At the risk of flogging a dead horse (who does that?), we’ve
yet to finish our trip through a roster that isn’t. Starting pitchers, relievers
and even the outfield have undergone the intense scrutiny of a web site that
has no more clue than the average fan but clearly much more free time.
No one gets a pass. Infielders, you’re up.
There’s probably nowhere on the diamond where the lack of
drama at Giants Spring Training is more evident that around the horn. It’s not much fodder for writers and bloggers,
but it has to make the team’s three-headed brain trust of Bruce Bochy, Bobby Evans
and Brian Sabean a trio of happy men. In fact, the Giants are so sure of
themselves that the current 25-man roster, a pretty good indicator of who might
break camp with the big club, only lists six infielders.
A year ago, San Francisco found itself banking on a second
baseman who had shone brightly in an abbreviated rookie campaign but was unproven
over a full season, and on the hope it could replace a popular all-star third
baseman and World Series MVP with a guy who had faltered but might have
discovered the fountain of youth.
As it turns out, Joe Panik is every bit the player we’d
hoped. He helped the Giants to a title in 2014 and was a 2015 all-star, but he
also proved that not even the youngsters are immune to injury.
Panik exceeded modest
expectations (Dan Uggla and Brandon Hicks got a shot before Panik did, and I
think Joe Strain hung up on them), batting .309 over 610 Major League at-bats.
He knows the strike zone (.364 OBP) and is notoriously hard to strike out. But like much of the core, an injury limited him to spectator status in the second
half.
Panik is supposedly fully recovered, but Giants fans can be
forgiven if they’re a bit nervous about a guy with back issues. Freddy Sanchez, Mark Derosa, Edgardo Alfonso
and Marco Scutaro have all succumbed to similar ailments just since Hal dissed
Dave and refused to open the pod bay door.
The one positive was that Kelby Tomlinson got a chance to play,
and he appears to be a keeper. The Giants have him listed as Panik’s primary
back-up, and his .303 average was garnered over 178 ABs. He looks to be ready
for the show.
Across the diamond the Giants found their answer by
accident. Casey McGehee was an unmitigated disaster before giving way to MattDuffy in May. He amassed over 570 trips to the plate and both hit (.295) and
fielded well enough to finish second in the Rookie of the Year voting behind
Cubs slugger Kris Bryant, and it’s possible to argue Duffy got jobbed.
Bryant. 'Ugh, me mash. Hit
many balls very far. They stay hit'. He's a slugger. Duffy does everything else and can still
provide a bit of pop.
The word no one wants to hear murmured around these two is “regression”.
Panik hasn't played a full season, and last year was Duffy’s first; not exactly
a long track record for either. Yet hope
springs eternal, and it’s justified.
Panik was on a 200-hit pace before he got hurt. Duffy hit .300
from May through August while going to the post in 118 straight games;
currently the longest streak in the NL. Despite little time to come up for air he
still hit .267 in a final month when the team around him was crumbling.
The other two spots are locked. Shortstop Brandon Crawford
got the big extension in the off-season. Not that he did anything spectacular,
just being the first Giant to win a Silver Slugger and Glove Glove in the
same season since some guy named Bonds back in 1997. It’s hard to imagine repeating his 21-home run effort but his power numbers have gone up in each of
his five seasons while he maintained a solid .250 average. Don’t look for him
in the cleanup spot, but batting seventh or eighth he’s downright scary –
especially on days when Madison Bumgarner hits behind him.
The enigma that is Ehire Adrianza backs him up on the depth
chart. Aside from being an announcer’s nightmare (Vin Scully has called him
everything but ‘Mother’), he’s a wildcard. He didn’t figure into the
Giants’ plans a year ago but injuries forced him out of the minors and into 113
ABs. His .186 average was a good argument for pitchers hitting eighth. Given
that Tomlinson can also play short and third and is essentially a better Adrianza,
he’s the most-likely guy on “the 25” to be sent packing.
At first base, San
Francisco showed it’s hand when it settled on a $6.2 million deal in the hour
before Brandon Belt’s scheduled arbitration hearing; followed by GM Evans
stating his intent to extend Belt’s tenure.
Despite Belt's status as a home-grown fan favorite, the desire to
lock him up seems a bit odd. Granted, he’s by far the best option as long as
Buster Posey stays behind the plate, but Posey’s “rest” days usually entail
keeping his bat in the line-up and leaving Belt as the odd-man out. Having
multiple years shortened by injury doesn’t help Belt’s cause.
But Posey shows no signs of slowing down as the full-time
catcher and has made it abundantly clear that he wants to stay behind the dish
as long as humanly possible. Belt may still have room to improve, especially if
his health holds up. If a deal is reached, it will have to fit in that sweet
spot where the Giants buy out a couple of years of free agency but still leave
the door open for Posey’s eventual move.
Also to Belt’s advantage, the Giants don’t have
anyone else. Posey is the only listed back-up, leaving
29-year-old journeyman Kyle Blanks as the most likely candidate to crack the
Giants bench.
Make-up of the infield is not a big story, but at least we’re
not talking about how fat Pablo Sandoval is.
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