The San Diego Padres have found their second basement for the 2009 season. David Eckstein and the Padres signed a one year contract on Wednesday. Eckstein is expected to make around $1 million in the one year deal. Eckstein hit .265 in 324 at-bats last season between stints with the Toronto Blue Jays and Arizona Diamondbacks.

I would expect to see Eckstein hitting in the number two spot for the Padres as he is a good contact hitter and usually puts the ball in play. He does not hit for power, but he will put the ball in play and get on base. Exactly what the Padres need at the top of the order.

Padres Blog

Post info: By Cliff on January 15th, 2009
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The San Diego Padres have re-signed Mark Prior and signed Chris Burke to one year contracts. Both players will be invited to spring training as well. Prior will make $1 million if he makes it to the big leagues and pitches in a game. Burke is expected to make $650,000 if he makes it to the big leagues and plays in a game.

I would have to say that Burke has a better shot of making the team then Prior just because we are unsure if Prior is healthy for the first time since 2006. I’d love for Prior to make the team and be a middle of the rotation starter but right now he has so many question marks it is unkown.

Either way both signings are pretty cheap and exactly what kind of contracts the Padres needed to sign them to.

Padres Blog

Post info: By Cliff on January 14th, 2009
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The San Diego Padres traded away shortstop Khalil Greene to the St. Louis Cardinals for Minor League right-hander Mark Worrell and a player to be named later on Thursday. The deal was first rumored on Wednesday but the both clubs did not make it official until Thursday.

Worrell was 3-3 with a 2.15 ERA and 80 strikeouts in 58 2/3 innings with Triple-A Memphis in 2008. He has 84 Minor League saves since being selected by the Cards in the 12th round of the 2004 First-Year Player Draft.

The Padres will have until April 1 to choose the other player in the trade. General manager Kevin Towers said that the player would be just as good as Worrell if not better once they choose the player. It is expected to be another pitching prospect.

With the move it sheds away the huge contract that Greene was to be paid next year. The team will probably be playing under a $40 millon dollar payroll in 2009 so they need to cut all the salary that they can and build for the future.

San Diego Padres

Post info: By Cliff on December 5th, 2008
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Catcher Josh Bard has played his last game of the season — and his last game — with The San Diego Padres.

Bard strained his right triceps on Monday, a relapse of the same injury that he suffered last month, also in Denver.

“It’s weird and frustrating with the way the season has gone,” Bard said before the Padres faced the Rockies on Tuesday at Coors Field.

In a season in which Bard has been hampered by injuries, this injury effectively ends his season with 11 games remaining, manager Bud Black said.

“He’s more than likely out for the year,” Black said.

The injury means Bard, acquired in 2006 from the Boston Red Sox with reliever Cla Meredith, has played his last game with the Padres.

A team source indicated Tuesday that the Padres won’t offer him salary arbitration after the season, rendering him a free agent.

With rookie Nick Hundley figuring to get the majority of starts at catcher next season, the Padres will either fill their reserve catcher role internally with someone like Luke Carlin, who started Tuesday, or through free agency.

One option for a backup could be 39-year-old Brad Ausmus, who lives in Del Mar. Ausmus, who played for San Diego from 1993-96, has said this will be his last season in Houston and that he wants to play closer to home.

The Padres’ catching situation is certainly a far cry from where the team was when it broke Spring Training when it had two veteran catchers — Bard and Michael Barrett — it felt comfortable with.

But Barrett missed 41 games earlier this season with a strained elbow ligament and has been out since July 4 with a fractured nose.

“It’s a tough situation,” Black said. “That’s a position we thought we were well covered. It just goes to show you never know.”

Bard suffered a strain of the right triceps taking batting practice at Coors Field on Aug. 8 and missed 13 games. He suffered a similar injury on Monday doing another hitting drill.

Bard, who missed 54 games earlier this season with a high ankle sprain, will now miss more games this season than he’s played in (57). He finishes the season hitting .202 in 178 at-bats with one home run and 16 RBIs.

Bard hit .338 in 93 games with the Padres following the trade from Boston and .285 last season with five home runs and 51 RBIs.

Corey Brock is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

Post info: By SDmic07 on September 21st, 2008
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San Diego Union Tribune’s Bill Center talked to Padres manager Bud Black about Brian Giles, who could be a free agent after the season.

And do you pick up Giles $9 million option for 2009 or let him walk into free agency with a $3 million buyout?

“Brian still gets it done,” Padres manager Bud Black said last night after the Brewers snapped a four-game losing streak and inched to within four games of the plummeting Chicago Cubs in the National League Central race.

“Brian is a mainstay player.”

While Black thinks Giles is a mainstay, the Padres front office obviously feels differently. Buster Olney says he heard that “the Padres were livid when Giles vetoed the trade that they pursued with the Red Sox in August.”

Will The San Diego Padres buy out Giles after this season? If you believe the rumors that the franchise is looking to cut payroll, then it makes sense that they would.

Coley Ward writes for Umpbump.com. You can reach him here.

  • The Padres might be looking to slash their already-low payroll. With Kevin Towers, Paul DePodesta, and Sandy Alderson on staff, they might be able to do it. The question is of how competitive they’ll be in ‘09.  For more on the topic, check out our Padres Offseason Outlook.
  • Towers thinks that when it comes to free agents, no one does it better than Pat Gillick.
  • Post info: By SDmic07 on September 7th, 2008
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    The San Diego Padres, old Padre finds new home.

    8-5-2008

    Philadelphia Phillies
    Signed INF Tadahito Iguchi

    Post info: By SDmic07 on September 7th, 2008
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     The San Diego Padres were able to come to terms with their first-round Draft pick, Allan Dykstra, moments before the 9 p.m. PT deadline.

    Dykstra was the 23rd pick in this year’s First-Year Player Draft and played his collegiate ball at Wake Forest University. But he is a hometown kid, having played his high school baseball at Rancho Bernardo High School.

    “We are extremely excited that we were able to reach an agreement with Allan Dykstra this evening,” said Padres director of scouting Bill Gayton. “It came down to the last hour. We spoke earlier this afternoon, and we had some conversations that obviously picked up as we neared the signing deadline.”

    Dykstra was given a $1.15 million signing bonus.

    The major hang up with the negotiations came after a team examination raised questions about a hip surgery Dykstra had during his days at Rancho Bernardo.

    The examination revealed some issues with Dykstra’s hip, the same one that he had surgery on in high school. He’d developed avascular necrosis, a degenerative hip condition.

    But Kevin Towers expressed that the deciding factor in going ahead with signing Dykstra was that his hip issues didn’t prevent him from playing collegiately for the last three years. After feeling comfortable with what his doctors and the Padres’ doctors had to say about his hip, the Padres were able to get the deal done.

    “Allan had a strong desire to play for the Padres,” Gayton said. “It was his favorite team, his hometown team and we selected him No. 23 overall, so we certainly didn’t want to run into long-term problems from an organizational standpoint. I mean, you have an extremely talented individual that, hopefully long-term, has a very successful career and we reap the benefits and he does as well.”

    Now that he’s signed, Dykstra and the Padres can focus on getting him back into the flow of baseball. When Dykstra was drafted, his college season was already complete as the Demon Deacons did not make the postseason, so he hasn’t been playing competitive baseball for quite some time.

    “He certainly missed some time this summer to get a chance to play [with Class A Eugene],” Towers said. “But the key thing is that we got it done and I think it just adds to an already very good 2008 Draft. And now it makes it all that more successful, having Dykstra now as a part of the Padres family.”

    Dykstra, who hit .323 with 16 home runs and 50 RBIs for the Demon Deacons, is someone the Padres are excited about getting into PETCO Park.

    “He has the type of power that plays at PETCO,” Towers said. “This ballpark certainly won’t be able to hold him. It’s hard to find those types of players out there.”

    Dykstra will be sent to Eugene upon his arrival but will tentatively arrive at PETCO on Sunday.

    “You want to introduce him to professional baseball,” Gayton said. “You’d like him to interact with his teammates and get a feel for the organization, staff and players that are here and are going to be working with him. Hopefully, he’ll be playing with them for many years.”

    Ronald Clark is an associate reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

    Post info: By SDmic07 on August 17th, 2008
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    The Brian Giles situation should be resolved today.  New take on it this morning: Michael Silverman of the Boston Heraldhas a baseball source indicating “the Red Sox claimed Giles out of legitimate interest and not as an attempt to keep another team from claiming him.”

    2:17pm: Nick Cafardo of the Boston Globe says Giles would have vetoed a deal to the Rays as well.  Cafardo believes the Red Sox will continue to monitor the waiver wire for a bench bat.  Amalie Benjamin says the Sox weren’t broken up about Giles’ decision, and trade talks didn’t get too far.

    12:55pm: It’s official – Giles has blocked the deal.  The window has closed.   You may recall he originally took less to sign with the Padres back in ‘05.

    12:35pm: ESPN’s Buster Olney says Giles plans to block a trade to Boston.

    Ken Rosenthal wrote yesterday, “the move was apparently designed as a block to prevent the Tampa Bay Rays from claiming Giles, sources say.”

    4:34pm: Tom Krasovic has further musings on the Giles situation.  He wonders if the Red Sox could rent Giles for the rest of the season and then let him go back to the Padres as a free agent.

    THURSDAY, 11:06am: Interestingly, the Red Sox won the claim on Giles.  Their intent was to block the Rays, according to Ken Rosenthal.  Giles can veto a trade to Boston, and he might simply because his playing time could be reduced.  Also, I have learned that Giles would still be able to veto a straight salary dump.  The Padres can’t use this situation to sneak around Giles’ no-trade clause.

    Boston winning the claim means all NL teams passed on Giles, as well as most AL teams.

     

    Post info: By SDmic07 on August 8th, 2008
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    Brian Giles Claimed On Waivers
    By Tim Dierkes [August 6, 2008 at 8:56pm CST]
    According to Ken Rosenthal, Padres right fielder Giles was claimed on waivers by an unknown team. Giles has about $2.7MM left on his contract this year. He also has a $9MM option for ‘09 with a $3MM buyout (which logically should be exercised). Giles gets another $2MM if traded. Rosenthal adds that Giles can block deals to the Orioles, Red Sox, Tigers, Rays, Marlins, Brewers, Pirates, and Nationals.
    Rosenthal says the Padres will attempt to make a deal with the claiming team, though it won’t be a salary dump. Giles, 37, is hitting .318/.405/.438 away from PETCO this year. Not too many players are capable of a .400 OBP.
    Players Who Cleared Waivers
    By Tim Dierkes [August 6 at 9:59pm CST]
    I will make this post a permanent sidebar link. This is a running list of players who have cleared waivers, based on published reports. Once a player clears waivers, he can be traded to any team (barring a no-trade clause).
    Greg Maddux – Maddux is earning $10MM this year and will only accept a trade to a West Coast team. The Dodgers wanted him but asked the Padres to pay more than 80% of his remaining salary according to Peter Gammons.

    Post info: By SDmic07 on August 7th, 2008
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    On the day The Yankees Stadium/Polo Grounds said fare-well to the last All-star Game it will ever see, it sure seemed like it didn’t want too say good bye. Going to the bottom of the 15th inning was Michael Young one out sacrifice-fly scoring the homerun derby winner Justin Morneau from third.
    The San Diego Padres side of things they have a lot too be proud when it comes to their 1st baseman
    Adrian Gonzalez has one hit, one RBI, one strikeout on three at bats; defensively he was great just like we’re use to. He was clutch in the big situations; his sac-fly in the top of the 8th was though to be the winning run until Billy Wagner gave it up the next inning to Evan Longoria ground rule double scoring Grady Sizemore.
    One note to point out The Florida Marlins 2nd baseman Dan Uggla had three errors that had big roles in both times The American League, came back or when they on it.
    Two in the 8th and one in the 15th.Other notes: Matt Holiday started off the scoring with a single homerun his first All-Star homerun. Also Lance Berkman scored Hanley Ramirez on a
    Sac-fly in the top of the 6th. But it wouldn’t hold up as the bottom of the 7th inning
    J.D Drew hit a two run shot (first in an All-Star Game) scoring J.Morneau.
    It was a Mid-Season Classic and Homerun Derby for the times and good ones to send the Yankees Stadium/Polo Grounds off on a memorable note. Thank You for the memories since the being of time!

    Post info: By SDmic07 on July 16th, 2008
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