O'Hearn continued his strong three-year run for Baltimore in 2025 before being flipped to San Diego at the trade deadline. The veteran first baseman set career highs in home runs (17), RBI (63), runs (67) and OPS (.803), and he actually fared better versus lefties than righties (.832 OPS compared to .795), which led to him filling less strict of a platoon role. That isn't likely to be sustainable given O'Hearn's struggles versus southpaws throughout his career, but an improved floor versus same-handed pitching could result in more playing time. He doesn't offer significant power or run production but is a decent four-category contributor that could get a boost this offseason, depending on where he signs in free agency. Read Past Outlooks