Willy Adames, Buster Posey set tone for SF Giants’ spring training



SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Willy Adames didn’t need much time to excite the contingent of fans seated behind the first-base dugout at Scottsdale Stadium on the first day of full-squad workouts.

In his first live batting practice session of the spring, Adames sent right-hander Sean Hjelle’s second offering over the left-field fence and into the opposing bullpen. It was a glimpse of what the Giants hope Adames can provide over the next seven years.

“Every time you touch the barrel this early in the spring is a great feeling,” Adames said with a smile.

Before Adames cleared the fences for the first time, president of baseball operations Buster Posey set the tone for spring training by speaking to the team Monday morning in the clubhouse. Manager Bob Melvin addressed the team as well but crossed several items off his list because Posey beat him to the punch. When Adames discussed his signing, he said Posey was the factor, sharing that his meeting with the Giants was solely between the two.

The team addresses were accompanied by a video, one featuring highlights of former Giants such as Willie Mays and Will Clark, as well as current players such as Logan Webb and Justin Verlander.

“We’re all kind of thinking the same things,” Melvin said. “It’s about team here, and Buster was kind of the ultimate team player for a star. The message was: If we’re going to go where we want to go, we’ve got to do it together.”

Added Adames: “I bought into his plan for this organization, what he wants to build here in the near future. I want to be part of that. I want to have something that’s similar to what they had when they were champions three times in five years. We want to build something like that here now.”

For the Giants to get where they want to go, they’ll also need Adames to continue playing at a high level.

Adames, 29, enters his first camp with the orange and black fresh off signing a franchise-record seven-year, $182 million contract, a record that previously belonged to Posey ($167 million). The signing of Adames appeared to signal that an active offseason was ahead for San Francisco, which lost left-hander Blake Snell and outfielder Michael Conforto to the rival Los Angeles Dodgers in free agency. Instead, the rest of the winter was relatively quiet.

The Giants did beef up the rotation by signing right-hander Justin Verlander to a one-year, $17 million deal. Jung Hoo Lee could also almost be considered a new signing given he only played 37 games in 2024. But the bulk of last year’s roster — a roster that finished fourth place in the NL West — remains the same.

“We’re counting on the young guys to step up and be themselves,” Adames said. “I feel like we have amazing talent here. We have to go out there and compete and put up numbers and win games. As far as the talent we have here, I think we’re in a really good spot.

“The division is tough. We’re going to have to go out there and beat everybody playing the right baseball. That’s the culture we’re trying to create here in spring training: play baseball the right way and take advantage of every opportunity that we can and see what happens after that.”

Adames stands to provide an instant boost of power after setting career-highs in homers (32), RBIs (112), runs (93) and steals (21) last season. The main area of Adames’ game to monitor, though, will be his defense.



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