Results tagged ‘ Dodgers ’

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.

A Preview of Giants-Red Sox, and Getting Sentimental for a Sec

…so I’ve really been slacking with keeping up with what’s been going on this season in this blog. I’m going to try and be better about it starting now, however, and there really isn’t a better time to talk about Giants baseball than right now. This next stretch before the All-Star Break is crucial to showing what kind of team they are and to whether or not they have the right makeup to potentially be a playoff team this year.

The Giants are going into this weekend’s interleague series with the Boston Red Sox coming off a 2-6 road trip in Toronto and Houston. I didn’t necessarily expect more than one or two wins in Canada, but I definitely expected them to at least win two games in Texas if not just plain sweep the poor Astros again. But Zito and Cain got shelled in back-to-back games, and now here we are with the Red Sox and Dodgers coming up at home before we go out on the road to play the Rockies, Brewers and Nationals. And with this team’s road record…yikes. They need to have at least a 3-3 homestand, and honestly I’m not sure if they’re capable of producing that.

Let’s get realistic here. The Giants are throwing the erratic Jonathan Sanchez, the newbie Joe Martinez and Tim Lincecum against the knuckleballer Tim Wakefield, 10-game winner Clay Bucholz and Jon Lester. I think the Giants can pull out Sunday’s game with the reigning Cy Young on the mound, but excuse me if I’m not too confident in Sanchez and Martinez against this powerful BoSox lineup. This is the team with the best record in Major League Baseball since the first two weeks of the season, and unfortunately I expect them to add onto that by winning at least two out of three games this weekend.

All right, I need to take a moment to put my cynicism aside for some sentimentality. I put the first draft of this article up here about two or three months ago, but recently I turned it into a column that got printed in the paper at my college (UC Santa Cruz) so I thought I’d share it again, especially in light of the upcoming Giants-Red Sox series…so here it goes:

For the Love of the Game

By Julia Reis

So I really, truly love baseball. That’s kind of an abstraction, I know, but it’s the truth. I love baseball because it means spring and summer. It means short sleeves and blue skies and lazy Sunday afternoons at the ballpark. It means the simple intricacies, like watching an outfielder make a great diving catch or standing up to cheer for a pitcher with a 3-2 count on the batter and two outs in the inning. It means thinking back to when you were a kid, playing catch with a family member in the backyard or hitting a ball off a tee with a whiffle ball and a plastic bat. It means hope and second chances, a clean slate for underdog and overachieving teams alike. But over the past few years, baseball has developed an even deeper meaning for me that transcends all of this.

I think about this every time I go to a Giants game with my older brother Ryan. I value every chance I get to spend with him, maybe more so than most people do with their siblings. That’s because I’m still getting to know him — I met him a little less than three years ago. My parents had him in 1975 while they were still in college — two years before they got married — and due to extenuating circumstances, decided to give him up for adoption. Almost 32 years later, my mom decided to try to find him, and, as the saying goes, “the rest is history.” He came home from a Boston trip to catch the Giants at Fenway Park with his now-wife in June 2007, and found a letter from my mom in his mailbox, introducing herself and our family and expressing her hopes that maybe we could make a late start and become a part of each others’ lives.

From the start, my brother and I developed an instant connection with baseball. In our first e-mails, before we even talked on the phone or met in person, we were talking about the Giants, analyzing the tough losses that were mounting up, Barry Bonds’ home run chase, and the prospects of a new young pitcher named Tim Lincecum. During the time we spent trying to fill in the blanks of each others’ pasts, we talked about baseball. It was our mutual common point, a shared interest that we could use to make it past the initial awkwardness of a newfound sibling relationship.

Almost three years after he became a part of my life, we’re closer than I could have ever hoped, especially considering I wasn’t confident that we would ever meet. We talk through e-mails, Facebook, or we send text messages almost every day about sports, music and everything in between. We don’t get to see each other as often as I’d like, but with baseball season now underway, I’ll get to see him relatively often, as he plans to come down to the Bay Area for games once or twice a month. The fact that I am fortunate enough to be able to share the experience of going to a game with my brother gives me another reason to love baseball, to count down to Opening Day far in advance every year.

Thinking about my brother and our mutual love of the game has made me come to realize the unity that exists in sports and how it goes beyond that of players on the same team. There aren’t that many opportunities in society where people of completely different backgrounds, political views or values can all connect — that’s why a sport can be so magical.

Sports can bring together cities and countries, with millions of people pledging allegiance to their country’s flag along with the colors of their favorite team’s uniforms. It evokes strong emotions that few other venues can — a team can tear your heart out by trading your favorite player, have you cheering until your throat is raw, or break your heart by losing a postseason elimination game. As a fan of your home team’s stadium, arena, or field, your voice is an echo to the shouts, applause and boos of other fans around you. It is where the noise of the crowd can become as loud as a 747 Boeing jet, where even the most soft-spoken individuals can be found yelling their voices hoarse. It is where miracles happen — the birthplace of the bottom of the ninth, the Hail Mary, the buzzer-beater. And it is the venue that has brought my brother and me closer together, and where we will be this summer when the Giants play the Red Sox. It will be almost three years to the date after he came home from seeing them play each other in Boston to find the letter from our mom in his mailbox.

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…so if you read this far along in my entry, thanks! And let me know what you think of my column, the Giants-Red Sox predictions etc.

Show Me Whatcha Got/Reflections on Wednesday’s Game

Before I get into talking about this make-or-break road trip for the Giants, I have to reflect on yesterday’s Giants-Dodgers game.

Ugly? Yes. Makes you think of umpire conspiracies? Yes. But it was the most exciting Giants game of the year (Sanchez’s no-hitter notwithstanding) and one of the best games I’ve ever been to.

There were just so many elements factoring into the game to make it interesting before it even started. An afternoon game with Lincecum on the mound and the Giants trying to avoid a sweep at the hands of their archrivals before leaving for a grueling road trip. The previous game was an ugly one, a blowout for Los Angeles in a pivotal game for the Giants to win. The night before that was not as bad of a loss but still left a bitter taste in the mouths of the orange and black thanks to two bad calls by the first base umpire. All those storylines made for an interesting afternoon from the onset and altogether spelled out one thing: must-win.

008.JPGThe ultimate box score–a 4-2 win for the Giants and a no-decision for Tim Lincecum after pitching 8 2/3 innings–was no surprise. But when you add in all the other occurences it made for a chaotic game that was not particularly well played, but extremely entertaining and an instant classic.

When you add it all together, you’ve got a dominant start by Lincecum that went awry when he was one strike to Andre Eithier shy of another complete game. You’ve got not one but two Giants managers being ejected from the game (Bochy and Wotus, his back-up) after two more bad calls by the first base umpire, leaving it up to Tim Flannery. (By the way, as a side note–you took Schierholz out for Rowand? Really? Lefty-righty matchup or not, every fan sitting with me in the bleachers knew it was going to end in a double play). There’s the great slide into home plate by Eugenio Velez that Russell Martin didn’t like too much, which ultimately led to Pablo Pandoval getting hit and a dugout-clearing jawing match with Renteria leading the charge.

023.JPGFinally, after all that, you’ve got the most improbable person going from goat to hero for the Giants when Juan Uribe hits the walk-off home run to end it in the 10th after Wilson came in to relieve Lincecum. Right before it happened I turned to my brother sitting next to me and said, “Well, if Uribe can get the game-winning hit here, all will be forgiven” and there it was. He had a big error in the 9th and left seven men on base in the game all by himself, and then he winds up on home plate with the foghorn sounding and his teammates jumping up and down on top of him. It was a crazy capper to a crazy game and it left me leaving the ballpark saying over and over, “Did that really just happen?!” It was just one of the most electrifying games I’ve ever been to. I was screaming the whole time (I often yell during important points in the game, but I was going all-out yesterday) to the point where my head and heart were pounding and my throat stung. It was one of those games where you knew they had to win, and not just in the sense that it was an important game in terms of avoiding the sweep and building momentum for the road trip but also in terms of it being a sort of destiny. I know that might sound corny, but there’s really no other way of saying it. 

045.JPGBut after waxing poetic about Wednesday’s game, it’s time to look at the bigger picture. In the end, this was still a near disastrous homestand for the Giants. Going into it, I figured the Giants had a pretty good chance of sweeping the Reds and that they could possibly take two out of three from the Dodgers. They wound up losing the series to Cincinnati and to the Dodgers to make a 2-4 homestand, and now they have to go on their longest road trip of the year and play the New York Mets, the Reds again and the Colorado Rockies who are torching the universe and constantly on the Giants’ heels atop the NL Wild Card. To me, the Giants need to be able to take the series’ from the Mets and Reds and at least split with Colorado in order for them to still be considered contenders when they come back to play Arizona on August 25 in San Francisco. I know the Giants have all those road woes, but I don’t feel that those are high expectations. Yes it’s great that the Giants have been so dominant at home this year, but it’s not enough. I’ve quoted Damon Bruce on this before and I will again because I think it rings true: the team you are at home is the team you want to be and could be, but the team you are on the road is who you are. So in order for the excitement surrounding this team to continue and for them to be taken as serious playoff contenders, the Giants need to start improving who they are. This is an immensely pivotal road trip, and I seriously hope they come back still intact. After the unexpected excitement and hope for this season, I wouldn’t want it to end in August.

So going out on a classic Eminem lyric:  

“You’ve only got one shot, do not miss your chance to blow/This opportunity only comes once in a lifetime”       

First Entry!

…so I’ve been meaning to create an MLB blog for awhile; I guess the Giants 6-3 win over the Cardinals inspired me. Basically I really like to write and I talk about Giants baseball A LOT, so I figured combining the two would make a lot of sense. If anyone has any feedback or just wants to talk baseball, let me know!

Now let me take a minute to opine (that’s the word I’m looking for, right? Like commending?) on my San Francisco Giants. I would say I’m probably giddy. I know it’s only July 1 so there’s a lot of baseball left to be played, but I think Giants fans deserve to be excited. As I was trying to explain to my mom (who isn’t really a sports fan but whom I’ve influenced to get into Giants baseball), this is the first time we’ve really had hope since 2004, when we were in the race with the Dodgers right up to the end, when Steve Finley crushed our aspirations for the playoffs with a clutch grand slam.

I don’t think even the most optimistic Giants fans believed the team would be this good this year, and if they did they were probably ridiculed for having pie-in-the-sky hopes. I mean, they’re still not a great team; the pitching is phenomenal, but they could definitely use another bat, even though they’ve been hitting well lately. But nobody thought that on July 1, the Giants would be eight games above .500 and leading the National League Wild Card. Does the Wild Card matter in July? No, so I can see why a lot of people might still be skeptical and saying, “Wake me up in September.” But because of the low expectations myself and many other people had for the Giants in 2009, I can’t help but be really excited by our record and the fact that we have a mere shot at the postseason.

I’m going to try not to get ahead of myself since we haven’t even reached the All Star Break yet. But I can’t help but grin a little when I see the standings…

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