Photo by Suzanna Mitchell/San Francisco Giants/Getty Images
Saturday and Sunday’s action on the farm.
It was a busy weekend for the
San Francisco Giants. While their Major League club was celebrating Brandon Crawford and winning games on walk-off little league home runs, their Minor League Baseball affiliates were all chugging away at their seasons.
Here’s all the action from a fun weekend on the farm. And it’s the last weekend for a while with only four Minor League teams playing, as the Arizona Complex League season gets started on Saturday!
Link to the 2025 McCovey Chronicles Community Prospect List (CPL)
All listed positions in the roundup are the positions played in that particular game.
News
An award to hand out! Low-A San Jose outfielder Lisbel Diaz (No. 17 CPL) was named the Player of the Week in the California League after an absolutely blistering week in the batter’s box. Congrats, Lisbel!
The Giants transaction tracker makes no mention of this, but High-A Eugene RHP Josh Bostick (No. 27 CPL) appeared on the Injured List this weekend. Hopefully he’s OK.
AAA Sacramento (14-13)
Saturday: Sacramento River Cats beat the El Paso Chihuahuas (Padres) 4-2 (10 innings) [box score]
Sunday: Sacramento River Cats beat the El Paso Chihuahuas 7-2 [box score]
A lot of fun performances for the River Cats over the weekend. Most encouraging and exciting, to my eye, was the continued hot streak coming from the bat of left fielder Marco Luciano.
It was a delightful weekend for Luciano, the former top prospect who, it bears noting, is still just 23 years old. He hit 2-7 over the weekend, smacked an absolute mammoth of a home run, drew 2 walks, was hit by a pitch, and struck out twice.
After his slow start to the season, Luciano is starting to put things together in a big way. Over his last 13 games, the righty has gone 15-49 with 2 home runs, 5 doubles, and 11 walks, though he also has 17 strikeouts. As was the case even when Luciano was struggling in the early going, the most encouraging thing has been that he’s hitting the ball very hard again — that was what propped up his prospect status for so many years, but it mysteriously disappeared last year, both in the Majors and Minors.
Luciano’s home run was hit at 113 mph ... for context, the hardest hit ball in play by any Giant in the Majors this year was just 111.6 mph (which came, surprisingly, off the bat of Luis Matos). His home runs have been jaw-droppers, and a huge amount of the balls he puts in play — both outs and hits — have left the bat at high velocities. He’s now up to a .755 OPS and a 107 wRC+ on the year, though that number is propped up a bit by the 15.7% walk rate that, while encouraging, isn’t going to be sustainable at the next level.
If Luciano keeps this up, he’ll end up in a similar position to his current teammate and fellow former top prospect, LHP Kyle Harrison. Which is to say, he’ll work his way into the mix with no clear way of actually getting Major League time.
Unlike with pitchers, the Giants can’t exactly count on injuries piling up in the outfield (though they probably will, at some point). So if Luciano forces the issue, where does he go? Matos is struggling mightily as the fourth outfielder, but he’s been serving as the backup center fielder and the platoon right fielder, so it wouldn’t be easy to swap him out for Luciano, a learning-on-the-fly outfielder who has only played in left. He could, potentially, take David Villar’s spot and serve a designated hitter against lefties while Wilmer Flores plays first base, but I doubt the Giants want to use him in such a small role when he could be playing everyday in Sacramento ... especially since Casey Schmitt and Jerar Encarnación should both return in May.
The answer, then, is that Luciano will probably stay in Sacramento until the door opens ... but I’m enjoying watching him try to force it open, and hopefully that continues.
He wasn’t the only player with a nice offensive weekend. The biggest highlight belonged to catcher Brett Auerbach, who hit 2-8 with a walk, a strikeout, and a go-ahead 10th-inning home run on Saturday. What a moment!
Auerbach is quietly having a sensational season after hitting shockingly well with Sacramento last year when promoted quickly due to roster needs. With Villar in San Francisco, Auerbach has held off Luciano for the title of best bat in Sacramento, as the 2020 undrafted utility player is sporting a .784 OPS and a 112 wRC+. I’m not entirely sure what his path to the Majors is, but he’s certainly making a compelling case and, at the very least, he seems destined for a cup of coffee at some point.
It’s also noteworthy that Auerbach caught both games. While originally drafted as a catcher, the right-handed hitter has turned into more of a utility player who can be the emergency catcher ... he’s spent time at second base, third base, left field, and right field this year, but these were his 1st 2 games of the year behind the dish. I would assume that means that Logan Porter and Max Stassi were a little banged up, as neither played over the weekend.
Second baseman/third baseman Osleivis Basabe continued his nice season. After going 0-4 on Saturday, the 24-year old went 2-4 with a walk and a home run on Sunday, bumping his OPS to .726 and his wRC+ to 91. Those aren’t bad numbers for a glove-first infielder, but it’s still hard to see how Basabe works his way onto the active roster given that he’s been passed by Christian Koss (though it’s certainly worth noting that Basabe is on the 40-man roster still).
Rounding out the dinger party was right fielder Victor Bericoto (No. 24 CPL), who smacked the 1st dinger of his AAA career. It wasn’t a cheapie, either, as he took on dead center.
Bericoto has been having one hell of a resurgent year after his mediocre 2024, and recently got a well-deserved promotion when Villar was called up to the Majors. The righty went 3-9 over the weekend, with an outfield assist to complement that 2-run homer, though he was also caught stealing and struck out 4 times. Still, he looks comfortable in AAA, and I wouldn’t rule out seeing him in San Francisco at some point this year.
Unfortunately, the tough year continued for center fielder Grant McCray, who hit just 1-9 with a double, a walk, and 4 strikeouts over the weekend. McCray remains an impressive player who will be an everyday player in San Francisco should anything happen to Jung Hoo Lee (god forbid), but he’s not exactly burning down Sacramento this year, as he has just a .624 OPS and a 70 wRC+ (though his 26.2% strikeout rate is an encouraging step in the right direction). Oddly, McCray’s power has completely dried up this year, despite playing in the Pacific Coast League: after having a .201 isolated slugging percentage in the Minors last year (between AA and AAA), and a .177 mark in his MLB debut, he’s sitting at just .071 this season. His double on Sunday was just his 6th extra-base hit (5 of which have been doubles) in 126 plate appearances.
Equally strange is that McCray, one of the fastest players in all of professional baseball, continues to see his stolen bases shrink. In 2023, the speedy lefty swiped 52 bags in High-A, good for 0.41 per game. Last year, across AA, AAA, and the Majors, he had just 19 stolen bases, or just 0.14 per game. That’s about where he is this year, as his 5 thefts have resulted in 0.19 per game. Let the speed play, Grant!
Good, if not great pitching performances by the starters. On Saturday it was RHP Trevor McDonald (No. 15 CPL), who seems to be a forgotten player compared to the former top prospects like Harrison and Mason Black, the current top pitching prospect in Carson Whisenhunt, and the shiny new toys on the 40-man roster in Carson Seymour and Carson Ragsdale.
But McDonald is still one of the best prospects in the system, and is on the 40-man roster. Saturday was a reminder of what he can do, and what he needs to work on. He showed how hard he is to hit, as he gave up just 3 knocks in 4.2 shutout innings, while striking out 5 batters. But he also showed the control issues that have plagued his year, throwing just 40 of 84 pitches for strikes (a dismal rate), while walking 4 batters. McDonald’s ERA is just 3.84 this year (great for the PCL), but his FIP sits at 5.03, largely because he’s now walked 12 batters in just 22.1 innings.
On Sunday it was Seymour (No. 21 CPL), who has been arguably the biggest star in Sacramento this year. The powerful righty rebounded from his worst outing of the year to throw 5 strong innings, though he wasn’t at his sharpest, as he gave up nearly 2 baserunners per inning, ceding 7 hits, 1 walk, and 1 hit batter, though limiting the damage to just 2 runs, while striking out 4. Seymour is still having an excellent year — he has a 1.93 ERA and a 3.46 FIP, numbers that rank 1st and 3rd, respectively, out of 31 PCL pitchers with at least 20 innings thrown this year. But he definitely hasn’t been as sharp his last 2 times out, as you can see by the splits:
First 4 starts: 18 innings, 10 hits, 5 walks, 2 runs, 22 strikeouts
Last 2 starts: 10 innings, 11 hits, 6 walks, 4 runs, 8 strikeouts
Perhaps I’m getting too granular!
With RHP Lou Trivino struggling in San Francisco, you’ve got to think the door might open for RHPs Tristan Beck or Sean Hjelle to rejoin the Major League bullpen. Both are having spectacular seasons, but neither had a good weekend. Deuces were mostly wild for Beck on Saturday, as he pitched 2 innings and gave up 2 hits, 2 walks, and 2 runs, but had 0 strikeouts (1 of his walks was also intentional). Hjelle was able to keep the runs off the board with a scoreless outing on Sunday, but gave up a hit and 2 walks in 2 innings, with 2 strikeouts. Beck now has a 2.40 ERA and a 2.98 FIP, while Hjelle is sporting a 1.17 ERA and a 2.67 FIP.
AA Richmond (5-16)
Saturday Game 1: Richmond Flying Squirrels beat the Akron RubberDucks (Guardians) 4-1 (7 innings) [box score]
Saturday Game 2: Richmond Flying Squirrels lost to the Akron RubberDucks 2-1 (9 innings) [box score]
Sunday: Richmond Flying Squirrels lost to the Akron RubberDucks 16-7 [box score]
I like to think that the Squirrels and Ducks are just baseball purists who don’t like the 7-inning doubleheaders that Minor League Baseball uses (and the Majors used in 2020). After playing a 7-inning game on Saturday, they manually eschewed it for the back half of the doubleheader, going scoreless through the scheduled 7 innings and the “extra” 8th inning, before finally handling the scoring in the 9th inning, for a 9-inning “extra innings” loss. Traditional!
Not a lot doing for Richmond, though, as has been the case all year, really. The best news was that first baseman/designated hitter Bryce Eldridge (No. 1 CPL) played in all 3 games. After making his highly-anticipated season debut on Tuesday, Eldridge was mysteriously absent for the next 2 Squirrels games, before appearing on the lineup card for Friday’s game that ended up postponed.
Thankfully it wasn’t an aggravation of his wrist injury, as NBC Sports Bay Area’s Alex Pavlovic noted on Monday’s
Giants Talk podcast that Eldridge had just been a little under the weather.
Unfortunately, Eldridge’s season is mirroring his Spring Training: a very early, very impressive home run, followed by a whole bunch of struggles. He had just 1 hit over the 3-game weekend (a single) and, since homering in his 1st at-bat of the year, has gone just 1-12 with 2 walks and 6 strikeouts. Is that cause for concern? Hell no! But it is cause for writing a little blurb in this here article.
A nice weekend for a pair of hitters who are off to nice starts this year: left fielder/right fielder Jairo Pomares (No. 41 CPL) and second baseman Diego Velasquez (No. 16 CPL). Pomares, a lefty slugger looking to regain his prospect status, hit 3-11 over the weekend with a go-ahead 3-run home run in the team’s only win. He added a walk and his 1st 2 stolen bases of the year, while striking out twice.
Pomares, who is 24, is sporting a nearly identical batting average and slugging percentage to his half-season Richmond debut last year, but he’s lowered his strikeout rate while nearly tripling his walk rate. As such, he’s seen his OPS jump from .714 to .744, and his wRC+ from 104 to 117.
Velasquez, a 21-year old switch-hitter who is nearly 3 years younger than the average Eastern League position player, hit 5-11 with 2 doubles, a walk, and a strikeout.
Velasquez doesn’t have the frame to ever be a power hitter but, with every passing game, it seems more and more likely that he can be a good enough contact hitter, and control the strike zone well enough, to still be an offensive threat, especially given his position. Despite a middle-of-the-pack BABIP (.328), Velasquez is rocking a .301 batting average, which is 12th among 92 Eastern League hitters with at least 50 plate appearances this year. Relatedly, his 9.4% strikeout rate is 3rd lowest out of those 92 hitters. It’s a .775 OPS, a 133 wRC+, and a whole lot of reason for optimism and excitement for Velasquez this year.
Quick check in on a pair of players I haven’t talked about much this year: center fielder/left fielder Vaun Brown hit 2-7 with 3 strikeouts, a stolen base, a caught stealing, and an error, while shortstop Aeverson Arteaga (No. 12 CPL) went 0-6 with 3 walks and 4 strikeouts. Brown is not as broken as last year, but it’s still a pretty grim scene for someone who exploded onto prospect lists a few years ago. He has a .522 OPS and a 57 wRC+ and, while his strikeout rate is significantly better than in 2024, it’s still a close-your-eyes-when-looking 37.1%. The power is seemingly all gone for the exciting athlete ... just 3 years after hitting 23 home runs (and 54 total extra-base hits), Brown has just a double to his name in the extra-base category this season ... though he only has 35 plate appearances, as the Giants are still protecting him against righties a decent amount. Given that Brown turns 27 in 2 months, you’ve got to think his final games with the organization are in danger of coming this year. Arteaga has been even worse, with a dismal .468 OPS and a 41 wRC+. But since he missed pretty much the entirety of 2024, a lot of rust is to be expected. And he only just turned 22, making him nearly 2 years younger than his peers at the level.
I don’t know how I wrote that many words about position players after starting with “not a lot doing.” Sorry about that, y’all.
We can speed through the pitching, though, as there wasn’t much there either. LHP Seth Lonsway started the 2nd game of the doubleheader and was the star of the weekend amongst Richmond’s arms, as he tossed 5.2 shutout innings, giving up just a single, a walk, and a hit batter, while striking out 3. Lonsway was the team’s 6th-round pick in 2021, and he’s been fantastic in Richmond. He earned a midseason promotion there last year, and sported a 1.38 ERA and a 3.59 FIP in 6 games. He’s picked up where he left off, beginning this year with a 2.18 ERA and a 3.39 FIP through 4 starts. He’s been an old school, Logan Webb-esque arm this year, with just 5 walks in 20.2 innings, and a fantastic 60.0% groundball rate. Sacramento’s overflowing rotation will probably keep Lonsway from getting promoted anytime soon but, then again, he’s only made 10 appearance for the Squirrels. Some extra seasoning won’t hurt.
Relieving Lonsway was RHP Trent Harris (No. 20 CPL), who continued his dominant campaign, giving up just a single in 1.1 shutout innings, though he didn’t have any strikeouts. Harris has yet to allow a run this year, and has ceded just 4 baserunners in 7.2 innings, while striking out 9. Speaking of great relief outings, RHP Nick Garcia pitched 2 perfect frames in Game 1 of the doubleheader, and struck out 3 batters to boot. I’ll be curious to see what the Giants do with Garcia, whom they took in the Minor League phase of the Rule 5 draft before last season. He was dominant in AA last year but got destroyed in AAA. He’s off to a good start with Richmond this season, but the Giants might be hesitant to send him back to Sacramento.
Sunday was a tire fire on the mound, and I’m going to run through it just for a little comedic relief: LHP Joe Whitman (No. 9 CPL) gave up 5 baserunners and 4 runs in 2.2 innings; RHP Will Bednar (No. 42) allowed 4 baserunners and 3 runs in 0.2 innings; RHP Michael Stryffeler ceded 5 baserunners and 3 runs in 1 inning; RHP Dylan Cumming got rocked for 5 baserunners and 3 runs in 0.2 innings; and RHP Nick Morreale also surrendered 5 baserunners and 3 runs, albeit in 1.2 innings. Props to RHP Cameron Cotter, who saw all that transpire and then retired all 4 baserunners he saw, with 2 strikeouts.
High-A Eugene (11-10)
Saturday: Eugene Emeralds beat Spokane (Rockies) 6-3 (10 innings) [box score]
Sunday: Eugene Emeralds lost to Spokane 9-6 [box score]
What a day for 10th innings. While Auerbach was hitting a go-ahead dinger in the 10th for Sacramento on Saturday, third baseman/second baseman Thomas Gavello was doing something similar for Eugene, bopping a 2-run 10th-inning shot for some insurance after the Emeralds scored the Manfred Man. Delightful!
The nice thing about home runs — especially ones in extra-innings — is that they make a whole weekend good. So Gavello can look back on the weekend fondly, even though he hit 0-8 with 7 strikeouts in his other at-bats. It only takes 1 swing, folks!
While that was Gavello’s 2nd big fly of the year, a pair of his teammates had their 1st blasts of the season. On Saturday it was second baseman Quinn McDaniel, who had a sensational game, hitting 2-3 with a game-tying 2-run home run, 2 walks, a stolen base, and a strikeout. What a game! McDaniel, the team’s 5th-round pick in 2023, isn’t having a great season, with a .701 OPS and a 102 wRC+. But he’s dramatically slashed his strikeout rate from last year, and it only takes a few games like this to get the numbers looking rosy. The 22-year old right-handed hitter, who is repeating the level, also has 8 stolen bases in 9 attempts. He got Sunday off, though given what he did on Saturday, he probably wanted to play.
It was the opposite for first baseman Guillermo Williamson, who sat on Saturday but on Sunday went 1-3 with a 9th-inning home run, a walk, and a strikeout. Williamson, who only just turned 21, has a whole bunch of power in his swing, though he hasn’t always been able to make it play. He has a .741 OPS and a 108 wRC+ in his debut High-A season. He’ll need to improve his contact skills (he has a .219 batting average and a 29.3% strikeout rate), but there are worse things than a young left-handed hitter with a powerful swing and a 19.5% walk rate, that’s for sure.
Consistent hitting for designated hitter/center fielder Bo Davidson (No. 11 CPL), who went 4-11 with a double and 2 strikeouts, though he was caught stealing. He continues to make his 2024 year look like no fluke. Center fielder/left fielder Jonah Cox (No. 26 CPL) hit 2-9 with a double, a strikeout, and an outfield assist, though he was also caught stealing, which is quite a rarity. Since joining the organization last year, Cox has 70 stolen bases and has been caught just 11 times.
Speaking of stolen bases, shortstop Zane Zielinski hit 2-8 with a walk and 2 strikeouts, and stole a base. Zielinski, the team’s 9th-round pick a year ago, didn’t make his professional debut until halfway through the month, but already has 8 stolen bases in just 15 games, and has yet to be caught. He also has a .720 OPS and a 110 wRC+!
Not very good pitching for Eugene. Sunday’s game wasn’t quite the tire fire that Richmond’s game was, but it sure wasn’t good, either. It was a bullpen game, with 7 pitchers combining to give up 7 hits, 10 walks, and 9 runs in just 8 innings, and no need to dwell on it further.
Saturday featured a not very good start by RHP Cale Lansville, but the bullpen was spectacular, with RHPs Brayan Palencia and Ian Villers each handling 3 shutout innings. Palencia, a 22-year old in his 1st year at High-A, needed just 34 pitches for his 3 innings, and threw 23 of them for strikes, giving up just 1 hit while striking out 2. Palencia, who has a 3.75 ERA and a 3.98 FIP, only has 9 strikeouts in 12 innings, but he’s issued just 2 walks. Villers, a 24-year old 8th-round pick from 2021, needed just 39 pitches for his 3 no-hit innings, giving up only a walk while striking out 4 batters. It’s mostly just good to see Villers healthy, but the results sure are delightful, too: he has a 0.75 ERA, a 2.31 FIP, and 14 strikeouts to 4 walks in 12 innings.
Low-A San Jose (13-8)
Saturday: San Jose Giants beat the Fresno Grizzlies (Rockies) 2-1 [box score]
Sunday: San Jose Giants beat the Fresno Grizzlies 8-6 (10 innings) [box score]
A delightful weekend to cap off a wonderful week for San Jose. They have a 4-game winning streak, and took their series against Fresno 5-1.
On Sunday, in something of a role reversal, the actual Giants were celebrating a walk-off little league home run, while the Baby Giants were celebrating an honest-to-goodness, clear-the-fence walk-off home run. It came courtesy of first baseman Zander Darby, who had a game that, I dare say, might have been even better than his name.
Darby, a local kid who was taken in the 12th round of July’s draft, only just returned from the Injured List. He missed nearly a month to start the season, before making his season debut on Wednesday. After sitting Thursday through Saturday, Darby returned on Sunday for just his 2nd game of the year.
He hit 3-4 with a home run, 2 doubles, a walk, and 2 stolen bases. Eugenio Suárez might be the only person on the planet who had a better baseball game this weekend. But hey, at least Darby’s team won!
It’s mostly just good to see Darby healthy and getting a chance to show off. And lord, did he show off! What an awesome game that he’ll surely remember for the rest of his life.
Shortstop Jose Ramos couldn’t match Darby (who could!) but was also a star on Sunday. After going 0-3 with a stolen base on Saturday, Ramos hit 2-3 with a double and a walk on Sunday. He’s still trying to get his numbers in line — and catch up to his hot start a year ago — but the 22-year old has a lot of intriguing tools.
Sunday’s game was hilarious, in a very Minor Leaguey way. The Baby Giants stole a whopping 7 bases, but allowed 6. They also committed 4 errors. Welcome to the Cal League, everyone!
The most exciting part of the stolen base parade was how much center fielder Dakota Jordan (No. 8 CPL) got involved in it. The reigning 4th-round pick hit 4-8 with a walk and a strikeout over the weekend, and stole 4 bases in as many attempts.
Jordan might be the best athlete in the system, but there were question marks about how it would play when he was drafted. He has McCray-esque speed, but in college was primarily a corner outfielder and was not a threat on the bases. The Giants were clear that they believe he can be more than that, and so far both the organization and the player are walking the walk. Jordan has played exclusively in center field (where he’s made numerous highlight plays), and already has 9 stolen bases (without being caught) in just 20 games. He had just 7 stolen bases in his entire college career, which spanned 107 games.
His athleticism is playing, and he’s showing great progress on his strikeouts (his 28.4% rate isn’t good, but it’s encouraging given that it’s lower than what it was last year in college). Funnily enough, the one thing that
wasn’t a question with Jordan — his power — is the one part of his game we haven’t really seen displayed yet, as he has just 1 home run and a fairly pedestrian .141 isolated slugging. But that will come, and it’s extremely exciting that he has an .813 OPS and a 122 wRC+ without the power, especially when you add the dynamism on the grass and the bases. My hot take is that Jordan will be a top-25 prospect in baseball at some point next year.
On the mound, it was a very exciting outing for LHP Jacob Bresnahan (No. 31 CPL). Since coming to the Giants in the Alex Cobb trade over the summer, Bresnahan has been the very definition of a player who has brilliant stuff that the results can’t get close to matching. But on Saturday that was not the case. The stuff was brilliant and so, too, were the results for the 19-year old southpaw. Bresnahan pitched 5 dominant innings, allowing just 1 baserunner — a single — while striking out exactly half of the 16 batters that he faced. Bresnahan lived in the strike zone, needing just 62 pitches to get through 5 innings, and throwing 45 pitches for strikes. A low pitch count and a high strikeout count ... it’s hard to do any better than that! That’s a sign of the potential that Bresnahan has, and why the Giants are so excited about him despite the bloated ERA.
Sunday’s starter was also a pitcher who is trying to get the results to match the stuff, though they didn’t this time out. RHP Gerelmi Maldonado (No. 36 CPL), who is probably best described as the Jordan Hicks of the Baby Giants, struggled to find the zone, throwing just 26 of 49 pitches for strikes, while giving up 2 hits and 2 walks in just 2.2 innings. His defense did him no favors though, as both of the runs he allowed were unearned. And despite struggling to find strikes, he did manage to K 3 batters. A whole lot of talent in that arm.
On Saturday, 25-year old RHP Darien Smith made his Minor League debut, with the undrafted free agent coming off the IL to pitch 2 innings, allowing 3 hits and an unearned run, with 1 strikeout. Welcome to the pros, Darien!
Well that seems like enough thousands of words for one day. But hey, it’s an off day.
Home run tracker
AAA Marco Luciano (4)
AAA Victor Bericoto (4 total, 1 in AAA)
AAA Brett Auerbach (3)
AAA Osleivis Basabe (3)
AA Jairo Pomares (4)
High-A Thomas Gavello (2)
High-A Quinn McDaniel (1)
High-A Guillermo Williamson (1)
Low-A Zander Darby (1)
Injury report
Here’s a look at all the prospects who are currently on the injury list on the farm. Always take this with a grain of salt, as MiLB bookkeeping is notoriously bad.
Sacramento
RHP Juan Mercedes —
Development List
LHP Enny Romero —
Restricted List
LHP Reggie Crawford (No. 10 CPL) —
60-Day IL
RHP R.J. Dabovich —
60-Day IL
LHP Juan Sánchez (No. 33 CPL) —
60-Day IL
LHP Ethan Small —
7-Day IL
RHP Cole Waites (No. 32 CPL) —
7-Day IL
RHP Keaton Winn —
7-Day IL
LHP Chris Wright —
7-Day IL
Richmond
2B Nate Furman —
60-Day IL
RHP Ryan Murphy —
60-Day IL
RHP Mat Olsen —
60-Day IL
CF Turner Hill —
7-Day IL
LHP Nick Zwack —
7-Day IL
Eugene
RHP Elijah Pleasants —
Development List
OF Alexander Suarez —
60-Day IL
RHP Josh Bostick (No. 27 CPL) —
7-Day IL
LHP Dylan Carmouche —
7-Day IL
LHP Hayden Wynja —
7-Day IL
San Jose
RHP Sam Bower —
60-Day IL
C Ty Hanchey —
60-Day IL
RHP Spencer Miles —
60-Day IL
SS Maui Ahuna (No. 23 CPL) —
7-Day IL
RHP Junior Flores —
7-Day IL
INF Jeremiah Jenkins —
7-Day IL
OF Jose Ortiz (No. 22 CPL) —
7-Day IL