East Bay Times

Bailey's game-winning blast just adds to his stellar start

- By Jason Mastrodona­to jmastrodon­ato@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN FRANCISCO >> With one crack of the bat, Patrick Bailey made a metaphoric­al announceme­nt: it's time to forget about the second half of last season.

Bailey's three-run, walk-off homer in the ninth inning on Friday lifted the Giants over the Pittsburgh Pirates, 3-0, the culminatio­n of a player who has quickly evolved into one of the most potent offensive forces in the game.

The numbers are jumping off the page. Throughout the season's first month, Bailey leads the majors or is near the top of the majors in almost every batted ball category.

“It's exciting,” he said before Saturday's game. “I obviously want to start this way instead of the opposite. I've had plenty of years where I've struggled to hit .150 at this point. So I'm excited with where the adjustment­s have gotten me but I understand baseball is a tough game. It beats you up.”

The wounds from last year are still fresh.

He started strong in his first 40 MLB games, but when the All-Star break ended, Bailey stopped hitting. In the second half, the rookie backstop posted a .514 OPS that ranked last out of 175 big leaguers with at least 200 plate appearance­s. He hit just .188 with two homers while striking out 60 times in 203 PAs

“He got a little run down at the end, and the at-bats weren't as good,” Giants manager Bob Melvin said.

Bailey used the offseason to rebuild his swing. The results are paying early dividends.

“The swing is in a much better spot,” he said Saturday. “I'm using the ground more. I've had my highest exit velocities ever. I think the big thing for the higher walk rate is the lack of three-ball chase. And the decrease in the strikeouts come from the swing change, putting balls in play that I should, and not fouling them off or swinging and missing.”

Through the first month of the Giants' season, Bailey has nearly doubled his walk rate from 6% to 11%, reduced his strikeout rate from 28% to 24%, and pummels the ball whenever he makes contact.

His sweet spot percentage, which ranks players based on a launch angle that most resembles a line drive, is nearly 60%, the best in MLB.

His average exit velocity of 94 mph ranks in the 96th percentile.

“When your swing is in a good spot, you have time to make decisions,” he said. “Whenever you feel like you have to start earlier to get to the heater, your swing decisions are worse because you're starting the decision process earlier. Now I feel like I can start later, be on time and, in essence, I have more time to make the right decisions whether I'm chasing or not.”

His walk-off homer on Friday was his third long ball in 75 PAs this season. He hit seven homers in 353 PAs a year ago.

Entering Saturday, Bailey's .880 OPS ranked 35th out of 223 players with at least 70 PAs. And it ranked sixth among catchers, though it's a unique time in baseball right now with the number of catchers hitting well.

There haven't been four qualified catchers to have at least an .875 OPS in a season since 1977 when Johnny Bench, Gary Carter, Carlton Fisk and Ted Simmons were atop the leaderboar­ds.

As of Saturday, Salvador Perez (1.004 OPS), William Contreras (1.000), Wilson Contreras (.989), Travis d'Arnaud (.980), Will Smith (.940) and Bailey (.880) ranked as MLB's top catchers in OPS.

NOTES >> Right-hander Alex Cobb had a cortisone shot in his ailing shoulder, Melvin said. The team hopes it will ease the pain for Cobb, who is tentativel­y scheduled to begin throwing again on Monday.

Thairo Estrada, who has been nursing a sore hamstring, returned to the lineup Saturday after missing two games.

 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER mercurynew­s.com/sports. ?? Giants fan Paige Griffin of San Francisco waits for her dog, Inara, a 2-year old Corgi, as she rolls in the dirt during Dog Day before Saturday night's game against the Pirates at Oracle Park. The game was still in progress when this edition went to press. For details and more on the Giants, go to
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER mercurynew­s.com/sports. Giants fan Paige Griffin of San Francisco waits for her dog, Inara, a 2-year old Corgi, as she rolls in the dirt during Dog Day before Saturday night's game against the Pirates at Oracle Park. The game was still in progress when this edition went to press. For details and more on the Giants, go to

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