Ninety wins.
Five playoff runs scored.
And a winter that felt uncomfortably quiet.
Now A.J. Preller is breaking that silence.

đĽ HOT NEWS: After Losing Cease and SuĂĄrez, Padres Preparing Late-Offseason Push âĄ
The San Diego Padres won 90 games last season.
It didnât matter.
They managed just five total runs in a three-game Wild Card exit. The Dodgers went on to celebrate another World Series title. And in San Diego, a 90-win season suddenly felt like a missed opportunity.
Now, with spring training approaching, Padres GM A.J. Preller is signaling something loud and clear:
Heâs not finished building this team.

âWeâre going to look to add some guys here in the next couple of weeks that help us a lot,â Preller said at FanFest inside Petco Park.
Translation?
This roster isnât done.
A Winter of Subtraction
So far, San Diegoâs offseason has felt more like reshuffling than reinforcement.
What theyâve done:
- Re-signed Michael King
- Signed South Korean infielder Sung-mun Song
What theyâve lost:
- Dylan Cease (signed a $210M deal with Toronto)
- All-Star closer Robert SuĂĄrez (signed with Atlanta)
- Slugger Ryan OâHearn (to Pittsburgh)
- Hits leader Luis Arraez (still unsigned)
- Yu Darvish (out for the season with elbow injury â possibly career-ending)
Thatâs not minor turnover.
Thatâs rotation-altering change.

In the NL West â where the Dodgers continue stacking championships â standing still isnât neutral.
Itâs falling behind.
Prellerâs Checklist: Arms First, Then Bats
The Padresâ rotation currently projects around:
- Michael King
- Nick Pivetta
- Joe Musgrove
- Randy VĂĄsquez
Competitive? Yes.
Intimidating? Not yet.
Preller made it clear: another starting pitcher is high priority.
âContinuing to add to the starting pitching side of things,â he emphasized.
But the offense might be the more urgent concern.
When Fernando TatĂs Jr., Manny Machado, and Jackson Merrill arenât carrying the load, the lineup can stall â and the Wild Card series proved it brutally.

Preller specifically mentioned upgrades at:
- First base
- Designated hitter
- Bench depth
Heâs not looking for placeholders.
Heâs looking for impact.
The Ownership Cloud
Complicating everything is uncertainty at the top.
The family of late owner Peter Seidler announced in November that the team is exploring a sale. Meanwhile, Preller himself is entering the final year of his contract.
Speculation quickly followed:
Is the quiet offseason about payroll control?
Preller pushed back firmly.

âWeâre not in a spot where we have to do anything because of a payroll kind of situation,â he said.
Earlier trade talks may have involved trimming salary. But now, the focus is clear:
Add.
Not subtract.
As for his own future?
âI expect something to get done.â
Heâs betting on himself.
Again.
The Dodgers Problem
Every decision in San Diego is measured against one benchmark:
Los Angeles.

Back-to-back World Series titles. Massive payroll. Relentless depth.
Preller has never been afraid to swing big. But 2026 feels different.
This isnât about blockbuster splashes.
Itâs about precision.
Late-winter value deals. Motivated veterans. The kind of spring additions that quietly reshape a roster â like previous late moves for Cease and Pivetta.
If Preller pulls off one strong rotation add and one reliable bat before Opening Day, the entire narrative changes.
If he doesnât?
The gap with L.A. widens.
TatĂs Is Watching
Fernando TatĂs Jr. isnât panicking â but he knows what happened.
âWe can definitely play a better, higher level of baseball,â TatĂs said after working on mechanical adjustments this winter.
Belief is present.
But belief alone doesnât erase five postseason runs.
The memory of that collapse lingers in every offseason conversation.
The Final Window
February is baseballâs pressure point.
Free agents grow flexible. Trade talks accelerate. Value surfaces.
Preller is counting on that window.
âYou get the opportunity to hopefully get some players that are motivated, that want to be here,â he said.
Motivated.
That word matters.
The Padres arenât rebuilding.
Theyâre recalibrating.
But in a division ruled by the Dodgers, recalibration must be sharp â not cautious.
What This Really Means
San Diego doesnât need a teardown.
It needs:
- One stabilizing starter
- One reliable run producer
- Bench insurance
- October resilience
Preller says moves are coming.
The next few weeks will determine whether this is calculated patience â or late urgency.
Either way, one thing is clear:
The Padres arenât done.
And in the NL West, they canât afford to be.
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