Tag: Tim Lincecum

Tim Lincecum: Giants Must Give Former Ace Week off to Figure out Issues

What is going on with Tim Lincecum?

The San Francisco Giants would sure like to know.

The two-time Cy Young award winner has gotten off to a horrific start this season, and after dropping to 2-7 on the year this past Sunday, something has to be done.

Manager Bruce Bochy knows as much and admitted to Sirius XM Radio host and former GM Jim Bowden that the team is analyzing their options on Tuesday:

So if those are the two options…skipping a start has to be the plan of action.

If he gets tossed into the bullpen, his ego will be shot, he’ll have to prepare differently and the relationship between Lincecum and the club would be severely damaged.

It would be a slap in the face to one of the catalysts for the Giants’ epic 2010 World Series run.

Sure, he has struggled this year, but heading into the season, he had a 69-41 career record with 1,127 strikeouts in 1,028 innings. Being demoted to the bullpen would be a grave overreaction after just 13 starts.

The solution is to have him skip a start.

With the off-day Monday, the Giants won’t have to call anybody up. With another off-day on Thursday, June 21, Lincecum wouldn’t have to pitch again until June 22. That gives him 11 days between starts without roster adjustments.

What he needs is time to reflect on why he only has 77 strikeouts in 72 innings. He can figure out why he has failed to reach the seventh inning in 10 of 13 starts and why he currently sports a 1.58 WHIP, 6.00 ERA and .265 BAA.

Sometimes, you just need a few extra days off to not only clear your mind and relax, but to also watch film and figure out if it’s a mechanical issue.

Missing one start isn’t a big deal; it happens to plenty of pitchers—a demotion to the bullpen is for somebody still trying to find his place in the majors.

The Giants are in a tough position with Lincecum, and they need to tread carefully to ensure they don’t lose their former ace for good. 

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MLB Trade Deadline: Contenders Who Need to Make Moves

As the summer continues to heat up, so will talk of trade potentials and teams looking to make adjustments for a late-season push.

Although it is still fairly early, injury, slumps and poor records have already began to plague major league clubs.

Some teams like the Chicago Cubs, the Houston Astros and, perpetually, the Oakland Athletics will enter rebuilding mode and begin to sell off contracts for prospects.

Others, such as the San Fransisco Giants, Los Angeles Dodgers and Miami Marlins, who are in the hunt for October, will take on loaner veterans to help get their teams over the hump.

Here is a look at some possible trade talks before the All-Star Break.

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MLB Predictions: Will It Last? Thoughts on 10 Hot and Cold Starters

Popular opinion regarding how certain major league teams and players start a season generally holds that all authoritative conclusions made before June 1 are premature. Because teams and players turn cold starts into fine seasons, and hot starts into prolonged slumps, forecasting performance based on the season’s initial third often results in poor predictions. 

All the experts who eulogized David Ortiz’s career at 34 years old in May 2009 certainly learned hard the lesson that two months of at-bats is simply not enough to accurately predict a player’s rest-of-season destiny. If it were, Ortiz might have ended up with something like eight home runs and 50 RBI instead of the 28 and 99 that approximate his career averages.

The season’s first two months, as in all, feature slow-starting household names as well as no-namers lighting pitching staffs on fire.

For those struggling, like Albert Pujols and Tim Lincecum, it is hard to fathom them continuing in their futility. Likewise, it is suspect to assume that the likes of Lance Lynn and Chris Capuano will continue their Cy Young performances throughout the season on the mound.

Superficial stats are often fool’s gold when predicting future success, which is why a glimpse at the underlying vital signs of these 10 players sheds light on just what can be expected from them as the calendar flips to June.

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Bruce Bochy’s Bad Managing Costs Tim Lincecum and the San Francisco Giants Again

If you want to know why the San Francisco Giants are barely a .500 team, you don’t need to look any further then the sixth inning in the Giants’ 7-6 loss Friday night to the Miami Marlins.

With one out and one run already in to cut the Giants’ lead over the Marlins to 3-2, the Marlins had the bases loaded. Tim Lincecum was already over 90 pitches and looked like he had lost it.

Then John Buck hit a sacrifice fly to tie the game. Only then did Giants manager Bruce Bochy get the bullpen going. A little late, don’t you think?

The next batter, Chris Coghlan, hit a three-run homer and the Marlins had blown the game wide open, leading 6-3. By the way, Coghlan had a homer in only five career at-bats against Lincecum. 

Bochy pulled Lincecum, but it was way too late for the Giants and their ace.

So Bochy’s slow thinking cost the Giants and Lincecum once again.

A few things have come to light this year about Lincecum. One is that he no longer can be trusted to get out of jams in the middle innings. Bochy leaves him in every time and keeps letting Lincecum hurt himself and the team.

Yo, Boch, this isn’t Cy Young Timmy from 2008 or 2009. It isn’t even up and down Lincecum of 2010 or last year. This is a pitcher who has lost his confidence to get out of these situations.

Yet Bochy is making things worse by allowing Lincecum to bury himself and the Giants every single time. Bochy needs to throw Lincecum a life preserver by having a quick hook. Instead he’s sticking a fire hose down his throat and turning it on full blast!

Bochy potentially cost the Giants 4 runs in the sixth inning, and the Giants lost by only one. This was Bochy’s loss through and through.

This just goes to prove what I’ve been saying all along about Bochy. He’s a lousy manager with poor judgement. Brian Sabean and Larry Baer, are you watching the games? Bochy is screwing up right and left.

A good manager can sense when his pitcher is losing it. He knows when to make a change. Bochy isn’t a good manager. Not even close.

Remember a few years ago when Barry Zito would start allowing home runs after the 90th pitch like clockwork? Do you also remember that everyone in the media noted that fact? And do you remember how long it took Bochy to start using a quicker hook with Zito? It was absolutely ridiculous! The man just doesn’t get it.

There’s believing in your players and then there’s just being a damn fool. 

I was calling for Bochy’s head on a platter last season. Yes, the Giants were strapped by injuries, but all Bochy did was make matters worse on an almost daily basis.

Hensley Meulens isn’t the only one who needs to go. It’s time to get rid of Bochy and hire a manager who can think his way through things.

No, the Giants personnel isn’t perfect. Far from it. But no team is. Certainly the Los Angeles Dodgers, this year’s surprise team in the majors, isn’t perfect either. They are a collection of a few stars and the rest are journeyman that general manager Ned Colletti threw together with a limited budget. Yet they are in first place with the majors’ best record.

The Giants are a better team then the Dodgers on paper, and they should be better on the field. But they’re not, because of poor managing. Time to get a manager that will lead the Giants past the Dodgers and any potential playoff foes.

But there won’t be any playoffs for the Giants if Bochy continues as Giants manager.

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Why the Nationals Should Lock Up Strasburg, Harper to Long-Term Deals NOW

Stephen Strasburg and Bryce Harper are the future of the Washington Nationals

Strasburg will be the ace of a formidable starting rotation for years to come, and Bryce Harper will anchor the outfield and the lineup with his five-tool talent. The future is in good hands. 

Here are seven reasons why the Washington Nationals need to quickly sign both players to long-term contracts to ensure the successful future of the franchise.

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Fantasy Baseball Hold ‘Em or Fold ‘Em: Is It Time to Give Up on Tim Lincecum?

Once upon a time Tim Lincecum was one of the elite pitchers in the game…

When you say it like that it feels like ages ago, doesn’t it?  Of course, that’s far from the case.  Lincecum was one of the best pitchers in the league as recently as last season and viewed by most as a Top 5 option entering 2012.  So, when you see these types of numbers through 8 starts, you obviously have to be curious as to what is going on:

2 Wins
43.2 Innings
5.77 ERA
1.56 WHIP
48 Strikeouts (9.89 K/9)
22 Walks (4.53 BB/9)
.346 BABIP

Yes, there has been enough bad luck at play (his BABIP as well as his 60.4% strand rate) to make us think that better days are definitely ahead.  That’s definitely a fair stance to take, but we need to look at the other numbers as well.  Unfortunately, there are things that have got to be concerning.

The first one is his control.  Prior to this season his worst career BB/9 was 4.00, and that came in his rookie season of 2007.  In the four subsequent seasons he’s posted marks of:

  • 2008 – 3.33
  • 2009 – 2.72
  • 2010 – 3.22
  • 2011 – 3.57

In other words, we know he has better control then what he’s shown thus far this season.  You would have to think that, if healthy, things would rebound in this department.

The other major concern is two-fold.  Opponents are teeing off on Lincecum, with a 24.8% line drive rate (career mark is 19.3%) and, at least in part, we can point to a major drop-off in his velocity as a reason why.  Just look at his average fastball speed since making his Major League debut:

  • 2007 – 94.2
  • 2008 – 94.1
  • 2009 – 92.4
  • 2010 – 91.3
  • 2011 – 92.3
  • 2012 – 90.0

It’s obvious that we shouldn’t expect him to be averaging 94 mph, like he did over his first two years.  Whatever the reason (if he simply changed his approach), he had dialed it back and was still among the most successful starting pitchers in the league.  However, seeing the drop once again, coupled with the line drive rate, is obviously eye opening.

There is going to be speculation that he’s injured, but until there’s news from San Francisco that is just pure speculation.  Whatever the reason, Lincecum is throwing his fastball softer (though still throwing it 51.9% of the time) and opponents are ripping it.

Would I think that he’s going to get things turned around?  I would, but there obviously have to be a few caveats like if he’s healthy and if he can get his velocity back up.

That said, I’d be willing to roll the dice on him if an owner in your league has grown frustrated and is willing to part with him on the cheap.  If I had to pay a premium for the pitcher he was from 2007-2011, or at least that upside, then I’m not buying.  There is too much risk and too many things that need to change for him to get back to that pitcher.

If I can get him at the price/risk his 2012 numbers provide, then I’m willing to roll the dice.  Unfortunately, based on what we’ve seen thus far, I’m not so comfortable that he’s going to return to the pitcher that he was.

What are your thoughts on Lincecum?  Would you be willing to take the chance on him?  What would you be willing to give up to acquire him?

Make sure to check out Rotoprofessor’s recent rankings:

Make sure to check out some of our other recent rankings:

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San Francisco Giants Ace Tim Lincecum: The Biggest Obstacle to Winning West

The San Francisco Giants‘ biggest enemy in 2012 is not the Arizona Diamondbacks, the Los Angeles Dodgers or any other National League opponent. 

Their biggest challenge to winning the National League West is the enemy within.

The Giants have six players that I view as All-Star caliber: Pablo Sandoval, Buster Posey, Tim Lincecum, Matt Cain, Madison Bumgarner and Brian Wilson.  For the Giants to contend in 2012, they cannot afford major regression or serious injury to those players. 

Unfortunately, major injury and regression have already struck half of those players, as well as their starting second baseman, Freddy Sanchez. Sanchez is out indefinitely with a shoulder injury that cost him most of last season as well. 

Wilson is out for the year after undergoing a second Tommy John surgery on his right elbow, Sandoval is lost for the next month after undergoing surgery to remove his left hamate bone one year to the date of having surgery to remove his right hamate bone, and Lincecum is just plain lost. 

The good news is that, while Wilson won’t return this year, the Giants have a deep enough bull-pen to withstand that loss and, unlike Wilson, Sandoval will be back within the next four-to-six weeks. 

The bad news is that there is no timetable for Lincecum to figure out his issues, an unacceptable development for a team build around it’s starting rotation. 

It isn’t all bad for Lincecum right now.  He’s pitched noticeably better at times during his last four starts after getting lit up by the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field in his second start, culminating in eight excellent innings against the San Diego Padres two starts ago. 

His 3.42 fielding independent pitching (FIP) is well below his 5.68 Earned Run Average (ERA), suggesting that Lincecum has been the victim of some bad luck, while his left on base percentage of 60.8 percent is well below his career average of 75.4 percent, also suggesting that bad luck and poor timing are a major culprit for his early struggles. 

However, even if Lincecum starts to experience better luck, there are clear signs that he has peaked and is no longer the dominant ace he once was. 

During his Cy Young reign in 2008 and 2009, Lincecum led all starters in wins above replacement (15.5), strike-outs per nine innings (10.47), ERA (2.55), FIP (2.48) and home-runs allowed per nine innings (0.42). 

Since winning his second Cy Young Award, Lincecum has regressed in all of these categories.  During the last two seasons, he has gone from being the best pitcher on the planet to something more human

The Giants won the World Series with this more hittable version of Lincecum in 2010, but they could not afford any further regression this year if they hoped to get back to the promised land.  Unfortunately, Lincecum isn’t trending back towards his Cy Young seasons.  Instead of getting better, he is getting worse. 

His fastball velocity continues to go in the wrong direction, from a high of 94.2 miles per hour (MPH) when he first entered the league all the way down to an average of just 89.8 MPH this season

Increased command has not come with taking velocity off the fastball.  His command peaked in 2009 when he walked a career low 2.72 batters per nine innings, but it has worsened every year since, with his walk rate all the way up to 4.83 per nine innings so far this season, fourth worst in the league. 

The combination of below-average velocity and command has made the best pitcher on the planet turn into a giant question mark. 

With so few miles per hour now separating the fastball from his vaunted change-up, hitters no longer look as foolish against the disappearing off-speed pitch that made him so dominant. 

With Sandoval hurt, Sanchez out indefinitely and Wilson down for the year, the Giants need their starting rotation to anchor the team with their once outstanding ace to carry the team again.  Unfortunately, when Tim Lincecum reaches back, it just isn’t there right now. 

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Giants vs. Mets: Tim Lincecum Gets 1st Win, but Still Searching for His Form

It took Tim Lincecum four tries, but the diminutive right-hander mercifully registered his first win of the 2012 season. He went five innings against New York’s junior varsity squad, whiffing eight Mets, surrendering four hits and suffering just a single earned run.

This is where the good news starts to turn, though.

The outing “lowered” Linececum’s ERA to 8.20 and did the same for his WHIP, now an unsightly 1.88. That last bit is the really ugly stunner because Lincecum coughed up five walks for a not-so-grand total of nine baserunners in five frames.

Giants fans—indeed, observers of Major League Baseball in general—are not accustomed to seeing Lincecum place almost two ducks on the pond per inning and have it help his numbers.

In truth, the story was even gorier than the sheer numbers.

The Freak’s command was largely nonexistent. It looked like he had zero idea where the ball was going once it left his hand, which explains why he averaged more than 20 pitches per inning on his way to 108 tosses total.

What’s more, he needed plays ranging from spectacular to above-average from several defenders to labor through the outing.

Emmanuel Burriss made a fantastic diving grab to get the first out of the game, Melky Cabrera made a nice running catch on a sinking line drive to keep runs off the board and then there was the game-saver. Had it not been for a jaw-dropping, get-out-of-your-seat-and-cheer double play turned by Burriss and Brandon Crawford—one that featured a back-handed glove flip from Burriss and a bare-handed turn by Crawford—Lincecum’s final numbers would’ve been more gruesome, and they probably wouldn’t include that first W.

Lack of command, messy pitch totals and reliance on defense are not Tim Lincecum’s calling cards.

There’s also the nagging, made-for-columnists drama of his decreased velocity, which has finally produced the inevitable injury speculation.

The hand-wringing over the drop in velocity continues to be much ado about nothing—the dude did strike out eight professional hitters (or close approximations thereto). If the lack of zip on the Franchise’s heater was a sincere problem, you wouldn’t see that gaudy strikeout total—not even against a team as offensively suspect as this year’s Mets.

The lack of command is the real cause for concern, and his latest outing didn’t help put anyone at ease, least of all Lincecum.

The fan favorite might’ve put on the proverbial brave face after the game, but reading between the lines, it sure doesn’t sound like he’s found himself yet. After settling down against the Philadelphia Phillies in start No. 3, the Franchise seemed on that track, but his latest trip to the bump seems to have knocked him back off it.

The rhythm and ease with which Lincecum coasted from the second through the sixth inning against the Phils were gone, replaced with a forced, uneven motion from first pitch to last against the Mets. That’s usually evidence of a pitcher who is searching for himself and thinking too much.

And both are bad signs as the calendar turns to May.

Even so, the faithful need not panic.

It’s definitely getting closer to that time, but for now, the glass case can remain unbroken and the red button un-pushed.

As strange as it may seem, Giant fans should take comfort in the fact that we’ve seen Lincecum scuffle like this in seasons’ past. As I’ve previously noted, Timmy’s familiar with these valleys and arguably even deeper, darker ones. It follows that the pitcher is also familiar with how to climb out of them or at least how to stay sane while making the ascent.

We’ve seen the ace struggle in four straight starts before, so we’re still in charted territory.

Additionally, Lincecum has been making progress since he hit rock bottom in Colorado. He looked better in the Philly start (after the first inning), but the results were better against New York. If he can sync up the fluidity he found against the Phightins while avoiding the big inning like he did in New York, he should be right as rain in no time.

That’s easier said than done, but a confidence boost and a little relaxation should go a long way toward achieving that end. And nothing inspires confidence or relaxes a pitcher like a win.

Lincecum just got his first of the year ,so don’t be surprised if more are in his immediate future.

Of course, if his struggles stretch into the new month and uncharted territory, you should be prepared for something else.

Because if that happens, there will be a panic in the Bay Area the likes of which we haven’t seen recently.

And for good reason.

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Tim Lincecum vs. Barry Zito: What to Make of SF Giants’ Uncharacteristic Starts

The 2012 Major League Baseball season has gotten off to an odd start for the San Francisco Giants—the offense has come streaking out of the gates while the pitching has stumbled.

Even more bizarre, Tim Lincecum, the ace in a rotation of guys who could put up a good tussle for that mantle, has been the most prone to flame. Meanwhile, Barry Zito, the much-maligned $126 million man and the only pure spectator in the aforementioned tussle, has been damn near unhittable.

Sure, not even 10 percent of the season is in the books, but the more superstitious Bay Area baseball fans are beginning to eye that Mayan calendar with serious concern. And really, can you blame them?

The bats have been averaging 4.5 runs a game in the early going as the club’s perennial Achilles’ heel has been a strength. On the other hand, the pitchers—the orange and black backbone—have surrendered almost as many earned runs per contest (4.1). The starters have been particularly ragged. Lincecum, Madison Bumgarner and Matt Cain all got knocked around in their first trips to the mound, while Ryan Vogelsong began the year on the shelf.

Only Zito has remained above the fray.

Toss in some shoddy defense—a major-league worst 15 errors have produced seven unearned runs on the season—and the Gents’ 4-6 record makes sense. But try selling it as logical to San Francisco fans, whose baseball world is on tilt at the moment.

MadBum and Cain righted their ships in their subsequent starts, and Vogelsong turned in a fine performance once he came off the disabled list, but Lincecum’s scuffles and Barry’s brilliance have continued.

The Freak has been such only in the circus-sideshow sense of the word—if you exclude the Giants who’ve yet to pitch four innings, Timmy’s 10.54 ERA in three starts is almost twice as high as anyone else’s. He’s allowed 26 base-runners in 13.2 innings, he’s already suffered more first-inning runs in ’12 than he did in all of 2011, his command has been off and his velocity was a muted 91-92 MPH in his latest start (Monday versus Roy Halladay and the Philadelphia Phillies).

Yes, two of those three starts came in the hitter havens of Chase and Coors Fields. But the Colorado Rockies are not the offensive juggernaut they’ve been in recent years, even at home, and there’s no sugar-coating a loss to the Phillies since they were down Ryan Howard, Chase Utley and a useful Placido Polanco.

So, it’s a mild understatement to say times are not so good for the Franchise.

Just as it’s a mild understatement to say times are rosy for Mr. Zito.

The Giants’ other former Cy Young has more innings pitched (16) in two starts than Timmy has in three. He’s got the best earned run average (1.13) of any San Francisco hurler with at least four innings pitched, his WHIP (0.69) is second only to Matt Cain’s sparkling 0.60 and he’s posted eight strikeouts against only a single walk. His shutout of the Rockies on only four hits and no walks in Denver’s ERA-bloating air is already the stuff of San Francisco legend.

Ah, times are good in the Zito household.

Of course, we’ve been here before, in both cases.

Big-Time Timmy Jim labored through an ugly, four-game stretch to kick off June in ’11. In 2010, a season that carries a touch of significance in The City, Lincecum endured unsightly jags in both May and August. Even his second Cy Young campaign in 2009 got off to a slow start, as the right-hander slogged through his first two starts.

As for Baked Zito, the lefty has threatened to shake off the doldrums as recently as the championship season of ’10. That year, he boasted a sub-3.00 ERA as late as June 1 and put together another fine string of starts to finish up the month of July. In ’09, Barry pitched to a 1.93 ERA for the entire month of August. Even his inaugural season with los Gigantes, a mostly terrible 2007, saw him cobble together a sub-3.00 ERA in (you guessed it) August.

Against that backdrop, you know the question before it’s asked: Is the early-season performance of each pitcher an aberration or a sign of things to come?

Should Giants fans panic about Lincecum? Should they reserve a seat on the Zito bandwagon?

In the Franchise’s case, the answer is simple: Not yet.

To some degree, Lincecum’s a victim of his own success. When you give the faithful two Cy Young Awards and a World Series ring in your first three full seasons, expectations become unrealistic. The 27-year-old is not going to be suffocating in every start, and he was never going to throw in the mid-90s for his entire career. Consequently, the diminished velocity was never as troubling as his lack of command.

After all, command without velocity can get you to the Hall of Fame (see: Maddux, Greg), whereas velocity without command gets you a seat on the couch and a remote control.

Lincecum’s command hasn’t been terrible. He’s made too many mistakes inside the strike zone, producing too much loud contact, but he’s only walked four batters all year. Furthermore, he’s whiffing more than a batter an inning and seemed to find his rhythm against Philly after a brutal first inning.

When you consider the Freak’s body of work, that the answer to his command issues always seemed to be a tweak rather than an overhaul and the way he settled in against the Phils, I expect the filthy ace we all know and love to be back on the hill in his next start.

The question is, is Zito’s case more complicated?

There are reasons to believe his mini-resurgence is genuine and here to stay. The 33-year-old spent time with pitching guru Tom House this summer and overhauled his delivery. While the complete reconstruction didn’t hold, Zito stayed with some of the tinkering, and the early results are encouraging. Most compelling, he’s already demonstrated more resiliency than we’ve seen at any point during his Giant tenure—the Zito to which San Francisco has become accustomed would’ve melted down after spotting the Pirates two runs in the first inning of his last outing.

Or after a two-out triple in the fourth. Or after the three errors the Gents committed in the fifth and sixth.

This time, however, the lanky lefty settled in after the first, stranded that two-out triple and pitched through the errors to keep San Francisco in the game. That speaks to confidence, which is as important as anything in Barry’s arsenal.

Put another way, there are real and significant reasons for optimism.

Alas, there is a flip side to this particular coin.

Such as the tales we heard about how the theory that a quieter, more focused offseason explained his hot start in ’10 and held the promise of an equally strong finish. Another popular chestnut offered to explain his torrid April and May in ’10 was the increased use of his slider.

The point being that, as long as Barry Zito has struggled in a Giants uniform, the faithful have heard and/or read stories promising that some basic change would banish those struggles and deliver us all—Zito included—from a now-five-year nightmare.

And just as consistently, the theories have proven false, the promises empty.

Is this the year the pattern crumbles or just its latest iteration? Who knows?

The Giant faithful have been burned too many times to be hopping on the wagon with both feet, but this “new” Zito looks different and better than the previous “new” Zitos, so mark me down as cautiously optimistic.

Which is a welcome change.

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Spring Training: Lincecum Leads Giants over Kansas City

On Monday, it was a trip to Kansas City’s spring training facility to see the Royals and San Francisco. Outside of the Chicago Cubs, the Giants are the biggest draw in the Cactus League and easily had more than half the fans of the 6,243 in attendance.

To the delight of much of the crowd, San Francisco won 2-1, as both teams used a mix of regulars and subs for about six innings, before the younger guys with numbers of 60 or higher took over.

Last season, the Giants were last in the National League in scoring and 29th in baseball, with a large part of their problem being they swung (and often missed) at more pitches that were out of the strike zone than any other team in the major league. The return of Buster Posey will help, although you don’t go from being the lowest scoring team in your league to becoming the 1970s Big Red Machine because of one player.

Part of the change in culture was noted when San Francisco got a runner on first base. If that player had reasonable speed, they would be looking to steal second, and if a hit ball was a questionable gapper, the runner would try to advance the extra base.

Kansas City’s farm system is reportedly well stocked and the parent club was sixth in runs scored in the junior circuit in 2011. Can the Royals maintain a solid scoring team and improve its pitching to continue its march to become a .500 club? That answer will come later and it will be their pitching that will make that determination.

Giants Notes: Tim Lincecum threw four good innings, striking out four and permitting one walk and one hit. Lincecum utilized his curveball for the first time this spring and had good results, if not total command just yet. “This is a lot better than my last outing (five runs on seven hits and a walk with no strikeouts),” Lincecum said. “The fact I doubled my innings helps and my arm and my body still feel good and I still kept my mechanics. I’m trying to take that as a positive and run with it.” While there are still three weeks left in spring training, Lincecum’s velocity is of possible concern. If the radar gun numbers on the scoreboard are to be believed, Lincecum topped out at 90-91 MPH—just like last season—and not at the 93-95 range of his Cy Young seasons. This should be looked at further once the season starts.

San Francisco has a great deal of catching depth behind the healing Buster Posey, with the likes of switch-hitting 22-year-old Hector Sanchez, who will probably start the year in the minors along with vets Eli Whiteside and Chris Stewart.

The Giants are very excited about center fielder Gregor Blanco, who reached based four times on Monday and raised his batting average to a scalding .545. Blanco earned MVP honors in the Venezuelan Winter League and has not missed a beat in wearing a San Francisco uniform for the first time.

Freddy Sanchez is expected to take the field sometime this week, having been a DH to this point in coming back from a torn labrum last June. Among the people playing second base is Joaquin Arias, who made three sensational plays. The 27-year-old doesn’t appear to be a threat with a bat in his hand, but give him some leather and he’ll get the job done.

Brett Pill had two hits and played first base yesterday, and it is perplexing that it seems the Giants’ front office really wants this 27-year-old to play over Brandon Belt, who is four years younger and has considerably more power.

San Francisco’s projected win total is 87 and if that is to be reached, they need Posey and Sanchez back to their old selves and others to be a force. If manager Bruce Bochy stays committed to being aggressive on the base paths and the starting pitching holds up, there is no reason the Giants cannot return to the postseason and win 90 games in 2012.

Royals Notes: Having never seen Luke Hochevar live before, the immediate reaction is he throws harder than I would have guessed, consistently ringing up 95 mph on the radar gun. Last season, his career took off in a new direction by adjusting his arm angle to make his slider appear like his sinker, causing hesitation by batters. In the second half of last year Hochevar had a 3.52 ERA and averaged 7.7 punch-outs per nine innings. On Monday, while throwing hard, his pitches lacked movement in surrendering two runs on four hits over three innings and was taken deep by Conor Gillaspie. This is an important year for the 6’6″ right-hander who turns 29 in September and needs to show that he’s more than just another arm on what might be an ordinary club.

For the first time in memory, Kansas City has enough quality pitchers in camp and they will actually have to send somebody down because they were not just quite good enough to make the big club, instead of choosing the lesser of evils. Manager Ned Yost has talked about the competition being extremely “stiff”, using that word four times in the same sentence recently. While it is debatable about the exact quality of this contingent, it is a big upgrade over prior years.

Another huge positive for the Royals would be the return to form of closer Joakim Soria, who suffered declining strikeout numbers and less command a season ago. If Soria does not return to previous form, the match of him and new setup man Jonathan Broxton could cause a sharp increase in the need for Maalox in the Kansas City area. Yost would be foolish not to maximize the talents of last year’s setup star Greg Holland, who struck out three of the four San Fran hitters he faced Monday.

Any lineup that includes Billy Butler and Eric Hosmer is a terrific place to start. If Alex Gordon can have the same kind of breakout season he did last year and be a touch more selective at the dish, Kansas City’s offense will be capable of scoring runs in bunches. However, to surpass the oddsmakers total of 80 projected wins and finish second in the AL Central, the pitching has to improve overall and more Royals at the top and the bottom of the order have to be on base with greater regularity. 

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