Subscribe

It’s officially Spring Training eve. Fans, reporters, coaches, and most importantly, players have arrived in Scottsdale, Arizona. And after one more sleep, they’ll get to work.

Last week, the San Francisco Giants announced their list of 19 non-roster invitees to Spring Training. As a refresher, NRIs are players who are in the system but not on the 40-man roster … prospects and Minor League free agents. Although there’s plenty of crossover between the NRIs and the players who aren’t in Major League camp — they’re all working out at Papago, and the players at the Minor League camp next door are frequently called into action in preseason games — there is importance in being named an NRI.

Advertisement

Most players who are NRIs are either given a chance to make the Opening Day roster, or are getting some seasoning because the organization is high on their ability to contribute at some point during the year. And that’s important, both for development and for the message that it sends to those players.

The beauty of Spring Training is that it gives players a chance to change their story. If I had written the following article last year, for instance, I would have had Christian Koss quite low … but we all saw how that played out.

So what follows is a list of all 19 NRIs, ranked in order of their excitement right now. It’s not a ranking of how good the players are, and it’s definitely not a ranking of how likely they are to break camp on the roster. And, critically, it’s fluid … though don’t come back to this article in a few weeks expecting me to have updated it.

Enough rambling. Here are the 19, from most exciting to least exciting.

Advertisement

1. Bo Davidson — OF

The Giants only selected three outfielders for their list of NRIs this year, but that’s three more than last year. And with Marco Luciano and Wade Meckler gone, Luis Matos placing one foot out the door, and Grant McCray lacing up his shoes, Davidson represents the next wave of talent that the Giants are hoping graces the outfield.

Heliot Ramos broke the long-standing homegrown All-Star outfielder curse, and in about six weeks he should break the left field Opening Day curse. Jung Hoo Lee is firmly entrenched in right field. And Harrison Bader was brought in on a multi-year free agency deal to man center. The Giants have the most set outfield in recent memory, and yet … you can forgive us for dreaming of a little more.

Davidson could be that more. He burst on the scene, remarkably rising from undrafted free agent to a member of the Baseball America top 100 in two years. As a Junior College athlete, Davidson hasn’t faced the advanced level of competition that his peers in AA have, and that’s the cause for both excitement and caution. Arguably the two largest questions facing Davidson are how well he can handle advanced spin and velocity, and if he can stay in center fielder as he rises the ranks.

Advertisement

Spring Training gives us our first chance to get some answers to those questions, and our first opportunity to see how dynamic his athleticism looks when standing across from Major Leaguers, instead of single and double-A ballers.

2. Parks Harber — 3B/1B/OF

One of the fun things about NRIs is that you can get a glimpse into how the organization views certain players. The most shining example? Harber. To illustrate that, let’s look back at the 2025 NRIs, of which there were six position players. Those six, in alphabetical order:

Sergio Alcantara — Had more than 500 Major League plate appearances
Bryce Eldridge — The top prospect in the organization, who had some AAA experience
Christian Koss — Had more than 300 AAA plate appearances
Jake Lamb — Had a 10-year MLB career
Logan Porter — Had made his MLB debut and spent three years in AAA
Max Stassi — Had a 10-year MLB career

Advertisement

That’s roughly what you can expect with most NRIs, especially on the position player front. So it was noteworthy that Davidson, who hasn’t yet played in AAA, was on the list. And it was extremely noteworthy that Harber, who hasn’t yet played in AA, was on the list.

Harber probably belongs in the “it doesn’t matter how well you play, you can’t make the Opening Day roster” bucket, but his inclusion on this list means we can start turning the hands of his clock faster than in a time capsule sequence in a movie.

He was an afterthought by the industry when he was included in the Camilo Doval trade this summer, yet it quickly became clear he could hit the snot out of the ball. His data at the Arizona Fall League emphasized that, and now it’s clear the Giants view him highly. They want to see how his swing fares against more advanced pitchers. They want to see him get comfortable in the outfield after primarily being an infielder. Like Davidson, they want to get a glimpse into whether or not Harber might be able to help the team as early as later this year.

3. Juan Sánchez — LHP

If you’ve been following the news this weekend, and I don’t blame you if you haven’t been, then some atrocious excuses for “country music” have probably come across your airwaves. I’d like to cleanse your palate, with a line from an honest-to-goodness, authentic, extremely worth listening to country artist, Tyler Childers:

Advertisement

Well I used to ride a Mustang
And I’d run that thing on high hopes
‘Til they raised the price of dreams so high I couldn’t pay

That, I’d say, adequately sums up the Giants relationship with their bullpen. At the deadline they traded respected veterans Camilo Doval and Tyler Rogers. New closer Randy Rodríguez then suffered an elbow injury that will cost him the 2026 season.

Then the offseason came, and the media masses who always think the Giants will spend money even though they won’t linked the team to Edwin Díaz and Devin Williams even though that obviously was never going to happen. And we all thought they’d reunite with Rogers, but they didn’t even sniff in that direction.

Instead, they signed Sam Hentges for $1.4 million, signed Jason Foley to rehab an injury and hopefully debut late in the summer, and added a bunch of Minor Leaguers. And I’m not even sure that I disagree with the approach.

Advertisement

But in order for it to work, some players are going to need to pop, and Sánchez is a prime candidate. The southpaw, who signed with the Giants a whopping nine years ago but only just turned 25, was an NRI two years ago and nearly broke camp with the team. He was narrowly beat out by Erik Miller — possibly only because Miller was already rostered — and then his elbow gave out and he not only didn’t debut, but missed all of 2025, too.

Now he’s back, and healthy. He pitched in the Arizona Fall League and, if he can repeat his Scottsdale performance from 2024, could not only make the team, but become a critical part of a (hopefully) successful bullpen.

4. Will Bednar — RHP

Hey, here’s another youngish arm that the organization was once quite high on who could ultimately prove to be a big part of the bullpen. Bednar spent a few years failing to live up to his first-round draft status, but in 2025 reinvented himself as a high-electricity reliever, and cranked up his velocity to where it flirted with 100. With Doval in the Bronx and Rodríguez injured, the Giants don’t have a lot of those players, which gives Bednar a good path to the Majors.

Advertisement

Really, the excitement in seeing Bednar is the same excitement we’ll have when he presumably opens the year in AAA: seeing how his stuff plays against more advanced hitters. He has command issues (though they got better in the second half last year), but in 2025 struck out 84 AA batters in just 50.2 innings. Will that play against better hitters? I, for one, am very excited to see.

5. Gregory Santos — RHP

I expect that Bader will be the signing this year who (positively) impacts the win total the most, but Santos is my favorite move the Giants made this winter. Once a top-10 prospect in the system, Santos was DFA’d by the Giants three years ago due to a roster crunch. That decision immediately looked awful: in his first year with his new team, the Chicago White Sox, Santos became one of the best relievers in baseball, with a 3.39 ERA, a 2.65 FIP, and a 1.5 fWAR mark that ranked 15th among all bullpen arms.

But he’s struggled with injuries since then, and has pitched just 14.1 innings over the last two years, and just 28.2 if you include Minor League assignments.

Advertisement

When right, Santos has a truly special mix of fire and control: in 2023, he was 98th percentile in fastball velocity, and 85th percentile in walk rate. If he’s healthy this spring, he just might look like that player again (he’s only 26, after all). And if he looks like that player again, he just might be one of the best offseason signings in all of baseball.

6. Victor Bericoto — OF/1B

Developmental paths — and the logistics forced by 40-man roster decisions — are funny. Bericoto was part of the same international signing class as Luciano and Matos. And while Matos is still clinging to a spot on the roster, if I had to guess which of those three will play the biggest role for the Giants this year, it would be Bericoto.

As with Davidson and Harber, Bericoto’s inclusion is likely a sign of how the Giants feel about him, especially since he only played 11 games in AAA last year (before suffering an injury, and then heading back to AA). In many ways, Bericoto mirrors what the Giants hope Jerar Encarnación brings to the table, except instead of being a Major Leaguer who is out of options, Bericoto, who just turned 24, is still in the Minors. He’s a powerful right-handed bat who plays a quality corner outfield and can also man first base. What’s not to like?

Advertisement

It seemed over the summer that his time with the organization was running out, but now he feels like a player who could quickly become part of the outfield plans. We haven’t gotten to see him face advanced pitchers yet, and now we’ll get to see just how close he is.

7. Michael Fulmer — RHP

There are always position player NRIs who don’t really have a shot at making the roster. But thanks to the volatile nature of pitchers, the sheer number of spots available in the bullpen, and the inevitability of injuries, that’s not really the case with pitchers. They can all make the Opening Day roster. Especially the ones that Buster Posey has faced before.

On the surface, Fulmer is extremely un-exciting. He’s a 32-year old veteran trying to find his way back to the Majors. We see tons of those every year, and they rarely work out. But pull back the curtain a little bit, and it’s a different story. Fulmer was mediocre in 2023, lost all of 2024 due to injury, and spent almost all of his 2025 in the Minors trying to rebuild his value. But he was very good in 2022 and he was excellent in 2021 and really, those years aren’t far away when you account for the lost year and the rehab year. He’s the perfect candidate to give to a coaching staff and see what happens. There could be something special there.

Advertisement

8. Trent Harris — RHP

Davidson, Harber, and Harris … it really is impressive that the Giants have three such highly-regarded undrafted prospects!

Harris is the ultimate case of “if things click, this could be special,” and those are some of the most exciting players to watch in Spring Training. The recently-turned 27-year old was thoroughly dominant in AA last year, but got roughed up in his AAA introduction. By his own admission, much of that was due to a loss of confidence and abandoning his best pitch. He might be one tweak away from being a critical bullpen piece, and we’ll soon find out if the Giants can help him make that tweak.

9. Nate Furman — 2B

The Giants acquired Furman a year-and-a-half ago as the player to be named later in the Alex Cobb trade. Due to injuries, we’ve only seen him play 36 games for the organization, but he’s hit .369/.493/.607 in those 36 games, and that will get anyone’s attention.

Advertisement

In many ways, Furman is the Minor League version of the player the Giants signed to play his position at the big league level, Luis Arráez. He has borderline unbelievable contact skills, an almost non-existent display of power, and his glove has more red flags than green ones.

But here’s the thing about great contact hitters: they’re fun to watch, and Posey loves them. And I’ll appeal to authority and say it’s very notable that the Giants chose Furman — who has just 22 AA games to his name — as an NRI, ahead of players like, say, Diego Velasquez and Dayson Croes. You never know what players have been working on, especially in the offseason. Maybe Furman looks good with his glove. Maybe he has a little pop of power. Either of those things would turn him into a bonafide prospect.

10. Diego Cartaya — C

If you want to feel a little bit better about what happened with Luciano, then have I ever got the name for you. Allow me to introduce you to someone who signed in the same international period as Luciano, but for a larger amount of money. Someone who was instantly viewed as the cream of the crop from that class. Someone who, after debuting, was ranked even higher than Luciano, and was on many top-10 lists. A player who, unlike Luciano, came from an organization frequently lauded for its player development. A player who, like Luciano, is now floating around trying to find a career.

Advertisement

Yes, Cartaya was once the diamond of the Los Angeles Dodgers system. Being a 19-year old catcher who hits 10 home runs in 31 games in A-ball will do that to you. He completely fell apart in the upper Minors, though. After posting a 65 wRC+ in more than 200 AAA plate appearances in 2024, the Dodgers cut him loose this time last year. He caught on with the Minnesota Twins’ AAA affiliate, where he hit … cover your eyes if you’re easily scared … 5-59 with 40 strikeouts.

The Twins dumped him and the Giants picked him up, presumably on a multi-year Minor League deal, because they slow-played him (he officially appeared in just four low-A games) and now he’s back.

He’s probably broken. He’s almost certainly broken. But at 24 years old, he’s not far removed from being one of the best prospects in baseball. Sometimes it takes the right coaches or the right change of scenery, or just something clicking as you go through life. He’s a free lottery ticket, and if he shows any glimpses this spring, things will start to feel exciting.

11. Wilkin Ramos — RHP

Ramos is the type of player whom we would all be very excited about if he had come up through the Giants system, instead of reaching Minor League free agency and signing with the team that way. His performance has paralleled Harris: he’s been dominant in AA (1.52 ERA in 70 games), and awful in AAA (5.94 ERA in 30 games). The primary difference (other than the pitch mix) is that, despite entering his ninth year of professional baseball, Ramos is still two years younger than Harris, at just 25.

Advertisement

He’s an extremely Giantsy pitcher: he doesn’t get a lot of swing-and-miss, but his ground ball rate was a whopping 60.9% last year. That number ranked 12th out of the nearly 1,400 Minor League pitchers with at least 50 innings last year. He’s a long shot to make the Opening Day roster, but he could be exciting enough to watch that he becomes a pitcher people follow in AAA.

12. Caleb Kilian — RHP

He returns! Like Santos, Kilian is making his way back to his original organization, after he was included in the 2021 trade for Kris Bryant. Unlike Santos, Kilian has never popped at the Major League level, though he made eight appearances in the pros between 2022 and 2024. Injuries limited Kilian to 15.2 innings in the Minors last year, but in 2024 he had a 3.22 ERA in AAA, while only walking 2.8 batters per nine innings. He’s not electric, but he has strong command, a deep repertoire, and can live in the mid-90s. If he’s added to the roster he’ll be out of options, though, so he’ll have to have an exceptional camp to avoid starting the year in Sacramento.

13. Nick Margevicius — LHP

Margevicius concludes the pitcher section of our list. He could be much lower, but pitchers, by nature of their ability to make the Opening Day roster, are just inherently a little bit more exciting. But he is the least exciting of the group. The 29-year old hasn’t pitched in the Majors since 2021, and while he had a decent 3.89 ERA/3.60 FIP mark with the Detroit Tigers’ AAA affiliate last year, the underlying metrics were fairly grim. His fastball lives in the very low 90s, and his Prospect Savant page is almost entirely blue. He was above average in walk rate (89th percentile) last season, but everything else was below average … or way below average: strikeout rate (45th percentile), chase rate (39th), swinging strike rate (29th), zone contact rate (24th), xwOBA (22nd), expected batting average (15th), whiff rate (13th), zone swing rate (11th), expected slugging (8th), barrel rate (8th), exit velocity (7th), and hard hit rate (7th).

Advertisement

14. Jared Oliva — OF

The Giants claimed Justin Dean off of waivers this offseason. They then designated him for assignment, and lost him on waivers. To recoup that loss, they signed Oliva to a Minor League deal. Oliva is a slightly lesser version of Dean. He probably can’t hit — his brief MLB time has mostly been used as a late-game replacement, and he had a 102 wRC+ last year as a 29-year old in AAA. But he plays some mean outfield defense, and stole a stupendous 57 bases last year in just 95 games, while only getting caught six times.

That’s fun to watch, and that’s excitement in and of itself. But he’s probably not in play to make the roster unless Drew Gilbert gets injured and McCray gets traded.

15. Buddy Kennedy — INF

Kennedy has an intriguing combination of power and speed, though he’s 27 and it really hasn’t manifested in much yet. He has nearly 200 plate appearances in the Majors, but has hit just .178/.271/.274, and his defense certainly isn’t good enough for that. He only had a 116 wRC+ in AAA last year as a 26-year old, but he did hit .280 with a tidy 14.3% strikeout rate, and we know the Giants like that.

Advertisement

Long story short: he’s not in play to make the Opening Day roster, and he won’t do a lot of things that excite you, but he can put himself in position to be a depth piece in AAA.

16. Eric Haase — C

The Giants don’t want Haase to be their backup catcher on March 27. But Haase certainly might be their backup catcher on March 27. He is insurance for if neither Jesús Rodríguez nor Daniel Susac looks ready for the Majors, because he certainly can hold down the spot, as he’s done so often in his career. He’s 33 and you know exactly what you’re getting with him. That’s important, but it’s not exciting.

17. Osleivis Basabe — INF

Basabe is back, after spending all of 2025 — his first year in the organization — in AAA. He only posted an 85 wRC+ there (and was DFA’d and outrighted), but his defense all over the diamond is very strong. He’s only 25, but it feels wrong to think of him as a prospect. He’s depth. He’ll provide some Spring Training excitement because of his defensive wizardry, but he’s really just hanging around to play all over the Sacramento dirt, and fill in if there’s an emergency.

Advertisement

Then again, I said that about Koss this time a year ago.

18. Jake Holton — 1B

Remember Trenton Brooks. Holton is the new Trenton Brooks.

This is his first year with the Giants, after the soon-to-turn 28-year old right-handed hitter spent his first seven season with the Tigers. He spent all of 2023 with Detroit’s AA squad, where he posted a 123 wRC+. Good enough for a promotion to AAA, right? Nope. He spent all of 2024 with their AA team, where he posted a 141 wRC+. Well that is surely good enough for a AAA promotion, yeah? Wrong again. He also spent all of 2025 with Detroit’s AA affiliate, where he repeated his 141 wRC+ mark.

Advertisement

He’ll likely be ticketed for a AAA debut with Sacramento, but 300+ plate appearances in AA is telling. He might put up great Spring Training numbers, but he’ll likely only be viewed as emergency depth, for a variety of reasons.

19. Logan Porter — C

We saw Porter in the Majors last year, and we may see him again this year. He is the very definition of a AAA catcher: strong enough defensively and competitive enough offensively that he can fill in for a week or two; bad enough at those things that he can be designated for assignment without any repercussions.

Porter isn’t at Spring Training to compete for a roster spot or raise his stock. He’s at Spring Training to familiarize himself with the pitching staff so that, on some random July day when Rodríguez, filling in for an injured Susac, takes a foul ball off his mask and needs a week off, the Giants have someone who can step in competently.

That’s valuable; but it ain’t exciting. Well, not relative to the other names, at least. But it’s still baseball, and baseball is exciting. More importantly, baseball is back.

Read the full article here

Leave A Reply

2026 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Exit mobile version