Showing posts with label Pablo Sandoval. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pablo Sandoval. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Top 10 Reasons the Giants are a Dynasty

Top 10 Reasons the Giants are a Dynasty
By Michael Saltzman
On Twitter @CandlestickWill

So many players, coaches, front office people and members of the ownership group have had their hand in the three championships the San Francisco Giants have won over the last five years. But who is the most responsible. Nothing like a top 10 list to debate who had the biggest impact and who is the biggest reason the Giants are being referred to as a dynasty.



Honorable Mentioned:

The 6 Castoffs & Misfits: Andres Torres, Freddy Sanchez, Aubrey Huff, Pat Burrell, Juan Uribe and Cody Ross


The Giants had never won a World Series in San Francisco until these 6 men became Giants. All 6 had important roles in a Giants patchwork lineup that out hit the Braves, Phillies and Rangers in 2010. What makes these men unique in this historic run of the Giants is that none of them were able to do much for the Giants outside of 2010. Torres, Sanchez and Uribe were members of the Giants in 2009, but played smaller roles. Huff, Burrell and Ross had terrific numbers as Giants in 2010.

Wins Above Replacement in 2010:
Aubrey Huff (5.7)
Andres Torres (5.3)
Pat Burrell (2.1)
Freddy Sanchez (1.8)
Juan Uribe (1.5)

Cody Ross, who only played a month for the Giants before the post-season, made up for it in October, hitting .294 with 15 hits, 10 runs batted in and 5 home runs or a 1.076 OPS. Andres Torres highest WAR after 2010 was a 1.4 he had for the Mets in 2012.

Without these 6 men, the Giants don't win in 2010. Without winning it all in 2010, is there any talk of a dynasty?


Marco Scutaro:
What the misfits were to 2010, Scutaro was to 2012. Injuries plagued his 2013 season that he tried to play through and ultimately his back wouldn't let him play in 2014. He was recently designated for assignment by the Giants. However, his impact on the Giants in 2012 was enormous. He had a 2.1 WAR despite only 268 at bats. He hit .500 in the NLCS alone with 14 hits and a 1.140 OPS. His patience at the plate and his influence in the locker room helped the entire roster play smarter and more efficient. While he doesn't make my top 10, he certainly is one of the most influential figures in this dynasty for the Giants.



The Top 10



#10: Ownership Group
I'm not going to pretend to know all the interworkings of the front office to know who among the group approved the salary raises for our homegrown players or told Brian Sabean he could make a certain trade or sign a certain player.

According to Baseball Prospectus the Giants went from a payroll of $95M at the end of 2009 to a current payroll of $179M in 2014. That kind of financial commitment has as much to do with the success of the franchise as any other factor.

The combination of re-signing homegrown talent and trading or signing players to free agent contracts, wouldn't be possible without the support of the ownership group.


#9: Coaching Staff
Again, it's hard to designate one member of the staff as head and shoulders above the others. Dave Righetti, the team's pitching coach, has been tremendous in preparing the staff over the years and specifically during the playoff rounds where the Giants have out pitched some great staffs. But How can we say that his impact on the staff is more valuable than bullpen coach Mark Gardner or bullpen catcher Bill Hayes.  What Henry "Bam Bam" Muelens has done as the hitting coach has been vastly underrated. What Roberto Kelly and Tim Flannery have done at 1st and 3rd base respectively, has been incredible. If you don't think what they've done is valuable, go through the twitter response to Flannery announcing his retirement. And maybe the most influential part of the staff is bench coach Ron Wotus. Kelly and Wotus were in charge of the infield and outfield positioning. But Wotus was also the right hand man of Bruce Bochy. Bochy has said repeatedly how valuable his staff has been and how much responsibility he has given them. Wotus, for example, has been in charge of Spring Training camp for years now.



#8. Pablo Sandoval
Fans owe the Panda a standing ovation the next time Boston comes to San Francisco. For any animosity they may have over him choosing to leave the Bay Area, needs to be trumped by the three championships he was a part of. As the MVP of the World Series in 2012, he became a instant legend with three home runs in Game 1, joining the likes of Babe Ruth and Reggie Jackson. However, it's his overall playoff performances that are truly outstanding.

In 2010, 2012 and 2014 he slashed a .344/.389/.545/.935 postseason line.  Sandoval also has the 2nd highest WAR among hitters since 2010 among Giants.

For all the weight issues, contract disputes, and slumps, Sandoval was most productive when it mattered most. That can't ever be forgotten. 



#7. Hunter Pence
Despite only being a part of two of the three championships, it's hard not to rank Pence even higher than 7th for what he means to the team on and off the field. He is the heartbeat of the Giants and the team is always better with him in the lineup. The effort Pence gives on ground out to 2nd base is why he leads the Giants every season in infield hits. The passion Pence plays with is why the team always seems to find ways to win.

His speech in Cincinnati with the Giants on the brink of elimination was the stuff of legends, and the fact that it led to winning six elimination games that post-season is tremendous.

His speech to the fans at the end of the 2014 regular season will forever make him a San Francisco icon.  Do the fans believe in value of Hunter Pence? YES! YES! YES!




#6. Core 4
The Giants have looked very different over the years and from the castoffs to Hunter Pence and Angel Pagan to Andres Torres and Gregor Blanco, the team has continually brought in new faces. One of the constants has been the pitching staff, and specifically the bullpen. Javy Lopez, Jeremy Affeldt, Santiago Casilla and Sergio Romo have each won three World Series as a member of the Giants. While their roles have changed throughout the run, their effectiveness hasn't.

In 2010, Brian Wilson was the closer, while the Core 4 were all used as setup men depending on the matchups.

In 2012, Sergio Romo was the closer, with the Affeldt, Casilla and Lopez each playing critical setup roles again.

In 2014, it was Santiago Casilla's turn to pitch the 9th inning, but again, all four were lights out throughout the playoffs.

The value of Casilla, Romo, Affeldt and Lopez has been one of the most underrated elements of the Giants dynasty. That is why they deserve such a high ranking. That is also why they are all still members of the best bullpen in baseball.


#5. Tim Lincecum & Matt Cain
It's never been easy for me to decide between the value of Tim Lincecum and Matt Cain and which pitcher has been more valuable during this dynasty.  Instead of ranking them separately, I've decided to put them together because this team doesn't win championships without both.

Lincecum had won back to back Cy Young Awards in 2008 and 2009, but his 2010 might be the best year of his career when you combine his regular and post-season.  From his 1st ever post-season appearance in 2010 of 8 scoreless innings and 14 strikeouts vs the Braves to his last post-season appearance of 8 innings of 1 run ball and 10 strikeouts vs the Rangers.

Cain had some great seasons as a Giant, but his 2012 was his best. He started the All-Star game, and led the Giants staff by pitching the clinching game of each round of the post-season. When the season was on the line, the Giants went to Cain.

Cain was injured in 2014, and Lincecum was limited to 1.2 innings pitched in the 2014 World Series. However their impact on the pitching staff and their success in 2010 and 2012 was astronomical. The Giants did outhit their opponents in their post-season series, but that was mostly due to the lack of hitting from the other teams. One of the main reasons for that was the starting staff that was led by Lincecum and Cain in 2010 and 2012.


#4. Madison Bumgarner
If 2010 & 2012 were dominated by Lincecum and Cain, 2014 was dominated by Madison Bumgarner. Bumgarner is the only starting pitcher over the last three post-seasons that has had a dominating performance in all three World Series.

His 2014 post-season was one of the greatest we have ever seen. It was so good that he was awarded the Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year, despite not being the best pitcher during the regular season.

It wasn't just 2014 that makes Bumgarner ranked so highly on this list. It was his 8 shutout innings in Game 4 of the 2010 World Series as a 20 year old. It was his 7 shutout innings in Game 2 of the 2012 World Series. And that, combined with his otherworldly 2014 performance, and Bumgarner may go down as the best post-season pitcher of his generation.

Scariest part is he is 25 years old.

If you aren't convinced that Bumgarner is the best pitcher on this staff over the last five years, let's use his bat as the tie breaker.


 
#3. Brian Sabean, Bobby Evans, Dick Tidrow and John Barr
Everyone in baseball knows Brian Sabean, but few realize the all-star front office he has put together. Bobby Evans, the assistant general manager has taken over for Ned Colletti and the transition has been seamless. His ability to work out contracts with the roster and work with the agents and other teams has been masterful. Dick Tidrow is the team's scouting director and the homegrown talent he has amassed over the years is staggering. John Barr has overseen the amateur and international scouting for the team among other responsibilities. These four men have led the Giants from a good organization to an elite one.

Fans are always quick to remember a front office's worst moves. Sabean and his team have had their share of moves that fans have criticized. From re-signing guys like Huff, Lincecum, Scutaro, or from trades like Carlos Beltran for Zach Wheeler or from not signing guys like Jose Abreu, Rusney Castillo, or Yasmany Tomas.

However, when you look at some of the best moves Sabean has made, it's pretty special.

  • Hunter Pence for Tommy Joseph and Nate Shierholtz
  • Marco Scutaro for Charlie Culberson
  • Angel Pagan for Andres Torres and Ramon Ramirez (who both came back to the Giants)
  • Pat Burrell for the league minimum
  • Cody Ross for nothing
  • Aubrey Huff for $3M
  • Freddy Sanchez for Tim Alderson
  • Juan Uribe, Torres and Gregor Blanco as a spring training invite
  • Extensions for Madison Bumgarner, Pablo Sandoval, etc...
  • Drafting Matt Cain, Tim Lincecum, Bumgarner, Brandon Belt, Brandon Crawford, Joe Panik, etc...
Sabean was always hamstrung in the Bonds years because they were always looking to replace young talent with veterans. Now that he has the backing of the ownership group, has brought in a tremendous coaching staff and has the personnel around him in Evans, Tidrow, Barr and others, he has been able to blend young homegrown talent with shrewd trades and signings. This has allowed the Giants to have the best front office in baseball.



#2. Bruce Bochy
Bochy will go down as the greatest manager in San Francisco history when he retires. Not because of what he may still do, but with what he has already done. Three championship rings is three more than any other manager. Bochy has always been known as a players manager, but what makes Bochy stand out among other managers in the game today is his ability to get the most out of the entire 25 man roster by playing all 25 guys on the team.

This isn't commonplace around the league, as some guys may go weeks without seeing the field. For all the frustration fans may have with unproductive guys getting playing time, Bochy will always let a guy on his roster earn what he gets. The guys at the end of the bench or the guys at the end of the bullpen will play. They will play and if they perform, they will continue to play. If they don't perform, they will eventually be replaced. Fans may want guys sent away sooner sometimes, but it is clear that there is a method to Bochy's approach. He wants guys to know they were given a chance to succeed and that gets Bochy's teams to play up to their potential.

Other managers have had more talent in each playoff run, but the 9 straight playoff series wins is not by accident. Being the underdog in nearly every series is because the other teams have usually had more talent on paper. However, winning each and every series is because of Bochy as much as nearly everyone in the organization.



#1. Buster Posey
When all is said in done, Posey might be on the Mount Rushmore of Catchers. Johnny Bench and Yogi Berra are the top tier of catchers in baseball history. Both are hall of famers as much because of their numbers on the field as the World Series trophies they helped win.  Posey now has 3 World Series trophies he has helped win in his four healthy seasons.

Posey has a 23.3 WAR since his debut in 2010, by far the most for any hitter since that first championship season.

His ability to catch the incredible staff the Giants have had throughout the run is another reason he has shown to be the most valuable player in the last five years.

Posey has a Rookie of the Year trophy, Comeback Player of the Year, Most Valuable Player, as well as a batting title, two Silver Slugger awards, The Hank Aaron award, the Willie Mac award and a two time All-Star.

The scary part is that he is only 27 and so he is just entering his prime.

Monday, January 26, 2015

Taking you back to 2010, where it all began

Taking you Back to 2010, Where it all Began
By Will Candlestick



For life long San Francisco Giants fans, this new era of success still feels more fantasy than reality. The idea that winning a championship is expected from this new wave of fans feels ridiculous. After 52 years, some of us fans still look back at 2010 as that perfect moment.

Now that all Giants fans are spoiled regardless of when they started cheering, it's important to look back at the evolution of this franchise from an organization that never found a way to the one that seems to be doing all the right things.

October 27, 2006
Bruce Bochy signed a three year deal to manage the Giants and it would be the 3rd coach Brian Sabean had brought in during his tenure. Dusty Baker and Felipe Alou both had success managing the Giants, but ultimately it was time to let Alou take a step back with the organization and find someone else. That someone was Bochy, who was a rival coach and player with the San Diego Padres for the better part of the last two decades. Bochy said all the right things at his introductory press conference with the Giants.

"I look forward to this challenge," he said. "I made a commitment to myself and to my wife that if we were to make a change, it would be with an organization that would be a cultural fit for me, where I would be comfortable and where there was potential to build real chemistry between myself and the front office.
"It would be a place where I would have a chance to make an impact and a contribution. That's why I'm sitting here today. That's the only reason I'd leave San Diego."



First 3 Years
The Giants struggled mightily in his first two seasons, winning 71 and 72 games respectively in 2007 and 2008. The team was old and the team lacked much talent coming through the minor league system, which was the same old story with all of the Barry Bonds led lineups that Sabean and company were putting together. Bochy, to his credit, did the best he could with what he had as he had done in San Diego.

For years, Bochy had overachieved with the Padres, winning the National League West title 4 times as well as the pennant in 1998. Had it not been for the greatest Yankees team in 60 years, Bochy may have come to San Francisco with a World Series ring. (Although who knows if the Padres would have let him go had he won it all in 1998 either.)

Now he was overachieving with the Giants, but casual fans couldn't see it because the record didn't show it. Bochy was finding ways to win with players who were at the end of their careers and struggling to stay healthy or productive.

In 2009, the last year on Bochy's contract, the team won 88 games. Led by Cy Young winner Tim Lincecum, the Giants were doing something Padres fans weren't used to when Bochy coached for them.  Bochy was letting the young guys lead the way. Lincecum, Matt Cain, Pablo Sandoval and Brian Wilson were just some of the young players who were taking over the locker room that for the last 15 years had always been a veteran's locker room. Much like in San Diego, veterans ruled because that's where Bochy was most comfortable. If he was going to lose, he was going to lose with "his guys," the guys who had experience and played the game the right way.

How the 2010 Season Began
As 2010 began, it was clear that the pitching staff was led by Lincecum and Cain. Lincecum was a back to back Cy Young champion and Cain had become as reliable a pitcher as there was in the game. The 1-2 punch of those two starters really set the tone for the shape the team would take that season.

Sandoval had opened eyes around the league in 2009 with 25 home runs and 90 runs batted in to go with a .330 batting average as a switch hitter. He was still learning how to play 3B at the major league level, but his potential was through the roof.

However, as Sabean and Bochy had proved in the past, they were reluctant to go with young guys all over the diamond and 2010 was no exception.  Travis Ishikawa and Emmanuel Burriss had played more games at first and second base than any other player in 2009. The team needed to upgrade. The team had traded for Freddy Sanchez in 2009 and signed Aubrey Huff late in the off-season to take over those two slots.

Edgar Renteria was at shortstop, but had never been able to stay healthy as a Giant to this point. Mark DeRosa, another veteran that had been brought in by the front office was even in worst shape than Renteria and wasn't going to be able to be the everyday LF they had hoped he could be.  The Giants brought in Juan Uribe for a second Spring Training invite to camp hoping the veteran could earn his way back onto the club.

The outfield was also a mess with Randy Winn gone and Fred Lewis being sent to Toronto. The team also had an underachieving Aaron Rowand as the only OF left. So the team kept Andres Torres and Nate Schierholtz to compete for spots on the roster along with Triple-A product John Bowker. 

Then there was Bengi Molina. For years, Molina had done everything asked of him and more for the franchise. Despite not being a power hitter, Molina was the Giants clean up hitter for much of his time as a Giant and in fact led the team in home runs in 2008 and was one of their most consistent hitters. However, Molina wanted to find a new home and nearly left for the New York Mets in the off-season. Sabean even famously said that Molina's "ship has sailed" when referring to the chances Molina would come back. Yet, Molina did end up returning in 2010 despite knowing that the team's top prospect, Buster Posey, was waiting in the wings to replace him.

The Same Old Bochy & Sabean
For many fans, these signings were just further proof that the Giants were going to win with veterans whenever they could.

As the season went on, production from Huff, Sanchez and Uribe was good enough that fans were being more patient with this particular group. Molina, Renteria and Rowand were all struggling with the issues fans had predicted in Spring. Molina was dealing with the constant questions surrounding when would Buster Posey come up and when he would take his place. Renteria was struggling to be healthy enough and Rowand was struggling with production on the field.

As the year went on, another interesting twist occurred. Pablo Sandoval was struggling. What seemed like the makings of the next big bat in Giants history suddenly was struggling and weight issues seemed to be at the center of it. On top of that, Sabean was finding more veterans to add to this bunch. Pat Burrell, who had been released by the Tampa Bay Rays, was brought in to take over left field. Despite his defensive struggles, Burrell's bat erupted as a Giant, and suddenly with Huff, Burrell, Uribe and Posey, the Giants had some serious power threats in their lineup.

As the team got closer and closer to the trade deadline and the August 31st cutoff for playoff rosters, the team added Jose Guillen and Cody Ross to keep the lineup effective as the team got closer to a possible playoff berth. They had also shored up their bullpen with the additions of Ramon Ramirez and Javier Lopez, and this team that had so much youth at the start of the year was looking more like the teams that had been built for so many years by Sabean.

If Bochy and Sabean were going to lose to the Padres for the NL West title, it was going to be with their veterans.

So What Changed?
It's funny what happens to a season. One moment you are committed to one of your most productive catchers of all-time in Bengi Molina, and the next minute you are giving the job to the Rookie of the Year in the National League. One moment you are convinced that Pablo Sandoval is the best third baseman in the organization since Matt Williams, and the next moment, you are going with a two time Spring Training invite in Juan Uribe.  Barry Zito, who had signed a 7 year, $126 million contract the year Bochy arrived was being replaced in the post-season rotation with a 20 year old phenom, Madison Bumgarner.

This inconsistency of going with Posey over Molina, but then going with Uribe over Sandoval, while not including Zito on the playoff roster at all was crazy. Renteria and Rowand both made the playoff roster as well, but Rowand was also sent to the bench in favor of Andres Torres, who had come out of nowhere in 2010 like so many others to be the team's everyday CF.

How could you explain Sabean and Bochy's decisions? It came down to one simple question: Who will give us the best chance to win today?  Huff and Sanchez had never participated in the post-season before, despite several years in baseball, and they weren't going to miss this opportunity. Renteria, who had been injured most of the season, had vowed to his teammates to make up for it in the playoffs. Uribe took the 3B job from Sandoval and found ways to drive in runs any way he could. And the OF of Burrell, Torres and Ross became one of the most unlikely groupings in post-season history.

Production was trumping experience or potential. So many times, front offices had given players more chances then they had earned because they had "potential" and so many times, we had seen both Sabean and Bochy fall victim to the "experience" excuse for using veterans over unproven players. However, all of sudden, this 2010 Giants team was winning because players were playing simply based on what they had earned.  And it fluctuated.  All 25 members of the roster contributed to the playoff wins. Rowand was given chances to start and Sandoval was given chances to hit. Maybe the most impressive showing came in Game 4 of the World Series when Madison Bumgarner was given the ball despite having never pitched a full season before in the big leagues. His eight shutout innings vs the Texas Rangers showed how far Sabean and Bochy had come.

Fans who had ripped both in the past for loving veterans too much and relying on guys well after their production had warranted it, was going away. Fans had embraced this group of "castoffs and misfits" like no other team before it and as Brian Wilson struck out Nelson Cruz, every fan of the Giants finally knew what it felt like to win the World Series.


Of all the moves Sabean made, and of all the on-field decisions Bochy made, no one move stood out. It was the collection of moves that showed how much both had grown working together. Sticking with Renteria or believing in Bumgarner or letting Posey catch this incredible pitching staff or sitting Sandoval for Uribe. It didn't matter which decision was best. All of these decisions led to a championship by the Bay and a title that no fan will ever forget.

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Giant Points on the 2015 Off-Season

Photo Courtesy of @Buelna37 on Twitter

  • Tim Flannery is the biggest loss of the off-season
  • Pablo didn't want to come back.
  • Michael Morse wanted to live in Florida where he's from with his wife and newborn baby.
  • Jon Lester would not have cost us a 1st round pick in June draft.
  • James Shields & Max Sherzer would have cost us our 1st round pick.
  • Jon Lester took richest offer. 
  • Casey McGehee and Nori Aoki are 1 year options that create depth & flexibility
  • If we need to upgrade during the season, McGehee & Aoki could be great bench options too.
  • Gregor Blanco and Juan Perez having better competition than Gary Brown is a good thing.
  • Adam Duvall and Chris Dominguez having more competition to make team is good too.
  • Jake Peavy for an entire year will be great for our staff off the field as well as on.
  • Bringing back a motivated Sergio Romo could make him elite vs RH again.
  • Tim Lincecum motivated to earn another contract can be a great thing.
  • Tim Hudson needs Derek Jeter treatment from the fanbase in final year.
  • That's $30M we can move around and add players with in 2016.
  • Marco Scutaro wants to play, and if he somehow gets healthy, what a bat off the bench.
  • Angel Pagan and Matt Cain coming back is huge.
  • Brandon Belt and Brandon Crawford are still getting better.
  • Having Andrew Susac and Hector Sanchez could mean more time at 1st for Buster Posey.
  • Our bullpen will still have Jeremy Affeldt, Javy Lopez and Santiago Casilla
  • We will be getting a full season of Joe Panik
  • We still have Hunter Pence
  • And we still have Madison Bumgarner
  • And we still have Bruce Bochy
  • And we still have Brian Sabean, Bobby Evans, Dick Tidrow and John Barr
  • Oh, and we are the defending Champs! "I know, because I won" ~ Barack Obama

Friday, January 24, 2014

The Life of a Giant Bobblehead

The Life of a Giant Bobblehead
by Will Candlestick

1st 40,000 fans receive an...autographed...Buster Posey...handmade...Garlic Fry...paper bowl.  The suspense got lost there sometime after Posey.  As the San Francisco Giants promotional schedule came out yesterday, I noticed some fantastic things on there for this year. April 10th, for example, is a Farewell to the 'Stick stadium replica. The team also has the 60th anniversary of the 1954 World Championship team with the fans getting a replica ring, bobblehead nights of Duane Kuiper (commemorating his 1 and only home run,) Hunter Pence, Brandon Crawford OR Brandon Belt and Angel Pagan and even Sergio Romo socks.

All of these giveaways got me to thinking about what are some other giveaways that would make me want to buy tickets immediately after hearing about them.

What about a Aubrey Huff commemorative Rally Thong?  Maybe not.

A can of Bud Light autographed by Pat Burrell?  Maybe more inappropriate. And also, maybe too soon for 2010 memorabilia.

1. Commemorative Mike Krukow action figure. Or better yet...Magic 8 ball. It could answer you with "Grab some Pine Meat!"  "Atta Babe!"  "Gamer Babe"  and of course his signature horse laugh.

2. Hunter Pence Scooters for everyone.  Can't just be to the first 10,000 kids, because, hey, if Hunter can ride one, I want one.

3. Kirk Rueter Woody Doll. It might be a little creepy if they use his likeness on a doll, but what fan wouldn't want one, and I'm positive it would find a great place in "The Shed."

4.  Angel Pagan Lion Mane Wigs. What better way to celebrate a Giants win, than letting your Pagan Wig fly?

5. Brandon Crawford mini Vacuum Cleaners. Maybe he needs a gold glove 1st. Of course, then I would suggest Gold Crawford Gloves.

6. Panda Blow-Up-and-Back-Down-Again-Dolls.  The toy that adjusts as Pablo does.

7. Ryan Vogelsong Gameday Chicken Enchiladas.  Actually, instead of a giveaway, they should serve chicken enchiladas at Orlando Cepeda's booth on games he starts.

8. Madison Bumgarner Snot Rockets...ok, I know that wouldn't go over well, or how that would even look, but at least had to throw it out there just for fun.



9. Buster Posey American Flags. Because we believe in truth, justice and the Posey way.

10. Bruce Bochy grunt button. Perfect for a desk at work. "How are you feeling today Will?"  "mmmgrrrphhhgmm"  "Oh, sorry, didn't realize the Giants were tied 1-1 in the 15th."

What's your favorite promotional idea?  What can we add to the list?

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

San Francisco Giants Financial Planning

Breaking Down the Master Financial Plan of the San Francisco Giants
by The Will Candlestick

As we head into a very uncertain 2014 for the San Francisco Giants, one thing is clear. The Giants have a plan. It might not bring a 3rd championship in five years, or even another championship in the next five years, but it will keep the team competitive each and every year. Before I talk about the plan, let's 1st take a look back at where this plan came from.

1. The Aaron Rowand Rule

While many fans assume this should be named the Barry Zito rule for the contract he signed in 2007, but as Henry Schulman and Susan Slusser wrote then, the rationale to sign Zito was different.

"We view Zito as a franchise player, and we'll certainly need one when Bonds goes," said a Giants source at the time.

When they said 'Franchise Player,' what they meant was 'Star Power.'  They felt Zito would be the perfect replacement for Barry Bonds because of his familiarity to the fans coming from Oakland and his Cy Young worthy curveball that would play well at AT&T Park.

The Aaron Rowand rule is based off of the large oversized contract he signed in 2008.  Rowand was brought in for his "warrior spirit" and what he would bring to the locker room. The problem was that by signing him in free agency instead of through trade or the draft, he cost over $12 million a year for the next 5 years. And as we saw 4 years later, the Giants weren't willing to even let him last that long, waiving him in 2011.

That's the difference between the 2 bloated free agent contracts.  Zito's was talent based, which despite the results, is always a reason to sign someone to large sums of money.  Rowand's was for intangibles.  The same intangibles Juan Uribe and Marco Scutaro used to propel the team to titles in 2010 and 2012 respectively and for far less money.  Uribe wasn't even offered a major league contract in 2010 until after Spring Training and Scutaro was a mid-season trade. That is where you find intangibles. A player with talent, who is being overlooked and out to prove something.  When you give a player like that $60 million, they have nothing left to prove, and while Rowand worked tirelessly in the cages to be good, his intangibles weren't worth the contract.

So, as a result:

The First Rule of Giants Baseball is: You Do Not Offer 5+ Year Deals To Free Agents from Other Teams.

The Second Rule of Giants Baseball is: You Do Not....ok you get the reference.

2. The Matt Cain Rule.

The next step in the plan is to protect yourself from yourself. If you cannot sign other teams players to massive contracts, the massive contracts should go to the players you already trust. The players whose medical histories you've written yourself and whose coaches know all of their flaws and all of their quirks. Bottom line: If you are going to win or lose, you are going to know who you are going to win or lose with.

'Growing' your Own:
Matt Cain, Tim Lincecum, Madison Bumgarner, Buster Posey and Pablo Sandoval are all home grown products that have been labeled as part of the present and future of the organization. All were given their 1st extension with the Giants well before their 4th year of arbitration, or in other words, 6th year in the Major Leagues. Matt Cain signed his extension in 2012, just before winning his 2nd World Series with the club, as did Buster Posey, signing his extension just before the start of the 2013 season.  This sets a baseline for all future contracts.

Before, agents for Cain and Lincecum could say to the organization: "If Zito is making $20 million a year, my client needs to be making at least $21 million"

Now, with Cain making the most money and Bumgarner locked in for 5 years, agents are limited in their leverage because the two best pitchers for the Giants aren't going anywhere and the Giants aren't looking for an 'Ace of the Staff.'

3. The Hunter Pence Rule
 

Earning your Money:
Angel Pagan, Marco Scutaro, Hunter Pence, Javier Lopez, Jeremy Affeldt, Ryan Vogelsong and Santiago Casilla, are all guys who have earned their 1st free agent contracts they signed with the Giants by playing with the Giants.  Because of what they did in a Giants uniform, they were given high priced contracts.



4. The Brandon Belt Effect.

Now let's fast forward to the end of the 2014 season. The Giants have just won their 3rd World Series...(ok sorry, just got excited.)

What the Giants have done is set themselves up for every future meeting with every future agency that comes into AT&T Park. Cain and Posey are your faces of the franchise. Bumgarner is locked in. Pence is now set up long term. Just with those Mt. Rushmore type pieces alone, you have leverage on every future starting pitcher and power bat. You can tell an agent that if their client wants to get more money than they are worth, they will need to find another club willing to pay it. 

So, if you are Brandon Belt, and you have struggled to find consistency at the plate throughout your 1st 2+ seasons and you see the way this organization is spending their money, here is what you can see.

A. The Giants have no issues at all spending money
B. The Giants are extremely reluctant to spend big money on a player they've never coached before.
C. The Giants will work with players who are inconsistent if they believe they are a part of their core.
D. 2013 proved that Brandon Belt is now officially a part of that core.
E. Core players don't leave.

So, whether it's Tim Lincecum re-signing for two years, despite 2 full seasons of ups and downs (more downs than ups)

Or, whether it's Sandoval or Belt not being traded the second they become tradeable/expendable (The Billy Beane Model)

If you are Sandoval, Belt, Sergio Romo or Brandon Crawford, you can see the light at the end of your contract, and you see that your next Major League contract will be with the San Francisco Giants.