As of Tuesday (Korea time), San Francisco has been sluggish in the fourth place among the five teams in the West Division of the National League with 49 wins and 55 losses and a 0.471 win rate this season. The team has been lagging far behind the top-ranked LA Dodgers in 13 games. As a result, it is almost impossible to advance to the postseason by winning the district championship.
Even in the wild card race, San Francisco lags behind the top three teams that can advance to the post season by 5.5 games. The online statistics website FanGraphs even predicted that San Francisco’s possibility for fall baseball is very low at 11.3 percent.
The Major League website (MLB.com ) diagnosed on the 27th (Korea Standard Time), “San Francisco, which has become difficult to advance to the postseason with 49 wins and 55 losses in the season, has become a seller in the Major League trade market, and there are quite a few popular candidates on their roster.”
The media first mentioned the name of left-handed pitcher Blake Snell (32).
Up until three weeks ago, Snell was almost impossible to trade. Despite winning the Cy Young Award given to the best pitcher in the National League last year, Snell showed extremely poor performance with an ERA of 9.51 in the first six games he started this season. Things have changed, however, since he returned from injury.
Snell has been playing like a Cy Young Award winner since returning from injury on October 10. In his last three starts, Snell has allowed only six hits while pitching a total of 18 innings, displaying a good ERA of 1.00. “Snell’s recent good pitching has rapidly started to discuss his name in the trade market,” the media reported.
San Francisco plans to sell outfielder Michael Confoto (31), bullpen pitcher Taylor Rogers (34), and starting pitcher Alex Cobb (37) in addition to Snell, according to the media. Matt Chapman (31), a third baseman who was recruited ahead of this season, is also known to be subject to disposal.토토사이트 순위
Chapman signed a three-year, 54 million-dollar contract with the San Francisco Giants ahead of the last spring camp. As of Tuesday, however, he has played in a total of 101 games this season, posting a batting average of 0.234 and 14 homers and 45 RBIs, which are not meeting expectations. His OPS, which combines on-base plus slugging percentage, also stands at only 0.738.
“Chapman’s overall performance this season is not good, but he has recorded an OPS of 0.886 with six home runs in his last 26 games,” the media said, predicting that he will have a bite in the trade market.