Tag: San Francisco Giants

Peavy Becomes 5th Giants Pitcher to Hit a Home Run in 2015

San Francisco Giants pitcher Jake Peavy hit a home run off Cincinnati Reds pitcher Collin Balester during the fourth inning of Wednesday’s game, becoming the fifth different Giants pitcher to homer this season, which ties an MLB record, per MLB Stat of the Day.

Peavy was an unlikely candidate to help San Fransisco match the record, as he only had two career home runs before Wednesday’s game, with both of those coming back in 2006 as a member of the San Diego Padres.

He does now have a .226 batting average for the season, but his career batting line of .168/.205/.226 is only somewhat above average for a pitcher.

Teammate Madison Bumgarner, who has been the best-hitting pitcher in all of baseball the past two seasons, unsurprisingly accounts for five of the nine home runs hit by San Francisco hurlers, with Tim Hudson, Ryan Vogelsong and Mike Leake each chipping in one.

Leake is also unusually good in the batter’s box for a pitcher, but Vogelsong and Hudson are closer to Peavy’s level.

With one current member of the starting rotation (rookie Chris Heston) yet to go deep this year, the Giants have a reasonable chance to be the first team ever with six different pitchers to homer in a season.

Heston doesn’t have any home runs in his 49 career at-bats, but he does have a pair of doubles, along with a strong (for a pitcher) .204/.204/.245 batting line.

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Joe Panik Injury: Updates on Giants 2B’s Back and Return

The San Francisco Giants‘ chances of making the postseason are slim enough as is, and they won’t improve with news of an injury to Joe Panik.

Continue for updates.


Bruce Bochy Will ‘Be Surprised’ if Panik Plays Again in 2015

Monday, Sept. 14

Amy Gutierrez of CSN Bay Area reported manager Bruce Bochy’s comments on how the Giants may be without their All-Star second baseman for the remainder of the season as he deals with an injured back. Last week, CSN Bay Area’s Alex Pavlovic shed some light on the severity of the issue:        

There’s no question San Francisco will miss Panik in the lineup. His .312 batting average and .378 on-base percentage are both second on the team, while his 4.1 WAR would be third among MLB second basemen if he had the at-bats to qualify, per FanGraphs.   

With that said, the Giants only have a 1.5 percent chance of making the playoffs on Baseball Prospectus, and they’re only a 0.9 percent favorite on FanGraphs.

Whether or not Panik plays, San Francisco will in all likelihood miss the postseason. Since that’s the case, the team might as well let Panik rest now and allow his back to fully heal.

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With SF Giants’ Repeat Hopes Now Lost, Must Look for Bold Winter Changes

OK, now we can stick a fork in the San Francisco Giants.

We weren’t quite ready to do that a week ago after the defending champs were swept by the NL West-leading Los Angeles Dodgers. Things looked bad, but not doomed. With key players due back from injury and their schedule set to lighten up, the Giants stood a strong chance of getting hot.

Well, they haven’t.

In the wake of last week’s sweep, the Giants lost four out of seven against the Colorado Rockies and Arizona Diamondbacks. They’re now just 13-20 in their last 33 games and staring up at big deficits in the two playoff races they’re in. They trail the Dodgers by 8.5 games in the NL West race and the Chicago Cubs by nine games in the National League wild-card race.

The good news, such as it is, is the Giants still have an easy remaining schedule. But the bad news is that they no longer look like they’re going to be tackling it at full strength.

As John Shea of the San Francisco Chronicle highlighted after the Giants’ 2-1 defeat in Arizona on Wednesday night, the club’s hopes for a full squad have been derailed by lingering injuries to Joe Panik, Brandon Crawford and Nori Aoki and also by Hunter Pence’s slow healing from a bad oblique. 

“It’s just nonstop right now,” skipper Bruce Bochy said of his club’s injuries. “It’s really unbelievable.”

So, behold the reality of the situation. FanGraphs now gives the Giants a 0.3 percent chance of making it back to October to defend their title. And in light of their recent losing streak, their huge deficits and their rapidly decaying roster, even that may be generous.

There’s only one thing to do in times like these, and that’s look forward to what the offseason may hold. And this, mercifully, is where Giants fans will come face-to-face with a great big bundle of optimism. Provided the club is up to being bold, this winter should be a big one.

In case you’re thinking it, no, the Giants aren’t in line for big, sweeping changes this winter. There’s just no need for that.

Most of the 2015 band is set to return in 2016, and that’s largely a good thing.

Buster Posey, unquestionably the best catcher in baseball, isn’t going anywhere. The same goes for staff ace Madison Bumgarner and every member—Panik, Crawford, Matt Duffy and Brandon Belt—of an infield that Jonah Keri of Grantland and Craig Edwards of FanGraphs have deemed the “best in baseball.” The Giants are also set to retain their entire starting outfield and most of their bullpen.

All this means the Giants will be returning the key pieces of an offense that ranks fifth in the National League in runs and most of the key pieces of a bullpen that ranks sixth in MLB in ERA. In other words, they’re going to be returning virtually all the key players who have formed their biggest strengths.

There is, however, no question the Giants will have to address what’s been their big weakness in 2015: starting pitching.

Giants starters entered Friday tied for 12th in MLB in ERA at 4.06, but things look even worse if you subtract the strong work of Bumgarner and (surprisingly) solid rookie Chris Heston, as the remaining starters boast an ugly 4.63 ERA.

That should surprise precisely nobody. Outside of Bumgarner and Heston, the Giants have relied on the services of four over-the-hill pitchers in Tim Hudson, Ryan Vogelsong, Tim Lincecum and Jake Peavy and also on a seemingly permanently broken Matt Cain. 

This always was the risk heading into the season, and the Giants were bitten by it. But fortunately, they’ll soon be in a position to fix this mistake in a big way rather than continue to live with it.

Hudson announced this week that he’ll be retiring at season’s end, and Lincecum and Vogelsong are both due for free agency. The three of them alone represent $34 million set to come off the books, and there’s more where that came from. Marco Scutaro’s contract is finally up at the end of the year, and also heading for free agency are Jeremy Affeldt and trade acquisitions Mike Leake, Marlon Byrd and Alejandro De Aza. 

Now, the catch is that some of the money coming off the books will be needed for various pay raises. Posey, Peavy, Bumgarner and Romo are all due for higher salaries in 2016, and Crawford and Belt are due for pay hikes in arbitration.

But even with all this taken into account, the Giants still have only about $154 million in projected payouts on the books for 2016. That’s $20 million below this year’s $173 million Opening Day payroll, and that figure could be the club’s payroll floor rather than its payroll ceiling.

Bottom line: Starting pitching is really the only thing the Giants need to pursue this winter, and they’re going to have enough money to do so. And given the nature of this particular winter, they’ll be in the right place at the right time.

Between David Price, Johnny Cueto, Jordan Zimmermann, Scott Kazmir and—if he opts out of his contract with the Dodgers—Zack Greinke, this winter’s market is going to be loaded with front-line starters. And regarding that, at least one Giant is thinking big.

“I’d be surprised if we weren’t in the market for more front-line pitching,” said Peavy recently, via Barry M. Bloom of MLB.com. “This way, when you go into next year, you know what you’ve got.”

Peavy’s wish should be granted. Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports recently reported that the Giants are at least likely to consider Zimmermann, and Grant Brisbee of McCovey Chronicles nailed it in writing this in response to that report:

The Zimmermann whisper is more than just a stray rumor, though. It’s the blueprint of the offseason…If it’s not Zimmermann, it will be Johnny Cueto. If it’s not Cueto, It’ll be Zack Greinke. If it’s not Greinke, it’ll be David Price. If it’s not Price, It’ll be Scott Kazmir. There’s a tier below this, too, and the Giants will be kicking tires and kicking tires and kicking tires on every single starting pitcher.

He’s right. And with the market indeed being so saturated with front-line pitching, it’s reasonable to expect that prices for these guys won’t far exceed San Francisco’s grasp. Especially if Zimmermann is indeed their main target, as he’s unlikely due for an overly ridiculous payout.

Heck, signing Zimmermann might even leave money to spare for another free-agent starter from the second tier, which is set to include names such as Brett Anderson, Wei-Yin Chen, Yovani Gallardo, Jeff Samardzija and Doug Fister.

Also, Mike Leake. His ground-ball style makes him an ideal fit for the Giants’ terrific infield defense, and Andrew Baggarly of the Bay Area News Group reports that selling Leake on re-signing may be easy:

If the Giants can sign an ace starter and one of the market’s second-tier starters this winter, what’s been their biggest weakness in 2015 will have gotten a major face-lift. And with that done, all that will be left are secondary concerns.

Of those, the only one that resembles a real priority is finding an upgrade over Angel Pagan, who’s been the worst center fielder in baseball when he hasn’t been injured.

This could mean signing somebody like Austin Jackson for cheap or seeing if there’s a trade to be made for someone more permanent. For example, perhaps the catcher-needy Minnesota Twins would be interested in clearing the way for Byron Buxton by swapping Aaron Hicks for Andrew Susac.

What we’re hearing from the Giants right now is their slow and sullen march to a disappointing end to a once-promising season. But make no mistake, we’re not hearing the death knell of the dynasty they’ve built over the last six years. 

The Giants are going to head into the winter built upon a remarkably strong foundation and with what looks like enough resources to fund needed upgrades. If they play their cards right, they’ll be right back at it in 2016.

From there, it would just be a matter of letting their strange even-year magic do its thing.

 

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

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Does Tim Lincecum’s Hip Surgery Spell the End of ‘The Freak’ in Giants Orange?

Tim Lincecum was never supposed to last this long. But he was never supposed to go away so soon.

He was too small and too funky, and he was never going to endure. Then he was a two-time Cy Young winner and a World Series champion, and he was going to be a San Francisco Giant forever.

He scared away so many scouts that five college pitchers were drafted ahead of him in 2006 (Greg Reynolds? Brad Lincoln? Brandon Morrow?). But he convinced the Giants to the point that they offered him $100 million for five years (he said no).

Lincecum never fit into any standard model, and he always defied every prediction.

And that’s why I’m still not convinced that the hip surgery that ended Lincecum’s 2015 season will also end his Giants career.

There’s every reason to believe that it will. Lincecum will be a free agent at season’s end, and while the reports Thursday were that he’ll fully recover by spring training, there’s no way the Giants can sign him for anything close to the $18 million he made this season in the last campaign of a two-year, $35 million contract.

No one else will, either, but it’s often harder for a player to stay in the same place with a drastically reduced salary.

Giants general manager Bobby Evans wouldn’t even discuss the issue when he spoke to reporters Thursday, according to Andrew Baggarly of the San Jose Mercury News.

“The timing to discuss that will have to come later,” Evans said.

In one way, you could hardly blame the Giants for saying goodbye now. As much of a bargain as Lincecum was at the start of his career, the Giants have paid him $75 million for a 39-42 record and a 4.68 ERA over the last four years (if you prefer modern stats, they’ve paid the same money for minus-2.7 WAR, per Baseball-Reference.com).

It’s hard to know how much that lack of success was related to the health issues that eventually led to Thursday’s surgery. Way back in April 2012, I wrote about “whispers around the game” that Lincecum’s hip was bothering him, and that he couldn’t drive toward the plate with his usual strength.

Lincecum denied it then, and Baggarly wrote Thursday that any issues before this year were more stiffness than pain. While Lincecum’s overall numbers haven’t come close to matching what he did from 2007 to 2011, he did throw no-hitters in both 2013 and 2014.

And when the Giants moved him to the bullpen in the 2012 postseason, Lincecum pitched effectively and helped the Giants to their second World Series crown.

He barely pitched in the 2014 playoffs (1.2 innings in one World Series game), but Lincecum will still go down as one of the most recognizable and most significant figures from the best times the Giants franchise has ever had.

Maybe it’s over for him now, at least in San Francisco. I’m not convinced.

Lincecum is still just 31. Hip surgeries are serious, but they don’t need to be career-ending, as Alex Rodriguez and Troy Tulowitzki are proving. Dr. Marc Philippon, who did their surgeries, also did Lincecum’s.

He told the Giants that the surgery was successful, with a five-month recovery timetable, per Baggarly. Giants athletic trainer Dave Groeschner told reporters that Lincecum will begin the rehab process Friday.

“Nobody wants to have surgery,” Groeschner said. “He did everything he could to try to avoid it. It’s just, he wants to get back to being Tim Lincecum.”

I can see it. I can see him in that same Giants uniform, perhaps with the hair grown all the way out again. I can see him on that same mound, defying every prediction one more time.

I can see it, and it turns out I’m not alone. When Baggarly and other reporters approached Buster Posey on Thursday to ask about Lincecum’s time as a Giant, Posey refused to describe it in the past tense.

“It’s hard to sit here and share memories because I fully expect him to be back,” Posey told them.

I’m not as confident as that, but I can see it.

Or maybe I just want to see it.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball. 

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Young Giants Fan Can’t Believe He Didn’t Catch Foul Ball

A young San Francisco Giants fan was shocked he didn’t grab a foul ball that came his way during the team’s game against the St. Louis Cardinals on Saturday. 

In the bottom of the fourth inning, Gregor Blanco of the Giants smacked a foul ball into the stands. The young fan failed to make the catch, leaving the group behind him grabbing for the souvenir. The kid couldn’t believe it, putting his hands over his head in disbelief like his mom had told him they ran out of Bagel Bites. 

Worse yet, the Giants went on to lose, 6-0.

[MLB]

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Madison Bumgarner Performs Pirouette-Like Move to Make Play at 1st Base

Madison Bumgarner channeled his inner dancer in the third inning of Thursday’s 9-1 win over the Chicago Cubs, performing a pirouette-like move to make a play at first base.

San Francisco Giants first baseman Brandon Belt fielded Kyle Schwarber’s ground ball, tossing it to Bumgarner, who reached across his shoulders to make the catch while spinning to land with his foot on the bag.

The lefty limited the Cubs to two hits and one run in six innings at AT&T Park.

[Major League Baseball]

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Can Marlon Byrd Deal, Mike Leake’s Impending Return Boost Giants’ Playoff Hopes?

Marlon Byrd has value. 

It is tangible. It’s not like saying he brings leadership or veteran experience to a clubhouse. Those things can’t be measured. And who knows if they actually help? Especially when a team already possesses such qualities across its rows of lockers.

Byrd hits for power, and he currently has his health. For the San Francisco Giants, those things are entirely valuable right now. Going into the season’s final six or so weeks, Byrd’s bat plays for the defending World Series champions, a team injured in the outfield and in its lineup by the absences of Hunter Pence and Joe Panik.

“He still has some old-man strength,” Leake, a teammate of Byrd’s earlier this season with the Cincinnati Reds, told Henry Schulman of the San Francisco Chronicle. “I think he’ll help out.”

There’s no reason to doubt that. Byrd has 19 home runs this season, which is his biggest draw, since his OBP was .286, and his OPS-plus was 98 playing mostly in hitter-friendly Great American Ball Park. Sticking him in the outfield with Pence gone gives the Giant at least a power presence.

And while Byrd’s numbers at AT&T Park aren’t great—.216 average and .263 OBP—he has hit for power with four homers in 20 games. And maybe some icing on the cake is that he pounds Dodgers pitching at Dodger Stadium to the tune of .356/.387/.529 with six doubles and three homers in 93 plate appearances.

The Giants have been hit hard by injuries, as have several other contenders in the National League, and are now 2.5 games behind the Dodgers in the NL West and four behind the Chicago Cubs for the second wild-card spot. Byrd gives them coverage in the outfield with Pence and Nori Aoki both spending multiple stints on the disabled list this year. Plus, the Giants do not expect to have All-Star second baseman Panik back until next month

“I’m excited,” Giants manager Bruce Bochy told reporters, via the Associated Press (h/t ESPN). “Marlon is a real pro who knows how to play the game and, most importantly, gives us a much-needed bat.”

The move comes A day after their archrivals, the Los Angeles Dodgers, made a similar move to bolster their ailing lineup with Chase Utley. And while the trade does not address the team’s biggest need, much like the Utley trade, Mike Leake’s return to the rotation in the coming days could do exactly that for the Giants.

And if Leake is right, his return could be more impactful than the deal for Byrd.

The Giants’ rotation has struggled in the second half outside of ace Madison Bumgarner and Leake’s one start before pulling a hamstring after his trade. Taking out the second-half innings of those two, San Francisco’s rotation has a 4.38 ERA since the All-Star break after Jake Peavy gave up four runs in six innings Thursday night in Pittsburgh.

Aside from Peavy, Matt Cain and Chris Heston have also been points of concern recently. In Cain’s four August starts, which included a solid six-inning, two-run performance in St. Louis on Wednesday, he has a 7.32 ERA and 7.02 FIP, costing the Giants about a half a win (h/t Matt Goldman of MLB Daily Dish). Heston has not been much better, showing a 4.58 ERA, 6.11 FIP and also costing the Giants in wins in his four turns.

Ryan Vogelsong has been good since returning to the rotation this month, posting a 2.40 ERA in three outings. But none of them have lasted longer than six innings, as he has not been at all efficient with his pitches. Considering the Giants have holes in other rotation spots, that lack of length could end up taxing what has been a pretty good bullpen in the second half.

“They aren’t overly confident in their starting rotation,” Fox Sports 1 MLB analyst C.J. Nitkowski said on the network Thursday. “They have the great ace in Madison Bumgarner [but] there’s a reason they went out and got Mike Leake. There’s a reason Tim Hudson went on the DL then they pushed him to the bullpen. Right now these guys are not helping. Tim Lincecum is not there. Matt Cain has been struggling.

“Overall, when you look at this starting rotation, you’re not overly inspired. You’re just hoping they can get it together.” CSN Bay Area’s Alex Pavlovic reported on Leake:

That is why Leake could be a significant upgrade. In his five starts before going on the DL, four of those with the Reds, he had a 0.99 ERA and averaged over seven innings a game. If that is the Leake who comes back in the coming days, he will be a massive upgrade to a shaky rotation.

Byrd and Leake are two former Reds who were going nowhere with Cincinnati, but given the state of the Giants at this point of the season, they could both be playing significant roles in this year’s playoff races.

 

Follow Anthony on Twitter @awitrado and talk baseball here.

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Marlon Byrd to Giants: Latest Trade Details, Comments and Reaction

The San Francisco Giants announced via their Twitter account on Thursday that they acquired outfielder Marlon Byrd and cash from the Cincinnati Reds for Double-A pitcher Stephen Johnson. 

For the Giants, the deal for Byrd was a necessity, as their outfield was worn dangerously thin. The team had just placed Hunter Pence on the disabled list as he deals with an oblique strain, while Nori Aoki made his return from the seven-day concussion disabled list in a corresponding roster move, bolstering the depth at Bruce Bochy’s disposal.

“I’m excited to have Marlon,” Bochy said, via Alex Pavlovic of CSN Bay Area. “I really respect how he plays the game. He’s excited about coming here. It’s fair to say we could use some help and experience, and he supplies that.”

Prior to the trade and Aoki’s return, Gregor Blanco and Justin Maxwell were the only healthy and established outfielders available with Angel Pagan also shelved on the disabled list, according to MLB.com. 

They’ve recently relied on 28-year-old outfielder Juan Perez, who made his first appearance with the Giants this season on Aug. 13.     

Now, San Francisco adds an established outfielder who holds plenty of pop in his bat, as the 37-year-old has hit 19 home runs in 96 games with the Reds this season. In return Cincinnati gets a righty reliever in Johnson who is 3-0 with 68 strikeouts in 58.0 innings pitched in Double-A this season, according to MiLB.com.

FanGraphs.com’s Kiley McDaniel took a look at what the Reds are getting:

San Francisco currently sits 2.0 games behind the Los Angeles Dodgers for the National League West Division lead and 3.0 games back of the Chicago Cubs for the final wild-card spot. To make a late-season push, the Giants will need Byrd to replace some of the power lost with Pence injured.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.

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Juan Perez Climbs the Wall to Rob Stephen Piscotty of Solo Home Run

Unfortunately for St. Louis Cardinals right fielder Stephen Piscotty, Juan Perez’s spidey senses were tingling Wednesday afternoon.

The San Francisco Giants center fielder made a stunning catch in the bottom of the first inning, scaling the wall at Busch Stadium to rob Piscotty of a solo home run shot.

Despite Perez’s efforts, however, the Cardinals took a one-run lead two batters later when catcher Yadier Molina singled on a line drive to bring shortstop Jhonny Peralta home.

[MLB]

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Nori Aoki Injury: Updates on Giants OF’s Possible Concussion and Return

San Francisco Giants left fielder Norichika Aoki is battling concussion-like symptoms. 

Continue for updates.


Aoki Headed to DL

Thursday, August 13

According to USA Today‘s Jorge L. Ortiz, the Giants placed Aoki on the seven-day disabled list after he left Wednesday’s game against the Houston Astros with “lightheadedness.”

It was Aoki’s first start after being hit in the head by a 92 mph fastball from Chicago Cubs pitcher Jake Arrieta on Sunday, August 9, after which he left the field under his own power. 

Wednesday night was Aoki’s first game back. Giants manager Bruce Bochy told Oliver Macklin of MLB.com that his left fielder “got lightheaded, dizzy, so we had to take him out. We’re treating him at this time for a concussion. He showed symptoms.”      

Coming over from the Kansas City Roayls in the offseason, Aoki has appeared in 80 games in 2015, already making a stint on the DL after fracturing his fibula toward the end of June, according to FoxSports.com. But the 33-year-old has been a vital bat for the Giants, batting .302 with a .368 on-base percentage, making him a prime candidate for being their leadoff man. 

Justin Maxwell replaced Aoki on Wednesday night and will be his replacement moving forward, but he does not have the same capability of finding ways on base like Aoki does. In 86 games this season, Maxwell is batting just .220 with seven home runs and 25 RBI. 

Ortiz also reported Ryan Lollis was called up from Triple-A to add depth to the left field position, but he has appeared in just two games in the majors in 2015 and is hitless in five plate appearances. 

It’s a tough time for the Giants to be losing a run producer like Aoki, who uses his patience at the plate and speed on the basepaths to manufacture runs. San Francisco sits 3.5 games behind the National League West-leading Los Angeles Dodgers and 5.0 games back of the final NL wild-card spot.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.

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