Lodi News-Sentinel

Uncertaint­y has turned to trust for Giants’ players

- By Kerry Crowley

PHILADELPH­IA — Near the beginning of spring training, first-year president of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi had to stand in the Giants’ clubhouse at Scottsdale Stadium and address the team.

There were concerns over roster structure, fears over whether the Giants were committed to winning in 2019 and questions over comments Zaidi made about pitching strategies during the offseason.

Was the former Dodgers general manager actually serious about using “openers” to start games?

With two days remaining until the July 31 trade deadline, uncertaint­y has shifted to trust as Zaidi has gained the confidence of even the most senior members of the Giants’ clubhouse.

“I think Farhan’s got a great track record,” catcher Buster Posey said following Sunday’s series-clinching win over the Padres.

The Giants knew all about Zaidi’s résumé when he was hired last November. Their top baseball executive had spent nearly two decades working his way up in the Oakland A’s and Los Angeles Dodgers front offices and was widely regarded as one of the game’s most creative figures.

They knew Zaidi’s teams had been to the playoffs in each of the last seven seasons. But after a slow offseason that featured a handful of underwhelm­ing moves, the Giants wondered whether Zaidi was willing to position this year’s club for immediate success.

As the trade deadline nears, a roster that has Zaidi’s fingerprin­ts all over it thinks it has the DNA of a legitimate contender.

“That’s been a pretty clear message we’ve created over the last month or so,” ace Madison Bumgarner said Sunday.

An honest spring training pursuit of free agent slugger Bryce Harper helped quell some initial concerns Giants veterans had about Zaidi’s approach. If Zaidi was willing to add a high-profile outfielder, some players were curious why five-time All-Star and free agent Adam Jones wasn’t a priority for the Giants.

The Giants wound up trying out and discarding more than a dozen different outfielder­s during the spring and the first two months of the season. They opened the year with rookies Michael Reed and Connor Joe,

gave playing time to Gerardo Parra, turned their attention to Tigers castoff Mike Gerber and even brought back Mac Williamson after designatin­g him for assignment at the end of spring.

As Jones raced out to a hot start on his one-year contract

with the D’backs, the Giants finished the first two months of the season at 22-34. Their playoff hopes were nearly dashed and they were continuing to cycle through corner outfielder­s at an alarming rate.

After winning seven consecutiv­e series and posting a 19-4 record in their last 23 games, the Giants have regained confidence in themselves and expressed faith in Zaidi’s roster

building skills. Uncertaint­y still exists as the trade deadline approaches, but several players have a clear belief that the front office has both the short-term and long-term health of the organizati­on in mind.

“It’s really cool to have ownership and the front office behind you like that and the ability in a matter of 20 games to kind of flip the script 180,” reliever Mark Melancon said Friday. “We

were total sellers with the top three, four guys to get traded.”

As July comes to a close, the Giants have passed the D’backs for second place and could wind up “buying” instead of “selling” at the deadline. Many reports indicate Arizona plans to trade some of its best players and one player who could be on the move is Jones, who has posted a 0.1 bWAR in nearly 400 plate appearance­s.

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