Mike Yastrzemski, especially when you compare his numbers to his grandfather's, might have one of the most fascinating careers of the moment. Yaz didn't make his MLB debut til he was 28, after years of toiling in the minors, and since then he's averaged 3.5 WAR and .241 per season while still being one of the most respected Giants of the current regime. His best statistical season was during the pandemic-shortened 2020, and it would have given him an All-Star nod that has still evaded him. He's never played a season with more than 148 games, and he's never hit more than 57 RBIs in a season. Yet whenever he's healthy he always hits well, plays great defense and is well liked.
Yaz...feels like he would have been more at home in the time his grandpa Carl played. Back then, they called you up at like 21, you played for 20 years, you didn't have to swing at every pitch and you didn't get hurt as often. It's just upsetting that the second he really finds his sweet spot in the majors is right around the end of his peak. Not that he's not an exciting and crucial player, even at 34, but I suppose the Giants wish they got more of 20s Yaz rather than the guy who many get injured right when he really gets going.
Yaz is a perfect summation of the Giants to this point: a guy capable of great things who does very well but for an infuriatingly narrow period of time. Thankfully Yaz, like the Giants, are widening that period this year, being a very strong third place team with aspirations of dethroning the top two.
Are there disappointments this season for the Giants? Of course. Willy Adames is not playing as well as promised, LaMonte Wade simply isn't hitting, Justin Verlander has been simply passable, Ryan Walker's dominance is absent, and Patrick Bailey, the catcher so promising that the Giants traded Joey Bart to Pittsburgh to keep him as the starter, hasn't hit above .200 yet. There are definite flaws, places where the answer hasn't shown up yet, and some close recent losses. But ultimately, this is a team that can hit, and has a lineup where nearly everyone has over 10 RBIs.
Yaz, alongside Matt Chapman, Heliot Ramos, Jung Hoo Lee and Wilmer Flores, make up a very strong, potent, powerful core. Lee is definitely for real, leading the team in hits and still managing 24 RBIs. Chapman continues to be one of the best third basemen in the game and also consistently hits home runs. Flores, for a period, led the league in RBIs, and his 33 is still a great mark. And yes, with Robbie Ray and Logan Webb in peak form, and enough young guys that will eventually get the idea, the pitching is in great shape as well.
The Giants just look very good, and have managed some excellent wins, even in spite of having two teams that are better in the same division. The upset is possible, and if this lineup keeps producing at this rate, it will become more and more of a certainty.
Coming Tonight: The Orioles are down a lot of their best pitchers right now, meaning one of their rare offseason signings is actually coming in handy right now.