Report: Padres Prospect Bowen Being Called Up for MLB Debut
· Yahoo Sports
The San Diego Padres are shaking up their roster a bit with a slugging outfielder. According to Kiley McDaniel of ESPN, Jase Bowen is joining the Friars in Philadelphia ahead of their upcoming series against the Phillies. San Diego has no room on their roster, so a corresponding move will have to be made. It was speculated that Bowen would be called up when Jackson Merrillinjured his back, but the call never came.
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Bowen has spent the season demolishing baseballs in Triple-A. He almost forced himself onto the Opening Day roster after a stellar spring training, but was edged out by a crowded bench picture. The Padres’ offense has had a difficult time scoring runs lately. A spark like this might be exactly what the club needs to get going.
OF Jase Bowen has been called up by the Padres, per source.
He was a 2019 11th round pick from an Ohio high school that’s now set to make his big league debut.
Bowen has hit 13 HR and posted a .962 OPS in AAA in his first season for the Padres after six years with the Pirates.
— Kiley McDaniel (@kileymcd) June 1, 2026
Report: Padres Calling Up Outfield Prospect Jase Bowen
Stuck in Baseball Limbo
For six years, Bowen was stuck in the Pittsburgh Pirates minor league system, barely treading water offensively. From 2019-2024, the outfielder never hit better than .256 in a single season. Bowen’s OPS marks weren’t much better, with his highest during that time being an average .794.
Before 2025, the highest level of play Bowen had seen was Double-A in ’24. He slashed .241/.298/.366 with 10 homers for the Altoona Curve (the Pirates’ Double-A team). Then something interesting happened in ’25. He was demoted to Single-A and started the season with the Bradenton Marauders. He ended the year with the Triple-A club and batted .272/.353/.449 with his first career OPS above .800.
It was a banner year for Bowen. He decided to elect free agency in the offseason to pursue an opportunity with another club. That opportunity came knocking in a minor league contract with the Padres and a non-roster invite to Spring Training. Bowen delivered immediately.
A Spring Training for the Ages
Bowen played in 25 of the Padres’ 31 Cactus League games. He raked during that time, batting .296/.333/.630 with four home runs. Bowen also flashed the leather with a 1.000 fielding percentage in 27 total chances across all three outfield positions.
Unfortunately, a crowded and talented bench forced Bowen off the roster. The likes of pleasant surprise Miguel Andujar, Nick Castellanos, Ty France, and Bryce Johnson were all tried and tested big-league players. Bowen had yet to make his debut. That made it unlikely he would be selected to the Opening Day roster, but his potential was tantalizing.
Making His Case for a Roster Spot
Bowen has spent his season in the minors proving the Padres wrong for not calling him up sooner. Across 49 games in Triple-A, he is batting .292/.362/.600 with a .962 OPS and a ridiculous 13 home runs. Those numbers rank Bowen second in the Pacific Coast League in home runs, third in slugging percentage, and seventh in OPS.
Anotha one ☝️Jase Bowen launches his second homer of the night pic.twitter.com/CGjpzeS5YU
— El Paso Chihuahuas (@epchihuahuas) May 9, 2026
Not only that, but Bowen’s outfield defense has been spectacular. He’s made just two errors out of 93 total chances (384 1/3 innings). The majority of that time has come in center field, with 35 of his 49 games coming at the position. Bowen made just one error across 300 1/3 innings at the position this season.
The Padres’ offense has massively struggled this season, with inconsistent spurts of power followed by long stretches of mediocrity. They’ve still managed to win games, but have endured a brutal stretch recently that included their first sweep of the season at the hands of the Phillies. Bowen could very well be exactly what the Padres need to push them forward.
The likeliest corresponding move is for San Diego to designate Johnson for assignment. The outfielder is out of minor league options and would have to be DFA’d in order to make it to Triple-A El Paso. Johnson has always been considered a glove-first bench player, with a career .233 batting average. The club has yet to announce the move, but will likely do so ahead of their series opener in Philly on Tuesday.
Main Photo Credit: © Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images