San Diego, CA
Padres Daily: Manny’s Padre strength; King keeps going strong; Tatis’ running
Good morning,
Manny Machado got his dad strength, eventually.
“It took me a little bit,” he said. “I thought it was supposed to be right away. It took me a few months. Guys say it’s instantly, but I guess mine was put on the back burner.”
Well, that did have a lot to do with his working through the effects of offseason elbow surgery before (and for a while after) his son was born in late April.
Machado is lifting the Padres pretty well now. He has been for some time.
He hit two homers and drove in three of the Padres’ runs in a 5-1 victory over the Giants last night.
The Padres improved to 24-0 this season when he has multiple RBIs.
And here is an update of how they have fared since Machado started hitting like the back of his baseball card says he should:
The beauty of the Padres this season, as I wrote about earlier this week in a piece (here) that was ostensibly about the culture change within the club, is that they are not just Machado’s team anymore.
The Padres were just 37-40 on June 18, when Machado was batting .245 with a .662 OPS. But in past years (last year), it is a safe bet that record would have been worse with Machado being all but a nonfactor.
To that point, it was Jurickson Profar (47 RBIs, 10 homers, .904 OPS), Jake Cronenworth (46 RBIs, 10 homers, .748 OPS) and Fernando Tatis Jr. (35 RBIs, 13 homers, .806 OPS) carrying the team (with the occasional lift from Jackson Merrill and Donovan Solano and others).
Even then, as frustrated as he was, Machado said he was having fun. He would repeatedly praise the overall play of the team.
“Even when you’re struggling,” he said this past weekend as he pondered this season and what has made it special for him, “everyone is pulling for you and everyone wants you to get out of it.”
Now, remember, he is (bleeping) Manny Machado. He knew he wouldn’t struggle forever.
He mostly knew.
“I knew it was gonna be there,” he said last Saturday as he sat in the visitors clubhouse at Tropicana Field. “I mean, that confidence is always there. That’s who I am. But we’re human. We go through our slumps and, you know, you’re like, ‘(Expletive)! I’m never gonna get a hit again. Do I suck?’ Like, yeah, it crosses everyone’s mind. If someone didn’t say that, then they might be lying.
“But it’s a long season, so you know where you’re going to be at the end of the year. And I think it makes it easier when your team is winning and you have guys having career years, you have rookies coming up and doing tremendous things. It makes baseball a little bit easier to come to a ballpark every single day. You don’t have to put that extra weight on your shoulders. Because it’s still there no matter what. But it’s just a little bit less pressure you put on yourself to try to come out of it.”
In the above-mentioned story, Machado does acknowledge, “For us to win, I gotta play at my caliber.”
It’s just what it is. For all those other players have done — and the collective contributions are the real story of this season — the Padres are not in playoff position without Machado.
As Machado goes, so go the Padres. That is something that has been true since his second season here, in 2020, when the talent around him was sufficient enough that his contributions actually mattered.
In the two seasons they have gone to the playoffs, he has finished third (2020) and second (2022) in National League MVP voting.
And, almost unfathomably after the worst first 2½ months of a season in his career, Machado could again finish top five in voting should he continue to produce as he has for nearly half the season.

You can read in my game story (here) about how Machado’s 42nd career multi-homer game — most in MLB since the start of the 2012 season — supported another fine effort by Michael King and lessened the sting of Merrill leaving the game after fouling a ball off his knee.
Merrill was diagnosed with a left patella bruise and X-rays were negative, meaning there was no bone fracture. It is likely he will miss some time, though how long is something the Padres will likely be better able to assess in the coming days.
Merrill continued his at-bat in the sixth inning and played center field in the seventh before being replaced there in the eighth inning by Tyler Wade.
The Padres could call up an outfielder, which would likely be Brandon Lockridge, who they got from the Yankees in exchange for Enyel De Los Santos at the trade deadline.
The King
King passed his career high in innings nine starts ago. His 28 starts this season are more than three times as many as he made last year, when he primarily worked out of the bullpen for the Yankees.
Yet he threw 100 pitches last night for the second start in a row, allowed one run in six innings and has now gone 11 starts without allowing more than three earned runs in a game. His 2.14 ERA (over 63 innings) during that stretch ranks fourth in the major leagues.
King (12-8, 3.10) is tied with Dylan Cease and five others for third in the National League in wins behind Zack Wheeler (14) and Chris Sale (16).
He did not allow a run last night until Michael Conforto homered on a sinker left a little too high and a little too in the middle of the plate leading off the sixth inning.
After a single by Matt Chapman followed, King got a visit from pitching coach Ruben Niebla.
“Ruben basically said empty the tank when he came out,” King recalled. “And so I think knowing that it was my last inning gave me, like, some extra energy or whatever I could put out there, and I was happy to get through it.”
With his 13th quality start, he reached 156⅔ innings on the season. That is 42 more than last season and just 4⅔ shy of the total he threw between three levels of the minor leagues in 2018.
The Padres and King insist he is going strong, and the results and accompanying metrics back up that contention. His velocity and the spin and movement on his pitches remain at (or better than) season norms.
The Padres did give King a few extra days between starts this turn through the rotation.
Consistent with his mindset all season, he shrugged at the mention of his reaching the 100-pitch mark in consecutive games for the first time in his career.
“I thought I was more efficient than that,” he said. “… I had eight days off. I felt good.”
Forcing the action
Maybe Machado’s first home run would have scored both runners anyway. Or maybe Giants rookie pitcher Mason Black was a little rattled and didn’t make the same quality and/or type of pitches he otherwise would have. We’ll never know, and it doesn’t matter.
Regardless, what Luis Arraez and Tatis did immediately before Machado’s first-inning homer was the latest example of the Padres forcing action on the bases.
On Profar’s fly ball to right-center field, Arraez tagged up from second and Tatis did so from first. Tatis briefly slowed about a third of the way to second to see where right fielder Mike Yastrzemski’s throw would go, and he immediately continued when he saw it would bounce wide of second.
Giants shortstop Tyler Fitzgerald judged erroneously that he could get Tatis, so the rookie moved to cut off the throw and fire to second base. His late throw got past second baseman Marco Luciano and rolled into right field and all the way past the foul line as both runners scored easily.
So just a quick recap… first, this happened ⤵️ pic.twitter.com/vcyImdhyJM
— San Diego Padres (@Padres) September 7, 2024
The play gave manager Mike Shildt cause to use one of his favorite expressions.
“It was aggressive with intelligence,” Shildt said. “The combinations — what we’re seeking and we get. I love the aggression. It was just a good baseball play. Luis sees it, takes off. And Tati did a nice job, because that’s a tough one, because you’ve got to read the throw. So he was in a good position to go, read it and then turned it on again to be able to force a play at second. So just another good baseball play.”
Getting there
The play showed something else as well.
“It is a sign I’m feeling good,” Tatis said with a smile.
Tatis estimated he is at about 95 percent in his return from a stress reaction in his right femur (thigh bone).
Where his not being at full strength/speed manifests most is when he is decelerating, be that in the field or on the bases. It clearly takes him more steps to stop.
“It’s a little bit of discomfort,” he said of the act of slowing down. “But it’s also more like muscle memory. But I feel good. I feel confident. I’m not afraid of running.”
That is apparent.
Tatis was 2-for-4 last night and has multiple hits in two of the four games since he returned from a 72-day absence.
Stepping up
Adrián Morejón and Jeremiah Estrada were for a night back in roles similar to those they were holding down before the Padres acquired Jason Adam and Tanner Scott at the trade deadline.
Morejón relieved Bryan Hoeing with one out in the eighth inning last night and retired the next two batters, and Estrada worked a 1-2-3 ninth.
The two young relievers (both 25) have been primarily working earlier innings the past five weeks. But they were needed to work late in last night’s game, because closer Robert Suarez was unavailable and Adam and Scott likely reserved only for emergency if the game had gone deep into extra innings due to recent workload.
“Really good bullpens have guys that bring it home, which we do (and) guys that, when we’re down, can hold it there and not have to use the same guys,” Shildt said. “And then the guys that typically bring it home that can be down, when you get into stretches where you’ve got a lot of close games, and they’re down, you have other guys that … step up and get it done. Sign of a really good team.”
Last night was the fifth consecutive game in which the Padres had a lead of three or fewer runs as late as the eighth inning. Saurez, Scott and Adam had all worked the previous four, which did have an off day in the middle.
Tidbits
- This is a preposterous disparity that really only a hitter who knows how to work a plate appearence could perpetrate: Profar is batting .167 3-for-18) with a .448 on-base percentage during a six-game on-base streak. He has walked 10 times in that span.
- Wade played his sixth position for the Padres last night, adding center field to the other two outfield spots plus shortstop, second and third. Said Wade: “I’m an athlete.” While he was standing ready as their emergency catcher, we will probably never get to see Wade there now that Elías Díaz has joined the team as the third catcher.
- Hoeing, who took over for King at the start of the seventh and got four outs, was pitching for the first time in eight days. Hoeing, who has a 1.04 ERA in 12 games (17⅓ innings) for the Padres, had pitched in seven games (8⅓ innings) from Aug. 18 to 29 and was deemed to need a rest.
- Xander Bogaerts was 1-for-4 with a double and has an extra-base hit in each of the past two games. He had one extra-base hit in his previous 14 games.
- As detailed in my game story, Machado’s two home runs last night tied him with Nate Colbert for most in Padres history with 163. You can read a story Jeff Sanders wrote (here) in 2020, in which Colbert talked about the record and who he thought would break it.
- The Padres’ 60-7 (.895) record when scoring at least five runs is best in the major leagues.
- The Padres’ three-run first inning was their 89th time scoring at least that many runs in an inning. That is four more times than they did so last season.
- Early in the season, the Padres were among the league leaders in scoring in the first inning. That ability waned over the summer. But they have scored 13 first-inning runs in the past 11 games. They had scored 13 first-inning runs in the 33 games before that.
- The Padres announced they will be providing sunscreen and a free bottle of water for all fans for tomorrow’s game. The forecast calls for temperatures in the 90s at game time.
- Machado revealed last night he has been playing most of the season with a finger injury. He did not specify what the injury is. He did chide me and MLB.com’s A.J. Cassavell for not reporting it while adding, “But I’m not going to tell you about it.” (Let me reiterate here that I enjoy the heck out of covering Machado. He can certainly be salty. But he makes me laugh a lot, and he has made the team I watch every day a lot better and a lot more relevant.)
All right, that’s it for me.
Talk to you tomorrow. Maybe. I have not seen my wife in two weeks, and I believe that after tonight our schedules do not have us both home again for another two weeks. So, yeah, we’ll see. Maybe the next newsletter will be Monday.
Either way, I will cover tonight’s game, and we will have our usual coverage on our Padres page.
P.S. If you are reading this online, please know there is an easier way to get the Padres Daily. And it is free! Sign up here to have it emailed to your inbox the morning after every game. Well, every game except when Mrs. Acee insists I spend time with her.
San Diego, CA
Should Congress bar big investors from buying single-family homes?
President Donald Trump said recently on social media he would ask Congress to stop large investors and private equity firms from buying single-family homes.
His plan did not have many details but echoed a common refrain across the U.S. that investors should not own homes and that they drive up prices.
Critics have argued the issue is overstated, with an estimated 4% of single-family rentals owned by institutional investors. Studies over the years have routinely shown San Diego County as having one of the lowest rates of institutional investors.
Still, the move is likely to be popular with voters and even stopping some big firms, like Blackstone, from buying properties could make a small difference in the real estate market.
Question: Should Congress bar big investors from buying single-family homes?
Economists
Ray Major, economist
YES: Institutional investors should be banned from owning single-family homes. The American dream is built on homeownership, and every person in the United States should be able to work hard and afford a home. Institutional investors reduce the supply and increase home prices turning potential homeowners into lifelong renters. This, in the long run, will eliminate the average American’s ability to build generational wealth and pass it on to their children.
Caroline Freund, UC San Diego School of Global Policy and Strategy
NO: Investors have mixed effects on housing affordability. Families who cannot afford to buy benefit from renting in neighborhoods with strong schools. Investors can also stabilize markets during downturns, as they did after the financial crisis when prices collapsed. To improve affordability, limiting ownership by large investors in markets where they have pricing power would make more sense than an all-out ban. And if the goal is to increase housing supply and improve affordability, there are far better tools than investment restrictions.
Kelly Cunningham, San Diego Institute for Economic Research
NO: The vast majority of single-family rental homes are owned by small to mid-size landlords, less than 5% by large investors. Blaming big firms seems a populous desire to make the administration look like caring about home prices and doing something about affordability, but ignoring real drivers of housing costs and actual problems caused by overregulation, development restrictions and compounding fees. Blaming investors could end up with policies having adverse consequences on home markets altogether.
Alan Gin, University of San Diego
YES: Even though institutional investors are a small part of the market, their influence is growing. They are important at the margin, which can have big implications for some communities. By increasing the demand for housing, they cause prices to go up, which leads to housing price inflation as one of the biggest contributors to the elevated overall inflation rate. They can also squeeze out individual buyers, who may have difficulty competing with all-cash offers in a high-interest-rate environment.
James Hamilton, UC San Diego
NO: If an investor buys a home and rents it out, that is one less home occupied by an owner and one more home occupied by a renter. This does not change the overall cost of housing. Moreover, the Constitution does not give Congress or the president the power to impose such a rule. This is a local problem, not a national issue. The real solution is to reduce local fees and restrictions on home building.
Norm Miller, University of San Diego
NO: This limit on institutional ownership is symbolic of populous-driven interference in the housing market, and just like rent controls, it is harmful in the long run, inhibiting capital allocation and new supply in the housing market. Home prices and rent levels are overwhelmingly driven by supply-demand fundamentals: i.e. job growth, migration, zoning constraints, NIMBYs and construction levels. Institutions may manage rents more systematically, using dynamic pricing tools and standardized operating procedures — but they do not set the market. They respond to it.
David Ely, San Diego State University
NO: The shortage of affordable single-family homes is primarily due to insufficient new construction. Existing homeowners choosing not to upgrade because they do not want to give up their low-rate mortgage is a contributing factor. Given the relatively small share of single-family homes owned by institutional investors, restricting their purchase of homes will not materially expand the stock of housing available to households or slow price appreciation.
Executives
Phil Blair, Manpower
NO: The issue is not who owns rental properties, but how few there are available. The private sector has found a real estate investment niche and deserves to be able to exploit it. The law of supply and demand says build more housing and the rental prices will collapse. The administration could be opening up thousands of acres of underutilized land across the country for much-needed housing.
Chris Van Gorder, Scripps Health
YES: The percentages might be low in terms of numbers of homes purchased by large investors, private equity or other corporate investors. But their purchases do escalate the price of homes by reducing the inventory available for those wishing to purchase homes for their own personal use by private assets. I think this could modestly control the price of homes by increasing availability for private purchasers.
Jamie Moraga, Franklin Revere
NO: President Trump proposed banning large institutional investors from buying more single-family homes. The key word “more” suggests a limit, not a sell-off. Instead of an outright ban, Congress could find bipartisan support for assessing a cap on institutional single-family homeownership. A cap could ease competition for first-time buyers, help protect tenants from “mega-landlords” and reduce market concentration. It could also help balance housing affordability, rental supply, and homebuilding impacts.
Gary London, London Moeder Advisors
YES: But this is a bit of economic dodgeball because there are relatively few homes held in institutional portfolios in San Diego. I propose legislation that focuses on 1) zoning and land use policies to encourage new housing construction, 2) incentivize senior citizen downsizing by eliminating capital gains tax and 3) allow a one-time pass-through of existing property taxes for new transactions. Then a more robust resale market would emerge, coupled with demand for new housing.
Bob Rauch, R.A. Rauch & Associates
NO: Institutional investors represent a small share of the housing market, so banning them would do little to lower prices. They also supply rental housing for people who can’t or don’t want to buy. Proposals to restrict who can purchase property mirror the kinds of policies pushed in New York City by Mayor Mamdani. We need to reduce regulations, taxes, and fees that constrain supply. Limiting who can buy homes shrinks the market and discourages construction.
Austin Neudecker, Weave Growth
YES: While institutional ownership currently only represents 4% of the market, funds with increasing algorithmic targeting, cash bids and conversion to rentals can drive prices and create negative externalities, especially impacting first-time buyers. First, run market-specific trials with short sunsets and analyze the impact on prices, supply and rental affordability before broader implementation or allow them to lapse.
Have an idea for an Econometer question? Email me at phillip.molnar@sduniontribune.com. Follow me on Threads: @phillip020
San Diego, CA
New dune restoration effort aims to protect Oceanside beaches
The city of Oceanside has begun a dune restoration pilot project aimed at reversing years of sand loss along the coastline and strengthening coastal resilience.
The project is underway north of the Oceanside Pier, where crews have been installing posts and fencing designed to capture windblown sand and help rebuild dunes that once naturally protected the shoreline.
“This whole area was filled with dunes. In fact, all of the harbor was a big dune system that connected to all the estuaries there,” said Jayme Timberlake, a coastal zone administrator for the city of Oceanside.
The North Oceanside Coastal Dune Restoration Pilot Project is the latest effort to address erosion that has steadily reduced beach sand for decades. According to a study from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, sand along Oceanside’s coast has been diminishing since the 1940s, when harbor projects began. While annual dredging has helped replenish some of that sand, erosion remains an ongoing issue.
Crews from the California Conservation Corps were seen hammering and drilling Wednesday as part of the installation process. The goal, advocates say, is to create conditions that allow dunes to rebuild naturally.
“The sand is blown, it hits, it hits the fences, it hits the vegetation and then it starts depositing and growing that back beach area, so you’ll get that little dune hump. There will be native plants and vegetation going in here,” said Robert Ashton, president and CEO of Save Oceanside Sand.
Ashton said restoring dunes is about more than just preserving the beach.
“A healthy beach and habitat like this is important for the health of the community,” he said.
Timberlake said northern Oceanside is one of the few areas where enough sand still exists to make dune restoration possible, thanks in part to sand placed on the beach from harbor channel dredging.
“In this area of northern Oceanside, we have sand still because we use the sand from the channel harbor dredging, and we put it on the beach here, but there’s still episodic erosion issues. There’s still chronic erosion happening here in this northern area as well,” she said.
City officials describe the project as a nature-based solution to climate change and sea-level rise. With fencing, posts and eventually native vegetation, Timberlake said the dunes can grow more quickly and provide a buffer between the ocean and developed areas.
“We really need to keep that sand on the beach where it is, when we have it so that we can keep that resilience between our homes, our infrastructure and the ocean itself,” Timberlake said.
Fenced plots have been installed from just north of the Oceanside Pier to Harbor Beach and the San Luis Rey River, part of a broader effort to protect nearly four miles of coastline.
“That’s our objective: to get all our beaches restored in a sustainable and responsible manner that restores the health and the life blood of our city,” Ashton said.
City officials said the fencing used in the pilot project could remain in place for about three years as the dunes develop.
This story was originally reported for broadcast by NBC San Diego. AI tools helped convert the story to a digital article, and an NBC San Diego journalist edited the article for publication.
San Diego, CA
Court upholds verdict for former news anchor Sandra Maas in KUSI’s appeal of equal pay lawsuit
A San Diego appeals court on Tuesday upheld the judgment and what amounted to a $1.775 million award to former news anchor Sandra Maas, who sued the company that previously owned KUSI, alleging it violated equal pay laws by paying her significantly less than her co-anchor.
The opinion comes nearly three years after a San Diego Superior Court jury also found for Maas in her whistleblower claim, in which she argued that her contract was not renewed because she pushed back for the pay disparity.
McKinnon Broadcasting Co., which had owned KUSI when Maas worked there, had challenged the verdict on various grounds, “none of which we find persuasive. We affirm the judgment,” reads the opinion issued Tuesday from the 4th District Court of Appeal, Division 1.
Maas’ attorney, Josh Gruenberg, said in an email Tuesday that the appellate court “confirmed that the jury’s findings were supported by substantial evidence and that the process was impartial and sound.” He called the opinion “a true celebration of equal pay rights and of a judicial system that holds firm — even on appeal.”
“Most importantly, it brings long-overdue closure to a grueling chapter in Sandra Maas’s life,” Gruenberg said. “It takes courage to come forward, and even greater courage to withstand the blocks and tackles that followed in this case.”
Attorneys for McKinnon did not immediately respond to an email requesting comment.
According to arguments and evidence in the 2023 trial, Maas was paid a lower annual salary than male co-anchor Allen Denton during their years anchoring the TV station’s flagship newscast. In 2010, when they first teamed up, she was paid $120,000 annually, and he made $200,000.
When he retired, in 2019, his annual salary was $245,000. Hers was $180,000. That same year, Maas left the station. Maas’ attorney told the jury that when Maas asked for equal compensation, her contract ultimately was not renewed.
Pam Vallero, one of Maas’ attorneys, told the jury in opening statements of the four-week trial that the two anchors had sat “side by side at the same news desk, reading from the same teleprompter, anchoring the same newscast, but paid significantly different by KUSI.” That, she told the jury, “is why we are here.”
The attorney for KUSI told the jury during opening statements that Maas had been “paid fairly for her work in light of her experience, in light of her work ethic, attitude and overall value.”
Maas’ counsel argued that she had worked in broadcast television for 33 years, compared to Denton’s 37 years on TV. KUSI’s attorney said Denton had 48 years of experience, counting 11 years in radio before jumping to TV.
Maas, who worked at CBS 8 in San Diego in the 1990s, started at KUSI as a morning anchor in 2004. Denton, who had worked in the Bay Area, joined KUSI in 2010.
Aside from upholding the verdict, the appeals court on Tuesday also upheld the award of more than $2.3 million for Maas’ attorneys fees.
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