作者JeremyKSKGA (GIANTS!!!)
看板SFGiants
标题[新闻] Belt gets cast off wrist, could return in two weeks
时间Sat Jun 18 13:10:30 2011
http://0rz.tw/w6ELP
Belt gets cast off wrist, could return in two weeks
By Chris Haft and Adam Berry / MLB.com | 06/17/11 10:17 PM ET
OAKLAND -- With the almost overwhelming number of injuries the Giants have
suffered this season, the fact that their top prospect fractured his wrist
has almost been lost in the shuffle. But Brandon Belt is making progress and
could be back on the field within two weeks.
Belt had his cast removed Friday and was wearing a protective splint on his
left wrist, and the left-handed slugger was scheduled to begin throwing
Friday in Oakland as well. It still should be about a week until he begins
taking swings, Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. Belt was hit by a fastball
from the Cardinals' Trever Miller on May 31 and has been on the 15-day
disabled list since June 4.
Utility man Mike Fontenot, meanwhile, is not recovering from his left groin
strain as quickly as planned. Fontenot was still with the club in Oakland and
worked out on the field before the game after his rehab assignment with
Triple-A Fresno came to an abrupt halt on June 10 because he aggravated the
injury.
"He's not coming along quite as fast as we were hoping. It's hard to put when
he'll be ready," Bochy said. "He certainly could help."
Bochy said he was hoping Fontenot would be able to restart his rehab within
the next day or two, and he would ideally be back within the week to help off
the bench, at second base or at shortstop.
Rounding out the injury report, outfielder Darren Ford (sprained left ankle)
made his first rehab start for Fresno on Thursday night, going 0-for-3 with a
strikeout.
Zito's rehab likely to end after one more start
OAKLAND -- Barry Zito will make one more rehab start before the Giants decide
what to do with him, but that plan is seemingly becoming clearer by the day.
The left-hander, working his way back from a right mid-foot sprain, said he
felt good after Thursday's start for Triple-A Fresno, and Giants manager
Bruce Bochy said it was a fair assumption that Zito will rejoin the Major
League club in time for their June 28 doubleheader against the Cubs in
Chicago.
"He's stretched out. He's been in our rotation, so that would make all the
sense in the world for him to be in the mix there," Bochy said. "It's
something [general manager] Brian [Sabean] and I will talk about after his
next start."
Zito's pitching line for Fresno wasn't particularly impressive, as he gave up
four runs on five hits and two walks, but he also struck out six and threw 96
pitches. Bochy had originally said he wanted Zito to throw 100 or more, but
Zito said it wouldn't have made any sense for him to start another inning
just to throw four more pitches.
"As far as the foot goes, everything felt good on that front," said Zito, who
is 3-0 with a 3.20 ERA in three rehab starts. "The ball felt good coming out
of my hand. Offspeed was there for the most part. It was a good outing."
Making one of the doubleheader starts seems to be the most logical move for
Zito. If the Giants didn't use him, one of their regular starters would have
to pitch on short rest in his next outing, which is an unnecessary move when
they will have six starters ready to go at that point.
What will happen with Zito after that point, however, remains to be seen.
Bochy has repeatedly said that right-hander Ryan Vogelsong, who took Zito's
spot after his injury, will remain in the rotation -- not a big surprise
given his 4-1 record, 1.92 ERA and 54 strikeouts to 18 walks.
A's skipper knows Giants can contend
OAKLAND -- A's manager Bob Melvin refuted the skeptics who insist that the
Giants can't continue to survive while scoring poorly and relying on one-run
victories.
Melvin, who became Oakland's skipper June 9, cited the 2007 Arizona
Diamondbacks, one of the clubs he previously managed, as a team that survived
by living on the edge.
That year's D-backs ranked 14th in the league in runs and were outscored,
732-712. Yet Arizona won the National League West with a 90-72 record and
defeated the Chicago Cubs in the Division Series before losing to Colorado in
the NLCS. Those D-backs posted a Major League-best 32-20 record in one-run
games during the regular season.
Compare that with this year's Giants, who entered Friday 39-30 despite having
scored as many runs as they had allowed (243). San Francisco leads the Majors
with a 19-10 mark in one-run games. Melvin echoed what various Giants have
repeated: Thriving in those circumstances becomes a state of mind.
"You start playing a lot of them and have success in them, and when you're in
those types of games, everybody's confident that you're going to win," Melvin
said.
Chris Haft is a reporter for MLB.com. Adam Berry is an associate reporter for
MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball
or its clubs.
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