Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Giants keep focus on defensive fundamenta­ls

San Francisco tries to fix league-worst defense from 2022

- By Evan Webeck

A manager’s time is valuable in spring training. He can only be in one place at a time, when his players are divided into a dozen or more groups spread across multiple fields. What he chooses to observe shows his priorities.

Gabe Kapler is watching the Giants’ defensive fundamenta­ls.

“I just feel like we were not great at executing the fundamenta­ls last year,” Kapler said.

The eye test spoke for itself. So do the numbers: By Defensive Runs Saved (minus-53), they were dead last. By Outs Above Average (minus-32), they were thirdworst. They committed 100 errors, tied for the fourth-most in the majors.

It stood in stark contrast to the previous season, when they were among the upper third of the league in each metric.

So, that is why Kapler begins each morning standing on the infield of the diamond here at Scottsdale Stadium, watching his pitchers go through fielding practice, his infielders chase down runners and his outfielder­s hit the cutoff man.

But that’s not all.

“We’re framing it a little bit differentl­y,” Kapler said. “We want our players to know how often things occur. Like, how often are we getting over to first base to cover? How often are we fielding a comebacker? How often are we fielding a bunt? And then going back and talking about how successful we were at those tasks relative to the league in the last couple of years. These are areas that we can definitely improve if we talk about why we weren’t a playoff team last year.”

That is why when you walk into the home clubhouse here, on the big-screen monitors above the lockers, there is a carousel of rotating video clips. They highlight good examples of different

fundamenta­ls — bunt defense, rundowns, outfield cutoffs — and, yes, there were enough examples from last season to fill at least a 30-second reel (though one clip does feature outfielder Luis González moonlighti­ng on the mound).

The real message, though, scrolls before the start of the highlight package.

Picture the Star Wars intro text.

Because that’s exactly what it is.

Only these words don’t mention anything about a galaxy far, far away. They provide the framing that Kapler is talking about.

“For me,” said bench coach Kai Correa, the mastermind behind the idea, whose primary responsibi­lities include infield defense, “at the start of a Star Wars movie, that running theme, that text, what it does is provide context.

“What you seek when you’re a player is, ‘Hey, my time and my workload is really valuable and this job is really, really hard. So if I have context to an activity that might not be my most favorite thing in the world to do, it helps for me to then understand why I’m going to spend my time doing that.’ So my thought process by adding was that it was just a fun way, an attention-getting way to provide that context.”

For example, on rundowns:

“We got a runner out via the rundown 17 times. A little more than once every 10 games. Often enough that we have to establish roles in spring but not often enough that we will have to revisit it often.”

And sacrifice bunts:

“In 2022, teams attempted 30 sacrifice bunts against us, which is almost one in every five games. 17 of those bunts came late in games, after the seventh inning. Our record was 7-23 in those games.”

Before becoming Kapler’s bench coach, Correa gained recognitio­n for his videos teaching fielding techniques. He still runs camps during the offseason. It’s a passion for him. And their success in 2021 seemed to be a positive test case.

But then 2022 happened. “It didn’t sit well with us,” Correa said.

There are a couple reasons why, he believes, this year will be different.

“We were playing games where the people who were executing fundamenta­ls weren’t even in majorleagu­e camp,” he said. “You think about a large quantity of position players that played with us, they were in camp with other teams or minor-league camp.”

There was also the effect of a shortened spring training from the lockout. Time once spent teaching was gone. While every team faced the same reality, the Giants, Correa believes, were particular­ly affected because of their trouble staying healthy.

 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? San Francisco Giants pitcher Alex Wood (57) bumps into teammate LaMonte Wade Jr. (31) as both of them attempt to pick up a ground ball hit by the Milwaukee Brewers’ Kolten Wong (16) in San Francisco on July 15, 2022. Wong would be safe.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP San Francisco Giants pitcher Alex Wood (57) bumps into teammate LaMonte Wade Jr. (31) as both of them attempt to pick up a ground ball hit by the Milwaukee Brewers’ Kolten Wong (16) in San Francisco on July 15, 2022. Wong would be safe.

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