Sports
Giants part ways with Zaidi; Posey now president of baseball ops
Giants part ways with Zaidi; Posey now president of baseball ops originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
SAN FRANCISCO — A year after getting rid of their manager, the Giants have fired the man who hired him.
The Giants on Monday parted ways with president of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi, who was brought on after the 2018 season to overhaul the organization but managed to reach the postseason just once in six seasons.
Franchise icon Buster Posey has been named as Zaidi’s replacement, the Giants announced.
The Giants have parted ways with Farhan Zaidi. Buster Posey will be president of baseball operations.
— Alex Pavlovic (@PavlovicNBCS) September 30, 2024
Greg Johnson: “Buster has the demeanor, intelligence and drive to do this job, and we are confident that he and Bob Melvin will work together to bring back winning baseball to San Francisco.”
— Alex Pavlovic (@PavlovicNBCS) September 30, 2024
“We have made the decision to part ways with Farhan Zaidi,” Giants chairman Greg Johnson said in a statement. “We appreciate Farhan’s commitment to the organization and his passion for making an impact in our community during his six years with the Giants. Ultimately, the results have not been what we had hoped, and while that responsibility is shared by all of us, we have decided that a change is necessary. While these decisions are not easy, we believe it is time for new leadership to elevate our team so we can consistently contend for championships. I wish Farhan and his family nothing but the best moving forward.
“As we look ahead, I’m excited to share that Buster Posey will now take on a greater role as the new President of Baseball Operations. We are looking for someone who can define, direct and lead this franchise’s baseball philosophy and we feel that Buster is the perfect fit. Buster has the demeanor, intelligence and drive to do this job, and we are confident that he and Bob Melvin will work together to bring back winning baseball to San Francisco.
“We are also fully committed to following the Selig Rule and ensuring diversity in our hiring for any of our open positions.’
Johnson, Posey and manager Bob Melvin will address the media at 10 a.m. on Tuesday.
The Giants’ decision brings an end to a polarizing regime that put together the winningest team in franchise history but never won over large segments of the fan base and couldn’t figure out a way to consistently win at Oracle Park.
The Giants hired Zaidi away from the Los Angeles Dodgers after losing 187 combined games in 2017-18 and firing general manager Bobby Evans, and initially the move was met with just about universal praise within the industry. Zaidi came with a strong reputation from helping to build the Oakland Athletics and Dodgers and he arrived with the promise of rejuvenating an organization that seemingly had fallen behind the times.
Zaidi’s first season was a tricky one to maneuver, as he worked behind the scenes to make changes to baseball operations and analytics while also allowing Bruce Bochy to properly say goodbye. After that first season, he hand-picked Gabe Kapler to be his manager, and while the initial press conference was awkward and borderline contentious, the Giants soon were back in the playoffs. They won a franchise-record 107 games in 2021, with Kapler being named Manager of the Year and Zaidi seemingly hitting the jackpot with every move.
The heavy use of openers and platoons was jarring to fans, but it was also initially successful. Zaidi is known for unearthing diamonds in the rough, and he hit on players like Mike Yastrzemski, LaMonte Wade Jr. and Thairo Estrada, all of whom came to San Francisco essentially for free. The Giants continued to strike out on marquee free agents, but for a while at least, it seemed that might not matter.
Everything changed after Posey retired, and looking back, members of that 2021 team talk often of just how much of the heavy lifting was done by Posey, Brandon Crawford and Brandon Belt. Zaidi never was able to rebuild that core, or even come close.
Back-to-back mediocre seasons forced him to fire Kapler, a close friend, and completely change course. He went to the opposite end of the spectrum in hiring Melvin and attempted to go big in free agency, but the Giants missed the playoffs for the third consecutive season.
Zaidi ultimately was ousted for failures in two key areas. He was unable to build a strong player development system, with some notable misses in the first round of the draft. While 2023 first-round Bryce Eldridge looks like a future star, only one of Zaidi’s previous four first-rounders has reached the big leagues.
The Giants generally are viewed as having a bottom-half farm system, and the best young player on their roster — Heliot Ramos — was drafted by the previous regime and only broke through after injuries opened the necessary playing time this year.
Zaidi repeatedly came up short at the top of the free agent market, and expensive winters the past two years did not pan out. The 2022-23 offseason proved to be a disaster, with Mitch Haniger and Ross Stripling getting traded, Sean Manaea opting out, and Michael Conforto not living up to expectations. The Giants pushed payroll into the tax this past offseason, but some bad luck led to poor results.
Jung Hoo Lee suffered a season-ending shoulder injury and Blake Snell had a rough first half after signing late in the spring. Jorge Soler was dumped on the Braves so the Giants could get out from under the remainder of his contract. The offseason looked strong on paper, and Matt Chapman and Snell ultimately have lived up to expectations, but it wasn’t enough to get the Giants over the hump.
The Giants had only about a 10 percent chance of making the postseason at the trade deadline, but Zaidi held his best chips and made one last push. It didn’t work, and in recent weeks the temperature was turned up.
The Giants finally made a decision. After more than two decades of being run by Brian Sabean and his group, they now will turn the franchise over to Posey.
Download and follow the Giants Talk Podcast
This embedded content is not available in your region.