SF Giants’ top prospect Bryce Eldridge talks trade rumors, wrist rehab Today Us News



SAN JOSE — Bryce Eldridge hasn’t been oblivious to the rumors.

The Giants’ top prospect has been the subject of trade chatter all offseason, discussed as the possible centerpiece of a deal for starting pitching. Those talks, though, appear to have quelled following the additions of Adrian Houser and Tyler Mahle. Now donning the No. 8 in honor of hockey legend Alexander Ovechkin, Eldridge is still donning the orange and black.

He hopes to continue doing so for years to come.

“It’s definitely a first,” Eldridge said on Saturday afternoon before the first leg of the Giants’ FanFest Tour. “I try not to get too wrapped up in anything going on. I think when you get to a point in the offseason, people need stuff to talk about whether they know what’s true and what’s not.

“I don’t know how far those talks got, but I want to be here. I want to play for this team and I don’t plan on leaving here anytime soon. I hope they don’t plan on making me leave anytime soon. I want to be here for a long time.”

The 21-year-old’s primary concern this winter hasn’t been the trade talk, but recovering from left wrist surgery.

Eldridge sustained the injury during spring training, which caused him to miss the start of the minor-league season. He received a cortisone shot and grinded through the ailment, performing well for Double-A Richmond and Triple-A Sacramento before being called up for the stretch run.

“Some days were better than others,” Eldridge said. “It was definitely mentally challenging knowing I had to go up there and I didn’t feel 100 percent for most of the year, but it gives me confidence knowing what I was able to do when I wasn’t feeling my best.”

Eldridge said he is in the last week of his rehab and described himself now as “full go.” He began his hitting progression in December and will soon hit off a Trajekt Arc machine, which can replicate major-league pitchers.

Come February, Eldridge will attempt to earn a spot on the Opening Day roster for the first time in his career. With only 10 major-league games under his belt, Eldridge isn’t guaranteed to break camp with San Francisco despite some impressive at-bats during his cup of coffee.

Spring training will also provide the Giants with an extended opportunity to figure out the pairing of Eldridge and Rafael Devers.

Devers and Eldridge are an imperfect pairing defensively given they’re both left-handed hitting first basemen, and the Giants will have to determine their breakdown of playing time at first base and DH. Offensively speaking, they have the potential to anchor San Francisco’s lineup for years.

“Obviously, nothing’s guaranteed,” Eldridge said. “I want to make an impact and start the year with the team, whatever role they want me in. Mixing time with Devers, I think me and him could be a very dangerous duo in the middle of the lineup for a long time.”

Infielder Casey Schmitt has, in some ways, had a similar offseason to Eldridge. Like Eldridge, Schmitt also underwent left wrist surgery after playing through pain last season. Like Eldridge, Schmitt’s future has been a bit ambiguous.

The Giants are reportedly interested in the St. Louis Cardinals’ Brendan Donovan and the Chicago Cubs’ Nico Hoerner to boost their production at second base. Donovan is a versatile one-time All-Star with a career .772 OPS, while Hoerner is a two-time Gold Glover coming off the best season of his career.

Schmitt, who turns 27 before Opening Day, emerged as the Giants’ starting second baseman following Tyler Fitzgerald’s extended struggles. Despite the lingering effects of being plunked by a fastball in June, he still totaled career-highs in home runs (12) and RBIs (40) with a .706 OPS over 95 games.


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