Thursday, February 26, 2009

Johnson Has Lost a Little Off His Fastball but Not His Reputation

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — The San Francisco Giants, having faced 6-foot-10 Randy Johnson more than any sadist would suggest, figured after signing him this off-season that the coast was clear. No more sidearm fastballs at their ribs. No more leg-trembling at-bats against the most intimidating left-hander of their lives.

Or so they thought. In Johnson’s first throwing session against Giants hitters on Saturday, his new teammates took a few too many pitches for his taste. Unabashedly incensed, Johnson grumbled afterward, “Swing the stinking bat!”

“Something tells me the next guy who takes a pitch against Randy’ll get a fastball right in the cranium,” one Giants player said, requesting anonymity because he preferred not to be that guy.

Johnson may be 45, he may have lost a bit off his fastball and his back may have more scar tissue than Joan Rivers. But he remains a pitching force, and a fine fit for the lurching Giants.

His contemporaries Roger Clemens, Greg Maddux and Mike Mussina have all retired, and Tom Glavine’s elbow may not hold up for the Braves. But Johnson still stands tall, five victories short of 300.

Somewhat under baseball’s radar, after two operations in 10 months ruined his 2007 season and carried over into 2008, Johnson dominated the National League for the Arizona Diamondbacks in the second half of last year. He struck out fewer batters than usual and allowed a few more hits, but he posted a 2.41 earned run average that ranked fifth in the major leagues.

“I’m only as good as my back feels,” Johnson said, noting that his herniated disk has not been particularly troublesome for about a year. “My arm feels fine. As good as my arm feels, I don’t think I’ll be the pitcher my arm would allow me to be, because my back won’t tolerate the amount of force that it needs to provide to do the things that I did in the past.”

Beyond his 295 wins, that past includes two no-hitters, five Cy Young Awards and 4,789 strikeouts, second to Nolan Ryan.

Johnson pitched 194 innings last year, 10 of them in two minor league rehab games in April, over 32 starts. But his days of consecutive complete games or starts on three days’ rest are probably over, and he readily admits that his fastball has lost some zip.

Johnson’s fastballs averaged 93.6 miles an hour in 2003, when he was 40, but have steadily slowed to 90.4 last year, according to the Inside Edge scouting service. In part because of this, he throws fewer of them on the inside part of the plate, preferring to nibble on the outside corner more than in his flamethrowing past. But Johnson’s reputation has diminished less than his pep.

“Randy is known not necessarily as a headhunter, but he’s definitely someone where you take too big of a hack or lean in too far he’ll let you know,” said the Giants right-hander Matt Cain, who at 24 is close to half Johnson’s age. “I want to talk to him about how to take advantage of the inside corner, and not to let hitters dig in.”

Johnson, who agreed to a one-year, $8 million contract with $5 million more in incentives, was signed in part to mentor the Giants’ three young starters: Cain, Tim Lincecum (who won the 2008 National League Cy Young Award) and the rehabilitating Noah Lowry. His presence will also help San Francisco’s other primary starting pitcher, the troubled Barry Zito.

Zito and Johnson could not be more different in repertory or temperament. But Zito, who emerged in Oakland on a young staff and flopped after moving to San Francisco as a headlining free agent, said he expected to relax more with an older star in the rotation for a change.

“I feel younger,” Zito said of Johnson’s presence in the clubhouse. “I feel like I have a more fresh perspective coming into this season. I can just be a kid again, like I was when I came up.”

Johnson is reminded every day that he is no kid, not with lower-back issues he said he first experienced late in his second and final year with the Yankees, in 2006. He took two epidurals to numb the pain before his Game 3 start against the Detroit Tigers in the first round of the playoffs that year, but pitched poorly and lost. Surgery and a trade back to Arizona, where he had won a World Series and four of his Cy Young Awards, soon followed.

At 45, Johnson has a 25-year-old arm and a 65-year-old back. He undergoes about 30 minutes of back stretching exercises to throw reasonably safely; one awkward move could reinjure the disk and end his career.

“Being a tall guy and the incline of the mound, that puts a lot of stress on his back,” Dave Groeschner, the Giants’ trainer, said. “Throw a weakness in there and he has to be extra-aware of stretching and keeping his legs and arm in proper position.”

Johnson will do that in his first exhibition start on Friday, and continue the routine for as long as he pitches, which could be longer than most assume. One full year of pitching comfortably the way he did last summer would leave him fit to go again next year; only one pitcher in the post-1961 expansion era has made more than 30 starts at age 46, and that was the knuckleballer Phil Niekro.

Johnson’s pitches still zip half again as fast as Niekro’s did, though. And he has no intention of slowing down.

“I got through last year and proved that when I’m healthy and I give my back ample time to recover, I can pitch 180 or 190 innings,” Johnson said.

Asked if he could pitch until he was 50, he did not rule it out. Like opposing hitters — and even his own — Johnson will keep moving Father Time off the plate.

written by: ALAN SCHWARZ

San Francisco Giants expect Renteria to have a good season

During his 11 seasons in the National League, Renteria played in the steamy environs of Florida, Atlanta and St. Louis. Two years ago, he hit .332 for the Atlanta Braves.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — The Giants continue to express confidence that new shortstop Edgar Renteria will have a bounce-back year, citing his successful track record in the National League.

But what if the league had nothing to do with Renteria's sharp decline last season? What if he struggled with the Detroit Tigers last year and the Boston Red Sox in 2005 not because they are in the American League, but because they tend to be cold-weather cities through Memorial Day?

Renteria said there might be some truth to that theory.

"Cold weather is for football, man," he said. "That makes a big difference. You always want a fast start, but I'm the kind of player who never starts good. When the weather gets hot, I get hot."

When that statement was relayed to Bruce Bochy, the Giants' manager gulped hard — perhaps thinking of chilly fog that billows over the scoreboard at AT&T Park.

But Bochy likes what he has seen from Renteria this spring, and he doesn't admit to any concerns.

"You're talking about April in Detroit and Boston, where it's in the 30s and 40s," Bochy said. "Nobody gets used to that. Sure, it gets chilly in San Francisco, but I actually think it helps veteran players stay fresher late in the season."

Bochy also pointed out that Renteria has fared well at AT&T Park, which the stats support. Renteria's .344 career average at AT&T Park is his second highest in any N.L. park, trailing only Coors.

"He absolutely wore out the right-center gap," said center fielder Aaron Rowand, who was with the N.L. East-rival Philadelphia Phillies in '07. "He tore it up every game against us. I didn't see him last year, but he looks like the same guy to me. I'm excited he's here."

Renteria knows it's vital the Giants get off to a fast start. He said he'll do everything in his power to get his bat going in the No. 2 spot. And he has a good feeling about Pablo Sandoval and Fred Lewis, two hitters who will follow him in the lineup.

"They have great talent, man," Renteria said. "You can see in batting practice. They hit the ball everywhere. They know what they're doing at the plate. I think those guys are going to be very exciting this year."

  • Giants special assistant Felipe Alou was paying close attention as left-hander Jonathan Sanchez threw another impressive batting-practice session Sunday. Sanchez is scheduled to pitch the third game for Puerto Rico in the World Baseball Classic next month, facing the Dominican Republic team managed by Alou.
  • Barry Zito and Randy Johnson will pitch in a four-inning intrasquad game Tuesday, Bochy said. The Giants usually pitch non-roster players and prospects in intrasquad games, but both former Cy Young Award winners said they wanted to face hitters one more time before Cactus League games begin.
  • Left-hander Noah Lowry, who was home sick with the flu the two previous days, threw off flat ground.
  • The Giants will begin baserunning drills today. It's a final step in Lewis' rehab work after bunion surgery on his right foot. After some hesitation, Bochy said Lewis should be ready for Wednesday's Cactus League opener.
  • Former Giants Vinnie Chulk and Matt Herges are among the Cleveland pitchers scheduled to take the mound Wednesday. Indians left-hander Jeremy Sowers will start against Tim Lincecum.
  • By Andrew Baggarly

    originally publishes at: http://www.mercurynews.com/athletics/ci_11762771

    Die-hard fan strikes out at San Francisco Giants big FanFest

    The Register’s Web guy, Brian Kennedy, is a die-hard San Francisco Giants fan. As a byproduct of that devotion, he is a huge follower of Cy Young Award-winning ace pitcher Tim Lincecum.

    So, seeing as how Brian is scared to go into the big city by himself, I sucked it up and accompanied him to the Giants’ 16th annual FanFest on Saturday at AT & T Park. Before we go on, some disclaimers:
    • FanFest was free to the public, a big feather in the cap to the Giants in this dismal, downtrodden joke of an economy.

    • On the whole, the thousands of people who showed up seemed to have a good time.
    • Staff members — especially the ushers — were very friendly and helpful;

    • The team did the best it could to accommodate as many people as possible, given the size of the crowd.
    • Brian and I would probably go again, with one small but significant change to the procedure for getting autographs.

    We arrived nice and early. Brian brought his Sports Illustrated with Lincecum on the cover and a blue Sharpie pen.

    We soon found out that there is absolutely zero advantage to getting there early, because once the gates open it’s a free-for-all.

    Here was the basic set-up for the event, which ran from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

    Four autograph stations were set up throughout the ballpark, and three or four players and/or coaches were at each station for an hour. They then were supposed to rotate to the other stations.

    However, when we took a lap around the park in the first hour to scout out all four stations, Lincecum was nowhere to be found.

    A staffer told us he was at a VIP party in the suites, for which you needed a ticket.

    We asked her when he would be going down to the regular stations, and she said she didn’t think he would be because he was “so popular.”

    Not what we wanted to hear. Our theory was that there was no way Lincecum could blow off the general public.

    For weeks before the event, radio station KNBR 680 AM — the main sponsor of the event — had run commercials with Lincecum himself saying, “Come out to FanFest, me and my teammates will be signing autographs ...”

    That would leave the average guy — and if you look up “average guy” in the dictionary, Brian’s picture will be there — to believe that you can get a Lincecum autograph at FanFest.

    The truth was, the autograph lines were so long that there was no guarantee you would even meet the players before the hour was up.

    Brian’s strategy, eventually adopted by many, was to pick a line and hope that the right players rotated into your station by the time you made it up to the front.

    (The strategy worked out for me, because I got to meet Will Clark, one of my all-time favorites. Many, many people did not.)

    Two things happened at this point:

    1. People toward the front of each of the lines started telling others to “go ahead, I’m waiting” ... meaning if you really wanted the signature of third base coach Ron Wotus — who rotated into our station twice, by the way — you could take cuts. If you were in the back of the line and you really wanted to meet somebody like Will Clark, Matt Cain or Randy Johnson (the other one), well, better luck next year.

    2. Brian and I started to realize we might strike out, and like the rest of the masses, starting panicking.

    It was truly a magnificent example of crowd psychology.

    With Brian holding our place in one line, I would take a lap around the park each hour to see who had rotated in to the other three stations.

    Out of the five signing hours, I went on three laps. I never saw Lincecum or heard anybody buzzing about where he was.

    It’s possible he signed autographs for two of the five hours, precisely the two hours in which I did not take a lap. But — and I can’t prove this — I don’t think he ever signed for the general public.

    If I’m wrong, I apologize to the Giants in advance.

    I wouldn’t be writing this if Brian and I, speaking on behalf of many Giants fans, didn’t feel somewhat taken — specifically by the KNBR commercial.

    If Lincecum himself wouldn’t have said it on air, I wouldn’t have been surprised to hear that he was being saved for the VIPs and sponsors.

    By RANDY JOHNSON