It was, as it usually is, a busy weekend for the San Francisco Giants Minor League Baseball affiliates. Let’s jump into all the action!
Sports
LTA Fantasy Is Here!
We are excited to launch the beta of the LTA Fantasy for the Americas! LTA Fantasy is a free manager-style game allowing fans to build teams of LTA Pro Players. Each week, fans can build rosters to score points based on the real world performance of pro players. Compete in shared leaderboards of your favorite […]

We are excited to launch the beta of the LTA Fantasy for the Americas!
LTA Fantasy is a free manager-style game allowing fans to build teams of LTA Pro Players. Each week, fans can build rosters to score points based on the real world performance of pro players. Compete in shared leaderboards of your favorite conference, team, streamers, friends and more!
The LTA Fantasy app also has information on schedule, stats and more to keep up to date with the ongoings of the LTA!
We are launching LTA Fantasy in Split 2 of the LTA as an open beta. We will be adding new features as we iterate, receive feedback from fans, and iron out any issues in this window.
HOW TO PLAY
Starting at 12 pm PDT April 2, fans can sign up using their Riot ID at LTAFantasy.com. Fans will create a team with a name, logo, and tricode. Each team starts with a budget of 50 gold to assign players to your roster each week. You earn points from your rosters’ real world performance in official LTA matches over the weekend.
You can pick pro players from any team in LTA North or South, so the more you know about the conferences, the more chances you have to earn points!
Each week, players’ values are adjusted based on that performance on the weekend. Your budget will increase or decrease based on the value of the players on your roster. Analyze stats, matchups, budgets and more each week to climb the leaderboards and earn the most points across the Split!
Rosters lock every Saturday at 9 am PDT before LTA games start. Final scores for the weekend are calculated on Mondays at 12 am PDT. You can check how your roster did each week in each of the leagues you are competing in. Rosters unlock every Tuesday at 8 am PDT for you to make any adjustments to your roster as needed based on the new values.
See the full rules here for the scoring breakdown.
LEADERBOARDS & LEAGUES
When you sign up initially, you will pick your favorite team. This will automatically enter you into the leaderboards for the LTA League, your Conference League, and that Team’s League.
However, you can enter as many leaderboards as you want. Join a friend’s league, make your own league to invite friends, join streamer leagues, and more! Each League has a leaderboard to see how you rank!
In beta, each account can only have one roster at a time that competes in all of your Leagues at once.
LTA FANTASY REWARDS
100 players with the most points at the end of Split 2 in each Conferences League will earn a skin*! The Top 100 in the North Conference League will earn Spirit Blossom Yasuo, while the Top 100 in the South Conference will earn Spirit Blossom Yone.
*Applies only in valid regions. Accounts competing in both Conference Leagues will receive only one reward based on which team you pick as your favorite team. The other will go to the next in line on the leaderboard. These will be rewarded 30 days after the conclusion of Split 2.
Sports
Wayzata Volleyball Excited for New Season
2:45 PM | Monday, August 11, 2025 Monday marked the opening day of practice for Fall high school sports teams, including volleyball. Wayzata returns several players who saw court time a year ago when the Trojans won 19 matches and reached the semifinals of the Section 5AAAA tournament. Senior Eva Swenson and juniors Kayla Nawrocki […]

2:45 PM
Monday, August 11, 2025Monday marked the opening day of practice for Fall high school sports teams, including volleyball.
Wayzata returns several players who saw court time a year ago when the Trojans won 19 matches and reached the semifinals of the Section 5AAAA tournament.
Senior Eva Swenson and juniors Kayla Nawrocki and Ellie Osowski were all-Lake conference players in 2024, and all have committed to Division One college programs.
The Trojans also have a handful of other players back who earned varsity court time a year ago too, so it should be another season in which the team competes for conference and section titles.
Wayzata opens the season August 25th at Rogers.
Volleyball
CCX News – Daily Sportscast
Sports
Aggies Add Two-Time Olympian Nikfar as Assistant Coach – Texas A&M Athletics
BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION – Texas A&M track & field head coach Pat Henry announced the addition of two-time Olympian Amin Nikfar to his staff as an assistant coach Monday. Nikfar will lead the Aggie throws group. “Coach [Amin] Nikfar brings a wealth of experience and knowledge of the throwing events to our program,” Henry said. […]

“Coach [Amin] Nikfar brings a wealth of experience and knowledge of the throwing events to our program,” Henry said. “I have known him and watched his athletes compete at a very high level for a number of years. I believe not only in his ability to coach, but his ability to communicate with his athletes and I know he will work well with our staff.”
Nikfar joins the Aggies from North Carolina after leading the Tar Heels throws group for the past six seasons. During his time in Chapel Hill, he guided his athletes to 14 All-America honors, highlighted by a runner-up finish from Tommy Kitchell in the shot put at the men’s 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships, and a pair of third-place finishes at the women’s outdoor nationals, courtesy of Madison Wiltrout in the javelin and Jill Shippee in the hammer throw, in 2022 and 2021, respectively. His groups also stood out on the conference level, securing nine individual ACC titles across the indoor and outdoor seasons.
“Texas A&M is a storied track & field program, and it is a great honor to join the work that is happening in Aggieland,” Nikfar said. “I’d like to thank Coach Henry, his staff and the athletic department for the opportunity to join the ranks. I feel fortunate to be able to uphold the high standards that have been set and contribute to the team.”
Prior to UNC, Nikfar served as an assistant coach at Stanford where he was named the 2019 USTFCCCA West Region’s Women’s Assistant Coach of the Year for his work with his four women’s NCAA Outdoor Championship competitors. He also spent time coaching at Southeastern Louisiana, the University of New Orleans, St. Francis High School and adds a pair of volunteer coaching roles at Northern Arizona and his alma mater, California.
Nikfar, a shot put standout, competed in the 2008 Beijing and 2012 London Olympic Games and appeared in two IAAF World Championships. He was a nine-time Iranian national champion and broke national records six times. He was the 2004 Asian Indoor Athletics champion, and his collegiate-best mark still ranks No. 8 on the Cal’s all-time list. His lifetime best of 65-9.5 (20.05 meters) from 2011 remains an Iranian national record.
Coach Henry also announced new roles within the current staff for the 2025-26 season, as Olivia Ekponé now takes on the role of assistant coach/recruiting coordinator, while assistant coach Joe Sarra will now also serve as the team’s director of operations.
To learn more about Texas A&M Track & Field/Cross Country, visit 12thMan.com and follow @aggietfxc.
Sports
2025 NSIC preseason volleyball poll released
Story Links BURNSVILLE, Minn. – The defending NSIC regular season and tournament champions of St. Cloud State were picked by the league coaches in the NSIC Preseason Volleyball Poll. The Huskies are coming off a 2024 season where they finished 29-3 overall and 18-0 in NSIC play, and advanced to the […]

BURNSVILLE, Minn. – The defending NSIC regular season and tournament champions of St. Cloud State were picked by the league coaches in the NSIC Preseason Volleyball Poll. The Huskies are coming off a 2024 season where they finished 29-3 overall and 18-0 in NSIC play, and advanced to the NCAA Regional Final. SCSU received eight first place votes to tally 212 points.
The University of Jamestown, playing their first season at the NCAA Division II level, was picked to finish 11th. Senior setter Lily Bertsch was chosen as the Jimmies’ preseason player to watch.
Concordia-St. Paul was picked second with 208 points and four first place votes while Southwest Minnesota State was third with 202 points and the other four first place votes.
The 2025 NSIC Volleyball season will begin with non-conference matches on Thursday, September 4 while the NSIC schedule begins September 19. The NSIC regular season champion will be determined by the 20-match conference schedule. The 2025 NSIC Volleyball Tournament shall be an eight-team tournament with the quarterfinals hosted at the top four seeds on Tuesday, November 18 and the semifinals/championship matches hosted at the highest remaining seed. The semifinals/championship matches will take place on two consecutive days between Friday and Sunday, November 21-23 with the dates of competition determined by the host institution.
“We will be the least experienced team that I have coached in my 17 years at the University of Jamestown,” said head coach Jon Hegerle, who enters his 17th season. “However, this team has a lot of energy and the players genuinely care about each other. Returning only four players from last year’s roster, we will have a number of new faces on the court. I am excited to see how our team, players, and coaches respond to the gauntlet that is NSIC volleyball!”
“Lily will be in her third year as a starting setter,” continued Hegerle. “She has a tremendous work ethic and is a student of the game. Lily is always looking for what her team and teammates need. Lily is competitive and doesn’t shy away from any challenge. She is also humble and empathetic which makes her a great leader.”
Bertsch played in 25 matches last season, averaging 6.05 assists and 1.96 digs per set.
The Jimmies open the regular season in Nashville, Tenn., at the Ray Thrasher Classic, hosted by Trevecca Nazarene University September 5-6.
2025 NSIC Volleyball Preseason Poll
1 | St. Cloud State (8) | 212 |
2 | Concordia-St. Paul (4) | 208 |
3 | Southwest Minnesota State (4) | 202 |
4 | Wayne State | 188 |
5 | Northern State | 170 |
6 | Sioux Falls | 133 |
7 | Winona State | 132 |
8 | Minnesota Duluth | 130 |
9 | Minnesota State | 123 |
10 | Augustana | 110 |
11 | Jamestown | 84 |
12 | MSU Moorhead | 77 |
13 | Bemidji State | 53 |
14 | University of Mary | 42 |
15 | Minnesota Crookston | 40 |
16 | Minot State | 16 |
Sports
Cream and Crimson Scrimmage Offers First Glance in 2025
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Fans will get their first taste of the 2025 roster when the Indiana volleyball team hosts its annual Cream and Crimson Scrimmage on Saturday, August 23rd at 2 p.m. in Wilkinson Hall. The event is open to the public with no tickets required to enter. After graduating a large senior class […]

After graduating a large senior class in 2024, eighth-year head coach Steve Aird and is staff reset the roster with a fresh crop of prep products. IU’s seven-member freshman class was ranked No. 14 in the country by Prep Dig, making it the highest-ranked recruiting class in school history.
Led by consensus top-55 recruits and outside hitters Charlotte Vinson (Yorktown, Ind.) and Jaidyn Jager (Carlsbad, Calif.), IU was able to reload at every position group. Rounding out the newcomers is UCLA beach volleyball grad student Jessica Smith. She heads to Bloomington after a successful career in the sand with a track record of being a respected leader and an incredible passer.
The Hoosiers will play two sets to 25 points and one to 15 on Saturday (Aug. 23). It will serve as the final team scrimmage of IU’s fall camp ahead of the regular season opener in Coral Gables (Aug. 29) against Miami (Fla.). Fans will be treated to a live DJ, free giveaways and an autograph session after the match is concluded.
IU will make its regular season debut in Wilkinson Hall on Thursday (Sept. 4) against SEMO. Fans can purchase single game tickets HERE.
Sports
Colombia senator, 39, dies weeks after being shot at campaign event | Politics News
Presidential hopeful Miguel Uribe was shot in Bogota on June 7 during a rally and underwent multiple surgeries before his death. Colombian presidential hopeful Miguel Uribe, who had been fighting for his life since he was shot in June during a campaign event, has died, according to his family. Uribe, a 39-year-old senator and a […]

Presidential hopeful Miguel Uribe was shot in Bogota on June 7 during a rally and underwent multiple surgeries before his death.
Colombian presidential hopeful Miguel Uribe, who had been fighting for his life since he was shot in June during a campaign event, has died, according to his family.
Uribe, a 39-year-old senator and a potential presidential candidate from the right-wing opposition, was shot in Bogota on June 7 during a rally and underwent multiple surgeries before his death.
“I ask God to show me the way to learn to live without you,” his wife, Maria Claudia Tarazona, wrote on social media. “Rest in peace, love of my life, I will take care of our children.”
Uribe enjoyed a rapid political rise, becoming a recognised lawmaker for the Democratic Centre party. He was seeking to run in the 2026 presidential election.
A 15-year-old boy was arrested at the scene with a “9mm Glock-type firearm” and has pleaded not guilty after being formally charged on June 10 with attempted murder, the prosecutor’s office said. Five other suspects have also been arrested.
“Today is a sad day for the country,” Colombian Vice President Francia Marquez wrote on X.
“Violence cannot continue to mark our destiny. Democracy is not built with bullets or blood, it is built with respect, with dialogue,” she said.
‘Security beefed up’
President Gustavo Petro had previously blamed an international crime ring as being behind the attack on Uribe, without providing details or evidence, and has beefed up security for government officials and opposition leaders since it happened.
The assassination is reminiscent of political violence in Colombia during the 1980s and 1990s, when four presidential candidates were murdered in separate attacks blamed on drug cartels allied with right-wing paramilitary death squads.
Uribe’s death also adds to his family’s fraught history, with relatives prominent in Colombian politics.
His mother, journalist Diana Turbay, was killed in 1991 during a botched rescue mission after she was kidnapped by the Medellin cartel, headed by drug lord Pablo Escobar.
Meanwhile, Uribe’s maternal grandfather, Julio Cesar Turbay, served as Colombia’s president from 1978 to 1982, while his paternal grandfather, Rodrigo Uribe Echavarria, headed the Liberal Party and supported Virgilio Barco’s successful 1986 presidential campaign.
Uribe was elected to Bogota’s city council at 25. In 2016, at 30, he was appointed city government secretary, the youngest person to hold the position. He resigned from that post in 2018 to launch an unsuccessful bid for mayor of Bogota as an independent.
In the 2022 legislative elections, Uribe led the Senate slate for the Democratic Center party with the slogan “Colombia First”, winning a seat in the chamber.
There, Uribe cemented his role as one of the primary opposition voices to Petro, criticising the government’s peace strategy aimed at ending Colombia’s six-decade armed conflict.
Former right-wing President Alvaro Uribe, leader of the Democratic Center party with no relation to the deceased senator, called Miguel Uribe “a hope for the homeland”.
Uribe leaves behind his wife, a young son and three teenage daughters of his wife from a previous marriage.
Sports
Giants Minor League Baseball weekend roundup, August 9
It was, as it usually is, a busy weekend for the San Francisco Giants Minor League Baseball affiliates. Let’s jump into all the action! Link to the 2025 McCovey Chronicles Community Prospect List (CPL) All listed positions in the roundup are the positions played in that particular game. Some prospect ranking news! Baseball America released […]


All listed positions in the roundup are the positions played in that particular game.
Some prospect ranking news! Baseball America released their final top 100 of the season, and for the first time in a while, there are a trio of Giants on the list. Not surprisingly, AAA Sacramento first baseman Bryce Eldridge (No. 1 CPL) tops the Giants contingency of the list at No. 20. DSL shortstop Josuar González (No. 5 CPL) came in at No. 85, while AA Richmond outfielder Bo Davidson (No. 11 CPL) is excitingly in the top 100 as well, at No. 88.
Low-A San Jose LHP Jacob Bresnahan (No. 31 CPL) was named Cal League Pitcher of the Week after a dominant showing last week, in which he struck out 8 batters over 5 shutout innings, with just 1 hit allowed.
Also, outfielder Daniel Johnson, who had been playing for Sacramento but was recently DFA’d, was claimed off of waivers by Baltimore.
AAA Sacramento (60-54)
Saturday: Sacramento River Cats beat the Sugar Land Space Cowboys (Astros) 4-3 [box score]
Sunday: Sacramento River Cats beat the Sugar Land Space Cowboys 4-3 [box score]
A pair of 4-3 victories for Sacramento as they pulled off the rare 6-game sweep. See how much nicer things look when you’re 6 games above .500 than when you’re exactly .500? The Giants could stand to learn a lesson there! They did it in fun fashion, too, with back-to-back walk-offs courtesy of third baseman Thomas Gavello and shortstop Osleivis Basabe!
Sunday was a fun game on the mound, as it was handled entirely by pitchers who are likely to be in San Francisco soon. Kicking it off was rehabbing RHP Landen Roupp, who took the mound for the first time since starting for the Giants on July 22. Roupp stretched out to 50 pitches, which covered 3 innings, and he allowed 3 hits and 2 runs, while striking out 4 batters. Given that he has an injury history, and that the Giants are likely enjoying getting a chance to look at a pair of rookies in a lost season, I’d expect Roupp to get at least one more start in AAA before returning to the Majors, where he’s been one of the best stories on the team this season.
And closing the game was another rehabbing arm, LHP Erik Miller. It was the 2nd rehab appearance for Miller, who last pitched in the Majors on July 2. Since then, both Joey Lucchesi and Matt Gage have established themselves as high quality southpaw relief arms for the Giants, so I’m a little curious as to what the plan ends up being with Miller. He pitched an inning in this game, giving up a hit, a walk, and a run, while registering a strikeout.
In between that pair of MLB arms was a prospect, but one the Giants are likely to look at soon: RHP Blade Tidwell. It was the 2nd Sacramento appearance for Tidwell since joining the organization in the Tyler Rogers trade, and it would be hard to be more impressive. Serving as the piggybacking starter, Tidwell took down 5 scoreless innings, giving up just 1 hit and 1 walk while striking out 7 batters. As we know the Giants value, Tidwell pounded the strike zone, with 53 strikes from his 78 pitches.
Tidwell is on the 40-man roster, and while his MLB numbers have been awful in his debut season, they’ve also come in a very small sample. It seems likely that the Giants will want to give him a shot in the rotation at some point before the year is up.
Saturday’s pitching was less fruitful. RHP Mason Black (No. 7 CPL) struggled in the start, giving up 4 hits, 4 walks, and 2 runs in 3 innings, with 3 strikeouts. It remains a very disappointing year for Black, who has a 4.89 ERA and a 5.64 FIP and, save for a day of emergency coverage, hasn’t felt like part of the big league plans at any point this year. Add in the arrival of Tidwell and the (re)emergence of Kai-Wei Teng, and Black — who will be entering his final option year in 2026 — is starting to look like he has a very, very critical offseason ahead of him.
The bullpen was strong on Saturday, though, and it featured a perfect inning from RHP Keaton Winn, who struck out a batter in his best outing since returning from injury. He’s still shaking the rust off after missing 3 months. RHP Sean Hjelle made his 2nd appearance since getting DFA’d and outrighted and shined, giving up just 1 hit in 3 shutout innings, with 3 strikeouts.
On offense, we were treated to both sides of the Bryce Eldridge (No. 1 CPL) coin. On Sunday, the first baseman hit yet another home run — and yet another big home run. Big both in stature and meaning, as Eldridge took on the opposite field with ease while bashing a go-ahead 3-run bomb in the 8th inning.
It was the 12th dinger for Eldridge with the River Cats this year, despite it being just his 36th game. He’s hitting a home run once every 3 games, every 11.6 at-bats, and every 13.1 plate appearances. What a talent he is!
But, as I mentioned, we got both sides of the coin. In his other at-bats of the weekend, Eldridge hit 0-7 with 4 strikeouts. For as excited as we all are to see him hitting baseballs into McCovey Cove, there’s certainly a lot for him to work on as well.
Speaking of things to work on, there’s a reason Luis Matos is in AAA right now while the Giants opt for an all-lefty unproven duo of Grant McCray and Drew Gilbert in right field. But Matos, playing in center field over the weekend, showed some of the talent he’s working on, by smashing a home run on Saturday, his 2nd in as many days.
Unfortunately, like Eldridge, it was a tough weekend for Matos when he wasn’t hitting homers, as he went 0-7 with 3 strikeouts in his other at-bats.
Catcher Sam Huff might have seen his opportunities run out with the organization after he was outrighted — especially after the team acquired Jesus Rodriguez (who hit 2-7 with a walk and a strikeout). But Huff was quick to remind everyone that he has a special bat, as he started on Saturday and hit 2-3 with a triple, a double, a walk, and a strikeout. What a game! Third baseman Thomas Gavello also provided some Saturday spark, hitting 2-3 with a 2-run home run, though he went 0-4 with 3 strikeouts on Sunday.
One last important note: Tyler Fitzgerald played exclusively in right field over the weekend, his 1st time seeing the outfield grass since last year. Is that a sign that the Giants are desperate to find anyone who can play right field, or a vote of confidence in Casey Schmitt to be the second baseman for the foreseeable future? Probably both. Either way, he hit 2-8 with a strikeout over the weekend. The other 40-man players: second baseman Brett Wisely hit 1-7 with a walk and 2 strikeouts, while left fielder Marco Luciano hit 1-3 with a walk and a strikeout.
AA Richmond (41-64)
Saturday: Richmond Flying Squirrels beat the Erie SeaWolves (Tigers) 8-6 [box score]
Sunday: Richmond Flying Squirrels lost to the Erie SeaWolves 4-0 [box score]
A pretty mild-mannered split weekend for a team that has been pretty mild-mannered this year. There were no strong offensive weekends, though a few decent days. A pair of newish-comers each had a good game, with left fielder Scott Bandura going 3-5 with a triple, a double, and a stolen base on Saturday, while center fielder Bo Davidson (No. 11 CPL) hit 2-4 on Sunday, though he had a strikeout and was caught stealing.
Bandura, a 24-year old lefty who went 0-4 with 3 strikeouts on Sunday, has really been fitting in nicely since his recent promotion, with a .737 OPS and a 123 wRC+ in 20 games. It’s been a little less smooth for Davidson, a 23-year old lefty who didn’t play on Saturday, as he has a .678 OPS and a 104 wRC+ in 17 games, though he’s also dealt with some minor ailments. Very successful debuts in new homes for both of them, though!
Center fielder Turner Hill had an awesome game on Saturday, hitting 4-5 with a stolen base, though he went 0-4 on Sunday. With the arrival of Davidson, Hill — a 26-year old lefty — is no longer the most successful undrafted free agent in Richmond. But his year is certainly worth drawing attention to, as he has a .752 OPS and a 126 wRC+, with awesome defense and 15 stolen bases in 19 attempts. He doesn’t have much power, but there are certainly some Major League skills in the other elements of his game.
A very nice start on Sunday from LHP Nick Zwack, who is finally healthy and at the right level. After making it to AA in 2023, Zwack lost all of 2024 to injury, and has been rehabbing his way back up the system this year. He’s finally returned to Richmond, where on Sunday he pitched 5 quality innings, giving up 5 hits, 1 walk, 1 hit batter, and 2 runs, while striking out 5. It was his 4th appearance since returning to the Eastern League, and in those 4 games he’s allowed just 15 hits, 4 walks, and 4 runs in 19.1 innings, though he only has 14 strikeouts.
Saturday’s start didn’t go quite as well, as LHP Joe Whitman (No. 9 CPL) got hit fairly hard. Whitman needed 78 pitches to get through 4 innings (and threw just 49 of them for strikes), while giving up 6 hits, 1 walk, and 3 runs, and only striking out 2 batters. It’s been a year of electric performances met with poor outings for Whitman, whose 5.20 ERA and 3.83 FIP really feel like they tell 2 true stories of his season.
Excellent relief on Saturday from RHP Tyler Vogel, who struck out 4 batters in 2 shutout innings, while allowing 2 hits. After a very strong season in High-A, Vogel has been even better in his short stint with Richmond, registering 6 strikeouts against 0 walks in 4.1 innings, and not yet allowing an earned run in his 3 appearances. On Sunday, LHP Jack Choate (No. 29 CPL) needed to face just 3 batters to register 4 outs, while also nabbing a strikeout. He recently moved to the bullpen, though it’s unclear if that’s a short-term or long-term thing.
High-A Eugene (63-55)
Saturday: Eugene Emeralds beat Spokane (Rockies) 5-4 [box score]
Sunday: Eugene Emeralds lost to Spokane 8-7 (10 innings) [box score]
Everyone please join me in welcoming third baseman Parks Harber to the Giants organization! The 23-year old, who is a right-handed undrafted free agent from 2024, is the least heralded of the 4 players the Giants received in the Camilo Doval trade, but as Bo Davidson has reminded us all, being talented is more important than being heralded. And if Sunday is any indication, Harber is certainly talent.
The 6’3 UNC product made his organizational debut on Saturday and hit 0-3 with 2 strikeouts … understandable struggles for someone who hadn’t played in a game in quite a while and went through the emotional rollercoaster of being traded. But on Sunday? Well he more than made up for it, hitting 3-4 with a 2-run home run, a pair of doubles, and 4 runs batted in. That’s a damn good day! And one that has me excited to see more from him.
He wasn’t the only player who is new to Eugene who homered over the weekend. On Saturday, designated hitter Nate Furman played in his 4th game with the team and hit 2-5 with a solo home run and a strikeout. Furman, who played second base on Sunday and went 0-3 with a hit by pitch, is listed on Richmond’s roster and just rehabbing his way up the system, as the toolsy infielder — acquired last year in the Alex Cobb trade — missed the first few months of the season.
And hey, second baseman/designated hitter Jean Carlos Sio didn’t homer, but he’s also a new-to-Eugene player who performed well over the weekend. Unlike Harber and Furman, Sio is new not just to Eugene, but to High-A baseball, yet it hasn’t seemed to phase him. He went 2-5 with a double, a walk, 2 hit by pitches, and a strikeout over the weekend. Sio looks right at home in the Northwest League: after posting a .311 batting average, an .821 OPS, and a 130 wRC+ with Low-A San Jose, the 21-year old lefty has a .316 average, a .803 OPS, and a 135 wRC+ through 6 games with the Emeralds. He’s really put himself on the radar this season.
A good news/bad news situation with right fielder Jack Payton. On Saturday he had another swell day, hitting 2-3 with a double and a walk. The 2023 11th-round pick has really been on fire lately lately, as it was his 5th consecutive multi-hit game — during that time he’s hit 11-19 with 4 doubles, 2 walks, and just 2 strikeouts. But on Sunday he left the game early after suffering an injury on defense. Hopefully it was just something minor.
A fairly uninteresting weekend on the mound. LHP Greg Farone made the start on Saturday, as he continues to get acclimated to the level. It was the 7th High-A start for last year’s 7th-round pick, who is in his debut season, and this was a pretty nice outing: Farone pitched 5 innings with just 2 hits and 1 walk allowed, though a home run resulted in 2 runs to his name, and he only struck out 3 batters.
Farone, a 6’6 southpaw from Alabama, has done an impressive job adjusting to the level. In his 1st 3 starts with the Ems, he gave up 19 hits and 13 earned runs in 12.1 innings, but in 4 starts since he’s ceded only 9 hits and 3 runs in 21 innings. Impressive stuff!
RHP Austin Strickland pitched a perfect inning with 2 strikeouts on Saturday. He’s now been excellent in both of his August outings, as he tries to bounce back from a very difficult July. Unfortunately, RHP Liam Simon’s struggles to find his pre-injury form have continued, as he had another tough day at the office, facing 4 batters and walking 2 of them, while recording just 1 out and getting dinged for a pair of runs.
Low-A San Jose (71-37)
Saturday: San Jose Giants lost to the Visalia Rawhide (D-Backs) 5-2 [box score]
Sunday: San Jose Giants beat the Visalia Rawhide 6-5 [box score]
The Baby Giants have been one of the most electric teams in all of Minor League Baseball this year, but it was a quiet weekend for them. They did earn a split, but only had 1 extra-base hit all weekend long, with minimal exciting performances on either side of the ball.
Let’s start with the bad news. Center fielder Dakota Jordan (No. 8 CPL), who hit 1-5 with 2 strikeouts, left Sunday’s game. According to Roger Munter, Jordan looked to be moving a little uncomfortably after diving back to a bag following a wild pitch. It’s been a wildly successful essentially debut season for last year’s 4th-round pick, who has made enormous strides to his pre-draft contact issues, while sporting an .875 OPS and a 137 wRC+. But his flirtations with injuries have been the lone downside, and look like they’ll keep him from getting introduced to Oregon until 2026.
San Jose’s roster has a trio of recently-drafted players, and it wasn’t a very smooth weekend for a pair of them. Shorststop Gavin Kilen, the team’s 1st-round pick, hit 0-7 and was picked off, though he had just 1 strikeout while drawing 2 walks. Catcher Daniel Rogers, who went undrafted, had a Saturday to forget, striking out in all 3 of his plate appearances and committing an error — he didn’t play on Sunday.
But Trevor Cohen, the team’s 3rd-round pick, had a delightful weekend, hitting 4-7 with a walk and a strikeout. The Giants are high on Cohen’s ability to play center field and, after beginning the weekend in right, he shifted to the middle of the grass to replace Jordan. He may get some extended run there to show what he can do.
The best offensive weekend belonged to designated hitter/first baseman Robert Hipwell (No. 25 CPL), who hit 2-5 with a double and 2 walks, though he also struck out twice and committed an error. A 6th-round pick out of Santa Clara a year ago, the left-handed corner infielder has a .902 OPS and a 147 wRC+ this year, but also a 30.4% strikeout rate. Lots to love; lots to work on.
Saturday featured the organizational debut of RHP Yunior Marte, the player acquired in the Mike Yastrzemski trade. Marte, a soon-to-turn-22-year-old from the Dominican Republic was having a very strong season for Kansas City’s Low-A team, and that transferred to San Jose, where he gave up 2 hits, 2 walks, and 1 run in 4 innings of work, while striking out 4 batters. The Giants are pretty intrigued by what he has in his arm, and so am I!
Speaking of intriguing arms, RHP Keyner Martinez started on Sunday and struck out 5 batters in 3 innings, though he allowed 4 hits, 1 walk, and 2 unearned runs. Martinez opened a whole bunch of eyes in the ACL this year, when he registered 67 strikeouts against just 10 walks in 47.1 innings. And so far he’s keeping the good times rolling in San Jose, where he has 8 strikeouts and 3 walks in 6.1 innings.
A fellow electric arm, RHP Argenis Cayama (No. 28 CPL) followed Martinez from Papago to San Jose, though his results were poorer on Sunday, as he pitched 2.2 innings and gave up 4 hits, 1 walk, and 2 runs, with 2 strikeouts. Cayama’s been roughed up a bit in his 2 games, but he’s also only 18 years old (Martinez is 20).
RHP Gerelmi Maldonado (No. 36 CPL) really struggled with command on Saturday, walking 5 batters (and hitting another) in just 1.2 innings. He also gave up 2 hits and 3 runs, while striking out just 1. Maldonado has had the walk issues that one comes to expect with a pitcher returning from Tommy John surgery, though I’m not sure how comforting that is given how big his walk issues were before the surgery, too.
And RHP Ryan Murphy made his 2nd rehab appearance, though it didn’t go as well as the 1st. He allowed a hit, 2 walks, and a run in 1.1 innings on Sunday. Just great to see the 2020 5th-round pick back on the mound after so much time lost to injury. Here’s hoping he’s back in AA by the end of the year.
Dominican Summer League Black (31-18)
Saturday: DSL Giants Black beat DSL Colorado 6-1 (7 innings) [box score]
The DSL season is nearing an end, and shortstop Josuar González (No. 5 CPL, 17 years, 2025 IFA) is making sure he ends it on a high note. The consensus No. 2 prospect in the system is ending the year on a tear, as his numbers catch up to his tools. It was another great day for González on Saturday, as he hit 1-3 with a triple, a walk, and a strikeout. He’s been a hit machine lately: in his last 7 games, the switch-hitter is 12-25 with a home run, a triple, a double, 4 walks, and 4 strikeouts.
And just like that, González’s numbers look fantastic, as he’s rocking an .836 OPS and a 125 wRC+, and still has more walks than strikeouts. He’s the real deal, folks.
A great game for first baseman Evan Estevez (17 years, 2024 IFA), who is having a really nice 2nd season. The right-handed hitter, who will celebrate his 18th birthday later this week, hit 2-3 with a triple, a double, and a walk. He has an .836 OPS and a 120 wRC+, and while his strikeout rate (25.0%) is still fairly high, it’s much improved over last season.
Designated hitter Yoxander Benitez (18 years, 2024 IFA) hit a perfect 2-2 with a walk, and also stole a base. The righty only has a .672 OPS and an 89 wRC+, but a year after having a 25.0% strikeout rate and stealing just 4 bases (while being caught twice), Benitez has just a 9.9% strikeout rate and has stolen 15 bases (while being caught just once) in the same number of games played.
On the mound, it was an impressive performance by RHP Dilan Fernandez (20 years, 2023 IFA). He pounded the strike zone for 5 innings, though he did walk 3 batters. But he only allowed 4 hits and 1 run, and he struck out 6 batters. It was a nice rebound for Fernandez, who had a few tough outings recently. His numbers look very similar to what they were in his debut last year.
Dominican Summer League Orange (32-16)
Saturday: DSL Giants Orange beat DSL Arizona Black 13-7 (7 innings) [box score]
It was a fantastic performance by the Giants Orange squad’s offense, which mustered 11 hits and 10 walks in just 7 innings, while only striking out 6 times. But it was a well-balanced affair, as the game was defined more by everyone playing well than by anyone making a statement (on offense at least — the pitching isn’t worth discussing at all!)
Let’s just highlight 2 players who had really nice games: center fielder Rainer Espinoza (16 years, 2025 IFA) and third baseman Juan Colorado (18 years, 2024 IFA). Espinoza had one of his best games as a pro, hitting 2-3 with a double, 2 walks, and a stolen base. The righty now has a .761 OPS and a 117 wRC+ in his debut season, with 5 stolen bases in as many attempts. He also has more walks than strikeouts, which is the result of having a sky-high walk rate (23.4%) rather than a low strikeout rate (22.5%). Colorado hit 2-4 with a double and a walk, though he also had a strikeout and was caught stealing. The righty has been having a really difficult season, but hopefully he can end it on a high note.
Home run tracker
AAA Bryce Eldridge (19) [12 in AAA, 7 in AA]
AAA Luis Matos (10) [5 in MLB, 5 in AAA]
AAA Thomas Gavello (9) [4 in AAA, 3 in AA, 2 in High-A]
High-A Parks Harber (7) [4 in High-A, 3 in Low-A]
High-A Nate Furman (2) [1 in High-A, 1 in Low-A]
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