Thursday, November 22, 2012

How They Got Here: The Story of the 2012 San Francisco Giants Part 25

How They Got Here: The San Francisco Giants is a one-by-one look at how each member of the 2012 World Series Champion San Francisco Giants found their way to the squad. We'll look at all of the players on the roster, as well as notable players who did not make the postseason roster for whatever reason and the coaching staff and general manager. Part twenty-five tells us of journeyman infielder Ryan Theriot. 

Ryan Theriot was born on December 7, 1979, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He attended Broodmoar High School in Baton Rouge, and graduated in 1998. Along with childhood friends Mike Woods and Trae Duncan, Theriot was named a High School All American, and the three of them were the first three infielders from the same state to do so. Most of the time, Theriot has played second base or shortstop based on the necessity of the team, and has also appeared at third base, left field, and right field. Theriot went on to Louisiana State University, where he helped lead the Tigers to the 2000 National Championship, by scoring the winning run. He was a leader for his team, and crossed paths with multiple future teammates while in college. Theriot was drafted in 2001 by the Chicago Cubs in the third round, and completed the season in the Class A Advanced Florida State League with the Daytona Cubs. He hit only .204, and produced only nine runs batted in. Theriot has never been known as a power hitter, but does possess some speed. Theriot was assigned to the Class A Midwest League for 2002, playing with the Lansing Lugnuts of Lansing, Michigan. Here, he managed to produce a .252 batting average with thirty-two stolen bases and thirty-seven runs batted in. He split hit time in 2003 evenly between Lansing and the Class AA Southern League, where he played with the West Tennessee Diamond Jaxx, in Jackson, Tennessee. In Lansing, he hit .259 with twenty-one stolen bases and seventeen runs batted in, while with the Diamond Jaxx, he posted a .236 average with nine runs batted in and stolen bases each. His numbers so far looked like a draft bust, and Theriot found himself with Daytona again for all of 2004. This proved to benefit him, as he improved to a .273 batting average as well as thirteen stolen bases and thirty-four runs batted in. He returned to West Tennessee in 2005, where he spent most of the season hitting to a .304 average, as well as twenty-four stolen bases and fifty-three runs batted in. He earned a mid-September call up to the Chicago Cubs, and appeared in nine games, mostly as a pinch hitter or a pinch runner. Theriot spent two stints with the Iowa Cubs of the Class AAA Pacific Coast League in Des Moines, Iowa, as well as making two trips to the big league Cubs in the 2006 season. In Iowa, he posted a .304 batting average, fourteen stolen bases, and twenty-two runs batted in, while he hit .328 with three triples and home runs each, thirteen stolen bases, and sixteen runs batted in during his time with Chicago. To stay in the Chicago lineup in 2007, Theriot had to embrace a role as a super-utility player, playing five different positions throughout the season. He hit .266, while adding three home runs, two triples, forty-five runs batted in, and twenty-eight stolen bases in his first full season in the major leagues. He also managed a .250 batting average with a run batted in during the playoffs, but Chicago was swept 3-0 by the Arizona Diamondbacks in the National League Division Series. In 2008, he was able to settle in to the everyday shortstop role, and improved to a .307 batting average with four triples, one home run, thirty-eight runs batted in, and twenty-two stolen bases. While the Cubs were again swept 3-0 in the National League Division Series, this time by the Los Angeles Dodgers, Theriot was able to hit to a .273 postseason average. Theriot continued to man shortstop for the Cubs in 2009, and finished the season with a .284 batting average, five triples, seven home runs (including his first grand slam on May 1st), fifty-four runs batted in and twenty-one stolen bases. It was particularly admirable that Theriot was able to step up when the team was bit hard by the injury bug, as his power streak demonstrated. For 2010, Theriot was returned to a second base position to make room for highly-touted prospect Starlin Castro, a shortstop, to play. The move didn't disrupt him, as he hit .284 with twenty-one runs batted in and sixteen stolen bases before being traded with Ted Lilly and cash to the Los Angeles Dodgers in exchange for Brett Wallach, Kyle Smit, and Blake DeWitt on July 31st. In the next two months with the Dodgers, Theriot hit only .242 with just eight runs batted in and four stolen bases. Theriot was flipped in the offseason to the St. Louis Cardinals in exchange for Blake Hawksworth. With the Cardinals, he played in a near-everyday role, hitting to a .271 batting average, as well as forty-seven runs batted in, but as he has aged, his speed has declined and he has stolen far fewer bases. He split time at second base with Skip Schumaker in the postseason, although in the National League Division Series against the Philadelphia Phillies, he was six-for-ten with some minor run production in Game 1 of the series. While his bat went cold against the Milwaukee Brewers in the National League Championship Series, his glove was on full display, and he famously robber Prince Fielder of a hit to end an inning, which Fielder responded to with an emphatic high five. After a hitless performance in the World Series, it could be said that Theriot, with a .242 postseason average, was merely along for the ride as the Cardinals won the World Series title. It was the first of his career, but on December 12th, Theriot entered free agency. He was signed by the San Francisco Giants on January 27, 2012, and played largely at second base in the 2012 season. An injury suffered on May 8th led Theriot to the disabled list, a rare occurrence for the usually durable infielder, but he became the everyday second baseman when he returned later in the month. He played well in the role, but it wasn't enough, and he was relegated back to a timeshare role at second base and shortstop when Marco Scutaro was acquired from the Colorado Rockies. He also did a lot of pinch hitting to close out the season with a .270 batting average, thirteen stolen bases, and twenty-eight runs batted in. Theriot only worked as a pinch hitter in the National League Division Series and in the National League Championship Series. In the NLCS, Theriot came up big after Matt Holliday's controversial takeout slide on Scutaro, which shook up the veteran and allowed Theriot to finish the game at second base. He provided two valuable insurance runs in the eighth inning, and then did added his third and final 2012 postseason run batted in during Game 6, again in the eighth inning. He made only two appearances in the World Series against the Detroit Tigers as well, pinch hitting in Game 2 with no success. However, his iconic moment came in the tenth inning of Game 4. With the Giants on the road, the designated hitter rule was in effect, and Theriot was playing at designated hitter for the first time in his career. With the score tied at three in the tenth inning, Scutaro (he who took Theriot's second base job at the trade deadline) hit a single that allowed Theriot to score from second base. Theriot could be seen jumping up excitedly after sliding home, and the only run he scored in the postseason turned out to be the decisive run, allowing San Francisco to sweep and Theriot to get his second World Series title in as many years.

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