San Francisco Giants Reporter
Evan Webeck
Evan Webeck is the San Francisco Giants beat writer for the Bay Area News Group. A Pacific Northwest native and graduate of Arizona State University, Evan previously covered the Philadelphia Phillies for MLB.com and a variety of topics for his hometown newspaper, The Seattle Times, before joining BANG, where he has also chronicled a pandemic, the prep sports scene and the Golden State Warriors 2021-22 championship season.
All Stories
Webeck: Where I voted SF Giants’ Logan Webb on my Cy Young ballot
Our San Francisco Giants beat writer reveals his Cy Young ballot and where he placed Logan Webb.
Finalist for NL Cy Young, SF Giants’ Logan Webb finishes as runner-up
Webb led MLB with 216 innings, but his 3.25 ERA was a full point higher than Blake Snell, who is a free agent this winter.
Why SF Giants left 2 promising prospects unprotected in Rule 5 draft
The Giants chose to protect a trio of pitchers instead of Aeverson Arteaga and Grant McCray, who are considered further away from the majors.
SF Giants round out Bob Melvin’s staff with pitching, bullpen coach
Bryan Price, a graduate of Tamalpais HS and Cal, and Garvin Alston, the River Cats' pitching coach, will join Bob Melvin's staff.
Pat Burrell, Matt Williams among Bob Melvin’s initial hires for SF Giants coaching staff
The Giants announced the initial members of Bob Melvin's coaching staff, featuring some new faces and many holdovers from the previous staff.
Why NBA chose San Francisco — and Oakland — for 2025 All-Star game
The Warriors' new San Francisco arena was the primary factor, but their former home in Oakland will be part of the festivities.
Warriors to host NBA All-Star Game, weekend festivities in 2025
Chase Center will be the center of the basketball universe for All-Star weekend in February 2025.
SF Giants pick up option on Alex Cobb, All-Star starter returns for 2024
With a 3.80 ERA in 56 starts the past two seasons, Cobb will return to Giants at a below-market rate of $10 million.
What Michael Conforto opting in means for SF Giants
After an underwhelming 2023, Michael Conforto will opt in to an $18M salary for next season rather than test the free agent market.
Ohtani? Yamamoto? Chapman? Assessing the best free agent fits for the SF Giants
The Giants need to add star power, athleticism and, if they can, a top starting pitcher this offseason.