Friday, September 11, 2020

Friday, September 11, 2020


W-L GB
Miami 20-19 Lead Giants by .002
GIANTS 23-22 Must split this series  
Colorado 20-23 2 Angels in town
Milwaukee 19-22 2 Cubs can fatten their lead
New York 20-24 2 1/2 "Niagara Falls!---"
Cincinnati 19-25 3 1/2 Killer loss at Wrigley Field

Yesterday
Giants lost the opener at San Diego, 6-1.
Miami defeated Philadelphia with a walk-off hit in the ninth, 7-6.
Cincinnati lost at Chicago. The rest of the field was idle. 

Today
Giants at San Diego; 6:10 PM PDT. Johnny Cueto goes up against Garrett Richards, who five years ago looked to be one of the next Great Young Pitchers. Then a series of injuries derailed his career and he hasn't been the same since. Nor have the Angels, for whom he then pitched. He's now 32, and we wish him all the success in the world-- next week.
Miami hosts Philadelphia. The Rockies welcome those same Angels. Milwaukee has the division-leading Cubs at home. New York is in Buffalo to play the homeless Blue Jays, and Cincinnati, fighting for their lives, have a tough row to hoe at division rival St Louis.   

Last Night's Game
It was a rather perfunctory affair compared to the growing excitement that's accompanied the Giants' recent surge. Donovan (3-for-4) Solano and Wilmer Flores (home run, double), accounted for what offense there was, counterbalanced by three ground-ball double plays. Drew Smyly, who relieved the ineffective Trevor Cahill, pitched four innings, striking out eight while allowing one earned run (and one unearned). It seems clear from here that Cahill is not right and probably needs the IL; Smyly would seem a logical choice to replace him. San Diego, meanwhile, divvied up the pitching among seven guys. It was 4-1 after three and just sort of muddled along from there.

They're all big this time of year, but having lost the opener, it's imperative the Ginats answer back tonight and banish all thought of a disastrous sweep. Johnny Cueto's two most recent starts, both against Arizona, have been good. He hasn't had an assignment like this since Game One of the 2016 NLDS; it's time to step up.  




Yesterday the Giants parted ways with Pablo Sandoval, whom they first signed as a 17-year-old kid in 2003, and whose heroics are an indelible part of Giants history.  He has three rings. He had what may have been the biggest hit of the 2010 NLCS after a season of disappointment. He was the MVP of the 2012 World Series, tying one of the all-time Series records with three home runs in Game One. He caught the popup that clinched the 2014 World Series with Madison Bumgarner on the mound and the tying run on third. Less remembered, perhaps, is that Sandoval had 12 hits and a .429 average in that Series, and if not for "Bum" he would have been a Series MVP candidate. (Oddly enough, Hunter Pence also had 12 hits in that Series. Pence, too, was sadly given his release earlier this year.)  

Pable Sandoval was also the Giants' MVP in 2009 when he alone seemed to carry that undernourished offense into contention-- .330, 25 homers, 90 RBI, .943 OPS. He had another big year in 2011, trying to make up for Buster Posey's season-ending injury. After that he settled in to a solid groove for three years, with those magnificent postseason flourishes. Beloved as the "Kung Fu Panda" by Giants fans, he then shocked us all by signing a mega-deal with Boston for 2015; at least one Bay Area DJ reportedly had Steve Miller's "Take the Money and Run" on nonstop play after the news came in. 

Never svelte, but still a fine athlete and agile in the field as a Giant, Sandoval in Boston came to epitomize the nouveau-riche lazy ballplayer. His weight went way up, his stats went way down, injuries followed, and after two years of this the Red Sox cut him loose early in 2017, swallowing the money rather than letting him take up a lineup spot.  Bobby Evans immediately signed him for the minimum, and in the midst of the Giants' worst season in thirty years it seemed like yet another grim joke to be played on the fans. Howls of "Traitor!" came from the stands as well as from social media.  But over the next two years, the Panda quietly rehabilitated himself as a super-utility player, pinch-hitter, and even a pitcher! Last year he put up a 1.5 WAR in 296 at-bats with a .820 OPS. He was all the way back, not just in our hearts but on the field. 

His second San Francisco farewell has been gracious, humble, and classy. He knew it was getting to be time to go, and when the team signed Justin Smoak last week, the message was clear.  The longest-tenured San Francisco Giant will be missed by all  who favor the orange and black, for his irrepressible spirit, his winning attitude, and the historic moments where he rose to the occasion on baseball's biggest stage. Vaya con Dios, Pablo Sandoval.








About a year after we fled California and established in Virginia, we took a drive up near Shanksville, Penmnsylvania, to visit the Flight 93 Memorial Park. If you haven't been there, this is a good time to go. You have to drive, which keeps you away from crowds, and except for days like today, it's rarely crowded. And it is open every day.  There will be a lot of 9-11 memorial activity next year, so between now and then consider a quiet contemplative visit to this place of honor. And consider those "ordinary people" who made a heroic stand worthy of the greatest warriors. Would you-- would I-- summon up such courage in similar circumstance? These are the questions that come to mind on this tragic anniversary.  God bless America.



Thursday, September 10, 2020

Thursday, September 10, 2020

 

W-L GB
GIANTS 23-21   Now comes the real challenge.
Miami 19-19 Braves evidently had enough
Colorado 20-23 1 1/2 SD tightening their grip
Milwaukee 19-22 1 1/2 Explosive end to losing skid
New York 20-24 2 Conforto's catch sparks rally
Cincinnati 19-24 2 1/2 Bauer shuts out Cubs

Yesterday
Giants bombarded Seattle, 10-1, completing a 5-1 homestand.
Miami was overwhelmed by Atlanta, 29-9, the most runs ever given up (or scored) by a NL team.
Colorado lost again at San Diego.
Everyone else won. The Brewers awakened from their coma with a 19-0 walloping of the Tigers in Detroit, New York edged out the Orioles, and the Reds won at Wrigley Field.

Today
Giants begin a four-game series at San Diego. Trevor Cahill may start if he feels up to it; Drew Smyly, fresh off the IL, may go instead. Chris Paddack, who pitched well against the Giants earlier this season, starts for the Padres.
Miami opens a series with Philadelphia at home; Cincinnati finishes up at Chicago. Everyone else is idle.

Last Night's Game
Mike Yastrzemski launched a three-run homer off lefty Nick Margevicius in the third, and the Giants never looked back. Trevor Anderson pitched six three-hit shutout innings, and it was 7-0 by the time he departed. Evan Longoria, who is up to .291, drove in three runs on two singles. He has 24 RBI in 37 games.   Joey Bart was 2-for-4 and is up to .283. Brandon (1.051) Belt drew his daily walk and "drove" in a run with it. 

And Now...
You can say the stretch drive really begins at this moment. The Giants are at San Diego for the first of a four-game set that will do much to determine both teams' fortunes this year. The Padres are just as hot as the Giants: 8-2 over their last ten (and so are the Dodgers; the NL West has the three hottest teams in baseball). They have a four-and-one-half-game lead over the Giants for second place in the division and the automatic playoff berth that comes with it. Should the Giants win three of four, that margin would be two-and-a-half and we'd have a race for second. A split would be just fine as far as San Diego are concerned, and, though they don't want it, the Giants would probably take it as well. Having a lead in the wild-card race at this point is infinitely better than being among the four teams scrambling below to stay ahead of each other and catch those in front. A .500 record the rest of the way would leave the Giants at 31-29; that will probably be enough to get them in. You don't want to say this stuff in the clubhouse, but out here on the internet we're not so constrained.  The going is about to get tougher, so it's a good thing the Giants "got going" three weeks ago. 

Wednesday, September 9, 2020

Wednesday, September 9, 2020

W-L GB
Miami 19-18 Wow- Braves better watch out
GIANTS 22-21 A little daylight opens up…
Colorado 20-22 1 1/2 … between SF and the rest
Milwaukee 18-22 2 1/2 Three straight losses
New York 19-24 3 Loss column not their friend
Cincinnati 18-24 3 1/2 Cardinals are liking this

Yesterday
Giants defeated Seattle, 6-5, rallying from a early 5-1 deficit to win.
Miami continued to bedevil Atlanta with a 8-0 shutout.
The rest of the field all lost; all of them are on two- or three-game losing streaks. 

Today
Giants finish up with Seattle at the O; 6:45 PDT. Tyler Anderson gets the nod; lefty Nick Margevicius starts for the Mariners.
Miami is at Atlanta again. Colorado's at San Diego, Milwaukee at Detroit, New York hosts Baltimore, and Cincinnati is at Chicago against the first-place Cubs. 

Last Night's Game
Logan Webb's third straight difficult start was overcome by a Giants lineup that lately has been absolutely relentless. The young righty surrendered five runs in the first three innings, but manager Gabe Kapler gave him a visible boost of confidence by sending him out for the fourth, and he pitched two scoreless while his teammates bailed him out. In the third Alex Dickerson homered with two out; Donovan Solano and Brandon Belt followed with a double and RBI single to cut a 5-1 lead to 5-3. The turning point came in the fourth, again with two out. Joey Bart singled and Mauricio Dubon battled Brady Lail to a 3-2 count, then crushed a towering drive down the left-field line to tie it up. At that point it seemed inevitable the Giants would score again, and in the seventh Darren Ruf, pinch-hitting for Dickerson in a lefty-righty switch, obliged by belting one into the empty bleachers below the big Coke bottle. The only question was whether the on-again, off-again bullpen would hold up, and the same four guys from Monday did-- Caleb Baragar, Tyler Rogers (who got the win), Jarlin Garcia, and Tony Watson (who got the save). The Giants have now held on to a postseason berth for the second day in a row and are certain to do so for at least one more day.

Note: Twice in the last three days, Kapler has sent up a pinch-hitter for a guy who homered earlier in the game. Both times that pinch-hitter has belted a home run himself!  Yes, there remain questions about how he handles his bullpen, but let's give the manager some credit for getting the most out of this lineup.

Tuesday, September 8, 2020

Tuesday, September 8, 2020


W-L GB
GIANTS 21-21 Whoa, Nellie-- look at THIS!
Miami 18-18 Held on to beat Braves in 10
Colorado 20-21 1/2 Pomeranz shuts 'em out
Milwaukee 18-21 1 1/2 Off to Detroit after day off
New York 19-23 2 Took a tough loss in 10
Cincinnati 18-23 2 1/2 Rare to be idle on Labor Day  

Yesterday
Giants defeated Arizona, 4-2, taking 3 of 4 to complete a 13-5 climb from dead last into the lead at-large wild-card position. 
Miami defeated Atlanta in ten innings to reclaim a playoff spot for now. Colorado was shut out by our old friend, Drew Pomeranz, dropping back half a game. New York lost a tough one to Philadelphia in 10. Milwaukee and Cincinnati were idle.

Today
Giants host the AL Seattle Mariners, a 6:45 PM PDT start. Logan Webb faces the entertainingly-named Ljay Newsome, like Webb a 23-year-old right-hander. 
Miami, Colorado, Milwaukee, and Cincinnati are all on the road, at Atlanta, San Diego, Detroit, and Chicago respectively, while New York's at home against the Baltimore Orioles, who amazingly are just barely in contention for a AL wild-card spot.   

Last Night's Game
The Giants finally figured out Zac Gallen in the bottom of the sixth, after the young righty had baffled them for two games and five innings of a third. Six straight Giants reached base on four singles and two walks, one with the bases loaded to Brandon Belt, which capped the four-run outburst. Kevin Gausman's start (6 innings, 2 hits, 9 K, Game Score 70) may have been the best effort by a Giants starter all year, considering the context. Sam Coonrod, who has closer "stuff", gave up a solo homer in the ninth but earned his second save.

And so the Giants, who on August 17 were 8-16 after three catastrophic late-inning collapses in four days, have won 13 of 18 to reach .500, and they head into the final three weeks as the hottest team in the league. Marginal characters like Pablo Sandoval, who started yesterday's rally with a most uncharacteristic walk, are starting to make contributions at critical times. The big wheels on offense-- Yaz, Solano, Belt, Dickerson, Longoria, Slater when healthy-- have not fizzled out; they've stayed strong and kept a barely-adequate pitching staff afloat. And though little has been said about it, the return of Belt and Longoria from the early-season injured list has stabilized the defense. Remember all those errors in July? It's been a non-story of late; the Giants are still second in the league in errors, but the numbers are starting to normalize. We haven't been on social media much lately, but we trust the "Fire Kapler!" contingent have moved on to healthier pursuits, such as losing all their money on FanDuel.  

Seattle (19-22 as they hit town) are not exactly bottom-feeders, but the AL race is a little tighter than the NL. The Mariners are two games behind Houston for second place in their division, and also two games behind Houston and the Yankees for the last at-large wild-card spot. Out of 11 teams with a reasonable shot at the postseason, they rank tenth. 

By the time this two-game set concludes, the Giants will have played 25 of their 44 games against teams with losing records. And that will then change. There will be two more up in Seattle next week, but between now and season's end they have seven against San Diego, a huge four-game set at home against Colorado, and three over in Oakland. That's ten games against two strong teams, and four against a team they have to beat. Their 6-13 mark against clubs with winning records will have to improve if "GIANTS" is to remain at the top of our little leaderboard three weeks from now. 

Monday, September 7, 2020

Monday, September 7, 2020


W-L GB
Colorado 20-20 Can Padres slow them down?
GIANTS 20-21 7-2 against Arizona so far
Miami 17-18 2 percentage points behind SF
New York 19-22 1 Can they beat Philly a 3rd time?
Milwaukee 18-21 1 2 games up on Pythagoras
Cincinnati 18-23 2 Now face first-place Cubs

Yesterday
Giants defeated Arizona, 4-2.
Colorado defeated LA again, the Mets beat Philadelphia again, while Miami, Milwaukee, and Cincinnati lost. Miami's loss moves the Giants into the second wild-card spot by .488 to .486. 

Today
Giants finish up the four-game series with Arizona at the O; 5:15 PDT. Kevin Gausman against righthander Zac Gallen, who has pitched very well in two recent starts against the Giants. It's the last time these teams will face each other in the mini-season. 
Colorado moves on to play at San Diego. Miami and the Mets finish up with Atlanta and Philly. Milwaukee is at Detroit, Cincinnati's at Wrigley Field. 

Yesterday's Game
Johnny Cueto gave up two runs in the first, battled out of a bases-loaded pickle in the fifth, and was relieved with the sacks clogged again in the sixth. Caleb Baragar got out of it and earned his 5th win in the bottom of the frame when Austin "Welcome Back" Slater singled and Donovan Solano belted a home run for a 3-2 lead. One inning later, Brandon Belt pinch-hit for catcher Chadwick Tromp, who had homered in the third, and launched one into McCovey Cove for a big insurance run. Jarlin Garcia, Tony (0.69) Watson, and Tyler (gulp) Rogers made it hold up with three scoreless innings in relief. 
Krukow on "Donnie Barrels" Solano: "His home runs always seem to give 'em the lead-- or give 'em a walk-off!" 

Sunday, September 6, 2020

Sunday, September 6, 2020


W-L GB
Miami 17-17 Beat Rays in interstate battle
Colorado 19-20 It's awkward to root for LA
GIANTS 19-21 1/2 Weird: "SF beats Bumgarner"
Milwaukee 18-20 1/2 One loss and two Cardinal wins
Cincinnati 18-22 1 1/2 Beating up on last-place Bucs
New York 18-22 1 1/2 3 1/2 behind 2nd-place Phillies

Yesterday
Giants beat Arizona and Madison Bumgarner, 4-3.
Miami, Colorado, Cincinnati and New York won. St Louis beat the Cubs twice, one a makeup game, and moved into NL Central second position ahead of Milwaukee, who lost.

Today
Giants host Arizona at 1:15 PM PDT. Johnny Cueto faces lefty Alex Young. A win plus a loss by either Colorado or Miami moves the Giants into wild-card position.

Last Night's Game
"Bum" gave up a lot of homers last year, and he's giving up a lot this year. Two more flew out of the "O" in the early innings, courtesy of Evan Longoria and Darin Ruf.  The real excitement came in the sixth against Artie Lewicki when Mauricio Dubon and Joey Bart belted back to back triples off the right- and left-center field walls. Trevor Cahill was relieved early, and his seven successors held the fort, especially Caleb Baragar, Sam Coonrod, Jarlin Garcia, Sam Selman, and Tony Watson, who got his first save.

Bumgarner is now 0-4 with a 8.44 ERA.  Impossible to tell if this would have happened had he stayed in SF, but right now Farhan Zaidi has to feel like he dodged a bullet over the winter...  Good to see Austin Slater back in there, even as DH, even though he went 0-for-5 leading off... Trevor Gott and Tyler Rogers continue to inspire trepidation every time they take the mound... Ain't it nice to see three Giants regulars with OPS over a thousand?

Saturday, September 5, 2020

The 6-4-2 Plan


That title will resonate in a special way for a few of you who recognize the acronym "IBO." Now, forget about it. In this business model, we have six teams competing for two wild-card playoff spots, and heavens to Betsy, one of them is our very own San Francisco Giants! 

With 21 games left to play, the Giants are on the outside looking in on the expanded eight-team postseason field.  Twelve of the 15 National League clubs are in contention for something, but only five have winning records. One, the LA Dodgers, are playing .750 ball and will easily win the West. The Atlanta Braves and Chicago Cubs are both at .600 and leading the East and Central, respectively. And the San Diego Padres have, at long last, risen from the cellar and are perking along comfortably at .600 in second place. At this point, it's reasonable to say that those four are likely to qualify. Then we have baseball's hottest team, the Philadelphia Phillies, who have won 9 of 10 and leaped past surprising Miami into second place in the East at 19-15. 

Meanwhile, second place in the Central is a virtual tie between the Milwaukee Brewers and St Louis Cardinals, with Milwaukee (18-19) ahead by three percentage points, mostly because they have played eight more games than have the COVID-handicapped Cards. So, while the names may change from day to day, we're left with six teams in third or fourth place in their divisions who are all within two games of one another. Theirs is a battle for the bottom two at-large wild-card berths, which seem likely to go to one or more teams that finish with a losing record. It's a SJW's participation-trophy dream! 
 
The actual postseason will be another story altogether.

Let's get there first, OK?   Here we go...


W-L GB
Miami 16-17 22 road games, 11 at home
St Louis 14-15 Fewest games, runs, wins in NL
Colorado 18-20 1/2 Minus 39 runs, thanks to Giants
GIANTS 18-21 1 Can't afford baserunning gaffes
Cincinnati 17-22 2 Haven't made playoffs since '13
New York 17-22 2 Lead NL in grounding into DPs

Yesterday
Giants lost to the Arizona Diamondbacks, 6-5.
All the rivals lost as well. Status quo. 

Today
Giants at home against Arizona; 6:15 PDT.  Trevor Cahill, who gimped off the field at Arizona a week ago, and who used to pitch for the 'Snakes, will take the hill. Opposing is our old beloved postseason warrior, Madison Bumgarner, who hasn't pitched in a month himself. Can't we have 'em switch uniforms, just for one day?

Last Night's Game
Everyone, including himself, is blaming Mauricio Dubon for running the Giants out of a bases-loaded no-out situation in the eighth. Anticipating Steven Duggar, on third, would take off for the plate on a fly ball out, Dubon took off for third. Good hustle, but bad situational awareness. The fly ball was a short one, and Duggar's move was a deke. He retreated to third and Dubon was caught dead to rights. Bang-bang double play, the inning fizzled, and it's another one-run loss. 

But before we get too exercised about this, keep in mind the Giants put on 18 baserunners last night via 12 hits, 6 walks, and an error, and stranded 11 of them. They grounded into three double plays for a total of 4 on the night, and were 2-for-12 with RISP.  Bright moments: Brandon Belt, batting .341  with a 1.088 OPS, going 2-for-4 with a walk, 2 RBI, and a homer into McCovey Cove; resurgent Alex Dickerson on base thrice and scoring twice; Joey Bart 2-for-4 and up to .250; and four scoreless innings of relief from our shaky bullpen.