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Things I Learned While on Vacation

Chris » 07 July 2008 » In Giants » 2 Comments

This reminds me of one of those “What did you do last summer” assignments that you used to get at the start of a new school year.

1. Matt Cain is pretty good. It’s easy to forget that he’s actually younger than Lincecum and already has two full seasons of pitching under his belt. He’s tended to bounce around between starts this year but watching him shut down a very-good Cubs offense was fun. In fact, it was probably his best start of the year. Definitely his best by Bill James’ Game Scores metric. Using BB-Ref’s handy dandy Play Index, Matt Cain’s start on July 1st against the Cubs was the 4th best start, so far, in all of the National League when using Game Scores.

Cain struggled in yesterday’s loss against the Dodgers but give him some time, the talent is there.

2. Mays Field is still a really nice place to watch a game, even if the product onfield is a little weak. We sat in Viewbox Section 315 for all of our games — my dad has season tickets in that section — and the vantage point was awesome. It’s behind homeplate and because you’re higher up in the Viewbox area, you can see straight out into the Bay and watch all the sailboats and ships pass by. The food was good even if it was overpriced, but I guess that goes with the territory. Between 8-dollar beers and at a minimum of 5-dollar meals, you can go broke pretty fast.

Best Experience: I was pleasantly surprised to find both Lagunita’s IPA and Sierra Nevada’s Pale on draft. I had one of both. I remember having the IPA last year but I don’t recall seeing the Sierra Nevada before. I wanted to grab a Anchor Steam but I ran out of time. The garlic fries are still good and the Cha-Cha bowl was tasty and filling, even if the chicken was a little dry and under seasoned. Not a bad value.

Worst Experience: Paying 10 bucks for the chicken tenders and garlic fries combo meal. For 10 bucks I got two minuscule chicken tenders, a BBQ sauce, and some garlic fries. The chicken wasn’t bad but for 10 bucks, I want more than two measly pieces of chicken! Also, sitting behind that Dodger lady with a screechy voice and having to hear about how much she wanted to marry Russel Martin had me thinking very-bad-things.

All-in-all, the park still looks good and is, in my opinion, a top-5 park in the game.

3. Watching John Bowker knock one into the drink was sweet. I wasn’t sure before this season started how many Giants hitters would be able to reach that section of the park. Now that Bonds was gone, I had the number at a very conservative three players. Freddie, Bowker, and Nate were my picks to splash down. Has Fred hit one into the cove yet? I can’t remember.

4. Man, there are a lot of Cubs fans out there. For the Cubs series the stands were dotted with blue. It seems that no matter where you go you’ll see someone wearing either a Cubs, Braves, or Red Sox hat. The first two seem to have a huge following because of the early years of WGN and TBS that allowed many people that didn’t have local baseball to watch it on TV. My favorite Cubs fan experience was after a Giants win. We we’re walking out of the park through a parking lot and a group of Giants fans ahead of us started chanting “1908″. This caused a nearby Cubs fan to go into a rage, he started yelling about how the Giants were a bunch of steroid freaks and that the Cubs were so classy, they never had players like that. As soon as those words left his mouth, the maybe 6 or 7 of us, just busted into laughter, threw our arms up in the air, and said “Sosa!”. Good times. Most Cubs fans seemed really cool and nice but I think this particular guy had exceeded his quota of Old Style and Bratwurst.

5. Dodger fans are still morally corrupt and should be shipped to a deserted island.

6. Omar started way too much for my tastes. I know he’s a cagey veteran dancer, but he looked bad at the plate. Save for a bunt that went for a hit and a single up the middle, we didn’t see him do much at the plate. It was good to see Burriss start yesterday — and get three hits — but he did make an error.

7. If you saw Rich Aurilia play for the first time over the games I saw him, you’d think he was a superstar. He hit two homeruns over the games I saw him in and he hit another one out yesterday. His slash-stats on the year are currently at (.284/.341/.445) which are entirely respectable for a playoff-ish team needing a utility player. Stay hot, Richie, boost that trade value!

8. Tim Lincecum is awesome. A highlight of my trip was to see him throw in person. He’s small, but nasty. He sliced his way through a tough hitting Cubs team just like Cain did. The crowd was definitely jacked up to watch Lincecum pitch. It was one of the more lively crowds that I saw during my time in San Francisco.

9. Bruce Bochy left Matos in way too long. Ouch. And, what’s the deal with Jose Castillo? One one play he’ll look awesome and make an amazing grab on a ball, and the next, he’ll let one roll between his legs. I’ve never seen a player range from great-to-terrible so fast as Castillo. I still don’t care for the guy, but this play he made against the Cubs would make Pedro Feliz blush.

It was a great trip. Getting to see the G’s play on their home turf always makes me happy, regardless of the outcome of the game. Let it be known that I’m very jealous of you west coasters. I’ll let you guys have the traffic, but I’ll take the Giants.

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Spring Training Stats, Beware.

Chris » 28 February 2008 » In Giants, Minors » No Comments

Let me preface this post with this:

Spring Training statistics are meaningless.

Time and time again Spring Training has shown us that those who play hot for a few weeks before the season begins, aren’t essentially solid bets to carry that performance over into the regular season. Neifi Perez hitting .474 with 7 HRS in a few games? It’s probably best to just ignore it. Last spring Jason Ellison looked like Ted Williams. He hit (.403/.493/.613) and from that line, you would think he was Albert Pujols. The point is that anyone can look really good over 60-some AB’s and even more when it’s against guys who haven’t played for a few months, or minor league journey men. Rookies, injury reclamation projects, non-roster invitees all make up a huge portion of the Spring Training experience.

It’s best to not get too overly jazzed about whats going on in Spring Training. It’s great that baseball is back, but don’t come trying to convince me that Rajai Davis should be hitting 4th after he hits .675 over a handful of games.

With that out of the way, the Giants played their first Spring Training game today against the Chicago Cubs. They lost 12-6. Let’s check out some of the good performances and some of the bad performances from todays action.

The Good

Randy Winn - Winn hit the first HR for the Giants this Spring in the 1st inning of today’s game. He went deep off Ryan Dempster and finished the day 1-2. Winn had a nice bounce-back season last year and hopefully if the Giants can trade him at some point, they’ll do so. Maybe around the trading deadline if he’s playing near his career numbers?

Aaron Rowand - Warrior Spirit went 2-2 with two singles. Not too bad for a guy that struck out against Rags.

Fred Lewis - Freddie went 2-2 with an RBI. He hit a triple in the 8th inning. Fred might have a decent chance to make the roster with Schierholtz still having some options. If he’s not traded, Lewis might appeal more to the Giants because he’s out of options, unlike Nate.

Brett Harper - A dark horse candidate for first, Harper went 2-3 while picking up an RBI. Harper had one of the better AB’s of the day when he fouled off several pitches in a row after working the count to 3-2. He then knocked a RBI single to finish the at-bat. He also lashed a double. Harper might work his way into the 1B position sometime during the year if Ort struggles offensively.

Manny Burriss - Made a couple of fine defensive plays, including a diving stop-and-throw to get the out from short. Burriss, one of the faster prospects in the organization, also beat out an infield hit for a single.

The Bad

Noah Lowry - Lowry’s control issues from 2007 carried over into his first start. He only pitched an inning, but he walked three, threw a wild pitch, and hit Kosuke Fukudome. If Lowry can’t improve his control this year, he’s going to be in for a rough season. The Giants have to hope that he throws the ball well in the Spring to help boost his trade value which might be a little low right now.

Kevin Correia - Kevin pitched 1 innining, gave up 7 hits, and 5 runs, 4 earned. The defense didn’t do him any favors, a error at third by McClain led to a run. Correia’s got the inside track on the 5th starter job right now, but if he pitches very poorly in the Spring while another 5th starter candidate excells — Misch or Sanchez — he could find himself back in the bullpen.

Kevin Frandsen - Franny went 0-3 and left 3 on base. I listened to the radio broadcast on and off, but anyone care to mention his defense at short? Did he have any balls hit to him?

Tomorrow split squads play. Jonathan Sanchez faces Carlos Zambrano and the Cubs. Tim Lincecum faces newly aquired pitcher Erik Bedard and the M’s.

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