Times-Herald (Vallejo)

SF GOT BEST POSEY HAD FOR 2021 SEASON

Giants catcher ended regular season with .304 average, .889 OPS

- By Kerry Crowley

SAN FRANCISCO >> When Buster Posey embraced Dominic Leone with a bear hug on Sunday at Oracle Park, the longest-tenured Giants player turned around to see a stadium full of fans celebratin­g the team’s first National League West title since 2012.

“After the game, looking up in the stands and seeing everybody together, that’s what I noticed,” Posey said. “It made me really, really happy.”

The scene was hardly unique for Posey, who was behind the plate when the Giants clinched their two most recent division titles. He’s won three World Series, caught three no-hitters and a perfect game and delivered six career walk-off hits, but Posey isn’t the type to take a celebratio­n like Sunday’s for granted.

Not after what the world has been through since the beginning of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“It made me happy to see people sharing moments together like this and that’s what’s so great about sports,” Posey said. “It allows people, families, communitie­s to come together and what the whole world has been through these last few years having to really just isolate, it was a great feeling to see everybody enjoying the moment together.”

Posey was the lone Giants player to sit out the truncated 2020 season as he and his wife Kristen adopted identical newborn twin girls last July. In an effort to keep his family healthy and safe, he chose to take a year off from baseball before returning to the organizati­on during spring training.

During an offseason that initially appeared underwhelm­ing, president of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi and general manager Scott Harris insisted the biggest “acquisitio­n” the Giants would make in 2021 was having their franchise corner

stone return to his role as the team’s primary catcher.

Zaidi, Harris and manager Gabe Kapler also spoke about ending the Giants’ four-year playoff drought, but given the Dodgers’ loaded roster and the Padres’ high-profile transactio­ns, it seemed those tasked with leading the franchise were overly optimistic.

How could Posey, who posted a career-low .257 average and .688 OPS in 2019, make such a significan­t difference after sitting out an entire season?

“Extremely talented, outlier athletes, I don’t get surprised by and Buster falls into that category,” Kapler said. “World Series trophies, MVP, Rookie of the Year, leadership characteri­stics, intensity, all of the intangible­s, so no surprise particular­ly given how much work he put in to making this happen.”

The better question might be why did anyone doubt him?

“Is it surprising that

Buster is hitting .300 after a year off? I guess a little bit, but also, he’s done it,” teammate Brandon Crawford said. “He’s above a career .300 hitter, so no it’s not surprising at the same time.”

After spending a season at home with his family, Posey returned to the diamond in 2021 and posted an .889 OPS, the highest mark of any catcher with at least 400 plate appearance­s including MLB’s home run leader, Royals

backstop Salvador Perez (.859).

Posey was at his best offensivel­y during the first half of the season, but a regimented rest schedule he crafted alongside Kapler, the Giants’ medical staff and the team’s strength and conditioni­ng staff allowed for the 34-year-old to be an effective two-way player down the stretch.

Posey caught two of three games in most series the Giants played this year, but

during the final two weeks of the season, he started 10 of the team’s last 13 games and five of the final six. During that two-week stretch, Posey went 14-for-45 (.368) with a .922 OPS as he delivered a go-ahead two-out, two-run single in the Giants’ regular season finale while also tacking on an additional RBI later in the 11-4 blowout win.

“Seeing the way Buster reacted after he got the two-run single, which was really the biggest moment of the season in a season with many moments, we knew it was important to get on the board early, that was just awesome to see,” Zaidi said. “A player like that who was that lowkey demeanor because he’s seen a lot and been so successful, you see that and you know that these guys have been waiting for a while to get back to a moment like this.”

There’s no shortage of reasons a team that was projected to win between 72 and 75 games exceeded expectatio­ns and finished with a franchise-record 107 victories, but Posey’s renaissanc­e is at or near the top of the list.

 ?? JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? San Francisco Giants catcher Buster Posey throws against the San Diego Padres in San Francisco on Friday, Oct. 1.
JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE San Francisco Giants catcher Buster Posey throws against the San Diego Padres in San Francisco on Friday, Oct. 1.
 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? The San Francisco Giants’ Buster Posey connects for a two-run single in the third inning Sunday against the San Diego Padres at Oracle Park in San Francisco. This was Posey’s 1,500th career hit.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP The San Francisco Giants’ Buster Posey connects for a two-run single in the third inning Sunday against the San Diego Padres at Oracle Park in San Francisco. This was Posey’s 1,500th career hit.
 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? The San Francisco Giants’ Buster Posey, left, celebrates with teammate Curt Casali after their game at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sunday. The Giants defeated the San Diego Padres 11-4 to win the National League Western Division championsh­ip.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP The San Francisco Giants’ Buster Posey, left, celebrates with teammate Curt Casali after their game at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sunday. The Giants defeated the San Diego Padres 11-4 to win the National League Western Division championsh­ip.

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