Giants Freeze At the Non-Waiver Trade Deadline
Each year, the MLB non-waiver trade deadline produces innumerable “winners and losers” lists from Baseball sports writers around the country. It’s an opportunity for fans to step away from local broadcast and print media happy-talk about their baseball team and get a sense of what the national press thinks.
For Giants fans, a quick survey of 2010 non-waiver trade deadline winners/losers lists around the Majors will not be reassuring. First, a large number of those lists don’t even include the Giants, suggesting the Giants' front office did nothing of substance to critique. For the record, San Francisco picked up lefty reliever Javier Lopez from the Pirates, giving up pitcher Joe Martinez and minor league outfielder John Bowker, and got righty reliever Ramon Ramirez from the Red Sox for Double A pitcher Dan Turpen.
The 2010 trade assessment lists that do include the San Francisco Giants put them solidly in the losing column; thankfully they do not appear at the top of any “loser” lists I could find.
Several samples:
Winners Losers
Jeff Passan, Yahoo Sports Rangers White Sox
Padres Giants
Phillies Red Sox
Jason Stark, ESPN Rangers White Sox
Padres Blue Jays
Yankees Baltimore
Astros Giants
Frankie Piliere, MLB FanHouse Yankees Red Sox
Astros Giants
Rangers Tigers
Jeff Passan of Yahoo wrote, “This is a Giants team with the sort of starting pitching depth that begged for a deal. Whether it was Jose Bautista or Corey Hart or any other big bat, the Giants needed to wave goodbye to Jonathan Sanchez. Another missed opportunity for GM Brian Sabean.”
From Jason Stark of ESPN: “Not dealing for [a bat] could turn into one of those critical missed opportunities to go deep into October. ‘They should have found a bat, no doubt about it,’ said one NL executive. ‘They've got the best pitching in the league. Give that team a little more offense, and look out.’”
In reality, Brian Sabean did pretty much what he did last year, when he traded for Ryan Garko and Freddie Sanchez, picking up two non-impact payers for a team rich with pitching and in serious need of more offense. As they have since 2006, the Giants front office continues to be unable to effectively use their deep pitching resources to craft a consistently effective run-scoring offense.
Despite the Giants sitting on the sidelines, the trade wire for hitters was sizzling this year. For example, the San Diego Padres delt for Miguel Tejada of the Orioles (199 hits, .313 AVG with 46 doubles in 2009) and immediately batted him 4th in their line-up at shortstop. What did they give up? Wynn Pelzer, a Double A pitcher at San Antonio with a 6-9 record and a 4.20 ERA this year. Pelzer was the Padres’ 9th round pick in the 2007 amateur draft. Oh, and the Padres also received $1.15 million from Baltimore as part of that deal.
Since we’re talking about San Diego, let’s mention another bat they picked up: outfielder Ryan Ludwick from the St. Louis Cardinals, who was part of a three team deal that included the Cleveland Indians. Ludwick knocked in 97 RBIs in 2009 with 22 home runs. What did the Padres give up? Class A pitcher Nick Greenwood, who is 4-4 with a 4.15 ERA at Fort Wayne.
While these moves were being made, and other teams around the Majors were managing to pick up quality bats, Giants GM Brian Sabean consistently fed the local Bay Area media the same tired party line he has expertly developed over the years: every team he talks to about a deal for a hitter demands a Giants starting pitcher, like Jonathan Sanchez. Oddly enough, virtually all other Major League teams apparently deal with each other at all levels of their organizations and routinely make deals, except when Brian Sabean is looking for a bat.
How can this be? Over the past five years, how can so many other teams manage to land quality Major League hitters by packaging deals that feature double A and single A players, while the Giants are being held hostage for their best pitchers? The problem is not the quality of the Giants’ minor league system, which is rated very high, the problem continues to be a Giants front office rooted in the past, unable to develop long-term planning strategies, their negotiating creativity frozen in fear of giving up any pitching.
Because of the many emails I get from San Francisco Giants fans who apparently, 1) just started following the Giants this year and are unaware of the team’s recent history; or, 2) have been sniffing so much amyl nitrate that it’s no longer possible to keep track of any day-to-day information, I have to again remind the faithful of Brian Sabean’s dismal track record the past five seasons:
2005 – 3rd place, 87 losses.
2006 – 2nd place (SD and LA tied for 1st), 85 losses
2007 – last place, 91 losses
2008 – 4th place, 90 losses
2009 – 3rd place, 74 losses
Despite the lackluster abilities of the front office, the Giants have come to life offensively the past month, and they are now pushing San Diego hard at the top of the National League West. The critical balancing act here is, which is the real team— the April/May/June third place squad or the resurgent run scoring line-up led by hard chargers Buster Posey and Aubrey Huff?
Watching the July 2010 Giants every day, this could be a team that not only makes the playoffs, but could potentially dominate throughout the playoffs. They'll just have to do it without much support from the front office. What a story it will be.






again, like Bart Simpson in "The Simpsons" intro. In a game against the San Francisco Giants on Tuesday July 20th in LA, Mattingly managed to violate both of these precepts in one inning and it cost the Dodgers the game.
MLB rule 8.06D states a manager or coach can only make one trip to the pitcher's mound in an inning; a second trip means the pitcher is automatically removed from the game. Giants Manager Bruce Bochy saw Mattingly's slight misstep, bounded out of the dugout and informed the umps of the violation. Bochy also told them he was prepared to protest the game if Mattingly wasn't called on the gaff. Although the homeplate umpire also recognized the violation, for some reason he kept it to himself and waited for Bochy to protest it before taking action.

from the Nationals, the Giants look up and see themselves still in 4th place in the NL West, four games behind the San Diego Padres.
> Twenty-year-old Madison Bumgarner won his first Major League game, beating the Brewers on Tuesday July 6th (8 innings, 3 hits allowed, no runs, 3 walks, 5 strike-outs). The next night, Tim Lincecum was facing Milwaukee, and during the telecast a brief shot of the Giants dugout happened to catch a significant moment: at the dugout railing, in a tight group, were Lincecum, Posey and Bumgarner animatedly talking and laughing together. They were confident, at ease and very much at home.
The Brewers should be, and likely will be, dealing hitting soon. The Giants would love to get superstar Ryan Braun, but the Milwaukee front office would have to be extremely over medicated to even consider that. Corey Hart was apparently seriously discussed, with Jonathan Sanchez as part of the package the Brewers wanted. But, once again, the Giants hold on to their pitching like a security blanket, snarling and hissing at the real world, too paralyzed to let go.
Buster Posey now becomes the Giants starting catcher, and inherits one of the best starting pitching staffs in the Majors, featuring two Cy Young Award winners (Tim Lincecum and Barry Zito), and one of the youngest players in the Majors, twenty-year old fifth starter Madison Bumgarner.
Today, the Philadelphia Philles announced that All Star second baseman Chase Utley has been placed on the 15 day DL for a severely sprained thumb (from Monday's game with the Reds, trying to stretch a single into a double). At the same time, the Phils put third baseman Placido Polanco on the 15 day DL for a bone spur in his left elbow, which he landed on making a dive in a game last Friday.
Teams that traditionally take a long time to pull the trigger on deals, or that like to wait and pick up "bargains" the last few days of July, could very well find themselves boxed out and wondering what the hell happened.
Word has surfaced the Giants put out some preliminary queries about Kansas City Royals center fielder David DeJesus. At first glance DeJesus does not seem to fit the Giants’ three greatest needs: power, more power, and a lot more power. This year, DeJesus is batting .323, with a .393 OBP, and a .874 OPS; he’s played in 71 of KC’s 73 games, and has 5 home runs and 31 RBIs.
station, pose the following question: if they could, should the Giants trade starter Matt Cain for Milwaukee Brewers power hitter Ryan Braun? The commentator hesitated, and finally said the Giants should probably not make that deal, because they just can't give up Cain.
I was watching the Friday night June 18, 2010, Comcast broadcast of the San Francisco Giants interleague road game against the Toronto Blue Jays. Giants starter Barry Zito was pitching against one of the best offensive line-ups in baseball— Toronto has the lowest number of at-bats per home run in the Majors, and the Jays’ 266 extra base hits are second only to the Red Sox (270).
What started it all? An injury to Edgar Renteria induced the front office to grudgingly bring Buster Posey up from Triple A; now Posey is playing every game, hitting .391 and producing runs. The Giants are very conservative when it comes to bringing up starting position players, so Posey's promotion was a hugely symbolic event.