Showing posts with label brandon belt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brandon belt. Show all posts

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Baby Giraffe Meets Brandon Belt, Or Vice Versa

In a story so sickeningly adorable I actually threw up in a pink Red Sox hat, Brandon Belt recently took pictures with the baby giraffe named after him. While the Giants rookie first baseman isn't enjoying the ROY caliber season many of us expected, Belt did become the recipient of a nickname spreading in popularity just as quickly as teammate Pablo Sandoval's "Kung-Fu Panda" did. Announcer Duane Kuiper bestowed the nickname "Baby Giraffe" upon Belt due to his, let's say, lack of grace in the outfield.

The fans like it and so does Six Flags Animal Kingdom which named a giraffe born last Friday after the Giant. The giraffe Brandon, 6'2, is already closing in on the real Brandon, 6'5. All right, get ready to be nauseated by cuteness. Here are the pictures of the two meeting thanks to The Veteran and the Rook blog...


Brandon explaining,"Opulence, I has it."


Baby Giraffe caught looking at an 0-2 off speed pitch.


Tim Lincecum is going to be so pissed Brandon Belt fed that to a giraffe.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Believing In Brandon Belt

Friend of Off Base and talented writer, Julian Levine of Splashing Pumpkins, and I shared a pre-season prediction about Brandon Belt winning the National League Rookie of the Year. But after some early hiccups, Julian had to swing by to remind me not to give up on Belt. Here's the guest post.

Coming into 2011, Brandon Belt hype was at an all-time high. And, well, why wouldn't it be? The 2009 fifth-round pick had rocketed himself into top prospect status, hitting .352/.455/.620 across three levels of the minors in his first professional season. Belt was the real deal. A guy who combined astounding plate discipline with solid power, gold glove potential at first, a strong arm, and acute baserunning skills.

I myself had immediately fallen in love with Belt for one particular reason: his on-base abilities. Over the last three seasons, the San Francisco Giants had ranked 21st, 30th, and 28th in the majors in BB%, so it was refreshing to see a guy who could draw walks.

Anyway, everything with respect to Belt looked good entering the season. He had ranked 23rd in Baseball America's top 100 prospects list, and Keith Law had him at 17th overall. Dan Szymborski had released his 2011 Giants ZiPS projections on January 4, and Belt was forecasted to hit .266/.357/.440 as a rookie. Not too shabby. And of course, in Spring Training, Belt began where he'd left off -- posting a .282/.338/.479 slash line over 72 at-bats.

He looked ready for the majors, but few expected him to start the year there. Service time issues and a crowded roster would most likely leave him starting the year in Triple-A Fresno. That was, until Cody Ross suffered a calf injury that put him on the Disabled List to start the season. Belt would enter 2011 as the Giants' starting first baseman. I was excited.

But things didn't go so well. In 52 at-bats, he struck out 13 times, and he seemed to be hitting the ball on the ground too much (22 GB/13 FB). The plate discipline was there (eight walks in 60 PAs), but Belt just seemed too passive at the plate, and the consensus among scouts was that he needed more seasoning:

He needs more time in the minor leagues. Pitchers are disrupting his timing. He isn’t confident up there. He still has terrific plate discipline, but we all know rookies cannot always count on getting the borderline calls from umpires.


So when Cody Ross was activated from the DL on April 20, Belt was optioned to Triple-A. Where he promptly returned to raking. In his second Triple-A stint, Belt OPS'd .994 over 132 PAs; and in the wake of the notorious Buster Posey collision, Belt received a call-up.

Of course, as luck would have it, Belt landed on the Disabled List just two games into his second run at the majors, as a hit-by-pitch left a small fracture in his left wrist.

The latest update has Belt returning within two weeks. From what I've seen, he's not an adequate defensive left-fielder, and with Aubrey Huff heating up (OPSing over .900 in the month of June), Belt will have to fight for playing time at first. But I still can't wait to see what he does.

At the beginning of the year, I had Brandon Belt winning the 2011 Rookie of the Year. In retrospect, that prediction looks rather ridiculous -- as we all know ROY awards are built for RBI machines, not on-base machines (just ask Jason Heyward). Nevertheless, my expectations remain high. Belt will get on base. He won't be a slugger, but he should be able to hit as many as 20 home runs over the course of a full season. And he's still got that plus glove at first base.

Over the past few years, the Giants have developed some pretty nice homegrown talent -- Madison Bumgarner, Buster Posey, and Pablo Sandoval to name a few. And though things haven't gone well so far this year for Belt, the Giants seem to have developed yet another gem to add to their collection.

Thanks Julian. You can read more of his work at Splashing Pumpkins, Beyond the Boxscore and MLB Daily Dish. He's busy. You can also follow him on Twitter @SPGiantsBlog.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Curveballs for Jobu

Curveballs for Jobu is Offbasepercentage's daily trip around the ballparks.

Today's honorary bat boy is Terry Puhl.














Well kids, it looks like I'm back in charge of Jobu today because uncle Derwood wrote one and is in some kind of exhaustion coma. Not to be confused with the lazy comma. I suffer from, that. Let's go to some baseball before I try to be clever again...

Giants 10, Dodgers 0.
The Giants finally got in the win column after dropping the first two games of the series to the Dodgers. Brandon Belt continued his streak of firsts collecting his first stolen base. The rookie went 0-3 but had two walks. Half of that sentence made no sense to Jeff Francoeur. I love Buster Posey and find myself rooting for the Giants (J.T. Snow represent!) but a Pat Burrell, Aubrey Huff, Aaron Rowand outfield should just have Yakity Sax playing over the speakers the whole time they're out there.

Yankees 10, Tigers 6.
Mark Teixeira, A-Rod and Russell Nathan Jeanson Coltrane Martin Jr. all homered for the Yankees who managed to escape an A.J. Burnett start with a victory. Brad Penny was the victim of the Yankee shelling but he goes home to Karina Smirnoff so it's hard to feel too bad for him.

Padres 11, Cardinals 3.
So, Brad Hawpe and Orlando Hudson are on the Padres. I don't know how the Padres scored 11 runs but after a quick glance at the boxscore, I think Guy Fieri pitched a scoreless 7th inning for San Diego. I'm not good at my job. Albert Pujols finally hit his first homer of the year.

Orioles 3, Rays 1.
The Buckshowalter Express keeps rolling over its competition. Chris Tillman tossed six no-hit innings and Brian Roberts hit a home run for the 2-0 Orioles. Mark Reynolds only struck out twice, much to my chagrin.

Phillies 9, Astros 4.
Cliff Lee struck out 11 and walked zero much to the surprise of no one. I love baseball but the Astros, as an organization, just make me sad. Like an ugly puppy.

Also played...
White Sox 8, Indians 3.
Blue Jays 6, Twins 1.
Royals 5, Angels 4.
Rangers 12, Red Sox 5.
Mariners 5, A's 2.
Cubs 5, Pirates 3.
Nationals 6, Braves 3.
Reds 4, Brewers 2.
Mets 6, Marlins 4 (10).
Rockies 3, Diamondbacks 1.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Curveballs for Jobu

Curveballs for Jobu is Offbasepercentage's daily trip around the ballparks.

Todays honorary bat boy is Benny Agbayani.














Marlins 6, Mets 2.
Josh Johnson wasted no time proving that last year's breakout performance was no fluke by taking a no-hitter into the seventh inning. Of course, it was against the Mets who seem to just ooze futility as an organization these days. I may have had a few questionable comments about the Marlins John Buck signing but he made me look like a fool (more of a fool?) by hitting a grand slam. Everbody's favorite baseball tweeter @LomoMarlins also added a homer. Carlos Beltran returned to the Mets lineup going 1-4, so there's that.

White Sox 15, Indians 10.
If Indians fans knew they'd get 10 runs on opening day, they probably would have been ecstatic. But they still got routed by the Sox in a game that was never even close. Adam Dunn launched one in his Sox debut. Thanks to MLB.TV, I didn't have to listen to Hawk Harrelson which is why my laptop isn't smashed into bits right now.

Blue Jays 13, Twins 3.
Blog enemy Carl Pavano tossed some BP for the fellas at the Rogers Center giving up seven earned over four innings. J.P. Arencibia, Jose Bautista and Adam Lind all took Pavano yard. The young Jays catcher wasn't finished either as he hit another homer in the 8th inning. Justin Morneau went 0-4 in his first game back from a season ending concussion that cost him half of last season.

Dodgers 4, Giants 3.
The defending champs fell to 0-2 but Brandon Belt hit his first career home run. I've watched a few of his plate appearances and I don't see any way that the Giants can send him down unless I just jinxed him and he goes on a 0-46 un-tear.

Orioles 4, Rays 1.
Who had Jeremy Guthrie outdueling David Price? Price looked filthy at times and struck out seven over seven but allowed all four earned runs. Brian Roberts hit a triple which is good for my fantasy team because I wasn't sure he was still alive. Mark Reynolds only struck out once, much to my chagrin.

Pirates 6, Cubs 3.
Andrew McCutchen is good at the baseball. The Cubs, not so much.

Royals 2, Angels 1.
Kila Ka'aihue hit the walk off home run against Michael Kohn as Rehab's "Drinking Problem" played in my bedroom.

Also played...
Rangers 9, Red Sox 5.
Mariners 6, A's 2.
Phillies 5, Astros 4.
Diamondbacks 7, Rockies 6 (11).