Will Posey, Minasian find help for the Giants this week at GM meetings?
For the San Francisco Giants, the nightmare next door—meaning 350 miles down the coast—isn’t going anywhere.
The talented, highly paid, yet often despised World Series champions, the Los Angeles Dodgers, will be back with the same high-priced cast next season. And once again, Shohei Ohtani will be pitching again as well as hitting home runs and stealing bases.
That reality makes the tasks of the Giants’ new controlling executives, Buster Posey, president of baseball operations, and general manager, Zack Minasian, even more significant at this week’s general manager meetings in San Antonio.
And to make the situation even a little more difficult, the Giants have to figure out whether they want to re-sign Blake Snell, who opted out of his contract, in order to get more money. That’s not an unusual situation in the sporting world of the 21st century. But the people in charge, Posey, Minansian, and those who control the bankroll have to decide whether Snell is worth it.
Certainly Ohtani, who the Giants attempted to sign last spring, was worth what the Dodgers spent for him. You sensed when leaving the Angels, and joining the other team that uses Los Angeles as its identification, even though the Angels are in Anaheim, that the Dodgers would be very much one of the very best teams in the sport.
They turned out to be the best, not only winning more games during the regular schedule than any other team but also winning the most important games, the four in the World Series.
As Giants fans know all too well, the Dodgers have dominated San Francisco the last few seasons. L.A. has had an abundance of skilled players, and for the Giants too much success.
So, how can that be changed? Who is out there that the Giants can acquire? The name Juan Soto, last a member of the Yankees, keeps popping up, and he certainly would be what the Giants could use, an outfielder with power. However, there is little optimism.
The baseball aphorism is no team can have too much pitching, again verified in the World Series. Nor, too much defense. Just maybe if the Yankees don’t fumble, stumble, and drop the ball in that wretched fifth inning of Game five, the result of the series is changed. Then again, the better team usually wins, and clearly the Dodgers were the better team.
The Giants had their own defensive problems the last couple of years, and their former GM, Farhan Zaidi, tried to make moves to correct those problems. You can’t keep giving teams four outs an inning, no matter how strong your offense is.
What Giant fans would like is a team that can field and hit, of course. Posey, the catcher on the Giants three World Series champions—and that seems so far away—knows well the significance of fundamentals.
He also understands how a big bat would not only help the team but bring in the fans. Ever since the days of Babe Ruth, the power hitter has been the star. Yes, the Giants could use one along with one or two guys who can throw strikes. You have to start someplace if you ever want to overtake the Dodgers, as difficult as it seems.