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San Francisco Giants: Weight of Pablo Sandoval Will Be His Demise

The world of sports is littered with sad stories of failure—failure that has come as a result of a myriad of issues.

We’ve seen athletes suffer through financial woes after their careers have ended, Antoine Walker and Allen Iverson serving as the poster boys for this particular dilemma.

We’ve seen drugs rob athletes of everything as well, no example more poignant than the premature demise of Len Bias, who was drafted with the second overall pick in the 1986 NBA draft by the Boston Celtics but never had a chance to showcase his immense skills. A cocaine overdose took care of that.

On the other side of the spectrum, we’ve seen many promising athletes have their careers destroyed by injury. The gruesome knee injury of Shaun Livingston is a strong warning that despite the skill they might possess, athletes are not invincible.

Somewhere in the middle, between destroying their own career through a destructive lifestyle (gambling, excessive spending, drugs) and failing through no fault of their own (injury), are the athletes who, while successful, have no hope of reaching their full potential because of their own personal choices.

Pablo Sandoval, the third baseman for the San Francisco Giants, falls right into that category. Beloved by all in the Bay Area for his cheerful personality and love of the game, the man affectionately known as the “Kung Fu Panda” looks like just that: a panda—a big, out-of-shape one at that.

It’s a reality every fan knows and has sadly accepted. His prowess with the bat and nimbleness for his size have always gotten him a pass. After all, if the man is producing, who are we to say anything?

That pass he owns, however, is starting to get a bit dated. Sandoval’s weight is beginning to spiral out of control; he currently looks heftier than he ever has. Let’s just say that the 240 pounds he is listed at is becoming more and more laughable.

Again, when he’s producing, it has been forgiven. Times like this, however, when his average has slipped to .257 and his on-base percentage a paltry .300, this is when the anger at his weight emerges.

The hypocrisy among the fans is almost as disturbing as the Panda’s own disdain for his health.

The worst part about it is that even when he is his typical hitting self, it is still only a fraction of the baseball player Sandoval can be.

He has been blessed with the softest of hands; few pick it as cleanly as the Panda over in the hot corner. Anything hit at him is likely to be turned into an out. That sounds nice, sure, but the most important thing about that sentence was “hit at him.”

The range he once possessed has almost completely deteriorated; it’s a wonder teams don’t bunt their way to victory, to be honest. He has created a mirage at third base, making the routine look great. Style has overtaken substance, but not as a personal choice; his weight has created the need for that.

The evidence was painfully clear in the Giants’ 4-3, 16-inning loss to the New York Mets Monday night. His counterpart, David Wright, has managed to do the opposite of the facade Sandoval has created. Whereas the Panda makes the routine look grand, Wright manages to make the toughest of plays look routine.

Sandoval’s disregard for his weight is costing him each time he sets foot on the baseball field. His past seasons, while good, could have been great. His current season, injury-riddled as it has been, has suffered as well. And if some fans expect the future to yield bigger and better things, they are mistaken.

Out-of-shape and overweight athletes tend to fizzle in the league. Their shelf life is markedly shorter than those of players who put the work in to keep themselves in shape. Unless Sandoval makes a concerted effort to get his weight in check, he will be added to the long list of athletes whose success story was marred by one troubling failure. 

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San Francisco Giants: Can Brandon Belt Live Up to Lofty Expectations?

Two years in to his major league career, the San Francisco Giants are still wondering who exactly Brandon Belt is.

Is he the guy that destroys spring training and minor league pitching, showing both his ability to hit for prodigious power as well as a high batting average (spring stats: .437/.459/.901, 8 HR)?

Or is he the guy we’ve seen in the majors so far, a player who’s shown modest power at best and an inability to consistently get on base?

The answer is most likely somewhere in between. At just 25 years old, Belt still has plenty of time to continue to tinker with his swing, hopefully getting the large loop that has plagued him from his arrival to the big leagues out of it.

Unlike some of his more heralded teammates like Buster Posey and Matt Cain, Belt was not a highly touted prospect coming out of college. Drafted in the fifth round of the 2009 draft, 147th overall, most scouts were impressed, but not really blown away, by anything Belt brought to the table.

It wasn’t until he started absolutely mashing in the minors, hitting .352 with 23 home runs and 112 RBI in 136 games in 2010, that people really started to get a glimpse of his potential.

He was to be the future at first base.

Now, 279 games into his major league career, he still might be that. Unfortunately, he probably won’t be the future star at first base that many fans expected.

And as a fifth-round pick, that’s ok. The Giants could have done a lot worse than what they’ve already gotten from Belt, and most likely what they will continue to get in the future.

Obviously it’s time to lower expectations a tad bit. The question then becomes, what should we expect to see from Belt going forward?

Already an above-average defender at his position, the value that Belt provides on defense alone should provide a certain degree of optimism. As is the case in the professional ranks, however, defense will always take a backseat to what a player does with the bat. 

Always a patient hitter at the plate, Belt must continue to make strides if he hopes to ever be more than just a player with a keen eye at the plate. He must do something with the pitches that he does indeed select.

The power is obviously there; we’ve seen him waterlog a few balls in his career by way of McCovey Cove. It just hasn’t consistently been there thus far. The same goes for his approach at the plate. He’ll string together a few good weeks and then proceed to spoil it by a month-long slump.

Fortunately for Giants fans, I do not believe that Belt has reached his ceiling just yet. I’m not saying that it’s all that much higher than what he’s currently producing, but his best years are yet to come.

In terms of a past comparison, Mark Grace comes to mind. A career .303 hitter with modest power (173 home runs and 1146 RBI), I see Belt maybe not hitting for quite that high of an average, but also to slightly outperform those power numbers.

We’ve seen what he can do when his head is right and his swing is smooth. If he can harness his ability for extended periods of time, a few plus-.300 seasons with 20-25 home runs don’t seem out of his reach.

Belt will never be Will Clark; he never was going to be, despite how high the expectations rose. If he can, however, produce a Grace-like career, the Giants organization would be more than pleased with their 2009 fifth-round selection. 

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