2020 San Francisco Giants season

The 2020 San Francisco Giants season is the Giants' 138th year in Major League Baseball, their 63rd year in San Francisco since their move from New York following the 1957 season, and their 21st at Oracle Park. It is the first under the leadership of the team's new manager, Gabe Kapler, who replaced the recently retired Bruce Bochy, and new team general manager Scott Harris.

2020 San Francisco Giants
Major League affiliations
Location
Other information
Owner(s)Larry Baer (managing general partner)
President of Baseball OperationsFarhan Zaidi
Manager(s)Gabe Kapler
Local televisionKNTV (NBC Bay Area 11)
(Jon Miller, Mike Krukow, Duane Kuiper, Amy Gutierrez)
NBC Sports Bay Area
(Duane Kuiper, Mike Krukow, Dave Flemming, Jon Miller, Shawn Estes, Javier López, Amy Gutierrez)
Local radioKNBR (104.5 FM and 680 AM)
San Francisco Giants Radio Network
(Jon Miller, Dave Flemming, Duane Kuiper, Mike Krukow)
KXZM (93.7 FM, Spanish)
(Erwin Higueros, Tito Fuentes, Marvin Benard)
StatsESPN.com
BB-reference
< Previous season     

On March 12, 2020, MLB announced that because of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the start of the regular season would be delayed by at least two weeks in addition to the remainder of spring training being cancelled.[1] Four days later, it was announced that the start of the season would be pushed back indefinitely due to the recommendation made by the CDC to restrict events of more than 50 people for eight weeks.[2] On June 23, commissioner Rob Manfred unilaterally implemented a 60-game season. Players reported to training camps on July 1 in order to resume spring training and prepare for a July 23 Opening Day.[3]

Season standings

National League West

National League West W L Pct. GB Home Road
Los Angeles Dodgers 177 0.708 7–5 10–2
Colorado Rockies 139 0.591 3 7–6 6–3
Arizona Diamondbacks 1211 0.522 7–4 5–7
San Diego Padres 1212 0.500 5 6–4 6–8
San Francisco Giants 816 0.333 9 3–6 5–10

National League Division Standings

Division Leaders W L Pct.
Los Angeles Dodgers 167 0.696
Chicago Cubs 147 0.667
Atlanta Braves 1410 0.583


Division 2nd Place W L Pct.
Colorado Rockies 138 0.619
Miami Marlins 97 0.562
Milwaukee Brewers 1010 0.500


Wild Card teams
(Top two qualify for postseason)
W L Pct. GB
Arizona Diamondbacks 1211 0.522
St. Louis Cardinals 55 0.500
San Diego Padres 1212 0.500
Philadelphia Phillies 89 0.471 ½
Cincinnati Reds 911 0.450 1
New York Mets 1014 0.417 2
Washington Nationals 812 0.400 2
San Francisco Giants 815 0.348
Pittsburgh Pirates 414 0.222 5

Record vs. opponents

2020 National League Records

Source: NL Standings Head-to-head

Team ARI COL LAD SD SF AL
Arizona 2–11–35–50–04–2
Colorado 1–20–02–13–17–5
Los Angeles 3–10–04–34–36–0
San Diego 5–51–23–42–11–0
San Francisco 0–01–33–41–23–7

Updated with the results of all games through August 17, 2020.

Game Log

2020 game log: 8–16 (Home: 3–6; Away: 5–10)
Legend:           = Win           = Loss           = Postponement
Bold = Giants team member

Current roster

San Francisco Giants roster
Active roster Player pool Coaches/Other

Pitchers
Starting rotation

Bullpen

Closer

Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Pitchers

Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Manager

Coaches

45-day injured list


Restricted list

28 active, 32 player pool

7- or 10-day injured list
Suspended list
# Personal leave
* Not on 40-man roster
Roster and coaches updated August 17, 2020
TransactionsDepth chart

All MLB rosters

Farm system

Level Team League Manager
AAA Sacramento River Cats Pacific Coast League
AA Richmond Flying Squirrels Eastern League
A-Advanced San Jose Giants California League
A Augusta GreenJackets South Atlantic League
A-Short Season Salem-Keizer Volcanoes Northwest League
Rookie AZL Giants Arizona League
Rookie DSL Giants Dominican Summer League

References

  1. Mark Feinsand (March 12, 2020). "Opening Day delayed at least 2 weeks; Spring Training games cancelled". MLB.com. Major League Baseball. Retrieved March 14, 2020.
  2. "Opening of regular season to be pushed back". MLB.com. Major League Baseball. March 16, 2020. Retrieved March 16, 2020.
  3. Feinsand, Mark (June 24, 2020). "Play Ball: MLB announces 2020 regular season". MLB.com. Retrieved June 24, 2020.
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