The San Francisco Giants
are a Major League Baseball team based in San Francisco, California, that currently play in the National League West Division. One of the oldest MLB teams, the Giants hold the honor of having won the most games of any team in the history of baseball [1]. The Giants played in New York City through the 1957 season, after which they moved west to California to become the San Francisco Giants.
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New York Giants history
Early days and the John McGraw era
The Giants began life as the second baseball club founded by millionaire tobacconist
John B. Day and veteran amateur baseball player
Jim Mutrie. The Gothams (as the Giants were originally known) were their entry to the
National League in 1883, while their other club, the
Metropolitans (the original
Mets) played in the
American Association. Nearly half of the original Gotham players were members of the disbanded
Troy Trojans, whose place in the National League the Gothams inherited. While the
Metropolitans were initially the more successful club, Day and Mutrie began moving star players to the Gothams and the team won its first National League
pennant in 1888, as well as a victory over the
St. Louis Browns in an early incarnation of the
World Series. They repeated as champions the next year with a pennant and World Series victory over the
Brooklyn Bridegrooms.
It is said that after one particularly satisfying victory over the
Philadelphia Phillies, Mutrie (who was also the team's manager) stormed into the dressing room and exclaimed, "My big fellows! My giants!" From then on, the club was known as the Giants.
The Giants' original home stadium, the
Polo Grounds, also dates from this early era. The first of the Polo Grounds was located north of
Central Park adjacent to Fifth and Sixth Avenues and 110th and 112th Streets in the
New York City neighborhood of
Harlem. Upon eviction from the Polo Grounds after the 1888 season, the Giants moved uptown and renamed various fields the Polo Grounds which were located between 155th and 159th Streets in the
New York City neighborhoods of
Harlem and
Washington Heights. The Giants played at the Polo Grounds until the end of the
1957 season, when they moved to San Francisco.
The Giants remained a powerhouse during the last half of the 1880s, culminating in their first league pennant in
1888 and another in
1889. However, in
1890, nearly all of the Giants' stars jumped to the upstart
Players' League, whose New York franchise was also named
the Giants. The new team even built its park next door to the National League Giants' Polo Grounds. With a decimated roster, the Giants finished a distant sixth. Attendance took a nosedive, and the financial strain affected Day's tobacco business as well. The Players' League dissolved after the season, and Day sold a minority interest to the PL Giants' principal backer, Edward Talcott. As a condition of the sale, Day had to fire Mutrie as manager. Although the Giants rebounded to third in
1891, Day was forced to sell controlling interest to Talcott at the end of the season.
Four years later, Talcott sold the Giants to
Andrew Freedman, a real estate developer with ties to
Tammany Hall. Freedman was one of the most detested owners in baseball history, getting into heated disputes with other owners, writers and his own players. The most famous one was with star pitcher
Amos Rusie. When Freedman only offered Rusie $2,500 for
1896, Rusie sat out the entire season. Attendance fell off throughout the league due to the loss of Rusie, prompting the other owners to chip in $50,000 to get him to return for
1897. Also, out of pure spite, Freedman hired former owner Day--by now a broken man--as manager for part of
1899.
In 1902, after a series of disastrous moves that left the Giants 53½ games behind, Freedman signed
John McGraw as a player-manager, convincing him to jump in mid-season from the
Baltimore Orioles of the
American League and to bring with him several Orioles' players. McGraw would go on and manage the Giants for three decades, one of the longest and most successful tenures in professional sports. McGraw's hiring was one of Freedman's last significant moves as owner of the Giants; after the season he was forced to sell his interest to
John T. Brush. Under McGraw the Giants won ten National League pennants and three
World Series championships.
The Giants already had their share of stars during its brief history at this point, such as
Smiling Mickey Welch,
Roger Connor,
Tim Keefe,
Jim O'Rourke and
John Montgomery Ward, the player-lawyer who formed the renegade
Players League in 1890 to protest unfair player contracts. McGraw would also cultivate his own crop of baseball heroes during his time with the Giants. Names such as
Christy Mathewson,
Iron Man Joe McGinnity,
Bill Terry,
Jim Thorpe,
Mel Ott,
Casey Stengel, and
Red Ames are just a sample of the many players who honed their skills under McGraw.
The Giants under McGraw famously snubbed their first ever modern
World Series chance in
1904—an encounter with the
reigning world champion Boston Americans (now known as the "Red Sox")—because McGraw considered the new
American League as little more than a
minor league. His original reluctance was because the intra-city rival
New York Highlanders looked like they would win the AL pennant. The Highlanders lost to Boston on the last day, but the Giants stuck by their refusal. McGraw had also managed the Highlanders in their first two seasons, when they were known as the Baltimore Orioles.
The ensuing criticism resulted in Brush leading an effort to formalize the rules and format of the World Series. The
Giants won the
1905 World Series over the
Philadelphia Athletics, with
Christy Mathewson nearly winning the series single-handedly.
The Giants then had several frustrating years. In 1908,
they finished in a tie with the
Chicago Cubs and had a one-game playoff at the Polo Grounds. The game was a replay of a tied game that resulted from the
Merkle Boner. They lost the rematch to the Cubs, who would go on to win their second World Series. That post-season game was further darkened by a story that someone on the Giants had attempted to bribe umpire
Bill Klem. This could have been a disastrous scandal for baseball, but because Klem was honest and the Giants lost, it faded over time.
The Giants experienced some hard luck in the early 1910s, losing three straight World Series to the
A's, the
Red Sox, then the
A's again (The Giants and the A's both won pennants in
1913; two seasons later, both teams finished in eighth [last] place). After losing the
1917 Series to the
Chicago White Sox (the White Sox's last World Series win until 2005), the Giants played in four straight World Series in the early 1920s, winning the first two over their tenants, the Yankees, then losing to the
Yankees in
1923 when
Yankee Stadium opened. They also lost in 1924, when the
Washington Senators won their only World Series in their history (prior to their move to Minnesota).
1930–57: Five pennants in 28 seasons
McGraw handed over the team to Bill Terry in
1932, and Terry played for and managed the Giants for ten years. During this time the Giants won three pennants, defeating the
Senators in the
1933 World Series and losing to the Yankees in
1936 and
1937. Aside from Terry himself, the other stars of the era were Mel Ott and
Carl Hubbell, one of the very few pitchers in baseball history to master the
screwball (along with Mathewson and
Fernando Valenzuela). Known as "King Carl" and "The Meal Ticket", Hubbell gained fame during the
1934 All-Star Game, when he struck out five Hall of Famers in a row:
Babe Ruth,
Lou Gehrig,
Jimmie Foxx,
Al Simmons, and
Joe Cronin.
Mel Ott succeeded Terry as manager in
1942, but the war years proved to be difficult for the Giants. Midway during the
1948 season Brooklyn Dodgers manager
Leo Durocher left the Dodgers to became manager of the Giants. This hire was not without controversy. Not only was the mid-season switch unusual, but Durocher had been accused of gambling in 1947 and subsequently suspended for the entire
1947 season by Baseball Commissioner
Albert "Happy" Chandler. Durocher remained at the helm of the Giants through the
1955 season, and those eight years proved to be some of the most memorable for Giants fans, particularly because of the arrival of
Willie Mays and arguably the two most famous plays in Giants' history.
1951: The "Shot Heard 'Round the World"
One of the most famous episodes in Major League Baseball history, and possibly one of the greatest moments in sports history, the "Shot Heard 'Round the World" is the name given to
Bobby Thomson's
walk-off home run that clinched the National League pennant for the Giants over their rivals, the Brooklyn Dodgers. This game was the third of a three-game playoff series resulting from one of baseball's most memorable pennant races. The
Giants had been thirteen and a half games behind the league-leading
Dodgers in August, but under Durocher's guidance and with the aid of a sixteen-game winning streak, caught the Dodgers to tie for the lead on the last day of the season.
Mays' catch and the 1954 Series
In game one of the
1954 World Series at the Polo Grounds, Willie Mays made "The Catch"—a dramatic over-the-shoulder catch off a fly ball by
Vic Wertz to deep center field. At the time the game had been tied 2–2 in the eighth inning. With men on first and second and nobody out, an extra-base hit could have blown the game wide open, and given the
Cleveland Indians the momentum to win not only Game One, but perhaps the World Series itself. Instead, Mays caught the ball 450 feet from the plate, whirled and threw the ball to the infield, keeping the lead runner,
Larry Doby, from scoring.
The underdog Giants went on to sweep the series in four straight, despite the Cleveland Indians having won a then-
American League record 111 games that year. This was the last World Series victory for the Giants, subsequently losing in
1962,
1989, and
2002. It would be their last appearance as the New York Giants, as the team moved to San Francisco prior to 1958 season.
Memorable New York Giants of the 1950s
In addition to Bobby Thomson and Willie Mays, other memorable members of the Giants teams during the 1950s include:
Hall of Fame manager
Leo Durocher, coach
Herman Franks, Hall of Fame outfielder
Monte Irvin, outfielder and runnerup for the 1954 NL batting championship (won by Willie Mays)
Don Mueller, Hall of Fame
knuckleball relief pitcher
Hoyt Wilhelm, starting pitchers
Larry Jansen,
Sal Maglie,
Jim Hearn,
Marv Grissom,
Dave Koslo,
Don Liddle,
Rubén Gómez, and
Johnny Antonelli, catcher
Wes Westrum, catcher
Sal Yvars, shortstop
Alvin Dark, third baseman
Hank Thompson, first baseman
Whitey Lockman, second baseman
Davey Williams, and utility players:
Bill Rigney,
Daryl Spencer, Bobby Hoffman, and
Dusty Rhodes among others. In the late 1950s and after the move to
San Francisco two Hall of Fame First Basemen
Orlando Cepeda and
Willie McCovey joined the team.
1957: The move to California
The Giants' final three years in New York City were unmemorable. They stumbled to third place the year after their World Series win and attendance fell off precipitously. While seeking a new stadium to replace the crumbling Polo Grounds, the Giants began to contemplate a move from New York, initially considering
Metropolitan Stadium in
Minneapolis-St. Paul, which was home to their top farm team, the
Minneapolis Millers. Under the rules of the time, the Giants' ownership of the Millers gave them priority rights to a major league team in the area.
At this time, the Giants were approached by San Francisco mayor
George Christopher. Despite objections from shareholders such as
Joan Whitney Payson, majority owner
Horace Stoneham entered into negotiations with San Francisco officials around the same time that Dodgers' owner
Walter O'Malley was courting the city of
Los Angeles. O'Malley had been told that the Dodgers would not be allowed to move to Los Angeles unless a second team moved to California as well. He pushed Stoneham toward relocation. In the summer of 1957, both the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers announced their moves to California, and the golden age of baseball in the New York area ended.
New York would remain a one-team town with the
New York Yankees until 1962 when Joan Whitney Payson founded the
New York Mets and brought National League baseball back to the city. Payson and
M. Donald Grant, who became the Mets' chairman, had been the only Giants board members to vote against the Giants' move to California. The "NY" script on the Giants' caps and the orange trim on their uniforms, along with the blue background used by the Dodgers, would be adopted by the Mets.
1958: The San Francisco Giants history begins
As with the New York years, the Giants' fortunes in San Francisco have been mixed. Though recently the club has enjoyed relatively sustained success, there have also been prolonged stretches of mediocrity, along with two instances when the club's ownership threatened to move the team away from San Francisco. Most disappointingly for the large fan base that they have maintained ever since their arrival in the city, the Giants have failed to win a World Series title since the move from New York.
1958–61 Seasons: Seals Stadium and Candlestick Park
When the Giants moved to San Francisco, they played in
Seals Stadium for their first two seasons. The stadium, which was located at 16th & Bryant St. across from the Stempel's Bakery, had been the home of the
Pacific Coast League (PCL)
San Francisco Seals, a minor league affiliate of the
Boston Red Sox, from 1931–1957. In
1958, Latino hitter
Orlando Cepeda won
Rookie of the Year honors. The
next season, Willie McCovey won the same award.
In
1960, the Giants moved to
Candlestick Park (sometimes known simply as "The 'Stick"), a stadium built on a point in San Francisco's southeast corner overlooking
San Francisco Bay. The new stadium quickly became known for its strong, swirling winds, cold temperatures, and thick evening fog that made for a formidable experience for brave fans and players. The park had a built-in radiant heating system, but it never worked. Candlestick Park's reputation was sealed in the ninth inning of the first 1961
All-Star Game when, after a day of calm conditions, the winds rose. A strong gust appeared to cause Giants relief pitcher
Stu Miller to slip off the
pitching rubber during his delivery, resulting in a
balk (and a baseball legend that Miller was "blown off the mound").
There were also many times that Candlestick Park was covered in fog, both inside and out, coming in from the ocean seven miles to the west (through what is known as the "Alemany Gap," a type of wide gorge through which the ocean winds come without major topographical obstacles). At one time, a fog horn was played inside the stadium between innings giving Candlestick another reputation. Other times, the winds would also whirl around in the parking lot, but inside the stadium it would be calm. But even with its reputation of being cold, windy, and foggy, it stood its ground when the ground below it shook violently during the
1989 World Series. At 5:04 p.m., the
Loma Prieta Earthquake shook the
San Francisco Bay Area during the pre-game ceremonies before Game 3. For 15 seconds the stadium rocked and there was fear that the standing light fixtures above would fall onto the crowd. However, only minor injuries were reported, and the stadium's structure was deemed safe ten days later.
1962 World Series
In
1962, after another memorable pennant chase with the
Dodgers which resulted in a playoff series which the Giants won, the Giants brought a World Series to San Francisco. However, the Giants lost the series 4 games to 3 to the
New York Yankees. The seventh game went to the bottom of the ninth inning, with the Yankees ahead 1–0. With
Matty Alou on first base and two outs,
Willie Mays sliced a double down the right field line. Right fielder
Roger Maris, whose 61 home run season in
1961 has historically overshadowed his great defensive work, quickly got to the ball and rifled a throw to the infield, preventing Alou from scoring the tying run.
With the speedy Mays on second, any base hit by the next batter, Willie McCovey, would likely have won the series for the Giants. McCovey hit a screaming line drive that was snared by second baseman
Bobby Richardson, bringing the Series to a sudden end. Earlier in the inning, a failed sacrifice bunt by
Felipe Alou had ultimately resulted in his brother Matty not scoring on Mays' double, which started a lifelong dedication to fundamentals on Felipe's part. In addition, Richardson was not originally positioned to catch the drive – he only moved there (three steps to the left) in reaction to a foul smash by McCovey on the previous pitch.
Giants fan (and resident of nearby
Santa Rosa)
Charles Schulz made a reference to the real world in one of his
Peanuts
strips soon afterward. In the first three panels of the strip of December 22, Charlie Brown and Linus are sitting on a porch step, looking glum. In the last panel, Charlie cries to the heavens,
"Why couldn't McCovey have hit the ball just three feet higher?"
Some weeks later, the same scene appears. This time, Charlie cries,
"Or why couldn't McCovey have hit the ball just
two
feet higher?"
1963–84 Seasons: Always a bridesmaid, never the bride
Although the Giants did not play in another World Series until 1989, the teams of the 1960s continued to be pennant contenders thanks to several future Hall-of-Famers. These included
Gaylord Perry, who pitched a no-hitter with the Giants in
1968;
Juan Marichal, a pitcher with a memorable high-kicking delivery; McCovey, who won the
National League MVP award in
1969, and Mays, who hit his 600th career home run in 1969. A Giants highlight came in
1963 when
Jesús Alou joined the team, and along with Felipe and Matty formed the first all-brother outfield in Major League history.
The Giants' next appearance in the postseason came in
1971. After winning their division, they were easily defeated in the
League Championship Series by the
Pittsburgh Pirates and
Roberto Clemente, who then went on to beat the
Baltimore Orioles in the
World Series. During this decade, the Giants gave up many players who became successful elsewhere. Some of them included
Garry Maddox,
George Foster,
Dave Kingman, and
Gaylord Perry. However, the Giants did produce two more Rookies of the Year winners (
Gary Matthews Sr. in
1973 and
John Montefusco in
1975).
In
1976,
Bob Lurie bought the team, saving it from being moved to Toronto. A year later, Toronto was awarded an expansion team (the
Blue Jays), but San Francisco baseball fans' worries about losing their beloved Giants had not completely gone away just yet. The rest of the 1970s was a generally disappointing time for the Giants, as they finished no higher than third place in any season. That third place season was
1978. They had a young star in the likes of
Jack Clark, along with veteran first baseman
Willie McCovey, second baseman
Bill Madlock (whom the Giants had acquired from the Chicago Cubs,) shortstops
Johnnie LeMaster and
Roger Metzger, and third baseman
Darrell Evans. Veteran pitchers
Vida Blue,
John Montefusco,
Ed Halicki, and
Bob Knepper rounded out the starting rotation with Vida Blue leading the way with 18 victories. The most memorable moment of that
1978 season occurred on May 28, 1978 when pinch hitter
Mike Ivie, acquired from the
San Diego Padres during the offseason for Darrel Thomas, hit a towering grand slam off of Dodgers pitching ace
Don Sutton in front of Candlestick Park's highest paid attendance of 58,545. They were atop of the NL West for most of the season, but the
Dodgers heated up to eventually win the West and the NL Pennant.
In
1981, the
Giants became the first National League team to hire a
black manager,
Frank Robinson. However, Robinson's tenure lasted less than four years and was generally unsuccessful. In that tenure, the Giants finished a game over .500 in the
strike-shortened 1981 season. The
next season, the Giants acquired veterans
Joe Morgan and
Reggie Smith.
They were in the midst of a three-team pennant race with the Dodgers and Braves. Morgan hit a homer against the
Dodgers on the final day of the season to make sure
Atlanta won the NL West.
In
1984, the
Giants hosted the
All-Star Game at
Candlestick Park.
[2] 1984 was also the sole year that their infamous ex-mascot, the
Crazy Crab, "graced" the field.
1985–89 Seasons: Nadir and resurrection
In
1985, a year which saw the
Giants lose 100 games (the most in franchise history), owner
Bob Lurie responded by hiring
Al Rosen as general manager. Under Rosen's tenure, the Giants promoted promising rookies such as
Will Clark and
Robby Thompson, and made canny trades to acquire such players as
Kevin Mitchell,
Dave Dravecky,
Candy Maldonado, and
Rick Reuschel.
New manager
Roger Craig served from 1985 to
1992. In Craig's first five full seasons with the Giants, the team never finished with a losing record.
Under Roger Craig's leadership (and his unique motto, "Humm Baby") the Giants won 83 games in
1986 and won the National League Western Division title in
1987. The team lost the
1987 National League Championship Series to the
St. Louis Cardinals in seven games. The bright spot in that defeat was Giants outfielder
Jeffrey Leonard, who was named the series MVP in a losing effort.
1989 Season: The "Thrill", World Series and the Earthquake
Although the team used 15 different starting pitchers, the
1989 Giants won the National League pennant. They were led by pitchers Rick Reuschel 1989 National League All-Star Game Starter) and
Scott Garrelts (the 1989 National League ERA champion) and sluggers Kevin Mitchell (the 1989 National League
MVP) and Will Clark.
The
Giants beat the
Chicago Cubs in the
National League Championship Series, four games to one. In Game 5, eventual 1989 NLCS MVP Will Clark (who hit .650, drove in eight runs, including a grand slam off
Greg Maddux in Game 1) came through in the clutch with a bases-loaded single off of the hard-throwing
Mitch Williams to break a 1–1 tie in the bottom of the 8th inning. Clark took the first fastball for a strike, then fouled one away. Williams' next pitch missed the outside corner to bring the count to 1-and-2. After Clark fouled off two more pitches, he hit a screaming line drive up the middle to bring in two runs. In the top of the 9th inning,
Steve Bedrosian was shaky as he gave up a run. But ultimately, Bedrosian was able to get
Ryne Sandberg to ground-out for out #3. Fittingly, the hero of Game 5, Will Clark caught the final out from second baseman Robby Thompson. For the first time in 27 years, the San Francisco Giants were the champions of the National League.
After taking care of the Cubs, the Giants faced the
Oakland Athletics in the "
Bay Bridge Series". The series is best remembered because the
Loma Prieta earthquake on October 17, 1989 disrupted the planned Game 3 of the series at Candlestick Park. After a ten-day delay in the series, Oakland finished up its sweep of San Francisco. The Giants never would hold a lead in any of the 4 games and never even managed to send the tying run to the plate in their last at-bat.
1992 Season: Farewell San Francisco?
Following the 1989 World Series defeat to the Oakland A's, a local ballot initiative to fund a new stadium in San Francisco failed, threatening the franchise's future in the city. After the
1992 season, owner Bob Lurie, who had previously saved the franchise from moving to
Toronto in
1976, put the team up for sale. A group of investors from
St. Petersburg led by
Vince Naimoli reached an agreement to purchase the team and move them across the country to Tampa Bay, FL. However, Major League Baseball blocked the move, paving the way for the team to stay in San Francisco with an ownership group led by
Peter Magowan, the former CEO of
Safeway and who was named Managing General Partner, along with
Harmon Burns and his wife,
Sue Burns, who purchased a majority share of the team. (As compensation, MLB granted Naimoli's group an expansion franchise, the
Tampa Bay Devil Rays.)
In addition to the anticipated move to downtown San Francisco, the Giants' ownership also made a major personnel move to solidify fan support. Before even hiring a new General Manager or officially being approved as the new owners, Magowan signed locally-grown superstar free agent
Barry Bonds (a move which MLB initially blocked until some terms were negotiated to protect Lurie and Bonds in case the sale failed), a move that shaped the franchise's fortunes for more than a decade.
1993 Season: "The last pure pennant race"
The Barry Bonds era began auspiciously as Bonds put up the numbers for the third MVP of his career: 46 homers, 129 runs and 123 RBI, (.336 BA, .458 OBP, .677 SLG, for a total of 1.135 OBP+SLG), all career highs.
Matt Williams was solid again (38 HR, 110 RBI, .294 BA), with Robby Thompson and Will Clark (in his last season with the Giants) providing offensive support.
John Burkett and
Bill Swift both had 20+ wins, and closer
Rod Beck was dominant with 48 saves and a 2.16 ERA.
[3] All this led the Giants to a 103–59 record in
Dusty Baker's first year as manager, which earned him the Manager of the Year award.
But despite the
Giants' great record, the
Atlanta Braves — fueled by solid seasons from
David Justice,
Ron Gant,
Deion Sanders and their midseason acquisition of
Fred McGriff from the
San Diego Padres — came back from a 10-game deficit to the Giants to win the NL West by a single game.
[4] The Braves also had 20+ wins from both
Tom Glavine and
Cy Young Award winner
Greg Maddux.
Desperately needing a win against the
Dodgers in the final game of the year to force a one-game playoff with the Braves, the controversial choice of Giants rookie pitcher
Salomon Torres proved disastrous as he gave up three runs in the first four innings and the Giants went on to lose the game 12–1. After MLB's establishment of the three-division–
Wild Card playoff format following the
1993 season,
New York Times
sports columnist
Dave Anderson captured the feeling of many baseball purists regarding the thrilling (and for Giants fans, heartbreaking) winner-take-all outcome as the "last pure pennant race".
1994–96 Seasons
The period of
1994 to
1996 were not good years for the Giants, punctuated by the
strike that canceled the rest of the 1994 baseball season and the
World Series. The strike prevented Matt Williams a chance to beat
Roger Maris' single season home run record—he had 43 HR in 115 team games, and was thus on pace for 60 when the strike hit with 47 games left to play (Bonds had 37, on pace for 52). But the rest of the team was bad, with no other player having even 10 home runs or even 40 RBI that late into the season.
[5]
The Giants came in last place in both
1995 and 1996, as key injuries and slumps hurt them. 1995 had a strange feeling about it, with fans unsure if they would come back after the strike-shortened 1994 season (something that would keep attendances notably lower for a few more years, probably until the HR chase of 1998). Bonds continued to be the team's driving force, posting decent numbers (33 HR, 104 RBI, 109 R and 120 BB in 144 games). Matt Williams and
Glenallen Hill were the only other Giants with 20+ HR, and the rest of the team had mediocre offensive numbers. The pitching staff was bad, with only
Mark Leiter having 10 wins (10–12, 3.82 ERA). Rod Beck had 33 saves, but a 4.45 ERA and a 5–6 record, including nine
blown saves.
[6]
thumb
1996 was highlighted by Barry Bonds joining the 40–40 club (42 HR, 40 SB, with 129 RBI, 151 BB and .308 BA). Rookie
Bill Mueller also provided hope for the future of the club with a .330 average (66 hits in 200 AB over 55 games). Matt Williams and Glenallen Hill provided offensive support. Pitching-wise, the team was not very good. Only Mark Gardner had more than 10 wins (12–7, 4.42 ERA), and Rod Beck had 35 saves, a 3.34 ERA and nine losses on his record.
[7] The low point came in late June when the Giants lost 10 straight games en route to a 68–94 record.
1997 Season
After three consecutive losing seasons, the Giants named
Brian Sabean as their new general manager in
1997, replacing
Bob Quinn. (Sabean may have been acting as GM prior to the announcement, as he was rumored to have engineered the deal to get
Kirk Rueter from the
Montreal Expos). His tenure began with great controversy. In his first official trade as GM, he shocked Giants fans by trading Matt Williams to Cleveland for what newspapers referred to as a 'bunch of spare parts', with the negative reaction being great enough for him to have to publicly explain:
"I didn't get to this point by being an idiot... I'm sitting here telling you there is a plan."
Sabean was proven right, as the players he acquired in the Williams trade—
Jeff Kent,
Jose Vizcaino,
Julian Tavarez, and
Joe Roa (plus the
$1 million in cash that enabled them to sign
Darryl Hamilton)—and a subsequent trade for
J.T. Snow were major contributors in leading the Giants to win their first NL West division title of the decade in
1997. Snow, Kent, and Bonds each had over 100 RBI, and pitcher Shawn Estes' 19 wins led the team. Rod Beck had 37 saves.
[8]
The 1997 baseball season also saw the introduction of
interleague play. The Giants faced four American League teams that year:
Seattle Mariners,
Texas Rangers,
Anaheim Angels and the
Oakland A's, while compiling a 10–6 record.
[9]
The Wild-card winning
Florida Marlins ended the Giants' season with a 3–0 sweep in the
first round of the playoffs, as the Marlins marched on their way to their first
World Series championship.
1998–99 Seasons
In 1998, the Giants were fueled by good seasons from Jeff Kent and Barry Bonds, both with 30+ HR and 100+ RBI. Also having good seasons were pitchers Kirk Reuter (16–9 W-L record, 4.36 ERA), Mark Gardner (13–6, 4.33) and newly acquired
Orel Hershiser (11–10, 4.41).
[10] New closer
Robb Nen had 40 saves. The Giants tied for the NL Wild card but lost a one-game playoff against the Chicago Cubs.
The next year, (1999), saw the Giants finished second in the NL West with an 86–76 record. Barry Bonds' production dropped as he hit .262, his lowest average in a decade. He did however hit 34 home runs while missing more than one-third of the season due to injury, and other team regulars put up very good numbers in support. These included J.T. Snow, Jeff Kent, Rich Aurilia, and Ellis Burks, all who had 20+ HR and 80+ RBI.
Marvin Benard also had a career year in center field with 16 home runs, 64 RBIs, and a career and team high 27 stolen bases. The pitching staff was paced by
Russ Ortiz (18–9, 3.81) and Kirk Reuter (15–10, 5.41).
[11]
With the knowledge that their days in Candlestick Park were coming to an end, the 1999 season ended with a series of promotions and tributes. After the final game of the season, a defeat to the Los Angeles Dodgers, home plate was ceremoniously removed and taken to the new grounds where the downtown stadium was being built.
2000–2001 Seasons: Downtown Baseball Begins
In
2000, after 40 years at
Candlestick Park, the Giants bid a bittersweet farewell to their old home and relocated to a new, privately financed downtown stadium, a long-advocated move.
AT&T Park (originally Pacific Bell Park and later SBC Park) sits on the shores of China Basin (often referred to as
McCovey Cove by Giants fans) at the corner of 3rd and King Streets (with an official address of 24 Willie Mays Plaza to honor the long-time Giant). Regardless of anything that might happen on the field of play, this move represented an entirely new era for the Giants and their fans. Whereas the team used to occupy what was widely regarded as the least baseball-friendly stadium in all of Major League Baseball, a throwback to the era of suburban, multi-purpose, concrete "cookie-cutter" stadiums that so many teams moved to during the 1960s and 70s, their new home is regarded as one of the better venues in all of professional sports.
thumb
The Giants routinely sell out this nearly 43,000-seat stadium, whereas it was not uncommon for them to have a paid attendance of less than 10,000 in Candlestick's nearly 60,000 seating capacity, although by the 1999 season the Giants managed about 25,000 fans a game. The franchise since the move annually vies for highest MLB season attendance, in contrast to being often threatened with having the league-low figure before. While still breezy in the summer time in comparison to other MLB parks, AT&T Park has been a consensus success and has developed the reputation as a "pitcher's park." Its state-of-the-art design minimizes wind-chill, it is well served by mass transit, and it has spectacular views of the bay and the city skyline (which even Candlestick had until it was redesigned in the early 1970s to accommodate the
49ers).
AT&T Park is the centerpiece of a renaissance in San Francisco's
South Beach and
Mission Bay neighborhoods. But most important to Giants fans, the new ballpark means they no longer have to worry about their team moving away from San Francisco, at least not any time soon.
Despite inaugural game festivities at the new ballpark, the Dodgers would spoil the 2000 season opener, with a three HR performance by little-known Kevin Elster. However, the Giants would rebound and put out a solid effort all season long, culminating with a division title and the best record in the Major Leagues. Jeff Kent paced the attack with clutch RBI hits (33 HR, 125 RBI) en route to winning the MVP award, despite Bonds's 49 HR, 106 RBI season. The pitching staff was decent but not great, although 5 starters had at least 10 victories. These included Liván Hernández (17–11, 3.75), Russ Ortiz (14–12, 5.01), Kirk Rueter (11–9, 3.96), Shawn Estes (15–6, 4.26), and Mark Gardner (11–7, 4.05). Robb Nen was nearly perfect, with 41 saves and a minute 1.50 ERA.
[12]
The Giants lost the 2000 division series to the
New York Mets, three games to one. They had started out solid, winning game one bolstered by
Liván Hernández. However, the Mets won the next three games, despite decent performances by Shawn Estes, Russ Ortiz and Mark Gardner. Game two in particular had a tumultuous ending. Down 4–1 in the ninth, JT Snow hit a three-run home run to tie the game, but the Mets scored in the 10th to win the game.
[13]
In
2001 the Giants were eliminated from playoff contention on the second to last day of the season. Rich Aurilia put up stellar numbers (37 HR, 97 RBI, .324 BA) in support of Barry Bonds, who once again gave fans something to cheer about as he hit 73 home runs, setting a new single-season record. The pitching staff was good but not great, with Russ Ortiz (17–9, 3.29) leading a staff that also had Liván Hernández (13–15, 5.24), and Kirk Reuter (14–12, 4.42). Shawn Estes and Mark Gardner would have sub-par years, but notably Jason Schmidt (7–1, 3.39) was picked up in a mid-season acquisition from the
Pittsburgh Pirates. Robb Nen continued to be a dominant closer (45 saves, 3.01 ERA).
[14]
2002 Season: National League Championship Season and World Series
In the
2002 season, the Giants finished 2nd in the NL West behind the
Arizona Diamondbacks, bolstered by another MVP season for Barry Bonds (46 HR, 110 RBI, .370 BA, a then record 198 walks and a .582 OBP) and
Jeff Kent (37 HR, 108 RBI and .313 BA).
[15] Additional roster support was provided by decent seasons from
Benito Santiago and
Rich Aurilia, plus new acquisitions
David Bell,
Reggie Sanders and
Tsuyoshi Shinjo, who spent only one season with the Giants before returning to Japan. The pitching staff again proved solid (but not excellent), with 5 starters having 12 wins or more, including
Jason Schmidt, who the Giants acquired in 2001 from the
Pittsburgh Pirates. Closer
Robb Nen had 43 saves and a 2.20 ERA, and setup men
Felix Rodriguez and
Tim Worrell were solid coming out of the bullpen.
The Giants would make the playoffs as the NL Wild Card team. In their first postseason appearance since 2000, they went on to defeat the
Atlanta Braves in the
NLDS three games to two, with Russ Ortiz winning Games 1 and 5 in Atlanta.
[16] In the
NLCS, they went on to defeat the
St. Louis Cardinals four games to one, with wins by Reuter, Schmidt and two by Worrell in relief.
[17] Benito Santiago went on to win the MVP award in the NLCS.
The Giants then went on to face the American League's Wild Card team, the
Anaheim Angels, now known as the
Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, in the
World Series. Since it's inception, this was the first time that two wildcard teams met in a World Series. The Giants split the first two games in Anaheim and took two of three at Pac Bell Park. With the Giants leading the series three games to two following a 16–4 blowout win in Game 5 at Pac Bell Park, the series shifted back to Anaheim. With the Giants leading 5–0 going into the bottom of the 7th inning of Game 6, the series' momentum changed decisively when then Manager
Dusty Baker removed starter Russ Ortiz and handed him the "game" ball as he left the mound. Moments later,
Scott Spiezio hit a three-run home run for the Angels off reliver Felix Rodriguez, who then went on to win the game 6–5. The following night, Anaheim won Game 7, 4–1 to claim the Series. Angels third baseman
Troy Glaus was named MVP.
After the 2002 season, the Giants would go through many personnel changes. Dusty Baker did not have his contract renewed, and left the team after 10 seasons to manage the
Chicago Cubs. Closer
Robb Nen had pitched despite a damaged shoulder, an injury which eventually ended his career, retired and Jeff Kent was not re-signed. Instead, he went to play for the
Houston Astros. Position players
David Bell,
Reggie Sanders,
Tsuyoshi Shinjo and
Kenny Lofton, as well as pitchers
Liván Hernández,
Russ Ortiz and relief pitcher
Aaron Fultz all played for other teams the following season.
2003 Season: Wire to wire
After two consecutive close second place finishes, the Giants, under new manager
Felipe Alou, recorded 100 victories for the seventh time in franchise history and the third time in San Francisco, winning their division for the third time in seven seasons. The team spent every day of the
season in first place, just the ninth team to do so in baseball history. Their offense was paced by yet another MVP season from Bonds (45 HR, 90 RBI, .341 BA, 148 BB, and an OBP of .529). Decent offensive support was provided by Rich Aurilia, Marquis Grissom, Jose Cruz Jr., Edgardo Alfonzo, Benito Santiago, Pedro Feliz and Andres Galarraga. The pitching staff was led by Jason Schmidt (17–5, 2.34 ERA) and Kirk Reuter (10–5, 4.53), but had a dropoff after that, as no other starter had 10 wins.
[18]
Once again in the playoffs, and just like in 1997, the Giants faced the
Florida Marlins in the
NLDS. Jason Schmidt won game one in San Francisco with a complete game victory, but the Marlins would win the series three games to one as the Giants bullpen proved unable to prevent their opponent from scoring. Both times the Marlins were the NL Wild Card and yet went on to win the World Series.
[19]
2004–06 Seasons: Playoff drought
On
November 13,
2003, Brian Sabean engineered what is considered by many to be the worst trade in Giants history. He traded
Francisco Liriano,
Boof Bonser, and
Joe Nathan for
A.J. Pierzynski. Pierzynski would last only one season with the Giants.
In
2004,
Barry Bonds broke his own records with 232 walks and a .609 OBP on route to his 7th and last NL MVP award (45 HR, 101 RBI, .362 BA). The team also had a solid but not stellar supporting cast including Marquis Grissom (22, 90, .279) and Pedro Feliz (22, 84, .276), along with decent showings by Ray Durham, Edgardo Alfonzo, Michael Tucker and AJ Pierzynski. Jason Schmidt was the star of the staff (18–7, 3.20 ERA, 251 SO), and the team was constantly looking for a new closer (Matt Herges and Dustin Hermanson split the role during the season).
[20] After sitting out most of the first half of the season, JT Snow led the league in hitting after the All-Star Break.
As in 1993 and 2001, the Giants again avoided elimination from playoff contention until the final weekend of the season. The team would come close but still finished two games behind the division-winning
Los Angeles Dodgers, marking the third time in four seasons the Giants would finish within 2½ games of the leader. The season ended in frustration, as San Francisco needed a three-game sweep of the Dodgers in the final weekend of the season to force a one-game playoff in San Francisco for the NL West title. After winning the first game, the Giants lost the second game 7–3 (L.A. scored seven runs in the 9th, the last four on a
walkoff grand slam by
Steve Finley) as the Dodgers clinched the division title.
Houston won the wildcard spot the next day, rendering the Giants' season finale (a victory) meaningless.
The Giants'
2005 season was the team's least successful since moving to its new stadium. Bonds missed most of the season with a knee injury, closer
Armando Benitez was injured for four months, and ace
Jason Schmidt struggled after numerous injuries. However, team management has taken advantage of the off year to give playing time to numerous young players, including pitchers
Noah Lowry,
Brad Hennessey,
Kevin Correia,
Scott Munter,
Matt Cain, and
Jeremy Accardo, as well as first baseman
Lance Niekro and outfielders
Jason Ellison and
Todd Linden. The acquisition of
Randy Winn from the
Seattle Mariners also proved invaluable in the stretch run.
On May 25, the Giants held a celebration in honor of
Baseball Hall of Famer
Juan Marichal. A statue of Marichal was dedicated on the plaza outside of the ballpark.
Leonel Fernández, the
President of the Dominican Republic, was in attendance. In the two games which followed the ceremonies, the Giants wore uniforms with the word "Gigantes" on the front (the
Spanish word for "Giants"). On July 14, 2005, the franchise won their 10,000th contest defeating their long-time rivals, the
Los Angeles Dodgers, 4–3, becoming the first professional sports franchise to have five digits in its winning total.
On September 28, the Giants were officially eliminated from the NL West race after losing to the division champion
San Diego Padres. The team finished the season in third place, with a record of 75–87, their worst season—and first losing record—since
1996. Despite the disappointing finish, manager
Felipe Alou was offered a one-year extension of his contract by Giants management.
The Giants were expected to contend in 2006, as they were bolstered by a strong starting staff. Despite a losing streak in May, and the worst batting performance by
Barry Bonds in about 15 years
[21] (which led to the general observation that age had eroded his skills) the Giants did contend in the less-than-stellar Western Division and by July 23 were in first place. On that day, however, during the last game of a home stand and leading San Diego going into the 9th inning,
closer Armando Benitez blew a save by giving up a home run and the Giants lost in extra innings. That was the first loss of a horrendous three-week stretch that saw San Francisco go 3–16, losing nine games by one run.
[22]
At the end of August the Giants recovered to again contend for both the division crown and the Wild Card berth. Bonds returned to form after his legs healed (batting .400—34 for 85—in 27 games from August 21 to September 23), the starting staff pitched well enough to lead the National League in ERA among starters, and the team found an effective closer in
Mike Stanton, acquired in a trade at the end of July. However on the final road trip of the season the Giants lost eight of nine games to fall out of all contention for post-season play, despite an offensive explosion by both Bonds and right-fielder
Moisés Alou. The starting staff collapsed, bombed in all nine games, and Giants pitching gave up 93 runs on the trip (by comparison, the Giants gave up 86 runs during the 19-game losing span in August), and the Giants were "officially eliminated" on September 25, and finished the season with a record of 76–85, just 1½ games better than the previous season.
On October 2, 2006, the day after the end of the regular season, the Giants announced that they would not renew the contract of manager
Felipe Alou, but did extend him an offer to remain with the club in an advisory role to the general manager and to baseball operations.
2007 Season: End of the Bonds era
With 11
free agents excluding
Jason Schmidt who has now signed with the Dodgers for roughly $15 million a year, a new manager on board with
Bruce Bochy coming from division rival San Diego, and the loss of veteran catcher
Mike Matheny due to complications resulting from
concussions sustained during his career, the Giants' prospects for the 2007 season were less than favorable going into the winter off-season. Since then, the team has agreed to several deals—resigning
Pedro Feliz,
Ray Durham, and old time Giants fans favorite
Rich Aurilia, and picking up catcher
Bengie Molina,
Ryan Klesko, and
Dave Roberts. They also signed free agent pitcher
Barry Zito to a seven year contract worth $126 million. The deal, which was the richest contract for a pitcher in baseball history, includes a $20 million player option for an eighth year. On January 9, 2007, the Giants resigned pitcher
Russ Ortiz to compete for the fifth starting position in spring training. Ortiz was slotted for the position in late March due to his outstanding spring.
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The Giants started off the regular season slow, had spurts of promise but more often stretches of mediocre to worse play. Pitching was often inconsistent (such as when Barry Zito pitched) or the offense was non-existent (such as during a pair of 1–0 losses for losing pitcher Matt Cain).
The season did have memorable action, such as the Giants playing the Red Sox in Boston for the first time since 1912. Most notable during the season, however, was Bonds march towards Hank Aaron's career home run record of 755. Bonds' proximity to the record brought heavy media attention to the San Francisco Giants.
On July 27, in the first inning of the Giants' three game series against the
Florida Marlins, Bonds hit his 754th career home run. Also contributing to the Giants' 12–10 victory was pinch-hitter
Mark Sweeney, who moved ahead of
Manny Mota on the all time pinch hits list with a clutch RBI single in the sixth inning.
Leading off in the top of the second inning of game two versus the Padres, before a sell-out crowd at
PETCO Park, Barry Bonds hit a high fastball off the facing of the upper deck in left field for his 755th career home run. The opposite-field shot tied the game at 1–1 and tied
Hank Aaron for the all-time home run record. The Giants lost in extra innings, this time by a score of 2–3.
In the bottom of the 5th inning at home against the Nationals on August 7, 2007, Bonds hit his 756th home run which caused a melee in the crowd. Hank Aaron appeared on the big screen and congratulated Bonds. The Giants went on to lose the game 8–6.
On August 9, 2007, Mark Sweeney was traded to the
Los Angeles Dodgers for AA second baseman Travis Denker. The trade was the first between the Giants and the Dodgers since 1985.
[23]
The discouraging theme of 2007 would continue as solid pitching was not backed up with offense.
Tim Lincecum held the
Chicago Cubs to two hits through eight innings on August 21, but the team scored only one run, losing to the Cubs by a score of 5–1.
On September 22, 2007, the Giants officially announced that the team would not re-sign
Barry Bonds for the 2008 season. After much speculation and debate, owner
Peter Magowan announced Bonds' departure at a press conference, stressing the fact that the Giants needed to get younger and start fielding a more efficient offense.
[24]
Barry Bonds played his last game as a San Francisco Giant on September 26, 2007. He went 0 for 3, driving a ball that was caught at the warning track in left-center field in his final at bat.
2008 Season: Without Bonds
The 2008 season marked the first year that Barry Bonds was not a member of the team since first signing with them in 1992. The Giants signed former
Philadelphia Phillies outfielder
Aaron Rowand to a 5-year, $60 million contract.
Barry Zito once again got off to a poor start, losing his first eight decisions. However, the team found hope in pitcher
Tim Lincecum. After going 7–5 in his 1st stint in
2007 with the Giants, he exploded onto the scene this year winning 4 straight before losing his 1st game of the year on April 29, 2008 to the
Colorado Rockies. Lincecum was selected to the
2008 MLB All-Star Game at
Yankee Stadium but was unable to pitch due to being hospitalized with
flu-like symptoms. He went on to win the 2008 NL
Cy Young Award, finishing at 18–5. He was the first Giant to do so since
Mike McCormick won it in 1967.
The Giants finished the season in 4th place in the NL West with a record of 72–90.
2009 Season: A mix of the Old and the New
During the off season, the Giants strengthened their pitching staff by acquiring veteran starting pitcher
Randy Johnson and relievers
Bobby Howry and
Jeremy Affeldt. The Giants also signed
infielders
Edgar Renteria and
Juan Uribe. Despite these new acquisitions however, questioned still lingered about the teams offensive abilities and whether they would be able to contend. Nevertheless, the team compiled a 49-39 record by the
2009 Major League Baseball All-Star Game, good enough for second place in the NL West.
In addition to the team's overall performance, the first half of the season provided several memorable moments for the players themselves. Highlights included Johnson earning his
300th career victory, becoming the 24th pitcher in Major League history to do so, as well as struggling starter
Jonathan Sánchez tossing a no-hitter against the
San Diego Padres on July 10, the first Giants no-hitter since 1977 when
John "The Count" Montefusco no-hit the Braves. 2009's pitching staff will go down as one of the strongest starting rotations in Giants history. With 3 Cy Young Winners (Lincecum, Zito, Johnson) and a possible 4th on the way (Cain), the Giant's pitching staff is a formidable threat to any team they face.
The Giants sent two of their starting pitchers to the All-Star Game.
Matt Cain, who did not pitch due to a minor elbow injury, and
Tim Lincecum, who was chosen to be the starting pitcher for the National League. It was Lincecum's 2nd straight all-star game appearance and Cain's 1st. The Giants narrowly missed sending a third player the game, as
third baseman Pablo Sandoval was a leading contender to be the fan's vote for the final roster spot. However the vote went to
Philadelphia Phillies outfielder Shane Victorino.
On July 10,
Jonathan Sánchez, spot starting in place of an injured
Randy Johnson and on his first start upon returning to the starting rotation n after a brief demotion to the bullpen, threw a
no-hitter against the
San Diego Padres. Sánchez issued no walks and struck out a career-high 11 hitters in the game, which was also his first major league
complete game and
shutout and the first no-hitter ever thrown at AT&T Park. He threw 110 pitches to complete the game, with a final score of 8-0 for the Giants.
On July 19, the club announced that
Sue Burns, the team's senior general partner who was a virtual fixture in her seat adjacent to the Giants' dugout, died early Sunday morning of cancer. She was 58. Burns was the widow of
Harmon Burns, who died in November 2006 at age 61. A financier in the San Francisco Bay Area, Harmon Burns was a key member of the investor group that purchased the Giants from Bob Lurie after the 1992 season and prevented them from moving to Tampa-St. Petersburg.
Rivalries
Giants-Dodgers
The historic rivalry between the Giants and the
Los Angeles Dodgers is the longest in baseball history, which began when these two National League clubs both played in
New York City (the Giants at the
Polo Grounds in Manhattan and the Dodgers at
Ebbets Field in Brooklyn). Both franchises date back to the nineteenth century, and both moved to
California in 1958, where the rivalry found a fitting new home, the cities of
Los Angeles and
San Francisco having long been rivals in economic, cultural, and political arenas. Although the feud between the
Boston Red Sox and the New York Yankees gets more publicity, the Dodgers/Giants rivalry is the oldest in
baseball. The Giants have won the World Series five times in their history, while the Dodgers have won the World Series six times. Since historically, the playoff race in the NL West has been fairly tight, the feud often leads to one team spoiling the other's chances of any hopeful playoff spot. An example of this phenomenon was in the 1951 season, where the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers faced off in a three game playoff. Supported by
Bobby Thomson's
Shot Heard 'Round the World, the Giants won the game 5–4, defeating the Dodgers in their pennant playoff series, two games to one. Another more recent example played out in the 2004 season when the Dodgers beat out the Giants for the NL West by two games after
Steve Finley broke a 3–3 tie, by hitting a walk-off Grand Slam in the bottom of the 9th inning, in the second-to-last game of the regular season, thus sealing the division for the Dodgers. Unlike other historic rivalries such as those between the
Cardinals and Cubs and the
Red Sox and Yankess, the rivalry between the Dodgers and Giants has been very even, with both teams experiencing success over the years.
Giants-Yankees
Though in different leagues, the Giants are also considered to have something of a feud with the
New York Yankees,
[25] [26] [27] beginning as a regional rivalry before the Giants moved to the
West Coast. Before the institution of
interleague play in 1997, the two teams would have little opportunity to play each other. However, they faced off in seven
World Series, in
1921,
1922,
1923,
1936,
1937,
1951, and
1962. The Yankees won five of these series. The first regular-season meeting between the teams occurred in 2002 at
Yankee Stadium. The teams met again at
AT&T Park in 2007.
Giants-Athletics
A geographic rivalry with the cross-bay
American League Oakland Athletics has grown larger as a result of the two teams meeting in the
1989 World Series, which Oakland won 4–0 (and which was interrupted by the
Loma Prieta Earthquake moments before Game 3). In addition, the introduction of
interleague play in 1997 that has called for the teams to play each other about 6 times every season since 1997. This rivalry, once limited to spring-training games, is called "The Battle of the Bay" because the two teams play on opposite sides of the
San Francisco Bay. They have played each other fairly evenly, despite differences that range from league, style of play, stadium, payroll, fan base stereotypes, and media coverage—all that have heightened the rivalry in recent years.
[28] Since the start of interleague play, the A's lead the series 34–28.
[29] The intensity of the rivalry and how it is understood varies among Bay Area fans. Some are fans of both teams. The “split hats” that feature the logos of both teams best embodies the shared fan base. Other Bay Area fans view the competition between the two teams as a "friendly rivalry" with little hatred.
This particular geographic rivalry is generally considered to be relatively friendly when compared to similar cases, including the Subway Series (New York Mets and New York Yankees), the Windy City Series (Chicago Cubs and Chicago White Sox), and the Freeway Series (Los Angeles Dodgers and Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim).
Baseball Hall of Famers
As of 2009, the
Major League Baseball Hall of Fame has inducted 66 representatives of the Giants (55 players and 11 managers) into the Hall of Fame, more than any other team in the history of baseball. The
Los Angeles Dodgers have the second most (45 players, 9 managers) and the Yankees with the third most (41 players, 11 managers).
Ford C. Frick Award recipients
Names in
bold
received the award based primarily on their work as Giants broadcasters.
- Ernie Harwell
- Russ Hodges
- Lindsey Nelson
- Lon Simmons
* Played as Giants
Other
The following inducted members of the Hall of Fame played and/or managed for the Giants, but either played for the Giants and were inducted as a manager having never managed the Giants, or managed the Giants and were inducted as a player having never played for the Giants:
- Cap Anson – inducted as player, managed Giants in 1898.
- Hughie Jennings – inducted as player, managed Giants from 1924–25.
- Bill McKechnie – inducted as manager, played for Giants in 1939.
- Frank Robinson – inducted as player, managed Giants from 1981–84.
- Casey Stengel – inducted as manager, played for Giants from 1921–23.
Broadcasters
Russ Hodges and
Lon Simmons are permanently honored in the Hall's "Scribes & Mikemen" exhibit as a result of winning the
Ford C. Frick Award in 1980 and 2004, respectively. As with all Frick Award winners, neither is officially recognized as an inducted member of the Hall of Fame.
Retired numbers
95px: Bill Terry: 1B, 1923–36; Manager, 1932–41
| 95px: Mel Ott: OF, 1926–47; Manager, 1942–48
| 95px: Carl Hubbell: P, 1928–43
|
95px: Willie Mays: OF, 1951–72
| 95px: Juan Marichal: P, 1960–73
| 95px: Orlando Cepeda: 1B, 1958–66
|
95px: Gaylord Perry: P, 1962–71
| 95px: Willie McCovey: 1B–OF, 1959–73 & 1977–80
| 95px: Jackie Robinson*
|
In 1944, Hubbell became the first National Leaguer to have his number retired by his team.
Terry, Ott and Hubbell played/managed their entire careers for the New York Giants. Mays began his career in New York, moving with the Giants to San Francisco in 1958; he did not play in 1953 due to his service in the
Korean War.
Also honored
John McGraw (3B, 1902–06; Manager, 1902–32) and
Christy Mathewson (P, 1900–16), who were members of the New York Giants before the introduction of uniform numbers, have the letters "NY" displayed in place of a number.
[30]
Broadcasters
Lon Simmons (1958–73, 1976–78, 1996–2002, 2006) and
Russ Hodges (1949–70) have a stylised old-style radio microphone displayed in place of a number.
The Giants present the
Willie Mac Award annually to the player that best exemplifies the spirit and leadership shown by
Willie McCovey throughout his career.
* Retired throughout the major leagues
Season records
All-time record: 10184-8724 (.539)
(most wins in MLB history)
Current roster
|
40-man roster
| Spring Training non-roster invitees
| Coaches/other
|
Pitchers
- -- Jeremy Affeldt
- 18 Matt Cain
- -- Jesse English
- 52 Alex Hinshaw
- -- Bob Howry
- -- Waldis Joaquin
- 55 Tim Lincecum
- 51 Noah Lowry
- -- Joseph Martinez
- 56 Osiris Matos
- 16 Pat Misch
- -- Luis Perdomo
- 69 Kelvin Pichardo
- 54 Sergio Romo
- 34 Billy Sadler
- 53 Jonathan Sánchez
- -- Henry Sosa
- 37 Jack Taschner
- 47 Merkin Valdéz
- 38 Brian Wilson (baseball)
- 22 Keiichi Yabu
- 75 Barry Zito
|
| Catchers
- 20 Steve Holm
- 1 Bengie Molina
- 48 Pablo Sandoval
Infielders
- 29 Brian Bocock
- 21 John Bowker (baseball)
- 7 Emmanuel Burriss
- 19 Kevin Frandsen
- 50 Conor Gillaspie
- 5 Travis Ishikawa
- 23 Ivan Ochoa
- -- Edgar Rentería
- 57 Ryan Rohlinger
- 8 Eugenio Vélez
Outfielders
- 14 Fred Lewis
- 10 Dave Roberts (outfielder)
- 33 Aaron Rowand
- 12 Nate Schierholtz
- 2 Randy Winn
|
| Pitchers
- -- Justin Miller (baseball)
Infielders
|
| Manager
Coaches
- 6 Tim Flannery (baseball) (third base)
- 26 Mark Gardner (baseball) (bullpen)
- 58 Bill Hayes (baseball) (bullpen catcher)
- 39 Roberto Kelly (first base)
- 9 Carney Lansford (hitting)
- 46 Dave Righetti (pitching)
- 17 Ron Wotus (bench)
* Not on active roster
† 15-day disabled list
updated 2008-12-11
•
|
Minor league affiliations
- AAA:
Fresno Grizzlies, Pacific Coast League
- AA:
Connecticut Defenders, Eastern League
- Advanced A:
San Jose Giants, California League
- A:
Augusta GreenJackets, South Atlantic League
- Short A:
Salem-Keizer Volcanoes, Northwest League
- Rookie:
Arizona League Giants, Arizona League
Radio and television
The Giants' flagship radio station is
KNBR, 680 AM, which refers to itself as "The Sports Leader".
Jon Miller,
Dave Flemming,
Greg Papa, and
Duane Kuiper take turns as play-by-play announcers. Miller and Flemming are the regulars. Typically, when games are televised on
KNTV, Kuiper replaces Miller on the radio. When Miller is out of town for his
ESPN Sunday Night Baseball
duties, Papa usually replaces him. Damon Bruce is responsible for the Post-Game show, and usually takes calls from KNBR's in-stadium studio, known as "The Bunker."
Giants' telecasts are split between
KNTV (over-the-air) and
Comcast SportsNet Bay Area (cable). Miller regularly calls the action on KNTV, while the announcing team for
CSN telecasts is Duane Kuiper and
Mike Krukow, affectionately known as "Kruk and Kuip". Papa occasionally does play-by-play on TV as well.
KNTV's broadcast contract with the Giants began in 2008, one year after the team and
KTVU mostly ended a relationship that dated to 1958, the team's first year in the Bay Area (KTVU continues to air Giants games that are part of the
Major League Baseball on Fox
package).
Home run call glitch
On
May 28,
2006, Flemming called the 715th career home run of Barry Bonds, putting Bonds second on the all-time home run list. Unfortunately, the power from his
microphone to the
transmitter cut off while the ball was in flight, so the radio audience heard only crowd noise. Papa took over the broadcast and apologized to listeners. Kuiper's TV call was submitted to the
Baseball Hall of Fame as an artifact, instead of the usual radio call.
The Curse of Coogan's Bluff
Just as the
Chicago Cubs have the
Curse of the Billy Goat and the
Boston Red Sox had the
Curse of the Bambino, the Giants have two superstitious ghosts. The first originates when the New York Giants left for California at the end of the 1957 season. Fans at the Giant's home ballpark, the Polo Grounds (located at a site in New York called Coogan's Bluff), professed that the Giants would never win a World Series away from New York. Since the 1958 season, the Giants have failed to win the Fall Classic, despite the near-misses of 1962 and 2002, and the 4-game sweep at the hands of Oakland in 1989.
The "Krukow Kurse"
Another curse popular amongst Giants fans is related to long time Giants personality
Mike Krukow.
[31] [32] [33] The "Krukow Kurse" is a "tongue-in-cheek" hex upon the Giants used to explain their more than fifty year failure to win the
World Series. It is attributed to current Giants broadcaster Mike Krukow based upon his yearly optimistic pre-season predictions that the Giants "have a chance" to win the
World Series. Once Krukow stops making such claims- says the legend- the Giants will in fact win the
World Series.
See also
- Giants statistical records and milestone achievements
- List of San Francisco Giants broadcasters
- San Francisco Giants general managers and managers
- Yomiuri Giants, a Japanese baseball team whose uniforms and logos resemble the San Francisco team's
- New York Giants (football team that was named after the Giants when both teams played at the Polo Grounds in New York)
- 2009 San Francisco Giants season
- Francisco Grande (The Giants' spring training camp from 1959-1982)
- The Fan
, a film starring Robert De Niro and Wesley Snipes that centers on the Giants.
References
- http://www.baseball-almanac.com/recbooks/rb_gam3.shtml
- 1984 All-Star Game
- 1993 San Francisco Giants Statistics and Roster
- 1993 San Francisco Giants Schedule, Box Scores and Splits
- 1994 San Francisco Giants Statistics and Roster
- Baseball-reference.com SFG 1995
- Baseball-reference.com SFG 1996
- Baseball-reference.com SFG 1997
- http://www.baseball-reference.com/leagues/NL/1997-standings.shtml
- Baseball-reference.com SFG 1998
- Baseball-reference.com SFG 1999
- Baseball-reference.com SFG 2000
- Baseball-reference.com NLDS 2000
- Baseball-reference.com SFG 2001
- Baseball-reference.com SFG 2002
- Baseball-reference.com NLDS 2002
- Baseball-reference.com NLCS 2002
- Baseball-reference.com SFG 2003
- Baseball-reference.com NLDS 2003
- Baseball-reference.com SFG 2004
- Baseball-reference.com Bonds stats
- Baseball-reference.com SFG 2006 schedule
- Giants make deal with rival Dodgers, sending Sweeney to L.A.. ''San Francisco Chronicle''.
- Bonds Goes From Out of the Park to Out of a Job
- Yankees Century: 100 Years of New York Yankees Baseball
- The Sports Encyclopedia: Baseball 2006
- The Book of Sports Trophies
- http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4176/is_20060623/ai_n16507923
- http://www.baseball-reference.com/games/head2head.cgi?teams=OAK&from=1997&to=2007&submit=Submit
- See List of Major League Baseball retired numbers#Similar honors.
- Interweb News Service.[1].Retrieved on 2008-04-13.
- Singlewhammy.com.[1].Retrieved on 2008-04-13.
- San Francisco Magazine.[1]. Retrieved on 2008-04-13.