Tenaciously, The Kids Are In It and Silencing Critics Along The Way

Christopher Kamrani by Scribe Written on July 02, 2009
OAKLAND, CA - JUNE 23:  Tim Lincecum #55 of the San Francisco Giants pumps his fist against the Oakland Athletics during a Major League Baseball game on June 23, 2009 at the Oakland Coliseum in Oakland, California.  (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images) (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)

His locks free-flowing, and his quirky, juxtaposing windup spell out sentences in the book that is the 2009 San Francisco Giants.

Tim Lincecum is just the tasty, page-turning first chapter.

Everything else is falling into place. Everything for a team that was picked to finish, by some, fourth in the deplorable National League West.

They knew the pitching would be there, they knew that, but what they didn't know is that a slew of castoffs and no-namers would come to the helm and contribute on a daily basis to wins, spun by some of the best dealers on the mound.

Juan Uribe. Travis Ishikawa. Andres Torres. Nate Schierholtz.

Exactly.

At this point in the season, at 42-35, any self-respecting Giants fan would've taken a slap to the face had they been told their team would be here, seven games over the .500 mark with the All-Star break merely a couple weeks away. Winning on the road, getting timely hits, a bullpen stabilized from last season's epic meltdown.

Yeah, it's a different Giants squad this season, they just play, and leave it at that.

They swing the bats as if their lives depended on it, the defense, staunch in its resolve to backup what is arguably one of the best rotations, and well the pitching does take care of itself, albeit the disaster it took manager Bruce Bochy almost four months into the season to find out that Jonathan Sanchez has the stuff, but not the brain.

To quote the famous Crash Davis, he had "a million-dollar arm and a five-cent head."

It has been quite the emphatic turnaround, actually. To channel Davis, once again, the lead character in what is the best baseball movie ever made, Bull Durham, the Giants were left for dead early on.

"You just got lesson number one: don't think—it can only hurt the ball club," Davis said.

No one just came out and said it. They just thought it. It's the same thing. Semantics, I guess.

The Giants were stumbling along, playing close to .500 ball and then something clicked. Couldnt've been ol' Crash, the beleaguered cynic who loves nothing more than to laugh and crush the hell out of the ball.

It couldn't have been Crash that walked up to the Lincecum, Cain or even the Unit and said, "Relax, all right? Don't try to strike everybody out. Strikeouts are boring! Besides that, they're fascist. Throw some ground balls—it's more democratic."

The Giants didn't need a battery-mate quote to rev up the engine.

The whole team was in a twilight zone. Putting up one, two, even three run games if they were lucky.

Now look at them.

They're on the road, turning double plays, belting out homers to all parts of the field, and most importantly, they're winning and when they're not winning they're losing—with style. Before they were bested at home, 8-1, by the Angels on June 16th, you had to go back a little over a month to find the last time the Giants were so shellacked.

May 9. Dodger Stadium. 8-0 the guys in the white-and-blue.

It's easy to bring kudos to the manager. His job to throw guys out there, call the pitches, call the plays—essentially manage a would-be win into realization. Yes, the Giants are playing "Bochy Ball", but it's more than that.

They're doing it their own way, too.

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written on July 02, 2009 Opinion

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