
Imago
credits: MLB.COM

Imago
credits: MLB.COM
Baseball became secondary Monday morning when news broke of a fatal crash in San Pedro de Macorís. A car accident. Three fatalities. And one of their own is in critical condition with a broken spine and femur. For the San Francisco Giants, what started as a normal day became a nightmare playing out thousands of miles away.
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The pitcher fighting for his life is Antonio Jiménez, a 24-year-old left-hander in the San Francisco Giants organization. He was rushed to a Dominican Republic hospital with injuries, including fractures to his femur and spine and multiple lacerations.
The accident occurred outside the Altice telecommunications building. Jiménez was splitting his time between the Giants’ Triple-A affiliate, the Sacramento River Cats, and winter ball for Toros del Este in the Dominican Republic. He started his professional career with the Tampa Bay Rays in 2018 before joining San Francisco last season.
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Baseball insider Hector Gomez broke the news on X, sharing the grim reality facing the Giants organization. He wrote, “San Francisco Giants prospect LHP Antonio Jimémez is in the intensive care unit of a Dominican Republic hospital following a motor vehicle accident that claimed the lives of three people in San Pedro de Macorís in the wee hours of Monday.
Antonio Jiménez, 24, was taken to the hospital after he suffered fractures in the femur and spine, and several lacerations from an accident that involved an SUV colliding with two scooters in front of telecommunications company Altice.”
The Giants released a measured statement to the Daily Mail, acknowledging the tragedy while respecting the ongoing investigation. “We are aware of the tragic car accident involving one of our players, Antonio Jiménez, and are in the process of gathering more information,” the organization said.
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“Out of respect for everyone affected and due to the ongoing investigation, we will refrain from further comment at this time.” The words convey the seriousness of an organization that realizes baseball becomes irrelevant when lives are at stake.
Three men—Alfredo García, 28; Israel Carpio; and Víctor de Jesús—were declared dead at the scene. Meanwhile, Jiménez is fighting through his injuries in the ICU. His Dominican Winter League team, Toros del Este, posted their own statement on X: “Our prayers are with our pitcher Antonio Jiménez, who suffered several injuries in a regrettable traffic accident.” The full details of what happened that Monday morning remain under investigation, but the human cost is already devastatingly clear.
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Jiménez wasn’t simply another minor leaguer; he was a pitcher who had worked hard for years to reach a dream that now seemed out of reach.
Inside a young pitcher’s path
In 2018, Antonio Jiménez signed with the Tampa Bay Rays organization, which was the start of his rise through the minor leagues. He spent the next few years moving up through the Rays’ system, from rookie leagues to higher levels of minor league play.
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He showed enough promise to get the attention of the San Francisco Giants.
In December 2024, the Giants signed him to a minor-league deal and sent him to the Sacramento River Cats, their Triple-A team. At that point, he had a good record in the minors, with 31 wins and 13 losses, a 3.43 ERA, and 471 strikeouts.
He hadn’t played in the major leagues yet, even if his numbers were good.
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Jiménez also stayed busy in his home country, the Dominican Republic, where he pitched for the Toros del Este over the offseason to stay in touch with his roots. People saw that he threw with his left hand, had a high strikeout percentage against left-handed hitters, and had four pitches.
These things made him a sleeper prospect in the Giants’ system.
This background helps to understand why the tragic crash in the Dominican Republic that left Jiménez fighting for his life is so shocking, both individually and for an organization that was banking on a rising arm.
His story is even more touching because he had been progressively improving in the minors but was still on the verge of making his MLB debut.
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