Wednesday, April 09, 2014

Your 2014 Giants: Recent News on Panda and Pagan

Two really interesting bits of news have come out:
  • Sabean says that negotiations with Pablo Sandoval has been tabled.
  • Angel Pagan's time on the DL last year was not without its benefits, not all health (Merc, Schulman)
ogc thoughts

First off, Giants negotiations with Sandoval have been shut down because, basically, they are far apart in what Sandoval's side is asking for, and what the Giants are offering.  The last news was that Sandoval's side said that they were open to negotiations to mid-season, even though his agent also shared that that Pence's contract is their "base" (and the agent saying "5 or 6 years") and informed the public that the Giants reportedly offering 3 years and $40M.

Now, this makes all the sense in the world to me.   They were too far apart for negotiations to make sense.  I have to go with my prior (not sure if here or comment somewhere - or maybe it was deleted ;^) comment that it seems like Pablo's agent is a novice at being an agent, and severely didn't understand how Sabean likes to operate, which is with his kimono closed.   I'm sure Sabean wasn't happy that Sandoval's agent spilled both sides of the equation.

And there it is, Pence's 5 years at $90M contract is the "base" from which to start, according to his agent, and the Giants opening offer of 3 years and $40M, which the agent, from another account I recall him saying, that it was an insult.

What's insulting is that the agent thinks that Sandoval is worth over $100M right now (that's what 6 years at Pence's contract means).   What's insulting is that Sandoval never kept himself in good shape, even after the Giants rewarded him with his first big contract, he has acted since then like it was owed to him, not that he had to earn it.  What's insulting is last spring he announced to the world that his contract means nothing to him, that he had two years to get in shape before hitting free agency (clearly math or common sense are not his forte).

If Sandoval had stayed in reasonable shape and hit like he did in 2009 and 2011, he would not only be easily worth $100M, he might be looking at closer to $200M, that's how much money he left on the table by never taking his fitness seriously until just before free agency.  If Sandoval had even dedicated himself to fitness in last year's off-season, instead of coming into spring training and declaring that he got two years to get himself in shape, ignoring the fact that the Giants were paying him big money in 2013 and 2014 to be the hitter he can be, the Giants would have at least considered giving him a contract similar to Pence.  Sandoval hits better than Pence and also played superlative defense at 3B in 2011, whereas Pence is merely average defensively, at best (per advanced defensive metrics last few seasons).

The thing is, Sandoval's contract offer from the Giants is pretty fair.  If you take the Fangraph analysis of the disparities of $/WAR by position, for some reason, outfielders get paid more than 3B, and adjusting for that fact, the average 3B at Pence's abilities make roughly $13-14M per season.  If you look at Cot's, he fits into a wide range of market values.  I think he's clearly below A-Rod, 1st with $27.5M AAV, David Wright second at $17.25M AAV, Ryan Zimmerman and Evan Longoria, tied for third with $16.67M.  Then there is Aramis Ramirez at $12.0M AAV and Martin Prado at $10.0M AAV.  So somewhere between $12.0M and $16.67M seems to be the market value for Pablo, in my mind.

That also fits in with the Giants initial bid too.  Really, Sandoval's agent 1) don't know that the first bid is just that, the first bid, not an "insult" that, by the value, values Pablo as the 4th best thirdbaseman in baseball; and 2) is clearly within the market set for the best thirdbasemen in the majors, Pablo is clearly no A-Rod, Wright, Zimmerman, or Longoria, and yet he wants more than they are getting?  The first shows a lack of experience in negotiating or knowing who you are negotiating with, the second shows a lack of preparation and lack of market knowledge, knowledge that is easily examined by anyone with an internet connection.

Wright's, Zimmerman's, Longoria's and Prado's contracts were signed within the last two years, so they are very fresh and valid contracts to compare and contrast against:
  • Wright:  After signing an 8 year contract extension, the next season was his 30 YO season, and he had 8 seasons averaging 5.1 WAR.
  • Zimmerman:  After signing a 6 year contract extension, the next season was his 27 YO season, and he had 6 seasons averaging 4.7 WAR.
  • Longoria:  After signing a 6 year contract extension, the next season was his 27 YO season, and he had 5 seasons averaging 6.0 WAR.
  • Prado:  After signing a 4 year contract extension, the next season was his 29 YO season, and he had 4 seasons averaging 4.0 WAR.
  • Sandoval:  Next season is his 28 YO season, and up to this year, he has 5 seasons, averaging 3.6 WAR.  Even if he produced at his peak season in 2014, that's still only 4.0 WAR per season production.  In fact, his peak of 6.1 is below Longoria's average, and is the only season where he was better than Wright's or Zimmerman's AVERAGE WAR in his career (4.3, 1.5, 6.1, 2.5, 2.7).
Based on the above, there is no way he should get more than what the best thirdbasemen has gotten in the market so far.  His base appears to be Prado, who was older but around as productive as Pablo has been, before getting his big contract.  It appears that he should be closer to Prado than Zimmerman or Longoria, in terms of AAV and years given.  Five years appears to be a fair request, but no way he gets six like Zimmerman or Longoria, they accomplished more plus, moreover, was younger than what Pablo would be the next season.  Given his similarity with Prado, the Giants were rather generous, giving Pablo the same money for three seasons that Prado is getting in four seasons.

I thought perhaps that given their interest in keeping negotiations open to mid-season, that there was a compromise position in the middle of those two offers, like 4 years at $15M that would have satisfied them.  But given how quickly this door closed, clearly the Panda Camp has very high figures in their heads - again, Pence as their base - and from the way Sabean characterized it in the video at the link I inserted above, it sounds like they are still pretty much sticking to their Pence base assertion as his market value.

Good luck to Pablo trying to convince other teams to give him 5 years at $18M per season, minimum.   Any team doing that will have to be pretty desperate for a power hitting thirdbaseman to give him more money than the best thirdbasemen have been getting lately.  He would need to hit like he did in 2009 while fielding like he did in 2011.  Even then, teams are going to balk, both because of the years committed to a player who didn't take his fitness seriously until he had to and because the Giants will give him the qualifying offer that will strip most team's draft pick away from them for signing Pablo.

And if he didn't notice, the NYY already has a 3B, the Dodgers are right at their ceiling of spending, I would think, the Cubs aren't ready to sign anyone for the future yet, and would they take that risk with Pablo, and I can't remember the last time the ChiSox signed a free agent to that kind of contract.  Maybe a lower payroll budget team can take a flier on Sandoval, given that the new ESPN contract basically gave every team enough money to buy one extra-large free agent.  But will they blow their extra money on a player who until this season, never took much care to keep himself in shape?

He might find himself waiting for the season to start after it has officially started next season, like Stephen Drew and a few other free agents are this season.  That's what happens to players who want and expect big money, but had not really done that much to deserve it.

Angel's Just Trusting His Hands

Angel realized something while on the DL last season.

Schulman:
He said he had a revelation he had while rehabbing his hamstring injury last year that enabled him to raise his game when he returned, and to start this year. 
Pagan said his biggest problem as a hitter in his first seven big-league seasons was a lack of patience. As he hit bucket after bucket of balls from a pitching machine he finally realized what coaches had been telling him, to trust his hands. When a hitter trusts his hands he can stay back longer and see pitches longer. 
Pagan said that has made all the difference. He cites patience as the key to his hitting since the injury. 
“In this game, if you fall for the pitcher’s game, he’s going to get you out a lot,” Pagan said. “When you’re patient and wait for your pitch things can change drastically and you can get some good numbers. 
Like these: Since his Aug. 30 return, Pagan is 45-for-127 (.354) with 11 doubles, two triples, three home runs and nine walks.
Purdy:
The serenity shown by Pagan on his first at-bat was, according to him, the payoff for a mental reorientation he tried to make during those rehab weeks. 
"It was patience," he said. "Before, I had the game backward. I was falling for the pitcher's game, letting them get me behind and get me out. Now, I'm waiting for the pitcher to come to me." 
The light bulb went off in Pagan's head about this, he said, while watching all those games last summer and then going into the batting cage. Even though he was hitting off a machine, he would begin waiting for the best pitches or purposely keep his hands back to be ready for pouncing on the ball.
That's a key thing that often gets forgotten about major league players:  how hard it is to stay within yourself when you are playing the game.  Your mind starts wandering, you start thinking too much, and that gets in the way of your true talents from shining.  Players use different ways to get their minds out of the equation.  Ishikawa reportedly found God and decided to leave it in His Hands, which freed his mind to suddenly hit much better in the minors.  Some never find the key and have to leave the game.

Pagan is lucky to have figured this out, it's never too late to learn some key insight into the game:  see how Torres parleyed that into some nice money by changing his batting mechanics totally.  This might also extend Pagan's career by a few years, if his hitting since returning is truly indicative of his improved hitting.

Let's see what the numbers say.  His career BABIP before this season is .317.  That's with a 14.4% SO% and 7.4% BB%.  That's a 1.94 K/BB ratio.  He had a 8.3% XBH% and 32% X/H%.  58.6 AB/HR plus 0.67 GB/FB and 0.78 GO/AO, with a 21% LD% and 3.9% HR/FB and 13% IF/FB.

For this season, his BABIP is .500, clearly going down, so nothing there.  13.5% SO% and 8.1% BB%, both within his career ranges, and so is his 1.67 K/BB ratio.  He has 13.5% XBH% but that might be due to high BABIP, especially since his 33% X/H% is right in his career range.  34.0 AB/HR but that could be small samples.  0.81 GB/FB, that is a high for his career for full season work and continues a trend of raising that ratio over the past 3 seasons.  0.75 GO/AO is right near his career average.  34% LD% is very high for his career, he averaged 21% and peak was 24% last season.  As well as his 6.3% HR/FB, but again, could be small sample sizing.  His peak seasonal high was 4.4% in 2010 and he's been in the low 4's in his recent seasons, suggesting that is his norm, in the low-to-mid 4's.  And he hasn't had an IF/FB so far this season, which greatly helps anyone's BA.

So that is his big difference this season so far, his line drive hitting and lack of IF/FB.  Obviously, SSS, but he's been a good line drive hitter his whole career, league average is only 19%.  So his BABIP should roughly halved once the luck ends.  And I don't think anybody averages that high a LD%, though I'm not sure what the high for the majors is.  He will definitely come down, but where he ends up will be the question.  If he can stay near .800 OPS and .340 OBP, that would be great to get out of the leadoff position.  

In this last games of 2013, he hit .323/.376/.496/.871, with a .350 BABIP.  Dropping his current BABIP to .350 would leave his BA at .291 and OBP at .336, both right around his career norms.  His SLG would be around .430, which would leave him near his career .761 OPS.   He appears to be totally near his career norms for everything except for LD% and BABIP being elevated.

So despite what he says right now, his numbers are very similar to his career norms, and as his BABIP normalizes, so should his batting line.  He would need to continue to keep his LD% higher, which would leave his BABIP higher, if he hopes to keep his batting line greatly improved.  It's something we can only wait and see.  Good luck Angel!  We're rooting for you!

3 comments:

  1. Hey OGC - what do you think about Pablo's stats decreasing the last 3 years? The BA/OBP isn't that bad, but the SLG is really dipping. Do they worry about it? Is that the key that made the Giants hold strong on contract talks? I put up the numbers at raising matt cain today.

    the thing with the Panda for me is he absolutely has to rake. If he is a singles hitter he is very ordinary, and easily replaceable.

    Having a 3 year trend in his stats may hurt Panda's market a lot, in addition to the points you outlined.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I didn't look into this stats now, per your comment, but I don't think his overall numbers reflect his abilities accurately. That's because he's basically a singles hitter when he's covering from an injury and trying to find his stroke back.

      As we know, 2011 and 2012 were affected by his hamate bone breaks, and 2013 was affected by a couple of injuries he had; that's why 2013 was lower, he had two extended periods of recovery, he was just starting to hit again when he got injured again. I recall looking at his stats outside of those periods, and he was Panda-like then, it was just a matter of his injuries hampering him the past few seasons.

      However, while he might be a better hitter while he's healthy and got his stroke, this may just be who he is: an injury prone player. Combine that with his being a single's hitter for 4-6 weeks after coming off the DL, and I can see the Giants or any team being reticent about giving him a big Pence-type contract. That's basically why I think his agent's being stupid about negotiations - he's got $ signs in his eyes, not a good way to negotiate, that's what happened to Aurilia and you saw what that did to him.

      Though Panda is a much better hitter than Aurilia, so the same exact thing won't happen, but what I'm referring to is that his agents held out for what they thought he was worth and he ended up taking a cheap deal with Seattle, couldn't get his hitting going, and he never did get that big contract. I would bet the Giants would have given him a lot more than what he got in terms of contract had they been more reasonable.

      I can see Pablo being like I-Rod in 2003 (?), holding out for a long time and finally taking a one year deal (perhaps as much as I-Rod), probably like Morse's deal, to play somewhere by spring training. Morse seems to be a good comp in that he's been dealing with injuries too, around the same age, but hits pretty good when he's healthy. It could be like with Molina in 2010, where we sign him to a deal just before spring, at a fair price, I can't imagine that the Giants wouldn't still be interested in one year, nor that Pablo would want to leave for a one year deal if he can get the same or similar amount from SF.

      But I agree, mostly: if he's a singles hitter, we can replace him. I don't know about easily, but with the guys we got in the lineup, and assuming we end up signing Morse to a 2 year deal, we probably can get by without him around, and in 2015, we could be ready to see Panik up here, and maybe move Scutaro to 3B, maybe Duvall could be ready, or maybe Susac continues to rake and Posey finally moves to 3B and the Panda era might be over...

      And yeah, a 3 year declining trend would definitely hurt his value in terms of total years and thus dollars, but he's going to get a pretty good deal from someone for one year, at minimum, I'm pretty sure about that, and I think 2-3 year deals are what he'll be seeing if he has a so-so to good year and not a Panda year like 2011.

      Oh, and it also depends on how well he fields 3B as well. DRS had him worth almost 3 wins defensively in 2011. If he can repeat that in 2014 while being a singles hitter, he'll probably get a better deal, much like Adrian Beltre, as he'll have a high BA since he don't strike out much.

      Delete
    2. Oh, and here are my thoughts about his hitting so far.

      I think that he's probably OK, the announcers say that he's been hitting the ball well with some bad luck. I would counter that perhaps some of that bad luck is self induced based on this odd fact: he's leading the team in walks.

      The Panda has never liked to take walks. But look at him now, he says he lost the weight at the behest of his teammates, it had nothing to do with the contract, he's trying to be the model player that teams want to unload a Panda-load of Benjamins into his bank account, so maybe he took to heart what Barry that Batter Whisperer perhaps said to him in spring training and trying to take more walks.

      Well, as I've noted before, Malcolm Gladwell's article said that when people are in learning mode, their muscle memory is not working, he's like a beginner again. So perhaps Sandoval is trying hard right now to take walks, but that's causing a micro-second of extra wait time, and thus he's just missing pitches he would maybe knock with authority otherwise.

      He is not striking out too badly, plus walking a ton, so his eye must still be pretty good, he's just making the same contact. I would give him a month to figure out everything and it starts to become muscle memory.

      And luckily, he's doing it batting 3rd, the spot you want to put your 5th best hitter, because that batter is in a lot of 2-out situations, so on bases and extra base hits are not worth as many runs as it is in the 1st, 2nd, 4th, or 5th spots in the lineup. Though if Morse continues hitting, they might swap until he starts hitting again. I think it is a matter of time.

      Though I also think it's a matter of time before he gets injured, and it pushes him back to zero. Hopefully not for his and our team's sake, but I'm waiting for it...

      Delete

Labels

1984 Draft (1) 2007 Draft (15) 2007 Giants (52) 2008 Draft (22) 2008 Giants (53) 2008 season (6) 2009 Draft (18) 2009 Giants (87) 2009 season (24) 2010 Decade (12) 2010 Draft (11) 2010 Giants (137) 2010 NL ROY award (1) 2010 season (19) 2010's (3) 2011 Draft (9) 2011 Giants (84) 2011 season (8) 2012 Draft (11) 2012 Giants (93) 2012 season (11) 2013 Draft (3) 2013 Giants (39) 2013 season (5) 2014 (1) 2014 draft (5) 2014 Giants (79) 2014 season (16) 2015 Draft (4) 2015 Giants (50) 2015 season (10) 2016 Draft (1) 2016 Giants (45) 2016 season (6) 2017 Draft (3) 2017 Giants (27) 2018 Draft (8) 2018 Giants (50) 2018 Season (8) 2019 Draft (1) 2019 Giants (27) 2019 season (2) 2020 Decade (1) 2020 Giants (9) 20201 Draft (1) 2021 Giants (3) 2022 Giants (2) 2023 Giants (14) 2023 season (1) 2024 Giants (9) 25 man roster (11) 25th man fallacy (1) 26 man roster (1) 3B (1) 40 Man Roster (11) 49ers (1) 5-day rotation (1) 51/49 decisions (1) 6-man rotation (5) 89 Quake (1) 89 World Series (1) A-Ball (1) A-Gon (1) A-Rod (3) A's (6) AA-Ball (1) Aaron Rowand (25) Abiatal Avelino (1) accomplishments (1) ace pitcher (2) ace starter (4) Adalberto Mejia (6) Adam Duvall (5) AFL (4) aggression (1) Albert Suarez (5) Alen Hanson (3) Alex Cobb (1) Alex Dickerson (2) Alex Hinshaw (3) Alex Pavlovic (1) Alexander Canario (2) All-Star Game (1) almost perfect game (1) Alonzo Powell (1) Amphetamine (3) analysis (24) Andre Torres (14) Andres Torres (2) Andrew Baiiley (1) Andrew Bailey (1) Andrew McCutchen (2) Andrew Suarez (5) Andrew Susac (11) Andy Baggerly (2) Andy Sisco (1) Andy Suarez (9) Angel Joseph (1) Angel Pagan (17) Angel Villalona (30) Anniversary (1) appendicitis (1) Aramis Garcia (2) Arbitration (19) Armando Benitez (5) Armando Gallaraga (1) art of failure (1) Asia-Pacific signing (1) assessment (1) Astros (3) At the Rate They Are Going (1) ATT Park (1) Aubrey Huff (20) Austin Jackson (2) Austin Slater (5) Award (4) BABIP (3) Bam Bam Meulens (1) Barry Bonds (30) Barry Zito (77) baseball (1) Baseball America (3) Baseball Prospectus (6) Baseball Prospectus Bias Against Giants (4) baseball strategy (9) Baseball Study (18) baserunning (2) batting peripherals (1) batting stance analysis (1) batting title champion (1) Beat LA (9) bench players (4) Bengie Molina (14) Benjamin Snyder (1) Bert Blyleven (1) best manager (2) best practices (2) Beyond the Box Score (1) Bias Against Giants (1) Big 6 (9) Big Picture (3) Bill Hall (1) Bill James (1) Bill James Handbook (2) Bill Mueller (1) Bill Neukom (21) Billy Beane (3) biography (1) Blake Riverra (1) Blake Snell (1) blog news (3) Blog Philosophy (3) Bob Howry (2) Bob Mariano (1) Bobby Evans (4) Boston Red Sox (1) Brad Hennessey (5) Brad Penny (2) Brandon Bednar (1) Brandon Belt (50) Brandon Crawford (25) Brandon Hicks (1) Braves (5) breakout (2) Brett Bochy (4) Brett Pill (9) Brewers (1) Brian Anderson (1) Brian Bannister (3) Brian Bocock (2) Brian Cooper (1) Brian Horwitz (3) Brian Ragira (2) Brian Sabean (50) Brian Wilson (14) Bridegrooms (6) Bruce Bochy (36) Bryce Eldridge (1) Bucky Showalter (1) bulllpen (8) Bullpen (33) Business Plan (23) Buster Posey (102) Byran Reynolds (2) Byung-Hyun Kim (1) Cained (4) call-ups (3) Candlestick Park (1) Cards (13) Career Prospects (4) Carl Hubbell (1) Carlos Beltran (4) Carlos Gomez (1) Carney Lansford (2) Carson Whisenhunt (2) Carter Jurica (1) Casey Kelly (1) Casey McGeHee (3) catcher injury (5) catching (3) CBT penalty (1) CC Sabathia (1) censorship (2) CEO (2) Chad Gaudin (5) Charles Culberson (5) Charlie Culberson (3) Chase Johnson (3) cheating (1) Chillax (1) Chris Brown (1) Chris Gloor (1) Chris Heston (19) Chris Lincecum (1) Chris Marrero (1) Chris O'Leary (1) Chris Ray (4) Chris Shaw (4) Chris Stewart (4) Chris Stratton (30) Chris Strattton (1) Christian Arroyo (7) Christmas (1) Christopher Dominguez (4) Christy Mathewson (1) Chuckie Jones (2) Clay Hensley (3) Clayton Blackburn (10) Clayton Tanner (3) Closer (9) closer by committee (3) Coaches (4) coaching changes (1) Cody Hall (2) Cody Ross (8) Col (1) Comeback Award (1) Commissioner (1) comparison (3) competitive advantage (1) Competitive Balance Tax (2) Competitive Cycles (2) competitiveness (2) Conner Menez (1) Connor Joe (3) Connor Nurse (1) Conor Gillaspie (25) contender (1) contract extension (3) contract negotiations (2) contract signing (7) Coordinator (1) core competency (1) Core Rotation (1) Cory Gearrin (5) Cory Guerrin (1) Cory Hart (1) Craig Whitaker (2) Cubs (1) Curt Young (1) cuts (1) Cy Young Award (5) cyber-relief (1) D-backs (16) D-gers (36) D-Rocks (3) D-Rox (17) D.J. Snelten (3) Dallas McPherson (1) Dan Ortmeier (11) Dan Otero (2) Dan Runzler (6) Dan Slania (3) Dan Uggla (1) Daniel Carbonell (1) Daniel Slania (2) Dany Jimenez (1) Darren Ford (1) Dave Righetti (1) Dave Roberts (11) David Aardsma (1) David Bell (1) David Huff (2) David Loewenstein (1) Decade of the Giants (12) decline (1) Defense (11) Deferred Money (1) deleted comment (1) Denard Span (3) depth (1) Dereck Rodriquez (7) Derek Holland (18) Derek Law (11) Detroit Tigers (1) DFA (3) DH (2) Dick Tidrow (2) dictionary (1) direction (1) Dirty (1) DL (3) dodgers (15) Donald Snelten (1) Donovan Solano (1) Draft (11) Draft Analysis (27) Draft Bonus (7) draft list (3) draft philosophy (2) draft signing (3) Draft Strategy (12) Draft Study (9) Draft Success (4) drafting (5) Dres (16) Drew Pomeranz (1) DRS (1) Dynasty (3) Earl Weaver (1) Edgar Renteria (13) Eduardo Nunez (4) Edwin Escobar (5) Ehire Adrianza (26) Eli Whiteside (4) Elimination game (1) EME (2) Emmanuel Burriss (18) end of an era (1) epic season (6) era (1) Eric Byrnes (1) Eric Surkamp (6) Erik Cordier (1) Eugenio Velez (12) evaluation (3) Evan Longoria (3) Evan Longoriia (1) extension (7) fan outrage (10) fan rants (2) fanfest (1) FanGraphs (3) Farhan Zaidi (35) feature reliever (1) felony conviction (1) Fielding (5) Fielding Stats (4) finger injury (3) first post-season press conference (3) Francisco Peguero (4) Fred Lewis (3) Freddie Lewis (17) Freddie Sanchez (4) Freddy Sanchez (7) Free Agency (8) free agent misses (1) Free agent possibilities (28) Free agent signing (22) Free agent signings (21) front office (3) Gabe Kapler (1) Game Score (3) gamer-tude (1) Garrett Williams (1) Gary Brown (26) Geno Espinelli (1) George Kontos (10) Ghosts of Giants Drafts (2) Giants (10) Giants Announcer (1) Giants blogs (3) Giants Chat (4) Giants Classic Rotation (1) Giants Defense (4) Giants Draft (15) Giants Drafts (8) Giants Farm System (34) Giants Franchise record (2) Giants Future (66) Giants GM (12) Giants Greats (3) Giants hitting manual (1) Giants Leadership (1) Giants manager (1) Giants No-Hitter (5) Giants Offense (34) Giants Offseason (24) Giants Pitching (10) Giants President of Baseball Operations (3) Giants Strategy (44) GiDar (1) Gino Espinelli (1) glossary (1) Gold Glove Award (1) good players (4) good will (1) Gorkys Hernandez (2) Graphical Player (1) great players (4) Gregor Blanco (18) Gregor Moscoso (1) Gregory Santos (1) Guillermo Moscoso (2) Guillermo Mota (2) Guillermo Quiroz (1) Gustavo Cabrera (4) Hall of Fame (10) Hall of Shame (4) Hank Aaron (5) Happy Holidays (2) Hate mail (1) Hayden Birdsong (2) healthy (1) heart-warming (1) Heath Hembree (8) Heath Quinn (1) Hector Correa (1) Hector Sanchez (12) Heliot Ramos (11) Henry Sosa (8) HGH (1) Hidden Game (1) high expectations (1) high school focus in draft (1) high velocity hitters (1) high velocity pitchers (1) hiring (2) hiring process (1) Hitter's League (1) Hitting (19) Hitting Coach (1) hitting mechanics (3) hitting pitchers (2) hitting streak (1) Hitting; (1) Home Run Career Record (7) Home Run Hitting Contest (1) Hunter Bishop (4) Hunter Pence (25) Hunter Stickland (1) Hunter Strickland (9) Ian Gardeck (1) Idea (4) IFA (1) improvement (2) Indictment (1) Infield (1) injury (7) instant replay (2) instructor (1) Interesting Question (1) International Free Agent Pursuits (5) International Signings (5) interview (5) Investment (1) Ivan Ochoa (2) J.P. Martinez (1) J2 (1) Jack Taschner (4) Jackson Williams (3) Jacob Dunnington (1) Jacob Gonzalez (2) Jacob Junis (1) Jacob McCasland (1) Jae-gyun Hwang (1) Jake Dunning (2) Jake Peavy (39) Jake Smith (1) Jake Wong (1) Jalen Miller (1) Jandel Gustave (1) Japanese Starters (1) Jarrett Parker (10) Jason Heyward (1) Jason Maxwell (2) Jason Stoffel (1) Javier Lopez (5) JC Gutierrez (3) JD Davis (1) Jean Machi (6) Jeff Kent (1) Jeff Samardzija (28) Jeff Suppan (1) Jeremy Affeldt (12) Jeremy Shelley (2) Jerome Williams (1) Jesse English (2) Jesse Foppert (1) Jesus Guzman (4) Jimmy Rollins (1) Joaquin Arias (14) Joe Panik (18) Joe Torre (1) Joey Bart (6) Joey Martinez (2) Johan Santana (1) John Barr (1) John Bowker (22) John Thorn (1) Johneshwy Fargas (2) Johnny Bench (1) Johnny Cueto (31) Johnny Monell (1) Johnny Rucker (1) Jonah Arenado (1) Jonathan Mayo (1) Jonathan Sanchez (49) Jordan Hicks (1) Jordan Johnson (1) Jorge Soler (1) Jose Canseco (1) Jose Casilla (1) Jose Guillen (3) Jose Mijares (3) Jose Uribe (2) Josh Osich (9) JT Snow (1) Juan Perez (6) Juan Uribe (9) Juggling Monkey (1) Julian Fernandez (7) Julio Urias (1) Jung Hoo Lee (3) jury (1) Just Say No (1) Keaton Winn (1) Kelby Tomlinson (5) Kendry Flores (2) Keury Mella (2) Kevin Correia (2) Kevin Frandsen (22) Kevin Gausman (3) Kevin Pillar (2) Kevin Pucetas (10) KNBR (1) Kung Fu Panda (30) Kyle Crick (16) Kyle Harrison (6) laid off (1) Landen Roupp (1) Larry Baer (3) Larry Ellison (1) Lead-off (2) leadoff (1) left-handed (1) Lew Wolff (1) LHP (1) Lineup (17) lineup construction (4) Lineup position (1) links (1) Logan Webb (3) Lon Simmons (1) long relief (2) Long-Term Contract (22) long-term planning (3) losing streak (1) Lucius Fox (3) luck (2) Luis Angel Mateo (2) Luis Matos (2) Luis Toribio (1) lunatic fringe (1) Mac Marshall (1) Mac Williamson (12) Madison Bumgarner (185) Mailbox (1) Malcolm Gladwell (1) management change (3) management issues (5) managerial value (5) Manny (1) Marc Kroon (2) Marco Luciano (4) Marco Scutaro (12) Mark DeRosa (8) Mark Gardner (1) Mark Melancon (4) Marlon Byrd (1) Martin Agosta (7) Marvin Miller (1) Masahiro Tanaka (1) Mason Black (1) Mason McVay (1) Matsuzaka (1) Matt Cain (160) Matt Chapman (1) Matt Daniels (3) Matt Downs (2) Matt Duffy (8) Matt Graham (1) Matt Holliday (1) Matt Krook (2) Matt Moore (15) Matt Morris (2) Mauricio Dubon (2) Mechanics (4) Media (17) Media Bias (17) media hypocrisy (1) Media Trade Idea (3) Medical (1) Mediocy (11) Mediots (6) Melk-Gone (1) Melky Cabrera (14) Melvin Adon (1) memories (1) mental (1) Merkin Valdez (8) Message in a Bottle (1) methodology (2) MI (1) Michael Conforto (1) Michael Main (1) Michael Reed (1) Michael Trout (1) middle infield (2) Miguel Cabrera (2) Miguel Gomez (1) Miguel Tejada (5) Mike Fontenot (3) Mike Ivie (1) Mike Kickham (9) Mike Leake (11) Mike Matheny (1) Mike Morse (10) Mike Yazstremski (2) milestone (1) minor league (1) minor league contract (4) minors (11) mismanagement (1) misnomer (1) mistakes (2) MLB (2) MLB stupidity (2) MLB Success (7) MLB Trade Rumors (1) MLBAM (1) MLBTR (1) MLE (1) Mock Draft analysis (8) Modern Portfolio Theory (1) Modus Operandi (2) MPT (1) MVP (2) Natanael Javier (1) Nate Schierholtz (45) Nathanael Javier (1) Nationals (1) Naysayers (2) Negotiations (1) Neil Ramirez (1) NewPQS (8) Next Gen (1) Nick Hundley (2) Nick Noonan (27) Nick Pereira (1) Nick Vander Tuig (2) Nick Vincent (1) NL Champions (2) NL Playoffs (1) NL West (29) NL West Division Title (20) NL West Future (1) NLCS (22) NLCS MVP (2) NLDS (8) Noah Lowry (14) non-roster invitees (2) non-tenders (3) Nori Aoki (4) NPB (1) NRI (1) Oakland A's (4) OBP (1) oddities (1) Offense (4) offensive era (1) ogcPQS (6) Omar Vizquel (3) one-run games (3) Opener (1) openers (1) Opening Day (6) opening day pitcher (3) opening day roster (11) Optimism (1) Osiris Matos (2) Outfield (3) overturned (1) Ownership (7) Pablo Sandoval (97) Padres (1) Panda (6) Pandoval (1) passing (1) Pat Burrell (15) Pat Misch (5) Patrick Bailey (2) Payroll (11) PECOTA (1) Pedro Feliz (12) PEDS (10) Perfect Game (2) perjury trial (1) personal (2) Personal Reminiscence (2) Pessimism (1) Pete Palmer (1) Pete Putila (1) Pete Rose (3) Peter Magowan (2) Phil Bickford (3) Phillies (7) philosophy (1) Phoenix Theory of Rebuilding (1) Pierce Johnson (2) Pitch Count (3) pitch framing (1) pitch value (1) Pitcher hitting 8th (1) pitcher’s health (1) Pitchers League (1) Pitching (27) pitching analysis (4) pitching department (1) pitching development (4) Pitching Rotation (90) pitching staff (6) pitching strategy (2) plate discipline (1) platoon players (2) Play Ball (1) player acquisition (1) player budget (2) player development (7) playoff (2) playoff analysis (3) playoff hopes (37) playoff roster (2) playoff rotation (6) Playoff Success (28) Playoff Win Effective (3) Playoff Win Efficient (2) Playoffs (44) postmortem (2) PQS (109) press conference (2) pressure (2) priorities (1) Projected Record (6) projection (2) projections (2) promotion (2) prospect (3) prospect analysis (7) prospect future (1) prospect handling (1) Prospect of Note (3) prospect promotion (1) prospect study (2) Prospects (46) quality starts (1) questions (1) radio great (1) Rafael Rodriquez (8) Rajai Davis (2) Ralph Barbieri (1) Ramon Ramirez (3) Randy Johnson (10) Randy Messenger (2) Randy Winn (14) Rangers (5) Ranking (4) rant (1) raspberry (1) rationalization (1) Ray Durham (5) Rayner Arias (1) re-sign (2) realist (1) Rebuilding (5) Rebuilding Myths series (1) rebuttal (1) Red Sox (1) Reds (5) Reggie Crawford (1) rehab (1) reliever (3) relievers (1) Relocation Concession (2) Research (2) resource scarcity (1) rest for starters (1) Retired (3) Retirement (3) return (1) Reyes Moronta (3) RHP (1) Ricardo Genoves (1) Rich Aurilia (7) Rick Peterson (1) Rickie Weeks (1) Ricky Oropesa (3) right-handed (1) risk mitigation (2) risk profile (1) Roberto Gomez (1) Rockies (2) Rod Beck (1) Roger Kieschnick (13) Roger Metzger (1) Ron Shandler (2) Ron Wotus (1) Ronnie Jebavy (1) Ronnie Ray (1) rookie debut (1) Rookie of the Year (1) Roster (4) rosterbation (2) Rotation by Committee (1) Rotation Chaos (1) ROY (2) Royals (3) Rule 5 (2) Rule 5 Draft Pick (5) rumors (9) run differential (1) run prevention (1) run production (1) runs support (1) Russ Ortiz (11) Russell Carleton (1) Ryan Garko (2) Ryan Klesko (4) Ryan Rohlinger (2) Ryan Theriot (3) Ryan Vogelsong (93) Ryder Jones (2) Sabean Naysayers (7) Sabermetric Thoughts (6) sabermetrics (5) SABR (1) Salary speculation (3) SALLY (1) Sam Dyson (7) Sam Long (1) Sam Selman (1) Sam Wolff (1) San Jose Giants (1) San Jose Relocation (3) Sandro Fabian (2) Sandy Rosario (1) Santiago Casilla (9) scenarios (1) Scott Boras (1) Scott Harris (2) Scott McClain (2) Scott Shuman (1) Scouting (2) Sean Hjelle (5) season review (1) secret sauce (2) Sergio Romo (17) Seth Corry (6) SF Giants (2) Shilo McCall (1) Shohei Ohtani (3) Shohei Otani (2) Shooter (1) shutouts (1) Signature Song (1) signing (13) Silly-Ball (3) South Atlantic League (1) South Bay Rights (1) SP usage (1) spin rate (1) splits (2) Sports Illustrated (1) Spring Training (16) stabilized stats (1) standings (1) starting CF (1) starting lineup (19) starting pitching (96) starting rotation (4) Statcorner (1) State of the Giants (1) statistics (2) STATS (1) Steamer (1) Stephen Vogt (1) Steroids (7) Steve Edlefsen (4) Steve Johnson (3) Steve Okert (8) Steven Duggar (7) strikeout rate (2) Sue Burns (1) sunk costs (1) superstition (1) tactics (1) talent evaluation (4) Tax (1) team culture (1) Team of the 2010's (2) Team of the 2020's (1) Team of the Decade (4) Team Speed (1) Team Support (1) Thank You (2) The Evil Ones (tm) (1) The Giants Way (2) The Hardball Times (1) The Hey Series (19) The Hey Zaidi Series (4) Thomas Joseph (3) Thomas Neal (9) Tigers (4) Tim Alderson (17) Tim Hudson (39) Tim Lincecum (195) TINSTAAPP (1) Todd Linden (3) Todd Wellemeyer (6) Tommy Joseph (3) Tony Watson (4) Top 100 Prospects (1) Top 14 Roster (1) Top Draft Position (4) top Giants prospects (6) top player list (1) top prospect list (6) Trade (12) Trade Analysis (22) Trade Idea (9) Trade PTBNL (2) Trade Rumors (30) trading (1) training staff (2) Training Tool (1) Travis Blackley (1) Travis Ishikawa (47) Trevor Brown (5) Trevor Gott (1) tribute (1) Tristan Beck (2) turning point (1) Ty Blach (23) Tyler Austin (1) Tyler Beede (10) Tyler Cyr (1) Tyler Horan (1) Tyler McDonald (1) Tyler Rogers (2) Tyler Walker (2) umpire mistake (3) Umpires (3) USA Today (1) utility (1) Voros McCracken (1) Waiver Roulette (1) Waldis Joaquin (5) walks (1) Wall of Fame (1) WAR (4) Warrior Spirit (1) Wendell Fairley (10) What-If Scenario (3) wild card (1) wild card race (1) Will Bednar (1) Will Clark (1) Will Smith (7) Will Wilson (3) Williams Jerez (1) Willie Mac Award (1) Willie Mays (1) winning on the road (1) Winter League (1) winter meetings (3) World Series (28) World Series Champions (13) WS Ring Bling (1) xBABIP (1) xwOBA (1) Yankees (1) Yusmeiro Petit (40) Zack Cozart (2) Zack Wheeler (9) Zaidi MO (2) Zaidi Rotation (3) ZiPS (1) Zito Role (2)