USA TODAY International Edition

Giants buck trend, opt for experience

- Jorge L. Ortiz

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – Shortly after the San Francisco Giants traded for Andrew McCutchen in mid-January, pitcher Jeff Samardzija set up a group chat to help him with the transition. Then the club gave McCutchen his old uniform No. 22, with the blessing of longtime fan favorite Will Clark. And at spring training, the newcomer was greeted by living legend Willie Mays.

Those gestures made McCutchen feel more comfortabl­e in his new environmen­t after nine seasons with the Pittsburgh Pirates, but not as much as looking around the clubhouse and finding a number of familiar contempora­ries.

Buster Posey, Brandon Crawford, Hunter Pence, Mark Melancon. All are in their 30s, just like McCutchen. All were his National League All-Star teammates at some point. Once McCutchen got over the shock of being traded by the Pirates, the only pro franchise he’d known, this felt like the right fit.

In trying to bounce back from a 64-98 season, their second worst in the San Francisco era, the Giants defied the game’s trend toward youth and added four players past their 31st birthday in McCutchen, third baseman Evan Longoria, outfielder Austin Jackson and reliever Tony Watson.

“It’s awesome. I like that they did that, because I came from a team that was trending in the other direction,” McCutchen said. “I came to a team that had an even worse season than the Pirates, and instead of them (the Giants) going, ‘Oh, we need to get rid of you,’ they said, ‘No, let’s make the team better.’ That’s pretty exciting.”

Is it wise?

The last three World Series champs — the Kansas City Royals, Chicago Cubs and Houston Astros — captured the title after extensive revamping of their rosters, infusing young talent into the organizati­on but enduring several losing seasons while those players developed.

That has become a widely copied model throughout the game, with about 10 teams currently in overhaul mode.

The worst place to be, many in the industry believe, is getting stuck between contending and rebuilding, loaded down by a bloated payroll, short on impact prospects and far from contending for the division crown.

That might well describe the Giants, who at 94-140 have the majors’ worst record since the 2016 All-Star break.

When first baseman Brandon Belt turns 30 on April 20, the Giants will field seven regulars — all but second baseman Joe Panik — who have entered their fourth decade on earth.

The San Francisco brass, determined to continue filling out AT&T Park, resisted calls for a teardown, arguing the team’s core was still in its prime. Other than Pence (34), none of the core position players is older than 32.

“You read about it a lot, people questionin­g why the team wasn’t blown up after the horrendous season we had last year,” Posey said. “I’m grateful I’m with an organizati­on that’s still trying to get back to the pinnacle of baseball.”

The Giants reached that exalted level three times in the first five years of this decade, and not once did they have the league’s best record or were regarded as the top team. In 2014 they claimed championsh­ip No. 3 as a wild card and even had to beat the Pirates on the road to advance to the division series.

Along the way, those San Francisco clubs learned what it takes to win on the biggest stage, whether it’s a Cody Ross here, a Marco Scutaro there or Madison Bumgarner’s heroics elsewhere. A teamfirst mentality was forged.

Some influentia­l figures from the trifecta remain — Posey, Bumgarner and, in a lesser capacity, Pablo Sandoval — as well as winners of two rings including Pence, Crawford and Belt.

McCutchen believes that pedigree makes a difference.

“This is a place where they understand winning culture,” he said. “You’re not showing up here to get a paycheck. You’re here to win. That’s what it’s all about here. I figured that out pretty quickly.”

But there are plenty of questions about whether that stretch of consistent winning is a thing of the past and whether the Giants are just putting off a muchneeded rejuvenati­on. Last year they failed to keep up with the big leaguewide surge in power hitting, ranking last in home runs by a wide margin.

Pence, Crawford and Belt are coming off down seasons, the latter hampered by a concussion. Even Posey, who won a Silver Slugger award, hit only 12 home runs, his fewest in a full season.

And the pitching staff, the backbone of those championsh­ips, fell apart for reasons that went beyond the shoulder injury that sidelined Bumgarner for nearly three months. San Francisco’s 4.50 ERA, which ranked eighth in the league, was nearly a run higher than the year before and its worst since 2006.

Manager Bruce Bochy acknowledg­ed an attitude adjustment was necessary after the 2017 pratfall.

“It’s going to be important we do some things different, and that’s on the mental side or the attitude side,” he said. “When you get these (new) guys, they know they’re going to impact our club, make us a better club. And our pitching staff, we’re going to be better defensivel­y. That’s going to do a lot for their confidence. That’s what the offseason can bring, a new hope when you add players like this.”

Their credential­s are impressive, especially those of McCutchen — the 2013 NL MVP — and Longoria, a three-time All-Star and Gold Glove winner with the Tampa Bay Rays.

Both come from clubs where they were known as the undisputed faces of the franchise, but they’re happy — even eager — to yield that distinctio­n in San Francisco to Posey. Longoria calls it “a good burden lifted.”

More important than any designatio­ns will be their production, which recently has not been on par with their prime years. Longoria has posted an onbase plus slugging percentage below .770 in three of the past four seasons, 2016 being the exception.

McCutchen, who has moved from center to right field, dropped to a careerlow .766 OPS in 2016 before recovering with a .849 mark and 28 home runs last season. He has the added incentive of entering his final season before free agency.

Bumgarner said the new additions have reinvigora­ted the club, and the reverse is true as well.

Longoria, who played in front of the smallest average home crowds in the majors in each of the last six seasons — typically under 16,000 — is looking forward to turnouts twice that size.

“It is energizing, definitely,” he said of the move to San Francisco. “Just from the fan base alone, being able to play in front of 35,000-plus a night, that brings energy itself. The excitement of the fans, the pace of the city, all of the other things that go along with playing in a big market, yeah, they’re definitely energizing.”

The Giants believe smart management of playing time, along with the club’s innovative approach toward sleep and the added days off this season, will help keep the mature squad fresh and energized.

They’ll need those traits to present any kind of challenge in the NL West, likely baseball’s toughest division after sending three teams to the playoffs in 2017. The Los Angeles Dodgers, winners of five consecutiv­e division crowns, again project as the favorites, while the Arizona Diamondbac­ks and Colorado Rockies also have the look of contenders.

In the face of that challenge, Bumgarner said he likes the Giants’ offseason acquisitio­ns. Bumgarner, who in 2010 became the fourth-youngest pitcher to win a World Series game at 21, is now a convert to the notion that experience trumps youth.

“I’d rather have a guy that’s been there, any time,” Bumgarner said. “I was a young player being on this stage for the first time, and I would have argued with you then. But I would much rather have a guy who’s been there.”

The Giants have quite a few of those.

 ??  ?? Giants left fielder Andrew McCutchen RICK SCUTERI/USA TODAY SPORTS
Giants left fielder Andrew McCutchen RICK SCUTERI/USA TODAY SPORTS

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