Tuesday, April 21, 2015

San Francisco Giants Organizational Depth Chart (4/21/15 Edition)

2015 San Francisco Giants Organizational Depth Chart
Put together by @CandlestickWill & @CoveChatter

C Buster Posey (MLB)
C Hector Sanchez (MLB)
C Andrew Susac (MLB)
C Guillermo Quiroz (Triple-A)
C Trevor Brown  (Triple-A)
C Jeff Arnold (Double-A)
C Jackson Williams (Double-A)
C Eliezer Zambrano (Double-A)
C Ben Turner (Single-A)
C Matt Pare (Single-A)
C Ty Ross (Single-A)
C Geno Escalante (Single-A)
C Brad Moss (Low-A)
C Aramis Garcia (Low-A)
C Jared Deacon (Low-A)
C John Riley (Low-A)

1B Brandon Belt (MLB)
1B Travis Ishikawa (MLB)
1B John Bowker (Triple-A)
1B Ricky Oropesa (Double-A)
1B Angel Villalona (Double-A)
1B Brian Ragira (Single-A)
1B Skyler Ewing (Low-A)
2B Joe Panik (MLB)
2B Matt Duffy (MLB)
2B Ehire Adrianza (Triple-A)
2B Brandon Hicks (Triple-A)
2B Ronny Cedeno (Triple-A)
2B Blake Miller (Double-A)
2B Kelby Tomlinson (Double-A)
2B Austin Slater (Single-A)
2B John Polonius (Single-A)
2B Jeremy Sy (Low-A)

SS Brandon Crawford (MLB)
SS Carlos Triunfel (Triple-A)
SS Juan Ciriaco (Triple-A)
SS Randy Moreno (Double-A)
SS Christian Arroyo (Single-A) 
SS Ydwin Villegas (Single-A)
SS Travious Relaford (Low-A)

3B Casey McGehee (MLB)
3B Joaquin Arias (MLB)
3B Adam Duvall (40 Man/Triple-A)
3B Mitch Delfino (Double-A)
3B Ryder Jones (Single-A)
3B Brandon Bednar (Single-A)
3B Jonah Arenado (Low-A)
3B Will Callaway (Low-A)

LF Nori Aoki (MLB)
LF Gregor Blanco (MLB)
LF Juan Perez (Triple-A)
LF Darren Ford (Triple-A)
LF Elliott Blair (Double-A)
LF Devin Harris (Double-A)
LF Ryan Lollis (Single-A)
LF Rafael Rodriguez (Single-A)
LF Brennan Metzger (Single-A)
LF Shawn Payne (Single-A)
LF Cristian Paulino (Low-A)

CF Angel Pagan (MLB)
CF Brett Jackson (Triple-A)
CF Daniel Carbonell (40 Man/Double-A)
CF Jesus Galindo (Single-A)
CF Randy Ortiz (Low-A)
CF Johneshwy Fargas (Low-A)
RF Hunter Pence (MLB)
RF Justin Maxwell (MLB)
RF Jarrett Parker (40 Man/Triple-A)
RF Javier Herrera (Double-A)
RF Mac Williamson (Double-A)

RF Tyler Horan (Single-A)
RF Chuckie Jones (Single-A) *Suspended
RF Hunter Cole (Low-A) 
RF Andrew Cain (Low-A)
RF Gustavo Cabrera (INJ)

SP Madison Bumgarner (MLB)
SP Matt Cain (MLB)
SP Jake Peavy (MLB)
SP Tim Hudson (MLB)
SP Tim Lincecum (MLB)
SP Chris Heston (MLB)
SP Ryan Vogelsong (MLB)
SP Yusmeiro Petit (MLB)
SP Ty Blach (Triple-A) 
SP Jake Dunning (Triple-A)
SP Austin Fleet (Triple-A)
SP Robert Coello (Triple-A)
SP Braulio Lara (Triple-A)
SP Nik Turley (Triple-A)
SP Kevin Correia (Triple-A)
SP Kyle Crick (Double-A)
SP Clayton Blackburn (Double-A)
SP Chris Stratton (Double-A)
SP Adalberto Mejia (Double-A) * Restricted List
SP Matt Lujan (Double-A)
SP Joe Biagini (Double-A)
SP Jack Snodgrass (Double-A)
SP Tyler Beede (Single-A)
SP Keury Mella (Single-A)
SP Luis Ysla (Single-A)
SP Nick Vander Tuig (Single-A)
SP Martin Agosta (Single-A)SP D.J. Snelten (Single-A)
SP Chase Johnson (Single-A)
SP Matt Gage (Low-A)
SP Mark Reyes (Low-A)
SP Samuel Coonrod (Low-A)
SP Nathanial Santiago (Low-A)
SP Jose Reyes (Low-A)
SP Nicholas Gonzalez (Low-A)
SP Michael Santos (Low-A)

RP Santiago Casilla (MLB)
RP Sergio Romo (MLB)
RP Jeremy Affeldt (MLB)
RP Javy Lopez (MLB)
RP Jean Machi (MLB)
RP George Kontos (MLB)
RP Hunter Strickland (40 Man/Triple-A)
RP Erik Cordier (40 Man)
RP Cody Hall (40 Man/Triple-A) 
RP Steven Okert (Triple-A)
RP Brett Bochy (Triple-A)
RP Juan Gutierrez (Triple-A)
RP Curtis Partch (Triple-A)
RP Mike Broadway (Triple-A)
RP Clay Rapada (Triple-A)
RP Derek Law (40 Man)
RP Ray Black (40 Man)
RP Joan Gregorio (40 Man/Double-A)
RP Josh Osich (Double-A)
RP Kelvin Marte (Double-A)
RP Jose Casilla (Double-A)
RP Pedro Rodriguez (Double-A)
RP Stephen Johnson (Double-A)
RP Phil McCormick (Double-A)
RP Tyler Rogers (Double-A)
RP Christian Jones (Single-A)
RP Ian Gardeck (Single-A)
RP Jeff Soptic (Single-A)
RP Mason McVay (Single-A)
RP Daniel Slania (Single-A)
RP Connor Kaden (Low-A)
RP Raymundo Montero (Low-A)
RP E.J. Encinosa (Low-A)
RP Carlos Diaz (Low-A)
RP Rodolfo Martinez (Low-A)
RP Reyes Moronta (Low-A)
RP Ramon Del Orbe (Low-A)

Giants are 4-10, Let's Keep Calm and Panik

The San Francisco Giants are in last place. Only two teams in baseball, the Miami Marlins and Milwaukee Brewers have a worse record than the Giants 4-10 mark. The Giants are next to last to only the Boston Red Sox in hard hit ball percentage.

Buster Posey, the team's cleanup hitter and former league MVP, is currently hitting .229 with two extra base hits. Casey McGehee, who has been the Giants replacement for Pablo Sandoval, is hitting .194 with two extra base hits. And Brandon Belt, who was suppose to be having his breakout season, is hitting .152, with zero extra base hits.  Madison Bumgarner, the Sports Illustrated Sportsmen of the Year, NLCS and World Series MVP and Silver Slugger winner last season, has a 5.29 earned run average and has given up 10 earned runs over 17 innings. In other words, 4 more runs than he gave up in the entire 2014 post season over 52 and 2/3 innings.

Hunter Pence, the life blood of the team, has been on the disabled list and has yet to play an inning in 2015. Matt Cain and Jake Peavy are both currently on the DL as well, with no set timetable for their returns.

The famous World War II poster, Keep Calm and Carry On, has been reshaped and renamed many times over in recent times and the current 2015 Giants new motto has become "Keep Calm and Panik."



This isn't coming from management or from the public relations staff and it has not yet come from the team's official store. Bruce Bochy isn't preaching it to his players either. It's coming from the fanbase. An awkward mix of die hards who have gone through the five decades of struggles and the new generation that believe in odd year curses and demand titles every season.


Fans have raised expectations of this franchise to a level that few organizations have ever felt in the history of baseball. The New York Yankees, arguably the greatest franchise in sports for their unparalleled success, are one of the only franchises to make a run like the Giants have in recent history. The Boston Red Sox have also won three World Series over a ten year span, as well as the Oakland A's and Cincinnati Reds who both had runs in the 1970's. Besides those four franchises, you have to go to the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1940's or the Yankees again to find a team with the type of success the Giants have had since 2010.

This brief history lesson is to remind all of the new "die hards" that this type of thing we have seen with the Giants is rare in Major League Baseball and that the expectations, ultimately, are unrealistic, from a historical point of view.

However, we live in a day and age where people voice their opinions 140 characters at a time and prefer to shorten their attention span only to what is trending.

The Giants are going to be in a lot of trouble in Matt Cain and Jake Peavy end up sidelined for an extended length of time this season. It is magnified by the fact that every team in the National League West is off to a better start and that is primarily because of them already winning series against the Giants head to head. The hole the Giants have dug for themselves is not due to a tougher schedule. It is due to losing to the teams they will be competing with for a division title.

Ultimately, the Giants will either need to get healthy quickly, or look to make a trade or two to upgrade the starting staff or the middle of their order.  Fans today don't want to wait until July when the trade deadline approaches, so expect more complaints from a fanbase that has watched their favorite team build a dynasty.

Friday, April 3, 2015

Giants Re-Shape their Front Office to remain the best Front Office in Baseball

Today's official announcement of extensions to Brian Sabean and Bruce Bochy may fall under the radar today considering this is one of several extensions the two have signed with the San Francisco Giants during their tenure together. Even the tweet from the Giants was boring.

However, there were some moves made today to continue the trend set by the organization years ago about how to handle their baseball talent. Just like with the talent on the field, the Giants have been surprisingly loyal to their talent off the field. Brian Sabean was hired in 1996, and has been with the organization ever since as the longest tenured general manager in the game. Now he has been promoted to Executive Vice President of Baseball Operations to make room in the general manager's chair for Bobby Evans, who has been with the team for 22 years and was the assistant GM under Sabean.



A portion of the official release:
Sabean has been promoted to executive vice president of baseball operations. He is responsible for managing all aspects of the Giants’ baseball department, including the immediate and long-term development of the major and minor league systems and the team’s growing scouting and international operations.

Giants Vice President and Assistant GM Bobby Evans has been named senior vice president and general manager and will manage the day to day operations of the baseball department. Entering his 22nd season with the Giants, Evans assists Sabean in all Major League and amateur contract negotiations, player acquisitions via trade or free agency and all areas of major and minor league operations.


The promotion of Evans is a smart one on two fronts. First, it allows the Giants to keep one of the best assistant general managers in the game and allows Sabean to continue to work with Evans on all baseball matters. It also does something far more important to the overall health of the franchise. It allows Evans and every other executive and employee to see that promotions from within are standard practice.

The Giants promoted Sabean to a new role, and gave Evans Sabean's old job and Jeremy Shelley Evans' former role.

When the Giants won the World Series in 2010, there were many baseball experts and even Giants fans who did not approve of the re-signings of many of the players from that team. Players like Aubrey Huff, Freddy Sanchez, Cody Ross, Andres Torres and Pat Burrell were not as good in 2011 as they were in 2010 and the money spent to retain all of these players were looked at bad investments.  The Giants even tried to compete with the offers given to Juan Uribe and Edgar Renteria to stay. For any criticism the team received for these moves, there was something starting in the locker room and in the front office that off-season that has continued through 2015. The team made a commitment to the players and the people behind the scenes who were leading this organization.

For the 1st time in 52 seasons, the Giants had won the World Series, and the feeling in the organization was to continue to try to win with the group that got them there. What this has done has given everyone in the building a feeling of ownership in the success of the team and a feeling of family that is rare in the business world of sports.

It's not just re-signing Huff, Ross or Torres in 2010, but also keeping Tim Lincecum, Matt Cain, Marco Scutaro, Angel Pagan, Jeremy Affeldt, Javier Lopez, Hunter Pence, Jake Peavy, Sergio Romo and Ryan Vogelsong.  The Giants tried to keep Pablo Sandoval too.  What this does is send a clear message to future free agents such as Brandon Belt, Brandon Crawford and Joe Panik that the Giants will continue to believe in them the same way they believed in so many before them.

Now, Giants fans and baseball are seeing the same thing in the coaching staff and the front office. When Tim Flannery, the team's beloved third base coach, announced his retirement, the Giants organization made a decision strikingly similar to the ones they've made with their players. They promoted Roberto Kelly to be their new third base coach and promoted Bill Hayes to be their 1st base coach. Other people outside the organization could have been brought in to do the job, and maybe even done the job well, but it sends a better message to all the coaches in Sacramento, Richmond, San Jose and Augusta as well as with the major league club, that promotions are not only possible, but expected.

The promotions of Sabean,Evans and Shelley has become the norm for the San Francisco Giants. The Giants three World Series trophies are a direct correlation to the team's commitment to their players, their coaches and their front office.

Friday, March 20, 2015

It's March Madness: Time to Re-Visit the #SFGiantsMadness

During the off-season, I decided to purchase a subscription to Baseball Reference and with that subscription, I found out so much more about why Matt Cain is one of the most underrated pitchers of the last 10 years. Their site allows you to organize career stats in many different ways very easily, such as how many games has Matt Cain pitched in his career where he went at least 7 innings and gave up 3 runs or less. (The number is 125 by the way.)

That gave me an idea. Who are the best San Francisco Giants of All-Time? Not in the history of the franchise, but just since 1958. Since WAR (Wins Above Replacement) has been widely viewed as a good barometer of who the best players are, I decided to make an NCAA style bracket of San Francisco Giants based on WAR.

Not surprisingly, the top four were obvious: Willie Mays, Barry Bonds, Willie McCovey and Juan Marichal. These four would become the #1 seeds and the names of my brackets. The "Say Hey Kid" bracket, the "GOAT" bracket, the "Stretch" bracket, and the "Dominican Dandy" bracket.

It was great seeing that current players like Cain, Tim Lincecum, Buster Posey, and Madison Bumgarner were already good enough to make the cut. It was also interesting to see some of the fans most popular former and current players right on the cusp of 64. This made it very easy to include the "Play in Games" just like the NCAA has recently. This included matchups like this:







As we approached the 1st round, their were some interesting match ups and one particular flaw with WAR. Closers. Two of the greatest closers in team history were also two of the fans most loved players. The late Rod Beck and Robb Nen. Both left a mark on the fanbase, yet, because WAR doesn't equate closers in the same way as other pitchers, they had a tough road in the tourney. That being said, the tournament had started and fans on Twitter were having a great time. Some of the highlights from the 1st round:



Hunter Pence's complete beatdown of Jeff Kent.



Pablo Sandoval losing to Ray Durham, mostly because fans were sad Pablo left for Boston. (Sidenote: This was done before Panda's comments about not missing the Giants at all)



An epic battle between Matt Cain and Mike Krukow.



And getting some love from Sports Illustrated photographer Brad Mangin for using his Ed Halicki photo.



As we approached the round of 32, matchups became even tougher and players were pitted against one another making it nearly impossible for Giants fans to decide. Some of highlights included:


Willie Mays barely beating World Series phenom Madison Bumgarner.



Kirk Rueter upsetting Gaylord Perry.



Having to put my childhood favorite, Kevin Mitchell, against my all-time favorite Cain.



Rich Aurilia being a great sport about an impossible battle.



The round of 16 had some matchups that really showed the age of Giants fans. Were they going to fight to keep current players like Cain, Lincecum, Posey and Bumgarner in the tournament? Were they going to fight for Bonds, Mays, McCovey and Marichal. Let's take a look at the two closest match ups:


Willie Mays and Buster Posey receiving 98 total votes, splitting right down the middle. However, at the time I cut off the voting, Mays had a 1 vote lead.


Tim Lincecum's mustache and ability to make baseballs float in mid air beating the greatest pitcher in San Francisco Giants history.




Now it was down to the Elite 8, and there would be no sugarcoating anymore. These were match ups fans were dreading. Time to rip off the band-aid and show you:


Willie Mays defeated Orlando Cepeda in the only blowout.



Tim Lincecum pulling away in the 2nd half to defeat Matt Cain.



J.T. Snow had fan support early, but ultimately was no match for Barry Bonds.



Willie McCovey defeating Will Clark.





So we had reached the Final Four and the #4 seed Tim Lincecum joined #1 seeds Willie Mays, Barry Bonds and Willie McCovey. Fans had spoken and it was clear that despite several upsets throughout the tournament, the greatest of all-time couldn't be denied.


Willie Mays defeated Tim Lincecum to reach the championship game.




Barry Bonds squeaked by Willie McCovey at the buzzer to reach the championship game.



I was happy to see that the two greatest Giants of all-time survived to the championship game. Despite the popularity of players such as Pence, Rueter, Snow, Lincecum and others, the Giants fans retweeted and favorited just enough to ensure the championship would be the two greatest living baseball players in team history and maybe baseball history.


And the Winner and STILL champion...The Greatest of All-Time, The Say Hey Kid, Willie Mays




Can't wait until next off-season to do this again and see who upsets who and to see if Willie can defend his title. A huge thank you to all who participated and voted on Twitter back in December.

Friday, February 27, 2015

My Interview with Mac Williamson (2/6/15)



Transcript of My Interview with Mac Williamson on Blog Talk Radio for Baseball Essential
 

Will: Hey Mac Williamson, how are you? First of all, hey, congratulations on getting a Spring Training invite, that's fantastic, congratulations to you.

Mac: Thank you very much. I'm looking forward to it a lot.

Will: So how are the workouts going in Arizona right now?

Mac: Everything's going well. They've had a big group of guys here the last three weeks, working out, doing baseball related stuff. And then we have another group coming in on Monday, so I've kind of been able to jump in some groups, do some hitting, throwing, running as well as my lifting, so everything's going well.

Will: That's great. Now I know you had Tommy John Surgery in April. Could you just tell fans kinda what that rehab experience was like, and how things are going now?

Mac: Yeah, so I had surgery at the end of April, and I had to wear a kind of a brace for about six weeks. I started range of motion about a week after surgery. Just to kind of get it so it won't lock up, so it wouldn't lock up. And then for the first two or three months, they were solely focused on trying to get the range of motion back and strengthen it, real minor strengthening stuff, mainly for the shoulder. And then after about three months, we started a more vigorous strengthening. I was able to start working out. A lot of body weight stuff at first, but I was able to start working out harder and harder obviously as time went on, and then later in the Fall I started throwing in September, beginning of November. I started a throwing program and I started hitting at the end of December. And here I am today.

Will: God, that's great. Now who are some of the people that kind of helped you along the way to get back on the field?

Mac: The main guy I work with every day is Tony Reali. He's the organizational therapist. So I've worked with him since day one. I worked with him a little bit in Spring Training when I first hurt it, trying to rehab it at first trying to avoid surgery. So I've worked with him since day one. In addition to him, several strength coaches have been in and out. You know the Arizona league strength coach obviously were at the complex in Arizona, so the Arizona strength coach, the Arizona league strength coach was here all year until the completion of the season at the beginning of September and then after that, Jeff Head, who was the head minor league strength coordinator worked with me through the Fall and then now since I've been back since the new year, and had January camps, so there's been several different strength coaches around helping to ensure that anything that I need, I have at my disposal.

Will: Well that's great. It's so great to hear that there are so many people in your corner there.

Mac: It really is. And mean they've been really good. And it's not just me. It's for anyone that was injured or is out or who lives here in the off-season, and ensuring that all the players have what they need at any given time to be successful.

Will: Now in 2013, you obviously had a tremendous year with the San Jose Giants, basically led the team in pretty much every category. And so what are you taking away from that season, heading into 2015?

Mac: Well I think the biggest thing to take away from that season was my improvement and progression as the season went along. I started off very slow. Made some adjustments, in conjunction with the hitting coach in San Jose, Lipso Nava, the manager Andy Skeels and the minor league hitting coordinator Steve Decker. We all kind of got together as the year went on, just before the All-Star break, started making some changes, which you know we all had to be on board with, because, you know, it's hard to do that in the middle of the season.  But we were all in agreeance that this needed to be done and you know they really helped me a lot and they were patient with the adjustments and so as the season went on I got better and better and I think the results were indicative of that. And then last year, prior to getting hurt, heading into Spring Training, I really wanted to built upon the adjustments I had made. I made some further adjustments in the off-season to take into the season which obviously I wasn't able to do because I wasn't able to play.

So, you know, this year, every year you want to stay healthy, because if you aren't healthy, you can't help the team win, you can't progress and can't move along. But I think more than anything, this year, it's important for me to stay healthy on top of building on some of the things that I've worked on at the end of the 2013 season as well as some of the things that some of the coaches have helped me with since when I first started hitting one handed drills in the fall. I couldn't use my right hand yet, but I could use my left handed one handed drills.

And now Andy Skeels is the Triple-A hitting coach, was here for instructional league, and he really took some time out of his day for those thirty days during instructional league to help me change some things, the finite things, that really needed to be changed. And I look forward to continue to work with him. I think he'll be at Major League camp as well in the beginning of Spring Training. So I look forward to working with him, continuing to work with him, and make the adjustments to be more consistent this year. If I am fortunate enough to be in Richmond. You know, it's a very tough league to hit in. So consistency is going to be key.

Will: Absolutely, and obviously I think from a fan's standpoint, you always hear about moves within the...different managers moving around, so it's actually good to hear that you'll have a chance to work with Skeels again, because I know he, like you just mentioned, he's obviously a big influence on your approach at the plate.

Mac: Right

Will: To know that you'll be part of working with him again, that'll be great.

Mac: Yeah, I mean he was the manager in San Jose obviously in 2013 and then last year he moved up to Triple-A hitting coach in Fresno and this year obviously he'll be in Sacramento so. And he really knows what he's doing, so I'm looking forward to hitting with him, as well as Bam Bam and some of the other guys in the organization to try to do the most I can in the little time I have in Spring Training to get ready for the season.

Will: And, what do you take away from the fact that you and Daniel Carbonell are the only Spring Training invites in the outfield, and Bobby Evans said today that during some interviews that he expects you to be fully ready to go. I mean it seems like the organization certainly has your back and supports you, so what does that mean to have that kind of support from your organization?

Mac: Well, it means a lot. You know, coming off a year where I didn't play, basically at all. It really showed the confidence they have and the hope they have in me as a player. To be able to be the player that they want me to be, in the future. In the near future. I've met several players that got the opportunity to go to Major League camp in the past and didn't have a great season the following season and weren't invited back. So to be invited back having not played at all is a huge honor. And it speaks volumes to, you know, what they see in me. So I'm very fortunate and very honored and humbled that they want me to come back and they're willing to let me be out there with all the guys again. And hopefully do well.

Will: So what is maybe specifically, maybe more than one thing to this answer, but what is your main goal for this season besides obviously like any player staying healthy. I know with your surgery, it might be a little bit more so in your case, but besides health, is there any other main goal that you might have going into the season.

Mac: I think the biggest key to being a major league player is being consistent. And in San Jose, I'd have a very good two week span and a very bad two week span right after, very up and down. And I think being consistent this year, making the adjustments that I've made and will continue to make to my swing will help me be more consistent. They say time and time again when there's an opening up in the big league club and they ask "who's going to be able to help them today?" you need to be a guy that's consistent. They know exactly what they are going to get out of you everyday. And there's not a guy saying that "well, right now he's not hitting really well, but two weeks ago he was hitting" So I think that being consistent is the key to the game. And that's really what I want to focus on is being more consistent and just trying to continue to make the adjustments I've made.

Will: And is there maybe one part of your game that you maybe take more pride in than others, maybe be your defense or the way you approach the game at the plate, is there a certain part of your game that you take maybe extra pride in maybe over other things.

Mac: My game all-around, I'm known more for my offensive capabilities than my defensive capabilities. And I'm not going to sit here and say that I'm a great defensive player. But I really do like to surprise people at least before surgery when they'd try to take an extra base or you know. Obviously ego plays a part in it in anybody when a catcher throws out a runner or an outfielder throws out somebody at the plate. That's something that I really enjoy. Aside from hitting home runs. That's something that's really fun to do. I take pride in playing defense the right way and continue to get better because I'm not the best defensive player out there. I was fortunate enough to be in camp last year and work with some of the guys and Angel Pagan took some time out of his day every day to help me get better and I was very very happy that he did that for me, because he didn't have to but I take pride in just doing things the right way defensively and you know, it's the little things. If you make a mistake in the infield it can cost a base, if you make it in the outfield it can cost you multiple bases. So not necessarily make spectacular plays, but you know make all the routine plays, I think is important.

Will: Yeah, I think in the Giants recent past, even with guys like Pat Burrell or Mike Morse in the outfield, I mean it's the success they had out there is usually based more about the angle to take to the ball than the speed. And so being able to improve your defense doesn't always have to be athletically, obviously. Obviously that's an important part of the game.

Mac: Right

Will: Is there a player in the league right now you feel has a similar game to you? Obviously, I had an opportunity to see you many times in San Jose, but a lot of fans aren't familiar with you live, is there a player that maybe you would compare yourself similarly to? Or maybe someone you try to pattern your game after?

Mac: I don't necessarily think that. I mean, Again, I obviously hear people compare you to people. You know, I can't sit here as a minor league guy who hasn't played a game in Double-A yet and say confidently that I look like Albert Pujols or I look like Matt Holliday. Or something like that.

Will: Right, right right.

Mac: I mean, they're generous comparisons don't get me wrong, but I don't necessarily follow my game after anybody. I think that everybody's game is unique and they play the game their own way.  And, you know, I'd just liked to be consistent. I mean, Matt Holliday, if you look back at what he did in the minor leagues, he struggled a little bit there, early on in A ball. I think he repeated High maybe one year. So he struggled and made the adjustments that he needed to make to become a Major League superstar.

I think my build is very similar to his. I'd like to say that my game yields itself to be very similar to his, but, you know like I said, it would be unfair for me to compare myself to him, because there's a reason he's making a lot of money.

Will: That's impressive on your part to be so humble.

Now is there maybe a baseball idol you had growing up? Maybe someone that you looked up to maybe when you were younger kid and maybe a favorite team?

Mac: Yeah, so I'm from North Carolina and obviously there's no major league club in North Carolina so your a Nationals fan or your a Braves fan. And I grew up a Braves fan and I grew up in the Sheffield, Andruw Jones, Chipper Jones, Rafael Furcal, that whole group. And Andruw Jones, I'm sorry, I mean Chipper Jones was always the, you know, country boy, could hit anything and play big defense, kind of the all around player. So I enjoyed watching him. I think 'cause they were the most covered team around me. I think TBS covered their games all the time. I kind of watched him the most.

Will: A couple more questions for you. I really appreciate you taking the time here.

Mac: No, yeah absolutely.

Will: What would you say is maybe your best baseball moment in the pros so far? Something that maybe sticks out in your mind.

Mac: I would like to have said winning the Cal League championship in 2013 but the Angels affiliate really put a number on us there and we were unable to close it out but I think obviously being invited to Major League camp as a Non-Roster guy is definitely an accomplishment. I think being an everyday player. I mean, not everyone gets to play professional baseball and I think being an everyday player in San Jose was pretty cool. I mean, at one point I played 99 straight games and which doesn't sound like a lot when you compare it to Cal Ripken Jr's record, but it's a lot of games in a row, especially when you have only two off days a month, three off days a month at the most. I think that might be my most, my best accomplishment, just because I'm honored to be able to play everyday and it's something that's not easy to do. You know, injuries and you know just pure bad luck and you're out for a week or two weeks or something like that. So that's probably my greatest accomplishment.

Will: That's great and then just kind of last question for you here, you know, let's just hope that there's some kids listening and if there's a guy who's thinking about little league, playing, maybe has the same dream as you of playing in the Major Leagues someday, what advice, if any, would you give to that kid that's listening right now?

Mac: I think that there's a few things I would say.

First and foremost, don't limit yourself to one sport. Or one position too soon.  I think it's important to play multiple sports. I don't think it's necessarily good to play one particular sport your entire life and never diversify your talents and you can grow old of the sport. I mean, if you've been playing baseball since you were five and you're eighteen heading into college, you've been playing for thirteen years, I mean, the chances of you burning out and not loving it, I mean I've seen it time and time again. I think it's important to play as many sports as you can.

And then within baseball, I think it's important to play as many positions as you can. And not settle on just one. I mean, I was a catcher, I played a little bit of third base all my life. I never really played outfield at all. And then I got to college and played outfield. And here I am in the pro ball playing outfield. Something that I never really did when I was growing up. So, I think it's important to play all the positions.

And I think it's important to have fun as a kid and play it as a game and not take it too seriously. I mean there's travel teams that are eight years old, something like that. I mean I think it's important for the parents to realize it's just a game. It's not life or death if the kid doesn't play well. I mean, I can't tell you the number of times I've seen parents get pissed because there kids are eight years old and had a bad game. They missed a ball in the field or something like that, I mean you can't do that to the kids.

I think it's important to work hard and once you're heading into middle school/high school age, to know what you want to do. To have goals, set goals and not just let yourself wonder and not pay attention to school, not pay attention to your sport. And so it's too much. I think there's a fine line between visualizing and getting yourself to the sport. Or whatever sport you're playing, multiple sports. And if you do that the right way and split your time up the right way, you're going to be successful in whatever you do.

Will: That's great. Well I really appreciate you taking the time like I said and wish you nothing but the best of luck in camp and hopefully you'll be able to stay healthy through this year and hopefully will see a lot of in the coming years. I know you said Richmond, but who knows, maybe in a couple years, we'll see you at AT&T wearing orange and black. So, thank you so much for your time. I really appreciate it.

Mac: That's alright. Thank you very much for having me on.



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