SF Giants announcer says major free agent signing 'could happen pretty fast'

Dave Flemming reinforced recent reports about the SF Giants aggressive pursuit of superstar free agents on the latest episode of The TK Show.
SF Giants announcer says major free agent signing 'could happen pretty fast'
SF Giants announcer says major free agent signing 'could happen pretty fast' /
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The SF Giants are diving headfirst into the offseason searching for a superstar. A recent report by MLB Network insider Jon Morosi said the front office was "set" on signing at least one of the top-two available free agents (Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto). Legendary Giants announcer Dave Flemming reinforced the report on the latest episode of The TK Show with Tim Kawakami, and was optimistic enough to say, "I think it could happen pretty fast, I do. This week we could have some big Giants news."

"They're not only in, they're in hard on the biggest names," Flemming said. "So, that doesn't guarantee success. We've seen it over and over again where the Giants come up short on some of these big players for lots of different reasons and different reasons player to player. But they are in hard on the biggest names."

Flemming noted that Sonny Gray, who signed a three-year, $75 million contract with the Cardinals, seemed like a potential fit with the Giants. However, he believes the Giants are confident enough in their pursuits of Ohtani and Yamamoto that they were not willing to make a sizable enough signing that could impede their financial flexibility.

"They're in on Ohtani for sure. They're in on Yamamoto for sure and I would guess, pure speculation-I'm not in on the phone calls or anything, my guess is those are the top two and everything else cascades from those two."

Ohtani, of course, is coming off his second-MVP campaign in the past three years, where he hit .304/.412/.654 with 44 home runs in 135 games as a designated hitter and recorded a 3.14 ERA with 167 strikeouts and 55 walks in 132 innings pitched as a starter with the Angels.

Yamamoto has long been considered one of the best pitchers not already in MLB, and has drawn interest from the Giants for years, according to Flemming. Across the past seven seasons in the NPB with the Orix Buffaloes Buffaloes, Yamamoto has a 1.83 ERA with 911 strikeouts and just 204 walks in 890 innings pitched.

The SF Giants will obviously have to convince Ohtani that they are ready to win now. After flailing in obscurity with the Angels, it's no secret that Ohtani wants to be in a situation that will get him to the playoffs every year. Flemming speculated that the Giants may look to sign center fielder Jung-hoo Lee (#9-ranked free agent) or third baseman Matt Chapman (#7-ranked free agent) to try and improve their chances.

"I think there's a lot of comfort fits with Ohtani here," Flemming added. "He liked San Francisco. He liked the organization. He liked Buster Posey and the championship pedigree. I guarantee you Melvin is an asset... The biggest hurdle is pretty obvious and it's just convincing Ohtani that the championship run is primed. That he is sort of the last piece and you can make a run at a championship, and part of that pitch might have to include another player or two."


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Marc Delucchi
MARC DELUCCHI

Marc Delucchi (he/they/she) serves as the Managing Editor at Giants Baseball Insider, leading their SF Giants coverage. As a freelance journalist, he has previously covered the San Francisco Giants at Around the Foghorn and McCovey Chronicles. He also currently contributes to Niners Nation, Golden State of Mind, and Baseball Prospectus. He has previously been featured in several other publications, including SFGate, ProFootballRumors, Niners Wire, GrandStand Central, Call to the Pen, and Just Baseball. Over his journalistic career, Marc has conducted investigations into how one prep baseball player lost a college opportunity during the pandemic (Baseball Prospectus) and the rampant mistreatment of players at the University of Hawaii football program under former head coach Todd Graham (SFGate). He has also broken dozens of news stories around professional baseball, primarily around the SF Giants organization, including the draft signing of Kyle Harrison, injuries and promotions to top prospects like Heliot Ramos, and trade details in the Kris Bryant deal. Marc received a Bachelor's degree from Kenyon College with a major in economics and a minor in Spanish. During his time in college, he conducted a summer research project attempting to predict the future minor-league performance of NCAA hitters, worked as a data analyst for the school's Women's basketball team, and worked as a play-by-play announcer/color commentator for the basketball, baseball, softball, and soccer teams. He also worked as an amateur baseball scout with the Collegiate Baseball Scouting Network (later renamed Evolution Metrix), scouting high school and college players for three draft cycles. For tips and inquiries, feel free to reach out to Marc directly on Twitter or via email (delucchimarc@gmail.com).