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SF Giants corner bat Willie Calhoun becomes a free agent

SF Giants upper minors depth piece Willie Calhoun became a free agent earlier this week, officially hitting the open market.

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The SF Giants have players throughout their organization slated to become free agents this offseason. On Wednesday, corner bat Willie Calhoun became a free agent, according to the minor-league transactions tracker. Calhoun received a brief big-league stint with the Giants in September but was outrighted to Triple-A and finished the season in the minors.

Calhoun started his career in the Dodgers organization, emerging as a consensus top-100 prospect in the minor leagues during Farhan Zaidi and Gabe Kapler's tenure in Los Angeles.

The Dodgers eventually used Calhoun as the cornerstone of their trade package to acquire Yu Darvish from the Texas Rangers at the 2017 MLB trade deadline. The Rangers quickly gave Calhoun a big-league opportunity, and he emerged as an everyday player.

By 2019, Calhoun seemed to be one of the best young hitters in MLB. While injuries limited him to just 83 games that year, he recorded 21 homers with a .269/.323/.524 triple-slash as a 24-year-old. It seemed like he was living up to his potential and destined to be a middle-of-the-order bat in Texas for years to come.

Instead, Calhoun has never been able to replicate that power production and was unable to take the next step in his career. Calhoun posted a .490 OPS in the pandemic-shortened 2020 season and hit just .250/.310/.381 in 2021.

The Rangers worked with Calhoun to try and generate more power with his swing. Unlike other players who were able to take their performance to another level with similar changes, though, Calhoun never felt comfortable.

In 2022, after a bad start to the season, Calhoun was optioned to the minor leagues and requested a trade. Eventually, the Rangers dealt Calhoun to the Giants in exchange for outfielder Steven Duggar.

Calhoun was noticeably more productive in the Giants organization, hitting .291/.377/.453 with five home runs, 19 walks, and 22 strikeouts in 42 games with San Francisco's Triple-A affiliate. He only appeared in four games with the Giants, though, and managed just one hit in eight at-bats.

The biggest questions surrounding Calhoun have been defensive. Calhoun has below-average range and arm strength and inconsistent glovework. While he was primarily a second baseman early in his career, he's shifted to first base and left field defensively and, frankly, is probably best suited as a designated hitter.

Given Zaidi and Kapler's history with Willie Calhoun, it would not be surprising to see him re-sign with the SF Giants on a minor-league contract this offseason. For now, though, every MLB team will have an opportunity to negotiate a new deal with Calhoun after he became a free agent earlier this week.


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Marc Delucchi
MARC DELUCCHI

Marc Delucchi (he/they/she) serves as the Managing Editor at Giants Baseball Insider, leading their SF Giants coverage. As a freelance journalist, he has previously covered the San Francisco Giants at Around the Foghorn and McCovey Chronicles. He also currently contributes to Niners Nation, Golden State of Mind, and Baseball Prospectus. He has previously been featured in several other publications, including SFGate, ProFootballRumors, Niners Wire, GrandStand Central, Call to the Pen, and Just Baseball. Over his journalistic career, Marc has conducted investigations into how one prep baseball player lost a college opportunity during the pandemic (Baseball Prospectus) and the rampant mistreatment of players at the University of Hawaii football program under former head coach Todd Graham (SFGate). He has also broken dozens of news stories around professional baseball, primarily around the SF Giants organization, including the draft signing of Kyle Harrison, injuries and promotions to top prospects like Heliot Ramos, and trade details in the Kris Bryant deal. Marc received a Bachelor's degree from Kenyon College with a major in economics and a minor in Spanish. During his time in college, he conducted a summer research project attempting to predict the future minor-league performance of NCAA hitters, worked as a data analyst for the school's Women's basketball team, and worked as a play-by-play announcer/color commentator for the basketball, baseball, softball, and soccer teams. He also worked as an amateur baseball scout with the Collegiate Baseball Scouting Network (later renamed Evolution Metrix), scouting high school and college players for three draft cycles. For tips and inquiries, feel free to reach out to Marc directly on Twitter or via email (delucchimarc@gmail.com).

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