Results tagged ‘ Barry Zito ’
“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’.
- Posted on October 2, 2010 at 7:18 pm
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- Filed in: Dailies
- Tags: Arizona Diamondbacks, Barry Zito, Giants, Jonathan Sanchez, Mat Latos, Matt Cain, San Diego Padres
Timmy, Giants Baffled by San Diego Padres
After 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.
- Posted on August 15, 2010 at 10:02 pm
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- Filed in: Dailies
- Tags: Arizona Diamondbacks, Barry Zito, Cincinnati Reds, Colorado Rockies, Giants, Philadelphia Phillies, Road Trip, San Diego Padres, St. Louis Cardinals, Tim Lincecum
2010 Season Preview
“It’s one thing to follow the team from afar, running a finger down the television schedule, checking the score on the radio, setting timers and recordings, reading newspapers. But here beneath the red marquee, the huge expanse of Wrigley Field beating down on her, she’s reminded of what it is to miss something. She hadn’t realized how much a part of her this was: the bleacher seats and the press boxes, the men selling T-shirts and hot dogs and beer.”–from The Comeback Season by Jennifer E. Smith
You know that scene in Fever Pitch where Jimmy Fallon gets his Red Sox season tickets in the mail in March, when he hugs the UPS delivery man and runs inside to open them with his friends? When they breathe in the smell of the tickets and smile wanly at the thought of a new season, a clean slate, a redeemed sense of hope?
Well that’s pretty much how I feel right now. It seems like just last week when I was getting psyched about pitchers and catchers reporting to Scottsdale, and now they’re packing up and heading back to San Francisco for the start of the season.
There’s no way I can eloquently articulate how excited I am about the start of the season. I get this way every year, even if I don’t have high expectations for the Giants; it really is just great to have them back. It feels like a friend who moved away has come back to town for the summer and you get to see them again and reminisce about the old times and create some new memories. As corny as that sounds, that’s how Opening Day feels to me; it’s the return of an old friend whose presence you didn’t realize you took for granted until they were already gone.
But anyway, enough of my attempts to wax poetic. I love baseball, you love baseball. If you’re reading this blog, you may very well love the San Francisco Giants like I do (if not, that’s okay too; you’re welcome into the fold). So the following is going to be as much of an non-bias offseason-in-review/season preview of the Giants as I can muster. I’ll try not to ramble too much, but knowing me I probably will…anyway, let me know whatcha think of my musings!
OFFSEASON IN REVIEW
Key Additions: Mark DeRosa, Aubrey Huff, Bengie Molina, Juan Uribe, Todd Wellemeyer
Key Subtractions: Brad Penny (?) <–I’m really reaching on this one; can’t say there was really a key subtraction unless I’m totally forgetting someone
Best Move: Resigning Bengie Molina (1 yr, $4.25 million); avoiding arbitration with Tim Lincecum (2 yrs, $23 million)
Worst Move: Giving Freddy Sanchez a 2 yr, $12 million deal (although at this point it’s a little early to say if this was a bad move)
KEYS TO THE SEASON (IN NO PARTICULAR ORDER)
1. Can the starting pitching continue to be this stellar?
I know off the bat this probably sounds like a stupid question. I mean, it’s not like we’re the Los Angeles Dodgers whose best pitcher is, according to Joe Torre, Vicente Padilla. We’ve got two-time reigning Cy Young award winner Tim Lincecum leading this staff, and he only makes up half of the one-two punch that is him and Matt Cain. Jonathan Sanchez and Barry Zito are a little iffier, but both left Giants fans feeling somewhat hopeful at the end of last season, and Todd Wellemeyer looked really good in spring training (which doesn’t necessarily count for anything, but it’s still something). But my point is that for the Giants to go anywhere this season, their pitching staff as a whole needs to pretty much do just as well as last year; we can’t afford for them not to uphold their dominance. The starting pitching carried this team last year, and even with some offensive upgrades and the resigning of Bengie Molina it’ll still be up to the five guys in the rotation to carry this team. That would mean Lincecum and Cain would have to have a great season again, Zito and Sanchez would need to step up and we’d need to get as much production as possible out of the fifth spot in the rotation. Do I think they can do it? Yes. But I don’t like having to put it all on them.
2. How much of a hinderance will the defense be?
A lot has been said this offseason and spring training about the Giants’ defense, or possible lack thereof this year. Let’s face it: Aubrey Huff is no J.T Snow at first base, and no one can live up to Omar Vizquel at shortstop (although Omar Vizquel is pretty much a magician as a shortstop, so it’s hard to compare anyone to him, really). Edgar Renteria doesn’t have much range anymore, Aubrey Huff has never been known for his glove and can’t DH anymore, so he’ll have to get better as a defensive first baseman or risk getting pulled in the middle of a game for Travis Ishikawa. Freddy Sanchez is hurt for the next month, so Uribe will be manning second and can do a decent job defensively there. The Panda’s got third covered pretty well, but then you’ve got Mark DeRosa in the outfield which he’s not used to. Really the best guy in the starting lineup defensively on the Giants is Nate Schierholz, and he might be replaced by John Bowker in right field for Opening Day. The defense could be some cause for concern, as the pitching staff needs to be able to rely on a good infield and outfield around them to turn those double plays quickly and make some tough catches in the San Francisco fog. Otherwise it could end up costing them runs, and with the offense still not entirely proven they can’t afford to give up many runs each game because of simple defensive miscues.
3. The great catcher debate
Giants fans seemed pretty split when news broke that Bengie Molina would be a Giant this year, after all; either they supported the return of Bengie to give Buster Posey more time to develop or they disliked it because they felt like Posey was ready to go. As I said during the offseason, I supported Bengie’s return because I don’t feel like Posey has really proven himself at the Major League level and could use some more mentoring instead of being given the starting job right away on Opening Day. Bengie has been the most valuable Giant for the past couple years both for his offensive power and the way he handles our pitching staff, and while I think Buster Posey could replace Molina offensively, I think he could use more time to get used to catching the various pitchers on this staff before being thrust into the starting role. That being said, I think Posey should be kept on the 40-man roster upon leaving Scottsdale because he has hit well in spring training and would be a good-back up both as catcher and at first base if need be. He could be catcher when Bengie needs a day off or come in as an in-game replacement or pinch hitter. If they decide to send Posey back to the minors for now, I wouldn’t gripe too much at the coaching staff for that decision; however I would hope that he’d be called back up soon.
It’ll be interesting to see how this catcher story plays out this season. Bengie Molina knows his replacement is already waiting in the wings and that he’ll be expected to mentor him, and if Posey shows he’s capable of being a starter at the pro level then it’ll definitely put pressure on the coaching staff and management to give him playing time, perhaps over Molina depending on how far we are through the season and how we’re doing.
4. Will the veterans step up to the plate?
One of the main complaints from Giants fans over the past few years is that Brian Sabean has signed too many veterans past their prime. He brought veterans onto the team to build around Barry Bonds, but that didn’t really work out and we were still stuck with some of them after he left. And although the team has definitely brought up some young players who have turned out to be good hitters (a la Pablo Sandoval), the offense is still pretty dependent upon the success of older players like Aaron Rowand, Edgar Renteria, Freddy Sanchez and Bengie Molina. Now Aubrey Huff and Mark DeRosa can be added to that list, and the pressure’s especially going to be on them to perform since they were signed this offseason to be offensive upgrades. There are reasons to be hesitant about how well all of these players will do; DeRosa is coming off wrist surgery, Huff is joining the National League for the first time and will be in a winning environment for the first time in his career and Edgar Renteria and Aaron Rowand did not meet expectations with the bat last season. There are some signs of hope, however; for example, Rowand hit well in spring and showed up to Scottsdale a lot slimmer and more fit. It looks like Bochy is going to plug him in at the leadoff spot for now, which is where he had a decent amount of success in ’09. Besides that Aubrey Huff has also been hitting well in spring training, and Renteria and DeRosa both have spring training averages hovering around .280. Again, I know you can’t take spring training into account too heavily, but it’s at least a good sign that some of the veterans look like they’ll be making offensive improvements on last season, as pretty much all of them (excluding Molina) need to have [much] better years in order for the Giants to have a somewhat threatening lineup.
5. Sanchez vs. Sanchez
I’ve heard some local media guys say that thiscoming season really depends on Freddy Sanchez and Jonathan Sanchez, and I think that’s definitely true. We gave up one of our top prospects to get Freddy Sanchez midway through last season, and he didn’t really have an impact last year due to injury. Now he’s banged up again (which the Giants organization kept hush-hush for about a month, possibly to get a better deal with Juan Uribe as Andrew Baggarly with the San Jose Mercury news implied) and will miss the first month of the season. Needless to say, he will need to bounce back and start helping the team with his bat pretty quickly upon coming off the DL.
When it comes to Jonathan Sanchez, he showed promise at several points during 2009, most memorably of course with his no-hitter in July. At the same time, however it still seems like whenever he gets into a difficult situation he can’t dig his way out of it; his first time through the lineup is great, but by the fifth or sixth inning he starts to come undone and then falls apart altogether. It’s time for Sanchez to become a more consistent pitcher and add to this starting rotation’s prowess, and if he can do that this year could be a breakout one for him.
OVER OR UNDER? LAST YEAR’S STATS VS. THE YEAR TO COME
1. Bengie Molina home run total in 2009: 20
This year: Under
Why: Bengie Molina isn’t getting any younger, and with a catcher waiting in the wings in Buster Posey, Molina may get more days off to rest his legs in favor of giving Posey a chance to start, especially if Buster does make the 40-man roster and his great spring training can carry over to San Francisco.
2. Tim Lincecum’s strikeout total in 2009: 261
This year: Under
Why: It’s hard to come up with an argument against Tim Lincecum being just as good as last year. And while I do think he’ll have fewer strikeouts than last season, I don’t think it’ll necessarily be significantly less. My reasoning for why take the under? Just that he has another season of wear on his arm and that his velocity was down in spring training, which may mean his stuff might not be as entirely dominant as 2009. I hope I’m wrong, of course; I didn’t think he could win another Cy Young last year and he did, so I definitely could be mistaken.
3. Fred Lewis’ strikeout total in 2009: 84 (in 295 AB’s)
This year: Under
Why: I only say under because a. I think he’ll get less playing time this year and b. I don’t think he’ll be a San Francisco Giant much longer, if he even is at all going into the start of the season. Time to bid farewell to the man KNBR’s Damon Bruce appropriately refers to as “K-Fred.”
4. Barry Zito’s win total in 2009: 10
This year: Over
Why: I’m not sure if this is based on a lot of concrete evidence; I think it’s more of a “gotta have faith” situation. But if you want some concrete stats, 2009 backs up my belief that this season could be the best one he’s had in a Giants uniform so far (which I know isn’t saying much, but still). If you compare 2009 to 2008, he cut his ERA down dramatically (from 5.15 to 4.03), his earned runs (103 to 86) and his opponents’ batting average (.270 to .250). So here’s hoping Zito can pitch better and have better run support behind him this year so he can get past the 10-win mark that he’s been stuck at the past two seasons.
5. Jonathan Sanchez’s win total in 2009: 8
This year: Over
Why: We all know that Jonathan Sanchez has good stuff and is capable of being a great pitcher. We’ve seen glimmers of it before with his improbable no-hitter last season as the primary example; his problem has just been a matter of keeping everything under control and not letting the game unravel if someone gets a hit or walk against him. I think this year will be the one where Sanchez really steps up, though. He’s appeared really confident in spring training, according to local media guys who’ve been in Scottsdale; he knows he has a good arm with some power that could wreak havoc on hitters. Now’s his time to put it all together and show that he can be a mainstay for this rotation for years to come, like Cain and Lincecum have proven.
6. Aaron Rowand’s batting average in 2009: .261
This year: Over
Why: I really hope I’m right on this one, because I’m putting a lot of stock into Rowand’s spring training and ignoring the fact that his stats have been trending downward for the past few years. He showed up to Scottsdale in great shape, dropping some pounds to try and become a better hitter and perhaps attempt to steal some bases. And if his spring training stats are any indication–he’s hitting .444 as opposed to .189 last year at this time, with 20 hits and 9 RBI’s in 16 games–he may be able to get back into the groove he was in as the leadoff hitter for a time with us last year, as it looks like that’s where Bochy is going to put him come Opening Day.
7. Giants’ win total in 2009: 88
This year: Over
Why: Las Vegas has the Giants’ over-under for wins in 2010 at 82.5, which to me shows one thing–numbers can lie. Like I said before, I’m trying to put aside my bias and look at this objectively, and in doing so I really, truly think the Giants will have a better season than last year. Hell, on paper they should; they didn’t have any significant losses in terms of losing players to free agency, and they only improved their offense with the additions of Mark DeRosa and Aubrey Huff. Bengie’s back, Uribe’s back and our starting rotation and bullpen look just as solid if not better than before. Theoretically if we were able to get almost ninety wins out of last year’s team and we went out and made improvements during the winter, then why shouldn’t we be able to win more games than 2009?
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…so there’s my big season preview. I just want to say in closing that I am really excited about what 2010 has in store for my Gigantes. Honestly I don’t want to get my hopes up, but after last year’s surprise push for the playoffs it’s hard not to be anticipating more of the same for this year. I’m not saying it’s time to start printing postseason tickets whatsoever, but I do think the Giants could be playing some interesting baseball come late September. For the sake of myself and all the other diehard Giants fans who haven’t sniffed the playoffs since 2003, let’s hope this is the case.
- Posted on March 27, 2010 at 5:35 am
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- Filed in: Dailies
- Tags: Aaron Rowand, Andrew Baggarly, Aubrey Huff, Barry Zito, Bengie Molina, Brian Sabean, Bruce Bochy, Damon Bruce, Defense, Edgar Renteria, Fred Lewis, Freddy Sanchez, Giants, J.T Snow, John Bowker, Juan Uribe, Mark DeRosa, Matt Cain, Nate Schierholz, Offense, Opening Day, Pablo Sandoval, Spring Training, Tim Lincecum, Todd Wellemeyer
A Loss They Couldn’t Afford
To quote Duane Kuiper from a couple weeks ago, “This is not good, folks.”
Giants fans, we just lost a series to the San Diego Padres.
And this isn’t like when we got swept in San Diego to start the first road trip of the season, when it was only April and expectations were low, anyway. This was in September when we’re supposedly in a playoff race with two tough teams in our division that we’re in direct competition with–the Dodgers and Rockies–coming in on their heels.
Aaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrghhhhhh.
This simply wasn’t a game we could afford to lose if we’re going to be a legitimate playoff contender, and we did. It means a loss of momentum going into a series with our biggest rival, the division-leading Dodgers, and a loss in the Wild Card standings again because the Rockies are still on fire.
I guess I was hoping for too much after Monday’s stomping of the Padres. I didn’t expect another offensive outburst by the Giants’ lineup the next two games, but I at least hoped things would start to click more with our two-three-four hitters back. Unfortunately that didn’t happen, especially today. We hit a bunch of home runs this series in comparison to the norm, but I think that has a lot more to do with the ballpark playing smaller due to warm weather than it does with our lineup actually hitting better; otherwise we would’nt have let another no-name pitcher in Wade LeBlanc get us today.
When I was looking at the probable pitching matchup before the game and saw LeBlanc’s name, my immediate reaction was, “Oh crap, this is the guy who shut out the Dodgers the other night. If he did that against their potent lineup, the Giants are in trouble today.” And sure enough, the only trouble we really gave him was in the third with Torres’ home run and in the eighth with two on and nobody out. It was obviously a time to bunt (which for the Giants is a four-letter word as profane as any others), and Bochy brought out…Kevin Frandsen.
Frandsen? Uh, okay…sure, Boch. He’s barely been up in the Majors this year but sure, why not give him a pinch at-bat in a big opportunity.
So what does he do? Pop up the bunt with a 3-1 count. The Giants’ bunting inability continues.
And Zito didn’t look sharp for a second start in a row in a big spot, which will make Giants fans wonder if the overall good second-half performance is a fluke. He’s scheduled to start against the Rockies next week, and needless to say he absolutely has to pitch well in that start.
Not much else to say about this one. We couldn’t afford to drop the series to the Padres and we did. But there’s no time to dwell on it with LA and Colorado coming into town. If this club is going to step up again and prove they belong in the Wild Card race, now’s the time they have to do it.
- Posted on September 9, 2009 at 1:20 am
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- Filed in: Dailies
- Tags: Barry Zito, Bruce Bochy, Bunting, Colorado Rockies, Duane Kuiper, Giants, Kevin Frandsen, Los Angeles Dodgers, San Diego Padres, Wade LeBlanc, Wild Card
“Folks, Do You Believe?”
Well, now I feel stupid.
But come on, I definitely wasn’t the only Giants fan who, after the worst loss in five years on Monday, mourned the loss of the season a month early. I’ve been a diehard fan of this team for several years now and I know how they operate–they’re aggressive hitters but can’t hit, they don’t walk easily and they tend not to mount large comebacks or go on inspiring runs after bad losses.
There are not enough negative words in the English dictionary that do justice to describe how bad Monday night’s loss was for Giants fans. It would be a hard loss for any team to recover from, let alone the San Francisco Giants; they have a weak lineup and left Colorado with several of their key guys battered (Freddy Sanchez on the DL, Bengie Molina and Pablo Sandoval hurting), so needless to say it was looking dismal for this team.
But this homestand–the two come-from-behind wins against Arizona fueled by home runs from Ishikawa and Molina, the dominant pitching performances by Lincecum and Zito and today’s improbable victory to finish off the sweep of the Colorado Rockies–proves this team does have what it takes to make it to the postseason.
As a side note, Duane Kuiper’s call of Edgar Renteria’s grand slam today gave me chills. I know it sounds corny and maybe cliche, but it truly did. Just standing in my living room watching in disbelief as the ball sailed over the left field wall, then hearing Kuiper ask, “Folks, do you believe?” to cap off his call…it was just all so incredible and it was a moment that encapsulates the unbelievable nature of this season.
Duane Kuiper’s call of Edgar Renteria’s grand slam
I’m still going to be cautiously optimistic; I don’t want to get my hopes up too high in case something like Monday night happens again (oh man, I shouldn’t say that…I can’t fathom dealing with something like that again). But I will say this: for a team to have a shot at or get to the postseason, a lot of components have to be in play. There’s the basic essentials of having a couple reliable hard-hitters, a solid rotation, etc. But I think it’s also necessary to have a little magic (for lack of a better term), the kind that comes from games like today’s with Renteria’s grand-slam, or Zito’s curtain call worthy performance yesterday and Jonathan Sanchez’s no-hitter back on July 10.
Mike Krukow said it best on the postgame wrap today: forget the past five months, because it starts now. This homestand was great, and the sweep of the Rockies was amazing and integral for building momentum going into September. But now’s the time to show this is all for real. The Giants go on the road and play Philadelphia and Milwaukee, then come home and play the Padres, Dodgers and Rockies. If this team truly is built tough enough for the playoffs, they need to continue maintaining and building on the momentum from this past week.
And to answer Duane Kuiper’s question from his home run call: yes, I do believe.
- Posted on August 30, 2009 at 9:48 pm
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- Filed in: Dailies
- Tags: Arizona Diamondbacks, Barry Zito, Bengie Molina, Colorado Rockies, Duane Kuiper, Edgar Renteria, Giants, Mike Krukow, Sweep, Tim Lincecum
Still Breathing
Of course the best, most improbable comeback of the year occurs after Lincecum gets shelled.
Man, who saw that coming?
After Lincecum gave up four runs in the second inning (two thanks to the controversial over-the-bag, two-run single from the opposing pitcher that led to Bochy’s third ejection in a week, making him look like Bobby Cox in comparison to his normally calm self), I think all Giants fans were thinking, “Oh man, this one’s over.” But somehow, miraculously, it wasn’t.
We were able to come back against Homer Bailey. Yes he’s a mediocre with an ERA above seven, but the Giants have an annoying, baffling tendency of making poor pitchers look like Cy Youngs. They finally bucked that trend and exposed Bailey with a four-run inning that chased him out of the game, fueled primarily by Ryan Garko, of all people. Then it was Garko again in the 10th inning with the clutch two-run double after Winn walked to seal the win for the Giants and keep the momentum going from yesterday’s stomping in New York.
If the Giants had lost tonight, it would have been horribly disheartening and an ugly way to start a very win-able (knock on wood) series against the Reds. But they defied the odds and came back to show that this team still has a heartbeat in the National League Wild Card.
Unfortunately, they didn’t get a series victory in New York as I hoped; it wasn’t a terribly well-played series and they left the Big Apple with a split. But they at least need to take the series from Cincinnati and split with the Rockies. Theoretically, if this is a playoff-caliber team they should be able to sweep the Reds with Zito and Cain going in the next two…but again, I knock on wood. Last time I said that, Cincinnati came into San Francisco and took two out of three from us.
The Giants need to come back from this road trip at least 6-5. 7-5 with a sweep of the Reds and a split with the Rockies would be good; anything more would exceed my expectations. But they can’t come back to San Francisco with an under .500 road trip. Would the season mathematically be over if they did? No. But in the hearts and minds of many Giants fans, it would be on life support.
- Posted on August 18, 2009 at 10:51 pm
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- Filed in: Dailies
- Tags: Barry Zito, Bruce Bochy, Cincinnati Reds, Colorado Rockies, Homer Bailey, Matt Cain, New York Mets, Tim Lincecum, Wild Card
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