Saturday, November 23, 2013

Giants sign former All-Star Hudson, retain Lopez

For the second time in three years, the San Francisco Giants have followed up a successful World Series triumph with a disappointing season in which they've failed to make the postseason. Trying as hard as ever to manufacture a team capable of climbing back to the pinnacle of baseball immortality, Giants general manager Brian Sabean has already done some early shopping and knocked off a few key needs on the team's Christmas list. With outfielder Hunter Pence signing a 5-year extension one day before the end of the 2013 regular season and pitcher Tim Lincecum inking a new two-year deal just weeks later, Sabean continued his early spending by landing another seasoned veteran in right-hander Tim Hudson as the team officially cut ties with Barry Zito. 

Hudson, 38, signed a two-year, $23 Million deal earlier this week. Along with his veteran leadership and valuable knowledge of the game, Hudson brings a repertoire of pitches that includes everything but the kitchen sink as well as over 200 career wins along with him to the bay area where he first established himself as a big league pitcher from 1999-2004 with the Giants' cross bay rival -- Oakland A's where he helped create 1/3 of the Athletics' "big three" alongside Mark Mulder and Barry Zito. Through 15 big league seasons, the last 9 of which with the Atlanta Braves, Hudson has been named to three All-Star teams and has yet to log a season in which he's recorded a record at or under .500. 2014 will see the return of Hudson to the baseball diamond after a fractured right ankle in July put an abrupt end to his 2013 campaign. A season in which the Braves finished the regular season 96-66, good enough for the number 2 seed in the National League before being bounced out of the postseason by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the National League Division Series. 
Hudson logged an 8-7 record and an ERA of 3.97 in 21 starts in 2013 before being bit by the injury bug. Better known for their dominant pitching over the last few seasons that saw a World Series Championship in 2010 and another just two seasons later in 2012, Hudson joins a Giants starting pitching staff that looked very much unlike itself this past season by boasting an overall ERA of 4.37, the third highest in the National League. What direction Sabean and skipper Bruce Bochy look to head in with the team's fifth starting pitching spot is not yet known. While Ryan Vogelsong remains an option, the Giants may look elsewhere and sign another lefty to join Madison Bumgarner, granted Matt Cain, Linececum and Hudson are all right-handers. One southpaw the Giants will for sure be bringing back, however, is reliever Javier Lopez. Coming off his best Major League season yet (1.83 ERA), Lopez, who's been nothing but nails for the Giants since being traded in 2010 from the Pittsburgh Pirates, entered the offseason as one of if not the top left-handers on the free-agent market and was said to have drawn the interest of at least 10 other ball clubs before San Francisco retained one of its key cogs in the bullpen.

While the Giants still have a hole to fill in left field, GM Brian Sabean has been very on point thus far in the offseason in addressing the teams top priorities. And given how Sabe's likes to do his work early in the off-season, don't be surprised if he makes a move anytime soon and surprises us with an early Christmas present before the holiday.


Follow me on Twitter: @FraserKnowsBest

No comments:

Post a Comment