MLB · NL West · Est. 1883 · Oracle Park
San Francisco Giants
Current Leadership
Managing Partner & Chairman
Greg Johnson assumed the role of managing partner and chairman of the San Francisco Giants in 2024, taking over leadership from his father Charles B. Johnson. Greg had been increasingly involved in the franchise's operations and represents the next generation of the Johnson family's stewardship of the Giants. His transition to leadership came as the franchise looks to return to championship contention after the dynasty years of the early 2010s.
Investor Consortium
The Giants' ownership group includes a consortium of investors who partnered with the Johnson family to keep the franchise in San Francisco when it was threatened with relocation. The group has overseen the construction of Oracle Park (originally Pacific Bell Park), widely considered one of baseball's finest venues, and the development of the Mission Rock mixed-use neighborhood adjacent to the ballpark.
Manager
| Name | Position | Since |
|---|---|---|
| Tony Vitello | Manager | 2026 |
Coaching Staff
| Name | Position | Since |
|---|---|---|
| Jayce Tingler | Bench Coach | 2026 |
| Justin Meccage | Pitching Coach | 2026 |
| Hunter Mense | Hitting Coach | 2026 |
| Hector Borg | Third Base Coach | 2026 |
| Shane Robinson | First Base Coach | 2026 |
Historical Figures
Former Managing Partner
Charles B. Johnson, the billionaire co-founder of Franklin Templeton Investments, served as the Giants' managing partner from 2008 to 2024. Under his watch, the Giants won three World Series championships in a five-year span (2010, 2012, 2014), establishing one of the great dynasties in modern baseball. Johnson transitioned leadership to his son Greg in 2024 while remaining connected to the franchise.
Former Managing General Partner
Peter Magowan, the former CEO of Safeway supermarkets, led the ownership group that purchased the Giants in 1993 and prevented the team from moving to Tampa Bay. Magowan's signature achievement was the privately financed construction of Pacific Bell Park (now Oracle Park), which opened in 2000 as the first privately funded MLB ballpark in decades. He also personally recruited Barry Bonds to San Francisco in 1993, forever changing the franchise's trajectory.