It’s hard to find a bigger disappointment from last season than the San Diego Padres. Coming off an NLCS appearance in 2022 and getting a full season with superstars Manny Machado, Juan Soto, Fernando Tatis Jr., and free-agent acquisition Xander Bogaerts, the sky seemed to be the limit.

But the success never materialized and they remained an enigma all season as they struggled to find their footing in a competitive NL West. By the time they began playing their best baseball in September, it was too late.

Padres leaning into new identity after learning from disappointing 2023  season - Yahoo Sports

A year later, Soto is now with the New York Yankees, the Padres now has a new manager in Mike Shildt and, after missing the postseason, it’s time for the Padres to start playing like the team they were built to be.

“I think [our] edge comes from going through what we went through last year,” Padres starting pitcher Joe Musgrove told Yahoo Sports at spring training. “Not only high expectations from the fans in the city of San Diego, but high expectations of ourselves and what we’re going to accomplish. … we didn’t do that last year.”

Padres SS Xander Bogaerts to switch positions with 2B Ha-Seong Kim, 1 year  after $280 million contract - Yahoo Sports

San Diego has been talked about for the past several seasons as one of baseball’s elite teams. Going down its 26-man roster during those seasons, it’s easy to see why with the top-end star power the Padres had. But if their season in 2023 proved anything, it’s that talent alone can take a team only so far.

Beyond the wins and losses, the Padres’ issues last season seemed to come from the fact they simply had no identity. And with no identity or idea of who they were as a team, they had to rely on their talent flipping the switch, which proved unsuccessful.

The Padres wanted to be a team that slugged and hit homers. But their real issue was once they got punched in the mouth, they didn’t know how to respond. This was laughably evident in extra innings games, where San Diego went 1-12, ending the losing streak only in late September.

If we only knew how disappointing the Padres were really going to be - The  San Diego Union-Tribune

San Diego promoted from within for their managerial opening by hiring Shildt, who had been serving as the team’s bench coach, to take over for Bob Melvin. One advantage of doing so is Shildt has been in the building and seen the areas that need to be addressed.

“We talked about and used the word identity a lot this spring, internally [and] externally,” Shildt said. “The thing about identity is you find out how strong your identity is relative to challenges that you face. And so we’re always working on strengthening and deepening our identity where it’s just the fabric of who we are.

“The good news is that it’s ongoing and it just continues to evolve. Because as soon as you think you’re ripe, you’re rotten. … I’m pleased with where we are with establishing identity in camp. It’s probably the thing I’m most pleased with overall.”