USA TODAY International Edition

Bruce Bochy isn’t ruling out a return to the MLB

The three- time World Series winner stepped down as Giants manager after the 2019 season, but he says he’s open to another job.

- Bob Nightengal­e Columnist

Bruce Bochy walked away after winning three World Series titles with the Giants a year ago. Instead of strolling into the Hall of Fame in a year, there’s a pit stop he may still make. Bochy, 66, enjoys his job as senior adviser with the San Francisco team and working with its minor leaguers. But if someone calls seeking his availabili­ty about managing this summer or this winter, he told USA TODAY Sports he plans to at least listen.

“As long as I did it, you’re going to miss it,” said Bochy, who recently spent two weeks in Scottsdale, Arizona, at the minor league camp. “You miss the dugout. The competitio­n. There’s so much about the game that you miss being in the dugout and running a ballgame.

“I’m really happy doing what I’m doing, but you can never say never in this game – or anything in life. It would have to be the right fit. It would have to be a great situation. But that’s not driving me right now. I love doing work here with the Giants.”

Bochy would be delaying a probable nomination on the Today’s Era Committee ballot of the Hall of Fame this winter if he returns to the dugout, but he insists it’s a non- factor.

“I’m not assuming anything on that end,” he said. Bochy, one of 11 MLB managers to win at least 2,000 games, while leading his teams to four pennants and three World Series titles in his 25- year career, is a virtual lock for the Hall of Fame.

And just because you’re in the Hall of Fame, as Tony La Russa proved with the White Sox, it doesn’t restrict you from a return.

“Tony’s a great story,” Bochy says. “It tells me why you just don’t say no. You never know. I wouldn’t rule anything out.”

Olympic glory

Adrian Gonzalez, who last played in the majors in 2018, is working out these days in hopes of leading Mexico to glory in the Tokyo Olympics this summer.

The five- time All- Star who will be 39 in May says it’s always been a dream to represent Mexico in the Olympics. “This is a once- in- a- lifetime opportunit­y,” Gonzalez said. “I’ve talked to guys like Adam Jones, Ian

Kinsler and guys who want to play in the Olympics. We never had a chance when we played in the big leagues, and now we finally do.”

Gonzalez is playing for the expansion Guadalajar­a Mariachis of the Mexican League to prepare. Mexico is one of four teams to qualify for the six- team Olympic Field, joining Japan, South Korea and Israel.

Gonzalez isn’t using the Mexican League or the Olympics to showcase his skills but simply as a matter of pride, having already represente­d Mexico in youth tournament­s, the Caribbean World Series and the World Baseball Classic.

“I’m looking forward to the Mariachis and making the Olympic team, nothing past that. That’s all I want.”

Burnes making history

Certainly, no pitcher has dominated the game like Jacob deGrom of the Mets the past four years, so it may sound sacrilegio­us to say, but one general manager uttered the words anyways.

“Everyone talks about deGrom, understand­ably so,” he said, “but I’m telling you, the best pitcher in the game right now is Corbin Burnes ( of the Brewers). What he’s doing is mind- boggling. I’ll take him over anyone.”

● In Burnes’ first four starts this year, he has struck out 40 batters without giving up a walk. It’s the longest fourgame streak by a starter at any point during the season since at least 1893.

● He has a 0.37 ERA, giving up one run in 24 1⁄ innings, and has pitched 18 3 consecutiv­e scoreless innings.

● He is yielding a .098 batting average and has a 0.33 WHIP ( walks and hits per nine innings).

● His control is so uncanny that of the 85 batters he as faced this year, only 10 have reached a three- ball count and only one had a 3- 0 count.

Scouting legend dies

The baseball world lost a scouting icon when Diamondbac­ks special assistant Bill Bryk, 70, died.

The Diamondbac­ks are exchanging ideas to preserve his legacy and may either dedicate a stadium seat in the scouting section in his honor or name their tryout camps after Bryk.

“Bill was bigger than life,” Twins scout Billy Milos said. “He helped so many people, in and out of the game of baseball. He connected with everyone. He was the king of workouts. In the history of baseball, nobody had more tryout camps than Bill Bryk.”

LaTroy Hawkins, who grew up in Gary, Indiana, had a 21- year career as a pitcher but perhaps never would have made it without Bryk.

Bryk was the first scout to discover Hawkins and the man who convinced him that he should quit catching and become a pitcher.

“I remember going to a tryout camp at Block Stadium in East Chicago where Kenny Lofton was from,” Hawkins said. “That’s where Bill Bryk saw me. The following year he came to see me in high school. I hit a ball to left field that I thought was gone, and I was already getting in a trot, but it didn’t go out. So, I had to hustle to second base.

“When the inning was over, Bryk came to the fence and said, ‘ Hawkins, before you get into your Cadillac next time, make sure it’s out.’ Well, either the next at- bat or the one after, I hit a homer and I got into my Cadillac. I crossed home plate and said, ‘ What that far enough for you?’ He laughed and told that story to everyone forever.”

That was Bryk, as Cubs scout Jake Ciarrachi says, one of a kind.

Says D’backs scout Chris Carminucci: “He was a mentor, a best friend, a brother, everything you’d want. We spoke every day for 10 years. He was an advocate for the underdogs, fighting for the guy that nobody fought for. He would talk to everybody. Kids these days call it networking. He called it friendship.”

Around the league ...

● Blake Snell and Yu Darvish stole the headlines this off-season, but several scouts and baseball executives polled believe that the best of the Padres’ additions is Joe Musgrove. He became the first San Diego franchise pitcher in history to throw an MLB no- hitter and has been its ace with a 1.04 ERA and a 12.33 strikeout- to- walk ratio in his first four starts.

● Several scouts predicted this spring that Mets star Francisco Lindor could struggle in the National League East given his problems handling the fastball and the division filled with several of the finest fastball pitchers in baseball. Sure enough, Lindor is off to a rough start, hitting .204 with a meager .286 slugging percentage, one homer and three RBI in his first 15 games.

● Cubs shortstop Javier Baez, who turned down a contract extension worth $ 180 million a year ago, as ESPN’s Buster Olney reported, may want a mulligan. His value is plummeting with 34 strikeouts in his first 68 at- bats.

● If the Nationals fall out of the race, three- time Cy Young winner Max Scherzer is a valuable commodity. Yet considerin­g he is 37, has no- trade rights and is earning $ 35 million, the return may not be nearly what Washington wants.

● Clubs are salivating at the possibilit­y of acquiring Rockies right- handed pitcher German Marquez at the trade deadline. He is in the third year of a five-year, $ 43 million contract and is owed $ 7.5 million this year, $ 11 million in 2022 and $ 15 million in 2023 with a club option for $ 16 million in 2024. He could be a top three starter for most teams in baseball.

● Congrats to Orioles starter Matt Harvey who picked up his first victory since July 13, 2019. He had been 0- 5 with an 8.16 ERA with three teams. “To be honest,” Harvey said, “I didn’t know if it was ever going to happen again.”

● The Giants’ Curt Casali entered the weekend having caught five consecutiv­e shutouts, one of only five catchers to achieve the feat since 1900 and the first to do it with five different starting pitchers.

● Can you imagine facing the Brewers in a wild- card game or a best- of- five opening series? They have Burnes and Brandon Woodruff at the front end of the rotation and Devin Williams and Josh Hader at the back end of the bullpen. Hader has never looked better, giving up one hit in six outings through Friday.

 ?? JAKE ROTH/ USA TODAY SPORTS ??
JAKE ROTH/ USA TODAY SPORTS
 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R HANEWINCKE­L/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Bruce Bochy managed the Giants to World Series titles in 2010, 2012 and 2014.
CHRISTOPHE­R HANEWINCKE­L/ USA TODAY SPORTS Bruce Bochy managed the Giants to World Series titles in 2010, 2012 and 2014.
 ?? MARK J. REBILAS/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? After playing for Mexico in the 2017 WBC, Adrian Gonzalez eyes the Tokyo Olympics.
MARK J. REBILAS/ USA TODAY SPORTS After playing for Mexico in the 2017 WBC, Adrian Gonzalez eyes the Tokyo Olympics.

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