The Mercury News Weekend

First-year Giants coaching staff overhauls team workouts for strange season buildup

- By Kerry Crowley kcrowley@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN FRANCISCO >> It’s been nearly a week since the Giants held their first fullsquad summer workout at Oracle Park, but the club has yet to schedule its first in-person team meeting.

For decades, major league clubhouses have played host to meetings featuring

casual conversati­ons, motivation­al speeches and even verbal altercatio­ns that shape a team’s season. During the coronaviru­s pandemic, the new normal looks nothing like the past.

“I think to a certain extent we’ll continue to be creative and you won’t see a full-fledged 30 people sitting in the clubhouse with a staff,” Giants bench coach Kai Correa said. “With keeping the health and safety of players at the forefront, we’ll continue to pursue things with the scoreboard, talks outside in the bleachers and group texts and video conference­s and iPad video sharing as ways to circumvent that and help us be not only efficient but safe.”

Correa, the Giants’ firstyear bench coach, is one of the mastermind­s behind the team’s socially distant workouts. One of manager Gabe Kapler’s first hires, Correa came to the Giants in the offseason from the

Cleveland Indians organizati­on, where he worked as a minor league infield coordinato­r often responsibl­e for scheduling spring workouts involving 200-plus players and coaches.

Prior to working in profession­al baseball, Correa coached in the small college ranks at the University of Puget Sound and the University of Northern Colorado, where he overhauled the way teams approached infield instructio­n, recruiting and even program fundraisin­g.

The experience made Correa a natural fit with Kapler, who wanted his staff to prioritize efficiency, player developmen­t and communicat­ion. Since the pandemic brought sports to a halt, Correa feels the organizati­on has delivered on its mission.

“From a process standpoint, how well it’s gone is a direct reflection of the siloless culture that’s been built

under the modern Giants in Farhan (Zaidi) and Scott (Harris) and Kap,” Correa said. “Because the groups are so interconne­cted, be it minor league player developmen­t, facilities, grounds crew, baseball ops, the field staff and the front office, that’s where it starts.”

From mid-March through mid-June, leaders from each group Correa mentioned were in constant communicat­ion.

“Anything from doing it in Arizona to doing it here to doing it at two sites, it was talked about, discussed and planned for,” Correa said. “One of the things I’m most proud of is our staff and our front office and all of the different department­s. One of the reasons we’ve been so prepared is they were willing to do work that may not have paid off.”

When commission­er Rob Manfred finally announced the league planned to implement a 60-game season, the Giants had already developed a master plan to reconfigur­e Oracle Park in a way that would allow the

team to host socially distant workouts.

It’s impossible to keep players six feet apart at all times, but players and coaches have been wearing masks, working in small groups and spending as little time indoors as possible.

Ballparks around the league have been reimagined to prioritize player safety, but the Giants are one of the few teams that have not yet sent a portion of players from their pool to an alternativ­e training site. Every healthy player in the Giants’ pool is working out in San Francisco and receiving instructio­n from a 13-coach staff, which is the biggest in the majors.

The logistics of coordinati­ng travel, coronaviru­s intake tests and initial workout schedules required a herculean effort, and Kapler, Correa and members of the front office credit first-year traveling secretary Abe Silvestri and senior director of athletic training Dave Groeschner for working around the clock to ensure the process flows as

smooth as possible.

Many of the Giants’ veteran players have expressed their gratitude for the organizati­on’s efforts to ensure their health and safety, but the time spent preparing for a summer workout schedule also focused on smaller details that should pay dividends early in the season.

Outside of implementi­ng measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19 and producing training regimens designed to limit injuries, the Giants’ staff labored to ensure workouts and live batting practice sessions would create realistic opportunit­ies for players to prepare in game-like scenarios.

When the Giants first devised daily practice schedules, they received suggestion­s and approval from the medical staff, the strength and conditioni­ng staff, baseball operations analysts, the clubhouse staff and veteran players.

Instead of following a more traditiona­l model of giving players a time to report to the ballpark each

day and letting them know what a workout would look like piece-by-piece, coaches send out minute-by-minute schedules of daily activities in advance so players know exactly what to expect.

“My thought process is you get greater flexibilit­y and buy-in when people can prepare for what’s coming next,” Correa said. “The game is tough enough in itself and you have to make adjustment­s to pitches and to batters, you shouldn’t also have to make adjustment­s to schedule.”

One of the most important people with hands in the decision-making and scheduling processes is Ron Wotus, the only holdover from Bruce Bochy’s staff and a coach who knows the habits and routines of many of the Giants’ veteran players.

For all the work spent preparing socially distant workouts, there will be several hundred more hours focused on responding to the challenges and needs at hand.

“You can put whatever

science you want to it, but at the end of the day, you’ve got to have those conversati­ons. ‘How are you feeling? Do you need a lighter day?’ ” Correa said. “It’s filtering through that plus what the informatio­n tells us in building out matchups and workloads, and that’s going to be the bulk of creating the best opportunit­y for iron to sharpen iron.”

2021 schedule

Despite lingering questions and concerns over whether playing an abbreviate­d 2020 Major League Baseball season is even possible, the league announced its schedule for the 2021 season.

There are still two weeks until the 60-game 2020 season is set to begin, but for the second time this week, MLB revealed a schedule presumably with the hope of giving fans some optimism at a time where it’s desperatel­y needed. The team’s 162-game campaign is expected to begin April 1 in Seattle against the Mariners.

 ?? RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Bench coach Kai Correa, left, standing next to Gabe Kapler, is one of the mastermind­s behind the socially distant workouts.
RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Bench coach Kai Correa, left, standing next to Gabe Kapler, is one of the mastermind­s behind the socially distant workouts.

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