The Mercury News

Kapler’s job gets tougher as Giants visit Padres

San Diego’s improved roster presents challenges

- Iy Kerry arowley kcrowley@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Gabe Kapler has managed 63 games with the Giants, but he’s never had one of his pitchers take an at-bat.

That’s changing this week as the Giants play their first three games against a revamped Padres team that took three of four from the Diamondbac­ks to open the season.

Playing without a designated hitter and against a loaded Padres squad presents the Giants with two new challenges, but ones that will be equally important to conquer if they hope to make a surprise run toward a playoff berth this year.

“Their rotation looks really good,” Giants reliever Jake McGee said of the Padres. “Especially after getting (Yu) Darvish and (Blake) Snell. At the end of the day, you still have to go pitch well, hit

well and play defense, and I feel like if we do the little things like that, we’ll be able to compete.”

While the Giants spent the offseason hitting the freeagent market to acquire Monday’s starter, Anthony DeSclafani, today’s starter, Aaron Sanchez, and left-hander

Alex Wood, the

Padres took a different approach to rebuilding their pitching staff.

San Diego general manager A.J. Preller was the most aggressive executive in the majors this winter as he swung high-profile trades for the Padres’ top three starters, Darvish, Snell and Joe Musgrove. Their additions buoyed a team that has committed more than $750 million to three infielders — Fernando Tatis. Jr., Manny Machado and Eric Hosmer — and is now firmly viewed as a legitimate World Series contender.

“The Padres are a great

baseball team,” Kapler said. “With a pretty deep and establishe­d pitching staff and some of the better younger position players in baseball, also some good mix and match options with right-handed pitching and left-handed pitching, they’re also a well-managed club.”

With 19 games against the Padres and 19 more against the reigning World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers, the Giants will face one of the toughest schedules in the league. Their margin for error is slim, but several players cite the club’s depth as a reason for optimism ahead of their first divisional games.

“I think we have a really solid team, a lot of power all around,” DeSclafani said. “Just from watching the offense, no one gives at-bats away and I think that’s really huge in the game. Coming from a pitcher, when you have a guy that’s just going to battle every single at-bat, it just gets tiring.”

One of the ways the Giants can take advantage of their depth will come with timely substituti­ons, particular­ly in the late innings. President of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi acknowledg­ed last year that Kapler had one of the

more difficult jobs of any manager in the majors because the club’s roster required a lot of “active management,” meaning there were several moving pieces and challengin­g decisions to make in an effort to create favorable matchup advantages.

Eliminatin­g the designated hitter in the National League should make Kapler’s job tougher this year as he’ll need to weigh the risk and reward of removing starting pitchers in favor of pinch-hitters when the Giants are chasing runs in the middle innings.

In his brief tenure as the Giants manager, Kapler’s offensive substituti­ons have often worked in his team’s favor. San Francisco’s pinchhitte­rs posted a .917 OPS in 60 at-bats last year. The Giants’ OPS in pinch-hit situations was the highest mark in the majors by more than 100 points and their eight extrabase hits and 12 walks also led the league.

But decisions should be more complicate­d in 2021. Double-switching, asking players to move positions defensivel­y and removing veteran position players earlier in games for matchup purposes may all become more common now that the Giants

are returning to a National League style of play.

Kapler isn’t new to these types of moves; he managed the Philadelph­ia Phillies for two years before being hired in San Francisco following the 2019 season

It doesn’t hurt that Kapler’s bench will be filled with starting-caliber players. Zaidi and Kapler believe each position player on the roster is worthy of everyday at-bats. So when the Giants do move players on and off the field during games, they don’t believe the quality of the lineup will suffer. GIANTS CLAIM FORMER A’S PRODUCT BOLT >> It took just three games before the Giants made their first roster move of the season, although Monday’s transactio­n won’t lead to any changes with the major league roster.

The Giants claimed outfielder Skye Bolt on waivers after he was designated for assignment by the Oakland A’s last week. Bolt is expected to report to the team’s Sacramento alternate site.

To clear space for Bolt on the 40-man roster, the Giants designated pitcher Ashton Goudeau for assignment only weeks after adding the former Rockies and Orioles right-hander on waivers.

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DeSclafani

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