He's 'home' - and just what the Padres needed

4:19 PM UTC

This story was excerpted from AJ Cassavell’s Padres Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.

SAN DIEGO -- The Padres’ biggest stars have struggled at the plate, and their rotation has been decimated by injuries. And yet, nearly a third of the way into the season, they’re 10 games above .500.

There are plenty of reasons for that. The bullpen has obviously been excellent. The rotation has made it work, even without some key arms. But one of the most impressive aspects of these 2026 Padres has been the performance of the supposed role players. They've gotten roster-wide contributions to make the offense tick.

And nobody embodies that more than Ty France.

France signed a Minor League deal with the Padres during Spring Training and received an invitation to big league camp. He would need to earn his way onto the roster -- and that’s precisely what he did.

Now, it’s worth wondering where the Padres would be without France. He homered on Sunday and is now hitting .279 with an .846 OPS -- the best mark on the team among active players.

It’s also become clear that the Padres’ preference is to avoid using Miguel Andujar and Nick Castellanos at first base. As such, France’s glove has been immensely valuable. He starts at first base semi-regularly. He comes off the bench otherwise -- and can deliver a quality at-bat or Gold Glove-caliber defense.

France picked up that 2025 Gold Glove Award last week in a pregame ceremony. A couple nights later, on Saturday, he turned in a brilliant performance at first base that saw him turn three double plays -- each of them different, all of them coming with some degree of difficulty.

Perhaps there’s a case that France should have earned more playing time by now. He’s received 90 plate appearances, when most of the Padres’ regulars have gotten twice that. But France has also thrived in this role. So the same case could be made that he should stick to it.

Whatever the role, France is clearly fine with it. Selected by the Padres in the 34th round out of San Diego State in 2015, France got his big league breakthrough in 2019. A year later, he was traded to Seattle. He was mostly solid for the Mariners. But he’d struggled across the past two seasons, bouncing among four different clubs.

Which left him looking for a home in this winter, when the Padres came calling. The fit wasn’t an obvious one -- particularly after the team had signed Andujar and Castellanos in the preceding weeks. In hindsight, the signing looks like a no-brainer.

“I feel like myself again at the plate, which is comforting,” France said. “There was a good two-year stretch where I was searching for my swing. I feel like I’m in a really good spot now. [Hitting coach Steven] Souza and the guys have done a great job with me.

“And being home on top of it -- that just adds a little cherry on top.”

These Padres, of course, are very different from the Padres that France broke into the big leagues with. When he was traded at the 2020 Deadline, San Diego was still only on the precipice of breaking its longstanding playoff drought.

In the six years since, the Padres have reached the postseason four times. France, meanwhile, made his own name for himself. He reached the postseason in 2022 with the Mariners and the World Series last year with the Blue Jays. He was an All-Star in ‘22 and a Gold Glover in '25.

“He just brings someone that’s been there, done that and has had success in the big leagues,” said Padres manager Craig Stammen -- France’s former teammate on those 2019 and ‘20 Padres teams. “He brings that experience and belief that he can get it done in any moment.

"For us, this group, he’s brought some professionalism. Not that we didn’t have professionals. But he adds that element to it, where he’s prepared every single day for any type of role -- whether that’s starting or coming off the bench. And then, he also has an elite skill set at first base, where he’s got the Gold Glove.”

Earlier this week, as you may have seen, Manny Machado assured a throng of reporters that the team’s stars would produce soon enough -- that they would take the reins offensively from the likes of, say, France, Andujar, Gavin Sheets and Luis Campusano, who have kept this offense afloat.

The Padres can only hope. They're still probably going nowhere without more production from their big boppers. But in the meantime, they've needed production from … somewhere. And has France ever delivered it.