SF Giants prospects: Quinn McDaniel is making a great first impression

In this story:
Quinn McDaniel’s cell phone wouldn’t quit buzzing. Hundreds of texts and social media notifications were pouring in at once, an amount easily capable enough to cease any further functionality on the device. The messages multiplied in quantity as family and friends reached out to congratulate McDaniel on reaching the next stepin his baseball journey. He had been selected in the fifth round of the 2023 MLB Draft by the SF Giants.
A huge day for @MaineBaseball and @QuinnMcD3! McDaniel was selected in the 5th round by the @SFGiants, capping off an incredible career with the Black Bears.#mesports @FoxABCMaine @NickDerba https://t.co/mptOseLOKx pic.twitter.com/f8XPF2VLEh
— Tyler Krusz (@TylerKruszTV) July 11, 2023
The 20-year-old second baseman who had starred at the University of Maine was surrounded by his immediate family, girlfriend, and grandparents when he received word that the Giants had selected him with the 153rd overall pick.
“Yeah, I'm honestly not really sure if it's sunk in yet,” McDaniel told Giants Baseball Insider in an interview following the draft. “Obviously, there's a bunch of different emotions that I've kind of been feeling and I'm super excited. I'm very happy to be a Giant and I'm excited to get to work.”
McDaniel flew out to Arizona and officially signed his contract with the organization on July 18. He received a $300,450 signing bonus from the team, an under-slot deal.
In his five years as head coach of the Maine Black Bears, Nick Derba told GBI that teams that speak the most to players usually aren’t the ones who draft them. The Giants, however, were an exception to this luck-based trend.
“The conversations with Quinn regarding the draft were very normal,” Derba said. “He's a very confident player. He’s not cocky –– he’s a modest person –– but he knew that he was good enough to go and do this, so the conversation wasn't bigger than him.”
San Francisco was the first big league team to look extensively at McDaniel –– area scout Ray Callari had been in contact with him for roughly two years. Callari has been scouting in the organization since 2008 and is responsible for signing dozens of impact talent from the East Coast, including current prospects Ryan Murphy and Reggie Crawford (Giants Top 9 Prospect).
Despite knowing a limited amount about the Giants franchise, McDaniel says he’s heard about the winning culture from his connections with two current prospects, both fellow Callari-signed players. He overlapped at Maine with right-hander Nick Sinacola, a seventh-rounder by the club in 2021, and has spent time hitting during the offseason with outfielder Jared Dupere –– both are currently playing for High-A Eugene.
“We’re just hyped for our boy and I think that he fell into probably the best baseball situation he could have fallen into,” Nick Rainess, McDaniel’s shortstop at Maine, told Giants Baseball Insider. “We’re just pumped for him.”
Born in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, McDaniel was a three-sport athlete during his youth but shifted focus to baseball entirely once he enrolled at Marshwood High School in South Berwick, Maine. He grew up an avid fan of the Boston Red Sox and admired the likes of Mookie Betts and Kike Hernandez, two “high-twitch” players he could relate to.
“I think there's always been a little chip on my shoulder coming from Maine, coming from the Northeast and not being able to be outside year-round,” McDaniel said. “I think you can kind of see that if you watch me play the game –– I’ll play the game hard and I play the game really fast. It's definitely something I take pride in.”
The University of Maine wasn’t always a top destination spot for McDaniel, but conversations with Derba about the baseball program’s philosophy changed the dynamics and left a lasting impact on his overall interest. The pitch was enough to sell him on the school –– also on the idea of soon being a staple in the infield.
Rainess is nearly three years older and was a sophomore when McDaniel strolled through the Maine locker room as a freshman for the first time.
“I remember watching him hit for the first time being like, ‘Oh, this little guy is good. Yeah, who is this guy?’ He was someone that I wanted to be around from the first moment I met him,” Rainess said. “You hang out around him, you just get better. That’s how it goes.”
Rainess recalled a moment from last winter when the Black Bears were preparing for another season, but also having to endure the brutal damp climate of the Northeast. An avid fan of honey, McDaniel kept a jar inside his locker that he would refer to a few times a day. One day, he returned from a hitting session to see a flood of visitors invading the snack –– not any of his teammates, but tiny ants wandering the clubhouse floor.
“They seemed to find my honey and tell their friends about it,” McDaniel said. “So there were a bunch of ants everywhere. They were trying to get into my jar of honey and kind of get their lick on that. It was chaos.”
Naturally, a no-food policy was implemented shortly after.
At 5’11 and 180 pounds, McDaniel’s size hasn’t necessarily been a calling card throughout his athletic career. However, teammates considered him a “gym rat” with a quiet and determined personality –– the business-as-usual approach comes in handy when he constantly consumes motivational podcasts and worships mindset tactics established from studying Kobe Bryant.
McDaniel’s off-the-field demeanor and makeup have translated to success between the white lines. In 2023, he played in all 53 games for Maine and slashed .354/.513/.688 with 16 homers, 45 runs batted in, and 32 stolen bases. He also excelled in the plate discipline department, drawing 60 walks –– a single-season America East Record –– to compliment 44 strikeouts.
With twitchy movements at the plate and a pronounced leg kick, McDaniel brings an unorthodox style to his approach. Nevertheless, his offensive statistics have shown a consistent upward trend, year after year. The Giants have every reason to anticipate a continued progression in his performance.
It’s a home run derby for @MaineBaseball as Quinn McDaniel is the next to bat one in and increase the Black Bears lead to 6!#AEBASE x #AEChamps pic.twitter.com/HtADYQEoVU
— America East (@AmericaEast) May 27, 2023
“Obviously a big piece going into college was just gaining strength and kind of putting on some mass and just being able to kind of do damage with my swing,” McDaniel said. “So once I kind of got in the weight room and started to really take that serious, I saw the balls just coming off my bat a little different, which kind of allowed me to see some better power numbers.“
Defensively, McDaniel says he is most comfortable at second base and believes he could stick at the position in professional baseball. Derba agrees but also sees some versatility –– a tool the Giants have obsessed over with many of their infielders.
“I do think he can sit there,” Derba said. “He can play the outfield very well. His bat is his carrying tool so he hits. He’s got four spots he can play very well, he probably could even play a little bit a third. I think he’ll find a spot at second base because of the way he hits but I don't see him having any issues there, especially being in an organization where infielders do get better.”
McDaniel made his professional debut shortly after the draft, appearing in 16 games in the Arizona Complex League before receiving the call-up to Single-A San Jose to finish the season. Splitting time between second base and designated hitter, McDaniel has taken no time adjusting to pro pitching. Across 117 plate appearances between the two stops, McDaniel is hitting .258/.424/.495 with six home runs, eight stolen bases, 28 walks, and 35 strikeouts.
Quinn McDaniel was 1 for 3 with his 3rd Cal League home run and a walk vs Stockton on Tuesday.
— SFGProspects (@SFGProspects) September 6, 2023
Since joining San Jose, Quinn is hitting .367/.447/.733 (1.181 OPS) pic.twitter.com/7JcB7DwKsv
“I think the thing I'm most excited for is just surrounding myself with other people who love the game and using the development team and all the resources to truly make the best of this opportunity and truly just be the best player I can be, and just have fun with it,” McDaniel said.

Steven Rissotto (he/him) is an award-winning journalist who currently covers the San Francisco Giants for SFBay.ca and Giants Baseball Insider. At 19-years-old in 2021, he joined SF Bay Media as the Giants beat writer, covering games a few times a week during the Giants’ record-setting 107-win season. Along with his game story coverage he is also the host of RizzoCast, a baseball podcast he founded in 2020 that features interviews with professional and amateur baseball players, coaches, media, fans, and everyone else around the game. Past guests have included Tyler Glasnow, Bob Kendrick, Shawn Estes, Bill Laskey, Renel Brooks Moon, Dave Dravecky, Ned Colletti, Denard Span, Ron Wotus, Joe Maddon, J.T. Snow and more. He is also a co-host with Tylor Hall on the Shutdown Inning Podcast, a show focused on all the latest happenings around the baseball world. Both podcasts are available on YouTube and everywhere podcasts are found. Currently, he is a student at San Francisco State University where he is majoring in Journalism with an emphasis in print/online and minoring in education. At SF State, he is the managing editor for Golden Gate Xpress, the student-run newspaper. He was formerly a member of the newspaper at Skyline College, where he served as editor-in-chief and news editor while also writing sports and features. He was formerly a student-journalist at Archbishop Riordan High School in San Francisco, where he pitched for the baseball team and covered some of the biggest stories in campus history. This includes a new multi-sports facility on campus, the breaking news coverage of Riordan’s coed announcement and the COVID-19 pandemic. Steven is well-respected by his peers and has been honored numerous times by Student Newspapers Online, JEA, ACP, and the California Publishing Association. In 2021, he finished second in the country for Reporter of the Year for ACP among the two-year college schools.