That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: How serious is a deal for A’s playing last 3 years in San Francisco?; Dodgers top pick so far for Ohtani

Former Los Angeles Angels two way player Shohei Ohtani won the 2023 AL MVP and is an odds on favorite to join the Los Angeles Dodgers for the 2024 season. It’s yet to be determined. (AP News file photo)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Insiders have said that Oakland A’s president David Kaval after the MLB owners vote to move to Las Vegas that Oracle Park home of the San Francisco Giants could be the home of the A’s for the remaining three years 2025-27 while they wait for the Tropicana ballpark to be completed by 2028. How strong do you see that possibility.

#2 It’s ironic if the Giants were to allow the A’s to play at Oracle Park for the 2025-27 season in San Francisco after not allowing the A’s to have territorial rights to move to San Jose and now will allow them to come to Oracle and play their final three years in the San Francisco.

#3 No surprises here as former Los Angeles Angel Shohei Ohtani was named the AL MVP, Ohtani the two way player was 10-5 with an ERA of 3.14 pitching and hit .305 with 151 hits, 44 home runs, 102 runs, and 95 RBIs.

#4 Atlanta Braves Ronald Acuna Jr won the NL MVP hitting .337, 149 runs, 41 home runs, and 106 RBIs. Both Acuna and Ohtani won by unanimous decisions which is a first in the 92 years of the award.

#5 Ohtani is up for free agency is still waiting through the bidding and what team he would like to go and play for. The Los Angeles Dodgers are the odds on favorites in the Ohtani sweepstakes followed by the Chicago Cubs and San Francisco Giants.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez does News and Commentary podcasts each Tuesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Headline Sports with Charlie O: Will A’s finish up their Bay Area days at Oracle Park in San Francisco?

Will Oracle Park be a landing place for the Oakland A’s after the 2024 season?, the A’s would not lose a share of Bay Area TV revenue between 2025-27 while the Tropicana Park is being built in Las Vegas (SF Travel file photo)

On Headline Sports with Charlie O:

#1 How crazy will it be to have the San Francisco Giants host the Oakland A’s at Oracle Park in the 2025 through the 2027 seasons while the Tropicana is being built after the Giants would not cede South Bay territorial rights to the A’s.

#2 The A’s know they will not get the cut of Bay Area TV money if they were to play in Nevada or Sacramento and just to go ahead and finish they’re last three season in the Bay Area in San Francisco.

#3 The relationship between the City of Oakland and A’s owner John Fisher and MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred is so toxic because of how they got to this place it’s very unlikely the A’s will finish their last three seasons at the Oakland Coliseum.

#4 A’s fans led by the Oakland 68’s have called for a boycott, not a reverse boycott but a full on boycott for no one to show up at the A’s opening day game on Thu Mar 29th at the Coliseum against Cleveland.

#5 There has been some hope that Schools over Stadiums will get it together and get the court to approve their petition to get signed by some 102,000 Nevada residents, put the no public funding for the ballpark on the Nevada ballot for vote in Nov 2024 also Rep Barbara Lee (D-Oakland) and Rep Mark DeSaulnier will introduce the “Moneyball act” a measure that would require Oakland A’s owner John Fisher or any Major League Baseball owner who relocates it’s team 25 miles from it’s former location to compensate their former community or MLB would lose it’s anti trust exemption.

Charlie O does Headline Sports podcasts Sundays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Bob Melvin back with the Giants

Bob Melvin Topps baseball card

By Amaury Pi Gonzalez

SAN FRANCISCO–When the Giants hired Gabe Kapler in 2020, they did not hire the right man. Now, they hired Bob Melvin and he is the right man.

This time Bob Melvin returns to the Giants, but as a manager. In 1986 Bob Melvin played the first of his three years with the Giants. That same 1986 when Melvin played catcher for the Giants, another manager, Dusty Baker retired as a player across the bay with the Oakland Athletics.

In total after playing with the Giants Melvin played for another seven years, a total of ten years in MLB. BoMel has also managed in: Seattle (2003-04), Arizona (2005-06), Athletics (2011-21 and San Diego (2022-23).

I first met Melvin in Seattle, when he was managing his first team, the Mariners and I was broadcasting home games for the Mariners in Spanish. He always had a kind word with yours truly, a mutual respect he always has shown with the media. Now, he is returning to the Bay Area, his original home base and were he was born.

Bob Melvin is the right man for the San Francisco Giants. After a bad 2023 where they finished next to last in the western division, this was not a surprise. Gabe Kapler had to go and they needed a new manager, and the moment the San Diego Padres gave permission to Melvin to interview with the Giants, is the moment I knew he was coming to the Bay Area again.

BoMel managed the A’s for 11 seasons and took them into six Postseasons, always a tough job with a team often with the lowest payroll in the game, he also won two of his three Manager of the Year Award with the A’s 2012 and 2018, the other time in 2007 with the Arizona Diamondbacks. In 2001 Melvin was a bench coach with the Arizona Diamondback and won a World Series ring.

Just like Dusty Baker (who also managed the Giants) during his 26 year-career as a manager. Bob Melvin is a player’s manager, Bright, affable, gets along with everybody, players as well as media wherever he has managed. Here in the Bay Area he is one the favorites all-time managers, very professional and hard working.

The Bay Area native had a difficult situation with the Padres in San Diego, a team loaded with high priced-talent, but just like in Hollywood, where movies with too many stars and egos do not produce a good film, the Padres were a disaster this year underachieving, until the last few weeks when they started winning, but it was too late. Manny Machado was one of those players that did not make the other players better, guys like Fernando Tatis Jr, and Juan Soto or Xander Bogaerts. The Padres had zero chemistry.

Some were surprised when Bob Melvin was given the opportunity to interview with the Giants, after all he had a year left in his contract in San Diego. I was not one of those, San Diego management understood his situation, one that was never comfortable for Melvin, specially with the guys in the front office. My contact in San Diego told me about this, just mid-way through this season, and people ‘in the know’ always were aware of the bad situation for BoMel in San Diego.

Giants just hired a winner, a good man and a bright manager, a strategist of character and honestly. I welcome him to the Bay Area, again.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead radio voice on the Oakland A’s Spanish radio network and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportradioservice.com

Giants hire Bob Melvin as 39th manager in franchise history

San Francisco Giants manager Bob Melvin met with the media after being hired as the new Giants manager on Tue Oct 25, 2023 at Oracle Park in San Francisco (@SFGiants photo)

By Stephen Ruderman

SAN FRANCISCO–The San Francisco Giants officially announced that Bob Melvin will be the 39th manager in franchise history this morning.

After the Giants dismissed Gabe Kapler as manager on Sept. 29, it seemed that with Melvin’s situation in San Diego, there was a very good chance he was going to end up managing the Giants. The Giants were granted permission by the San Diego Padres to interview Melvin, who had managed the Padres the last two seasons. In just 48 hours, the Giants knew they had their man.

We are so excited to have [Melvin] leading our club,” said Giants Chairman Greg Johnson. “I can’t think of any other person in Baseball with the level of integrity, respect and achievements Bob has had in his career.”

“We view Bob as the perfect manager, and the perfect leader for this team and this organization right now,” said Giants President of Baseball Operations Farhan Zaidi. “There are so many players out there who played for Bob, who to this day will say he is the best manager they ever played for, and that carried so much weight for us in this process.”

For Melvin, he returns back to the Bay Area, where he grew up; where he went to college at Cal; where he played for the Giants as a backup catcher from 1986 to 1988; and where he managed the Oakland Athletics from 2011 to 2021.

“This is kind of a surreal moment for me,” said Melvin, who described it as coming full circle. “To be able to not only play here, manage here, go to Cal [and] manage the A’s, it’s not even something you even dream about.”

Melvin will bring a healthy mix of old-school baseball and new-age analytics to the table. While Melvin comes from an old-school background, he quickly got acclimated to analytics in his time managing under Billy Beane in Oakland.

“[Analytics are] very important,” said Melvin. “Every team, even the teams you see now that are playing deep into the playoffs, analytics are part of it

“Coming from Oakland, without analytics, we wouldn’t have had the success that we did there,” Melvin added. “There’s always a balance to everything…….I learned from my days in Oakland that there [are] a lot of smart people that contribute to this game; and there [are] also a lot of old-school baseball people, who understand what it’s like to go out there and compete, and the one thing analytics doesn’t show you is the competitive[ness] in certain people and certain players.”

Melvin coming to manage the Giants doesn’t just connect Giants History in terms of him playing for the Giants, but it connects in terms of the fact that he played for Roger Craig, who made an indelible mark on this team, as well as the city of San Francisco.

“There are certain things I learned from every manager, but really for me, Roger was the guy that made me watch the game like a manager,” said Melvin. “To this day, I will always be indebted [to him] for that.”

Just over two and a half months ago on Aug. 4, the Giants were 12 games over .500 61-49; held the first wild card spot in the National League; and held a four-game lead over the Miami Marlins for a playoff spot. They then went 18-34 the rest of the way, finishing under .500 at 79-83.

Melvin also credited Phil Garner, Billy Beane and Sal Bando for the manager he has become today. Melvin was the bench coach under Garner in 1999 with the Milwaukee Brewers, and in 2000 with the Detroit Tigers. Melvin credited Garner with teaching him old-school philosophies, while he also credited Beane for introducing him to analytics.

Zaidi dismissed Manager Gabe Kapler on Sept. 29 prior to the team’s game against the Dodgers that night. Bench Coach Kai Correa managed the final three games against the Dodgers.

It was believed that Kapler had lost the clubhouse, as a sense of a lack of urgency, as well as Baggarly’s report that Outfielder Joc Pederson had the clubhouse enthralled in the filipino card game, ‘Pusoy.’

Melvin was hired by the Padres following the 2021 Season in almost the exact same situation he is set to be hired by the Giants. The Padres went 36-24 in the shortened 60-game COVID sprint season of 2020, and were swept by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the National League Division series.

On Aug. 10, 2021, the Padres were 18 games over .500 at 67-49, and half a five-game lead for the second—in 2021, the final—wild card spot. They then collapsed, and went 12-34 the rest of the way, finishing at 79-83, the same record the Giants finished at this season. The Padres dismissed Manager Jayce Tingler, as the Padres had clubhouse issues in 2021, which was highlighted by a dugout spat between Fernando Tatis Jr., and Manny Machado on Sept. 18 in St. Louis.

Melvin was brought in, and the Padres had a much more solid clubhouse in 2022, as they went 89-73 to get the second wild card spot; upset the New York Mets in the National League Wild Card Series; and upset the 111-win Dodgers in the NLDS before losing to the Philadelphia Phillies in five games in the National League Championship Series.

The clubhouse issues returned in San Diego this season, but Melvin’s handling of the Padres’ clubhouse in 2022 shows that he can fix an uneasy clubhouse situation. He will be walking into a calmer situation, and he will have the immediate backing of clubhouse leaders, such as Logan Webb, Mike Yastrzemski, Wilmer Flores and Thairo Estrada.

Melvin is also a former Giant, and was a prodigy under one of the greatest managers in Giants’ history, Roger Craig. Melvin played with the Giants from 1986 to 1988, and was a part of the 1987 Giants team that got within a win of the National League Pennant, but ultimately lost the St. Louis Cardinals in seven games in the NLCS.

After retiring as a player, Melvin was a coach under Bob Brenly on the 2001 World Champion Arizona Diamondbacks, and was hired by the Seattle Mariners to manage prior to the 2003 Season. The Mariners went 93-69 in 2003, and missed the sole American League Wild Card by just two games. After a disappointing 63-99 2004 Season, the Mariners let Melvin go.

Melvin was then hired to manage the Diamondbacks in 2005, and after a pair of subpar seasons in 2005 and 2006, he took Arizona to a 90-72 National League West division title in 2007, as they swept the Chicago Cubs in three games in the NLDS, before being swept in four games by the Colorado Rockies, who were on an historic 21-1 run, in the NLCS. The Diamondbacks went 82-80 in 2008, but after a slow start in 2009, Melvin was let go on May 8.

After falling short of the Houston Astros’ managerial opening, Melvin spent the 2010 Season as a scout for the Mets, and then returned to the Diamondbacks in a front office role in 2011, following unsuccessful interviews for the Mets’ and Milwaukee Brewers’ managerial openings.

On June 9, 2011, Melvin was hired to manage the Oakland Athletics, following their midseason dismissal of Bob Geren. In 2012, Melvin took the A’s to an improbable division title, but he ran into a buzzsaw in Justin Verlander, as they lost the American League Division Series in five games to the Detroit Tigers. The A’s ran into the same buzzsaw in Verlander, and lost the ALDS to the Tigers in five again in 2013.

The A’s led the American League West for most of 2014, but a midseason trade of Yoenis Cespedes to the Boston Red Sox, and a late-season collapse barely netted them the second wild card spot, as they ended up losing a thrilling American League Wild Card Game to the Royals in Kansas City.

The A’s traded away their talent, and suffered in the standings from 2015 to 2017, but they were back in the playoffs after another improbable run in 2018, which saw them get the second wild card spot with 97 wins. They lost the wild card game in both 2018 and 2019, and then lost the 2020 Wild Card Series to the Chicago White Sox.

The A’s contended with an 86-76 record in 2021, but there was every indication that season that the A’s would once again trade their talent following the end of the year, which they indeed did, and Melvin left for San Diego.

Melvin will not be the former Giant returning to the team. It is expected that Matt Williams, who has been a part of Melvin’s coaching staff in Oakland in San Diego, will join Melvin in San Francisco. Williams was a fan favorite in San Francisco, as he spent a decade with the Giants from 1987 to 1996, and would have had a chance to break Roger Maris’ single-season record of 61 home runs if it was not for the Strike in 1994. Williams hit 43 home runs through 115 games.

Former Giants, Pat Burrell and Ryan Vogelsong, are also rumored to be back in Giants’ uniforms on the coaching staff, with Burrell as the hitting coach, and Vogelsong as the pitching coach.

Zaidi expressed gratitude to the Padres for allowing the Giants to interview Melvin, and said that the Giants will not have to compensate the Padres. The only compensation will be from Melvin to Giants’ young infidler, Casey Schmitt,” whose number six will be worn by Melvin for the 2024 Season.

Johnson also said that the team expects to announce soon that Zaidi will be extended through the 2026 Season.

Giants expected to hire Bob Melvin as next manager

Former San Diego Padres manager Bob Melvin is expected to take the helm at the San Francisco Giants. A press conference is expected this week introducing Melvin to the San Francisco media at Oracle Park in San Franciso (AP file photo)

By Stephen Ruderman

The San Francisco Giants “are poised to announce” that they will hire San Diego Padres Manager Bob Melvin as their next manager, according to Andew Baggarly, the Giants Beat Writer for the Athletic.

The Giants were granted permission by the Padres to interview Melvin, and according to Barragrly, nothing in the process “dissuaded” the Giants from going through with Melvin.

Just over two and a half months ago on Aug. 4, the Giants were 12 games over .500 61-49; held the first wild card spot in the National League; and held a four-game lead over the Miami Marlins for a playoff spot. They then went 18-34 the rest of the way, finishing under .500 at 79-83.

Giants President of Baseball Operations Farhan Zaidi dismissed Manager Gabe Kapler on Sept. 29 prior to the team’s game against the Dodgers that night. Bench Coach Kai Correa managed the final three games against the Dodgers.

It was believed that Kapler had lost the clubhouse, as a sense of a lack of urgency, as well as Baggarly’s report that Outfielder Joc Pederson had the clubhouse enthralled in the filipino card game, ‘Pusoy.’

Melvin was hired by the Padres following the 2021 Season in almost the exact same situation he is set to be hired by the Giants. The Padres went 36-24 in the shortened 60-game COVID sprint season of 2020, and were swept by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the National League Division series.

On Aug. 10, 2021, the Padres were 18 games over .500 at 67-49, and half a five-game lead for the second—in 2021, the final—wild card spot. They then collapsed, and went 12-34 the rest of the way, finishing at 79-83, the same record the Giants finished at this season. The Padres dismissed Manager Jayce Tingler, as the Padres had clubhouse issues in 2021, which was highlighted by a dugout spat between Fernando Tatis Jr., and Manny Machado on Sept. 18 in St. Louis.

Melvin was brought in, and the Padres had a much more solid clubhouse in 2022, as they went 89-73 to get the second wild card spot; upset the New York Mets in the National League Wild Card Series; and upset the 111-win Dodgers in the NLDS before losing to the Philadelphia Phillies in five games in the National League Championship Series.

The clubhouse issues returned in San Diego this season, but Melvin’s handling of the Padres’ clubhouse in 2022 shows that he can fix an uneasy clubhouse situation. He will be walking into a calmer situation, and he will have the immediate backing of clubhouse leaders, such as Logan Webb, Mike Yastrzemski, Wilmer Flores and Thairo Estrada.

Melvin is also a former Giant, and was a prodigy under one of the greatest managers in Giants’ history, Roger Craig. Melvin played with the Giants from 1986 to 1988, and was a part of the 1987 Giants team that got within a win of the National League Pennant, but ultimately lost the St. Louis Cardinals in seven games in the NLCS.

After retiring as a player, Melvin was a coach under Bob Brenly on the 2001 World Champion Arizona Diamondbacks, and was hired by the Seattle Mariners to manage prior to the 2003 Season. The Mariners went 93-69 in 2003, and missed the sole American League Wild Card by just two games. After a disappointing 63-99 2004 Season, the Mariners let Melvin go.

Melvin was then hired to manage the Diamondbacks in 2005, and after a pair of subpar seasons in 2005 and 2006, he took Arizona to a 90-72 National League West division title in 2007, as they swept the Chicago Cubs in three games in the NLDS, before being swept in four games by the Colorado Rockies, who were on an historic 21-1 run, in the NLCS. The Diamondbacks went 82-80 in 2008, but after a slow start in 2009, Melvin was let go on May 8.

After falling short of the Houston Astros’ managerial opening, Melvin spent the 2010 Season as a scout for the Mets, and then returned to the Diamondbacks in a front office role in 2011, following unsuccessful interviews for the Mets’ and Milwaukee Brewers’ managerial openings.

On June 9, 2011, Melvin was hired to manage the Oakland Athletics, following their midseason dismissal of Bob Geren. In 2012, Melvin took the A’s to an improbable division title, but he ran into a buzzsaw in Justin Verlander, as they lost the American League Division Series in five games to the Detroit Tigers. The A’s ran into the same buzzsaw in Verlander, and lost the ALDS to the Tigers in five again in 2013.

The A’s led the American League West for most of 2014, but a midseason trade of Yoenis Cespedes to the Boston Red Sox, and a late-season collapse barely netted them the second wild card spot, as they ended up losing a thrilling American League Wild Card Game to the Royals in Kansas City.

The A’s traded away their talent, and suffered in the standings from 2015 to 2017, but they were back in the playoffs after another improbable run in 2018, which saw them get the second wild card spot with 97 wins. They lost the wild card game in both 2018 and 2019, and then lost the 2020 Wild Card Series to the Chicago White Sox.

Giants expected to hire Bob Melvin as next manager

The A’s contended with an 86-76 record in 2021, but there was every indication that season that the A’s would once again trade their talent following the end of the year, which they indeed did, and Melvin left for San Diego.

Melvin will not be the former Giant returning to the team. It is expected that Matt Williams, who has been a part of Melvin’s coaching staff in Oakland in San Diego, will join Melvin in San Francisco. Williams was a fan favorite in San Francisco, as he spent a decade with the Giants from 1987 to 1996, and would have had a chance to break Roger Maris’ single-season record of 61 home runs if it was not for the Strike in 1994. Williams hit 43 home runs through 115 games.

Former Giants, Pat Burrell and Ryan Vogelsong, are also rumored to be back in Giants’ uniforms on the coaching staff, with Burrell as the hitting coach, and Vogelsong as the pitching coach.

This is a developing story, and the Giants are expected to officially announce the hiring on Wednesday.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Dusty Did it His Way

Houston Astros manager Dusty Baker (right) greets Texas Rangers manager Bruce Bochy (left) before game 1 of the ALCS at Minute Maid Field in Houston on Sun Oct 15, 2023. Baker announced his retirement from baseball after game 7 of the ALCS on Mon Oct 23, 2023 (AP News photo)

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Dusty Baker announced he is retiring after concluding the seventh game of the American League Championship. His team lost in seven games to the now-American League Champion Texas Rangers.

As a player, Dusty had a stellar career as an outfielder during 19 seasons with the Atlanta Braves, Los Angeles Dodgers, San Francisco Giants, and Oakland Athletics; he hit 242 home runs with 1,981 hits with a .278 batting average. In 1986, he retired as a player with the Oakland A’s, the team that showcased the Rookie of the Year that season in José Canseco.

Dusty, a gracious man whom I would often interview in Spanish many times, was always thinking baseball, and It did not surprise me when he launched a managerial career. I never met a player that said anything that wasn’t complimentary about Dusty Baker, the ultimate player manager.

I had the privilege of covering and traveling with Dusty Baker’s San Francisco Giants, the first major league team he managed from 1993 to 2002. I remember many conversations we had and interviews pre and post-game, especially during the first years of his managing with the Giants. He told me that “minority managers want that first interview, the opportunity to show what they can do.”

He won the 2002 NL pennant and took the team to the World Series against the Anaheim Angels, who won it all that year. He would continue as skipper with stops in Chicago with the Cubs, Cincinnati with the Reds, Washington with the Nationals, and finally, the last four years (2020-2023) with the Houston Astros, culminating with a World Series title in 2002.

During this 2023 season, he took the Astros to game seven of the ALCS and lost to the streaky Texas Rangers. In one Spring Training with the Cincinnati Reds as manager, Dusty introduced me to a young pitcher from Cuba named Aroldis Chapman who was then throwing at a velocity of 105 mph.

Dusty was an “old school” manager; not many left these days. After announcing his retirement from managing just hours after the Rangers beat his Astros, he is now free from the grind of managing, and his baseball on-the-field duties are done during a successful Hall of Fame career. Dusty ended #7 on the list of all-time winning managers with a record 2,183-1,862.

Only Connie Mack, Tony LaRussa, John McGraw, Bobby Cox, Joe Torre, and Sparky Anderson ended ahead of Dusty Baker. All these managers ahead of Dusty are in the Hall of Fame. If elected to the HOF, as he should, Dusty Baker will be the first African-American manager in Cooperstown.

Johnnie B. “Dusty” Baker will not have to deal anymore with some 25 year-old in the front office telling him about the science of baseball, known now as Sabermetrics; the analysis of baseball through statistics. We might see Dusty talking baseball on television, maybe MLB Network and such, but I do believe he will not return to managing, he has a lot of life left to live with his family, after all Baseball was his life, but not all of life is Baseball.

Felicidades Dusty!

Amaury Pi Gonzalez does News and Commentary each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Farhan Zaidi addresses disappointing 2023 Season

San Francisco Giants team president Farhan Zaidi met with the news media in the Giants dugout at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue Oct 3, 2023. Zaidi talked about the changes and what’s ahead for the 2024 Giants. (San Francisco Chronicle photo)

By Stephen Ruderman

SAN FRANCISCO–Giants President of Baseball Operations Farhan Zaidi held his end-of-the-season press conference following the end of a disappointing 79-83 2023 Season.

Today was the beginning of the 2023 Major League Baseball Postseason, which the Giants will not be participating in. It is the second year in a row, and the sixth time in the last seven years that the Giants stayed home in October. It was also their fifth losing season in the last seven years.

“Our goal is to never have these kinds of press conferences. We should be in the playoffs every year,” Zaidi bluntly stated.

The quote perfectly set the tone for this press conference.

Following an improbable 107-win season and National League West division title in 2021, the Giants finished right at .500 at 81-81 in 2022. It was a tremendous setback for the organization, which believed they were going to compete every year after 2021.

The Giants responded last winter by signing Michael Conforto, Mitch Haniger, Sean Manaea, Ross Stripling and Luke Jackson to two-year deals. It appeared that 2023 and 2024 were going to be dedicated to bringing the top prospects in the organization up, and the players above were signed to compete over these two seasons.

The season was going well for the most part. After a ninth-inning comeback win against the Angels on Aug. 7 in Anaheim, the Giants were 62-51; held the first wild card spot in the National League; and were four games up on a playoff spot.

However, it was just one of six wins the Giants had on the road from July 19 through the end of the season, as the Giants went 6-28 in their final 34 road games, which was one of many reasons the team fell all the way to under .500 and finished five games back of the Arizona Diamondbacks for the third wild card.

It was a collapse that cost Manager Gabe Kapler his job just two years after winning the National League Manager of the Year Award for his job in 2021. Now, Zaidi will commence his second search for a new manager with the team, as he heads into the final year of his contract.

“I think there’s a good chance we [will] start with internal candidates, maybe by the end of this week,” Zaidi said. “I would guess we’ll start reaching out to teams on permissions for people in other organizations at the beginning of next week.”

Zaidi addressed concerns over looking to bring in a new manager a multi year contract while he himself is not signed beyond next season.

“The reaction, and the amount of incoming calls we’ve gotten serves to support the view that this is a really highly-sought-after position in an organization that’s really highly regarded in the game and in the industry,” said Zaidi. “I don’t anticipate any issues there……I haven’t sensed any concerns from people.

Zaidi hired Kapler in large part due to their experience together in the Dodgers Organization, as well as Kapler’s philosophy of “new age” baseball. However, Zaidi appeared flexible to different styles of baseball, including old school baseball.

“There’s no template,” said Zaidi. “I’ve worked with managers, who have different experiences and different styles, and I think we want to be as broad [with] our search as possible.”

Zaidi also expressed willingness to hire a manager who he does not have experience working with.

Kapler’s firing was in large part due to the lack of motivation in the clubhouse over the final two months of the season, but that was hardly the only issue for the Giants.

Another one of the big issues for the Giants this season was the offense. The team overly relied on the home run, and that proved to be one of their many downfalls, as they set a single-season franchise record with 1,468 strikeouts.

When the Giants were going strong in June; in their first five games after the All-Star Break; and even for a brief period at the end of August when they won four out of five, they were playing the same situational baseball that won them three world championships in five seasons what now seems so long ago.

“We value contact,” said Zaidi. “[When] we look at our minor leaguers and guys coming up through the system, one of the key traits we look at in hitters to get promoted and work their way up to the big leagues is guys that make contact, and guys that don’t chase.”

A positive for the team was the prospects. Casey Schmitt, Patrick Bailey, Luis Matos, Marco Luciano, Kyle Harrison and Tyler Fitzgerald made their marks this season, and they are expected to play big roles next season, as Zaidi announced the organization’s intention to have Luciano be the everyday shortstop next season.

“Guys like Schmitt and Matos have a chance to be internal solutions,” said Zaidi. “It’s going to be about consistency with the quality of their at-bats, which we saw for stretches from both of those guys, and that goes for Luciano and Fitzgerald as well. These guys all have chances to be part of a position player group that’s really good defensively that’s here for the long term, and it’s just going to be about whether we’re getting enough from them offensively, so that’s going to be the challenge.”

Zaidi said that the next wave of prospects that will come up next season will mainly be on the pitching side. Prospects that could come up next year include Carson Wisenhunt, Mason Black, Hayden Birdsong and Landen Roupp.

“I think we have a really good group of starting pitchers that we’re going to see next year, who have a chance to make a big impact on the pitching staff and the rotation.”

As for last winter’s free agent signings, Conforto missed all of 2022 due to surgery on his right shoulder, and while he put together a hot stretch in the middle of the season, he eventually flamed out to a .239 batting average, as he could opt out of his contract. Haniger missed the first three and a half weeks of the season, and then suffered a broken right forearm after being hit by a pitch from Jack Flaherty on June 13 in St. louis. Haniger ended up hitting .209 in just 61 games.

Stripling struggled, and made noise, as he took umbrage with the Giants’ use of him and the pitching staff throughout the season. For most of the season, the rotation consisted of Alex Cobb, Logan Webb and three bullpen games. The bullpen games worked for the most part until August, but Manager Gabe Kapler opted to give Stripling and Manaea starts in September. Manaea struggled throughout much of the season, but he did put a stretch of a few strong starts together when he was given a chance in September.

Zaidi said that he wants a manager who will be a strong recruiter of free agents. Zaidi had a back and forth with Bonta Hill, the co-host of the Morning Roast at 95.7 The Game, about controversial comments Zaidi made last December regarding the team’s apparent inability to sign marquee free agents after the Giants were unable to sign Aaron Judge.

There is a lack of confidence amongst the fan base, as the Giants drew 2,500,153, the second-lowest non-pandemic season attendance since moving to the corner of 3rd and King. That is going to make this a big winter for the Giants and Zaidi, whose contract runs up after next season, because if the Giants show more disappointment in the standings, there is good reason to believe that even more major changes could be made.

Dodgers Shrink Giants 5-2, in Regular Season Finale in the City by the Bay; Fans give Brandon Crawford a Grand Farewell

San Francisco Giants shortstop Brandon Crawford doffs his hat for the last time to the San Francisco crowd at Oracle Park at the conclusion of Sun Oct 1, 2023’s game vs. the Los Angeles Dodgers. Crawford played for the Giants 13 years and won two World Series titles in 2012 and 2014. (@SFGiants photo)

By Michael Roberson

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. — The Los Angeles Dodgers (100-62) reached the century mark of wins (100) on the last day of the regular season, as they defeated the San Francisco Giants (79-83) on a beautiful (Fan Appreciation Day) afternoon in Oracle Park.

“For us to get 100 wins here, I think a lot of good things happened; just a wonderful day in the Bay.” Stated Dodgers’ Manager Dave Roberts.

Roberts also expressed fondness for the exiting Brandon Crawford, and how that added to the special day. He mentioned the longtime competition against the veteran infielder.

In addition, Roberts commented on the longtime rivalry between the Giants and Dodgers on both coasts (East and West), “This rivalry runs deep in its long history, going back to its days in New York and Brooklyn.”

As for the game on the field, it got off to a slow start. Neither team registered a hit for nearly three full innings. However, Giants’ catcher Blake Sabol ended the hitless streak in the bottom of the third inning. Unfortunately he was left stranded on base as the third out occured before he could come home.

The Dodgers had the misfortune of leaving runners on base in the top of the first and third innings themselves. They were hitless until the Top of the sixth inning.

Catcher Will Smith – not the actor, even though he was responsible for a Big Hit himself – slapped a single past the shortstop getting LA started on their upcoming barrage.

The 6th inning became the most important for the Southern California visitors, as they scored all their runs during that particular frame of the game. Five runs to be exact.

Second baseman Amed Rasorio’s single through the middle of the infield scored Smith, then center fielder James Outman also singled to center, plating third baseman Max Muncy. This put the Dodgers up 2-0 in front of the 38, 359 fans, some of whom were rooting for the Angel City Avoiders.

Los Angeles was not done with the two run advantage, and got the eventual GW hit from their shortstop. Kike Hernandez belted a 3-run bomb to left/center and gave his team an apparent insurmountable 5-0 lead.

It didn’t take long for the Giants to avoid the shutout, as San Francisco third baseman Casey Schmitt opened the bottom of the sixth inning with a solo homer, bringing them within four runs, 5-1.

Now that the Dodgers seemed content with their four run lead, not much happened until Scmitt came up again, two innings.later. He opened the bottom of the eighth with another solo dinger out of the field of play. That ended up being the last run scored on the day, and it made the score a three run deficit for the Giants, 5-2. That was just the margin LA’s Hernandez created in the 6th inning.

With the game seemingly in the hands of the Dodgers, the Giants used the top of the 9th inning to give Brandon Crawford his proverbial flowers. On Fan Appreciation Day, Crawford was given a standing ovation as he entered the dugout for the last time as a Giant. All the fans were respectful and appreciative for what this player did for the Giants and MLB.

So on a very special day in the Bay, the Dodgers won 5-2 over the Giants.

The #2 seed Dodgers await their opponent in the National League version of the Major League Baseball Playoffs. The possible matchup could be the #3 Milwaukee Brewers or the #6 Arizona Diamondbacks.

The Giants will go into the offseason presumably searching for a new manager and bolstering their lineup for the 2024 season.

Note: Brandon Crawford played a whopping 1.655 games (7th most) for the Giants and ranks with legends of the franchise. As a shortstop, he is the All-time leader (1,616). As for the San Francisco iteration of the franchise, he ranks fourth behind absolute “Giants!” (Willie McCovey [2,256], Willie Mays [2,095] & Barry Bonds [1,976]).

Crawford earned two World Series titles with the San Francisco Giants in 2012 & 2014.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: The Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum Hall of Fame at Fiesta Gigantes

From left to right:  Gabriel(Tito)Avila Jr. President, Amaury Pi-González Vice President, Joe Angel Broadcaster, Erwin Higueros, Broadcaster, Camilo Dovial, Giants pitcher at the Award ceremony at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Oct 1, 2023

Photo credit: Mauricio Segura, HHBMHOF

The Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum Hall of Fame at Fiesta Gigantes

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

SAN FRANCISCO–Fiesta Gigantes this season took place at Oracle Park, home of the San Francisco Giants, on the penultimate game of the regular season before the Giants hosted the LA Dodgers on September 30. The Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum presented (on the field) before the game their awards.

Hall of Fame plaque to ex-Giants play-by-play announcer Joe Angel, the only Colombian-born to become an English broadcaster in the major leagues for the Giants, as well as other teams during his career. Erwin Higueros, current Spanish play-by-play for the Giants, and Camilo Doval, from the Dominican Republic, who won the José Uribe Award.

Doval lead the National League in game saves this 2023 season with 39. The Giants won the game with a final score of 2-1.

Amuary Pi Gonzalez is the vice president of the Major League Baseball Hispanic Heritage Museum and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giant lose season finale at Oracle 5-2 to Dodgers; Crawford plays final game for SF takes a curtain call

San Francisco Giants’ Brandon Crawford prepares for the pitch by Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Bobby Millerm during the first inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Oct 1, 2023 (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (100-62) 000 005 000. – 5. 7. 1

San Francisco (79-83). 000 001 010. – 2. 3. 0

Sunday, October 1, 2023

Time: 2:44

Attendance: 38,350

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–This the way the world ends This is the way the world ends This is the way the world ends Not with a bang but a whimper. —T.S. Eliot, “The Hollow Men”

It wasn’t the end of the world, and the Giants’ season ended with both a whimper and a few bangs in a 5-2 loss to the NL West’s division winning Los Angeles Dodgers. Of course, one team’s bang is another team’s wimper, which is one of the beauties of baseball. Teams don’t compete to reach some abstract, context free goal; they play against each other.

Casey Stengel was right when he said that good pitching always beats good hitting and vice versa. The interplay between hitting and pitching, the confrontation, goes to the heart of the came. The Spanish philosopher José Ortega y Gasset’s dictum applies: I am myself and my circumstances.

Brian Crawford received a two minute standing ovation just before the first pitch was thrown at 1:06. He would be the Giants’ leadoff batter in the bottom of the first, having been reinstated from the IL to make what is very likely to be his farewell performance. It was Crawford’s 1,655th major league game, all of them as a Giant. The ovations came and went as frequently as the “SELL TEAM” chants do in Oakland or the exhortation to “BEAT LA” do in SF.

The last and loudest came as the ninth inning began and Crawford embraced his teammates and walked off the field, replaced by Marco Luciano at short. The old guard had passed. Crawford was the only remaining Giant from the 2014 World Series champions.

San Francisco sent their latest highly touted rookie, southpaw Kyle Harrison, to the mound. He had gone 1-1,4.85 in his brief, six game, career in the show. He plunked two consecutive batters but got through the first inning without any other trouble, which cleared the way for another ovation when Crawford came to bat and yet another when he went down swinging.

Crawford remained in the game and ended his career by going 0 for 4 with two strikeouts. My score card shows him making one put out and no assists.

Having righted the ship, Harrison returned to the mound in the second and pitched until John Brebbia relieved him to start the visitors’ sixth.

Harrison had gone five frames without allowing a hit, although he did hit his work after throwing five innings of no hit baseball, although he did hit three Dodgers with pitches and walk another two. It took him 94 pitches, 61 for strikes to get through the 20 Angelinos he faced. The youngster was not involved in the decision and so finished his first big season at 1-1, 4.15.

The Dodgers also sent a rookie to the mound. Bob Miller came to Los Angeles with three years of minor league experience, during which he went 10-10, 3.79. In the bigs, he had gone 11-4, 3.89 before today. His last previous start came on September 26, when he gave up two runs, both earned, to the Rockies over seven innings in Coors Field.

The Giants mauled him in his only other start against them, getting to him for seven hits and seven runs, all earned, in 5-2/3 innings. This afternoon he lasted a mere four innings against San Francisco, but he shut them out over that stretch, allowing only one hit and one walk.

His pitch count was 57, with 38 strikes. Victor González, who went on to garner the win and now is 3-3, 4.01, replaced him for the fifth and set the Giants down in order. Like Harrison, Miller to settle for. a no decision. He closed the book on the 2023 regular season at 11-4, 3.76.

John Brebbia replaced Harrison at the start of the visitors’ sixth and was ineffective. He faced three batters, the first and third of whom, Will Smith and Max Muncy, reached base on a single and walk, respectively. Both of them scored on singles allowed by Taylor Rogers, Brebbia’s. replacement, and the runs were charged to Brebbia. Kike Hernández’s home run to left, however, and the three runs batted in that came with it were all charged to Taylor’s account. Ross Stirling relieved replaced Taylor with Los Angeles ahead, 5-0.

Ryan Pepiot, listed as a starter, was on the mound replacing González for Los Angeles when Casey Schmidt led off the home sixth with a 377 foot round tripper to left, his fourth dinger in his short span with the Giants. That fig leaf made it a 5-1 ball game.

Schmidt made it two in a row when, leading off the Giants’ half of the eighth, he sent Pepiot’s first offering, an 88.3mph slider into the left center field bleachers, 389 feet from, which it left at 106.3mph.

Evan Phillips set the Giants down in order to earn his 24th save. Brebbia was the losing pitcher and ended his season at 3-5, 3.99.

The Giants’ next game is scheduled for Thursday, March 28, 2024, against the Padres in San Diego. The probable starters haven’t been announced yet.