If 2026 San Jose State baseball has felt like a season of almosts, that’s because it largely has been.
Coming off a 2025 campaign that restored postseason belief and reinforced Brad Sanfilippo’s culture of competitiveness, the Spartans entered this spring carrying cautious optimism but realistic Mountain West limitations.
Our own MW Connection team’s preseason outlook viewed the Spartans as dangerous enough to matter – a more middle-tier than a title-ready program chasing conference heavyweights like Nevada, San Diego State and Air Force.
For most of 2026, that projection has proven remarkably accurate.
SJSU has spent much of the year hovering in the conference’s competitive middle: too capable to dismiss, too inconsistent to fully ascend.
The Spartans have shown enough offensive life, veteran poise and occasional series-level punch to remain relevant, but not enough complete week-to-week execution to consistently separate from the Mountain West’s upper class.
Yet, entering the final regular-season series against Fresno State starting Thursday (May 14, 2026), the Spartans still have something tangible left to chase.
A path not to the top of the standings, of course, but to survival.
SJSU’s clearest strength throughout 2026 has been its offensive nucleus. Alex Fernandes has emerged as the lineup’s centerpiece and one of the Spartans’ most dependable producers, while Zach Chamizo, whom Sanfilippo once described as “a guy that could just roll out of bed and hit” has validated that confidence with key contributions of his own. Together, they’ve helped stabilize an offense that, when functioning, can absolutely pressure Mountain West opponents.
That offensive steadiness, paired with the veteran leadership Sanfilippo praised before the season, has often kept San Jose State competitive even when its larger flaws surfaced.
Because the Spartans’ defining issue has not been talent, it’s been sustainability.
Too often, San Jose has played well enough to compete but not consistently enough to control. Pitching depth fluctuations, bullpen inconsistency and missed opportunities against stronger conference opponents have repeatedly left the Spartans hovering near the postseason bubble instead of going above it.
In short, SJSU has looked respectable, but rarely complete.
Which is why this final Fresno State series now carries outsized importance.
With the Spartans entering the closing weekend one game behind the final Mountain West Tournament spot, the equation is straightforward: sweep Fresno State and hope the standings above them crack open. Fresno, sitting near the conference basement, represents San Jose’s clearest opportunity. Anything less than a sweep likely ends realistic tournament hopes.
But if SJSU handles business and gets help, particularly if San Diego State takes down UNLV, the Spartans could still sneak into the six-team conference tournament as the No. 6 seed.
It’s not glamorous.
But they are alive…mathematically.
For a team whose season has largely lived in the space between promise and plateau, that matters.
Should San Jose reach the tournament, the likely reward would be a first-round showdown against a higher seed such as Nevada or Washington State. It’s hardly ideal, but not impossible. Sanfilippo’s recent teams have shown enough tournament resilience to suggest that simply getting in could create upset potential, even if pitching depth remains the largest obstacle to a true run.
That’s the larger truth of 2026.
This season has not been about domination. It has been about proving San Jose State can still matter.
The Spartans have not become Mountain West frontrunners. They have not consistently matched the league’s best. But they have remained relevant enough, dangerous enough and experienced enough to make the final weekend meaningful.
For the Spartans, that leaves 2026 balanced on one final test: sweep the Bulldogs. Force scoreboard watching. Extend the season.
Because after months of hovering between respectable and breakthrough, San Jose State’s season now comes down to one simple challenge: make “almost” mean “not yet.”