As the San Francisco Giants are looking to string together a run of victories, they have been ranked near the bottom of nearly every MLB power ranking to start the 2026 season.
With a 3-2 victory over the San Diego Padres on Monday, May 4, the Giants won their third in the previous 10 games to improve to 14-21 on the season.
It's hasn't been an ideal start for the Giants' first-year skipper Tony Vitello. Vitello made MLB history when he was hired as manager by San Francisco with no prior coaching experience in the majors. He had been a standout, national championship-winning collegiate baseball coach at Tennessee.
However, through 35 games, the Giants have not looked like a team that could sneak into the wild card. It's too early to count them out, but after a month of baseball it's evident that something has got to give.
After a month of games, USA TODAY Sports gave the Giants a generous D+ grade for their performance. ESPN, meanwhile, gave San Francisco a D-. There's been times when you see the vision, but too many times when they can't get hits, can't get runs and can't close games. Here's where the Giants rank in experts' MLB power rankings:
Giants MLB power rankings
Here's where sports experts are ranking the Giants through the first month of baseball.
USA TODAY Sports: 28th out of 30
Gabe Lacques writes: "Willy Adames in your garden-variety 5-for-55 hole, though he did break a 54-at-bat streak without an extra-base hit."
The Athletic: 30th out of 30
Zack Meisel writes: "(Landen) Roupp was solid in 106 innings last year, but his performance through April suggested a breakout season could be unfolding before our eyes (at least, before his dud on Saturday. Pay no attention to that). He logged a 2.55 ERA in his first six starts, averaged more than a strikeout per inning and surrendered only one home run. He limited opponents to a .149/.248/.207 slash line, which means he essentially made every hitter resemble a pitcher trying to bat, and, well, they don’t do that anymore. That’s what the universal DH is for."
MLB.com: 28th out of 30
Will Leitch writes: "Whatever your thoughts about manager Tony Vitello and some of the changes the Giants made this season, it is incredibly difficult to get much traction when you can’t hit. The Giants have scored the fewest runs in baseball and have been shut out seven times, two more than any other MLB team. This is not the division in which you can get away with that."
CBS Sports: 28th out of 30
Matt Snyder writes: "Last week, I noted that the Giants finally showed a pulse. Well, we've now lost that pulse. They've lost six in a row."
Bleacher Report: 28th out of 30
Kerry Miller writes: "'Twas a brutal East Coast road trip for the Giants, whose well-compensated bats continue to be M.I.A. They averaged 1.5 runs per game and didn't hit a single home run while getting swept by both the Phillies and Rays, losing three of those six games in walk-off fashion. Rafael Devers, Matt Chapman and Willy Adames went a combined 9-for-66 (.136 AVG) with two runs and two RBI. Change needs to start there."
NBC Sports: 30th out of 30
D.J. short writes: "The Giants have been swept by the Phillies and the Rays over the past week and have scored the fewest runs of any team in baseball. They’ve scored 12 fewer runs than the next-closest team, the Mets. The Giants are calling up prospects Bryce Eldridge and Jesus Rodriguez in hopes of giving a jolt to their beleaguered offense."
ESPN: 23rd out of 30 (as of Apr. 30
Alden Gonzalez writes: "There was a lot of consternation about the Giants, their offense and rookie manager Tony Vitello early on, when the first 11 games resulted in eight losses and few runs. Since then they've been, well, fine, suffering a four-game losing streak but also two separate three-game winning streaks. Logan Webb has been just OK in his starts, Rafael Devers has yet to get going offensively and Patrick Bailey, their brilliant defensive catcher, has been one of baseball's worst hitters. Assuming those things correct themselves -- and Harrison Bader gets back to who he's supposed to be when he returns off the IL -- perhaps Vitello's Giants will contend."
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: San Francisco Giants nearing bottom of sports experts' power rankings