SF Giants Picks in the 2010 First Year Player Draft

Written by Richard Dyer on .

SF Giants 2010 Baseball First Year Player Draft picks

Follow-ups:

August 16, 2010-- Yahoo Sports reports the Giants signed first round pick Gary Brown out of Cal State Fullerton for a reported $1.3 million. Brown has tremendous potential as a fast tracked lead-off hitter and centerfielder.

June 19, 2010-- SF Chronicle sports writer Henry Schulman reported the Giants signed third round pick Carter Jurica and fourth round pick Seth Rosin.

First round #24
Gary Brown CF - Cal State Fullerton
Batted .438 with 31 stolen bases this year. Good contact hitter, great speed on the bases and in the outfield. Excellent defensive outfielder. Classic lead-off batter. Ranked #24 in Baseball America's Top 50 overall prospects.

Second round #74
Jarrett Parker OF - Virginia
In 2009 Parker batted .355 with 16 home runs for the Virginia Cavaliers, and was projected to be a top ten draft pick. He has fallen off somewhat this year, but is still considered a potential five tool player. Plays center field and has blinding speed on the bases and in the field. Power potential makes him a possible first baseman.  

Third round #105
Carter Jurica SS - Kansas State
The Baseball Draft Report listed Jurica 2nd out of the top 30 college shortstop prospects for 2010. He batted .360 last year and his fielding and hitting skills are rated outstanding.

Fourth Round #138
Seth Rosin RHP - University of Minnesota
Selected 28th by the Twins in the 2007 draft, but did not sign. Minnesota's ace, Rosin is a 6'7" strike thrower who can hit 95 MPH with his fastball.

Also picked by the Giants:
#168
Richard Hembree RHP - Charleston
#198 Mike Kickham LHP - Missouri State
#228 Charles Jones CF - High school (Missouri)

For almost fourteen years, the Giants constructed not only the big league team, but the entire organization, around Barry Bonds. The idea was to stockpile pitching prospects, from the draft or by accquiring propsects from other teams, to be used as trade bait. What were the Giants trading for? Round after round of older veteran players to drop into the batting line-up around Bonds. The concept was to have just enough bats to get into the playoffs each year.

But as Bonds era ended, the organization woke up and found itself strip-mined of any real minor league talent to develop. As a result, the Giants did not produce one legitimate big league position player for years.

Under Special Assistant for Scouting John Barr, the Giants have slowly moved away from their pitcher-centric strategy and started to restock the minor leagues with players who have speed, who can hit, and who play in the field. In 2006, two of the top three draft players were pitchers (including Tim Lincecum); in 2007, two of the top three draft picks were pitchers; in 2008, all three of the top picks were position players (including catcher Buster Posey); in 2009 , two out of the top three picks were position players.

And in 2010, the top three draft picks are two outfielders and a shortstop. Now that the minor league system is actually producing position players who can contribute at the Major League level, the Giants have finally joined organizations like Minnesota, Tampa, and Oakland, who compete successfully by building from within.

But there's a ways to go. The organization still seems to be reluctant to move homegrown younger players into pivotal starting rolls. And the Giants are still burdened by a number of inflated contracts with veteran players, and even a player of the caliber and promise of Buster Posey is blocked from a starting job because benching or releasing a high paid nonproducing player like Bengie Molina (or Edgar Renteria, or Aaron Rowand) would make the organization look bad.

Having said that, there is no doubt the San Francisco Giants have retooled and are now committed to a comprehensive organizational vision and to long-term planning. And it will be fun watching it begin to fully blossom over the next several seaons.

Unassisted Double Play: Posey to Catch and the Amateur Draft

Written by Richard Dyer on .

SF Chronicle sports writer Henry Schulman reports the Giants will start Buster Posey at catcher in tonight's road game against the Cincinnati Reds. Posey will team up with Giants starter Barry Zito.

This will be Posey's first 2010 start at catcher; he had four starts behind the plate in 2009. Regular starting catcher Bengie Molina has been benched for tonight's game, and this may be the long-awaited beginning of the Buster Posey era in Giants baseball.

Molina is currently batting .248, with 12 RBIs in 158 at bats. As recently as Saturday's game against the Pirates, Giants Manager Bruce Bochy continued to bat Molina in the clean-up spot despite his complete lack of run production and power this year. Molina has 2 RBIs in 47 at bats from the number four slot in the line-up, and is batting .200 with runners in scoring position through June 7th.

                                                                             -------------------------------

Just before game time tonight, at 7:00 PM ET, Major League Baseball will conduct the 2010 Baseball First Year Player Draft. The San Francisco Giants have the 24th pick in the first round of the draft, and the 74th pick in round two.  Several players may be on the Giants radar in round one, including West Virginia shortstop Jedd Gyorko, Ohio high school RHP Stetson Allie, outfielder Brett Eibner of Arkansas, and Florida high school shortstop Yordy Cabrera.

The Giants Cove will have an analysis of the Giants first round pick, and an assessment of who they didn't take (and why).

A 3D Cluster In Pittsburgh

Written by Richard Dyer on .

The San Francisco Giants lost to the Pittsburgh Pirates 6-3 on Saturday June 5th in Pittsburgh.

dalmationSo here's the party line we're supposed to buy and eat whole as far as the Giants are concerned: they were down 6-3 with two out in the top of the 9th inning, but it's OK because Giants second baseman Freddie Sanchez hit a long fly ball out with the bases loaded. That fly ball was caught by a Major League baseball player making a Major League play, but the Giants would have gone ahead if the Pirates' outfielder didn't catch it. So it was close, and that makes everything cool, right?

Actually, no-- and what is happening to the Giants this year is making me one angry puppy. This game with the Pirates was a classic black hawk down, iceberg dead ahead, major clusterf**k. And it was screwed up by the Giants way before the first pitch of the game was thrown by Pirates starter Pat Maholm.

How, you ask?

1. The team continues to stand by Todd Wellemeyer as the 5th starter, and no one can figure out why. The only possible answer I can come up with is that Wellemeyer has a rare photo of Giants owner Bill Neukom wearing a straight woolen tie; or a photo of Neukom doing something that involves sheep. It is the only reasonable explaination.

In the start against Pittsburgh, Wellemeyer went three innings, gave up six earned runs and walked three. His 2010 season record is now 3-5 with a 5.72 ERA, a 1.52 WHIP, which is 86 hits+walks in 52 innings. In fifty-two innings! This projects out to a 9-15 record for the season, so we apparently have at least ten more Wellemeyer losses to look forward to.

Forget about which name to bring up from Fresno or San Jose. In the on-field (and apparently off-field) words of Tiger Woods, "Just do it."

2. Giants Manager Bruce Bochy's tragic case of Line-up Disorder Syndrome [see my June 1st post] has now gone viral. In the game against the Pirates, Bochy batted Pablo Sandoval 8th, aging shortstop Juan Uribe 3rd, and aging, plodding catcher Bengie Molina clean-up. Oh, and Bochy also batted newly sign DH Pat Burrell 6th in the order ahead of Buster Posey.

I hardly know where to start.

a) Pat Burrell earned a spot on the team, and start in this game, by batting .221 as Tampa Bay's fulltime DH in 2009. Burrell was batting .202 when the Rays decided three weeks ago that it was better to dump him from the team and eat his $9 million salary rather than keep him. That's when the Giants picked him up for, essentially, free. I mean, free is good, right?

So Burrell batted ahead of Buster Posey, who is hitting .444 after his first week with the Giants his year. Burrell went 1 for 4 with a strike-out. And Burrell played outfield in the game instead of Nate Schierholtz or Aaron Rowand.

b) Bengie Molina, with 12 RBIs and a .250 average, batted 4th in the line-up. When Molina was tried in the clean-up slot before, at the end of April, he had 10 RBIs. When they finally moved him out of batting clean-up in mid-May, Molina had 12 RBIs. But the worst aspect of Molina batting clean-up is that, four or five times each game, the heart of the batting order is clogged up with his incredible lack of speed and ugly propensity to be part of double-plays. Note to anyone who will listen: please make it stop.

c) Manager Bochy has issues with Pablo Sandoval's hitting, and the Panda's month-long slump. But Bochy is old school, so instead of actually sitting down and communicating with his player directly, Bochy decided he would teach Sandoval a lesson by batting him 8th in the line-up against Pittsburgh. That would show Sandoval who's boss, and get his mind right. Sandoval responded by going 1 for 4.

d) Juan Uribe has been a great producer for the Giants in 2010: 31 RBIs, 8 home runs, steady in the field. But Uribe was signed to be a supersub-- working the infield when players needed a rest or got injured, allowing the Giants to not lose a step when one of the regulars wasn't playing. But once Uribe started hitting, the desperate-for-hitting Bochy found it irresistible not to play him every day.

Making Juan Uribe a regular weakens the overall plan for the 2010 team, and it will eventually wear Uribe down. He has great heart, and he is a great fastball hitter, but he cannot carry this team offensively every day. Batting third against the Pirates, Uribe went 0 for 4.

3. It took the run-challenged Giants one third of the season to finally bring Buster Posey up, and Bochy has already hinted that Posey may have to go down when/if Mark DeRosa and Edgar Renteria rejoin the line-up! But the real problem here is that Bochy continues to treat his younger players like delicate little leaguers: when Nate Schierholtz was hitting .360 in the 8th spot a month ago he couldn't be moved up in the order because that might jinx his streak. Posey bats 7th (or 6th) in the line-up because he's young and can't handle the responsibility of hitting 4th or 5th.

This is baseball management from the 1930s, only without all the wins. The Giants should at least consider slowly inserting 21st century baseball management and planning into the mix to see if that might work. But until then, remember the party line: we came close, and isn't that cool?

Commissioner Bud Selig Has Green Light to Overturn Perfect Game Blown Call

Written by Richard Dyer on .

It is an obvious decision for Major League Baseball: reverse umpire Jim Joyce’s blown 9th inning call during pitcher Armando Galarraga's otherwise perfect game yesterday in Detroit. Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig will no doubt take time to look at the actions of previous Commissioners, he will talk to his advisors, and then he will carefully gauge the temper of the fan public and the sports media before making his decision.

But Commissioner Selig doesn't have to take any of those tip-toeing, public relations rear end covering steps. Because St. Louis Cardinals Manager Tony La Russa has publicly stated umpire Jim Joyce's blown call in the June 2nd game should be overturned. And La Russa's statement is the ultimate green light for Major League Baseball to immediately correct a terrible mistake.

More than Selig, more than any superstar player, more than any manager or owner, and certainly more than any sports commentator or writer, Tony La Russa is the keeper of the inner soul of American baseball. La Russa is tough, opinionated, brilliant, and an expert about everything baseball is and isn't; about what baseball should be and should not be. He is an old school curmudgeon and a cutting edge innovator, and no one knows more about the historically vetted unwritten rules of the game.

Tony La Russa is the conscience of Major League Baseball, and Mr. La Russa has said that baseball should do the right thing. End of story.

Line-up Disorder Syndrome Strikes the San Francisco Giants

Written by Richard Dyer on .

Line-up Disorder Syndrome (LDS) is a tragic breakdown of the neurons in that area of the brain used exclusively by Major League Baseball managers to create their everyday line-ups. This dreaded disorder can also strike General Managers who meddle in their manager’s day-to-day line-up and fielding position decisions.

There are many who believe LDS has infested the San Francisco Giants front office for the past three years, and the raw scientific statistics certainly seem to back that up. But it’s only now, as people have become more comfortable talking about LDS, that we can try and do something about it.

orangescientist 2How does LDS happen? Medical researchers, wearing long white lab coats and appearing to be busy working in what looks like a large laboratory, believe the actual electrons that help baseball managers create effective batting line-ups and fielding assignments somehow short-circuit. The results are line-ups consisting of overpriced older veteran players who are slow and past their prime; line-ups filled with competent and moderately talented players who can’t possibly win, but at least won’t embarrass the manager and the front office; or line-up slots given to mediocre players who the manager wants to make feel good for some reason.

Medical science does not know why this tragic disorder occurs, or how to stop it, but Line-up Disorder Syndrome can lead to some horrifying sights: Edgar Renteria attempting to shape-shift his posterior as he goes for a routine ground ball to his right; Bengie Molina having the time to plan even the smallest details of his upcoming retirement as he runs to first base on a routine ground ball; Travis Ishikawa determined to make contact with those pesky breaking balls bouncing a foot in front of the plate.

Perhaps the two worst line-up episodes in 2010 were 1) batting Bengie Molina in the clean-up spot in May when his resume was perhaps the exact opposite of what a clean-up hitter should be; and, 2) continuing to lead off with Aaron Rowand in May as he was doing his best to fight through one of the worst slumps in his career.

Any number of things can be done to combat LDS, but I'd rather not watch Ryan Seacrest host a third rate TV fundraiser on the Farm Implement Channel. Instead, I decided to donate my personal time and limited expertise to devise and present several Giants line-up templates that are simple and easy to use, as we wait to see if science or Line-up Disorder Syndrome wins this battle.

The Mark DeRosa is in line-up:
1. Andres Torres CF
2. Freddie Sanchez 2B
3. Pablo Sandoval 3B
4. Aubrey Huff LF
5. Mark DeRosa RF
6. Buster Posey 1B
7. Juan Uribe SS
8. Bengie Molina C
9. pitcher

Notes: DeRosa played 10 games in RF in 2009, 38 games in 2008, and
22 games in 2007. Yes, it's possible.

The Mark DeRosa is out line-up:
1. Andres Torres CF
2. Freddie Sanchez 2B
3. Pablo Sandoval 3B
4. Aubrey Huff LF
5. Buster Posey 1B
6. Juan Uribe SS
7. Nate Schierholtz RF
8. Bengie Molina C
9. pitcher

Notes: OK, Aaron Rowand may have to be in Schierholtz's spot, but Schierholtz is one of the best defensive right fielders in baseball. Renteria backs up Uribe at short. From the bench.

The Bengie Molina is essentially retired line-up:
1. Andres Torres CF
2. Freddie Sanchez 2B
3. Pablo Sandoval 3B
4. Aubrey Huff 1B
5. Mark DeRosa LF
6. Buster Posey C
7. Juan Uribe SS
8. Nate Schierholtz RF
9. pitcher

Notes: OK, Aaron Rowand may be in Schierholtz's spot. But enough of this “Posey needs more time to become a catcher” manure.

The 2010 best possible Giants
line-up:
1. Andres Torres CF
2. Freddie Sanchez 2B
3. Pablo Sandoval 1B
4. Aubrey Huff LF
5. Mark DeRosa 3B
6. Buster Posey C
7. Nate Schierholtz RF
8. Brandon Crawford SS
9. pitcher

Notes: Uribe adds great strength from the bench as a super-sub, which is why he was resigned by the team.
Now why would we want a line-up like this?

Buster Posey Rocks San Francisco's AT&T Park

Written by Richard Dyer on .

It is a line score that could be historic for the San Francisco Giants:

AB

R

H

RBI

BB

SO

AVG

OBP

SLG

4

0

3

3

0

0

.750

.750

.750

Buster Posey played his first 2010 regular season game as a San Francisco Giant on Saturday May 29th, and helped lead his run-starved team in a 12-1 destructo-derby over the Arizona Diamondbacks. Posey hit three singles, including a two-out run-scoring hit in the 1st inning and a bases loaded hit in the 7th.

Posey, who is destined to be the Giants starting catcher, batted 6th in the line-up and played first base. The AT&T Park home crowd gave Posey a standing ovation as he left the on-deck circle and approached home plate for his first at bat.

As I wrote in my March 26, 2010 blog, when the Giants indicated Posey would stick with the team out of Spring Training, "watching Buster Posey play at the Major League level will be a treat, and we may look back at Opening Day 2010 as the start of an extraordinary career in the history of the San Francisco Giants." But Giant fans had to wait another two months to see if the Buster Posey era would make franchise history.

For over fifteen years, Giants ownership has been unable to develop any impact position players via the draft and their minor league system, committing the franchise to a long-term plan of drafting pitching prospects and signing less expensive players past their prime in hopes of competing in the National League West. This failed strategy led to last place, fourth place and third place finishes the National League West Division the past three years.

Buster Posey is not a cross between Ted Williams and Harry Potter; he won't instantly turn the San Francisco Giants into a powerhouse offense. But he brings hope for the future. The great Winston Churchill could have been speaking about Posey's ascension and the hope the Giants may finally start to compete in the National League when he said, "This is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning."

Buster Posey Called Up by the San Francisco Giants

Written by Richard Dyer on .

busterposeyHitting phenom Buster Posey has been recalled by the San Francisco Giants from their Triple A affiliate in Fresno. As of Friday May 28th, Posey was hitting .349 with a .442 OBP and a .995 OPS, playing catcher and some first base for the Fresno Grizzlies. During 2010 Spring Training, Posey hit .315 with a .351 OBP, but was not chosen to go north with the big league team.   

A shortstop and catcher at Florida State, Posey was the first draft pick by the Giants in the first round of the 2008 Rule 4 Draft.

The Giants appeared to be doing their best to keep Posey in the minors through the month of June, which would have made him ineligible to be Super Two arbitration eligible under Major League Baseball rules. If Posey sticks with the Giants the remainder of 2010 (all of 2011 and 2012), and he continues to hit as he has done in the minors, the Giants are potentially looking at a $4-5 million arbitration with him in 2013.

Posey will certainly play a great deal at first base, with first baseman Aubrey Huff likely moving to left field on a permanent basis. Posey will also catch when Bengie Molina is rested. Whether the Giants will eventually send down back-up catcher Eli Whiteside or back-up first baseman Travis Ishikawa remains to be seen. Whiteside has been a big contributor to the Giants as Jonathan Sanchez's personal catcher, and is batting .286. Ishikawa is batting .200 and has not been an offensive factor this year or during the 2009 season.

In 2010, the San Francisco Giants are 25th of 30 MLB teams with 192 runs scored. National League Western Division rival Arizona is 6th of 30 teams with 247 runs scored; the Dodgers are 8th with 237 runs scored.

For the past four years, the Giants have had outstanding pitching but little run production and no power. In 2008, the Giants were 29th out of 30 MLB teams with 640 runs scored; in 2009 the team scored 657 runs to finish 26th of 30 teams.

Buster Posey will have to play with high expectations that his bat will jumpstart the Giants offense and that he can quickly develop into a Major League catcher. The Giants are currently 25-22 in third place in the NL West, two and a half games behind the San Diego Padres.

Taking A Positive Spin On the Negative Highway

Written by Richard Dyer on .

A local San Francisco sports talk-show host recently offered a dissertation about the large number of talk show callers who call in just to rant about, and criticize, their favorite Major League Baseball team. Unrelenting negative anger seems to be the default mode for a large number of sports fans, and certainly for the overwhelming majority of sports talk-show callers. For baseball bloggers, constant, impatient rage appears to be a primary demand in the job description.

It may be as American as chicken enchiladas and hummus, but it does gets old.

The team is crap, the manager sucks, the players have no talent and are overpaid, the owners and the general manager have their heads up their rear ends, and the locker room attendants can’t properly fold the towels. And why doesn’t the team just trade Aaron Rowand for Miguel Cabrera, I mean what’s up with that?

In one sense, it’s the negative yin to the non-stop positive yang we get from team broadcasters and local beat writers who are generally paid to spin positives, or at least to not scare the fans too far away from the land of “everything’s OK with the team, now just relax and purchase additional products and services from our sponsors.”

But sometimes fan anger and negativity never seems to let up and the media has to wrestle with that-- especially radio. I admire, in particular, the skill of radio sports talk show hosts who expertly work through what can seem like endless, repetitive team-dumping to try and make their programs interesting and informative. The San Francisco market is fortunate to have a talented group of radio and TV broadcasters and commentators, and newspaper writers, who actually add to the understanding and appreciation of Major League Baseball. Year after year, it’s a media paradise for serious baseball fans.

As a sports blogger and writer, my passion is discussing and analyzing the current MLB season, and discovering new insights about the teams and the game. I may be a tragically addicted longtime San Francisco Giants fan, but there’s a raft of great stories to be told about every Major League team; even the Cleveland Indians.

I love the game, respect team management and the players, and value the history of the game; but I also feel a responsibility to be critical. Not critical in the sense of throwing endless f-bombs, but to evaluate the management and direction of MLB ballclubs, and to be as thoughtful and as interesting as I can possibly be while doing it. With, hopefully, a big emphasis on the “interesting” part.

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The Giants’ Organizational Plumbing is Clogged: But There’s Magic Inside

Written by Richard Dyer on .

A foundering MLB franchise is easy to recognize because the team’s management will invariably self-identify in the media. Beyond the obvious indicators of wins, losses, and player stats, certain words and phrases start appearing in the sports media indicating there is confusion, uncertainly, and lack of direction in the management of a specific baseball franchise.

For example, the San Francisco Giants 2010 media hyped catch-phrase, “It’s magic inside”, succinctly sums up the team’s approach to the serious business of baseball. If it doesn’t happen by magic, it’s probably not going to happen at all.

whiterabbitWhen you hear the phrase, “we’ve got to get at-bats for Juan Uribe (or Nate Schierholtz, or Andres Torres, etc.)”, it’s an expression of desperation and offensive crisis. “You have to” means you don’t really want to but you have no choice. It means you’ve run out of choices and are grabbing at something, anything, to jumpstart your ball club’s offense. “We’ve got to get at-bats for…” is not an endorsement of a good hitter, it’s code for “we have no good hitters”.

Has Yankee Manager Joe Girardi ever said, “Somehow, we’ve got to get at-bats for Robinson Cano”, or has Detroit’s Jim Leyland plaintively whined, “We need to find a way to get Brandon Inge into this line-up”? Either a player is producing, and is part of a team’s everyday line-up, or they aren’t producing and they’re out.

The real problem? There’s nothing to jumpstart in the San Francisco Giants everyday line-up; this is predominantly an assembly of fringe and older players who occasionally rise above offensive mediocrity. The 2010 version of the Giants has regressed into the offensely-challenged 2009, 2008, and 2007 versions of the Giants.

There is a variation on this that applies to the Giants super prospect Buster Posey. Here’s the often repeated party line we've heard about Posey the first two months of the 2010 season: "there’s no place to put Posey" in the current Giants line-up. In other words, the current line-up is so tight, so locked in, we just can’t find a spot for a batter hitting .327, with 28 runs scored, 28 RBIs, a .422 OBS and .929 OPS as of May 24, 2010.

In reality, there are at least six spots in the line-up Posey could be dropped into, but the team is locked into a number of very smelly contracts, and the idea of sitting underperforming players like Edgar Renteria ($9 million), Aaron Rowand ($12 million), or Bengie Molina ($4.5 million) would make the team’s front office look bad; $25.5 million bad.

An anecdotal reference to an individual player’s recent performance is another type of managerial comment that describes orange and black chaos. When it was suggested several weeks ago that Andres Torres should replace Aaron Rowand at the lead-off spot in the order, Manager Bruce Bochy told the media he was going in that direction until Rowand had a three hit game, so he held off. Which is like saying, despite this player’s overwhelming poor body of work, I’m betting that three hit game now means he is magically going to do well leading off.

After the Giants scored only one run in the first two games of a recent three games series with the Oakland As, Bochy finally moved Torres to the lead-off spot and batted Rowand 6th. After that final game, on Sunday May 23rd, in which the Giants were shut out for the second day in a row, Bochy continued the magic with this anecdotal-based remark: "Well, we didn't get a run today, so I can't say the lineup change worked."

About three weeks ago, Bochy told a beat writer he would not move Nat Schierholtz out of the #8 slot in the batting order because he was essentially afraid of jinxing Schierholtz, who was hitting .360 at the time. How did that bit of magic work out? Schierholtz never did get moved up to the 4th or 5th slot in the line-up to produce runs, and as of May 24th, he is batting .298 with 7 RBIs.

This kind of management-by-what-just-happened suggests the front office is operating a $483 million business based on the last shiny thing that happens to pass in front of their eyes. The more ancedotal-based decisions you make, the farther you get from being able to successfully deal with complex problems via thoughtful and creative solutions.

When the Giants replaced Aubrey Huff in the clean-up spot and made Bengie Molina the #4 batter in late April, Molina had a total of 8 RBIs. The magic here was the hope the new clean-up hitter would start driving in runs. As of May 24, 2010, Molina was out of the clean-up slot and had a total of 10 RBIs.

The team continues to run Todd Wellemeyer out as the fifth starter in the rotation, despite his 2-4 record, 5.71 ERA, and 60 walks+hits in 41 innings pitched. But Wellemeyer’s 2-1 record at AT&T Park persuaded the Giants to schedule a “cross-your-fingers” home start for Wellemeyer on Tuesday May 25th against the Washington Nationals, with little thought about what happens next. And, as an extra magical bonus, Wellemeyer’s start disrupts Tim Lincecum’s regular schedule, giving him six days rest instead of his usual five (which the team spins as “giving Timmy an extra day’s rest”).

Welcome to the 2010 San Francisco Giants— where the team’s media catch phrase rings appropriately true: there’s truly magic inside. Magic in lieu of having comprehensive goals, magic instead of long-term planning, and magic as opposed to rational, information-based decision-making.

Now let me reach into my hat and pull out a run for our next game…

Stop the Presses 2 - More Major League Baseball News!

Written by Richard Dyer on .

 Baseball headlines from newspapers around the Nation:
 newspaper2 

 

 

 

NEW YORK YANKEES PURCHASE NATIONAL LEAGUE CENTRAL DIVISION
“We’re Always Looking to Improve Our Club,” Stated Yankee General Manager Brian Cashman


BASEBALL COMMISSIONER BUD SELIG TO EXPAND NUMBER OF MLB WILD CARD TEAMS
“Basically, Every Team Except Pittsburgh and Kansas City Will Make the Playoffs Each Year,” Affirmed Selig.

FLORIDA MARLINS TO CHANGE NAME WHEN NEW STADIUM OPENS IN 2012
Team Will Be Called the “Los Angeles Marlins of Miami” to Cash In On Name Recognition Merchandizing Associated With Nation’s Second Largest City


CLEVELAND INDIANS WILL GO TO 200 GAME SEASON IN 2011
Commissioner Explains That “Numerous” American League Teams Have Demanded More Regulation Games Against the Hapless AL Central Franchise


PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES HIRE BLACKWATER TO RUN CITIZENS BANK PARK STADIUM SECURITY
New Blackwater On Field Supervisor, Dick Cheney, Promises Use of  Predator Drones

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