Giants Note: Rodriguez, Walker, Rupp, Eldridge

Giant approaches Randy Rodríguez On the 15-day injury list, the elbow sprain was August 23. Keaton Winn Triple-A Sacramento recalled a place.
Manager Bob Melvin said Rodríguez will be in second opinion (via Alex Pavlovic in the NBC Sports Bay area). Not sure if this means that the initial assessment shows that he is facing significant damage or just being cautious and cautious about any elbow focus. Rodríguez missed inflammation of the elbow for about five weeks in the second half of last year. The Giants play the strings in five games under .500. Even without obvious ligament injuries, it’s very likely to end Rodriguez’s season.
It’s a breakthrough year for 25-year-old Righty. Rodríguez won the All-Star Game and scored an average run of 1.78 with 50 appearances. He has incited more than a third of his opponent batsman and took over in the ninth inning Camilo Doval trading. Melvin says Ryan Walker A closer role will be involved for the time being. Walker was an early game of the season and had 11 saves, but he’s been on and off for a year. He has been pitching lately, and he has turned on the 2.45 ERA at 14 2/3 frames since the All-Star break.
Giant also provides updates about beginners Landen Rouppwas on the injured list last week. Tests confirmed that the right knee suffered a deep skeletal bruise (transmitted by John Shea, San Francisco Standard). It’s a month-long recovery schedule that will likely end his season.
However, when Rupp revealed that when he stumbled on the mound, which needed to be transported on the fields of Petco Park, he immediately worried that the ACL would be torn apart, which was a relief. He finished his second major league season with a 22-star start to 3.80 ERA and should have an internal track in the opening day rotation next year.
Although there weren’t many plots in the final weeks of the San Francisco season Bryce Eldridge Will arrive at Oracle Park. As part of a longer topic for the development of a 20-year-old, Susan Slusser of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote that Eldridge’s major league debut will wait until 2026. ’23 first-round picks continue to be positive in older games at nearly every minor league stop. He has his own game in 49 triple A games, batting .232/.303/.497, and has 14 home runs in 208 sets. Eldridge radiated 32% of the plate appearances at the smallest league level, including 31 strikeouts this month on 91 trips (34%).
Excitingly, it would make more sense for the fan base to have a first discussion of Eldridge for the first time, and it would make more sense for him to play for a year in Triple-A. Their season lasts until September 21, just one week shorter than the MLB schedule. Eldridge will not qualify for draft Rule 5. The Giants don’t need to bring him to a 40-man squad throughout the offseason unless they call him. It also means that if he struggles during spring training, they won’t burn the minor league option year, allowing Eldridge to start next season.



