Tag: NL West

Rockies GM Jeff Bridich Comments on 2016 Expectations, Vision for the Future

The Colorado Rockies have gone without a winning season for five straight years, and not much is expected in 2016 for the team that has finished last in the National League West in three of the last four years.

General manager Jeff Bridich is entering his second season with the Rockies, and after a 68-win campaign last year, Bridich said there’s no point in discussing when Colorado will turn it around Monday, per Patrick Saunders of the Denver Post:

What’s the point? Why limit ourselves? So if I were to come out and say something that’s pleasing to the ear of you, or a fan here or a fan there, and I say, ‘We’re not going to win for X.’ So what? What’s the point of doing that?

It’s about people. It’s about process. And it’s about how well can we do that together. If a lot of that or most of that comes together for us this year, wonderful. Why say something where it’s got to happen X number of months and years in the future, where really a lot of good things can happen this year. I just don’t see the point.

The Rockies have made the postseason once since their World Series run in 2007. Not a single player is left from that team after Colorado traded star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki to the Toronto Blue Jays last year.

While Colorado may be in rebuild mode, the Rockies have much to look forward to with All-Stars Nolan Arenado and Carlos Gonzalez as the team’s centerpieces. Arenado hit a career-high 42 home runs and had 130 RBI while making his first All-Star Game in 2015. The 30-year-old Gonzalez hit a career-high 40 homers for Colorado last year as well.

Despite finishing below .500 last year, the Rockies were fifth in the majors and No. 1 in the National League in runs scored with 737. However, Colorado gave up 844 runs a year ago, the most in the majors, per ESPN.com.

Pitching has been the issue for the Rockies since they traded ace Ubaldo Jimenez in July 2011. Colorado’s best pitcher since 2012 has been Jorge De La Rosa, who has a 39-26 record over the last four seasons but has finished with an ERA over 4.00 in each of the last two years.

The Rockies offense has shown it’s capable of putting up a lot of runs. Colorado can have a solid 2016 season and back up its general manager’s words if the starting rotation can consistently perform at a high level.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com. Follow Danny Webster on Twitter.

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James Shields Comments on Tyson Ross as Padres’ Opening Day SP

The San Diego Padres passed over pitcher James Shields for Opening Day starting duties in favor of Tyson Ross, but Shields insisted it’s not a huge deal.

According to Mike Cranston of the Associated Press (via Yahoo Sports), Shields took it in stride while speaking about the subject Saturday.

“I’ve been in this situation before,” Shields said. “I think in 2011, David Price [in Tampa Bay] took my Opening Day start after three years. And I got it right back the next year.”

Shields was 13-7 with a 3.91 ERA last season, his first in San Diego, while Ross was 10-12 with a 3.26 ERA.

First-year Padres manager Andy Green liked Shields’ attitude, per Cranston.

“He handled it like a pro,” Green said. “And he told Tyson, ‘Hey, it’s your job this year, but I’m coming back for it next year.’ That’s what you want to hear.”

The 34-year-old Shields, who is 127-97 in his career, did see his stats dip last year, allowing the second-most home runs of his career (33). His 93 ERA+ was also lower than Ross’ 112, according to Baseball-Reference.com.

However, there is no reason to think this will hurt Shields. He has been a workhorse throughout his career, throwing at least 200 innings in each of the past nine seasons. 

“Shields might be baseball’s best bet to be on the mound every five days,” Cranston noted.

If anything, it will light a fire under the right-hander, and he’ll come out ready the next day. It’s possible that Green may even be using this to fuel Shields and make sure he is firing on all cylinders for his first start.

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Hyun-Jin Ryu Injury: Updates on Dodgers P’s Shoulder and Return

After missing all of 2015 with shoulder problems that eventually led to surgery, Los Angeles Dodgers left-hander Hyun-Jin Ryu is making slow progress in his return to the mound in 2016. 

Continue for updates. 


Ryu Likely to Miss Start of Season

Saturday, Feb. 27

Per Eric Stephen of True Blue LA, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts acknowledged Ryu will not be ready when the regular season starts on April 4. Ken Gurnick of MLB.com reported Ryu won’t be ready until May.

Per Stephen, Roberts said, “If you look at April 4, he’s behind. We said it from the beginning, there’s no hard date, and we’re not going to rush him.”

Ryu’s 2015 season officially ended on May 21 when he had surgery to repair a torn labrum in his left shoulder. He hasn’t appeared in a game since Oct. 6, 2014, against the St. Louis Cardinals in the National League Division Series. 

At the time of Ryu’s procedure, Ken Gurnick of MLB.com noted some of the success stories following a similar procedure included Roger Clemens and Curt Schilling. He also pointed out sad endings to promising careers for Jason Schmidt and Mark Prior. 

While time will determine Ryu’s fate on that particular list, by all accounts, right now he is heading in the right direction. The Dodgers will need him back in their rotation after losing Zack Greinke to free agency this offseason. 

Los Angeles still has plenty of depth among starters, with Clayton Kershaw being the alpha dog and Scott Kazmir behind him. Ryu has been a valuable No. 3 for the Dodgers, posting a 3.17 ERA with 293 strikeouts in 344 innings since 2013-14. 

The Dodgers know how important Ryu is to their starting rotation and are going to take their time to ensure he is 100 percent before throwing him out against an MLB lineup.

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Matt Cain Injury: Updates on Giants Star’s Recovery from Arm Surgery

Matt Cain‘s struggle to remain healthy continues, as the San Francisco Giants right-hander is dealing with more arm problems early in spring training. It is uncertain when he will be able to return to action.

Continue for updates.  


Cain Comments on Recovery Timeline

Saturday, Feb. 27 

According to Alex Pavlovic of CSN Bay Area, Cain told reporters he’s “confident” he’ll be ready for the season. He added the cyst he’d had removed was just above his elbow and ruptured.  


Cain Had Cyst Surgically Removed

Thursday, Feb. 25

According to Henry Schulman of the San Francisco Chronicle, Cain had a cyst removed from his right (throwing) arm and will not start throwing again for 10 days. 

Per Pavlovic, the Giants said it is “too early” to know if Cain will be unavailable when the regular season starts on April 4 at Milwaukee


Cain’s Production Has Declined as Injuries Have Mounted

Once one of the most durable pitchers in baseball, Cain has fallen off a cliff since 2014. From 2006-13, the former All-Star made at least 30 starts per season and threw at least 184.1 innings. He had surgery to remove bone chips in his pitching elbow in August 2014. 

The 31-year-old started 2015 on the disabled list with a forearm strain, not debuting until July, before going back on the DL in late August with nerve problems in his right elbow. He’s made a total of 28 appearances over the past two seasons. 

There was a time when Cain’s absence would have devastated the Giants, but Madison Bumgarner is the team’s unquestioned ace. The front office also bolstered the rotation this offseason by signing Jeff Samardzija and Johnny Cueto to give them a strong trio heading into 2016. 

A healthy, productive Cain would be a huge boost to the Giants, but given his injury problems the previous two years, all they should reasonably hope for is that he can avoid the disabled list. 

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Vintage Matt Cain Would Have Dodgers Looking Up at Giants in NL West Race

The San Francisco Giants spent $220 million on Jeff Samardzija and Johnny Cueto this winter. And they have Madison Bumgarner, tree-chopping stud and postseason demigod.

The key to the Giants rotation, however, and the piece that could push them unequivocally past the Los Angeles Dodgers in the National League West might be the man penciled in as the No. 5 starter.

That’d be Matt Cain, former workhorse and current enigma.

Right now, Cain is the guy who hasn’t posted a sub-4.00 ERA in any of the past three seasons. He’s the guy who had bone spurs removed from his elbow in 2014 and made just 11 starts last year after suffering a forearm strain in April.

On the other hand, he’s still just 31. And Giants fans don’t need to chase their garlic fries with ginkgo biloba to recall the run of success that made Cain one of the most consistent right-handers in the game not so long ago.

After debuting in 2005, Cain eclipsed 200 innings every season between 2007 and 2012, posting ERAs under 3.00 in three of those campaigns and making three All-Star appearances. Along the way, the Giants won a pair of their recent trio of titles, and Cain authored a perfect game for good measure.

Tim Lincecum commanded more attention with his flowing locks and unorthodox mechanics, but Cain was the backbone of San Francisco’s starting five for the better part of a decade.

Now, he’s in camp searching for answers and, more importantly, the results that once came so readily.

Cain said of his recent struggles, per Andrew Baggarly of the San Jose Mercury News:

I’ve had long nights thinking about that one. I don’t know exactly what was keeping me from being consistent and making the pitches I wanted to make most of the time. I couldn’t tell you if it was something physical or something mental or if the wind was blowing the wrong way. But it was something that happened a lot and it was tough to go through, and the big plan is to be able to get past that.

Plans are one thing, execution is another. Everyone is in the best shape of his life and on the right track in late February (OK, not everyone). But Cain is now far enough removed from his salad days for the questions to become darker.

Like: Can he be an elite or even effective big league pitcher ever again?

Velocity isn’t the problem. In 2012, his last good season, Cain’s fastball averaged 91.1 mph, per FanGraphs. Last season, his average heater clocked in at 91.0 mph, while his ERA ballooned to 5.79. His issues, in other words, might be related to rust more than stuff.

There are case studies that point toward optimism, as McCovey Chronicles’ Grant Brisbee outlined:

Let’s look for pitchers who came back with a second stage of their careers, then. [Ryan] Vogelsong is an outlier, but he’s near and dear to our hearts. John Lackey isn’t quite so near and dear, but he was the most hated pitcher in Boston when he was Cain’s age. Three seasons later, he helped the Red Sox win a World Series. Three seasons after that, he picked up stray Cy Young votes. He was buried much deeper than Cain and he wasn’t as good in the first place. Edinson Volquez was waiver fodder for years before being a Game 1 starter again.

Pitchers come back from all sorts of calamity.

More often, they don’t. That’s the wet blanket. If you’re playing the odds, Cain will never again pitch like a No. 1 or anything close to it. FanGraphs projects a 4.35 ERA in 121 innings in 2016, while Steamer is a tick more optimistic, foretelling a 3.90 ERA in 130 innings.

Either one, or a split-the-difference stat line, would be perfectly palatable for a fifth starter. But what if Cain finds a way to wind back the clock? How scary would this already formidable Giants team become as it embarks on yet another even-year run?

Let’s assume Cueto and Samardzija both stay healthy and get boosts from the Giants’ stellar defense and pitcher-friendly park. Let’s say Bumgarner once again does Bumgarner things. And let’s stipulate veteran Jake Peavy has another year of effective grinding left in his arm. 

If Cain kicks in anything, that’s a strong rotation. And there are options behind him, including sophomore sinkerballer Chris Heston, who tossed a no-hitter last season.

But if Cain returns to All-Star level? You’re talking about easily the deepest, scariest starting five west of Queens.

Pair that with San Francisco’s balanced lineup littered with homegrown contributors, and Los Angeles’ run of three consecutive division titles is threatened, if not doomed.

The Dodgers boast plenty of talent. They’re baseball’s biggest spenders, after all, and while they lost Zack Greinke to the Arizona Diamondbacks, they could fill the void with Japanese ace Kenta Maeda and the return of Hyun-Jin Ryu, who missed all of last season with a shoulder injury.

Right now, the storied bicoastal rivals are neck and neck, with those Greinke-swiping Snakes coiled in the weeds. The NL West race could well turn on a comeback performance or larger-than-expected contribution from someone.

Every team can point to at least one player who potentially fits the bill. For San Francisco, it’s Cain. If he has a genuine renaissance in him, it could be bigger than any offseason addition.

The workhorse, in other words, has become the wild card. The question now is, can he be an ace?

 

All statistics courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted.

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Jose Reyes Placed on Administrative Leave: Latest Details, Comments

Major League Baseball has placed Colorado Rockies shortstop Jose Reyes on administrative paid leave until the completion of his legal proceedings.

Commissioner Rob Manfred made the announcement Tuesday afternoon, per MLB Communications. Shortly after, the MLB Players Association issued a statement in regard to the situation:    

Reyes was put on leave to handle the criminal proceedings stemming from his alleged domestic violence incident in Hawaii at the end of October.

MLB cited a section of the league’s Joint Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault and Child Abuse Policy that allows the commissioner to suspend a player with pay until a case is resolved. Depending on the result of the case, the commissioner could then hand down further discipline if he or she deems it necessary.

According to Chelsea Davis of Hawaii News Now, Reyes’ wife, Katherine, told authorities he “grabbed her off the bed and shoved her” at the Four Seasons Resort Maui at Wailea. Citing sources, Davis reported “she also told police that he grabbed her throat and shoved her into the sliding glass balcony door.” Reyes pleaded not guilty Nov. 24 to a domestic-abuse charge.

Joe Torre, MLB’s chief baseball officer, addressed both Reyes and New York Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman, who was also the subject of a domestic violence investigation, back in December:

Christian Red of the New York Daily News reported Jan. 14 that Reyes’ trial is set to begin in Maui County, Hawaii, on April 4, when the Rockies open the regular season against the Arizona Diamondbacks. The judge could potentially move up the trial date.

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Jim Davenport, Former Giants Player and Manager, Dies at Age 82

Former San Francisco Giants infielder and manager Jim Davenport died on Thursday night at the age of 82. 

The Giants released a statement about Davenport’s death on Twitter:  

As the Giants’ statement on Davenport’s passing noted, he spent most of his life with the franchise after beginning his Major League Baseball career as a player in 1958. 

Davenport played 13 seasons with the Giants, making one All-Star team and winning a Gold Glove at third base in 1962. He hit .258/.318/.367 with 77 home runs in 1,501 career games before hanging up the cleats following the 1970 season. 

After Davenport’s playing career ended, he remained a staple of the Giants organization, even managing the team for part of the 1985 season. The Alabama native did have brief coaching stints with other organizations even though his heart never really left San Francisco, per Chris Haft of MLB.com in February 2014:

Except for stints as a coach with San Diego (1974-75), Philadelphia (’88) and Cleveland (’89) and as an advance scout for Detroit (’91-92), Davenport has remained a Giant since he signed his first professional contract in 1955. He expects to begin his 50th Giants season in early March by visiting Minor League camp at Spring Training, where he’ll help tutor and evaluate players.

In Haft’s story on Davenport’s 50 years with the Giants, Hall of Famer Willie McCovey said his former teammate “was one of those steadying rods on that team,” adding Davenport is “as much a part of the Giant organization as me and [Willie] Mays.”

While not as well known to a mass audience like San Francisco legends McCovey and Mays, Davenport played a crucial role for the franchise during his playing days, helping the team reach the 1962 World Series before losing to the New York Yankees

Davenport’s love and commitment to the Giants will allow his legacy to live on long after his death. 

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Chip Hale, Diamondbacks Agree to New Contract: Details, Comments, Reaction

According to Fox Sports’ Jon Morosi on Thursday, the Arizona Diamondbacks have extended the contract of manager Chip Hale through “at least” the 2017 season. 

In his first year with the club in 2015, Hale led the Diamondbacks to a 79-83 record. He made significant improvements with the Diamondbacks. After recording 64 wins under Kirk Gibson in 2014, Arizona improved by 15 games with Hale. 

The Diamondbacks were a bottom-six team in runs scored and runs allowed per game in 2014 under Gibson. With Hale, Arizona ranked eighth in runs scored per game at 4.44, but its pitching still struggled, ranking 19th. 

After the offseason the Diamondbacks just had, though, that number might be changing soon. Arizona went out and got one of the top free-agent pitchers in Zack Greinke and dealt one of its top prospects in Dansby Swanson to the Atlanta Braves for Shelby Miller. 

Greinke went 19-3 with a league-leading 1.66 ERA in 2015 with the Los Angeles Dodgers and will be the Diamondbacks’ ace moving forward.

For Hale, there was little thought needed to make Greinke the team’s Opening Day starter, per MLB.com’s Steve Gilbert:

Miller, on the other hand, garnered an All-Star appearance despite a 6-17 record with the Atlanta Braves. The win-loss ratio is misleading, though, as Miller posted a 3.02 ERA in over 200 innings pitched. 

Add those top-caliber arms with a lineup headlined by 2015 MVP candidate Paul Goldschmidt, and the Diamondbacks are going to be a solid team in a National League West that includes the Dodgers and the San Francisco Giants

With those teams’ recent success, Hale is going to have his hands full when it comes to navigating the Diamondbacks toward the postseason in such a difficult division. 

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.

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DJ LeMahieu, Rockies Agree to New Contract: Latest Details, Comments, Reaction

Colorado Rockies second baseman DJ LeMahieu is fresh off a career season in 2015, and his team rewarded him with a new contract Wednesday as the two sides avoided arbitration.

The Rockies announced on Twitter they agreed to the two-year deal with the 27-year-old.   

The Associated Press (h/t ESPN.com) said the contract was for $7.8 million with LeMahieu getting $3 million in 2016 and $4.8 million in 2017. When exchanging proposed arbitration salaries, the infielder “asked for a raise from $517,500 to $3.3 million, and the Rockies had offered $2.8 million,” per the Associated Press.

The Associated Press also noted players were 3-1 in arbitration this year and added more details: “Players had their first winning record in arbitration since they went 2-1 in 2011. Management has a 302-224 advantage since arbitration started in 1974. Teams were 8-6 last year, the most hearings since 2001.” 

It is no surprise LeMahieu was set for a raise considering he turned in career-high offensive totals nearly across the board last season:   

As a result, the second baseman made his first career All-Star Game in 2015 and helped the Rockies finish fifth in the major leagues in total runs scored despite their abysmal 68-94 record.

LeMahieu also took runs off the board on the other side as an impressive fielder. He won the National League Gold Glove at second base in 2014 and is responsible for 37 total defensive runs saved above average at second base since the 2012 campaign, per FanGraphs.

The National League West is a loaded division with the Los Angeles Dodgers fresh off a 92-70 campaign and the San Francisco Giants and Arizona Diamondbacks coming off notable offseasons. San Francisco added Johnny Cueto, Denard Span and Jeff Samardzija to a club that finished 84-78 last year, and Arizona bolstered its rotation with Zack Greinke and Shelby Miller.

The Rockies are facing an uphill battle in the next couple of years with that competition, and the wild-card race won’t be much easier with the Chicago Cubs, Pittsburgh Pirates, St. Louis Cardinals, New York Mets and Washington Nationals all poised to make postseason runs in 2016 and 2017.

Perhaps Colorado’s best chance is to outscore teams with a strong offense in Coors Field, and ensuring LeMahieu is well-paid and there at second base alongside Carlos Gonzalez and Nolan Arenado is an ideal place to start.

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SF Giants Are Ready for More Even-Year Magic in 2016

The look on Bruce Bochy‘s face made it clear this wasn’t the first time he was hearing the phrase “even-year magic.” Heck, since leading the San Francisco Giants to the first of three straight even-year World Series titles in 2010, the veteran skipper has probably heard it a million times.

And he now seems prepared to hear it a million more times in 2016.

“A lot of us are already kidding around about the over/under on how many times we hear, ‘Hey, it’s an even year, so it must be our year!’” Bochy said when Bleacher Report asked about the Giants’ even-year magic during a Giants media function at AT&T Park last week.

Take the over? Yeah, take the over.

Just like in 2011 and 2013, the 2015 Giants responded to an even-year championship with an odd-year regression that kept them out of the postseason. But at 84-78, they at least finished with a winning record this time, unlike 2013.

And after a $250 million offseason spending spree that netted a pair of accomplished starters in Johnny Cueto and Jeff Samardzija and a talented outfielder in Denard Span, they’re going into 2016 with all sorts of good vibrations.

And if nothing else, the mere mention of the magic that guided them to championships in 2010, 2012 and 2014 gets the juices flowing.

“I think it puts your mind in the right place early on,” first baseman Brandon Belt said. “Not that we don’t think about it in odd-numbered years, but just hearing it so much when it’s an even-numbered year makes you focus and say, ‘All right, our goal this year is to win a World Series.’”

From the outside looking in, what’s happened with the Giants in even years seems easy to explain. They had talented teams with noticeably good chemistry in 2010, 2012 and 2014, sure, but Robert De Niro’s character from Silver Linings Playbook would say it was all about the juju.

In October 2010, the juju took the form of unhittable pitching and an endless string of timely hits. In October 2012, the Giants won six elimination games just to get to the World Series. In October 2014, there was Travis Ishikawa’s Bobby Thomson impression and Madison Bumgarner‘s god mode.

During that most recent magical run, even a now-former adversary couldn’t ignore there was something different about the Giants.

“They just had a different aura about them,” Span said, referring to when San Francisco beat his Washington Nationals in the 2014 National League Division Series. “They were confident. They knew their jobs. And they did the little things right. I think that was the difference in them beating us. I felt like we had more talent on paper, but they just outplayed us.”

But for those who actually were involved? Well, they’re not in a hurry to sell anyone on the idea that they’ve had a special aura in even years. This is most certainly a team that prides itself on the chemistry that seems so instrumental in making the magic happen, but the Giants insist it’s there every year.

“We’re confident every season,” shortstop Brandon Crawford said. “Whether it’s an even year or odd year, it doesn’t really matter for us.”

Rather, it may not be a question of what goes right in even years. Instead of even-year magic, perhaps what the Giants have been dealing with is an odd-year curse.

“It just seems like bad luck,” Belt said. “We’ve had a lot of injuries, and it’s tough to go out there and win a World Series when you don’t have your best players. You don’t want to blame it all on that. There have been a lot of times when we haven’t really played well. But at the same time, you hope you can keep everyone healthy and on the field.”

The data nods its head. Per BaseballHeatMaps.com, the Giants have averaged about 730 disabled-list days in the last three even years. In the last three odd years, the average jumps to more than 880 days.

For this, the obvious scapegoat is the offseason that follows a World Series win. It doesn‘t provide an atmosphere conducive to recuperation, as there are frequent demands for attention and little time to rest before spring training. And some Giants don’t mind pointing a finger.

“We’re human beings,” outfielder Gregor Blanco said. “It’s not easy when you play all the way to the World Series because you play so many games. Your body is exhausted. You’re mentally tired. And then spring training comes quick. You only have about a month-and-a-half to prepare yourself for the next year.”

Crawford also lent some credence to the notion that the offseason following a World Series title can have an effect, noting in particular that it “might show towards the end of the year than it does toward the beginning.”

This bit of smoke also leads to fire. In 2011, the Giants fell apart in the second half. In 2013, they fell apart after starting strong in April and May. Last year, the club went 28-32 after August 1 and dealt with late-season injuries to Matt Cain, Hunter Pence, Joe Panik, Mike Leake, Angel Pagan and Nori Aoki.

After a full offseason, it’s easy to think things will be better in 2016. There’s also the notion the Giants’ solid 84-78 record in 2015 actually undersells how good they were, as their Pythagorean record—a projected record based on runs scored and runs allowed—was actually the same as the NL West champion (and archrival) Los Angeles Dodgers.

That’s to say, the 2015 Giants’ true talent level may have been better than that of an 84-win team. And following the club’s hot-stove wheelings and dealings, the total package for 2016 looks even better.

Among the things the Giants are carrying over from 2015 are an elite catcher in Buster Posey, an elite ace in Bumgarner and a bullpen that posted a top-10 ERA (3.33). And in Belt, Crawford, Panik and Matt Duffy, the Giants have a homegrown infield that is arguably baseball’s best.

“I look at that infield, and I think how lucky and fortunate we are to have these homegrown products that all came up through our system,” Bochy said. “I think it’s one of the best infields in baseball. And now that they’ve played a year together, I think they’re only going to get better.”

What clearly needed to be fixed, though, was the depth behind Bumgarner in the Giants’ starting rotation. Or, more accurately, the lack thereof. According to FanGraphs, there was nearly a four-win gap between Bumgarner and the Giants’ next-best starter, Chris Heston, in 2015.

Enter Cueto on a six-year, $130 million contract and Samardzija on a five-year, $90 million contract. Both are workhorses who were among the best pitchers in baseball as recently as 2014, so the Giants are right to have high hopes for how much they’ll help. And not just in the rotation, either.

“Now we’ve got two guys who can go out there and throw 200 innings and keep you in ballgames,” said George Kontos, who was one of three Giants relievers to top 70 appearances in 2015. “When you’ve got proven guys who can do that, it helps keep your bullpen fresher. And when you can keep the guys in the bullpen fresher for longer, you can have better success down the stretch.”

With Aoki departing via free agency, the only other notable item on the Giants’ checklist this winter was an outfielder. Enter Span on a three-year, $31 million deal. If he can stay healthy following an injury-plagued 2015, he figures to be a consistent presence atop Bochy‘s batting order, as well as a much-needed defensive upgrade in center field.

All told, Span likes his new team just as much, if not more, than his old one.

“I think this team is more well-rounded,” Span said. “We don’t have a lot of big hitters, per se, but we’ve got contact hitters and guys that will make you pay if you make a mistake. And it’s a very athletic team in the infield and in the outfield, and even with our catcher. And with the guys they’ve brought in, the pitching staff now speaks for itself. I definitely like where we are.”

For what it’s worth, the computers do, too. FanGraphs projects only three National League teams to do better than the Giants in 2016. If that pans out, San Francisco will be back in the postseason at year’s end.

And then, well, clearly all it would have to do is sit back and wait for the magic to take hold. The explanation for it may vary, depending on who you ask, but that doesn‘t mean the Giants can’t be excited about keeping the trend alive.

“We know what we’ve done in the past, and it would be pretty storybook if we pulled it off again this year,” Cain said. “And that’s the plan.”

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked. Quotes obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

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