Following a professional sports team is irrational.
The entire process in itself is one that lives between the borders of irrationality. Professional athletes do not care about the casual fan in the same way that we care for them. We are outsiders looking in. We place great emphasis on who we are by who we root for. One of my sociology professors in college was a huge Redskins fan, for better or worse (often worse) and he would always quip that “No Redskins ever came to my house to help me fix the hole I punched in the wall after the team blew a close game”.
The connection between fans and the team they root for is a very odd one. We identify ourselves by our team colors. Seeing a stranger walking up the street wearing Dodger-blue generates a very specific feeling inside of me. “Oh, crap! Wheres my wallet?” After all, Dodger fans are thieving jerks who oppose all that is holy and good. The feeling created by sports is a undeniable one.
As fans, we gladly, sometimes obsessively pour over stats, collect memorabilia, and invest way too much of ourselves into the sport of our choosing. We follow a group of grown men playing a child’s game. Cheering for their victories as “we’ve done it!” and licking our wounds over tough loses.
The Giants team this year is practically an exercise in torture. The sport of baseball in itself is a social product, one that our society has created for a variety of reasons. Even though I know that in the big picture baseball is essentially small potatoes, I still find that I’ve invested part of myself into the game.
Watching Armando Benitez blow a hard fought game was difficult to watch. After the two balks and the walk-off home run from Delgado, me and my father sat in silence for a few minutes. Gazing into the television like zombies as Benitez and the rest of the team sulked off the field. We felt the loss too, maybe not as much as Benitez did, or anyone else on the team but it was a tough defeat.
And thats where the irrational nature of the sport rears its head. Why should we really care if a team of millionaires performs or doesn’t perform? Brian Sabean has got to be having some sleepless nights right now. The Giants have been spinning their wheels since the beginning of the season. Countering winning streaks with equally as bad losing streaks (we’re currently on a 4 game losing streak after the meltdown in Flushing).
The rotation has been very strong but 3 other NL West teams rank ahead of us in team ERA. The bullpen has moments of looking like an actual bullpen that can be trusted with a lead but most of the time it’s been a exercise in frustration. The lineup is largely old and punch-less, with more black holes than the Milky Way. With the loss against the Mets, the Giants sink to the bottom of the NL West on the basis of winning percentages.
The idea that I fear the most is that Sabean is going to panic and send away youth for something like Melvin Mora, a old player with declining skills and little upside. Repeating the same mistakes of past instead of looking towards the future. The Giants are at a impasse and their needed approaching decisions will be crucial to the future of the team. Package away prospects once again for a run in the NL West? Or stand pat and let things shake out the way they will.
I’ll never stop liking the Giants but they sure do test my patience sometimes.
Comment Starter: Do you think the Giants have a legitimate shot at winning the West?
I think we do. The teams above us have been playing above their heads, their pitching is not that good, whereas I think ours are legit. I think things will even out as the season progresses.
Take LA. Penny will not have a low 2 ERA all season. Lowe is just lucky on HRs right now, his ERA will rise to what he’s done the past two seasons, if not more, his BB/9 is up a lot. Wolf hasn’t had such a low 3 ERA since 2002, it has been low 4’s or worse the past 4 seasons, plus he’s been injured the past three seasons, pitchers don’t suddenly get healthy, physical problems will put him on the DL again, it’s like a clock. Hendrickson’s already turning back into a pumpkin, he had a low ERA for a while too, and Tomko hasn’t done well in Schmidt’s absense. And frankly, as bad as Zito’s contract can be, if the choices were Zito’s contract or Schmidt’s, I would choose Zito’s. He’s just that fragile in mind and body now, his mysterious velocity losses are perplexing.
Now SD. Peavy’s good but to keep his ERA at 1.47 all season? That’s Bob Gibson good, he’s going to regress. Same with Chris Young and his 2.42 ERA. Both their HR/9 look abnormally low. Also Germano is abnormally good right now too, particularly with his abnormally low K/9, it is about as bad a Rueter’s except that he’s walking at low rates unseen since Eck pitched for the A’s. They will fall back as well.
For the D-backs, I like Doug Davis, but he’s not keeping a 3.27 ERA, especially not in his home park. He has somehow pitched very well there, especially keeping his HR/9 down low – I don’t see how he can continue to do that in Chase, where the HR park factor there is 120, meaning 20% more HRs hit there than at average park. The other starting pitchers are that good, though, so they will still be tough as a rotation, but their relievers are not that good, they are keeping the team ERA low too, they will regress.
The Giants people will also say is pitching over their head and will regress too. First, Morris pitched this dominantly the first half of 2005 so this is not unusual, but his second half was bad. However, he just had shoulder surgery 3 months before spring training started, so I assume his inability to built strength during the offseason resulted in his losing strength in the second half. He probably won’t continue below 3 ERA but he won’t be that much worse in my opinion, maybe mid-to-high 3’s.
Lowry actually pitched very well last year considering he couldn’t throw like he normally could, he still had a below 4 ERA until his late season arm problems. Like Morris, 3.08 ERA probably not sustainable, but he should not rise a lot more, probably same range as Morris of mid-to-high 3 ERA, plus Lowry usually goes lights out good in August, so that will help keep the ERA for the rest of the season down low.
Matt Cain had a low 3 ERA after the All-Star break, so he’s pitching to his capabilities. ‘Nuff said.
Lincecum, well, all I can say is that he totally dominated AAA hitters – which I have not seen from any good pitching prospect over the past few years when info on the minors were prevalent, not Verlander, not Jared Weaver, not Ching-Mien Wang, not Dan Haren, not Harden, not even King Felix, nobody – like they were little leaguers and in a strong hitter’s league like the PCL, so who am I or anyone else to doubt that he cannot maintain a 3.24 ERA? He has had 4 straight dominating starts, shutting down the potent NY Mets offense.
Zito, at 4.21 ERA, is above his ERA for the past two seasons when he pitched at a relatively neutral park and in the AL, but now he pitches in a relatively neutral park that minimizes one of his problems – the long ball since he is a flyball type pitcher – and in the NL where there is a pitcher hitting 2-3 times a game, not a burly DH. His ERA will go down if anything.
The bullpen is pitching a bit above their heads, but if I remember right, Hennessey’s ERA as a reliever last year was in the low 3’s – it was his starting that boosted his ERA overall – which is not far from his current 2.82. Correia was about this good last year so he should not do worse. And the other relievers are not that low right now, so they probably shouldn’t get worse. And Sanchez is off the team now.
So teams ahead of us should fall in ERA whereas we are pretty much where we could be, should be. The argument could be made that they are all about where they should be. Morris’s first half 2005: 3.10 ERA, 1.07 WHIP. Lowry has had about half the full months he has pitched with a mid-3 ERA or better, he has just been inconsistent in pitching previously so he would have a good month followed by a bad month. This could be his breakout year much like Haren is experiencing with the A’s this year. Cain, as noted, has pitched like this before: second half 2006, 3.26 ERA, 1.18 WHIP. He figured out his early season problems last year and is just continuing what he was doing last year into this year. Lincecum shut down cold the PCL, something I have never seen with any other pitcher. Felix Hernandez, who is probably the most heralded prospect to come up in recent years before Lincecum, could only hold AAA hitters to a 2.25 ERA. And I gave Zito’s reasons above.