night in San Francisco.
Willy Adames was a signing that marked the start of a new era in San Francisco. It took seven years and $182 million to get it done, but the Giants believed he would be a key piece, especially for a team in desperate need of a shortstop post-Brandon Crawford.
Giants right-hander Jordan Hicks made his eighth start of the season on Friday, posting six innings of three-run ball against the Twins. He struck out six while issuing zero walks in the quality effort, but even after that outing his season ERA sits at a lackluster 5.82.
Right-hander Logan Webb's 152nd career major-league start will be his first against Minnesota on Saturday when the San Francisco Giants seek to halt the Twins' seven-game home winning streak.
Robbie Ray is proving that patience pays off. The veteran left-hander has been nothing short of electric in his first full season back from Tommy John surgery, and on Wednesday afternoon, he joined elite company in San Francisco Giants history.
San Francisco Giants shortstop Willy Adames has floundered thus far, but Sunday's home game against the Colorado Rockies seemed like a prime opportunity to find his groove.