Sunday, October 29, 2023

Your 2023 Giants: Ohtani, the White Whale

As with any superstar free agent, Ohtani is likely to not sign with the Giants. But I don't think it would be out of the realm either. Here are some of my thoughts on what it would take to sign him.

Also, as many of my posts goes, this went long: it is also a discussion of the positives that I see with the Giants roster and future. While the past couple of years have been disappointing, the Giants appear to me to be on the cusp of breaking out and being a serious contender for the intermediate term, if they can acquire at least one key component (a good cleanup hitter) and ideally two (another ace starter).

Lastly, I started this post thinking I needed to finish by the end of the World Series, as that was when I expected the Giants to announce their next manager. Because Bob Melvin was named manager, I finished it up and published it now, adding a note where I left the content unchanged and noting the hiring.

ogc thoughts

Obviously, big negatives right away is that:

  • The Giants only have one winning and playoff team in Zaidi's five seasons
  • Their manager was just fired
  • Their GM has a one-year team option that the team has already announced would be picked up, and is viewed as a lame duck leader

First:  Sign Zaidi to Two-Year Extension

[Note: This was written before Bob Melvin was hired and Zaidi was announced to have a similar length contract; both now have contracts for the next three years. I left this paragraph unchanged]

First thing the Giants should do after the World Series ends is to announced a new two-year extension for Zaidi, much like how they did that for Sabean during the late 2000's.  Even better would be a three-year.  This would remove the stigma of 2024 being a lame duck season, and show a longer term view of his tenure, hence why three years would be better.

Second: Illustrate How Ohtani's Need for Control Caused Angel's Issues with Losing

Next, they should analyze (I assume Giants have a ton of grunt interns to do this) exactly what the effects of Angels having to adjust their starting pitcher on the fly because of Ohtani. And I would bet that they were forced to use a below average starting pitcher or didn’t handle the opener well, resulting in losses. 

Then they should show how the Giants juggled that all season and the pitching held up strong, but unfortunately they need hitters, and that’s where Ohtani comes in at DH. They should also use the lineup calculator to show how much of an improvement there is with the Giants run scoring with Ohtani as DH, and how many wins that would add to a strong pitching team like the Giants in 2024, and then how much better they would be with Ohtani as SP in 2025. 

The Giants were 12th in Runs Allowed in 2023, and I expect it to improve in 2024 because Harrison, Beck, and Winn will pitch more innings, plus the poor performing vets either are gone or not getting as many innings. And especially with Ohtani in 2025, should be top 5 at least. And especially if they can sign either Snell or Yamamoto, that’s a rotation of aces. I think this is the Giants best path to contention right now. 

They need to prove to him why the Angels lost even with Trout and him, and why there’s no other team that has handled such a situation and still have a good pitching staff, else wherever he goes, that issue will dog that team as well. 

How Much Ohtani Improves Offense

I’ve used Pythagorean and the lineup calculator extensively over the years, and it has always been in the ballpark of the actual stats, so it should be simple to demonstrate that to him, then get into the theoretics of him in the Giants lineup and rotation. 

Of course, that presumes he can even come back from a second TJS and be effective. It hasn’t been declared as such yet, but the history is that a second TJS is the end of the pitching career. But they have been coy about what is wrong and hasn't announced what his procedure was, only that he had one, so we’ll see.

But he can hit while recovering from his pitching arm procedure.  To get a range of expectations on what the Giants might get from Ohtani, let's take a look at how he hit, from high, to average, to low, over the past three seasons:

  • 2023:      .304/.412/.654/1.066
  • 2021-23: .277/.379/.585/.964
  • 2022:      .273/.356/.519/.875

Here is the difference his batting lines above would improve the Giants over their 4th place hitter in 2023, who collectively hit a paltry .228/.304/.376/.680 (about as good a reason they fell out of contention:

  • Giants 4th place 2023: 1.07 RS
  • Ohtani 2023:  1.67 RS (+0.60 RS; adds 90 runs over 150 game season for Ohtani)
  • Ohtani 3-yr:   1.51 RS (+0.54 RS; adds 81 runs)
  • Ohtani 2022:  1.38 RS (+0.31 RS; adds 47 runs)
Based on an RA of 4.44 that the Giants had in 2023, adding the above runs to the 2023 team would result in (based on Pythagorean expected wins of 76 in 2023 and actual of 79):
  • Ohtani 2023:  85 wins (+9 wins over expected; + 6 wins over actual)
  • Ohtani 3-yr:   82 wins (+6 wins; +3 wins)
  • Ohtani 2022:  80 wins (+4 wins; +1 win)

So, based on high, average and low of the past three seasons, Ohtani would add anywhere from 4 to 9 wins over expected based solely on his hitting. 

Giants Improved Pitching in 2024, Which Was Already Good in 2023

The good news for Ohtani is that the Giants already had a good pitching staff in 2023. He should be looking for this because it is unknown whether he's even capable of coming back as a good pitcher, so he should want to sign with a team who is very talented.  While they were ranked 12th in Runs Allowed in the majors, the pitching staff was ranked second in xFIP with 3.86 and third in SIERA with 3.88, which is a sign that bad luck affected their results, and indicative of the good talent already on the team. Put some good (or just better) defenders out there and that RA can drop down a lot.  

In addition, the Giants should also have an improved pitching staff in 2024. Webb and Cobb were good, and look to continue to be good, plus Harrison took the next step in development and pitched in the majors in 2023, and he was roughly where ZiPS projected him to be in 2023, roughly 4 ERA/FIP, and project him to be around 3.65 ERA in 2024. If he can figure out his homer problems, he could be good his first full season, like Bumgarner was.  

There are other potential starters.  Tristan Beck also pitched well, and would be a decent 5th starter first option, with Winn, Stripling, DeSclafani filling out SP depth, and Whisenhunt, Black, Birdsong as prospects percolating and developing.  

Altogether, the 10 pitchers who were actually starting pitchers, had a collective 4.12 ERA and 4.49 RA, which is slightly worse than the 4.44 RA for the Giants.  

Based on an RA of 4.19 that the Giants would have with a rotation of Webb, Cobb, Harrison, Beck Winn, and using ZiPS 2024 projections (plus assuming the bullpen would also improve by removing the poorer performers and free agent pickup), and using the above expected RS with Ohtani:
  • Ohtani 2023:  88 wins (+12 wins over expected; + 9 wins over actual)
  • Ohtani 3-yr:   86 wins (+10 wins; +7 wins)
  • Ohtani 2022:  84 wins (+8 wins; +5 win)
With Ohtani, the Giants would be in playoff range in 2024 (since 84 wins got a team into the playoffs in 2023), just assuming the same production from the existing players, plus projected ERA for the expected pitching rotation (which also assumes that the bullpen is similarly improved too, through free agency).  And this should be a good base prediction, as the Giants will still have Desclafani and Stripling (and perhaps Manaea) still available, and if any can return to prior expectations, they can provide better ERA than Beck or Winn, at the back of the rotation.  Even better if they can sign free agents like Yamamoto or Snell or Sonny Gray to greatly improve the rotation.

Other 2024 Improvements

Those projections does not include expected improvements:
  • One is that in his second year, Gold Glove finalist Patrick Bailey would likely improve, both offensively and defensively, as well as playing an additional six weeks.  That's 1-2 wins. 
  • Second, Marco Luciano would be the starting shortstop, where he's projected to be near 2.0 zWAR, which is better than what Crawford and Schmitt produced there, roughly zero, so adding a win or two. 
  • Third, not as likely but Harrison has the tools to be an ace starting pitcher. If he can figure it out in 2024, he would add 3-4 wins. Even if he just meets projected production of 1.5 zWAR, that should be at least an extra two wins because the starters weren't even good enough to go three deep for a significant part of the season (i.e. they weren't even replacement level, which is considered to be zero WAR produced).  
Just among these three, we can expect anywhere from 4 wins to 8 wins extra.  With Ohtani's additions above, that should put the Giants in the 90+ wins range.  90 wins should get the Giants into the playoffs in 2024.

2025 Pitching with Ohtani

I think here is where the Giants might be able to win over Ohtani, integrating him back into the rotation.  Pitchers who have second TJS usually signals the end of their pitching career. That's probably why Ohtani has not announced that its TJS surgery. He is probably looking at every alternative.

What is known is that while it is an UCL tear in his pitching elbow, apparently the original TJS ligament placed in there is healthy and fine, it was another ligament that tore. And they are exploring a variety of options for repairing it, as Ohtani wants to return to pitching.  One includes a brace, which is what Brock Purdy got to fix his injury. But it still might be a TJS for this ligament, his agent did not deny that, he only would say that they are looking at many options.  He has had the procedure, but nothing is publicly known about it yet.

Thus, he will need a team willing to go the extra mile in accommodating his need to push a start back, as necessary, much like how the Giants operated this season.  Webb was the only starter to take the mound every five or six starts. Cobb often had to shift his start, because of his hip issues, which is similar to how a team would handle Ohtani. And, of course, for a significant portion of the season, the other three rotation spots were TBD, and they were actually .500 in those games, which other teams would struggle with, throwing out their 6th, 7th, 8th starters out there, and losing aa lot of games (as we'll see below when I look at the Angel's rotation)..

More importantly, I think to Ohtani, the team he signs with needs to already have a good pitching staff without him (which the Giants already do, with a Top 3 staff in xFIP and SIERA; and could be better with Harrison, and perhaps Yamamoto, if they sign him), and ideally one on the rise (which the Giants do with Harrison, Beck, Winn, and the other prospects), just in case his arm does not respond to whatever treatment he gets.  Only LA is even in the top 10 (10th in SIERA; 13th in xFIP), though Seattle is just behind SF (4th in both xFIP and SIERA).  But Seattle seems like a huge negative as a destination because Ohtani, one would think, would want to be the top dog with the team he signs with, and Ichiro casts a huge shadow in Seattle.  And they did not utilize the opener much in 2023.

Angel's Rotation Problems

Also, as I noted before, I would bet that the Angels was always forced to use replacement level starters. So I went through their starters throughout the season (which the Giants could have their analysts do, as I suggested above). I found a team that had rotation problems after Ohtani's starts.

They had to go with Tyler Anderson for 25 starts, only skipping two starts at the end. He had a 5.43 ERA, and while they went 12-13 with him as the starter, that's a horrendous ERA.  They also traded for Lucas Giolito, who had 6 starts with a 6.89 ERA, and the team went 1-5 with him as the starter, that's what helped tank their pennant run.  They also had to give seven starts to Jose Suarez, who had a 9.35 ERA as a starter.  And Jaime Barria had 6 starts at 4.94 ERA.  That's 44 starts with a collective 6.11 ERA. All the Giants starters had an ERA 4.99 or lower, except for 20 starts and 8 openers. 

On top of that, the Angels only had one other starting pitcher who was good, Patrick Sandoval, and he had a good ERA of 4.11 (109 ERA+), but the team went 8-20 behind him.  This was the result of a lot of games where the bullpen gave up enough runs after he left that the team lost despite Sandoval's effort.

Overall, the Angels had to mix and match all through the season, shifting to four man rotation at one point, then running a 6-man rotation from roughly May 15 to June 18 (with 7 different starters from 5/15-5/20, then an 8th on 5/22, with Ohtani pitching twice).  They only had one starter with over 20 starts besides Ohtani who had ERA+ at least 109, and the only other starter over 110 ERA+ only had 8 starts. 

Meanwhile the Giants had two starting pitchers at 109 or above (Webb and Cobb), and this was in the NL, where the average ERA used to calculate ERA+ was 4.22 (vs. the AL ERA+ base of 4.48, roughly).  Webb was near Ohtani's ERA of 3.14, with a 3.25 ERA, and Cobb had a 3.87 ERA.  They varied their rotation to both keep Webb on a five day pitching pattern, mostly, and allow Cobb extra time for his hip to be well enough for him to pitch.  

When the Giants had problems with the starting pitching, they were able to pivot before too much damage was done and their pitching was good enough to prop up the weak offense until the last two months of the season.  That was good enough to get them above .500 by roughly 10 games for most of the summer before things fell apart.  Their openers collectively had an 18-17 record in their "starts", which allowed the bulk feature pitcher the ability to face more of the bottom of the order.  Meanwhile, all the Angels starters with ERA+ of 100 or less, had a collective 31-41 team record.

Thus, if Ohtani is back in the rotation in 2025, they likely have Webb as co-ace of the rotation, and Harrison will hopefully make the jump to ace status by that season, as well.  Cobb will likely be aging out, so he's probably gone by then (age 37 season) or at best, a middle rotation guy, but Beck, Winn, Whisenhunt, Black, Birdsong, along with any future speculative free agent pickup like Gausman or Rodon, will fill out a good to great rotation. Even better if they are able to sign Yamamoto or Snell.

To Return to Contention: Giants Offense Need a Good Clean-Up hitter

The Giant's problem was mostly not pitching, it was hitting, especially the clean up hitter, who collectively had a .680 OPS, which isn't even good enough for the bottom of the lineup. And getting a good to great clean-up hitter, whether Ohtani or another bopper, like Bellinger, would boost the team into playoff contention, when combined with expected improvements in the starting pitching.  

This can be seen with the addition of Ohtani, from good to elite, into the clean up spot, as shown by the lineup calculator. Fans when they are down on a team suddenly need all-stars at every position or else it's all a failure, but as I showed above, the Giants weren't all that far from being playoff competitive, had they an average to elite clean up hitter.

Addition by Subtraction

Another area of improvement needed is fielding.  Errors pushed the Giants ERA of 4.02 to an RA of 4.44. This should be solved via the old addition by subtraction.  Two of the Top 5 players with the worse DRS will be gone, Brandon Crawford and Joc Pederson (combined -19 DRS, or roughly two wins lost).  

JD Davis was responsible for -10 DRS himself, and I expect Casey Schmitt to replace him as the starting 3B, as Davis' horrible 3B defense is a career long issue, costing 1.5-2.0 wins on a seasonal basis. Schmitt started off badly at 3B, but ended up looking great defensively there, per DRS.  His bat also looked better. Luciano should not be as bad at SS (collectively -21 DRS; he had a -11 DRS/Yr rate), which is roughly 1 win improvement on defense there, though he's not likely to be average there, as most scouts have him moving to 3B or a corner OF position.  He's still an overall improvement defensively if he's the starter.  

There is also media talk (Baggarly of The Athletic) about signing Matt Chapman to start at 3B. I think that would be a better solution for 3B than starting Schmitt, who still have a lot of question marks about his bat. Chapman would greatly improve 3B, by around two wins over Davis just on defense, plus his bat is more than okay for 3B and an improvement over Davis as well (overall, he has produced roughly 4.0 bWAR annually the past three seasons). In addition, his great defense there would help to cover up any range issues Luciano might have playing SS, and help to hide his weaknesses fielding SS. 

The other Top 5 are Luis Matos (-10 DRS) and Blake Sabol (-7 DRS). Matos might not even be the CF, if the Giants sign the Korean CF Jung-Hoo Lee, who has usually been a Gold Glove winner in KBO. If they strike out with him, Kiermeier is a free agent and would add around 20 DRS, if they can sign him.  In any case, Matos' not going to get much playing time with that type of fielding even if they don't sign Lee or Kiermeier.  

Sabol likely will be spending much of the season in AAA learning how to catch, as well as playing other positions, as they prepare him to be their utility player of the near future.  I expect the Giants to use Bart as backup catcher, given his abilities there, at the beginning of the season, and possibly trade him before the trade deadline, once Sabol is average-ish defensively. 

Bart still has some value, and would be a nice part of a bundle of players in a trade. I still think he can be a capable starting catcher if given the opportunity and experience. I would prefer keeping him as the back up catcher, to see if he can still develop his bat further, as his defense is considered good.  As much as I like Bailey and think he's the long term solution, catcher is an injury prone position, so it wouldn't hurt to keep Bart around, just in case.

Altogether, that's -46 DRS, or roughly 5 wins added by subtracting them.  And should lead to an overall improvement in defense, which was -17 DRS for the season. Subtracting them would push the team to +29 DRS. 

And it should even be better.Adding Schmitt or Chapman should add another +10 DRS or so, pushing to roughly +40.  If they can sign Lee to man CF (he's been a gold glove winner in KBO), that's likely another +10, pushing to +50 DRS.  +29 would have been 10th in the majors, +39-40 would have been 6th, +49-50 would have been 4th.  Kiermeier would push it up even higher.

Thus, the Giants could greatly turn around their overall fielding simply by replacing their top 5 offenders with average (+0 DRS) defenders.  That alone would push them to 10th overall.  And Schmitt (or Chapman) at 3B should push them to 6th.  That should all be doable.

To Compete While Accommodating Ohtani's varying need for rest, from 5 to 7 days

In addition, Ohtani only started 23-28 starts the past three seasons.  He needs a team that plans around the missing starts. The Giants need to demonstrate that Ohtani will run into the same issue with any other team, having to manage that uncertainty.  

The Dodgers have experience managing pitchers who miss games, but have not had to juggle starts as a starter (like Cobb with the Giants this season) who needs another day of rest to make his start.  I'm not sure about how SD, Seattle, Texas, Cubs, clubs that were allowed to talk with him back then, but haven't heard of them doing stuff like that. And the Mets, Yankees, and Red Sox have the money, but like these other clubs, isn't know for doing stuff like juggling their rotation with openers.

The Giant have that experience, as well as the success, as their pitching was good (and should be better next season with Harrison, Beck, Winn, and Walker on the staff all season, as well as subtraction of the laggards via less IP or DFA), and what they need is hitting to take advantage of the good pitching.

Contract Nuances

I also expect teams to structure the contract because of the uncertainty regarding his return to pitching.  I expect that Ohtani will ask for player options after his second and third seasons, much like Cueto's contract.  Ohtani will want the option of upgrading his contract if he can return successfully to the mound.

This might make him more amenable to a deal with the Giants. Nobody is going to doubt his abilities to hit, but this second pitching arm injury will be a huge question mark. The Giants not only have an organization focused on pitching, their park is a pitcher's park, and they already have a great pitching staff to build off of, by adding elite starters like Yamamoto and Ohtani to the rotation. 

I also expect teams to work in a bonus structure tied to the number of starts made.  The Giants have done that before with contracts for pitchers, and Zaidi did a very complicated one for Maeda in LA, because of his potential injury issues.  I expect much the same with Ohtani negotiations.

As noted, I expect a player option for at least after the third year, perhaps also one after his second.  Ohtani will have to accept a lower priced deal because of the uncertainty about him pitching. But whatever procedure he ended up doing to his arm (he has reportedly had it, but no news on what), he'll likely be not pitching in 2024, and might not even pitch a full season in 2025, depending on how things go, so there is a possibility that if things go well, 2026 would be the season he can pitch the full season, prove his worth, then opt out and get a bigger contract.

Given Zaidi's experience with injured pitchers contracts, one way to differentiate the Giants bid from others is to break down the Giants bid into one for his bat and one for his pitching.  I would guess most teams are not willing to pay for his ability to pitch, given his uncertainty, and would price it via a game appearances bonus.  If they can commit to at least $10M base plus appearances bonus, that would be more than other teams would offer, I believe. 

SF Should be a Desirable Team

All of this makes the Giants a better destination.  They need hitting, not pitching.  They are desperate enough to accommodate whatever contract nuances he wants, especially over paying for his pitching.  Everyone knows he can hit, so playing in SF won't hurt his value, but the park has been a pitcher's park for most of its existence, which would boost up his pitching performance if he's able to complete his comeback. The Giants have a pitching department, and has been aggressive in limiting their young pitching's usage in order to extend their careers, as well as facilities that presumably can help him recover better.

Hiring Melvin to be the manager helps as well. He's well known and well liked by players. He's won a number of awards as manager, showing how good he has been before. He's also associated with a number of the Japanese elite players like Ichiro, Nomo, Darvish, and thus viewed as a plus in pursuit of any Japanese free agents.  

He would also be the marque Japanese player in Giants history, should he sign. They had the first Japanese player, plus had Shinjo in the 2000's, but neither of them were stars of Ohtani's magnitude. He would be the biggest Asian star, in a region where there is a significant proportion of Asian people.

Other potential positives include the Giants bullpen catcher coach who is a Japanese native, who would give Ohtani someone on the staff who he could communicate easily with in his native language.  And if they are able to sign Yamamoto, that would give him a second native speaker.

He could sign here, hopefully recover to pitch well again, and more hopefully, win enough games in spite of the need to accommodate his needs and game readiness, to make the playoffs. That has to be key factor that the Giants pitch to Ohtani, demonstrating how the Angels didn't handle it well, and the need for expertise in handling his need to skip starts as he deems necessary, like what the Giants did this season.  And as the above calculations show, the Giants would easily get into the playoffs with his hitting and with the expected improvements in the pitching rotation, and any free agent signings for 3B and CF would just improve the team's chances to get into the playoffs.

Other Giants Thoughts

I think it would help greatly if the Giants could first sign an ace pitcher to the rotation. Signing Lee to man CF would be nice as well, or Matt Chapman for 3B, to bolster the lineup. That would give them a stronger position to then go to Ohtani and engage in serious negotiations.

Also, as demonstrated above, the Giants really need a cleanup  hitter who they can just automatically put in the lineup, so whether it's Ohtani (unfortunately, LA Dodgers look ideal for him, location, great team, constant playoffs, and wouldn't even have to move), or another slugger (like Bellinger), that is the number one priority for the off-season, as long as they can accomplish this without trading Kyle Harrison.  

Just Say No to Trading Kyle Harrison

My fear right now is that signing Yamamoto would lead to the Giants trading Harrison. Harrison should reach ace level within one or two seasons, and that would really give the Giants a great core ace situation for the rest of the decade with him and Webb atop the rotation. And even better if they sign Yamamoto.  I would be okay trading away the rest of the Giants bounty of young pitchers to trade for the cleanup hitter, but I would rather keep Harrison and try our luck next off-season for that clean-up hitter.  And who knows, perhaps Luciano could be that cleanup hitter for us, his bat has that potential.  

But Harrison being traded would not make me happy at all, I don't care if it is prime Trout we receive (and he's no longer in his prime).  I would think seriously about wanting Zaidi removed if this happens. As I've discussed here often, it is elite pitching that enables teams to win championships. I've detailed this in my business plan link to the right side. Zaidi has been holding strong to keeping that type of focus, and as i've noted before, you can never have too much great pitching, the more the merrier is best for the pitching staff.  

Sabean didn't listen to fans back then, he needed a cleanup hitter too, but kept Lincecum, Cain, Sanchez, Bumgarner, Wilson, Romo, and we needed every one of them contributing to get our first championship.  Giants fans are crying now about the offense, forgetting that the dynasty teams weren't star driven lineups either.  We had a star driven pitching staff.

No comments:

Post a Comment

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 (18) 2025 Giants (4) 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) AL Playoffs (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 (2) Bucky Showalter (1) bulllpen (8) Bullpen (33) Business Plan (24) Buster Posey (105) 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 (29) 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 (37) 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 (24) 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 (16) Giants Drafts (9) Giants Farm System (34) Giants Franchise record (2) Giants Future (66) Giants GM (13) 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 (5) Giants Strategy (45) 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 (13) 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 (2) 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 (4) 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 (7) 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 (2) 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 Yastrzemski (1) 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) outfielder curse (1) 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 (8) playoff (2) playoff analysis (6) playoff competitiveness (1) playoff hopes (39) playoff roster (2) playoff rotation (6) Playoff Success (29) 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 (4) prospect analysis (7) prospect future (2) prospect handling (1) Prospect of Note (3) prospect promotion (1) prospect study (3) Prospects (46) QO costs (1) 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 (5) StatCast (2) 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) transitional season (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) Willy Adames (1) winning on the road (1) Winter League (1) winter meetings (3) World Series (28) World Series Champions (14) WS Ring Bling (1) xBABIP (1) xwOBA (1) Yankees (1) Yusmeiro Petit (40) Zack Cozart (2) Zack Minasian (2) Zack Wheeler (9) Zaidi Haters (1) Zaidi MO (2) Zaidi Rotation (3) ZiPS (1) Zito Role (2)