East Bay Times

Chapman signing excites, surprises Giants clubhouse

- By Evan Webeck ewebeck@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. >> When J.D. Davis entered his late-night screening of the “Dune” sequel on Friday, he was the Giants' third baseman. Fresh off slugging his second home run of the spring a few hours earlier, the doubts that had subsumed his offseason had fully subsided.

Awakening his phone from “Do Not Disturb” mode as the credits rolled 2 hours and 45 minutes later, Davis realized that confidence had been misplaced.

“I activated it and went, `Shoot, I've got eight text messages,'” Davis recalled Saturday morning. “I'm like, `What happened? Oh, that happened.'”

The texts were not from Farhan Zaidi or any of his deputies in the Giants' front office.

Davis opened up social media, where he learned that Zaidi had brought in a new third baseman. The Giants' president of baseball operations waited out super agent Scott Boras and late Friday night secured a bargain-bin deal with four-time Gold Glover Matt Chapman.

The agreement, for a reported three years and $54 million with opt outs after each season, was still pending a physical Saturday morning. A few minutes before 9 a.m., Chapman walked into the Giants' facility, shortly after Davis finished addressing reporters at his locker.

“I assume somebody is going to come talk to me at some point,” Davis said. “I don't really want to put my foot in my mouth because I don't know what the game plan is accordingl­y as far as what Farhan wants to do or how he wants to go about it. But I felt like I proved myself this past year, having just 30 or 35 bad games and not really wanting to take the backseat. However, I want to win games. I want to do what's best for the team. I guess we'll just go from there.”

While perhaps nobody is more directly impacted by the move than Davis, the incumbent third baseman who now is a bit of a redundancy with Wilmer Flores already on the roster as a right-handed hitting reserve corner infielder, adding a player of Chapman's caliber carries larger implicatio­ns.

All offseason, Zaidi preached of improving their defense, particular­ly on the infield, where their ground ball-oriented pitching staff stood to benefit most. The Giants ranked first in the majors in ground-ball rate last season but worst in errors. Since nabbing center fielder Jung Hoo Lee in December, Zaidi had yet to address their personnel on the dirt besides extending

Today's games a non-roster invitation to veteran shortstop Nick Ahmed.

New starter Jordan Hicks, one of many sinkerball­ers on staff, was so excited to team up again with Chapman that he texted him as soon as he heard the news. They were teammates in Toronto last season and, now, represent two of the Giants' three biggest free-agent acquisitio­ns.

“I said, `See you soon, congrats bro,'” Hicks said. “He said, `Thanks, I'm pumped.' “

The news hit closest to home, though, for Davis, who is experienci­ng a little déjà vu.

This, after all, isn't the first time he has teamed up with Chapman.

Nor is it the first time that Chapman causes him to lose out on playing time at third base.

“To be honest with you, we didn't split much time,” Davis chuckled, recalling their time together at Cal State Fullerton.

Always the hotshot prospect, Chapman won the Titans' everyday job at third base. Davis was relegated to designated hitter for his first two seasons. Giving up hope on challengin­g Chapman for the third base job, Davis set his eyes on first base for his junior season, “but we had like a super senior who didn't want to graduate,” he said with a laugh, “so I moved out to right field my third year.”

Since being drafted by the Mets, Davis continued to move around the field, looking for any opportunit­y to get at-bats. In 2022, he got the chance he had been seeking when he was traded to the Giants, who eventually made him their primary third baseman. Although he scuffled after a strong start, Davis had reason to believe the organizati­on was invested in him.

One takeaway from his arbitratio­n hearing, he said in an interview earlier this spring, “was games as a starting third baseman. That was a role that wasn't an argument at all.” Sometime around the holidays, with rumors starting to heat up between Chapman and the Giants, Davis received a phone call from their new manager.

Bob Melvin had publicly gushed about Chapman, who played for him for six years in Oakland, but he wanted to reassure Davis.

“He had extended his neck to Farhan in saying we don't need a third baseman,” Davis recalled of their conversati­on, which he estimated lasted about five minutes. “He said his quotes saying `I love Chappy' and when people ask me if I want Chapman on the team, of course I do. I'd be lying if I said I don't want him. But at the same time I want to respect you and want you to know that I don't think we need anymore reinforcem­ent at third base. I think you're our third baseman.'”

In retrospect, he said he had no reason to believe Melvin had been disingenuo­us.

“He did say, if there's an opportunit­y to get him at the end of spring training, then moves can be made,” Davis said. “There were no promises. He also said that.”

Still, through the clubhouse rumor mill, Davis was of the understand­ing as recently as last week that there had been no formal offer exchanged between the Giants and Chapman. So, when Davis made his bleary-eyed way out of the movie theater Friday night, “it was definitely a surprise,” he said.

And, no, the news didn't spoil the flick.

“Definitely go see it,” Davis said. GIANTS RALLY BUT PADRES PREVAIL >> Chapman arrived at camp, yet it was another of Melvin's former A's players who helped the Giants rally late to tie the game against San Diego, before ultimately losing 3-2.

Chad Pinder, a longtime A's utilityman in camp as a non-roster invitee, singled in a run to highlight a two-run eighth-inning rally that erased San Francisco's 2-0 deficit. Pinder is hitting .286 in six games and is hoping to at least catch on at Triple-A Sacramento.

San Diego scored the winning run when Jose Azocar singled in a run in the ninth inning off Giants reliever Ethan Small.

The Giants got a strong start from Mason Black, who allowed a run in three innings while striking out three and not walking a batter.

ACUÑA HAS AILING KNEE >> Atlanta Braves star Ronald Acuña Jr. has some irritation around the meniscus in his surgically repaired right knee.

The reigning NL MVP had an

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Giants third baseman Wilmer Flores, center bottom, tosses the ball to a teammate after making a diving catch on a foul ball hit by San Diego's Graham Pauley in Saturday's spring training game in Scottsdale, Ariz.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Giants third baseman Wilmer Flores, center bottom, tosses the ball to a teammate after making a diving catch on a foul ball hit by San Diego's Graham Pauley in Saturday's spring training game in Scottsdale, Ariz.

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