Austin American-Statesman

First baseman is clearly an All-Star, could be building a case for MVP.

- By Kerry Crowley The (San Jose, Calif.) Mercury News

If there was a natural hiding spot for an elite hitter to remain a wellkept secret, playing first base for the San Francisco Giants is the perfect post to take cover. Start with the position. The National League is loaded with name-brand talent at first base. Joey Votto is a five-time All-Star and the face of the franchise in Cincinnati. Paul Goldschmid­t has finished in the top three of NL MVP voting three times in the last five years. Cody Bellinger is the reigning Rookie of the Year and a star in one of base

biggest markets. Five other NL first base

— including 2016 World Series champion Anthony Rizzo and the Padres’ $144 million man Eric Hosmer — have also been named to All-Star teams before.

Then consider the franchise: The Giants own three Wo r l d S eries titles this decade, thanks in large part to a vaunted pitching staff led by current ace Madison Bumgarner and a remarkable run of excellence from catcher and 2012 NL MVP Buster Posey. Baseball fans around the world look at the Giants and see a roster composed of Gold Glovers and past All-Stars, even if many of the most recognizab­le faces are nearly past their prime.

Examining the ballpark is a worthwhile endeavor, too. AT&T Park is a pitcher’s paradise, and unless your name is Barry Bonds, the stadium wasn’t designed with the talents of a left-handed hitter in mind.

Nearly every factor is working against Brandon Belt becoming a star. Yet 48 games into the 2018 season, he’s the most valuable hitter in the National League.

Belt isn’t just on pace to earn his second career AllStar nod. He’s outperform­ing every player in his division and is thriving as the unlikely offensive catalyst leading the NL West’s best offense.

“I think this is the best year I’ve had so far,” Belt said. “I think this is what I felt like I could always do. It’s just a matter of being consistent with it and I’ve got to continue to do the same thing.”

While stunning and sudden, Belt’s emergence is also paradoxica­l.

The NL Player of the Week recipient crushed five homers in seven games to help the Giants to a winning homestand and consistent­ly elicited rousing ovations from AT&T Park crowds. But throughout his eightyear Major League career, Belt has dealt with constant cries of criticism and defiant dismissals of his talent from many of those same fans. The most vocal detractors painted Belt as an oft-injured, always underwhelm­ing hitter with a penchant for whiffing — or worse, taking — in clutch situations.

Belt’s soaring 2014 home run in the 18th inning of Game 2 of the NLDS against the Nationals propelled the Giants to a series upset, but the first baseman has long been chided for what fans perceived as “warning track power.”

At age 30, a slight adjustment to Belt’s swing has keyed an offensive breakthrou­gh. Over the offseason, Belt evaluated video from the best year of his career, 2016, and determined he needed to lower his hands if he wanted his swing to be quicker through the zone.

The results have placed the rest of baseball on notice.

“This is what I thought I was going to be able to do before the season started,” Belt said. “Just a lot of experience and stuff and the physical part is kind of meeting up this year and I feel like I can keep going.”

Belt’s 2.4 WAR — perhaps the most common stat used to determine a player’s value — is the best in the National League and a full 0.7 points ahead of Rockies third baseman Nolan Arenado. It’s a smidgen in front of Diamondbac­ks center fielder A.J. Pollock’s 2.3 mark, but Pollock won’t have a chance to catch Belt in the near future due to a recently fractured wrist.

The Giants first baseman credits a deeper lineup for creating better opportunit­ies for him at the plate this year, but his manager and teammates know Belt is responsibl­e for taking matters into his own hands. No player on the Giants roster works a count like Belt, and his 25 hits with two strikes lead all NL players.

“I feel more comfortabl­e deeper in the count this year than I have in the past,” Belt said. “Definitely. I think I feel comfortabl­e at anypoint in time. Maybe I get later in the count and it might cause me to shorten up a bit and I might actually have a better approach at that point.”

Hitting in the heart of an order that now ranks second in the NL in batting average and fourth in OPS is a testament to Belt’s newfound confidence, which he been admits his strength.ways hasn’t al

After sitting out the final two months of the Giants’ 98-loss campaign with a concussion, the promise of personal accolades isn’t necessaril­y driving Belt’s breakout season. Like every other member of a well-compensate­d Giants core, it’s clear Belt senses an obligation to will the club into contention in the NL West, a division that remains a wide-open race. Should Belt continue cer’s

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