Tag: Matt Cain

SF Giants’ Matt Cain Receives Perfect Gift in Mizuno Samurai Sword

Matt Cain was already armed with a wide array of pitches, but now the dude is packing a samurai sword. 

Things do get fairly busy when you throw a perfect game. I wouldn’t know first hand, as my biggest accomplishment is the one time I didn’t eat a box of thin mints, but we’ll move on. 

Matt Cain threw a perfecto a week ago against the Houston Astros and then pitched Monday night against the L.A. Angels

Before he got started on his five innings of work and eventual 5-3 win, he needed to reap some rewards. 

According to Yahoo! Sports, his pitching day began by recording a spot for the night’s Late Show with David Letterman, a segment entitled, “Things I Want to Achieve Now That I Have Thrown a Perfect Game.”

The best of the day came in the form of a samurai sword. 

BuzzFeed Sports tweeted this picture and assumption that a perfect game comes with a perfectly sweet gift:

 

According to the Yahoo! Sports report, there is a perfectly good reason Cain was given a samurai sword that nerds like me will covet from afar:

He then accepted the gift of a samurai sword from Mizuno USA, a company that he endorses. According to Mizuno, the sword has only been awarded to its brand ambassadors on five different occasions with the most recent being Dallas Braden’s perfect game in 2010.

You too can have your very own samurai weapon. You need only to endorse Mizuno and to then throw nine innings of perfection.

As for me, I will just watch Kill Bill one more time and call it a job well done.

 

Follow me on Twitter and get the party started. 

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5 Reasons San Francisco Giants Can’t Let Matt Cain Go to Free Agency

Matt Cain, starting pitcher for the San Francisco Giants, will be cashing in loads of money if he hits free agency. 

Cain has spent his whole big league career in San Francisco and the Giants cannot let Cain hit the open market after the 2012 season. The righty could be an ace for most teams, and don’t let his wins and losses fool you. 

After the Giants’ atrocious offense in 2011, the last thing they need to do is lose pitching. If the Giants cannot sign Cain before Opening Day, they will have plenty of competition is signing the big righty. If the Giants want to be contenders for years to come, they have to sign him as soon as possible. 

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Fantasy Baseball Sleepers 2012: 4 Pitchers That Are Quality Start All-Stars

Picking out quality starting pitching for your fantasy baseball team can be a fickle enterprise, given how difficult it is to project how well any given MLB hurler will fare from year to year.

Not to mention how few and far between aces tend to be.

Now, I could easily tell you to go out and drop your auction dollars/draft picks on guys like Roy Halladay, Cliff Lee, Jered Weaver and James Shields, but those guys are stuck in tough divisions amidst offenses that could blast them on any given night.

Instead, stick with these four guys, who should be comfortable cranking up the heat—and racking up quality starts—against weak competition this season.

 

Justin Verlander, Detroit Tigers

Yeah, okay, so maybe recommending that you pick up the reigning American League Cy Young Award winner and MVP isn’t much of a stretch, especially since he led the majors in quality starts with 28.

And sure, there’s a fair risk that after such a spectacular season in 2011 Justin Verlander could regress toward the mean of his career, as most projections suggest he will.

Even so, at the age of 29, Verlander should still have some elite years left in his electric arm and should find himself pitching comfortably from ahead more often than not in a so-so AL Central, with the likes of Miguel Cabrera and Prince Fielder providing him ample run support every time out. 


Justin Masterson, Cleveland Indians

If you’re looking for a bit of a risky value pick in the AL Central, I offer you Justin Masterson.

The 26-year-old righty had a breakout year for the Indians in 2011, piling up 22 quality starts and career bests in earned-run average (3.21), fielding-independent pitching (3.28) and wins (12).

Of course, there’s reason to worry that Masterson might fall to the back of the pack, considering his low strikeout rate (7.11 K/9 career) and penchant for free passes (3.49 BB/9 career), along with his lack of a prior track record.

But, then again, Masterson might just be a late bloomer and at his age he should be approaching his pitching prime. Hence, if you can master Masterson for a reasonable sum, you’d be well advised to do so.


Matt Cain, San Francisco Giants

The only place in baseball better for pitchers than the AL Central is the National League West, a division in which the only half-decent offense—that of the Arizona Diamondbacks—happens to be replete with free swingers.

So it should come as no surprise that a power pitcher like San Francisco’s Matt Cain should be atop your fantasy wish list. Cain finished the 2011 season with an NL-best 26 quality starts, even though his strikeout rate (7.27 K/9) wasn’t exactly anything to write home about.

Cain’s secret to success? Limiting home runs—he gave up just 0.37 of ’em per nine innings.

It certainly helps Cain’s case that he plays in the cavernous AT&T Park and will be playing the season as a 27-year-old continuing to dominate alongside Tim Lincecum in the Giants’ rotation. Of course, the wins may be hard to come by behind San Fran’s so-so offense.


Clayton Kershaw, Los Angeles Dodgers

Why not bring this bit full circle with Cain’s most able challenger in the NL West, Clayton Kershaw?

What’s not to like about Kersh? He just turned 24, won the NL Cy Young last season after claiming the league’s Triple Crown of pitching, and he picked up 25 quality starts in 2011.

Oh, and he’s fanned better than nine betters per nine innings during his career.

And like Cain, he pitches in the NL West, the most offensively inept division in all of baseball, and in one of the great pitchers’ parks in the Big Leagues.

True, the Dodgers offense is little more than Matt Kemp and the Kempettes, but that shouldn’t affect Clay’s performance on the mound too much.

Not after picking up 21 wins with middling run support last year.

 

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San Francisco Giants: 5 Bold Predictions for Giants’ 2012 Season

From winning the World Series in 2010 to missing the playoffs in 2011, the San Francisco Giants have experienced euphoria and crashed back to earth.

The Giants are a pitching-rich, offensively depleted team. They enter 2012 with one mission in mind: to prove their championship a season ago was not a fluke. It won’t be easy. Everything that seemed to go right on their path to the World Series went wrong the following season.

Will Buster Posey return to form? Can Aubrey Huff find his swing? Does Tim Lincecum have another Cy Young season in the tank? Fans are eager to see if a team largely unchanged during the offseason can overcome the hardships and disappointments of 2011.

Let’s take a look at five major possibilities for the 2012 season.

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New York Yankees: 10 Free Agent Targets for the 2012-2013 Offseason

The Winter Meetings just ended this week and as expected, Brian Cashman made zero significant moves other than bringing back their own free agents. The Yankees may be interested in Yu Darvish and Yoenis Cespedes, but as of right now, they have not made any moves.

The 2011-2012 offseason was dominated by first basemen, such as Albert Pujols and Prince Fielder, but the New York Yankees already have Mark Teixeira and had no need for either of them.

The Yankees need pitching to push them over the top to legitimate World Series contenders, and the 2012-2013 free agent class is full of great starting pitchers. The Yankees also have other important needs, such as right field and the left side of the infield.

This class of free agents is loaded, and Brian Cashman would be smart to take advantage of this fact and go out and make at least one huge deal. Let’s see who they will be targeting in the next offseason.

It may be a little early, but we all love predictions, so let’s look ahead at next offseason targets for the New York Yankees.

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Lincecum, Cain, Bumgarner: Who Is Most Expendable for San Francisco Giants?

It’s like choosing which of your children is most expendable. Nobody wants to ask the question, and for sure nobody wants to answer it. However, the 2011 San Francisco Giants‘ offensive woes were such that many Giants fans were ready to sell their first born in exchange for a hitter. Ok, not quite, but two runs per game for long stretches will make people do crazy things.  

However, management seems intent on sticking to a strict budget this winter, and the stated top priority is to lock down the pitching staff for the future. Meanwhile, the plan for improving the offense seems to be: 1) hope Buster Posey stays healthy and hits; 2) Hope Freddy Sanchez stays healthy and hits; 3) Hope Brandon Crawford learns how to hit, and 4) throw some extra pennies in the fountain at the mall. 

But what if there were a better solution? What if that solution involved giving up one of our beloved pitchers for an offensive force? 

Granted, this is completely hypothetical, as the Giants seem intent on locking down both Matt Cain and Tim Lincecum to long-term deals. But hypotheticals are what get us through the dreary abyss of the offseason. If you were the Giants GM and the cupboard was bare, who would you sacrifice for the greater good? 

This is not meant to be a prediction or even a good idea. But in December, these are the debates baseball fans have. Which pitcher is most valuable? Which one would you put on the block first? Here are my ideas. Feel free to differ.  


It’s Not Madison Bumgarner

After a rough start, Bumgarner was lights out in 2011. He sported a 4.1 K/BB ratio, good for 10th in the Major Leagues, including a ridiculous 9.1 in June and July. As the Giants’ ship sank in August and September, Bumgarner was outright dominant, posting a 2.18 ERA over his last 11 starts. 

The advanced metrics suggest that Bumgarner may have been the best starting pitcher on the team last season. He led the staff in Wins Above Replacement (5.4) and xFIP (3.10). His opponents had a batting average on balls in play of .322, easily the highest among Giants regulars, which suggests a measure of bad luck. 

Right now, Bumgarner is a veritable Tom Glavine to Cain’s and Lincecum’s Maddux and Smoltz. He’s also under team control until 2017. The Giants are sitting on a gold mine, and I can’t imagine Bumgarner coming up in any trade talks for years. 

That leaves Cain and Lincecum…  


Surely Not Tim Lincecum

The face of the franchise, Lincecum may go down as the most popular Giant ever. When he was promoted from Fresno, the expectations were impossible. And he fulfilled them anyway. 

When Lincecum won two Cy Young Awards in his first two years, we said, “Yeah, Timmy’s right on schedule.” And when Giants fans were worried that Lincecum might finally be getting tired in late 2010, he inflicted this on the Braves:

9 IP, 2 H, 14 K

Throw in a dominating performance to clinch the World Series, and Lincecum is a true Bay Area legend.  

The main concern with Lincecum is whether or not he will hold up as the years wear on. Many still believe Lincecum is a flash in the pan whose flame will burn out quickly. However, these ideas are based on negative scouting stereotypes of pitchers with small frames and funky windups. There is no evidence that Lincecum is breaking down any time soon.  

Lincecum is a proven bona-fide ace. He’s the guy you throw in Game 7. Every time. He’s in an elite class of undisputed aces with a history of clutch performances. Sabathia, Lee, Halladay, Beckett, Carpenter, Lincecum. You hold on to guys like that regardless of the cost.  


Yes Indeed, It’s Matt Cain

If Lincecum and Bumgarner are Bieber and Britney, Matt Cain is the underground garage band we told everyone would hit it big. Cain is as reliable a starter as there is in the big leagues. As traditional right-handed aces go, Cain is easier on the eyes than Lincecum. He is big, broad-shouldered, doesn’t have a wiffle-ball windup and keeps his hair groomed.  

Cain’s career statistics contain some amusing contradictions. Despite posting a 3.26 ERA since 2007, Cain has compiled a record of 54-60 during that time period with abysmal run support. These funky stats make Cain even more endearing to Giants fans. Wins were irrelevant to Cain’s success long before it was cool to not care about wins. 

Cain, however, is the odd man out in my hopefully-never-gonna-happen hypothetical. Bumgarner is younger and left-handed. Lincecum is the undisputed ace. If Brian Sabean has a drug-induced moment of weakness next week at the Winter Meetings and Brian Cashman offers Cano, Teixeira and Granderson, Cain is the one to go. 

But don’t worry. It’s only hypothetical. For now.  

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San Francisco Giants: Lincecum, Cain Will Have Better Years Than Halladay, Lee

The top two pitchers for the San Francisco Giants and Philadelphia Phillies are arguably the top tandems in the Major Leagues. 

Each of these pitchers is an ace in his own right, but combined with the other, they make a great one-two punch for their respective teams.

In San Francisco, the Giants rode the strong arms and steely resolve of Lincecum and Cain to the 2010 World Series title.

Lincecum, a two time Cy Young award winner, compiled a record of 16-10 with a 3.43 ERA and 1.272 WHIP last season. For the third consecutive year, Lincecum led the league in strikeouts with 231, in 212 1/3 innings pitched.

Matt Cain was the steadiest pitcher in the Giants’ outstanding rotation. He was solid during the regular season, as he went 13-11, with a 3.14 ERA and 1.084 WHIP ratio. Cain worked a career high 223 1/3 innings and struck out 177.

Where Lincecum and Cain really excelled was in the postseason. Lincecum had a record of 4-1 with an ERA of 2.43 and WHIP of 0.919. In 37 post season innings, Lincecum struck out 43.

Cain was even better in the postseason: In three postseason starts, Cain went 2-0. He did not allow an earned run in 21 1/3 innings and had a WHIP of 0.938.

In 2010, Roy Halladay won the Cy Young award with the Phillies, the second of his career. He compiled a record of 21-10 with an ERA of 2.44 and WHIP of 1.041. Halladay threw 250 2/3 innings in the regular season and struck out 219.

Cliff Lee began 2010 in Seattle, but was traded to the Texas Rangers in mid season. He compiled a 12-9 record between the two clubs. Lee had an ERA of 3.18 and WHIP ratio of 1.003. Lee has one Cy Young award to his credit.

In the 2010 postseason, Halladay was 2-1 with an ERA of 2.45 and an incredible WHIP of 0.773. Lee, was 3-2, losing his only two games against the Giants in the NLCS.

Halladay is off to a great start this season. In three starts, he is 2-0 with an ERA of 1.23. Lee’s 2011 has not gotten off to as strong, as he is 2-1 with an ERA of 4.19. His WHIP is still excellent at 0.983.

Lincecum and Cain are off to great starts in 2011. The tandem is currently 3-1 and both have ERA’s below 2.00. 

Both tandems are outstanding and should do very well this year. However, there are three key factors that, I believe, give Lincecum and Cain the edge over Halladay and Lee, in 2011.

The San Francisco offense is much improved this year, whereas Philadelphia has lost Jayson Werth and Chase Utley is out for an indefinite period of time.

Throwing in the pitcher friendly AT&T Park is also a benefit to Lincecum and Cain. Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia is a hitter’s park and that could detract from the numbers of Halladay and Lee.

The biggest factor, in my opinion is age. Lincecum and Cain are both 26 year old and in the prime pf their careers.

For the Phillies, Halladay is 33 and Lee is 32.

All four pitchers are outstanding, however, I give Lincecum and Cain the slight edge.

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Matt Cain: Five Reasons the Giants’ Number Two is MLB’s Most Underrated Pitcher

When the San Francisco Giants called up Matt Cain in August of 2005, he made his debut as the second youngest pitcher in the major leagues.  Now in his seventh season as a big leaguer, Cain is a seasoned veteran with a laundry list of accomplishments to his credit.  He finished last year’s World Championship season with a 13-11 record with a 3.14 ERA, 1.08 WHIP, 177 strikeouts, 61 walks, 223 innings pitched and four complete games (including two shutouts).  

In May alone, he pitched into the sixth inning or later in each of his six starts while giving up nine earned runs on 23 hits with 35 strike outs and 18 walks with an 1.81 ERA.  He was instrumental in the Giants’ regular season success last year and even more so in their postseason World Series run.  Despite his track record of success, he is rarely included in the list of current upper echelon pitchers, and there are five main reasons why. 

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San Francisco Giants: Would Tim Lincecum Crack Their All-Time Starting Staff?

He has been called “The Freak,” “The Franchise” and “Big Time Timmy Jim.”  No matter what you call him, Tim Lincecum has burst onto the scene over the past three and a half years like no other pitcher in Giants history.

Is Tim Lincecum one of the top five pitchers in Giants history?

To answer this question, we must take a look at a long and storied franchise, dating back to their days in New York. 

In this article, I will look at the top five pitchers in the days of the New York Giants and also the top five pitchers in San Francisco Giant history.

We will then narrow down that list to come up with our top five of all time.

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2011 SF Giants Season Preview: Part 1

                                   2011 SF Giants Season Preview

 

It is a good time to be a San Francisco Giants fan. Great even. The Gigantes are fresh off an improbable World Series championship, the farm system is a veritable horn-o-plenty in comparison to recent  history, and leading the way is arguably the best starting rotation in baseball—that’s right Philadelphia, I went there.

 

But with the start of a new season, anything is possible, and new questions are raised. Will the Giants training staff find a way to resurrect the corpse of Aaron Rowand? Will Barry Zito be a serviceable fifth starter, or will he be released by the Giants and banished to a baseball purgatory like Baltimore or Kansas City to finish out his career? Is Buster Posey in fact the baseball Messiah?

 

The (possible) answers to these questions, and more are less than an inch away!

 

Part 1: The Pitching, Oh God, The Pitching!

 

Any 2011 preview of the Giants has to begin with pitching. It was pitching that ran roughshod over baseball’s best and captured the Giants first World Series in over 50 years. I argue that this pitching staff would have dominated absolutely any team from any era last year. That’s how good they were during the 2010 Playoffs.

 

Matt Cain and Tim Lincecum are so awesome they don’t even need to be previewed. They are so awesome that, as I was typing this, Lincecum just ruined some Minor Leaguer’s shot at the bigs with a ridiculous changeup, and Cain threw eight scoreless innings with zero media attention. Barring injury, two more excellent seasons can be expected from the top of the Giants’ rotation.

On most other teams, Timmy and Cain would be seen as what they are—two young guns entering their primes. On the Giants, they are the wise old sages tasked with leading the way for the really young guns, like 2010 MLB Playoff insta-hero Madison Bumgarner.

 

Of all the players on the 2011 roster, Bumgarner is one of the most interesting to me. He burst through last year with dominating performances on baseball’s biggest stages, against the games’ best. He clearly possesses the testicular fortitude to succeed, and dominate as a starter.

 

But Giants’ fans know that at this time last year there were reports of decreased velocity and increased hittability from the young MadBum, and for a little while there was something of a Chicken Little scenario brewing within the fan base.

 

While Bumgarner did his best to put these concerns to bed in last years playoffs, keep in mind that he still has not pitched a full Major League season, and spent most of last season stashed in the minors, enjoying the glorious benefits of extra days off (not to mention bus rides to and from Fresno). Realistically, he is still a very young pitcher who needs to learn how to pitch in the majors, and work through the growing pains of a young starter. However, I don’t think a 14-15 win, 3.50 ERA would disappoint anyone, nor do I think it’s unrealistic.

 

Bruce Bochy and Dave Righetti have proven their abilities to manage a young roster extremely well, and part of me secretly believes there’s a chance that Bumgarner goes Lincecum all over everyone’s A’s and continues to dominate to the tune of 16-17 wins, with an ERA somewhere between his 2010 regular season 3.00 and his otherworldly 2010 postseason 2.18.

 

Part of the reason I am less concerned than others about his inconsistent velocity throughout his career is that, despite his top-of-the-rotation stuff, his K rate has never been in the Lincecum-circa-2009 range anyways. He may only strike out roughly 6-8 batters per 9 IP, but he pitches to contact with movement that keeps the ball in the park. Most young pitchers arrive in the Majors relying on velocity to get them through their first year or two. Bumgarner relies on movement and control, which makes him a likely candidate to pitch in the bigs for many years to come.

 

One of the most impressive MadBum stats is his stellar walk rate. In his first Major League season (2009), he walked only 2.7 batters per 9 IP, and lowered that 2.15 last season including the playoffs. Even factoring in a learning curve, Bumgarner clearly has the stuff and the approach to be a successful third or fourth starter at worst, and an ace at best.

 

My official projection for the 2011 version of Madison Bumgarner looks something like 16 wins, 6.5 K/9, 2.0 BB/9, with a 3.25 ERA, while maintaining his always impressive WHIP at about 1.200. This factors in some growing pains, but also the flashes of blinding brilliance we have seen from the young lad in the very recent past.

 

Speaking of pitching to contact, we arrive at everyone’s favorite punching bag, Barry William Zito. These last few years have been tough for Barry and I. I was intrigued by him as he junkballed his was to a Cy Young Award in Oakland. I was mostly mortified when the Giants outbid themselves by $30 million for him, and overpaid him by roughly $90 million, but was secretly happy that he was on the light side of the Bay, and was optimistic about how that knee-buckling curve would play in the pitcher-friendly confines of AT&T Park.

 

Then reality hit. Zito has been incredibly, unbelievably hittable, and rumors have floated out of Spring Training this year that, after not making last year’s playoff roster, Zito would be cut from the team, and paid his money to walk away. To which I say….RIDICULOUS! Listen, even I, the biggest Zito apologist outside of his immediate family, has found it hard to defend him recently—but I’m going to try anyway. Here are the salient points on the Zito Defense:

 

1. The Giants have no other options for a fifth starter. Here’s an update I just received: Jeff Suppan is not good. He is not better than Barry Zito, neither is Dontrelle Willis. So unless a legitimate offer comes along for an affordable, durable, 200 inning-throwing, preferably hippie-minded starter, Barry is the best option the team has. By far. I know the anti-Zito haze is hard to see through sometimes, but when Jeff Suppan is standing on the other side of that haze, you’re better off sticking with Barry. 

 

2. The Giants are paying him. I don’t understand ever paying a player to play for another organization. It absolutely never works out well. Unless some team is willing to step up and pay Zito’s salary (stop salivating, Giants fans), there is absolutely no point to not rostering him. 

 

3. He fits in. Let’s face it, the Giants are a team filled with allegedly pot-smoking dirty hippies, and goofballs. And Barry Zito fits right in. He plays guitar, keeps it mellow, doesn’t rock the boat, and is a good teammate. Lincecum likes him. Cain likes him. Posey and Sandoval like him. Therefore I like him.

 

A statistical projection for Zito seems not only futile, but potentially disappointing. We have all seen both the best and worst of Zito, and most of us know what to realistically expect. However, with lowered expectations comes lowered responsibility.

 

There has been talk of making Jonathan Sanchez the No. 2 starter, in order to break up the lefties and righties, as well as the pitchers who are capable of consistently pitching late into games (Lincecum and Cain), from those who struggle in that area (Sanchez, Zito, and the youngster Bumgarner, who will not be expected to reach the innings totals of his starter brethren).

 

A rotation of Lincecum, Sanchez, and Cain, followed by Bumgarner and Zito, puts Barry in the fourth slot at best, and the fifth at worst.

 

Do I think this demotion will result in a return to Cy Young form? Obviously not. But matching up with Jon Garland and Wade Leblanc is surely more advantageous than, say, Clayton Kershaw and Mat Latos. Just saying. 

 

A potential answer to Zito’s expected inconsistency could be Jonathan Sanchez, AKA the mystery wrapped in a riddle bundled up in an enigma. I think if I had one wish for the Giants organization, it would be for consistency from Sanchez, because when he’s on, he’s as good as anyone in the league including his battery mates. But when he’s off, he’s a frustrating, frustrating man to watch. He sprays crisp 94 MPH fastballs all over the place. He twists off incredible sliders that would break hitters down if it weren’t a foot off the plate. His arm action frustrates hitters to the point that, were they to swing at the fastball whizzing a foot over their heads, their timing would definitely be off.

 

With the need to give Bumgarner some extra rest days as often as possible, a good season from Sanchez would be a key shot in the arm for this team. And there’s reason to be hopeful. In 2010 not only did Sanchez lower his ERA to 3.07, he maintained his stellar K rate, at over 9 per game. He also seemed to be more able to work through a difficult or stressful inning. He still gave up the occasional big hit(s), but his composure on the mound just seemed to be headed in the right direction.

 

I’m optimistic about Sanchez in 2011. I have faith that he will put it all (or at least some of it) together enough to finally have the season we’ve all been waiting for. For me, a projection of about 175-180 IP, 3.15 ERA, 9.5-10 K/9 and, good God let’s hope for, a sub 4 BB/9 ratio, seems about right. Although I have felt this way in the past, and have been proven wrong before on this topic, and let’s be honest, a 4.00 ERA with 4.8 K/9 wouldn’t surprise anyone. 

 

While the starting rotation is clearly the strength of this ball club, the bullpen remains somewhat of a mystery to me. While they can be fully expected to lead the league in ridiculous haircuts and outlandish facial hair, this is not a group for whom consistency is a strength.

I, like all Giants fans, have been tantalized and disappointed by Sergio Romo and Jeremy Affeldt more times than I can count. When I watch Romo pitch, I see sliders that should be unhittable, starting in the strike zone and breaking three feet off the plate, leaving batters looking foolish and confused. In nearly every game that Romo appears in, he has at least one moment that makes you stop and think “this guy has incredible stuff. He should be one of the best relievers in the league”. Problem is, these thoughts are often followed by a slider that hangs over the plate and is promptly deposited in the outfield bleachers by subpar NL West utility players.

 

Affeldt presents a similar quandary: is he the guy with the Zito-esque curve and the 96 MPH fastball, or is he the guy who struggles with his control, and gets knocked around by patient-yet-below-average hitters, like the David Eckstein’s of the world?

 

For me, Romo and Affeldt are the key to the success of the bullpen. Brian Wilson will undoubtedly be Brian Wilson—that is to say he will throw 98 MPH gas, walk one or two hitters too many, and generally give Giants fans a collective heart attack on his way to racking up his 40+ saves.

 

Javier Lopez, I’m assuming, will continue to own left handed hitters like Cody Ross owns Roy Halladay. And guys like Santiago Casilla and “Razor” Ramon Ramirez will prove serviceable enough to eat up some innings and spell the studs.

But Affeldt and Romo are the key.

 

With a little consistency, the Giants will have arguably the NL’s best bullpen again. But bullpen’s are fickle mistresses. Elite closers turn into overpaid specialists seemingly overnight, and one injury can decimate a relief crew (just look at former-Giant Joe Nathan’s Twins last season). Healthy and productive years from Affeldt and Romo would give San Francisco the depth to withstand an injury or two (just plug in a Dan Runzler here and an Alex Hinshaw there), but anything less than that could present real problems. Runzler and Hinshaw are great as innings-eaters/injury replacements, but asking them to step up and play major roles is a lot to ask, and I am dubious as to whether they are up to the task.

 

All that said, the Brian Sabean, Bruce Bochy, and Dave Righetti seem to have a knack for piecing together excellent relief crews. They did pick up Javier “sit DOWN, Ryan Howard” Lopez and Ramon Ramirez for nothing last season, and despite their penchant for high-wire acts, both Romo and Wilson have developed nicely overall, with Wilson emerging as an elite closer and the only modern-day pirate (swashbuckling variety, not Pittsburgh variety) to achieve MLB fame and fortune.

 

Well that does it for Part 1, hopefully you didn’t’ hate my initial foray into sports blogging, and hopefully you will stay tuned for Part 2: The Offense

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