He says heâll never rest.
His manager says he has no choice.
As the San Diego Padres prepare for the 2026 season, a quiet but intense conflict is beginning to surface inside the clubhouse.
Itâs not about strategy.
Not about lineups.
Not even about winning.
Itâs about control.
And at the center of it are two strong voices pulling in opposite directions:
Manny Machado⊠and his manager.
At 33, turning 34 this season, Machado is no longer just a superstarâheâs a symbol of durability. A player who prides himself on showing up every single day, no matter the circumstances.

Last season, he played 159 games.
Almost every night.
Almost every inning.
For Machado, thatâs not just effort.
Itâs identity.
So when Padres manager Craig Stammen revealed plans to give him more rest in 2026, it wasnât just a routine adjustment.
It was a challenge to everything Machado believes in.

âOh yeah, heâs gonna get more rest,â Stammen said confidently this spring.
But Machadoâs response?
Cold. Immediate. Unapologetic.
âIâll rest when Iâm in the ground.â
That one sentence instantly ignited debate across the baseball world.
Because this isnât just a disagreement.
Itâs a clash of philosophy.

On one side: a veteran star driven by pride, toughness, and the belief that availability is the ultimate value.
On the other: an organization looking at the bigger pictureâ162 games, potential postseason battles, and the unavoidable truth that time catches everyone.
And that truth is getting harder to ignore.
Machado is still producing at an elite levelâ27 home runs, 95 RBIs last season, and at least 27 homers in five straight years. His bat hasnât slowed down.
But his body?

Thatâs the concern.
Even Machado admitted he may have pushed too far last season, acknowledging he should have taken rest earlier in the year.
And thatâs exactly what the Padres are trying to prevent.
Because this isnât about April.
Itâs about October.
âIt’s a badge of honor for him,â Stammen said. âBut we need him for the full seasonânot just the beginning.â
Thatâs the key.
The Padres donât want less Machado.
They want more of himâwhen it matters most.
And that requires something Machado has resisted his entire career:
Sitting out.
The plan is already forming.
More off days.
Strategic rest.
Increased use of the designated hitter role to reduce strain.
All designed to preserve him for the long haul.
But hereâs the tension:
You canât force a player like Machado to change easily.
Because for him, toughness isnât negotiable.
Itâs who he is.
âHeâs no spring chicken anymore,â Stammen admitted bluntly.
And while that may be true, it doesnât make the conversation any easier.
Because Machado isnât just fighting opponents.
Heâs fighting time.
And now, heâs being asked to adapt.
For the Padres, the stakes couldnât be higher.
Theyâre relying heavily on their offensive core to carry the team, especially with uncertainty in the pitching rotation. Machado isnât just part of that coreâheâs the foundation.
And with an 11-year, $350 million contract running through 2033, the organization needs him to remain productiveânot just now, but for years to come.
That makes this decision bigger than one season.
Itâs about longevity.
Sustainability.
Survival.
Because if Machado burns out earlyâŠ
Everything changes.
As Opening Day approaches, this internal tension remains unresolved.
Will Machado accept the plan?
Or will he continue to push back against it?
Either way, one thing is clear:
This season wonât just test the Padres on the field.
It will test how far a superstar is willing to bendâŠ
Before he finally breaks.
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