If the San Francisco Giants were expecting to compete in a loaded National League West during the 2026 season, making an addition to their outfield was a must.

Franchise legend and team president Buster Posey accomplished that feat this week by signing Gold Glove Award-winning center fielder Harrison Bader to a two-year, $20.5 million deal, one that gives the Giants one of the best defensive outfielders in the game today.

The Giants will now enter the 2026 season with an outfield of Bader, All-Star corner outfielder Heliot Ramos, and former prized free agent signing Jung Hoo Lee, who will now shift to a corner spot–likely right field.

Having star third baseman and designated hitter Rafael Devers in uniform for a full season will provide Posey and first-year manager Tony Vitello with a boost, one that you could easily pencil in for 30+ home runs and over 100 RBI.

At long last, the San Francisco Giants had a hitter cross the 30-home run mark in 2025, as shortstop Willy Adames’ home run on the final game of the regular season made him the first player in orange and black to hit 30 or more homers since Barry Bonds did so in 2004.

By signing Bader, who will join fellow defensive standouts Matt Chapman and Patrick Bailey in the lineup, San Francisco has a solid collection of defense and offense they can deploy during the upcoming season.

Here’s a look at what the San Francisco Giants’ 2026 lineup could look like with Spring Training just around the corner.

More on the San Francisco Giants’ 2026 lineup

It’s likely that Posey will enter the 2026 season looking to upgrade the Giants’ second base spot, one that will be occupied by Casey Schmitt, Christian Koss, or Tyler Fitzgerald unless another signing is made before Opening Day.

Rookie first baseman and top prospect Bryce Eldridge, at just 21 years old, is in line to be San Francisco’s everyday starting first baseman, although Vitello could play Devers more at first base if the former first-round pick needs more time in AAA.

Adding Bader may not elevate the Giants to World Series contender status, but it upgrades an area of weakness–outfield defense–while also giving San Francisco a player who had an above-average season at the plate (.277 AVG and .796 OPS in 2025) for the next two years.

More San Francisco Giants content from Sactown Sports

Spring Training is right around the corner.

Football season is almost done, the holidays are way in the rearview mirror, and baseball is finally creeping back into everyday conversation. With report dates set, this isn’t some distant thing anymore. Spring Training is right around the corner.

The San Francisco Giants get going early. Pitchers and catchers report on Tuesday, February 10, and the full squad shows up Sunday, February 15. That’s when you start seeing the first videos from Arizona — bullpen sessions, batting practice clips, guys talking about how different they feel this year.

It’s also when the real questions start getting some early answers. Who looks sharp? Who doesn’t? Who suddenly looks like they belong?

Spring Training lies sometimes, but it still matters. It’s where jobs are won and lost, where rotations start to take shape, and where managers begin to show what they’re really thinking. For the San Francisco Giants, it’s about finding some stability — in the lineup, in the rotation, and in the clubhouse. They’ve got pieces, but Spring Training is where you see if those pieces actually fit.

Giants, A’s to report for Spring Training in coming weeks

Upcoming San Francisco Giants & MLB Offseason Schedule

Early-January – MLB Arbitration Negotiations
Mid-February – Pitchers & Catchers report for Spring Training
Saturday, February 21st – @ Seattle Mariners (Spring Training Opener)

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