Looking Forward [to the NLCS] and Looking Back [to the NLDS]

 

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Once again, I’ve been terrible about not blogging during the most crucial time in the baseball season, especially considering my team is still in it.

I guess after watching both champagne showers on TV, hearing more Lincecum f-bombs and going to both NLDS home games for the San Francisco Giants, it still hasn’t completely sunk in that my team is in the postseason, let alone in the National League Championship Series.

Before I move on to the Phillies and the much-anticipated Lincecum-Halladay (The Freak vs. The Doc) matchup this Saturday, I figure I should talk about the National League Division Series with the Atlanta Braves.

To preface, I was fortunate enough to be able to attend both these games with my older brother Ryan (see previous entries with the “For the Love of the Game” column link), and I know it was an experience that neither of us will soon forget. On the train ride over to the ballpark, my brother realized that he hadn’t been to a Giants playoff game since the 1989 earthquake World Series game, and I meanwhile had never been to one.

rallyflags2010.jpgI could not have asked for a better atmosphere; there’s no way I can eloquently encapsulate it all. Instead I remember it all in little bits and pieces: the sea of orange towels waving; how when our PA announcer Renel Brooks-Moon said “Your 2010 National League West Division Championship San Francisco Giants” it finally sunk in with me that my team was in the playoffs; and of course, the strikeouts. I remember how often my brother and I turned to each other and high-fived, me standing on my toes to reach his outstretched palm and saying, “Oh my God!” and “Can you believe this?!” over and over.

This is my favorite scene from the night (besides the end of the game, of course): Tim Lincecum completely shutting it down in the 8th inning before coming off the field to “Dynamite,” playing in the background. At over 100 pitches for the night and with Bruce Bochy’s typically conservative managing style, I figured this game was now in the hands of The Cardiac Kid himself, Brian Wilson. But Timmy is The Freak, after all, and so he came trotting out of the dugout in the middle of the ninth to a collective standing ovation, rally rag-waving, screaming crowd and, of course, shut the Braves down one more time to end it. 9 innings, no runs, 14 strikeouts. At the last out I turned to my brother and hugged him, knocking my cap off in my exuberance. Later we would both say it was the best-pitched game we had ever seen in person, and definitely one of the best games we’d each ever been to.
 I left AT&T Park that night with a scratchy throat and an unquenchable excitement for the next game.

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Then came Game 2, and little did I know that I would be leaving 24 Willie Mays Plaza that night with the complete opposite feeling as I did after Game 1.

It started off well enough; Matt Cain had a good first inning, and then Pat “The Bat” Burrell hit a three-run homer into the left field bleachers to give us an early lead. I was screaming my head off again and waving my pom-pom (by the way: rally rags > rally pom-poms) and shouting, “Po-sey’s be-tter!” at the top of my lungs every time Jason Heyward came to bat. I had that, “What could possibly go wrong?” feeling, and of course whenever that happens Murphy’s Law pretty much dictates that something will go wrong.

Matt Cain was his usual workhorse self and pitched well enough to win (see <a href="'http://www.facebook.com/v/484205710738‘>this video of him leaving to a standing ovation–not great because I took it with my iPhone, FYI), and who could’ve expected the complete collapse of our set-up guy Sergio Romo and our closer Brian Wilson? And then for our potential Rookie of the Year Buster Posey to come up with 1 out and the bases loaded and hit into a double play?! It was just unfathomable, and I knew when we didn’t win it there that we wouldn’t recover. Call me negative if you want, but I was just being realistic, and I just didn’t feel that we would come back after that. And when Troy Glaus hit that towering home run into McCovey Cove…well, that cinched it right there.

Leaving that ballpark after the final out of Game 2…wow. I had never felt so dejected over Giants baseball before. The last time I remember having that pit-in-my-stomach, knocked-out feeling was the walk-off grand slam game in Colorado last year, and before that it was probably the Steve Finley grand slam game in 2004 (notice a pattern here with the grand slams?). I couldn’t help but feel like that would be the last time I walked out of AT&T Park for the 2010 season, and I would bet that many of the 44,000+ Giants fans leaving the ballpark that night felt the same way.

I was really grateful to my brother, though, for being optimistic and talking me out of my little bout of misery after that game. Usually I’m aware of the fact that baseball, of course, isn’t everything, even though it is a significant part of my life; however after that loss I couldn’t help but feel totally dejected. My brother helped me keep the faith in the orange and black, though and made me remember that the best part of coming to these games, win or lose, was to share this experience with him. Now, sitting here in Santa Cruz on a warm Thursday afternoon a few days after my Giants won Game 4 to move on to the NLCS, I couldn’t be happier that I’ll get another chance to wave my rally rag and scream my lungs out for my home team with my older brother–and my mom as well this time–by my side.

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…so now it’s time to turn our attention to the National League Championship Series. I’m definitely weary of having to face the Phillies (actually, weary is an understatement; I’m pretty concerned), but I feel like our pitching staff can definitely match up against theirs. Our offense? Well, that I’m not so sure about. We were lucky with several of the runs we got against the Braves in that series; the first and last games were all about errors and a couple crucial missed calls by the umpires that went our way (aka Buster Posey sliding into second in Game 1 and how he was called safe when replays showed he was out). We can’t depend on those kinds of gift plays against this well-oiled Philadelphia machine, who has proven themselves time and time again these past few years in the postseason. Our pitching staff and defense has to be near-perfect and we can’t strand runners in the few RISP situations I expect we’ll get.

I don’t want to get my expectations too high; I’m definitely not invisioning the parade down Market Street already or anything like that. But I feel like my team, which has been labeled this chippy, lucky-to-be-here underdog by so much of the national media, has a legitimate shot against the Fightin’ Phils.

Here’s looking forward to Saturday and what I hope will be a great series for the world to watch.

Euphoria

I’m supposed to be reading the adventures of Don Quixote de la Mancha in time for my two o’clock lecture tomorrow, but I think my professor will understand if I don’t quite get through it: he is, after all, a San Francisco Giants fan.

After jumping up and down and pumping my fists in the air in some uncoordinated, spastic dance over and over again in my Santa Cruz apartment this afternoon; after watching my team (MY TEAM!!! The one I adopted eight years ago and stuck with through the foggiest of nights and dreariest of days) run laps around the field and bathe in champagne showers (and drop f-bombs on the air), I sit here in front of my computer at close to two in the morning, unable to wipe the smile from my face.

We did it. I know some people scoff at the tendency of fans like myself to use the word “we” when referring to their team of choice, but I truly think the fanbase is the tenth man on the field. We don’t do any of the pitching or the hitting, but we coax them on from our couches, our barstools, our stadium seats. We may get frustrated at times (many times, in fact; after all, the 2010 adopted slogan for this team was “torture”), but us diehards stand by them.

I can’t remember being prouder than I am today to say I’m a San Francisco Giants fan, or just simply a fan of baseball for that matter. There’s so many lasting images that will stay with me from just today, let alone this week or this entire season, and I can’t possibly sort through them all in my mind or write them all down in an articulate manner. I won’t be able to hold onto every single memory from today no matter how hard I try. But I know I will always remember standing in front of my TV screen, wringing my hands together as Brian Wilson struck out the final batter and Buster Posey threw off his mask and ran towards our closer to congratulate him on winning the National League West crown.

I don’t want to get too negative or bitter, but I did have a definite, “Told you so” attitude towards the many “experts” who counted the Giants out this season, who had them finishing in fourth place–just in front of the San Diego Padres, of course–in the division. I guess I can’t blame them too much; none of us knew that this scrappy team of predominantly veteran hitters and guys labeled as “journeymen” or “wash-outs” would click so well, or that we would manage to pull all these guys off the scrap heaps who would contribute in such a big way. But after last year’s surprisingly good season, I knew that they could pull it off this year.

I could just wax poetic about today and my love of baseball for another hour or so; could talk again about how much I adore this game (for anyone who may have stumbled upon this blog today who hasn’t read my “For the Love of the Game” column that I keep reposting, I’m going to pimp it again, just because I’m pretty proud of how it turned out; read it here). I could talk about the playoff matchup against the Atlanta Braves starting Thursday (which I’ll be attending with my older brother, who I haven’t seen since Lincecum bobblehead day in July–aka way too long ago), but I can’t even think that far ahead yet. All I can do right now is sink my head into my pillow, listen to “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” one more time, and sleep soundly, now that Game 162 is in the books, to be followed by at least three more.

“Nobody Said It Was Easy/No One Ever Said It Would Be This Hard”

Before the Giants took on the San Diego Padres this afternoon, I tweeted that no matter what happened in today’s game, I love baseball and will miss it like crazy whenever the season ends for my team.

But while I love this unpredictable, beautiful game, it also drives me completely crazy so much of the time. I know the Giants’ unofficial motto for the 2010 season is “Giants baseball: TORTURE!” (as coined by Duane Kuiper), but these past couple games have taken it to a whole new level.

One win away. One win to clinch the National League West, to make the playoffs for the first time in seven years. The momentum was completely on our side–we’d just swept the Diamondbacks, whereas the Padres were coming off a series at home against the Chicago Cubs in which they lost three out of four. The series was at home in front of a packed ballpark full of orange-clad fans waving rally rags. Matt Cain was pitching on his 26th birthday yesterday. We even had Steve Perry in the house today to sing “Don’t Stop Believin’” live, for God’s sake.

But the Padres showed some grit and determination, I’ll give them that. Last night they got some key hits to chase Matt Cain out of the game early, and today Barry Zito…well, he just sucked. Really. Two free runs off bases-loaded walks? There’s no excuse for that, at all. Maybe in a game in May against the Milwaukee Brewers, but not here. Not now.

So instead of hearing the sweet ballad of Tony Bennett’s “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” at the end of today’s game, I have this line from Coldplay’s “The Scientist” stuck in my head: ‘Nobody said it was easy/No one ever said it would be this hard.’

I knew this season, this push to the playoffs wasn’t going to be simple by any means. So many stars had to allign for this team, who coming into the season didn’t even know for certain who their right fielder was going to be (it was John Bowker on Opening Day, in case you forgot…he’s now playing out the final games of the season with the Pirates). We had so many question marks, so many skeptics, and yet here we are. I guess all I could have asked for is that Game 162 matter for my team, and now I’m going to get that tomorrow.

But I can’t help but feel this queasy, sinking feeling in my stomach, this feeling that I jinxed my team somehow by all but checking off the Giants as the division winners in my mind before the first game of this series, that I upset the baseball gods by not wearing my rally cap in a crucial moment or something simple like that. I know to a non-baseball fan that reasoning probably sounds stupid, but if you’re a diehard like me (or at least as paranoid as I am), you’re probably nodding your head knowlingly right now.

I can’t eloquently emphasize how important tomorrow’s game is, and I don’t think I need to; if you’re a Padres fan, a Giants fan or just a plain old fan of baseball, you know. I have the same sense of insecurity about putting this crucial game into Jonathan Sanchez’s hands as I did about Barry Zito today; after all, I do call Sanchez a “Jekyll and Hyde” pitcher. And Mat Latos is the ace of the Padres’ staff.

But despite all that and all the odds that are seemingly stacked against the Giants and all the nerves that are stirring up within me now, I guess this motto always remains true: don’t stop believin’.

The Next Six Games

I’m such a mixed bag of emotions right now.

It’s an unfamiliar feeling, this pennant fever I’ve contracted. It stayed away for a good four years, and I thought I began to felt the symptoms of it late last summer after a grand slam off the unlikeliest of bats–Edgar Renteria’s–but they went away for good after Jeff Baker sent a Brian Wilson pitch deep into the night one early fall evening.

But now, with six games to decide my team’s fate, I am full-on diagnosed with pennant fever. The thought of the next week, hearing people talk about it on the radio or in class or on the bus, makes me grin with a nervous, giddy excitement. I’d say I feel like a kid again, but as a twenty-year-old college student I still haven’t strayed from my childlike enthusiasm over my sport, my team, my city.

I know that over these two remaining series I’m going to be watching as if the Giants have already made the playoffs–with my hands wringed together, my stomach churning, my heart beating hard as Brian Wilson comes in to close out the ninth inning (although to be fair, that happens to every Giants fan seemingly every time our closer comes in). I’m also going to adopt the Chicago Cubs as my honorary team for the next three games, as they’re playing the San Diego Padres at Petco Park through Thursday before the Padres come north to San Francisco for what will probably prove to be the decididing series for the NL West crown.

At the same time, though I keep reminding myself to stay grounded, so not get my hopes up too high, to not “jinx” the Giants by already guaranteeing a postseason appearance in my mind. As my mom and most of my friends will surely remind me, this team has broken my heart plenty of times before, and part of me keeps telling myself not to expect anything different. But I can’t help but walk around Santa Cruz with a smile as I adorn my Giants t-shirt or put on my J.T Snow autographed baseball cap, thinking about the possibilities that the next few weeks could hold in store for my team, who was so poorly regarded and counted out of this season by so many so-called baseball experts. I want to prove them wrong; I want my miniature imitation of a postgame champagne locker room celebration at my apartment in Santa Cruz this weekend (which will probably just consist me jumping up and down and screaming, “We made the playoffs!” to anyone that cares to listen).

Although I’m going to be nervous as hell over these remaining games, I’m still going to do the best I can to really take it all in and treat them like they’re the last few times I’m going to see my team until next season, just in case that’s what happens. Because more than I care about the playoffs and some flashy hardware, I just love the game itself.

I can’t wait for these next six games, and although I already want to know what the outcome is, I’m going to sit in front of the TV or radio, cross my fingers and hope for the best.

Timmy, Giants Baffled by San Diego Padres

 
lincecumbadgame (3).jpgAfter Saturday’s momentum-swinging (or so us Giants fans hoped) victory over the San Diego Padres, many people billed Tim Lincecum’s Sunday afternoon rubber match start as crucial, perhaps even the most important of his young career considering the ramifications that winning a series against the division-leading Padres would hold. Fans were tentatively cautious that our ace could go out and return to his Cy Young form, or at least get through six solid-ish innings without getting hit too hard.

But instead the above picture of him walking off the mound for good in the 4th inning tells the story. It is Lincecum, the back-to-back Cy Young winner, the one nicknamed “The Franchise,” heading back to the dugout with his head down after giving up six runs without getting through even four innings.

It’s definitely a cause for concern now. I know that Timmy and us Giants fans hold him to such high standards since he has performed so extraordinarily his first full years in the big leagues. And when he’s had starts that for most pitchers would be good but not fantastic, everyone’s asked, “What’s wrong with Lincecum?”

But after a string of lousy starts; after giving up four runs in the first inning of his last start for the first time in his career, then coming out today in a game against our biggest rivals right now and pitching so poorly, it’s fair for Giants fans to definitely be worried about our star player.

Many people have called KNBR locally and written on local blogs to speculate what Lincecum’s issue must be, and the theories range from “he must be hurt” to “he needs time off” to “he’s smoking too much dope” and “he’s not smoking enough dope” (of course the latter two theories aren’t shocking, coming from San Francisco, where people sell “Let Tim Smoke” t-shirts outside our stadium). I kind of feel wrong to put a firm diagnosis on Lincecum when I know nothing about baseball mechanics compared to guys like his father and team pitching coach Dave Righetti.

But I guess like everyone else, it’s fair game to talk about it and wonder. He’s definitely not the same pitcher that wowed the baseball world the past two years, that had experts who claimed his size would lead to a physical breakdown baffled and awed over his delivery. His velocity is down, he’s allowing a ton more walks and he can’t dig himself out of big innings.

What I want to believe is that it’s all mental; that Lincecum is, in a way, pulling a Zito, feeling the mental pressure of becoming one of the faces of the franchise, of having a large contract. I want to think that all he needs is a side session with his dad and maybe a couple days off, and he’ll be back to good ole’ Timmy.

At the same time, however, I can’t help but fear for the worst. I know the team wouldn’t be running Timmy out there if he were seriously hurt; I’m just concerned that he is physically worn out and won’t be able to regain the velocity on his fastball or his dominance on the mound back at all, let alone down the stretch the next couple months. I hope that this is something that he can work on in the offseason; that he just needs a better workout regiment or something. If you go back to the Zito comparison, he improved after a summer spent working out with Brian Wilson, and now that he’s relaxed mentally and separated himself from his $126 million dollar contract he’s become a better pitcher.

But hell, I really don’t know. If any of you guys who might’ve come across my blog want to comment with your theories, have at it; all I can hope is that Lincecum can turn it around soon, or else we’ll be missing the key of our pitching staff in the most crucial part of the season.

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A few random notes from this series…

1. Jonathan Sanchez had to put up or shut up, and after his predictably poor performance against San Diego on Friday, it’s time to leave the bold predictions to the fans. I’m glad he’s passionate, but it wasn’t appropriate for him to declare we would sweep the Padres after a bad start in Atlanta and considering his Jekyll-and-Hyde style of pitching, as I like to call it.

2. I am done with Aaron Rowand. In my preseason blog entry I predicted that Rowand would have a better average this season and that he’d be a crucial part of how the Giants did this year; boy, it looks like I was wrong. It’s so frustrating watching him come to the plate (whether in crucial at-bats or not) and either strike out or hit into a double play. Would I like to see him turn it around and be one of the veterans to help carry the team into September (and possibly beyond)? Of course, but not if it means taking playing time away from Aubrey Huff, Andres Torres or even Jose Guillen (even though his defense is shoddy). If he can pinch hit late in the game and start to get hits when it counts, maybe I can reconsider this stance; however at this rate I don’t even want to see him in those situations.

3. I’m okay with the Jose Guillen trade. It’s like picking up Pat Burrell–the other team is paying most of his contract to go away, and we traded away a very low prospect to get a proven bat. I was initially concerned about the whole “clubhouse cancer” moniker, but I agree with the fact that he’ll be happy and cooperate as long as we keep playing well and have a chance for the playoffs.

4. This next stretch of nine games is CRUCIAL. Three in Philadelphia, three in St. Louis and then three at home against the Reds. We NEED to have a .500 road trip, then come home and take two out of three from the Reds. After that we play two more series at home against the Diamondbacks and Rockies, the latter of which worries me a little more.

So let’s break down the remainder of August. If we have a 3-3 road trip, then come home and take 2/3 from the Reds, sweep Arizona and take 2/3 from the Rockies, that’s a 10-5 record to finish August. I’m probably being a little too optimistic to think we can win the series against the Reds, and maybe a .500 road trip is too hopeful, as well. But all I can do is keep my fingers crossed and remain very cautiously optimistic.

Future Dream Job (and How My Summer Job Got Me Into the Giants’ Locker Room)

 

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…so this entry is a bit of an aside about my hopes for someday becoming a sports journalist and how I recently got to spend a day living the life of one, thanks to my summer internship.

Anyway, I’ve been a big news junkie since I was a kid. I guess it comes from the fact that my parents always kept a copy of the San Francisco Chronicle around and the television turned to KQED or CNN growing up. When I was eight or nine I decided I was dead-set on becoming a writer later on in my life, and that morphed into my aspirations of being some kind of journalist when I hit high school and started writing for our paper (which was called The Scroll, for anyone who might care in the slightest. Our mascot was a knight, so I guess that went with the whole medieval theme we had going on).

From the time I became a really big sports fan about seven or eight years ago, I started reading the Sporting Green in the Chronicle every day, pretty much cover to cover. During the baseball season I read all of the game reviews from Henry Schulman (the Giants’ beat writer), and columnists such as Scott Ostler, Ray Ratto and Bruce Jenkins. I read their articles not only for further knowledge and analysis of the teams I loved, but also to pick up on their reporting and writing styles; the way guys like Ratto and Ostler so smoothly incorporated puns and jabs into their columns, the way Jenkins could so eloquently set a scene of utter jubilation or desolation. I was probably the only kid at my high school (and definitely the only female) who brought the Sporting Green to class every day and read it in between periods (yeah I know, I’m kind of a dork). I’m such a news junkie that I have a box of sports page clippings in my closet at home that I kept to memorialize great and historically good/bad games, mostly by the Giants (e.g, Lincecum’s first Major League start, Bonds’ home run chase, the horrific grand slam loss to the Rockies last year) but also with some guest appearances from the Warriors and their “We Believe” season.

But I’m getting off-topic a bit with my baseball/journalism nerdiness. My point is that I’m sure there are some downsides to being a beat writer, aka that all the traveling and bag-searching hastles at airports gets old, and the press box food might not be all that great, and you’re away from your family a lot of the time. But since I haven’t had that many opportunities to travel in my life, I see some hidden glamour in the life of a beat writer who bounces from Pittsburgh in one night to Miami the next. Just being able to follow around a team of professional athletes and watching baseball and getting paid for it sounds like a dream come true, even if you have to deal with the athletes that hate the media (a la Barry Bonds in his playing days) or the ones that always spew out Bull Durham esque cliched responses (which from my outside perspective seems like a good majority of baseball players).

Speaking of which, I guess this is as good a place as any to get into the meat of this entry, which is how my summer internship got me standing within an arms’ length of Buster Posey last month.

Basically, I’m a summer intern with a television news station in San Francisco. To be specific I intern with the sports department, which means I go to work twice a week and get academic credit for watching Giants games and writing down highlights, along with doing some other odd jobs around the station. It’s a cool internship that’s given me an opportunity to delve into another media, aka broadcast journalism, which I’m not as familiar with.

As I discovered on July 18, there are also some other perks to this internship, like the opportunity to shadow a sports reporter/anchor around at the Giants’ ballpark and into the press box and locker room for postgame interviews with the players. Most Giants fans probably remember that game, if not by the date than at least by saying “that last game of the Mets series.”

Yeah. That game. Where the umpire called Travis Ishikawa, the winning run in the bottom of the ninth inning, out at home when a replay later showed he was safe. The game we eventually lost when we should’ve instead swept New York.

But anyway, it’s woulda coulda shoulda at this point. It’s just that context is necessary for describing what my experience was like. Because you don’t quite know the expression “so silent you could hear a pin drop” until you find yourself in the locker room of a professional sports team that has suffered such a blow.

All the journalists stood milling around in the center of the clubhouse for about ten minutes, barely talking in murmured voices amongst themselves as they waited for the players to come in from the showers etc. I remember noticing Matt Cain sitting in front of his locker, his head propped up by his chin (think of “The Thinker” pose) and a distinct frown on his face. You could tell he was really thinking about that game, delving into it in his mind for a good long while, letting the loss that should’ve been a victory wash over him. And he hadn’t even pitched that day; it was a Jonathan Sanchez start, if my memory serves me correctly. It shows you how competitive he is and how he takes a loss seriously; he isn’t one of those athletes that will joke around with other guys in the clubhouse as long as he had a good day pitching or at the plate, even if the team itself lost.

But anyway, it was really interesting seeing all the journalists work. It was like they were a pack of animals or something; they all traveled in a herd and surrounded one player when they saw he was dressed/almost dressed and started asking him questions before all finding the next guy they wanted to talk to. It was as if it was synchronized, although I guess these guys have been in the business so long that they just do this instinctually. They all surrounded Pablo Sandoval, asking him the typical questions you’d imagine for that game (how bad the loss was, how he did at the plate, if he thought Ishi was safe, etc.), then moved across the clubhouse to Brian Wilson, who had come into the tenth inning tie and given up the go-ahead run to New York. He took the entire blame for the loss and, as you can imagine, spoke in a pretty reserved tone. The reporters bounced around to Ishikawa, Posey and Aubrey Huff (who, by the way was clad in purple plaid golf pants–a vibrant shade of purple, too–with a white belt and matching shoes; pretty stylish get-up, actually) before dispersing from the clubhouse.

It was definitely cool to see these guys that I’ve followed since I was a kid–Schulman, Ostler and other reporters–interview the athletes that I pretty much worship on a day-to-day basis. I’d be lying if I said I didn’t feel a bit awkward and out of place, 1. because I was clearly the youngest one there, and therefore probably didn’t resemble a reporter, and 2. because I’m female. I know that women reporters are allowed in locker rooms and all that, but I was torn between glimpsing around and trying to check out Tim Lincecum and Buster Posey (who I admitedly like for more than their talent on the field) and keeping my eyes towards the ground or an inanimate object so as to not suddenly look up and find myself staring at a naked Pablo Sandoval (although yeah, I did see him shirtless…and I know he’s got enough people harping on him for his weight, but let’s just say the ‘Panda’ nickname is warranted). Quick aside–excuse any shallowness that I might have just exuded there. But come on, I am a twenty-year-old girl, so of course I’m going to notice if some of these athletes are cute.

But all-in-all I left the ballpark that day feeling pretty awed, and the whole experience definitely increased my fervor for wanting to become a sports journalist someday, if that could possibly pan out for me.

If you got through all that and my random asides to boot, congrats–and lemme know what you thought of it!

Go Giants in Atlanta!

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How Sweep It Is

broom.pngHow about that, Giants fans?

Could anyone, even the most optimistic of diehards, expected a clean sweep of our biggest rivals?

I would have been content with two out of three, really. A second consecutive series victory against the Dodgers in a continued attempt to climb out of the hole we’d dug ourselves against division opponents this year.

But what a momentum swing that the Giants have had since the All Star Break. They went 20-8 in the month of July, losing only one series (to Colorado, back when the Giants were mired in their seven-game losing streak) and split one (against Florida last week). They had two series sweeps (of Milwaukee and Arizona, but hey, a sweep’s a sweep), three if you count LA even though it continued into August and four if you count that bad call by the ump in the last game of the New York Mets’ series at home.

But numbers alone don’t capture the buzz in the Bay Area right now. People are calling into talk radio shows, saying they haven’t been this excited about the Giants–let alone any Bay Area team, for that matter–in years. And the excitement at the ballpark for this weekend series was so palpable. I went to the game on Friday, and I’d never heard a louder crowd during pregame player introductions. Sure there were Dodger fans there, but they were few and far between compared to the loads of orange and black clad people that came out. And it wasn’t the usual mixed crowd of corporate suits-and-ties and casual fans; no, it was the diehards, the Croix de Candlestick types, the oldtimers and young fanatics like me. It’s hard to explain that kind of atmosphere unless you’ve been in it before, unless you’ve been in an arena with thousands upon thousands of other fans all screaming for one team, one athlete, one cause. All standing with baited breath, hands clasped in the top of the ninth, watching their bullpen cling on for a victory against their biggest rivals. There’s really nothing like that environment, and it’s why AT&T Park will always be home to me.

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I’m really getting excited about our chances this season; any San Francisco fan who said they weren’t is either a huge pessimist or is in denial, not wanting to jinx the team. I’m definitely a little bit of the latter; I say the word “playoffs” with my fingers crossed behind my back and a silent prayer in my head. You have to do that if you live and die with your team like I do. And I know, it’s only August 2; there’s so much of the season left, so much time for anything to happen, good or bad. Teams have built a hot streak late in the game and ridden it far into the postseason (a la Colorado a few years back), and have also held a huge lead in their division, only to royally collapse in on themselves. I don’t want to get too hopeful to the point that if the Giants don’t make the postseason, I’ll be hugely disappointed. But like I said in my last entry, it’s like when Duane Kuiper asked last year, “Folks, do you believe?” And I do. As much as I want to be reserved and logical and be conservative about this upcoming road trip against Colorado and Atlanta, part of me feels like I did seven years ago as a thirteen-year-old, a new Giants fan who was optimistic to a fault and giddy with hope of having her team make the World Series for the second year in a row. And I can’t just silence that little kid voice inside of me, as much as I want to be cautiously optimistic.

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…on a bit of an aside, lately I’ve had people questioning why I care so much about sports (baseball in particular), more so than usual I guess.

It first came up when I was driving back from the Giants game with my mom on Friday, who has a mild interest in baseball but more for my sake than her own. She spent most of the game with her head buried in her book, refusing to look up at all the excitement going on around us.

“Why do you care so much about this team? What have they ever done for you? Sports doesn’t mean anything in real life,” she said, or words to that effect.

I tried to explain to her about how sports makes me feel; about how it can unify people from different backgrounds, about feeling like you were apart of a cause greater than just you as an individual, but I don’t think she really cared for those explanations.

Then again yesterday, I was driving back from dinner with my friend when I checked my phone and saw the game was in the ninth inning with Brian Wilson coming in for us. I said I was going to put the game on, but my friend was pretty vocal in her opposition because she didn’t want to have to listen to it.

She relented once I explained that it was the very end of the game and it’d probably be over pretty soon, and even got a little intrigued when I told her this series sweep (or winning three games in a row, as I told her) was the first against our big rivals at home since 2004.

But going back to my whole point about why baseball means so much to me. It’s really hard for me to explain it to someone who isn’t already a sports fan, because most of the time they just think it’s frivolous. And yeah, I guess I can understand why people would think paying to watch grown men hit a small ball around a yard would be silly. But like I said, it’s so much more than that; it’s about this feeling of unity, about how sports is one of the few venues that can bring people together like nothing else can, regardless of your background.

This column that I wrote about it for my college paper is the best way I can articulate why I love baseball. I’ve posted this a few times before, so forgive me for the overexposure; however it’s really the only I’ve been able to string words together about it in a close to eloquent manner.

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Well, let’s hope for two split series in Colorado and Atlanta this week. Anything more would be great, but again, I’m keeping my optimism in check.

Chills

I can’t think of a more creative title for this entry than that one. Because after watching Pat Burrell hit that home run to win us the game in the bottom of the eighth against the Dodgers (reminscient of Brian Johnson when I was a kid, before I became a Giants fan), I have chills.

The last time I felt like this was last season, when Edgar Renteria hit that grand slam home run versus the Rockies to complete the sweep of Colorado at home, right after that devastating extra-inning game against them earlier in the week at Coors Field. Listening to Duane Kuiper asking, “Folks, do you believe?” put goosebumps on my arms (and if you think that’s corny, well, it kind of is. But then you’re probably not a big-time Giants fan if you can’t understand what I’m saying).

So as I’m writing this and listening to our broadcast crew wrap up this come-from-behind victory to clinch a series victory against LA, our second in a row, Kuiper’s question comes to the forefront of my mind again, and I ask it to any Giants fans who might have stumbled upon my blog: “Folks, do you believe?”

It’s barely August, and there’s a huge chunk of the season left for all sorts of unsightly things to happen (knock on wood). But yes, I do believe.

I’ve barely felt like this in my eight years as a Giants fan, as I didn’t start paying close attention to them until after the World Series. So all I’ve seen is heartbreak and losing seasons; the last time we were a good team, our season was punctuated by a crack of the bat from then-Dodger, future-Giant Steve Finley. Then came the years where our franchise was built around Barry Bonds’ home-run chase and we had little else.

But now we’ve built together a fantastic pitching staff with one of the best closers in all of baseball and one of the best personalities–and pair of shoes–to match. We’ve got Aubrey Huff, who no one believed in last year enough to consider him for their team, except us. We’ve got Uuuuuribe, and a potential Rookie of the Year in Buster Posey, our future All-Star catcher. Our whole team is full of guys who could step up at any given notice and become unexpected heroes, like Pat “The Bat” Burrell, who grew up in the Bay Area rooting for the Giants and came home after Tampa Bay let him go.

Hopefully Ramon Ramirez and Javier Lopez will help shore up this bullpen. On a side note, I don’t love that we gave up Joe Martinez AND John Bowker for Lopez; I think that was a bit much for a guy who doesn’t seem like he excels as a reliever. But I guess it was like a Kevin Frandsen situation: we gave him chances and he didn’t do much, and we didn’t really have room for him on our team. So I wish both of those guys well, as I know all Giants fans do.

This year–and month especially–has been so memorable so far, primarily for good reasons. Sure, the Giants still have plenty of flaws, and there’s a lot of time left to play where anything could happen.

But right now, I can’t help but believe, just a bit.

Bye Bye Bengie?

…so many Giants fans have already heard this rumor, so I’m probably not breaking any news on this fan blog or anything. Basically it looks like Bengie Molina is a goner to Texas, likely for pitcher Chris Ray. It explains why Buster Posey had to sit for two games out of the three-game Dodgers sweep–we had to showcase Molina to potential suitors.

Honestly, this feels bittersweet to me. I know some Giants fans might be clinking imaginary champagne glasses in the air in their commutes home, but I don’t really feel the same way. Yes, he hasn’t hit well at all this year, he can’t run the bases and his defense behind the plate has been questionable lately.

But let’s think about this in the big picture. Bengie Molina has been one of the team MVPs over the past couple years, one of the only bats we’ve had in these slumping years since Bonds left and before Pablo broke out in 2009. He’s also been a pretty good defensive catcher, and our pitching staff (which consisted of three former and current Cy Young award winners last year in Tim Lincecum, Barry Zito and Randy Johnson) swore by him behind the plate. Until this year, he was Mr. Clutch, the guy you wanted in the batter’s box with two on and two out in the bottom of the ninth. All this combined made him one of my favorite Giants over the past few years.

I know that a lot of Giants fans didn’t think Bengie should be back this season; that Buster Posey should be given the keys on Opening Day. But even with his offensive numbers slipping, I still stand by the Giants’ decision to resign him for 2010, even if it will only end up being for less than half the season. At the same time, I look forward to seeing Buster Posey in his rightful position as a catcher the rest of the season.

Thanks for everything, Big Money Molina.

Red in the Face

Well, I was right–sort of.

The Giants were unable to take the series from the visiting Boston Red Sox, who made AT&T Park Fenway West this weekend. But in no way did I expect them to win Friday night, then lose the rubber match with Lincecum on the mound.

My concern for the athlete that I jokingly call the love of my life has definitely heightened with each bad start this season, and after today it’s pretty much reached its peak. Apparently he is not hurt, but at least if he were that would give him–and us fans–an explanation for his poor outings this season.

Some say that Lincecum just isn’t a power pitcher anymore and he’ll never get his velocity back; that he’s slowly becoming just an average, run-of-the-mill thrower. Others are saying chill out, Lincecum was facing one of the best offenses in all of baseball and this isn’t shocking; he’ll bounce back. And some are saying Lincecum just isn’t smoking enough dope anymore, a la the “let Barry surf” chants that echoed around the airwaves when Zito wasn’t pitching well.

I would like to side with the ”relax, he was facing a great lineup” argument, but I know that Timmy would’ve torn up the BoSox, Big Papi or not in his Cy Young years of ’08 and ’09. He still isn’t doing horribly for himself; he’s got an 8-3 record, an ERA still hovering around 3.00 and close to 120 K’s. But his erraticness at times definitely presents cause for concern and makes you think that this isn’t the same Freak we’ve come to know and love since May 2007.

On a related note, I was listening to the local sports radio station KNBR tonight, and the later host asked callers the question, “Should Lincecum be in the All-Star game?” If someone had told me before the season started that this would be a contested question in June, I would be pretty surprised. I still think that Lincecum definitely deserves to make the team, if not for this season’s performance than at the very least for his moniker of being the two-time reigning Cy Young winner. While I’d be bummed if he didn’t, I could understand the argument that this’d be beneficial for helping him have a break and work out any kinks he might have mentally or physically. I have a feeling he’ll make the team, though, especially with Bruce Bochy as one of the managers. 

All right. Time to ditch interleague play for 2010 and go beat LA (hopefully).

See all you Dodger haters at the ballpark tomorrow night.

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