East Bay Times

Ready or not is the question for Belt

Giants may decide to place first baseman on IL to start season

- Kyrerryaro­wleykcrowl­ey@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ >> At the beginning of Cactus League play, Giants manager Gabe Kapler wasn’t certain who would be his Opening Day first baseman.

Kapler still isn’t sure Brandon Belt will be ready to go by Thursday’s matchup with the Seattle Mariners, but he has far more confidence now than he did in February.

“Right now I see a real path to him being ready for us on Opening Day and ready to contribute right away,” Kapler said Thursday.

After undergoing surgery to remove a bone spur in his heel in October, Belt thought he would need extra time to heal at the beginning of camp and the Giants weren’t certain he would be a full participan­t in spring workouts. In the weeks leading up to his departure for Scottsdale, Belt tested positive for COVID-19 and was diagnosed with mononucleo­sis shortly thereafter, zapping his energy and robbing him of the chance to get on the field during the first weeks of Cactus League games.

Belt finally made his spring training debut as a pinch-hitter in Wednesday’s game against the Padres and notched his first start of the spring on Thursday against the Brewers, going 1 for 2 with a line-drive single and playing first base for four innings.

“I feel a lot better off than

I thought I would be,” Belt said Wednesday. “I’ve taken a lot of live BPs, I probably have about 15 to 20 atbats right now of live BPs, which it’s not perfect, but it’s something.”

Those 15 to 20 at-bats could turn into 30 to 35 by the end of exhibition play, especially if Belt has enough stamina to participat­e in some of the upcoming live batting practices the Giants have planned. That would push the veteran first baseman into a similar situation as the one he countered at the beginning of the 2020 season, when Belt missed a week of regular-season games due to a heel injury that kept him off the field for much of summer camp.

“Last year, it probably took me around 35 to 40 at-bats before I started to get some good timing,” Belt said. “We’re probably halfway there, I actually feel really good swinging the bat right now. I feel great in the cage, I feel like everything is where it needs to be. I feel like my eyes and everything needs to calibrate, you know the speed and whatnot to speed my body up or slow it down.”

Regardless of how much Belt is able to accomplish over the next several days, the Giants will have a tough decision when it comes to keeping him on the Opening Day roster. They’d be taking a risk that he wouldn’t have any health setbacks and also banking on a fairly rapid acclimatio­n to high-level pitching, which actually took Belt awhile to adjust toin2020.

The alternativ­e option for the Giants is to place Belt on the 10-day injured list and send him to their Sacramento alternate site to open the season. Doing so would give Belt an extra week or so to take more atbats, but the competitio­n wouldn’t be as challengin­g as what he’d see at the major league level.

If the Giants do leave Belt off the Opening Day roster, president of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi has indicated the club will still carry 13 position players and 13 pitchers. That would clear the way for outfielder and first baseman LaMonte Wade Jr. to begin the year with the Giants, giving Kapler added depth at several positions.

It’s unlikely Wade would see many starts, however, as the club would likely use Wilmer Flores or Tommy La Stella at first base in Belt’s absence.

GAME NOTES >> Nick Tropeano surrendere­d a home run, two doubles, two earned runs and a walk in two innings as the Giants and the Cubs played to 5-5 draw. Prior to Friday’s outing, Tropeano had allowed just one earned run in his previous five Cactus League outings.

• The Giants have taken a particular­ly cautious approach in third baseman Evan Longoria’s recovery from plantar fasciitis. The 13-year veteran infielder has exclusivel­y served as the Giants’ designated hitter this spring, something that is set to change today when San Francisco takes on the Seattle Mariners. Kapler said after Friday’s game that Longoria is expected to make his debut at third base, a significan­t step in his recovery.

• Originally listed as one of the pitchers set to appear for the Giants today, left-handed starter Alex Wood will no longer take the mound against the Mariners and will instead through an inning in a simulated game, Kapler said. Wood underwent a spinal ablation procedure after he experience­d back discomfort.

 ?? RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF ?? The start of first baseman Brandon Belt’s 11th major league season with the Giants could be delayed.
RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF The start of first baseman Brandon Belt’s 11th major league season with the Giants could be delayed.

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