Tag: Tim Lincecum

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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Tim Lincecum: Giants Offer Ace 2-Year, $40 Million Deal

Eager to avoid arbitration, the San Francisco Giants have made an offer to ace Tim Lincecum.

Tim Brown of Yahoo Sports is reporting via Twitter that the Giants have made a two-year offer to Lincecum worth $40 million. 

Lincecum is a two-time Cy Young Award winner (2008, 2009) and is controlled by the Giants through the 2013 season. 

 

What it means?

From the perspective of whether or not Lincecum is a Giant for the next two years, this means very little. But from the perspective of not having an arbitrator determine how much the Giants pay, this is big for the Giants. 

Brown is right in that the $4 million dollar gap can be resolved. But even if the Giants take the counter offer from the Lincecum side, San will now be in a better position to try to lock up fellow ace Matt Cain, who will be a free agent after the 2012 season. 

Either of the contracts would be massive, especially for a pitcher, but Lincecum has shown himself worthy of it. His two Cy Young Awards make him the face of the franchise, he has a career record of 69-41, and was integral in bringing the franchise the 2010 World Series. 

Whether Lincecum takes the Giants offer, they take his, or the two agree to something in between, it’s a good fit for both sides. Lincecum will certainly be handsomely rewarded, and money will be clear for the Giants to not only lock Cain up, but to also potentially bring in other players.

 

What’s next?

From both perspectives, it would be best to get this thing locked up and not go to arbitration. If they can’t, then an arbitrator will determine Lincecum’s 2012 contract, as well as his 2013 deal if the two sides can’t agree to something. 

While Lincecum is the face of the franchise, his production has dropped in recent years. The numbers tell that story.

  W-L    ERA    K   
2008    18-5 2.62 265  
2009 15-7 2.48 261
2010 16-10 3.43 231
2011 13-14 2.74 220

The strikeouts are the most alarming, as they coincide with a drop in velocity. While only is only 27, his small stature will keep him from sustaining such dominant power numbers.

What all of that means is that if he has even a slight drop in 2012, his arbitration number in 2013 will go down. So from a financial perspective, avoiding arbitration would best serve the Giants in 2012, and Lincecum in 2013. 

The good thing for both sides is that the gap between the two sides is not at all alarming. There is no reason to believe that they won’t work together and get this thing done soon.

 

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San Francisco Giants: Is Tim Lincecum Better Than Juan Marichal?

 

It seems like a loaded question from the outset, but is Tim Lincecum better than Juan Marichal?

For those unfamiliar with San Francisco Giants history (note: San Francisco Giants), Juan Marichal is considered by many people to be the best pitcher in franchise history.

Tim Lincecum’s astonishing success in his brief tenure with the Giants, however, suggests that Marichal’s position on the throne may have been supplanted by The Freak.

Let’s take a look at basic, raw statistics to get an overall image of the comparison:

 

Tim Lincecum:

5 Seasons:           69-41, 2.98 ERA, 1028 IP, 1127 K, 1.118 WHIP, 7.4 H/9

Juan Marichal:

16 Seasons:        243-142, 2.89 ERA, 3507 IP, 2303 K, 1.101 WHIP, 8.1 H/9

 

You might note the curious omission of two facts: Tim Lincecum has already won two National League Cy Young Awards, while Juan Marichal never finished higher than eighth in the rankings, and Juan Marichal threw 244 complete games, 236 more than Tim Lincecum.

These statistics have been omitted due to era (time period, not earned run average) differences. When Marichal pitched, the Cy Young Award was still a relatively new award and pitchers were still frequently considered for the MVP. In 1968, Marichal finished fifth in MVP voting. He finished in the top 10 in 1965 and 1966 as well. Furthermore, the Cy Young Award was given to only one pitcher in each league until 1967. Marichal also had the misfortune of having his peak years at the same time that Sandy Koufax experienced his. Had Marichal pitched today, one could make an argument that, even with adjusted statistics, he would have won the Cy Young Award at least once.

The 244 complete games are an impressive statistic in and of themselves, but must be placed into proper context. Personally, I consider complete games and (to a lesser extent) shutouts to be essentially useless when one considers statistical comparison between eras. Closers, in the sense that the term is used today, did not exist during Marichal’s career. Perhaps a better metric would be innings pitched per start:

Lincecum:           156 Games, 1028 IP, 6.63 IP per game

Marichal:             471 Games, 3507 IP, 7.44 IP per game

Consider, also, that Lincecum has one relief appearance and Marichal had 14 career relief appearances, so the “real” values are slightly higher. What these statistics mean is that an average start for Lincecum is a 6.2 inning outing and the average start for Marichal took him through 7.1 innings.

The next step is to prorate Tim Lincecum’s statistics. In the interest of computational simplicity, I will project that Tim Lincecum will maintain his performance for another ten seasons. Juan Marichal’s 16th season was a forgettable two-start stint with the Los Angeles Dodgers, so for argument’s sake I will consider Marichal’s career to be 15 seasons long as well. In this case, the statistics come out as such:

Lincecum:           207-123, 2.98 ERA, 3084 IP, 3381 K, 1.118 WHIP, 7.4 H/9

Marichal:             243-142, 2.89 ERA, 3507 IP, 2303 K, 1.101 WHIP, 8.1 H/9

Pay attention to the comparable winning percentages, earned run averages and WHIP. Note that strikeouts, admittedly a “fashion” statistic (although not useless in certain game situations), land Lincecum among the all-time leaders in that category. The league ERA disparities do not factor in much either, with Lincecum actually having a slight career edge in ERA+.

Whether or not Tim Lincecum can continue his dominance will ultimately determine how he stacks up against the likes of Juan Marichal by the time his career is over. Other slight-of-build pitchers have had enduring success, however, Pedro Martinez and Orel Hershiser being good examples. It is also important, for comparison’s sake, that Tim Lincecum remain with the Giants.

What these statistics do suggest is that, at this point in his career, Tim Lincecum is at least as dominant as Juan Marichal was during his best years as a Giant. 

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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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Tim Lincecum: 7 Reasons the New York Yankees Need to Trade for Him

Tim Lincecum has been reluctant to sign a contract extension with the San Francisco Giants this offseason, and since his value is as high as it will ever be, the Giants may need to trade him. They will also be able to shed the huge salary he will garner in arbitration over the next few years, and with that money the Giants could rebuild by signing a multitude of players.

Lets see why the New York Yankees should be the first team in line if Lincecum is put on the trade block.

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San Francisco Giants: Manager Bruce Bochy "Botches" Another One

Bruce Bochy is consistent, you have to give him that. The San Francisco Giants manager seems to be getting worse before he gets better.

A couple of days ago my esteemed colleague Barry Shiller wrote this piece about Bruce Bochy’s blind spots. He was too kind. I’m not that kind.

In tonight’s 2-1 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers, Bochy showed again why he has no place managing the San Francisco Giants, let alone the Bad News Bears.

In the bottom of the eighth inning, Giants catcher Chris Stewart bunted for a base hit with one out. Nice job by Stewart to get something going for a San Francisco Giants offense that had been stifled yet again, this time by Cy Young candidate Clayton Kershaw.

The obvious move, the move every San Francisco Giants fan and many non fans knew was coming next was to pinch run for Stewart with Giants speedster Darren Ford. Who can forget Ford single-handedly taking over a game in the late innings last year by scoring a run with his legs and winning the game for the light-hitting Giants?

Up came pinch hitter Mark DeRosa. No Ford. DeRosa popped out for the second out of the inning. Then Stewart jammed his ankle on an attempted pickoff play (after a strike was already on the batter, Justin Christian) and had to leave the game. Ahh, time to bring in Ford, who promptly stole second base. Christian struck out to end the inning.

Wouldn’t it have made more sense to bring in the speedster Ford right away, have him steal second, possibly even try to steal third and put the Giants in a situation with a runner in scoring position with less than two outs?

The Giants have three catchers on the roster, four if you include Pablo Sandoval. Why in the world was Bochy letting Stewart run in that crucial situation? Trust me, if Stewart hadn’t gotten injured, Ford would have never gotten in. Why? Your guess is as good as mine; maybe you should ask Bruce Bochy.

In the top of the ninth the Dodgers got a leadoff single by their catcher Rod Barajas. Don Mattingly (not exactly god’s gift to managing) did what any manager with a brain in his head would do: he pinch ran his fastest guy on the bench, former GIan Eugenio Velez, for his slow-footed catcher.

Velez was bunted to second by Justin Sellers and went to third on a wild pitch by Santiago Casilla. Then the speed came in when Velez scored on a short one hopper to Jeff Keppinger, whose throw was just a bit late and the go-ahead (and eventual winning) run scored.

The same situation—the catcher gets a hit—but different approaches. Mattingly does the sound thing and runs for the catcher, Bochy does the unthinkable and leaves his catcher in. Granted, there was one out for the Giants and none for the Dodgers, but that doesn’t take Bochy off the hook.

Bochy was not playing to win, he was playing not to lose, keeping in the better defensive catcher Stewart (until he got hurt that is). Yes, Eli Whiteside let the wild pitch get by him, on a ball that Stewart may have been able to block, but the Giants have a third catcher, Hector Sanchez, on the roster. Oh, that’s right, he’s a rookie, can’t play him Boch.

And Tim Lincecum is victimized yet again, first by the Giants’ bad hitting and second by another terrible Bochy non-decision.

Which brings up the point of my article last week, San Francisco Giants Should Fire Bruce Bochy. The guy is just a bad manager. Yes, bad managers can win the World Series, and Bochy is living proof. 

My new nickname for Bochy is an adaptation of his name, Botch-ey, because he botches things. The extra “e” stands for empty. Botch-ey has come up empty this season big time for the champs. Was there some sort of magic in the dip?

Up eight-and-a-half games and rolling, the Arizona Diamondbacks aren’t going to let the Giants back in the race. Bochy shouldn’t be making it so easy for them. Now, if it doesn’t cause the Giants manager too many heart palpitations, time to play the young guys every day.

Season over.

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Arizona Diamondbacks: Ian Kennedy Set to Duel with Tim Lincecum in San Francisco

The Arizona Diamondbacks send Ian Kennedy to the mound against San Francisco Giants ace Tim Lincecum Saturday night. This is a must see matchup for any baseball fan. 

The two men are both NL Cy Young candidates and this is easily the best battle in MLB this weekend. 

The Diamondbacks had their nine-game win streak snapped by the Giants Friday night, 6-2.

The Diamondbacks are now 78-60 on the season, with a five-game lead over the Giants in the NL West standings.

This is a make-or-break series for the Giants as they’re now playing out of desperation. The Diamondbacks have control of the NL West and don’t want to relinquish any ground to the Giants.

After all, the Giants are the defending World Series champions and they won’t go down without a fight. The Diamondbacks don’t want to give any momentum to the Giants and would really do themselves a lot of good by winning the remaining two games in the series.

Ian Kennedy looks to straighten things out for the Diamondbacks. The pitcher is an NL-best 17-4 with a 3.03 ERA on the season. His last start in San Francisco earned him a victory after eight solid innings. Kennedy is 9-1 in his last 10 starts and hasn’t allowed more than three earned runs in any of those outings.

Giants pitcher Tim Lincecum has been the tough-luck pitcher of the year in MLB. He’s 12-11 on the season despite his 2.58 ERA, which is fourth-best in the National League.

A microcosm of Lincecum’s season has come against the Diamondbacks. In two starts against the divisional foe, Lincecum is 0-1 with a 1.20 ERA, a .80 WHIP and a .140 batting average against.

The Diamondbacks have their work cut out for them against the Tim Lincecum and the Giants Saturday night. A win tonight against San Francisco’s best could be the knockout blow that Arizona is looking for. 

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Giants Need to Extend Tim Lincecum—Now—Before "Torture" Becomes Reality

The past three weeks of San Francisco Giants baseball has renewed the fabled “torture” theme that drove last year’s surprising playoff run all the way to becoming World Series Champions for the first time since the team moved out West from New York in 1958.

This year is different though. The “torture” will last well past the conclusion of the 2011 World Series, whether the Giants participate or not.

August proved to be a difficult month for the Giants in 2010, when they managed only 13 wins. The 2011 edition has not been any easier.

Players and executives within the organization are joined by the fans, who are holding out hope that this recent rough stretch the team has experienced—marred by injury after injury—will prove to be just another hiccup on the road to hot September and another lengthy postseason run with designs on defending their 2010 title.

The Giants and Arizona Diamondbacks are each playing out the remainder of the schedules against clubs that will not be featured in the postseason.

The Diamondbacks, ahead in the NL West standing by 2.5 games, are currently in the midst of a three-game losing streak and playing the pitching-tough Atlanta Braves—the current NL Wild Card leaders—have six more games against the Giants.

San Francisco will need to take advantage of those two series if they are to push themselves back into October baseball.

For the sake of Giants fans around the Bay Area, they better take advantage of this window of opportunity because this offseason could mark the “beginning of the end,” so to speak.

To make a push this season—to win now—the Giants mortgaged a portion of their future by trading top minor league pitching prospect Zach Wheeler to the New York Mets for Carlos Beltran.

If they fail to capitalize on that move—i.e. missing out on the postseason, Beltran is a free agent after the season, much in the same way he left Houston post-2004 after joining midseason—they could find themselves regretting the decision. 

Particularly if their current ace and two-time NL Cy Young Award winner Tim Lincecum chooses to leave town via free agency.

The two-year contract that Lincecum signed with the Giants in his previous trip to arbitration, earned by achieving Super-2 status, comes to a conclusion after the final out of the 2011 World Series.

Lincecum still has two years of arbitration remaining, so he will be back in black and orange for the 2012 and 2013 seasons, but that could be the end of his tenure as a San Francisco Giant, and Bay Area fans may need to come to terms with this reality.

“I feel as though the Lincecum people were put off by the arbitration process, they didn’t like it,” Greg Papa said in his weekly radio show on 95.7 FM The Game with host John Lund this past Friday.

Past frustrations, continued success and a lack of run-support were all reasons that Papa gave in a 10-minute segment where he explained his belief that the Giants need to lock up Lincecum to a long-term, top-tiered contract this offseason, rather than waiting until his arbitration years have expired.

By then, it might be too late.

“If they don’t [sign him], and he goes to arbitration again, I think he’ll play out the system and go to free agency,” Papa said.

“Even if they offer him that type of deal right now, I don’t know what he will do.”

The type of deal that Papa was referring to was in the ballpark of Cliff Lee’s current contract with the Philadelphia Phillies, signed before the 2011 season (five years, $120 million).

Few would argue that Lincecum doesn’t deserve that kind of money. But it could be out of the Giants’ price range thanks to crippling contracts given to the underperforming Barry Zito and Aaron Rowand.

“The payroll’s $120 million, but can you go to $180 million? I don’t think they’re going to do that,” said Papa.

There’s an argument to be made that Lincecum makes the team more money than he costs them. This has proved true during his tenure with the club since being called up in 2007.

Following the World Series victory, they may not need his name-value to boost merchandise sales, and all home games have already sold out in 2011.

Eventually the World Series effect will wear off though, and the Giants will need to make a decision about how much Lincecum earns the team versus costs them.

While he doesn’t make fans stand at attention—whether it be putting down their Garlic fries or stopping their walk along the right-field promenade like Barry Bonds once did—Lincecum’s pitching appearances are nothing short of spectacular. He has created a buzz around his pitching days.

Do the Giants want to lose that?

The reality for San Francisco though, is that they may not have much of a choice. By trading Wheeler, the Giants lost their next “ace” who may have been capable of replacing Lincecum.

Drafting the next Tim Lincecum is no guaranteed thing. After all, who saw that tiny, frail kid from Washington becoming such a dominant force?

He provides more to the Giants than just on-field production. He is a personality, the personality of the Giants, the most recognizable player on the team and their MVP.

Attending a game at AT&T Park, you’re likely to see as many kids wearing Lincecum wigs as Pablo Sandoval-inspired Panda hats. Maybe more.

There are two things the Giants front office must focus on this offseason—and over the next two years—to ensure that the face of their franchise remains with the team.

First, they absolutely need to offer Lincecum a contract that approaches the Cliff Lee and C.C. Sabathia levels, recognizing him amongst the best in baseball and compensating him as such.

He deserves—and needs—to be paid higher than the contract given to Barry Zito, who was left off the playoff roster in 2010 and has never justified his price tag as a Giant.

The Giants should give Lincecum an escalating salary over the next two seasons, covering his arbitration years, with a five-year extension tacked onto the end (making the total deal a seven-year extension).

It’s risky, but, “You have to give him the money, and you have to do it now. I don’t care if you got burned by Barry Zito, you can’t lose this guy,” said Lund during the radio program.

Second, the Giants need to address their offensive woes and give Lincecum a chance to start building his win total.

Ten times this season the Giants have failed to score a run while Lincecum was on the mound; three times they have been shutout.

Lincecum is losing wins that he deserves. While it may not be an issue he is concerned with at the moment, it will start infiltrating his thought process as he starts to think about his legacy in the game.

“The next contract he signs will impact his legacy in the sport,” said Papa.

“When you’re a great player like these guys are, that big contract will be years enough where it will determine if you go to Cooperstown or not. How many wins you gonna get. I know the new sabermetrics, wins are overrated. NO THEY’RE NOT (see Felix Hernandez 2010 AL Cy Young). You need to win. You pitch, your team needs to win.”

It’s an argument that has merit, and Brian Sabean had better address it in the offseason.

There is little reason for Lincecum to agree to a long-term extension until he sees the Giants start putting the pieces around him that will give him the support he needs to compete for a 162-game season.

Any more dominant pitching performances where allowing one earned run still ends up in a loss may start to wear on “Timmy.”

Trading for Carlos Beltran at the trade deadline was a good move (had he not got injured), but Lincecum deserves that kind of hitting power in the lineup.

Papa added, “You can make the Hall of Fame without winning, but the reason the Red Sox and Yankees get all those guys is because they offer you the chance to pitch in the playoffs and pitch in the World Series, and that’s what Lincecum wants.”

“You don’t think the Yankees would like him in pinstripes?”

A one-two combination of Sabathia, Lincecum, or vice-versa, is enough to make most teams quake.

A second World Series title would go a long way to building the case that Lincecum is one of those rare generational players that could end his entire career in a Giants uniform.

Ultimately there will come a time where he will start thinking about what he could accomplish if he jumped ship and joined an organization that would give him the opportunity to consistently win 20 games and provide the kind of run support he deserves.

This offseason, Sabean will need to start by putting together a lineup that can support his already-impressive starting rotation. Once he has begun to address that issue, he needs to do his best to find a way to avoid a second arbitration process with Lincecum or risk losing his superstar after 2013 to free agency.

He’s already started. While it generated little press, the Giants just signed their second-round pick in the 2011 player draft, Andrew Susac, a catcher with an above-average arm and plus-power at the plate (see the end of the article), as reported by the San Francisco Chronicle’s Bruce Jenkins in Saturday’s edition.

Lincecum will get his money—just maybe not with the Giants.

As much as he enjoys playing in San Francisco, he may jump at an opportunity to secure his place in Cooperstown while collecting rings with another franchise. And not shaking his head as he looks at his box-score from the night before, resulting in another one-run loss.

As Papa summarized in his talk with Lund, “There’s a point in time when you have to make a business decision [not] for your bank account, for your legacy.”

The same can be said of the Giants this offseason.

The deal that Lincecum arrives at spring training with in 2012 will tell us a lot about the direction of the franchise beyond the coming two seasons.

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San Francisco Giants: Have We Hit Rock-Bottom Yet? 5 Clues

Yeeech.

Losing three of four in Atlanta was disappointing. 

But getting steamrolled by the hapless 40-85 Houston Astros in the opener of a three-game weekend series? That’s senseless. And pitiful.

Here’s senseless: Pablo Sandoval hurts his left shoulder twisting a stubborn soda bottle cap and is out of Friday’s lineup (just joshing; he hurt it swinging the bat Thursday in Atlanta).

Here’s pitiful: the Giants infield Friday consisted of Huff at 1B, Fontenot at 2B, Tejada at SS, DeRosa at 3B. I affectionately call that group the O-Gang, as in: nO offense, Old, and Oh-my-gosh-these-guys-look-awful.

Sorry for the sarcasm. How else are we going to get through this?

Atlanta did defeat Arizona Friday, so the Giants NL West deficit remains two-and-a-half games. It only feels like it’s seven.

So what comes next? Locusts in the clubhouse? Bed bugs in the players’ hotel rooms? No cold beer at the hotel bar for Aubrey Huff? Stay tuned.

Meanwhile, here are five things to watch for as the Giants continue this dreadful road trip. 

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Houston’s Randy Johnson (Wandy Rodriguez) Blanks Hapless San Francisco Giants

I think people are starting to get the idea. If you don’t get the idea yet, then you are either an exceptionally optimistic fan, or delusional.

The San Francisco Giants are not a good baseball team.

Perhaps they were at one point in the season. Perhaps they were until the acquisition of Carlos Beltran. But they certainly aren’t now.

Granted, they have extraordinary pitching. Ryan Vogelsong threw seven innings of two earned-run ball, and remains second in the league in ERA.

The key word in the previous sentence is earned. Errors by Mark DeRosa and Nate Schierholtz enabled the Houston Astros to score three unearned runs off of Vogelsong. Guillermo Mota’s bogus home run to Bogusevic extended the lead to 6-0, which turned out to be the final score of the ballgame.

Realistically, though, it wouldn’t have mattered if Vogelsong had pitched a shutout—he still would have received a no decision at best.

The San Francisco Giants were completely baffled by left hander Wandy Rodriguez, who, like so many pitchers, had his finest outing of the season against the Giants’ hapless offense.

While the Giants are still only 2.5 games out of first place behind the Arizona Diamondbacks, the deficit seems nigh insurmountable.

In fact, a more realistic goal for the Giants this season than the playoffs is to finish the season above .500. At 67-59, the Giants would need to go 14-22 to finish the season at .500. Given the way this team has been playing recently, even that goal seems lofty.

The excellent Bleacher Report sportswriter Manny Randhawa will have to search deep into his bag of tricks to justify the Giants’ “excellence” in losing 6-0 to a team that was 44 games under .500 coming into the ballgame.

“It’s only just one game.” But is it? Is it really? Or is this game just an accurate representation of a disturbing trend?

One thing is certain: People should be fired after tonight’s travesty. Or at least demoted. Or, if Bruce Bochy prefers, they should come up with a mysterious foot strain. Mark DeRosa and Aaron Rowand are two examples of this type of person who does not belong on a Major League baseball field, contract or no. It’s already a “sunk cost.”

Am I overreacting? Is this a knee jerk reaction? I don’t think so. These are calculated statements backed up by on-field performances and statistics.

The Giants need to dramatically overhaul their lineup to put a competitive team on the field, or risk seeing their attendance and reputation plummet.

Not to mention, the Giants should be interested in keeping the sole bright spot on the team (pitching) intact. With free agency looming in the not too distant future for Matt Cain and Tim Lincecum, do you think either starter would be willing to play for a team wherein they get no offensive support?

Regardless of the pitchers’ unflappable coolness in the clubhouse in the face of losing and shouldering of responsibility for each loss, you know that these pitchers want to win. Not only do they want to win, they want to win championships.

And no team ranked last in the league in offense has ever made the playoffs, let alone won a championship.

In conclusion, if the Giants come out and score seven runs tomorrow, please save your “I Told You So’s.” After scoring seven runs against the Braves in game three of their series, they have been shut out twice consecutively.

For those keeping track, that is an average of 2.33 runs per game.

Even the lowly Giants are capable of scoring seven runs once in a while. A playoff caliber professional baseball club, however, will perform on a regular basis and demonstrate at least a modicum of consistency.

Madison Bumgarner (7-11, 3.49ERA) pitches next against Jordan Lyles (1-7, 5.31ERA). The ingredients are in place for a 5-3 Giants victory, if each pitcher pitches to their potential. Something tells me, however, that Bumgarner will lower his ERA once again, and loss number twelve will materialize as he is out-dueled by Roger Clemens…er…Jordan Lyles. 

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