Times Standard (Eureka)

Plenty of eyes are on Harrison

Giants’ pitching prospect throws BP

- Times-standard.com By Evan Webeck

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. >> The big wigs were on hand for this one.

Farhan Zaidi looked on from the first base dugout. New general manager Pete Putila was a few feet away. Stationed behind the mound: manager Gabe Kapler and a collection of other coaches. What were they gathered here to see Friday afternoon, on the second day of spring training? The future, they hope.

It was the Giants’ first live batting practice session of camp, and their presumptiv­e Opening Day starter, Logan Webb, was kicking things off. But the crowd, which included a half dozen other pitchers watching from the dugout railing, was here to see the young man who would throw next — the one they hope will follow Webb in the rotation for years to come — 21-year-old Kyle Harrison, the top left-handed pitching prospect in the game.

“He’s definitely got a lot of talent,” said catcher Joey Bart, who met the young lefty for the first time Friday and was one of four hitters he faced during one-plus simulated innings. “He’s got a really good fastball for a kid that’s, what, 21? Just a lot of talent, just a lot of upside.”

The Giants are banking on that upside to give them a two-headed monster at the top of their rotation for years to come, and they believe the talent there is already enough that he will start the year with Triple-A Sacramento and could be on the fast track to the majors.

“You just watch it and you’re like, ‘Oh, that ball takes off,’” Kapler said of Harrison’s heater, which reaches the upper 90s and was already hitting 95 mph even before the start of camp, according to Webb. “With Kyle it looks pretty explosive.”

Since being drafted 85th overall in 2020, Harrison, a San Jose

native and De La Salle High graduate, has sped through three levels of the minor leagues.

Using his fastballsl­ider combo (and working to refine a changeup), Harrison struck out more batters than all but one pitcher in the entire minor leagues last year. He limited batters to a .196 average against him and finished with a 2.71 ERA in 25 starts between High-A and Double-A.

Almost as soon as it was over, Harrison headed for Arizona, where he spent the entire offseason training at the Giants’ Papago Park complex, often in tandem with Webb, who owns a home here. They pushed each other in the weight room and built a relationsh­ip. At fan fest earlier this month, Webb couldn’t stop himself from raving about the young buck.

So, of course, when it came time for a major milestone in Harrison’s career — his first time throwing to live hitters in major-league camp — it came with Webb there, too.

“Webby’s kind of got him under his wing from what I can see,” Bart said.

Webb, Kapler said, “recognize(s) how important he is to the future of our organizati­on, take(s) that responsibi­lity very seriously, and that means taking some of the younger pitchers under his wing.”

Harrison smiled as he delivered each pitch.

He met with a group of reporters for the first time afterward and grinned through most of his answers.

“I’d be lying if I said I didn’t have any nerves,” Harrison said. “… It wasn’t (my) best stuff. I want to throw more strikes. That’s a big goal for me this year. Keep attacking hitters. Slider wasn’t how I liked it today, but it’s early.”

 ?? COURTESY OF THE GIANTS ?? De La Salle High graduate Kyle Harrison was 4-3with a 2.71ERA in 25combined starts at two minor league levels for the Giants last season.
COURTESY OF THE GIANTS De La Salle High graduate Kyle Harrison was 4-3with a 2.71ERA in 25combined starts at two minor league levels for the Giants last season.

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