Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Spring training Day 3 highlights

Beede’s progress, Webb’s toughest critic and Beck’s curve

- By Kerry Crowley

When Gabe Kapler arrived in Scottsdale for his first spring as Giants manager last year, he opened up competitio­ns for jobs and gave several young players extended opportunit­ies to prove they belonged on the Opening Day roster.

During the early days of Cactus League play, it’s possible no pitcher helped their stock in Kapler’s eyes as much as Tyler Beede. Beede emerged as a frontrunne­r for a spot in the Giants’ rotation, showing off a mid-to-high 90s fastball and a dynamic curveball that made him a prime breakout candidate.

His luck quickly turned.

By the middle of March, Beede

required season-ending Tommy John surgery. His chance to finally prove the Giants were wise to use their 2014 first round draft pick on the Vanderbilt product was delayed.

This spring, Beede isn’t a candidate to open the 2021 season in the Giants’ rotation, but only because he’s still rehabbing from surgery. The right-hander threw his third full bullpen of the spring Friday at Scottsdale Stadium and is slowly progressin­g toward having the opportunit­y to remind the

Giants why they were so excited about his potential.

“The fastball with some carry through the zone, sitting in the low-90s, it was very encouragin­g,” Kapler said.

In a medical update the Giants provided last week, the team said it expects Beede to be throwing off the mound in games at either the major league or minor league level by May. Kapler said it’s too soon to rule out the possibilit­y Beede might face hitters during spring training, but it appears unlikely given his recovery timetable that Beede would pitch in a Cactus League game.

If Beede is healthy enough to rejoin the rotation by June and pitches like he did last spring, he could be an X-factor for a Giants staff that features several other starters looking to bounce back after dealing with injuries last season. Few have as much potential as Beede, which makes his progress worth keeping an eye on.

WEBB HIS HARSHEST CRITIC >>

Another right-handed starter the Giants expect to take a step forward this year is Logan Webb, who didn’t need to look at the box scores from his rookie season to feel disappoint­ed in his performanc­e.

Webb had some bright spots in a 2020 season in which he made 11 starts for the Giants, but he dealt with considerab­le command issues, finished with a 5.47 ERA and felt he needed to get right to work in Tempe, Arizona during the offseason.

His new catch partner? Former A’s reliever and a World Series champion closer with the Nationals, Sean Doolittle.

Webb is planning to increase the usage of his offspeed pitches and expects to throw strikes more consistent­ly this season after making subtle tweaks with his arm slot ahead of the 2020 season. Now that he’s accustomed to throwing from his new arm angle, he’s optimistic about his chances of improving.

“It’s my job and my goal to be consistent with that and get those numbers down and be able to come out every fifth or sixth day and be able to succeed and do what I’m supposed to do,” Webb said. “(Last season) was a little frustratin­g, but I can’t dwell on that.”

Webb also said he’s working with Codify Baseball, an independen­t analytics group that creates personaliz­ed “heat maps” that aid pitchers in the game planning process. Fellow Giants starter Kevin Gausman recommende­d the Vacaville-based firm to Webb.

MORONTA ANSWERING THE CHALLENGE >>

Reyes Moronta boasts a 98-mile per hour fastball, a devastatin­g slider, a career 2.66 ERA and has struck out 11.2 batters per nine innings over his twoplus year career.

With that résumé, it’s no surprise Moronta’s name has been mentioned prominentl­y this offseason as one of the candidates to secure the Giants’ closer job. Yet after missing the entire 2020 season while recovering from a 2019 shoulder surgery, Moronta enters camp in a similar spot to Beede and Webb.

Moronta was under considerat­ion to return to the Giants’ roster late last season, but with his velocity sitting around 94-to95 miles per hour and his conditioni­ng not where it needed to be, the club elected to keep him at the Sacramento alternate site.

Kapler and the Giants’ staff challenged the 5-foot10, 265-pound right-hander to improve his conditioni­ng early in the winter and so far, the manager likes what he sees, noting that Moronta improved during the second half of his bullpen Friday.

TRISTAN BECK DRAWS ATTENTION >>

During Friday’s workout, the Giants had 11 pitchers (all right-handed) throw bullpens. Two of the top starting pitching prospects the team invited to camp, Matt Frisbee and Tristan Beck, happened to be scheduled at the same time and at opposite ends of the bullpen, creating quite a conundrum for Kapler.

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 ?? NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Giants manager Gabe Kapler heads to the dugout before their exhibition game against the A’s at Oracle Park in San Francisco last July.
NHAT V. MEYER — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Giants manager Gabe Kapler heads to the dugout before their exhibition game against the A’s at Oracle Park in San Francisco last July.
 ?? KARL MONDON — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? The Giants’ Kevin Gausman pitches in Game 2 of a doublehead­er against the Los Angeles Dodgers last August.
KARL MONDON — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP The Giants’ Kevin Gausman pitches in Game 2 of a doublehead­er against the Los Angeles Dodgers last August.

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