Archive for the ‘San Francisco Giants’ category

San Francisco Giants’ Playoff Hopes Rapidly Fading Away

August 18th, 2010

The Giants got off to yet another promising start to the game, as Torres led off with a solo home run. The Giants would only tack on one more run in the game, though (Pat Burrell solo homer), as they suffered an 8-2 loss to the Phillies.

Matt Cain did a decent job, pitching six innings and giving up only two earned runs. A Mike Fontenot error, however, would lead to a Jimmy Rollins three-run homer that the Giants never answered.

It's hard to know where the blame is for the Giants' poor month of August. They are 7-9, and their starters have not won any of the last 14 games.

Is it a coincidence, though, that this skid comes with the arrivals of Jose Guillen and Mike Fontenot, who are obvious defensive downgrades from Huff in right field, Ishikawa at first base, and Sanchez at second base?

Or should the blame be placed on the pitchers? How are they honestly to be expected to get outs with Burrell in left and Guillen in right covering minimal range (not to mention Pablo Sandoval's rapidly decreasing range at third and the fact that no other Giants second baseman can cover the range that Freddy Sanchez covers)?

The fact of the matter is, the defensive downgrades that come with Guillen and Fontenot greatly outweigh their offensive upgrades (even though I don't feel that Guillen is an upgrade over Ishikawa offensively).

The Giants won 20 games in July, behind a hot Buster Posey, reliable Torres and Huff, Burrell, and their usual great starting pitching. "If it ain't broke, don't fix it..." Thanks for fixing it, Brian Sabean. Thanks so much.

Of course, Lincecum needs to get his act together. Huff needs to get his act together. Other than that, all signs point to Guillen and Fontenot as the source of the Giants' struggles. I was right with my original instinct—these were unnecessary acquisitions.

The Giants have a chance at making the playoffs. Fontenot and Guillen need to go on the DL, though, for that to happen. The Giants' defense is pathetic. And is their offense really that much better? They scored just two runs off of  Joe Blanton. They've scored seven runs in the last three games.

As it stands, the Giants are two games back in the wild card, which is a manageable deficit. The division is quickly slipping out of their grasp, however, as they are six games out.


Notes:

Running statistic: Giants' runs allowed per game with Guillen in the starting lineup - 8.33, record with Guillen in starting lineup: 0-3.

Buster Posey is now 6-for-12 in the two-spot. He appears to be starting yet another hitting streak, but it's not helping that Huff isn't hitting behind him.

Fontenot has made errors in two consecutive games. I think the saying goes, "A run saved is a run earned." I'd rather have Freddy Sanchez out there saving the Giants runs with his defense, then Fontenot as a minimal offensive upgrade which is costing the Giants runs.

The Giants have hit four home runs in the last two games, all of them solo home runs. Pat Burrell has hit two of them, and guess who bats in front of him...Aubrey Huff. Aubrey Huff has carried this team thus far, and needs to continue if the Giants want to make the playoffs. Especially if he's batting behind Posey and in front of Burrell.

Pablo Sandoval was 0-for-4. His week of magic has come to a halt.

Affeldt had a miserable return: 1.0 IP, 3 H, 2 ER. In his defense, though: 1) the defense behind him sucks, and 2) he was pitching at Citizens Bank Park.

The Giants have allowed 17 runs in two games to a Phillies team that is playing without Ryan Howard. Let's say, hypothetically speaking, the Giants make the playoffs. How are they supposed to contain a lineup with Werth, Howard, Utley, Victorino, Domonic Brown, and Jimmy Rollins in the postseason, if they couldn't contain them with Howard out of the picture?

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August Turning Into House Of Horrors For The San Francisco Giants

August 18th, 2010

At the beginning of August, the Giants trailed the Padres by one game and led the Wild Card race.

They came off a month where they won 20 of their 28 games. They led the majors in runs scored.

But since then they are 7-8 and have fallen to five games back in the division. Now they are on the outside looking in on the playoff picture.

What happened? Three things.

 

Power outage:

Since the Giants entered the month of August, the offense has sputtered along with little consistency (unless you count consistently bad).

In their 15 games, they have scored a total of 54 runs. That is good for 3.6 runs per game.

One of those games they scored 10 runs in. If you take that game out, 44 runs in 14 games is 3.1 runs per game.

The only solace I can find in this is it's not a surprise. We knew the offense needed help, and now we are seeing why. Many people started to drink the Kool-Aid of a really hot month for the offense.

This offense is still only 18th in RBIs, even after leading the league in runs for a month. What does that tell you?

 

Where'd the pitching go?

The one strength of this team was supposed to be pitching. More specifically, the starting pitching.

Well, the Giants have gone 13 games without a starting pitcher picking up a win.

Some of that is Barry Zito getting lit up and Tim Lincecum not being able to find the strike zone. And some of it has to do with the offense not scoring enough runs.

Whatever the case, it has not been good.

Lincecum entered August with an ERA of 3.10. In three starts it has ballooned to 3.62, and he has an ERA of 9.00 and an 0-3 record in that time.

Zito's ERA in August is higher than in any other month this season. His 4.91 ERA has earned him two no decisions and last night's loss.

Matt Cain's ERA is much like his career. Good, but not good enough for this offense. He has an August ERA of 2.89 and one win in his three starts.

Jonathan Sanchez's mouth has gotten him into trouble lately, and his performances have not helped the case. Despite starting the month with six shutout innings against the Rockies, his performances have mirrored his career: Inconsistent.

In his last two starts, he has given up seven runs in nine and a third innings (6.75 ERA).

Even young Madison Bumgarner has not been impervious to this trend. In three starts, he has an ERA of 4.86 and has allowed 31 baserunners in 16.2 innings. That's almost two an inning!

But this is not the most troubling part about this month.

 

The competition is better

Remember who the Giants played last month?

The Nationals, Brewers, Rockies, Dodgers, D-Backs, Mets, and Marlins.

Now, take a look at the standings. Only two of those teams are above .500 and those two teams are only four and two games above .500.

They have a combined winning percentage of .471.

This month?

Cardinals, Reds, Phillies, Braves, Padres, Cubs, Rockies, and D-Backs.

They play or have played each division leader, and the top Wild Card contenders this month.

All but two of those teams have a record above .500. The combined winning percentage? .554.

 

The offense is having trouble with the tougher pitching staffs and the pitching staff has forgotten how to keep runners off the base paths.

But as I said in another article (http://bleacherreport.com/articles/425012-giants-playing-with-fools-gold), this could very well be the month that makes or breaks the Giants.

It is starting to lean toward break.

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Bobby Thomson, Who Hit the Epic Homer to Win ’51 Pennant, Dies at Age 86

August 17th, 2010

There have been many memorable home-runs hit in major league baseball history.

There was Bill Mazerowski’s shot in the bottom of the ninth inning in Game Seven of the 1960 World Series; Carlton Fisk’s in the 1975 World Series, waiving it fair; Kirk Gibson’s in the 1988 World Series, hobbling around the bases, and pumping his fist rounding second to the, “I don’t believe what I just saw!” call from Jack Buck; Joe Carter’s 1993 World Series winning homer; Aaron Boone’s drive deep into the New York night to end Game Seven of the 2003 ALCS against the Boston Red Sox; and David Ortiz’s blast to end Game Four of the 2004 ALCS, igniting a historic four-game rally over the rival Yankees.

But few were as memorable as Bobby Thomson's "Shot Heard ‘Round the World," off the Brooklyn Dodgers’ Ralph Branca, to give the New York Giants the 1951 pennant over their vaunted rival.

It is renowned as the greatest round-tripper in history, but Thomson never saw what all the hubbub was about. “I can’t believe we’re still talking about it,” he said on its 40th anniversary.

Believe it, Mr. Thomson.

It ended perhaps the most exciting pennant race of all time, and few moments in any sport’s history can rival what transpired that magical day on the diamond.

The Giants were deemed dead in the water in August, but a 37-7 finish remarkably forced a playoff with the Dodgers. Their rally was unthinkable—undeniably the most miraculous in history—a rally which ended in the most exhilarating and dramatic of fashions.

Thomson died today at the age of 86. He, nor his famed home-run, will ever be forgotten. Its clearing of the left field wall did much more than win a baseball game. The rivalry between the Giants and Dodgers went beyond sports: it was the battle for New York.

In today’s game of baseball, members of the Red Sox and Yankees talk, laugh, and commiserate before games. The Giants and Dodgers did no such thing. Hate is a strong word, but it can aptly be used to describe their feelings for each other.

Thomson played for the Dodgers Rookies, a sandlot team and part of the Dodgers organization before signing a contract with the Giants for $100 a month, a solid chunk of money in those days. Some players grumbled over salary, but for the vast majority, playing the game was enough (unlike in today’s money-grabbing era).

That’s how it was for Thomson. He had an incredible love for the game, and was darn good at what he did.

He hit a career-high 32 homers during the 1951 season, his sixth of eight seasons with the team.

He bounced around for the rest of his career, playing with the Milwaukee Braves for three-plus seasons, then back with the Giants for the remaining 81 games of ’57, and then made stops in Boston and Baltimore to finish a 14-year career that ran from 1946-1960.

He hung up his spikes with eight 20-plus homer seasons, including five straight with the Giants, and had 264 in his career to compliment 1,026 RBI, 903 runs, 1,705 hits, three All-Star selections, and an MVP finish in the top-10, which came, fittingly, during that famed ’51 season.

Thomson couldn’t have played in a better era for the Giants-Dodgers rivalry. In ’51, the Dodgers held a 13.5 game lead on August 11th, fueling a premature proclamation from Dodgers manager Chuck Dressen, “The Giant is dead!” It turned out, backed by rookie Willie Mays and, of course, Thomson, the Giants stormed back, ending with the most extraordinary of finishes.

That extraordinary finish was brilliantly documented in Don DeLillo’s 1997 best-selling book Underworld. DeLillo documents the adventure undertaken by Cotter Martin, a young kid who, fictionally, has a helluva time sneaking into the third playoff game between the two, evading “a cop in municipal bulk” in the process:

“Cotter gives him a juke step that sends him nearly to his knees and the hot dog eaters bend from the waist to watch the kid veer away in soft acceleration, showing the cop a little finger-wag bye-bye.

… He cuts into an aisle in section 35 and walks down into the heat and smell of the massed fans, he walks into the smoke that hangs from the underside of the second deck, he hears the talk, he enters the deep buzz, he hears the warm-up pitches crack into the catcher’s mitt, a series of reports that carry a comet’s tail of secondary sound.

Then you lose him in the crowd.”

Then, after the crack of Thomson’s bat:

“And Cotter standing in section 35 watching the ball come in his direction. He feels his body turn to smoke. … But before he can smile or shout or bash his neighbor on the arm. Before the moment can overwhelm him, the ball appears again, stitching visibly spinning, that’s how near it hits, banging at an angle off a pillar–hands flashing everywhere.”

That eloquent description of the homer and the pandemonium which ensued, communicates one of the most jubilant feelings one can feel, and one that Cotter and the thousands who actually bought tickets felt.

The homer by Thomson, who, “had the good fortune in 1951 to come to bat at the right time,” fueled a rivalry which went beyond the game, a rivalry which was also ignited by Sal Maglie, the Giants ace who was aptly nicknamed The Barber for his close shaves—that is, his desire to give opponents chin music whenever he felt necessary.

Just as the Dodgers hitters knew Maglie all too well, Thomson was Branca’s worst nightmare. Branca had allowed a homer to the then 27-year old in the first playoff game, then the shot on October 3rd, which completely erased a 4-1 ninth-inning deficit.

Whatever happened to the genius nicknames like “The Barber”? What ever happened to playing for the thrill of the grass? What ever happened to cleverly labeling game-winners as Thomson’s was? What ever happened to baseball being more than baseball, a game full of turf wars, bad blood, and tremendous history?

The game has lost it’s imagination. The game is rapidly losing the all-important meaning of game. And now, the game has lost a shy, nonchalant man, a man who hit the "Shot Heard ‘Round The World," a man, as well as his shot, who will never be forgotten.


 

(photo from USA Today)

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Giant Great Bobby Thompson Passes Away at Age 86

August 17th, 2010

The ultimate hero of the 1951 NL pennant race has passed away.  Bobby Thomson, the Flying Scotsman, died peacefully Monday night at his home in Savannah, Georgia.  Thomson played 15 seasons for 5 teams but is best remembered for his "Shot Heard Round the World" in the 3rd and deciding game of the 1951 NL playoffs. Thomson's two-run blast in the bottom of the ninth inning capped what is thought by many to be the greatest pennant race in the history of baseball.

On August 11th 1951 the Giants stood 13 1/2 games behind the Dodgers in the National League standings. The Giants went on to win 37 of their last 44 games and tied the Dodgers after the regular season ended.

After splitting the first two games the third game was played at the Polo Grounds on October 3rd, 1951. Thomson faced Ralph Branca that day and hit the 0-1 pitch into the lower deck in left field. Thomson, ironically, had hit a two run homer of Branca in the first game of the series.

Hall of Fame Giant announcer Russ Hodges made the dramatic call that day of Thomson's home run. His "The Giants Win the Pennant" call rings down through the ages. The Giants had not only won the pennant--they had beaten the Dodgers.

On deck that day was a young rookie who was hoping to not have to come to bat. Willie Mays went on with the Giants to become the greatest player in their long history.

A picture exists of a Dodger player staying in his position to make sure everyone touched all of the bases. Jackie Robinson held his ground until he was assured that the runners had all touched properly. Several years later Robinson was traded to the Giants but retired instead rather than joining the hated Giants.

Bobby Thomson and Ralph Branca made many appearances together over the years and made a small livelihood of signing autographs.

Rest in Peace Bobby, all Giant fans will never forget you.

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Tim Lincecum Is Smoking Too Much Pot

August 17th, 2010

Open your eyes Timm~ay!  Why are they all squinty like that?  Why are they all bloodshot?  ;)

A month or two ago on the road in Houston everyone watching the broadcast who was at one time a stoner could see it plain as day. Tim Lincecum on a day off was in the dugout as high as a kite.  

The familiar slack jawed laughter. The happy stare into nothingness. It was obvious.

Bruce Bochy the Giants' Manager must have done what everyone else has been doing which is turning a blind eye. 

This must has been going on for a couple years now and anyone who has been a total pot head in life for a period of time understands how it affects you. 

Your mind is less sharp especially when you are not smoking/coming down. Nothing matters too much. It's hard to finish things, like the second inning of Timm~ay’s last start.

After a bases loaded 3-2-3 double play kept the Padres to just two runs with two outs in the second, Timm~ay throws a first pitch fastball to Miguel Tejada of all people right down the middle. The two run single made it 4-0.

To be a pitcher you have to be a warrior set for battle. Every pitch in a tough situation is key; once you get a break like that double play, the pressure only intensifies and so must your focus.

 

Focus and weed do not go hand in hand.

Let's not suggest that Lincecum is pitching high, but maybe he should be.

You know how in college they tell you not to study drunk or else you'll have to be drunk for the test in order to be in the same mental mindset to remember what you studied?  Well same goes for major league pitchers who are so agitated from not being high that he doesn't even want to take warm up pitches.

Mike Krukow the Giants' announcer claimed he's never seen this before as he pointed out Lincecum was calling off warm ups between the second and third inning. Lincecum was so anxious he didn't even take his warm up pitches. The question is what did he do with that time?

As someone who works in the media, let this blogger assure you that the cable network that brought you this game is not cutting their commercial time short between innings nor is a corporate MLB umpire going to start the game until TV is ready... and rightfully so. There are contracts at play from advertising to Lincecum himself.  

So what does a pitcher do in that situation if he's not warming up and yet the game is not starting? Just stand there staring at the sky?  Not even the infielders got to warm up as Timm-ay called it off for everyone to stand there and do what? What he would be doing instead of warming is beyond expectation.  

That same inning the game pretty much ended when Sandoval overthrew first on a tailor made 5-3 double play. 

Baseball is a game of ritual. 

That's why every out in the infield or every strikeout without runners on leads to throwing the ball around the infield. It keeps the arms fresh and accurate and wakes everyone up again between batters. Sandoval's errant throw in this case was a direct result of Timm~ay's poor judgment in breaking the ritual.

Did I mention judgment and pot don't go hand in hand either?

This blogger grants that the evidence used in this article is hardly enough to prove the claims made herein. The truth is the truth however and right now the San Francisco Giants need Lincecum to shut the door on every other start for the rest of the season until the end of the playoffs.

So what is the solution? Let's be honest weed is fun. We're all allowed our escapes in life and the pressures of being a Major League Baseball are gut wrenching. Still, there is a responsibility here to a community that when the weed starts affecting performance that the problem has to be confronted head on with a solution.

Weed and responsibility do not go hand in hand. Although, to use stoner talk, one can gauge their spiritual evolution in life by the amount of responsibility they are able to take on in life.

 

Tim, everyone understands that this is just a phase for you that you will grow out of.  The problem is that the fans want to make the playoffs and you’re not helping.

The solution Tim is for you to stop smoking weed for one month. 21 days is enough to break a habit actually. Let's go for one month though.

Stop smoking weed for one month, and after that month, you can decide if you want to start again. 

San Francisco is a good place for you because the fans understand what you are going through. They understand this is just a phase in life for every San Francisco kid and San Francisco will love you all the same no matter what your decision Timm~ay.

At the same time San Francisco wants to see you succeed. San Francisco wants to see you rise to the levels you are capable of in this playoff run. 

A month without weed is all that’s necessary and surely there are plenty of fans in San Francisco who will join you in giving something up for a month so we're all in this together.

This blogger will give up video games for a month. That’s this blogger's escape which leads to a cycle of depression and fogginess. For one month from now, no video games on the phone in the home, at the friends, even the free arcade games on the floor at work. That's a vow.

San Francisco will be in this with you. So comment below on what you will give up for thirty days in support of Timm~ay leading the Giants to the playoffs.

 

 

 

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