Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Some Positives Despite Sloppy Loss

I know I should be really frustrated about last night's 5-3 loss to the Dodgers. The Giants committed two costly errors, threw three wild pitches, walked nine hitters, made mistakes on the bases, and struggled to get clutch hits despite numerous opportunities. However, I will admit that I thoroughly enjoyed last night's game before the Dodgers finally pulled away with two runs off Bob Howry in the ninth. Perhaps that's because I wasn't really expecting to win this game, with Dodger ace and Giant-killer Chad Billingsley on the mound. I feel like the fact that the Giants were able to at least get Billingsley, as well as Jonathan Broxton, on the ropes several times is a positive. Here are some other observations:

- Jonathan Sanchez worked harder than he needed to because of a dropped fly ball by Fred Lewis and a throwing error by Juan Uribe, which led to two Dodger runs. As a result, Sanchez was close to 100 pitches after five innings.
- Lewis strikes out a lot. He leads the National League with 26, and it seems like they have all come in the last week.
- For all the talk about what a clutch hitter Bengie Molina is, it seems like he's popped up a lot of first pitches in big situations.
- Pablo Sandoval is hitting the ball with authority, and Travis Ishikawa is taking better at-bats as well.

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Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Barry Beats LA...Zito Good Too

With the all-time home run king looking on, the Giants scored the game-tying and game-winning runs on two balls that didn't leave the infield grass. I'll take it. The Giants beat the Dodgers for the first time this year and improved their home record to 7-2. With Tim Lincecum going tomorrow, the Giants now have a good chance to take the series.

Barry Zito was not quite as sharp as he was in his last outing in San Diego, as he struck out just two while walking three, but he managed to work his way out of jams through the first six innings. The Dodgers finally got to him in the seventh, and Zito was gone after a two-run homer by Casey Blake and a single by Juan Pierre. Merkin Valdez, pitching for the first time in a while, allowed a game-tying single to Orlando Hudson and go-ahead single to Manny Ramirez, but avoided further damage by getting Matt Kemp to ground into a double play. The Giants then rallied for two against Ronald Belisario in the eighth.

The story of the game might be Brian Wilson, who is now Twitter-free. A day after blowing a three-run lead in Arizona, Wilson struck out Blake, Blake DeWitt, and Rafael Furcal to close out the game. After falling behind Furcal 3-0, Wilson planted three straight knee-high fastballs for called strikes.

Of course, Barry Bonds was in the building, and I think anyone watching would agree that the man would make a great color commentator.

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Monday, April 27, 2009

Who Would've Thought a 2-1
Weekend Would Be A Disappointment

Going into Friday's game, all I wanted was for the Giants to take two of three from Arizona, and that they did. It is a little disappointing because they came oh-so-close to leaving with a sweep, but here's a look back at a mostly positive weekend...

If you watched Friday night's game, then it was painfully clear that something is just not right with Tim Lincecum. Despite a Giants win, Lincecum in no way resembled the 2008 Cy Young award winner we know and love. He could only muster eight innings, and allowed a whopping five hits. Even worse, his strikeout total dropped from 13 in his previous start to only 12. He also increased his walk total from his previous start, allowing one. And, he allowed a 2-out RBI single to a pitcher! Miraculously, the Giants dominant offense carried them to a 5-1 victory.

Saturday's victory resembled the kind of win that only winning teams get. You know the kind where your number starter gets knocked out early, and your offense and bullpen carry you to victory. Clutch two-out hitting has been rather elusive for the Orange and Black, but all five came in such circumstances - an Edgar Renteria double, a Randy Winn homer, and a single from the oft hitting challenged Emmanuel Burris. The hitting was clutch, but I just cannot say enough good things about the bullpen's performance, especially the strong setup guys we have in Jeremy Affeldt and Bob Howry. A major issue the Giants have faced in their string of losing seasons has been a lack of quality setup guys to finish the job - coupled with starters who cannot go deep. Both Affeldt and Howry have handled their late-inning duties successfully (each has three holds), achieving a certain late inning confidence.

What was that about late inning confidence? Sunday's game had all the makings of an inspiring getaway win for the Giants - seven solid innings from Matt Cain (who was in line for win number three), a clutch homer from Pablo Sandoval, more great setup work from Affeldt and Howry, and a 4-1 lead with Brian Wilson on the mound. Blown saves happen - it is just a fact. I will not go into any monologues trying to diagnose Brian Wilson's strength and weaknesses. Even the best closers have a bad day. Despite the loss, there are still numerous positives to take from this game and even more from the series - the Giants have turned that dismal 2-7 into a respectable 8-9.

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Thursday, April 23, 2009

For Zito and the Giants,
It is All About the BB

I have three words that will be the key to the Giants' success in 2009 - base on balls. If Giants hitters can coax a few of these each game, they will put themselves in a position to score runs and win games. If Giants pitchers can avoid these, it is going to be very difficult to score runs off of these guys. I believe walks were the key to our 0-6 road trip, and subsequently the key to our 4-1 homestand.

But let's talk about Barry Zito. No article or re-cap of a Zito game fails to mention the ridiculous contract he is now in his third year of. Perhaps, Zito will never escape this, but it looks like the lefty has turned over a new leaf. Zito was electric yesterday afternoon. For a guy who typically struggles in April, struggles in the first, and struggles with walks, he put forth one of his best efforts ever as a Giant. For seven innings, Zito held the Padres scoreless, allowing just two hits. Most impressive, he allowed zero walks (but did hit one batter). He even struck out the side in the fourth, facing the heart of the Padres order.

Zito did knock his ERA down several notches, but couldn't improve on his 0-2 record, seeing as how the Giants were pretty much dominated by Chris Young, whose line was pretty much identical to zeros. Still, I felt something I have not felt in a very long time. Even though the game remained 0-0 through nine innings, there was an undeniable feeling that we would eventually win this game. The Giants have now made an entire trip through the rotation with each pitcher throwing a quality start. It has created that atmosphere where every game can be won behind strong pitching. More important, something special is also developing in the bullpen behind setup guys Bob Howry and Jeremy Affeldt and closer Brian Wilson. Those three combined for three scoreless innings, with Wilson pitching two for the win.

Strong pitching, both from starters and in relief will carry the Giants far. The key for Giants hitters is to create those opportunities to score runs. Some days, those opportunities may lead to a grand slam; others, it will simply lead to that one run needed to win.

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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Renteria Slams San Diego

With one swing of the bat against Jake Peavy on Tuesday, Edgar Renteria put as many runs on the board as the Giants scored in the entire series against the Diamondbacks, and then did one better with an RBI single the following inning. After an unspectacular first two weeks, Renteria has gone 6-13 over his past five games. Travis Ishikawa also had a much needed good game, driving in two insurance runs and working a walk in front of Renteria's grand slam. Matt Cain pitched his third straight quality starts, allowing two runs in six innings. Cain allowed nine hits, but only one for extra bases, and he didn't walk a batter.

A minor roster move was made after the game. Alex Hinshaw, who recorded the final out, was sent down to Triple-A Fresno, and catcher Steve Holm was recalled. Holm gives the Giants a legitimate backup catcher, though I have a feeling Pablo Sandoval will still probably spell Molina most of the time. Holm was 0-18 with eight strikeouts to start the year in Fresno, but at the very least, he provides the team with some insurance in case of emergency. Hinshaw was clearly the weak link in the bullpen with five walks and just one strikeout in 5.1 innings. It will be interesting to see what happens when Sergio Romo comes off the DL. Emmanuel Burriss had another 0-4, including a double play with the bases loaded and nobody out. Burriss has barely gotten the ball out of the infield and has made numerous mental mistakes, and I think we may see Kevin Frandsen sooner rather than later. All in all, however, a very good day.

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Monday, April 20, 2009

Big Unit Throws Near No-No

And, finally! Giants pitchers are starting to throw just like we expected them to. Unfortunately, Giants hitters are continuing to hit just like we expected them to. In their best series of the year, the Giants took two of three from Arizona with stellar starting pitching and scoring-challenged hitting. Giants starters did not allow a run to Arizona in 21 2/3 innings.The big story of yesterday was Randy Johnson, who earned win number 296 if his career, his first as a Giant. Johnson had us on the edge of our seats carrying a no-hitter into the seventh inning. Despite allowing a leadoff double, Johnson preserved his shutout, while Bob Howry and Brian Wilson carried the team the rest of the way. A thrilling game to watch from start to finish! The Giants mustered two runs - one on a sacrifice fly and one on a double play, both with the bases loaded. There were some positive signs for the Giants on the offensive front - there were five walks (one intentional), while Bengie Molina and Pablo Sandoval had multi-hit games. Unfortunately, they also struck out 11 times.

A quick bone to pick here. Following Saturday's loss, I read a blog post entitled Note to Sabean: Trade Brian Wilson, which stated, "The guy is a headcase. He’s not a competitor. His ERA is too high. He walks leadoff hitters. His trade value will never be this high again." First, Wilson has only had two real opportunities to prove himself this season and he is 2-for-2, facing the minimum in those games. While he does need to work on keeping the ERA down, the majority of his runs allowed come in non-save situations. Furthermore, when he has given up leads this season, they have been situations where he has entered with men on base, sometimes with zero margin for error. Why did the Giants lose so many games last year? The bullpen was a big part, but Wilson was a saving grace. Oh, and he comes cheap.

If the Giants plan to keep hitting like they do, pitching is going to have to be near flawless. Thankfully, today it was.

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Saturday, April 18, 2009

Lincecum Isn't Broken,
Just the Offense

After a pair of starts that did not rank amongst his best, folks jumped the gun trying to figure out what the issue might be with Tim Lincecum. "We've all seen it this week," wrote Ranier Reglos in Bleacher Report. "Tim Lincecum is not the same Giant he was last year." Is a 24-year old kid with a lifetime 25-11 record not allowed to have a couple of bad days? There is no curse surrounding Lincecum - no Sports Illustrated curse, no video game curse, and no Cy Young curse! Lincecum does not wear his emotions on his sleeve the way some pitchers do, and handles the pressure and the spotlight as well as anyone.

Those critics were silenced on Saturday afternoon, as Lincecum was absolutely money. Eight innings, thirteen strikeouts, zero runs, and zero walks. He has regained his natural form and dropped his ERA down to a respectable 3.86. Unfortunately, Lincecum has to rely on the San Francisco Giants for run support, and frankly he fell victim to a bit of Matt Cain syndrome at AT&T park. While Lincecum baffled the Diamondbacks for eight innings, Giants hitters appeared equally baffled. Emmanuel Burris and Fred Lewis each had two hits, and Edgar Renteria did walk, however the Giants could not get runners into scoring position and did not appear to know what to do with the ones they had. Oh, and Burris got caught stealing home. This is the kind of 2-0 loss that really hurts.

A quick note on the Arizona Diamondbacks: When they came to town in April of last year, I was genuinely threatened. I thought they had the best lineup in the West, and were the team to beat in the NL. As the Giants shut them out for 16 straight innings, I wondered, "When did this lineup become so unimpressive?"

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Giants Win!
My Joe Martinez Theory

I have this theory. Before Joe Martinez took a line drive to the face, the Giants were riding high, en route to a 2-1 start. The event shook the Giants up pretty good - it was evident from their reactions after the fact. I think the orange and black took that with them on the road, and it showed in their play. Mental mistakes were made in the field, baserunning gaffes cost the team runs, and the pitching was not anywhere near as sharp as we expected.With the Giants returning home on Friday night, Martinez was in the building looking significantly better and I think his presence really loosened everyone up a bit. I expect better play from this team in the coming weeks. It wasn't a strong night on the offensive front - save Andres Torres' insurance homer in the eighth when he could not get around the bases fast enough. This evening was really about the pitching.

We had concerns about Jonathan Sanchez when he mentally broke down in his first start, however his line was strong against the Diamondbacks - nearly seven shutout innings of 2-hit ball. Then the trio of pitchers who blew the lead against the Dodgers last Wednesday sealed the deal this time - 1 out from Jeremy Affeldt, 2 from Bob Howry, and then 4 from Brian Wilson in his first save of the season. With strong pitching, a decent bullpen, and an un-threatening lineup, these are the kinds of games the Giants need to be winning to stay competitive.

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Friday, April 17, 2009

Worst. Road Trip. Ever.

I cannot say for certain that this was the worst road trip ever. I am sure if I dug deep into the most painful sections of my Giants memory, I could come up with something. I prefer to keep that in short term mode, however. Still, it is hard to think of much that could have been more demoralizing than what was witnessed over the last seven days. I suppose of Tim Lincecum demanded a trade to the Dodgers, vowing to not pitch another ball until such a demand was met, that would have been more demoralizing. (You know the Dodgers would love that, too, seeing as how they love ex-Giants so much).

Ok. So when the Giants left, they were flying high at 2-1. Now they are sinking fast at 2-7. Add on top of that several lackluster pitching performances, an ineffective bullpen, and a lineup of hitters that either couldn't get the big hit, or - as in the case of last night - could not do the basic fundamental things that bring in a run here and a run there. Oh, and the defense has been shaky too. Stir that together, and you can find precisely one game in the last seven where the Giants looked like they had a shot at winning, and losing that only added to the demoralizing feeling.

What are we left with? Well, the season still just started and I plan to reserve all judgment at least until we actually get to see Brian Wilson pitching in a save situation. Tim Lincecum pitches tomorrow and, for the moment, that remains a comforting thought.

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Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Giants Trying to Move Rowand?

Joe Cowley writes in the Chicago Sun Times that, "The San Francisco Giants are looking to unload the $44 million they still owe Aaron Rowand through 2012." Cowley adds, "The one problem? The Giants would have to be willing to pick up a big chunk of the deal to even get [White Sox GM Ken] Williams on the phone."

Tim Dierkes at MLB Trade Rumors adds, "I'd venture to say the Giants would have to assume at least half of Rowand's contract to make it viable to the White Sox."

Rowand spent five seasons in Chicago and was a member of the 2005 World Championship team. He signed a five year, $60 million deal with the Giants before the 2008 season; not a bad move at the time, but looks worse in lieu of all the name players who signed for much cheaper this past offseason.

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Monday, April 13, 2009

The Best Way to Get Over a Sweep
From the Padres is To Beat the Dodgers

The weekend series with the Padres started with so much promise - a 2-1 Giants team going up against a weak Padres team with a mentally sound Jonathon Sanchez, a rejuvenated Barry Zito, and a sure-to-do-better-than-his-last-start Tim Lincecum. Three lopsided losses later and, well, this record is starting to look a bit like the start to 2008. But before we get ahead of ourselves with the doom and gloom, some positives to take from the first week of the season:

-Despite two misplays in the same inning yesterday, Fred Lewis looks very solid at the plate. His .450 clip leads the team and he has hit safely in each game.
-Randy Winn has, too, hit safely in each game and looks solid in the leadoff role.
-Despite a slow spring, Aaron Rowand has hit well to start the season, and the number seven spot might actually suit him well.
-Bengie Molina is still the clutch, reliable Bengie Molina we love.
-If Matt Cain can pitch all season like he did last week, this staff is going to be everything that we dream it is.
-Even in a loss, the Big Unit is still a blast to watch.
-This staff is going to strike out a lot of hitters.

Also, before we write this season off, we haven't even had a chance to watch Brian Wilson pitch with a game on the line.

Sure, there are a lot of questions that remain, but if Randy Johnson could shut down the Dodgers this afternoon, I think we would all feel that same excitement we did at the start of last week.

Monday, April 6, 2009

A Day to be Optimistic

The sun shines, KNBR cranks in the office, and the major league baseball season has begun. Opening Day ranks alongside my favorite days of the year - alongside All Star Monday, the first day of the playoffs, and Christmas. I love Opening Day becomes it brings with it optimism and opportunity. It will be weeks before your team is either in the hunt or dismally under .500, but on Opening Day, everyone is equal.

The last two Opening Days have been awful harbingers of doom for the Giants, however, with Barry Zito giving up first inning runs and hardly inspiring confidence. While the Giants Opening Day lineup lacks the big bat we hoped they would acquire, it does feature a lot to be optimistic about. The presence of young faces with promise has at least made the Giants a team I look forward to watching again. The best pitching staff I have ever seen in orange and black gives me hope we'll be turning a few of last year's 8-3 losses into 3-1 wins.

When the Giants Opening Day starter takes the mound tomorrow afternoon, there will be no harbingers of doom, even if first inning runs are allowed. A Cy Young winner dubbed "the freak" has given this city something to be excited about again. He has inspired a confidence our high-priced fourth starter simply cannot command. As long as there's a journey that says "Lincecum," there is hope.

It's very well possible that by June 1, the Giants will be dismally under .500, but at least today, I have a few reasons to be optimistic.


It has been difficult to be a Giants fan these last several years - losing records, injuries, and bad contracts. We may be critical - but we stand by our team through good times and bad. The Giants remain one of the most storied franchises in the history of baseball and have a crop of new stars ready to add new pages to the Giants history books. Lincecum, Cain, Sanchez, Wilson and Sandoval are giving us reasons to be excited. Times may not always be stellar, but the Giants always give us something to talk about.