san francisco giants we've got you all covered: june … · 6 p.m. - giants rout rockies, 19-2...
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Monday - June 227:35 a.m. - Mike Krukow joins Murph & Mac5 p.m. - Gabe Kapler joins Tolbert, Krueger & BrooksTuesday - June 237:35 a.m. - Duane Kuiper joins Murph & Mac4:30 p.m. - Dave Flemming joins Tolbert, Krueger & BrooksWednesday - June 247:35 a.m. - Mike Krukow joins Murph & Mac11:50 a.m. - Jon Miller joins Papa & LundThursday - June 257:35 a.m. - Duane Kuiper joins Murph & Mac5 p.m. - Farhan Zaidi joins Tolbert, Krueger & BrooksFriday - June 267:35 a.m. - Mike Krukow joins Murph & MacSaturday & Sunday - June 27-28Best of 2012 Cain Perfect GameNLDS Game 5 vs. CincinnatiWorld Series Game 4 at Detroit
GIANTS INTERVIEW SCHEDULE
Monday - June 226 p.m. - Bumgarner Blanks Reds (6/28/12)Tuesday - June 236 p.m. - Giants Rout Rockies, 19-2 (7/15/19)Rest of Week is TBA
THIS WEEK IN GIANTS HISTORY JUNE
221951
20-year-old Willie Mays hit a 10th-in-ning home run, the first of his 22 extra-
inning home runs, off 42-year-old Dutch Leonard of the Cubs. It was a three-run shot that gave the Giants a 9-6 win.Box
JUNE
232003
Stealing second base at Pacific Bell Park in the 11th in-ning, Barry Bonds
became the first player to hit 500 homers and steal 500 bas-es in his career. Box
JUNE
241950
With just 11 career homers, catcher Wes Westrum had three home runs and
a triple as the Giants beat Cin-cinnati 12-2. The Giants belted seven home runs (Hank Thompson, Alvin Dark, Whitey Lockman and Monte Irvin hit
the others) in the game, with Westrum driving in four runs and scoring five. Box
JUNE
252014
Tim Lincecum of the no-hit the Padres for the second time in his career in a 4-0
victory. He had already turned the trick against the Friars on July 13, 2013. He is the second pitcher following Hall of Famer Addie Joss to no-hit the same team twice. Box
JUNE
261938
Carl Hubbell won his 200th career game, as the Giants beat the visiting
Cubs, 5 - 1. Box
JUNE
271984
In the 3rd inning against the Reds, Giants outfielder Dusty Baker swiped
second base, third, and home, garnering three of his four sea-son steals. Baker swiped sec-ond, then next batter walked and he got caught in a run-down. Dusty stole third during the rundown and just kept run-ning. San Francisco won 14-9. Box
JUNE
282012
Madison Bumgar-ner pitched a one-hitter for a 5-0 win over the Reds. It was
the fourth straight shutout by Giants pitchers, setting a fran-chise record. Box
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS WE'VE GOT YOU ALL COVERED: JUNE 22-28Oracle Park 24 Willie Mays Plaza San Francisco, CA 94107 Phone: 415-972-2000sfgiants.com sfgigantes.com giantspressbox.com @SFGiants @SFGigantes @SFGiantsMedia
PRESENTED BY
POST PANDEMIC PLANNING - ADAPTING TO THE NEXT NORMAL Konica Minolta has evolved their existing virtual events series, “We’ve Got You All Covered," which was devel-oped primarily as a pandemic response and remote work enablement series, into a new program for busi-ness planning and returning to work in a post COV-ID-19 world. The new series, “Post Pandemic Planning - Adapting to the Next Normal,” helps businesses plan for reopening and offers solutions for what the “next normal” looks like for businesses moving into the fu-ture. Click here for the series schedule
THIS WEEK'S INSIDE GIANT MOMENTS PODCAST EPISODE (PRES. BY T-MOBILE)
Inside Giant Moments takes you behind the scenes of the most iconic moments in Gi-ants history with the players who made these moments, memories. Host Mark Wil-lard of KNBR dives in each week with exclusive inter-views on the official San Francisco Giants podcast. Subscribe Here
Rich Aurilia Years with SF: 1995-2003,
2007-2009Debuts Thurs., June 25
From his big league debut to completing his career a re-spected veteran, this All-Star shortstop is a beloved Giant. Aurilia had an explosive 2001 season and had a unique per-spective on baseball history, hitting in front of Barry Bonds.
EPISODE 15
NEWS & NOTES Giants first-round pick Patrick Bailey was awarded the 2020 Johnny Bench award last Thursday,
which is annually given to the nation's top Division I male and female college catchers. He is the 21st player to receive the award since its inception and the third member of the Giants organi-zation to have won the collegiate award. Buster Posey won the award in 2008 while Joey Bart claimed it in 2018.
During the month of June, you will have the op-portunity to commemorate your special moment on the scoreboard at Oracle Park. Pick a theme such as graduation, Father’s Day, birthdays or Pride month and include your personalized mes-sage. Receive a downloadable photo and see your message running in the ballpark through our live stream scoreboard cam. The program is a fun-draising opportunity as you’ll be able to choose which non-profit will receive the net proceeds from your donation. For more info click to visit http://www.sfgiants.com/livescoreboard
Friday - June 264 p.m. - Yaz Returns to Boston September 17, 2019 at Boston
Games air on SFGiants Facebook, Twitter & YouTube platforms
PRESENTED BY
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD
We've Got You All Covered June 22-28, 2020
COACH SPEAK: BRIAN BANNISTER Each week we'll get to know the new Giants coaches with a few fun ques-tions in this space. This week it's Direc-tor of Pitching Brian Bannister.
Is it true that you were born in the hospital across the street from Scottsdale Stadium? You’ve obviously played at the stadium before as a pro in Spring Trainings with Kansas City but did you ever play there as a kid growing up in the Scottsdale area?
BB: My parents both attended Arizona State Uni-versity from out-of-state, and afterwards they decided to stay in the valley. Me and my brothers were born in the hospital across the street from Scottsdale Stadium. I did play in the stadium as an amateur, but some of my best performances were actually at the Papago complex (which will be our new minor league spring training home).
One of your hobbies outside of baseball is pho-tography, what are some of your favorite things to photograph? Do you have a favorite picture (or set of pictures) that you’ve taken?
BB: I enjoy photographing people outside of their typical environment, such as athletes enjoying their hobbies, families, travel, fashion etc. instead of just playing their sport. I feel like this gives people a more well-rounded insight into who they really are outside of the spotlight. My favor-ite photo shoot was of NBA player Shawn Marion (nicknamed the Matrix) in an old warehouse that we designed to look like a scene from the Matrix movies.
Speaking of movies, if you’re seeing a film at the movie theater, what is your favorite thing to snack on?
BB: Plain popcorn. Nice and simple. My kids want all the other stuff.
Baseball has been a huge part of your life given that your father was a pitcher in the Majors for 15 seasons. You’ve been around a lot of baseball stadiums as a kid and an adult. Do you have an all-time favorite?
BB: Fenway Park will always have a special place in my heart because of the history and the oppor-tunity I had to win a World Series there as a coach. My go-to stadium as a scout is the Salt Lake City Bees (AAA Angels) because I love watching a baseball game with the snow-capped mountains of Park City, UT in the background. Just breath-taking.
GIANTS GEOMETRY (PRES. BY ORACLE) Oracle Park Educational Tours have gone digital! We have tak-en the foundation of our existing Educational Tours program and created virtual learnings and supplemental activities that adhere to Common Core academic standards. Emmy Award winning broadcaster Dave Flemming teaches two lessons on Giants Geometry and Lou Seal even joins the fun to participate in the activities. Through these baseball-themed video les-sons, our goal is to engage students grades 3rd-5th learning
from home in a new way and enrich in-class curriculum for educators by allowing Giants baseball to tell the story. Please visit sfgiants.com/distancelearning
SEASON TICKET MEMBER HEROES OF THE WEEK Each week we'll highlight a Giants season
ticket member or members who are stepping up during this tremendous time of need. This week we salute the work of the alumni from Touro University in Vallejo .
Lower Box Season Ticket Member Andrea Garcia is the Associate Vice President of Ad-vancement at Touro University in Vallejo and nominated a very special group of students on the front lines of this pandemic
Countless Touro alums are employed in the medical field and have been fighting the CO-VID-19 pandemic on the front lines. From Dr. Jasmine Singh, a psychiatrist who is helping people deal with loneliness and anxiety as a result of the physical distancing, to Dr. Geoff Luecker, who works in the ER at a New York City Hospital, are out working to help fight the pandemic.
Read their stories and more from the Touro Alumni on the Front Lines post on their website by clicking here
GIGANTES PODCAST (PRES. BY T-MOBILE)
Erwin Higueros interviews current players, former Giants players, as well as several Giants staff mem-bers, focusing on their culture on the new Gigantes Podcast, launching this week. Listen here
In episode two, Nick Ortiz, the Quality Assurance coach, talks about his job responsibilities with the Giants, his baseball experience and how the oppor-tunity to be part of the San Francisco Giants coach-ing staff came about. In addition, he talks about the importance of having a coach who speaks Spanish on Gabe Kapler's staff.
2020 MLB DRAFT RECAP Below is a rundown of the seven picks that the Giants made in the 2020 MLB First-Year Player Draft. Click here for a recap of the 2020 Giants Draft
Round Name Position 1 Patrick Bailey C 2 Casey Schmitt 3B Comp Nick Swiney LHP Comp Jimmy Glowenke SS 3 Kyle Harrison LHP 4 R.J. Dabovich RHP 5 Ryan Murphy RHP
COMMUNITY CORRIDOR CLICK FOR THE GIANTS COVID-19 COMMUNITY RESPONSE BLOG
On Father’s Day, Forever Giant Bill Laskey surprised 16 male seniors and staff from the Sagebrook Senior Living facility by participating in a virtual call. Bill shared stories, answered questions and truly made a difference in the lives of these men who are currently isolated from their loved ones due to COVID-19.
In an effort to keep youth connected during times of isola-tion, the Giants Community Fund has launched Junior Gi-ants at Home, presented by Bank of America. During the 4-week virtual program, players are invited to attend two age-specific practices weekly that feature fun warm-ups, baseball skills and drills and exclusive training videos from the San Francisco Giants Coaching Staff Throughout the season, participants are also introduced to important lessons in bully-ing prevention, health, education and character development. Live practices hosted in Español are now available. Last chance to join this summer, register for free at jrgiantsathome.org Summer Season 2 begins Monday, July 6.
GIANTS YOUTUBE CONTENT
2020 Giants MLB Draft RecapWatch Now
The 2020 MLB First-Year Player-Draft took place last week and the Giants made seven selections in the shortened, five-round draft. Learn more about first-round pick Patrick Bai-ley and who else was picked in this week's lat-est video.
Giants Top Prospects Highlight Mix Tape Watch Now
We've put together a mix tape of highlights from some of the Giants top prospects from the 2019 campaigns. Have a look at some of the highlights from Joey Bart, Heliot Ramos, Sean Hjelle, Seth Corry, Marco Luciano, Alex Canario and Hunter Bishop.
We've Got You All Covered June 22-28, 2020
GIANTS PLAYER SPOTLIGHT | JAYLIN DAVIS Raised in Greensboro, North Caro-
lina. Jaylin was named after basketball
player Jalen Rose. When his little brother came along twelve years later, his parents let Jaylin name the
new baby. He chose Amari, after Am-ari Cooper.
As a young kid, Jaylin hung out after school at the barber
shop or at his grand-father’s used car lot,
where he’d throw balls against a
concrete wall or hit tennis balls in the gravel lot where the junked cars were dumped. A gifted ath-
lete, he ex-celled in both
basketball and baseball. He was on
an elite travel ball teams from the age of eight or
nine, either pitching or playing shortstop. He had early exposure to fitness and nutrition when his travel ball team – all middle-schoolers -- began working with trainer Carmine Pageno. Da-vis continued working with him through col-
lege and the pros. “His demeanor was just different
from most people. That was a big fac-tor in his development,’’ Pageno said. He has always had great discipline on and off the field, a quiet, even tem-perament and he gets along with ev-eryone.
He eventually chose baseball as his primary sport. “Basketball was fun, but it just wasn't the same feeling,’’ he says. “Baseball is harder. I like a chal-lenge in life.’’
When he was playing showcase ball as he got older, he pitched a lot, and when he wasn’t pitching he played outfield, and scouts began looking at him as an outfielder. He solidified his position when, at Appalachian State, the starting centerfielder got hurt and Davis took his place.
The turning point in his develop-ment happened his freshman year at at Appalachian State in Boone, North Carolina. “He figured out how to catch up with the speed of the game. That sprung a new confidence level,’’ Pageno said. “That freshman year did wonders for him. And he kept getting better little by little.’’ He became the only freshman in school history to be named an All-American. He was also Southern Conference Freshman of the Year.
Missed most of his junior season af-ter surgery for a torn right labrum.
His first Major League home run was
a walk-off against the Rockies to give the Giants a 2-1 win on September 25. Davis became the first Giant to hit a walk-off homer for his first big league blast since Fran Healy in 1971.
He met Willie Mays as he struggled during that September in the big leagues. Manager Bruce Bochy told Davis that Mays had a rough start in the big leagues, too, and to just go out there and have fun and play. “You got here,’’ Bochy told him, “so just do what you did to get here.’’
He spent the 2019-2020 off-season training in Ft. Myers but still popped up to Greensboro to work with Page-no for two weeks. “After all those years with him, I knew what I needed to do to get myself ready,’’ Davis said.
Jaylin arrived early to spring training in 2020 to start working with new Gi-ants hitting coaches Donnie Ecker and Dustin Lind.
Read Jaylin's Blog entry, entitled "The Stories That Are Hardest to Tell by clicking here
FAMILY INFORMATION- Father, Lamont, was a barber. His shop was next to Jaylin’s grandmoth-er’s beauty parlor.
- Mother, Tiki Bigelow, worked in the city’s planning department.
- Has one younger brother, Amari.
SCHEDULEDGUESTS
THIS WEEKGABE KAPLERKAI CORREA
ALYSSA NAKKENWEDNESDAYS @ 6 P.M. | YOUTUBE.COM/GIANTS
BEYOND THE GIANT VAULT - HANK GREENWALD Housed in a 5,000 square foot building, the Giants Archives consists of memorabilia and artifacts from our team’s 138-year history. As part of the Giants Fan Page, fans can now, for the first time, learn about and view memorabilia from our collection. Little did anyone know when Hank Greenwald was born on June 26, 1935 in Detroit that he would become an icon to San Francisco Giants fans. When the Giants held a retirement ceremony for broadcaster Hank Greenwald his booth-mates, Mike Krukow, Duane Kuiper and Ted Robinson, presented their captain with an official Bancroft Military Cap which demonstrated the respect they had for him, and his longevity in the booth. He spent 16 seasons over-all as the play-by-play voice of the Giants on KNBR (680 AM). He was the voice of the Giants from 1979–86 before departing for a two-year stint with
the New York Yankees radio team, after which he returned to the Giants in 1989 until his retirement in 1996. Click to visit the vault and look at other mementos from the Tell It Goodbye season starting Thursday
KAPLER'S KITCHEN Each week, Manager
Gabe Kapler will give us some of his favorite food spots from around
the US, in no particular order.
Black sesame, sea salt caramel, malted vanilla. The line is worth it. Get a cone, then go check out the incredible views of the SF skyline from Dolores park right next door.
BI-RITE CREAMERYSAN FRANCISCO, CA
PRESS BOX EATS Senior Manager, Hispanic Communica-tions and Spanish Radio Broadcaster Erwin Higueros shares his recipe for Huevos Rancheros
Fry the tortilla in a small skillet with oil on me-dium heat. Cook for about 30 seconds on each side until it gets slightly crispy. Then remove onto a paper towel to remove excess oil.
Fry the egg in the same pan until it’s cooked to your liking.
Layer the huevos rancheros by adding the fried egg and black beans on top of the fried tortilla.
Add the salsa (diced tomatoes and cilantro) and sprinkle cotija cheese on top.
Slice avocado and add it onto the plate. Season with salt and pepper and add a dash of
hot sauce to serve.
INGREDIENTS Huevos Rancheros- 2 tablespoons avocado oil, or olive oil-1 6-inch corn tortillas are best- 1/4 cup black beans, cooked
and drained- 1 egg- 2 tablespoons diced tomatoes
- 1 tablespoon finely chopped cilantro- 1 tablespoon cotija cheese, crumbled- 1/4 avocado, sliced- salt and pepper- hot sauce
THE GAMER | ISSUE ONE OF Mike Yastrzemski dons the cover of Issue 1 of The Gamer, the Giants newest publication. The first issue includes a Q&A with the young Gi-ants outfielder that burst on the scene last season, a chat with new skipper Gabe Kapler, and a look at the Giants community efforts during the shelter in place. Click here to read today
GamerTHE
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS
ISSUE 1
POWERON DISPLAY
Mike Yastrzemski brings a big bat to the
Giants’ lineup
+GETTING TO KNOW GABE KAPLERUNIQUE BALLPARK FEATURESTOP TASTES AND SIPS AT ORACLE PARK
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