3 SF Giants who may make All-Star Game, one who might be left out

The SF Giants could be well represented this year at the Midsummer Classic.
San Diego Padres v San Francisco Giants
San Diego Padres v San Francisco Giants | Thearon W. Henderson/GettyImages

With the Midsummer Classic quickly approaching, and fan voting now underway, let's take a look at which members of the SF Giants have the best chance at representing the senior circuit in the All-Star Game.

3 SF Giants who could make the All-Star Game, one who may be left out

1. Robbie Ray, Pitcher

Ray's lone all-star appearance was eight years ago with the Arizona Diamondbacks. The southpaw did not even earn an All-Star bid in 2021 when he won the Cy Young with the Blue Jays. However, he looks like an easy pick to return to the game in 2025.

Through his first 13 starts of the year, Ray is fourth in the National League with a 2.44 ERA and tenth in the NL with a 1.07 WHIP. He's also tied with Brandon Pfaadt for the lead in wins, with an impressive 8-1 record. His opponent batting average (.191) and strikeouts (90) also rank in the top ten among NL pitchers, coming in at third and seventh.

All-Star teams are allowed 12 pitchers, and there is almost no way to argue that Ray has not been one of the National League's best 12 so far in 2025.

2. Logan Webb, Pitcher

It certainly looks like Webb could be due for a return trip to the All-Star game as well. The Giants' ace somehow did not appear in his first All-Star game until 2024, but if he keeps pitching as well as he has, a second appearance should be in order.

Webb's 2.55 ERA ranks fifth among NL starters, his 81.1 innings are second in the league, and his 91 punchouts rank fourth. While his 5-5 record might not look glamorous he has been getting the job done, pitching deep into games and not allowing many earned runs. He can't be blamed for the lack of run support.

3. Heliot Ramos

Like Webb, Ramos looks like he could be in line for his second straight all-star bid. The Giants' left fielder broke out in a big way in 2024 and has followed up on it with even better numbers in 2025. His .853 OPS ranks fifth among NL outfielders, and his .292 batting average ranks second.

Ramos deals with the reality that he is not as well-known a name as some of the other outfielders who are also likelt vying for reserve spots on the roster. Fernando Tatis Jr., Juan Soto, Oneil Cruz and Teoscar Hernandez currently all rank behind him in OPS. Will Ramos earn the all-star nod over bigger names having less impressive seasons at the plate? He did last year, which is a good sign.

And one who might be left out.....Matt Chapman

Chapman has enjoyed a solid season, but his all-star chances hang in the balance. With Manny Machado a likely lock to start the game at third base for the NL, Chapman likely has to get in as the reserve third baseman over Eugenio Suarez, and right now, that's probably not happening.

Suarez, despite his ups and downs, leads Chapman in runs (38 to 31), doubles (13 to 10), home runs (16 to 11), RBI (46 to 28), slugging (.504 to .433) and OPS (.815 to 787). Chapman does have the advantage in both AVG and OBP, and his superior defense has helped him accumulate significantly more bWAR (2.5 to 1.1).

If the NL coaching staff does take defensive value into account, Chapman would be selected over Suarez. However, considering the offensive campaign Suarez has been mounting, including his historic four-home run game, it feels like he would be the more likely choice.