SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — It took until the 116th day of free agency, but one of the most obvious pairings from day one finally came to fruition.
The San Francisco Giants agreed to terms late Friday night with third baseman Matt Chapman on a three-year contract that includes two opt outs, according to Jon Heyman of the New York Post, making one of their biggest splashes of the offseason almost halfway through spring training by bringing in the 30-year-old Platinum Glove winner on a discount deal.
Immediately supplanting J.D. Davis as the starting third baseman, Chapman will reportedly earn $20 million in 2024, $18 million in 2025 and $16 million in 2026 — a total potential value of $54 million — but will have the ability to opt out after each season.
Farhan Zaidi, the Giants’ president of baseball operations, was adamant about addressing the defensive issues that led to his club committing 13 more errors than any other team last season, and few free agents fit the mold better than Chapman, who has four times been named the best third baseman in his league and twice the best fielder in the entire sport.
Never playing fewer than 140 games over a full season, Chapman immediately becomes the Giants’ Opening Day third baseman and should be expected to be a stabilizing force in the lineup day in and day out. He will be one of two hitters in the projected starting nine, along with Michael Conforto, to hit 30 home runs in a season — something that has eluded Giants hitters since 2004 — though each last did it in 2019.
What that means for Davis, the incumbent at the hot corner and one of the hottest hitters early in camp, is a move to the bench or, given that the Giants already possess a right-handed hitting reserve corner infielder in Wilmer Flores, another team. If the Giants opt to keep both players, Davis would likely split more time with LaMonte Wade Jr. at first base and Flores with Conforto at designated hitter.
Chapman comes with more experience under new manager Bob Melvin than anyone else in the clubhouse.
The A’s first-round pick in 2014 (and Zaidi’s final draft as their general manager), Chapman debuted in 2017 and played his first five seasons in the majors under Melvin — and new third base coach Matt Williams — in Oakland, earning his lone All-Star selection and three of his Gold Glove trophies. A few months after Melvin took the managerial job in San Diego, Chapman was traded to Toronto, where he hasn’t been quite the same offensive force he was in Oakland.
The final number of his contract was likely considerably lower than what was projected after the 2019 season, when Chapman was 26 and still four years from free agency. He received MVP votes in consecutive seasons, combining to slug 60 home runs and win his first two Gold Gloves.
In four seasons since, he has totaled only 81 homers while batting .226, an OPS+ 9% above league average, opposed to 31% better in 2018-19.
Either version of Chapman should be an upgrade for the Giants lineup, which produced the seventh-fewest runs in the majors last season.
Gone from that group are Joc Pederson, Mitch Haniger and Brandon Crawford. In are Chapman, 25-year-old center fielder Jung Hoo Lee and rookie shortstop Marco Luciano, as Zaidi appears to be checking at least two of the three boxes on the Giants’ wishlist entering the offseason.
A superstar, they still sorely lack.
But they will field a roster that is younger and more athletic, one better constructed to support the strengths of its pitching staff and home ballpark.
The question is whether it will be enough to compete in a National League West that includes Shohei Ohtani’s superteam, the defending National League champions and not-to-be-forgotten Padres.
Opening Day in San Diego is just 27 days away.