Results tagged ‘ Joe Martinez ’
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.
Why THIS Giants Fan Approves of the Brad Penny Signing
In my blog entry last Thursday when Joe Martinez and the Giants were getting blown out by the Arizona Diamondbacks (yes, the way below .500 Arizona Diamondbacks), I called for the team to sign Brad Penny to plug in the hole at the fifth spot in the rotation. Now it’s Monday, and ta-da, it’s happened. So yes, I’m happy with the signing.
It’s been interesting hearing the reactions of other Giants fans to this signing. I work as a summer intern at KNBR (the flagship station of the Giants/49ers/Warriors), and earlier today I posted a status on the station’s Facebook page about Brad Penny becoming a Giant. A lot of people responded immediately with comments that were both positive and negative, and I found it interesting monitoring the page and reading what Giants fans’ reactions were. The naysayers pointed to his poor numbers pitching in Boston and his age and wondered why Madison Bumgarner isn’t being called up from Connecticut right this instant, while those who supported the signing like the veteran presence he brings and extremely low financial risk at $100,000. The general consensus seemed to be, “Well, Penny has kinda sucked with the Red Sox, but he at least has experience pitching in the NL West and I’d rather see what he can do than what Joe Martinez or Ryan Sadowski can’t again.”
So here’s my opinion on it as I stated in my blog entry from last week. I acknowledge that Penny hasn’t pitched well in Boston, but I believe there are several factors that he had to deal with there that won’t be in San Francisco. To state the obvious, San Francisco is a pitcher’s park whereas Boston is not, and Penny won’t have to face the Yankees’ lineup in the launching pad that is the new Yankee Stadium or at Fenway. I also think he won’t be under as much pressure as he was in Boston. I know this may sound off because he’s coming to a team trying to get to the playoffs for the first time since 2003, but think about it. Here he doesn’t have this big contract and isn’t on a center-stage with the media hounding him 24/7, and we’re not adding him to be the star pitcher on the staff going down the stretch; he’s meant to be complimentary to an already excellent rotation lead by Lincecum, Cain and a much-better Zito. There is tons more pressure on Lincecum and Cain to continue stepping up and be the aces they’re expected to be than on Brad Penny as the fifth place starter. In addition, Penny has pitched the vast majority of his career in the National League and spent a good chunk of that time with the Los Angeles Dodgers, so one would think he is more comfortable pitching in this league and this division. And to top it off, how can you argue with only paying him a hundred grand? That’s chump change for a proven veteran pitching presence, no matter how poorly he has pitched lately.
And for Giants fans who are demanding that Madison Bumgarner be brought up…slooooowwwww down. This kid’s not even old enough to legally drink yet and he’s still in Double-A. Is he doing well there? Sure. Does it look like he has a promising career ahead of him? Yes. But he needs time to learn all he needs to know about pitching in the Majors before he comes up. I understand why Giants fans want to see this guy now, what with all the hype and promise surrounding him; hell, what better way to spice up the September sprint than with an X-factor in the most promising pitcher in your farm system making his Major League debut? It would be a sexy storyline, but let’s be logical: Bumgarner shouldn’t be rushed up for that sake. Promote him to Triple-A Fresno, give him some starts there and wait a few weeks. If Penny ends up making Giants fans wistful of the Ryan Sadowski days, then reassess and maybe consider Bumgarner. But at this point I don’t want to see a young, promising pitcher like him be rushed up to the Majors and thrown into the pressure cooker that is the September playoff race.
So in this Giants fan’s opinion, the Brad Penny signing is a good, low risk deal. But will it turn out to be high reward as well?
We’ll find out soon enough.
Penny For Your Thoughts?
It’s 9-0 Diamondbacks in the ninth inning, and Kruk and Kuip are now covering a rock-paper-scissors match between two kids. At this point I would rather watch that than the game…but hey, I’m a masochist when it comes to this team, so I still have it on in the background.
Oh look, Bob Howry can pitch decently–when there’s no pressure on him.
Thanks Bobby.
No wait, he just gave up two doubles in a row. 11-0 Arizona. Finally. I was getting worried that Howry might suddenly become a dependable guy out of the bullpen.
Yeah, I’m bitter tonight. We’re getting absolutely whooped by a team that’s 15+ games under .500 when we had a chance to sweep them and gain ground on the Rockies in the NL Wild Card, since they lost to the Dodgers earlier today.
Can I say I’m that surprised? Not really. Joe Martinez was probably kept in too long but hey, the bullpen has been battered lately and it was evident from the get-go that we probably didn’t have another comeback in the bag tonight, especially as the runs started to pile up.
To me, this game makes it obvious that we need someone else in the five-hole of this rotation. One can argue that the Giants have more things to worry about than who the fifth guy in the starting rotation is (like their offense), but I still think it’s of concern. Sadowski and Martinez have both been feel-good stories coming onto this pitching staff and looked decent in their first couple starts, but both subsequently went downhill in their outings. Plus as I recall, both Sadowski and Martinez benefited in their first start or two from a rare outpouring of offense by the Giants that guaranteed wins for them in those starts.
So I’m of the opinion that the Giants should find a more reliable guy to plug into the five-hole. Yes it’s the fifth spot in the rotation, but every game counts going down the stretch if the Giants have any semblance of playoff aspirations left and we can’t afford to have Joe Martinez getting blown up in any game, whether it’s against a contending team or not. Who should the Giants’ fifth starter be? Well the first name on the tips of many Giants fans’ tongues is probably Madison Bumgarner. He’s been brilliant at the Double-A level with a 9-1 record and an ERA under 2.00–but the problem is that he’s only in Double-A right now. You can’t just have Bumgarner skip Triple-A and come immediately to the big leagues, no matter how much of a phenom he looks like right now. Even if the Giants might be making a playoff push here, I wouldn’t want to see his development hurt or him rushed too much for that sake. Promote him to Fresno soon and at least give him a couple starts, then if the Giants are still in it in mid to late September, maybe consider giving him a shot at his first Major League start.
Who else? Eh, maybe you can throw out a Kevin Pucetas at me, but he’s got an ERA over 4.00 and besides, the past two times the Giants have brought up a minor-leaguer to fill in the five-hole it hasn’t worked out too well.
The most intriguing option to me is Brad Penny, who was released by the Boston Red Sox yesterday and is garnering interest from many teams, including the San Francisco Giants. Has he struggled lately? Yes. For the year he’s gone 7-8 with a 5.61 ERA, and in August his record is 0-3 with an ERA of 8.31. But he is a veteran pitcher and would be benefited by pitching in AT&T Park. Plus as a former Dodger he’s familiar with the National League West and he would probably enjoy the opportunity to stick it to his old team since they didn’t part ways well. And hey, he’s out there for $1 million. If we’re paying Rich Aurilia one million dollars to be a benchwarmer so management doesn’t have to be the heavy and outright release him, can’t we pay Brad Penny that to quite possibly be the best #5 guy we’ve had all year?
Sounds like a good idea to me.
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