Former SF Giants shortstop Brandon Crawford planning to play in 2024

According to his agent, legendary SF Giants shortstop Brandon Crawford is gauging interest as his future still remains unclear
Former SF Giants shortstop Brandon Crawford planning to play in 2024
Former SF Giants shortstop Brandon Crawford planning to play in 2024 /
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After 13 big league seasons, legendary SF Giants shortstop Brandon Crawford isn’t ready to hang up his spikes just yet and is planning to play in 2024, his agent Joel Wolfe tells John Shea of the San Francisco Chronicle.

SF Giants shortstop Brandon Crawford hugs one of his children before his team takes on the Los Angeles Dodgers at Oracle Park on October 1, 2023.
Former SF Giants shortstop Brandon Crawford hopes to play in 2024 / D. Ross Cameron-USA TODAY Sports

On the second day of the general manager meeting in Scottsdale, Wolfe made known that the 36-year-old is generating interest from different organizations –– a swift change of pace for Crawford, who has never tested the free agent market in his career.

“He’s been with the Giants his whole life, literally, so it’s hard for him to imagine life anywhere else, but he’s listening,” Wolfe told the Chronicle. “Several teams have called and asked if he’d consider going somewhere.”

Crawford –– a three-time All-Star and four-time Gold Glove award winner –– has seen his production plummet in recent seasons, struggling to achieve league-average consistency offensively while taking multiple steps back defensively. The issue of health has also been in question as his durability has been tarnished by injuries in the last few years.

After a career resurgence in 2021 that notched him a two-year contract extension and consideration for National League MVP, Crawford’s last two seasons haven’t been pretty. In 2023, he slashed just .194/.273/.314 with a .587 OPS.

There’s no question Crawford is the greatest shortstop in franchise history, but fitting him in the organization's future plans could create a challenging and unlikely task for the Giants front office –– a baseball operations group focusing on stockpiling young and athletic talent. For that reason, president of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi has already essentially named Marco Luciano as the starting shortstop, allowing the 22-year-old top prospect a chance to win the job out of spring training.

“If Brandon could write the script, he’d play shortstop on that field (at Oracle Park) the rest of his life,” Wolfe said. “It’s not within his control.”

Wolfe also said Crawford could be willing to play multiple positions to extend his career. Aside from a lone pitching appearance, he’s only ever appeared at shortstop.

Andrew Baggarly of The Athletic added additional context by later reporting that Brandon Crawford and Wolfe were “gauging interest from teams,” while not yet deciding whether he’ll play in 2024. Instead, they’re simply navigating free agency with an “open mind.”


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Steven Rissotto
STEVEN RISSOTTO

Steven Rissotto (he/him) is an award-winning journalist who currently covers the San Francisco Giants for SFBay.ca and Giants Baseball Insider. At 19-years-old in 2021, he joined SF Bay Media as the Giants beat writer, covering games a few times a week during the Giants’ record-setting 107-win season. Along with his game story coverage he is also the host of RizzoCast, a baseball podcast he founded in 2020 that features interviews with professional and amateur baseball players, coaches, media, fans, and everyone else around the game. Past guests have included Tyler Glasnow, Bob Kendrick, Shawn Estes, Bill Laskey, Renel Brooks Moon, Dave Dravecky, Ned Colletti, Denard Span, Ron Wotus, Joe Maddon, J.T. Snow and more. He is also a co-host with Tylor Hall on the Shutdown Inning Podcast, a show focused on all the latest happenings around the baseball world. Both podcasts are available on YouTube and everywhere podcasts are found. Currently, he is a student at San Francisco State University where he is majoring in Journalism with an emphasis in print/online and minoring in education. At SF State, he is the managing editor for Golden Gate Xpress, the student-run newspaper. He was formerly a member of the newspaper at Skyline College, where he served as editor-in-chief and news editor while also writing sports and features. He was formerly a student-journalist at Archbishop Riordan High School in San Francisco, where he pitched for the baseball team and covered some of the biggest stories in campus history. This includes a new multi-sports facility on campus, the breaking news coverage of Riordan’s coed announcement and the COVID-19 pandemic. Steven is well-respected by his peers and has been honored numerous times by Student Newspapers Online, JEA, ACP, and the California Publishing Association. In 2021, he finished second in the country for Reporter of the Year for ACP among the two-year college schools.