Six Sure Signs of Success
1. Matt Cain is an Ace
No matter what happens with Tim Lincecum, Matt Cain is signed through 2018. Regardless of how much money Tim wants, Cain will be here. That allows the team some leverage in negotiations and does force the hand of Lincecum to perform if he wants more than the $22.5 million he'll make in 2013.
2. 1st Pablo and now Madison
Locking young players up is the easiest way to ensure more cost certainty in the future. The team did it previously with Cain, and also with Brian Wilson. Wilson, who's contract is up after the season, actually has a 4th year of arbitration awaiting. Pablo is signed through his arbitration. Bumgarner is signed through the first year of his free agency. Having their salaries locked him could save the team money they might have had to spend to keep them during arbitration, but more importantly, allows them to know what is on their books.
3. 1st Rowand and Huff and then Zito
This year will be interesting because the team might not have any money to spend as they approach the trade deadline, but may have some money next off-season. Aaron Rowand's $12 million as well as Aubrey Huff's $11 million will both be off the books. After the team says goodbye to that $23 million, they will finally breathe a sigh of relief the following year when the monstrous 7 year $126 million beast of a contract Barry Zito signed will be gone. He will make $21 million next season and then the team will pay him $7 million to no longer be a Giant. That $42 million that is currently devoted to Rowand, Huff and Zito will be gone.
4. The Kids are coming, The Kids are coming...
Freddy Sanchez is making $6 million, Jeremy Affeldt is making $5 million, and Angel Pagan is making $4.5 million. Even if any of these 3 end up having strong years in 2012, they will more than likely be making less in 2013. It is possible that with the strides being made in the minors by Joe Panik, Heath Hembree and Gary Brown, that the $15.5 million currently devoted to Sanchez, Affeldt and Pagan will turn into $1.2 million to Panik, Hembree and Brown.
5. The Bills will be Paid!
According to Ken Rosenthal of FoxSports, the Giants will no longer owe $20 million a year for AT&T Park after 2017. So when the Giants are paying Matt Cain $20 million and Madison Bumgarner $12 million, they can afford to pay Lincecum $25 and Buster Posey whatever he will be making. Same for Pablo Sandoval, Sergio Romo, Brandon Belt, Brandon Crawford, Nate Schierholtz, Gary Brown, Joe Panik, and Heath Hembree.
6. Even more Kids are coming...
Whether it's current 25 man roster contributors like Hector Sanchez and Brett Pill, 40 man roster options like Francisco Peguero and Charlie Culberson or up and comers like Tommy Joseph and Chris Dominguez, the Giants are stockpiled with talent and that will continue because of the scouting department and the staff the team has put together in the minor leagues. San Jose, Richmond and Fresno are loaded with talent and potential and it will allow the Giants the flexibility to move a player like Zach Wheeler for Carlos Beltran even if it is a 2 month rental because the team has Erik Surkamp or Kyle Crick
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Showing posts with label Gary Brown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gary Brown. Show all posts
Monday, April 16, 2012
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Saltzman Says...San Jose Giants moving fast up the ranks
The San Jose Giants started the season with 8 of the top 20 prospects in the Giants organization. Four pitchers and four hitters. CF Gary Brown (1st round, 2010), SP Zach Wheeler (1st round, 2009), RP Jose Casilla, RF Jarrett Parker (2nd round, 2010), C Tommy Joseph, RP Heath Hembree, 3B Chris Dominguez, and SP Craig Westcott.
With those pre-season rankings, it is not surprising the Giants won the 1st half title for the seventh year in a row. The Giants are 50-23, the best record in all of professional baseball that includes two separate 12 game winning streaks. What is surprising is how good other players have been and how quickly they are all moving up the team's system.
Recap:
C Hector Sanchez had a 14 game RBI streak at one point this season, and his bat and work behind the plate has him in Fresno now.
SP's David Mixon (2.66) and Kelvin Marte (3.43) are among seven starting pitchers with an ERA below 4.
SP Hector Correa, Dominguez and Hembree have all left San Jose for Double-A Richmond as well.
Brown has been invited to the Futures Game, to represent the team on All-Star weekend.
Brandon Crawford and Francisco Peguero both started 2011 in San Jose on rehab assignments, and Crawford is now in San Francisco and Peguero should soon be back in Richmond.
Wheeler, Hembree, Westcott, Brown and SP Kelvin Marte were all named to the Cal League All-Star game.
All of this success should bode well for the big club down the road.
With those pre-season rankings, it is not surprising the Giants won the 1st half title for the seventh year in a row. The Giants are 50-23, the best record in all of professional baseball that includes two separate 12 game winning streaks. What is surprising is how good other players have been and how quickly they are all moving up the team's system.
Recap:
C Hector Sanchez had a 14 game RBI streak at one point this season, and his bat and work behind the plate has him in Fresno now.
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| Sanchez is now in Fresno, one step away from the bigs. |
SP's David Mixon (2.66) and Kelvin Marte (3.43) are among seven starting pitchers with an ERA below 4.
SP Hector Correa, Dominguez and Hembree have all left San Jose for Double-A Richmond as well.
Brown has been invited to the Futures Game, to represent the team on All-Star weekend.
Brandon Crawford and Francisco Peguero both started 2011 in San Jose on rehab assignments, and Crawford is now in San Francisco and Peguero should soon be back in Richmond.
Wheeler, Hembree, Westcott, Brown and SP Kelvin Marte were all named to the Cal League All-Star game.
All of this success should bode well for the big club down the road.
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Saltzman Says...San Jose Giants win 18 inning thriller
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| Nobody imagined on Monday that the game would end on Tuesday |
Instant Classic: Giants Win 18-Inning Thriller
SAN JOSE - The San Jose Giants staged a dramatic rally scoring four times in the bottom of the 18th inning to earn an improbable 10-9 victory over the Stockton Ports at Municipal Stadium. In a game that didn't conclude until early Tuesday morning, Jarrett Parker reached base on a fielding error committed by Ports shortstop Dusty Coleman with the bases loaded and two outs in the bottom of the 18th to score the winning run. San Jose had to rally in the 11th and 13th innings to avoid defeat before overcoming Stockton's three-run top of the 18th to win the contest. The Giants finish their seven-game homestand with six wins and improve their overall record to 25-13 - two games ahead of the Ports (23-15) for the top spot in the first half North Division race.
San Jose was down to their last out in the bottom of the 11th inning when Ryan Cavan belted a solo homer to right field before Parker's RBI double in the bottom of the 13th tied the score again. After Stockton took a 9-6 lead in the top of the 18th, Chris Dominguez hit a key two-run single in the bottom of the frame before Nick Liles tied the game with a sacrifice fly. Then with the bases loaded, two outs and the count 3-2, Parker hit a sharp grounder to shortstop that was bobbled by Coleman, whose hurried throw to first was late as Wendell Fairley raced home with the winning tally.
Dominguez (5-for-8, HR, 4 RBI) tied a San Jose Giants single-game record with five hits, including a first-inning home run, to lead the offensive attack. Gary Brown (3-for-8, 2B, SB) extended his hitting streak to 11 games while Hector Sanchez (2-for-7, 2B, 2 RBI) collected at least one RBI in his 11th straight contest.
The back-and-forth affair saw the Ports rally from an early 4-0 deficit scoring twice in the top of the fourth before two more runs in the eighth inning to tie the game. Stockton took their first lead in the top of the 11th as Mitch LeVier led off with a single against reliever Hector Correa before Anthony Alilotti's sacrifice bunt and Max Stassi's RBI single.
The Ports then appeared to be closing in on a victory as pitcher Scott Deal quickly retired the first two Giants batters of the bottom of the 11th before Cavan stepped to the plate and crushed the first pitch of his at-bat well over the fence in right field for a solo homer. The home run, Cavan's fifth of the season, tied the score 5-5.
After neither team scored in the 12th, Stockton plated a single run in the top of the 13th without the benefit of a hit. Facing Ari Ronick, Aliotti drew a leadoff walk before Stassi dropped down a sacrifice bunt. However on the play, Ronick threw wildly to first for an error allowing Aliotti to advance to third and Stassi to move into second. Leonardo Gil then delivered a sacrifice fly to center plating Aliotti with the go-ahead run.
San Jose though again rallied as Brown led off the bottom of the 13th with a groundball to third that was stopped by a diving Gil, but a wild throw pulled the first baseman Alioti off the bag for an error. After
Brandon Crawford sacrificed Brown to second with a bunt, Parker lined a double to left that easily scored the runner tying the game 6-6. Parker, however, was stranded at second as Sanchez flied out and Cavan struck out to end the inning.
Andy Reichard entered the game for the Giants with one out in the top of the 14th inning and had to pitch out of trouble in the 15th and 16th frames. In the top of the 15th, Aliotti singled with one out and was at third base with two outs before Reichard induced Gil to groundout to third. Then in the 16th, Rashun Dixon led off with an infield single, was moved to second on a sacrifice bunt and advanced to third when Conner Crumbliss grounded out. However, again Reichard was able to keep the game tied as Coleman flied out to center.
The Giants had an opportunity to win the game in the bottom of the 16th inning as Sanchez singled with one out before Dominguez hit a two-out single to put runners on first and second, but Joseph struck out swinging to end the threat.
The contest was delayed briefly after the 16th inning as the game had reached the California League curfew. The rule states that no inning can begin after 11:50 PM, but after receiving clearance from the league to continue, the teams were allowed to resume action with the top of the 17th.
In the 17th, Reichard worked around a two-out walk before the Giants again put a runner in scoring position with two outs in the bottom of the inning. After the first two batters were retired, Brown doubled into the right field corner before Crawford walked. Scott Hodsdon was then summoned from the bullpen and he promptly struck out Parker to end the inning and force an 18th frame.
Stockton finally broke through with a big inning in the top of the 18th as Gil singled up the middle to leadoff before Dixon hammered an RBI double to the fence in left field to put the Ports back in front. After a sacrifice bunt moved Dixon to third, Crumbliss singled to left plating the second run of the inning. Then with two outs, Michael Choice produced an RBI double down the right field line to make it 9-6.
Needing an extra-inning rally for a third time, Sanchez began the bottom of the 18th by drawing a four-pitch walk. Cavan followed with a sharp double into the right field corner before Dominguez brought home both runners with a single up the middle. The rally continued with Joseph moving Dominguez to second with his first sacrifice bunt of the season before a wild pitch advanced the potential tying run to third. Liles then hit a sacrifice fly to left easily scoring Dominguez to bring San Jose even at 9-9.
The inning continued with two outs and nobody on as Fairley reached base on a bad hop groundball to shortstop that was officially scored as a single. After Brown singled and Crawford walked to load the bases, Parker worked the count full before hitting another sharp grounder to Coleman at shortstop. Coleman though bobbled the ball and was unable to retire Parker with his throw to first as Fairley scored the game-deciding run prompting a wild celebration of Giants players near first base.
Reichard (2-0) earned the win for San Jose despite giving up three runs in the top of the 18th. Reichard worked 4 2/3 innings of long relief with three runs (all earned) on seven hits allowed, one walk and two strikeouts.
Hodsdon (0-1) suffered his first loss of the season after surrendering all four runs (three earned) in the bottom of the 18th.
The Giants took an early 4-0 lead with four runs in the bottom of the first inning on Sanchez's one-out, two-RBI double and Dominguez's two-out, two-run homer down the right field line.
San Francisco Giant Santiago Casilla made his second rehab start on the mound for San Jose. Casilla, who is recovering from an elbow injury, pitched two scoreless innings working around a pair of singles and one walk. He threw 26 pitches before giving way to scheduled starter Craig Westcott.
Westcott yielded a two-run homer to LeVier in the top of the fourth, but had settled down to retire eight straight hitters from the fifth through the eighth innings. However, Stockton rallied in the top of the eighth as LeVier connected for a one-out, RBI double to knock Westcott out of the game before Aliotti hit a sacrifice fly against Correa to tie the score 4-4.
Correa stranded the potential go-ahead run at second base in the eighth before not allowing a hit in the ninth or tenth innings.
The Giants out-hit Stockton by a 17-16 margin. Parker (2-for-9, 2B, RBI), Cavan (2-for-8, 2B, HR, RBI) and Fairley (2-for-7) also had multi-hit games for San Jose.
Notes: The game ended at 12:48 AM on Tuesday morning ... The teams combined for 13 pitchers (Stockton 7, San Jose 6) ... The Giants won their first extra-inning game of the season in three attempts ... It was also their first walk-off win this year ... The Ports had been a perfect 4-0 in extra-inning games ... Dominguez joined Liles, Brown and Alex Burg as San Jose players to have five hits in a single game this season ... Westcott (5 1/3 IP, 5 H, 4 R, 4 ER, 2 BB, 2 SO), Correa (3 1/3 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 2 SO), Mitch Lively (1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 1 SO), Ronick (1 2/3 IP, 0 H, 1 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 0 SO) and Reichard all pitched out of the Giants bullpen ... Correa was officially charged with San Jose's first blown save since April 13 ... The Giants had converted 14 consecutive save opportunities ... San Jose's two-game lead in the division is their largest of the season ... Stockton suffered their first series loss this year ... The final time of game was five hours and 38 minutes - just 18 minutes shy of matching the longest home game in San Jose Giants history (5:56, May 12-13, 1995 vs. San Bernardino).
Box Score
Game Log
Andrew Baggarly Says...
It was an epic game at Single-A San Jose Monday night– and not because Santiago Casilla began it with two scoreless innings in a rehab appearance. Actually, the game lasted into Tuesday morning. It was an 18-inning marathon that ended at 12:49 PDT after five hours and 38 minutes. The Giants came back not once, not twice but THREE times against Stockton in extra innings (11th, 13th and 18th innings), and the final comeback, believe it or not, was a four-run rally to take a 10-9 victory.
Amazing. I’d like to know how many folks stayed for the duration. They probably saw one of the greatest baseball games in Bay Area history.
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Saltzman Says...21 Giants back in the minors
Eight players were optioned out: pitchers Jose Casilla, Alex Hinshaw, Henry Sosa and Clayton Tanner; infielders Ehire Adrianza and Conor Gillaspie; and outfielders Thomas Neal and Francisco Peguero.
Thirteen players were reassigned: pitchers Waldis Joaquin, Wilmin Rodriguez, Jason Stoffel, Ryan Verdugo and Matt Yourkin; catchers Tommy Joseph and Hector Sanchez; infielders Brandon Crawford, Charlie Culberson and Nick Noonan; and outfielders Gary Brown, Juan Perez and Terry Evans.
Thirteen players were reassigned: pitchers Waldis Joaquin, Wilmin Rodriguez, Jason Stoffel, Ryan Verdugo and Matt Yourkin; catchers Tommy Joseph and Hector Sanchez; infielders Brandon Crawford, Charlie Culberson and Nick Noonan; and outfielders Gary Brown, Juan Perez and Terry Evans.
Monday, February 7, 2011
When the Giants Come to Town Says...Top 50 Prospects: 2011 Edition
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Down on the Farm: DrB's 2011 Giants Top 50 Prospects
OK team, it's that time of year again to reveal DrB's 2011 Giants Top 50 Prospects. We've been doing this since about 2003 and a lot of people really seem to appreciate it. We'll post the list here along with Honorable Mentions and "Dominican Dandies" and then give a short scouting report on each one leading up to the start of the season. In researching the list, I am struck by how much younger, deeper and more athletic the Giants farm system is than just a few years ago. You will find that the Honorable Mention list is quite lengthy with quite a few names that you might think should be in the Top 50! One area of mild concern is the relative lack of strong pitching prospects in the upper minors. Luckily, the strength and relative youth of the Giants pitching at the MLB level gives them some time to correct this imbalance. As always, this list and the scouting reports to come are just one fan's opinion. As always, please don't get too hung up on the exact order. The most important part of the exercise is getting to know some of the players the Giants have in their farm system. On with the list!
1. Brandon Belt, 1B/OF.
2. Zack Wheeler, RHP.
3. Thomas Neal, OF.
4. Gary Brown, OF.
5. Francisco Peguero, OF
6. Dan Runzler, LHP.
7. Chuckie Jones, OF.
8. Ehire Adrianza, SS.
9. Brandon Crawford, SS.
10. Charlie Culberson, 2B.
11. Jarrett Parker, OF.
12. Conor Gillaspie, 3B.
13. Tommy Joseph, C.
14. Rafael Rodriguez, OF.
15. Nick Noonan, 2B.
16. Seth Rosin, RHP.
17. Mike Kickham, LHP.
18. Kendry Flores, RHP.
19. Heath Hembree, RHP.
20. Jose Casilla, RHP.
21. Ryan Verdugo, LHP.
22. Steve Edlefsen, RHP.
23. Johnny Monell, C.
24. Chris Dominguez, 3B.
25. Carlos Willoughby, 2B.
26. Jose Valdez, RHP.
27. Jorge Bucardo, RHP.
28. Jacob Dunnington, RHP.
29. Jake Dunning, RHP.
30. Hector Sanchez, C.
31. Carter Jurica, SS.
32. Dan Burkhart, C.
33. Reiner Roibal, RHP.
34. Matthew Graham, RHP.
35. Brandon Allen, RHP.
36. Roger Kieschnick, OF.
37. Clayton Tanner, LHP.
38. Craig Westcott, RHP.
39. Eric Surkamp, LHP.
40. Jason Stoffel, RHP.
41. Ryan Cavan, 2B.
42. Chris Lofton, OF.
43. Edwin Escobar, LHP.
44. Austin Fleet, RHP.
45. Wendell Fairley, OF.
46. Leonardo Fuentes, OF.
47. Marvin Barrios, RHP.
48. Juan Perez, OF.
49. Caleb Hougheson, 3B
50. Tyler Graham, OF.
Honorable Mention: Ryan Rohlinger IF, Brock Bond 2B, Jackson Williams C, Mike McBryde OF/RHP?, Darren Ford OF, Henry Sosa RHP, Waldis Joaquin RHP, Matt Yourkin LHP, David Mixon RHP, Wilmin Rodriguez LHP, David Quinowski LHP, Michael Main RHP, Drew Biery 3B, Michael Sandoval 1B, James Simmons OF, Justin Fitzgerald RHP, Kelvin Marte LHP, Ari Ronick LHP, Aaron King LHP, Nick Liles OF, Luke Anders 1B, Ydwin Villegas SS, Christopher Heston RHP, Brian Irving RHP, Jeremy Toole RHP, Andy Reichard RHP, Craig Whitaker RHP, Chris Gloor LHP, Chris Wilson RHP, Jason Jarvis RHP, Ryan Scoma OF, Devin Harris OF, Edward Concepcion RHP, Shawn Sanford RHP, Stephen Shakleford RHP, Carlton Salters OF, Joe Staley OF, Ryan Bean RHP, Jose De La Cruz OF, Sundrendy Windster 1B, Wes Hobson 2B.
"Dominican Dandies": Fernando Pujadas C, Christian Paulino 3B, Jesus Galindo OF, Shurendell Mujica SS, Luis Angeles RHP, Joan Gregorio RHP, Ariel Hernandez RHP.
1. Brandon Belt, 1B/OF.
2. Zack Wheeler, RHP.
3. Thomas Neal, OF.
4. Gary Brown, OF.
5. Francisco Peguero, OF
6. Dan Runzler, LHP.
7. Chuckie Jones, OF.
8. Ehire Adrianza, SS.
9. Brandon Crawford, SS.
10. Charlie Culberson, 2B.
11. Jarrett Parker, OF.
12. Conor Gillaspie, 3B.
13. Tommy Joseph, C.
14. Rafael Rodriguez, OF.
15. Nick Noonan, 2B.
16. Seth Rosin, RHP.
17. Mike Kickham, LHP.
18. Kendry Flores, RHP.
19. Heath Hembree, RHP.
20. Jose Casilla, RHP.
21. Ryan Verdugo, LHP.
22. Steve Edlefsen, RHP.
23. Johnny Monell, C.
24. Chris Dominguez, 3B.
25. Carlos Willoughby, 2B.
26. Jose Valdez, RHP.
27. Jorge Bucardo, RHP.
28. Jacob Dunnington, RHP.
29. Jake Dunning, RHP.
30. Hector Sanchez, C.
31. Carter Jurica, SS.
32. Dan Burkhart, C.
33. Reiner Roibal, RHP.
34. Matthew Graham, RHP.
35. Brandon Allen, RHP.
36. Roger Kieschnick, OF.
37. Clayton Tanner, LHP.
38. Craig Westcott, RHP.
39. Eric Surkamp, LHP.
40. Jason Stoffel, RHP.
41. Ryan Cavan, 2B.
42. Chris Lofton, OF.
43. Edwin Escobar, LHP.
44. Austin Fleet, RHP.
45. Wendell Fairley, OF.
46. Leonardo Fuentes, OF.
47. Marvin Barrios, RHP.
48. Juan Perez, OF.
49. Caleb Hougheson, 3B
50. Tyler Graham, OF.
Honorable Mention: Ryan Rohlinger IF, Brock Bond 2B, Jackson Williams C, Mike McBryde OF/RHP?, Darren Ford OF, Henry Sosa RHP, Waldis Joaquin RHP, Matt Yourkin LHP, David Mixon RHP, Wilmin Rodriguez LHP, David Quinowski LHP, Michael Main RHP, Drew Biery 3B, Michael Sandoval 1B, James Simmons OF, Justin Fitzgerald RHP, Kelvin Marte LHP, Ari Ronick LHP, Aaron King LHP, Nick Liles OF, Luke Anders 1B, Ydwin Villegas SS, Christopher Heston RHP, Brian Irving RHP, Jeremy Toole RHP, Andy Reichard RHP, Craig Whitaker RHP, Chris Gloor LHP, Chris Wilson RHP, Jason Jarvis RHP, Ryan Scoma OF, Devin Harris OF, Edward Concepcion RHP, Shawn Sanford RHP, Stephen Shakleford RHP, Carlton Salters OF, Joe Staley OF, Ryan Bean RHP, Jose De La Cruz OF, Sundrendy Windster 1B, Wes Hobson 2B.
"Dominican Dandies": Fernando Pujadas C, Christian Paulino 3B, Jesus Galindo OF, Shurendell Mujica SS, Luis Angeles RHP, Joan Gregorio RHP, Ariel Hernandez RHP.
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