Craig Stammen, the 40-year-old reliever entering his eighth season with San Diego, issued a public statement of confidence in Jose Feliciano's $3.9 billion acquisition of the Padres. The timing matters: roster decisions for the 2025 season are already in motion, spring training opens in six weeks, and a clubhouse that watched Peter Seidler's family sell to a private-equity principal needs to see the floor.
Stammen's remarks were brief and deliberate. He praised the organization's direction, referenced conversations with front-office personnel about Feliciano's commitment to winning, and used the word "excited" once. The statement came three weeks after the sale closed, which is exactly when veteran players start fielding texts from agents, teammates on other clubs, and reporters asking if the new money is real money or the kind that shows up in March and vanishes by July.
The significance is structural. Stammen has been in San Diego since 2018, overlapping with the Seidler-era spending that brought Manny Machado, Xander Bogaerts, and a $250 million payroll. He knows what ownership investment looks like in practice: chartered flights that don't get downgraded, training staff that doesn't shrink mid-season, and front offices that can say yes to a $300 million extension without three weeks of spreadsheet theater. When a player with that tenure endorses new ownership before pitchers and catchers report, it signals one of two things: he believes it or he's been asked to say it. Either way, the message is aimed at free agents, current roster players weighing opt-outs, and sponsors watching to see if San Diego remains a $5 billion media market with championship infrastructure or reverts to budget-competitive.
Feliciano's Allegis Group background points to operational continuity. Private-equity owners typically install cost discipline, but the Padres' $255 million payroll for 2024 ranked fourth in MLB, and the sale price implies the buyer is underwriting that tier. Stammen's public backing suggests the front office has already briefed veteran players on 2025 budget allocations, which means A.J. Preller's roster plans are likely unchanged. Worth noting: Stammen himself is on a one-year, $1.5 million deal, so his endorsement isn't a star player protecting a nine-figure guarantee. It's a middle-tier veteran with no contractual reason to carry water for ownership, which makes the statement more useful as a market signal.
The other audience is the coaching staff. Bob Melvin is entering his fourth season, and managerial tenures under new ownership often reset to zero regardless of prior performance. Stammen's comments were framed around organizational stability, not roster excitement, which tracks with a clubhouse that finished 89-73 and missed the playoffs. If Feliciano were planning a front-office overhaul or a payroll reduction disguised as a competitive reset, Stammen would have stayed quiet or issued the blandest possible quote about "new chapters." He did neither.
What to watch: coordinator and assistant hires in the next four weeks. New ownership often brings new voices even when the manager stays. Also, the Padres have $80 million in commitments rolling off after 2025, which creates a decision point on extensions for Dylan Cease and whether Feliciano operates like Seidler or like the Dodgers' ownership group that spends but expects ROI discipline. Stammen's next public comment will likely come in mid-February at spring training, when reporters ask the same question with six weeks of actual budget behavior to reference.
The statement landed on a Monday, which is when teams release news they want covered but not amplified. Feliciano has not yet appeared publicly at Petco Park or conducted a formal press availability. Stammen's endorsement functions as a placeholder until the owner defines his own message, which means the real test is whether the clubhouse still believes it in July.
The takeaway
Stammen's early backing of Feliciano signals the front office is selling continuity, but the real vote comes when **2025** budget decisions hit in spring.
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