Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Right Me Up

Don't look now, but the Giants are only 5 games out of first in the West and riding a 7 road-game win streak, the longest since 2004. There's something to be said about the increasingly abysmal Western Division and the national emergency that are the Nats, but I'll take hot-weather hitting and sweeps any time.


The Sick Man of Major League Baseball

This was by far the Giants' best series of the season. For once, strong starting pitching combined with timely hits to get Matt Cain his third win, who showed marked improvement from his last time out.
6/4 vs NYM: 5 IP, 5 H, 5 ER, 4 BB, 3 SO, 1 HR
6/9 @ WSN: 6.1 IP, 8 H, 1 ER, 1 BB, 6 SO, 0 HR
Cain's one Achilles heel has been lack of control, especially with his fastball--walking one too many batters and then serving up the long bomb. Last night, we saw him pitch to contact using a mix of pitches, resulting in a few more hits but three extra strikeouts to strand runners.

It also helps to have a guy like Yabu waiting in the bullpen to clean up the bases via one-pitch double-plays in the seventh inning.

If we thought that Brian Wilson's previous saves were terrifying, those were nothing compared to last night's 4-out thriller. Wilson preserved a 1-run lead in the 8th by getting a flyball to end a bases-loaded situation, and then cleaned up the 9th despite a throwing error by Castillo. He's now in the top 10 among relievers in WPA, with the likes of Joe Nathan and Mariano Rivera, with a 1.87.

Monday, June 9, 2008

Haterade


The source of the declining value of the American dollar, skyrocketing gas prices, and global warming: the maple bat

Bruce Jenkins takes another thinly veiled jab at Barry Bonds, this time for introducing exploding maple bats into MLB.
The maple-bat craze was launched single-handedly by Barry Bonds, who enlisted the Canadian-based Original Maple Bat Company in 1999 and used maple to hit his record-breaking 73 homers in 2001.
Safety first, but when will Brucey get new material?

In slightly fresher news, the Giants look to sweep their first 4-game series against the Nationals tonight.

Lineup, courtsey of Mr. Baggarly:
lf Lewis
2b Durham
rf Winn
c Molina
cf Rowand
1b Bowker
3b Aurilia
ss Vizquel
p Cain
Good to see Bochy run Bowker out on the field again. His .248 batting average belies the inordinate number of line drives he's hit right at people.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Streaking Bowker

Thanks to John Bowker's second home run in as many days (did I mention how much I love salami?), Zito notches a second win despite going only 5 innings and allowing 11 baserunners. Not stellar, not even good, but the Giants' newfound offense is enough to dig anyone out of a 3-0 hole. Can these Giants please keep the old Giants locked away in an underground cave?

Speaking of mashing, Posey goes deep again, adding two insurance runs in the 7th inning on the way to an 11-4 victory over Gillaspie and the Shockers.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Lincecum Keeps Rollin'

InningBatterVelocityResult
3T. Redding86Swinging strike, K
5K. Casto84Infield hit, single
6C. Guzman82Groundout
7K. Casto82Ball


Before I address the slider, can we just crown Lincecum king of the universe and be done with it? He's good. He's also the first Giants in 15 years to start off a season with an 8-1 record.

All seriousness aside, yesterday's data probably is not accurate since Gameday blanked on types of pitches in the 5th and 6th innings.

The information that actually showed up supports the same points I've noticed in previous posts. Sample sizes have tailed off in Lincecum's past starts since he has not thrown nearly as many sliders per game as he did against the Cardinals. I can say that no batter has teed off on the slider yet, though Casto managed an infield single.

---

Dirty Sanchez tonight at 4. 15 hits for the Giants again?

Friday, June 6, 2008

Open Watching Buster Posey and Conor Gillapsie Thread

It's currently the top of the 4th, 3-1 to Wichita State on a 2-run home run and an RBI double.

The commentators said that the coach for the the Seminoles calls every pitch, which disappoints me because we won't be able to see how Posey manages his pitchers. No base-stealers yet, but Wichita State seems like a running team, so he'll probably get a chance to show off his rocket arm.

Bottom 4th, 3-2 Wichita: Home run by Posey on the second pitch he saw, 6th of the post-season.

Top 5th, 3-2 Wichita: Gillapsie grounds out to first. That's his second groundout of the day. Not exactly confidence inspiring, but we'll see.

You can tell that Posey is new to catching. It's not a problem, but he bounces a lot when he sets up before a pitch.

Top 5th, 4-2 Wichita: Before the run scored, Wichita stole 3rd on a slider outside the zone that Posey couldn't catch properly. After, he blocked another ball in the dirt outside the zone nicely.

Bottom 5th, 5-2 Wichita: With two outs and a runner on second, Wichita decides to intentionally walk Posey.

Top 6th, 5-3 Wichita: Commentators said that Villanueva, FSU's starter for the game, credits Posey for keeping him focused during games.

Top 6th, 8-3 Wichita: Gillapsie hits a 3-run HR on the first pitch. A home-run is always appreciated, but it seems like he likes swinging at the first pitch.

Posey catches a pitch outside the zone, then whips it to the first baseman in an attempt to nail the runner there. Though the runner was safe, Posey threw it down the line pretty fast from his knees.

Bottom 6th, 9-4 Wichita: The broadcast on ESPN dropped out with Posey down an 0-2 hole. I'm not sure how he hit into an out, but the play involved Gillaspie.

Top 9th, 10-5 Wichita: Posey drops a 3rd strike, but flips it over to first for the out. He's caught 5 different pitchers today.

Bottom 9th, 10-5 Wichita:
Posey strikes out on a pitch way outside with a runner on first. He's a bum!

Bottom 9th, 10-7 Wichita: With 2 men on and 2 outs and a chance to tie up the game, Posey strikes out swinging. The pitch before, though, was a bit high and should have been ball four, but the ump called strike two. End game.

Play to Your Strengths: Draft Day 2



207: LHP Aaron King
237:
LHP Scott Barnes
267:
LHP Ryan Verdugo
297:
RHP Ryan O'Sullivan
327:
RHP Justin Fitzgerald
357:
RHP Ari Ronick
387:
CF Juan Perez
417:
CF Caleb Curry
447:
2B Daniel Cook
477.
1B C.J. Ziegler
507.
RHP Brian Irving
537.
SS Brooks Lindsay
567.
LF Ryan Mantle, LF
597.
2B Trey Sutton, 2B
627.
RHP Michael Eifel
657.
SS Carter Bell
687.
RHP Jason Jarvis
717. LHP Thomas Musick
747.
CF Damon Wright
777.
2B Ryan Lormand
807.
RHP Kyle Woodruff
837.
RHP Shane Kaufman
867.
1B Robert Flanagan
897.
SS Vladimir Frias
927.
RHP Aaron Davidson
957.
RHP John Blake
987.
LF Ryne Price
1017.
RHP Francois Lafreniere
1047.
3B Daniel Black
1077.
LHP Matthew Way
1107.
RHP Jeremy Penn
1137.
RHP Chris Wilson

Tons of pitchers taken, but I don't mind. Tidrow has a knack for finding talents, most recently Lincecum, especially in the lower rounds.

It's funny that the Giants only took 1 third-baseman, Daniel Black, so far, given that their minors system is bereft of players in the hot corner. They must have faith in Angel Villalona being capable of handling the position.

2008 MLB Draft: Day 1 Roundup

Let's give a warm welcome to the 6 new members of the Giants family, provided that the Giants can sign them, of course.

#5: C Buster Posey

Buster PoseyAfter initially slamming Buster Posey in a fit of "why didn't the Giants take Smoak" fury, I'm warming up to to him. He fills one of the gaping holes in the infield, throws in potential for 10-15 home runs, and is inarguably the best catcher in the draft.

What he brings to the table:
  • Named to the All-ACC first team in 2007, became the first sophomore finalist for the Johnny Bench Award, first team All American by Collegiate Baseball, named to the President's List for a 4.0 GPA.
  • Currently, he leads the NCAA with .467/.567/.864. There's something to be said about aluminum bats and small parks, but a .467 average is nothing to sneeze at.
  • Posey originally played shortstop as a freshman, but he is a fast learner and already displays great defensive potential behind the plate, nailing 40.9% of base stealers in 2007.
  • Throwing a low-90's fastball up to second would explain that percentage. In addition to catching, he's expected to be FSU's closer.
  • Just in case the Giants find themselves in this type of game again, Posey plays all nine positions.
  • This article by Heather Dinich of ESPN closed the deal for me:
    Baseball and school, that's about all I do. That's about it, but I wouldn't have it any other way. I enjoy it, I really do.
    If you're not sold on Buster Posey yet, take a looksee for yourself today 11 AM on ESPN2 when FSU faces Wichita State (home of Conor Gillaspie, how convenient) in the Super Regionals. Game 2 is on Saturday at 9 AM, Game 3 on Sunday at 10 AM.
#37: 3B Conor Gillaspie

  • 2007 MVP of Cape Cod League, winner of Thurmon Munson Batting Champion Trophy in Cape Cod League (won by Smoak, Derek Jeter, and Lance Berkman previously), named to first team All-Valley and Wichita All-Regional team
  • I love this pick. Love it. BA ranked Gillaspie as the 13th pro prospect in the the Cape Cod League and the Giants pick him at 37. Steal!
  • Like Bill Mueller, lack of power is the only real knock on Gillaspie, but I think that he has more power than people give him credit for. He hit .345 in Cape Cod with a wooden bat and amassed .673 slugging and 21 XBH, 7 of those home runs.
  • Power or no power, this guy flat out hits. He batted over .400 for most of his junior year and has plate discipline. Credit to the Giants for drafting guys with power and patience this year.
#82: RF Roger Kieschnick

  • Named to Second Team All-Big 12
  • He has raw power, finishing 2007 with a .302 batting average with 25 doubles, 5 triples, and 13 home runs. His swing causes him to pull at times, which could be a problem but at the same time generate XBH.
#117: SS Brandon Crawford

  • As a pull hitter, he has power, but he's lost confidence this year because of a rough Cape Cod season. When he's on though, he regularly drives balls and has a solid arm in the hole.
#147: Edwin Quirarte

  • Quirarte currently serves as the Matadors' closer. Other than that I don't know too much about him. His stats aren't stellar for a closer, 4.50 ERA in 2006 and 6.57 in 2007.
#177: Eric Surkamp

  • His sophomore season sounds a bit like Matt Cain's season last year:
    Had an outstanding, consistent season despite winning just four games ... Had seven no-decisions for the second consecutive season ... Left three of his no-decisions with the lead, three with the score tied, and one trailing by one run ... Allowed two earned runs or less in 11 of 16 appearances
  • He throws a fastball in the mid to high-80's but he gets guys out, as shown by his 2.71 ERA.
Overall, I'm very happy with the draft so far. The Giants have broken with tradition and drafted 6 collegiate players, 4 of them position players. Brian Sabean hinted yesterday that Posey would be put on the fast track to the majors and with the big club by 2010:
(Posey) is on the fast track and Bengie’s clock is winding down,” Sabean said. “It’s really up to him how soon he wants to get going and how soon he can get here.
As I'm typing, the Giants have drafted several new players, including 6 pitchers. I'm totally in favor of this new philosophy, and let's hope the Giants get these guys signed.