Two-year extension for Giants GM

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Nov 20, 2005
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By Janie McCauley
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Contra Costa Times

Article Launched:07/13/2007 11:55:09 AM PDT

SAN FRANCISCO -- Giants general manager Brian Sabean agreed to a two-year contract extension on Friday, a deal that also includes a club option for the 2010 season.
Sabean is in his 11th season as San Francisco's GM. The Giants haven't made the playoffs since 2003, and start the second half at 38-48 and 101/2 games behind San Diego in the NL West.

Sabean and the Giants began talks earlier than either side expected. Owner Peter Magowan's stance during spring training was that Sabean's future would be addressed at the end of the season.

"When you look at Brian's body of work over his 11 seasons with the Giants, it's evident that he is a shrewd baseball man who will find a way to get this team back to where we all want it to be," Magowan said in a statement. "While we are certainly disappointed with the way that things have gone this season, I'm fully confident that Brian and Bruce (Bochy) will get us back on the right track."

One of Sabean's biggest decisions in the coming offseason is expected to involve Barry Bonds -- re-signed this season to a $15.8 million, one-year deal -- but at 42, and four home runs shy of Hank Aaron's career record of 755, winding down a remarkable career.

The Giants won their first NL West title in eight years during Sabean's initial season in 1997. San Francisco also won the division in 2000 and '03, getting the wild card in 2002 when the Giants fell six outs short in the World Series to the Angels.

"Obviously, I am thankful and looking forward to having the opportunity to move this team in the right direction," Sabean said. "Clearly, the past 21/2 seasons have been a disappointment to all of us in the front office and to our fans. Moving forward, our goal is to win at the major league level while also developing a younger roster."

In February, Magowan pledged his support for Sabean despite the fact the Giants have missed the playoffs for three straight years. Magowan didn't point all the blame at the GM and said he fully expected Sabean to stick around.

"We're all on the hot seat. I'm on the hot seat," he said.

Sabean, who has said he would like to stay in San Francisco forever, said at the time he understood Magowan's need to wait. Sabean, who joined the Giants in September 1996, was in the same situation in 2002 and didn't receive an extension until after the World Series.


~k.
 

ReKz

Sicc OG
May 26, 2002
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I don't think it'll be so bad...we need to wait 'til the trade deadline to see what approach he takes (rebuild vs. stick to "win now", etc.)
 

V

Sicc OG
Apr 25, 2002
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  • V

    V

ReKz said:
I don't think it'll be so bad...we need to wait 'til the trade deadline to see what approach he takes (rebuild vs. stick to "win now", etc.)
LOL at stick to "win now"
 
Nov 20, 2005
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ReKz said:
I don't think it'll be so bad...we need to wait 'til the trade deadline to see what approach he takes (rebuild vs. stick to "win now", etc.)
Giants tell Sabean to rebuild
By Andrew Baggarly
MEDIANEWS STAFF
Contra Costa Times

Article Launched:07/14/2007 03:05:14 AM PDT

SAN FRANCISCO -- The Giants handed Brian Sabean a new contract to remain as their general manager Friday. Then they handed him a hard hat.
Sabean signed a two-year deal with a club option for 2010 to rebuild a franchise that has fallen into disrepair around an aging Barry Bonds. Financial terms were not disclosed.

For the first time in a decade, Giants upper management acknowledged the club faces a rebuilding effort. And managing partner Peter Magowan said he would be willing to tolerate losing in 2008 as the team develops younger talent.

"If I have to, the answer is yes," Magowan said. "The hope, particularly with our team that depends so much on our fine young pitchers, is that we can surprise ourselves. But if we need to develop patience to sustain winning in a few years, we're prepared to do that.

"I don't want anyone to think we don't want to win in '08. We do. But it will be a different philosophy, a different emphasis than has been the case the last several years."

Sabean said he and Magowan began discussing an extension a week ago, when the two men started hatching plans for the trade deadline and beyond. Sabean said he pushed the discussions along because he has strong personal ties in San Francisco and didn't want to leave.

"That heightened my sense of urgency," he said.

Said Magowan: "By making the decision now, it puts Brian in a much better position to do what he feels he needs to do in terms of making trades and making assessments. We can get a running start on the '08 season by making these moves now."

A fire sale is expected soon, but Sabean cautioned he isn't returning to run the Giants like an expansion franchise.

"We like winning," Sabean said. "I didn't stay here to rebuild to go through years to turn it around. Whether we can remains to be seen, but that's the focus."

Sabean's first task will be a complete organizational review to determine how the club can more efficiently allocate funds and personnel. He didn't indicate he would conduct a housecleaning of his department, though.

The roster is another matter. The Giants are expected to move several veterans, both to free themselves of future payroll commitments and to open spots for younger players such as Fred Lewis and Kevin Frandsen.

Asked how much longer before he would start to move veterans, Sabean pointed to the July 31 trade deadline.

"Within the next run of games, obviously," Sabean said. "From now until the deadline, every series is a big series."

One of the chief criticisms of Sabean's tenure is the Giants' failure to produce position players. Sabean and Magowan acknowledged the club needs to add young hitters, perhaps scanning the trade market for them instead of acquiring rental players.

"If you look at teams like Los Angeles, San Diego, Atlanta, even the New York Mets, in all those lineups there's a good blend of players developed by the system and free-agent players," Magowan said. "We don't have that kind of balance on our team. We've got to strive to get a better one in the future."

Yet Magowan said the farm system under Sabean has been "overly maligned," pointing out the many pitchers on major league rosters that began in the Giants organization.

"We've emphasized pitching for a good reason," Magowan said. "It takes less time to develop college pitchers than position players, and pitching is highly valued on the trade market.

"There's 24 other players on major league rosters developed by Giants, and 21 are pitchers. We need to strive for better balance overall, but that would rank us seventh out of 30 teams. That is a chief way of evaluating your general manager. I don't think the organization has been given any credit for that."

Sabean agreed, saying his reputation for favoring established players is unfounded.

"It's extremely unfair," Sabean said. "The formula certainly backfired, but I'm not going to apologize for trying to put the best team on the field."

Ultimately, Magowan said that Sabean was the right person to lead the Giants into the post-Bonds era.

"When you look at Brian's body of work over his 11 seasons with the Giants, it's evident that he is a shrewd baseball man who will find a way to get this team back to where we all want it to be," Magowan said.

Contact Andrew Baggarly at [email protected].

~k.
 
Sep 25, 2005
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Midget Fans

you guys have a beautiful field. my first time there ever.

way more Dodger Fans at At&T then Giants fans in LA.
outright plenty of Dodger fans all over the stadium.

even though we tried hard to give you guys the game, you guys didint have enough talent to take it. its been that kind of year for yall.


anyhow, gl tomorrow. you guys should take it, but if you dont you will go down as being swept again by the Dodgers at home, only this time it might be at the hands of what could possibly be the worst pitcher in all of baseball (Brett Tomko)
 
Jan 5, 2006
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I think the giants have the best stadium in baseball. Waterfront park, nice view all around. You can see Oakland Colliseum from ATT park with cameras of course, you could even see candlestick (monster park).