Results tagged ‘ Mark DeRosa ’
A Game Within A Game
When Mark DeRosa’s bunt rolled past the yellow-lined target a few yards from home plate, he huffed out of the batting cage to a hail of trash talk.
“They didn’t bring me over here to bunt!” he shot back, laughing.
DeRosa was competing in the team bunting contest this afternoon, a little competition that served mostly as an opportunity to try out new insults on each other.
There were two teams: Starting pitchers vs. position players. Five players on each team. Closer Brian Wilson boycotted the whole thing, watching from a good distance with his arms crossed..
“Not worth watching if there are no relievers,” he said.
DeRosa was joined by Kevin Frandsen, Andres Torres, Pablo Sandoval and Eugenio Velez. Freddy Sanchez was offering tips to his fellow position players.
“You want to hit it right here,” Sanchez said to DeRosa and Sandoval, pointing to the fattest part of the bat. “Right here.”
By the end of the first round -the vague rules were devised and enforced by third-base coach Tim Flannery – DeRosa and Sandoval were out as were most of the pitchers.
“You got to use ash!” Sanchez was now advising Frandsen and Torres. “Maple’s too hard.”
By the end, Frandsen was the last man standing. Not sure what he won, other than the lasting respect of Freddy Sanchez.
A Glimpse of Spring
If you can’t make it to Scottsdale this year, set your DVR to Comcast SportsNet Bay Area at 4 p.m. Saturday afternoon. (See other times and dates below.)
You’ll get an hour of spring ball like you have never seen it.
“Inside the Clubhouse: Spring Training 2010 Part 1” takes you into the clubhouse in Scottsdale, where the cameras first follow longtime clubhouse manager Mike Murphy (and his dog, Bella) as he dotes on the players like a favorite uncle.
“Everybody’s here early,” he says on the first day of camp. “First time I’ve seen that in a long time.”
You’ll hear from Bengie Molina about how much it means to him to be back with the Giants after an uncertain off-season. New players Mark DeRosa and Aubrey Huff weigh in on their expectations for the 2010 club. You’ll see Manny Burriss and top prospects Thomas Neal and Darren Ford hold hands in prayer before digging into breakfast at their favorite spot, Lo-Lo’s Chicken and Waffles.
The cameras also followed Tim Lincecum on the day in November he found out he had won a second consecutive Cy Young, and they follow him to New York for the awards ceremony in January.
And you also get to see Pablo Sandoval’s famous hike to the top of Camelback Mountain during Operation Panda.
Tune in. It’s an insider’s experience of the sights and sounds of Giants baseball in the desert (plus Tim and his Cy Young).
Air dates on Comcast SportsNet Bay Area:
Sunday March 21 @ 5 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.; Tuesday March 23 @ 6:30 p.m.; Friday March 26 @ 1:30 a.m..
Then look for the debut of “Spring Training 2010: Part II” on Tuesday March 30 at 6:30 p.m.
Sabean’s Update on Lincecum, Etc.
Just got off the phone with Giants GM Brian Sabean, who has been trying to hammer out a contract with Tim Lincecum.
“The bottom line is we worked in earnest to negotiate a two-year deal but it looks like it’s not going to happen,” he said from the Giants complex in Scottsdale, where Buster Posey, Eugenio Velez, Dan Runzler, Manny Burriss and others are attending a conditioning camp in preparation for spring training.
“It looks like we’ll be going to arbitration on a one-year deal.”
The salary this season for Lincecum, the 25-year-old, two-time Cy Young winner, will be decided later this month by a panel of three professional arbitrators. Lincecum and his agent are asking for $13 million. The Giants offered $8 million.
Players must spend six years in the major leagues before they can become free agents. So the Giants have Lincecum through the 2013 season – four more years. Thus, Sabean explained, there is no urgency in locking Lincecum in to a multi-year contract.
As for the rest of the team, Sabean said the additions of outfielder Mark DeRosa and first baseman Aubrey Huff, plus a full season from second-baseman Freddie Sanchez (after he rehabs from off-season shoulder surgery), bolster an offense that already has proven talent.
“With this lineup, I think we can springboard off the 88 wins from last year and get into playoff contention,” he said
The reasons?
“Number One,” Sabean said, “we’ll have more experience on the field. Number Two, guys will be able to hit in the order where they have traditionally hit.”
Meaning, among other things, that catcher Bengie Molina no longer has to fill the clean-up spot. He likely will hit sixth.
And speaking of Bengie and Sabean’s comment in December that “that ship has sailed” only to sign him a month later . . .
“That ship had sailed,” he said. “As it turned out, he didn’t want to go to New York and we’re thankful. He is back in place to help the pitching staff and take the pressure off Buster Posey.”
Posey, he said, could spend most of the season in Triple A or be the backup in San Francisco. “We’ll know more after spring training,” Sabean said. “We’re keeping an open mind.”
In the meantime, the players are looking forward to seeing each other at FanFest this weekend at AT&T Park.
“You get everybody together in the same room,” Sabean said, “and there’s always a great vibe as they meet and greet each other after going their separate ways in the off-season. Although there really isn’t an off-season. Everybody’s working out or playing winter ball. So it’s fun to be together again and starting a new season.”

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