Joe Panik

Joe Panik

33-Year-Old Second Baseman2B
 Free Agent  
2024 Fantasy Outlook
There was no outlook written for Joe Panik in 2024. Check out the latest news below for more on his current fantasy value.
$Signed a one-year contract with the Blue Jays in February of 2021. Traded to the Marlins in June of 2021.
Calls it quits
2BFree Agent  
May 19, 2022
Panik retired from professional baseball prior to the 2022 season, Jon Heyman of MLB Network reports.
ANALYSIS
Panik split the 2021 season between Miami and Toronto, but he spent the majority of his career with San Francisco. He maintained a .264/.328/.372 line across 3,099 career plate appearances and made the National League All-Star team in 2015.
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2020 MLB Game Log
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2019 MLB Game Log
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2018 MLB Game Log
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2017 MLB Game Log
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Recent RotoWire Articles Featuring Joe Panik See More
NL FAAB Factor: Waiver Pickups of the Week
September 5, 2021
September call-ups are here and Jan Levine chooses the best of the bunch while also detailing which lower-covered players have recently done well.
FanDuel MLB: Friday Targets
FanDuel MLB: Friday Targets
August 13, 2021
August 13, 2021
Chris Bennett checks in with his insights for building a winning FanDuel lineup Friday.
DraftKings MLB: Friday Breakdown
August 13, 2021
In Friday’s 14-game slate, Mike Barner likes the Dodgers’ left-handed hitter Max Muncy against Mets pitcher Tylor Megill.
Bernie on the Scene: Trade Deadline Edition
July 26, 2021
Bernie Pleskoff looks at players who could be moved at the trade deadline. Will the Mariners trade Mitch Haniger?
NL FAAB Factor: Waiver Pickups of the Week
July 25, 2021
Jan Levine is back to cover the latest NL adds and sees a certain Atlanta starter with plenty of potential opportunities.
Latest Fantasy Rumors
Linked to Yankees
2BFree Agent  
December 19, 2019
Panik is drawing interest from the Yankees in free agency, Buster Olney of ESPN reports.
ANALYSIS
The Yankees are exploring ways to add more left-handed bats to their roster, and Panik could be a good fit as a versatile infielder who happens to be from the area. The 29-year-old elected free agency rather than accepting an outright assignment to Triple-A in November after hitting .244/.315/.336 with five home runs and 39 RBI over 142 games with the Giants and Mets last season. There is mutual interest between the parties but no deal appears imminent, Joel Sherman of the New York Post reports.
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Past Fantasy Outlooks
2021
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2012
A 2011 first-round draft pick, Panik landed in Toronto/Buffalo on a minor-league deal and ended up playing a lot more than expected to help cover injuries. The glove-first second baseman turned in a surprising walk rate on the season while also striking out more than he had ever done in his career, without anything to show for it. Normally, when a guy doubles his strikeout rate, he is selling out for power, but Panik's slugging percentage dropped 36 points from 2019. Panik is the type of player you pick up in a single-league format when your fringe middle infielder gets demoted or hurt and you need a warm body in the spot. In standard leagues, you're almost better with the dead spot in your lineup than if Panik is playing every day.
Despite registering almost as many walks (36) as strikeouts (38), Panik hit only .235/.310/.317 with the Giants last season before being DFA'd and subsequently released in early August. He was quickly scooped up by the Mets on a big-league contract, and the results improved down the stretch. In 103 PA with New York, Panik hit .277/.333/.404, good for a 99 wRC+ -- so about league average. It wasn't enough for the Mets to want to keep him around, however, as they outrighted Panik and he opted for free agency. While limited defensively to second base, Panik remains a net positive there as he enters his age-29 season. His abilities in the field and bat-to-ball skills (career 9.4 K%) should earn Panik a spot on an Opening Day roster, but it may very well be as a backup/part-time player. Without regular at-bats, Panik's not viable at all in a mixed league. Even with them, he's borderline.
Through five games, Panik had three homers and it looked like perhaps it was necessary to adjust baseline expectations. As fate would have it, Panik managed just one more long ball the rest of the season. A sprained left thumb knocked Panik out of action for more than a month and he later missed a three-week stretch with a groin strain. When on the field, Panik was largely the same player he's always been from a plate-skill standpoint as he finished with an ultra-low K-rate (7.7%) alongside a middling walk rate (6.6%). After that first week, the power was non-existent, even the gap power. His .332 SLG was a career low, and with Panik's BABIP sinking to .265, his average also plummeted. He should be back as the primary second baseman in San Francisco barring a trade, but the total package here is entirely underwhelming.
For the second straight season, Panik lost time due to a concussion, but he avoided injuries otherwise and bounced back from a disappointing 2016 campaign despite having a light-hitting lineup around him. He continues to show a great eye at the plate, maintaining a strikeout rate below 10 percent for the third time in four seasons, and continuing to draw walks at a nice clip (8.0 percent). Most of the improvement last season came with a BABIP (.301) that was nearly in lockstep with his career mark (.299) as his line-drive rate recovered from a one-year drop. Panik doesn't offer much pop or speed, but he's a career .282 hitter with an opportunity to hit near the top of the order in San Francisco. If the Giants find help for their disappointing offense during the offseason, the counting stats could improve and make him a useful middle-infield filler, but the aforementioned limited contributions in homers and steals will leave Panik as a player best utilized in deeper formats.
At first glance it appears that Panik took a huge step back in 2016. His batting average -- considered his greatest asset -- took a dive from .312 in 2015 to .238 last season. Luck played a big role in the steep decline, as his .245 BABIP was nearly 100 points lower than the .343 and .330 marks he had in his rookie and sophomore campaigns respectively. A midseason concussion from a fastball to the head cost Panik a month of playing time, and it took him some time to get comfortable at the plate even after returning from the disabled list. It's encouraging that Panik's 90.0 percent contact rate was right in line with his career marks, and he continued to spray the ball to all fields. His .140 isolated power keeps him in the 30-double and 10- to 15-homer range over the course of a full season. Assuming his BABIP returns to .300-plus range, we could see a bounceback season from Panik in 2017.
Panik put himself on the map with his solid rookie campaign, but he kicked things up a notch in his sophomore season. He had a tremendous first half, hitting .308 and connecting on seven home runs while earning his first All-Star appearance. Things took a turn for the worse when he injured his back in July, effectively ending his season. Still, he showed enough in two-thirds of the season to become fantasy factor at second base. Panik saw his walks increase, his strikeouts decrease and his power round into form (.144 ISO, .455 SLG). With an offseason of rest, Panik should be back on the Giants' Opening Day roster, manning second and batting second while looking to build on his strong 2015.
Panik made the most of his first opportunity in the big leagues, hitting .305/.343/.368 over 287 plate appearances. Batting average was the only category in which he helped fantasy owners, but it was a mark more than 50 points above the league average. His defense will keep him in the field because it is quite strong, but his offensive value will always be capped at three categories. He can hit for average, run a bit and showed enough plate discipline to hit in the second spot of the lineup to help score runs down the line. He has a career line of .296/.365/.403 in the minor leagues, and the 2011 first-round pick looks like a lock to make the 25-man roster, making him a nice endgame target in NL-only leagues.
Panik, San Francisco's 2011 first-round draft pick (29th overall), put up a solid season High-A producing a .297/.368/.402 slash line with seven home runs in 605 plate appearances. His offense took a step back considering his 2011 season in Low-A, which is attributed to a drop in BABIP. Panik does not have much power (.105 ISO), but he has shown a good eye at the plate (9.6 percent walk rate) and only had an 8.9 percent strikeout rate in 2012. Most scouts see him as a future second baseman because of his lack of arm strength and speed.
Panik was taken with the 29th pick of the 2011 draft and he posted a .341/.401/.467 line over 270 at-bats as a 20-year-old in Low-A after joining the Giants organization. He's a long ways from making an impact at the major league level, but held his own during a stint against advanced competition in the Arizona Fall League (.323/.394/.473), although it's unclear if he's more of a utility guy or a possible regular down the road.
More Fantasy News
DFA'd by Miami
2BMiami Marlins  
October 1, 2021
Panik was designated for assignment by the Marlins on Friday.
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Done for season
2BMiami Marlins  
September 30, 2021
Panik will not travel back to Miami for the team's final series of the season, Christina De Nicola of MLB.com reports
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Returns to roster
2BMiami Marlins  
September 2, 2021
Panik was reinstated from the COVID-19 injured list as expected Wednesday.
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Expected to return Wednesday
2BMiami Marlins  
Undisclosed
August 31, 2021
Marlins manager Don Mattingly said Panik will likely be reinstated from the COVID-19 injured list Wednesday, when Miami's roster expands from 26 to 28 men, Christina De Nicola of MLB.com reports.
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Lands on injured list
2BMiami Marlins  
Undisclosed
August 13, 2021
Panik was placed on the injured list for an unspecified reason Friday, Christina De Nicola of MLB.com reports.
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