The San Francisco Giants signed pitcher Randy Johnson to a one-year, $8 million contract.
The 45-year-old Walnut Creek native and Livermore High School alumnus comes home needing five victories to reach the magic 300-victory mark; he could become the final pitcher in a generation to achieve the benchmark.
But the Giants have had ample chances to celebrate milestones amid four consecutive losing seasons. They’re counting on Johnson to provide more than a platform for the marketing department.
“He can still pitch,” Giants General Manager Brian Sabean said earlier this month. “He’s an intimidating force. The opposition knows who he is, and if he’s on your side, the team knows you’ve got a chance to win every time he goes out.”A five-time Cy Young Award winner, Johnson joins a Giants rotation that already boasted two Cy winners; Barry Zito won the A.L. award with the A’s in 2002 and Tim Lincecum captured the N.L. trophy last season. The 2002 Atlanta Braves (Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, John Smoltz) were the last major league team with three Cy Young winners.
This was a nice signing and if the Giants could add a couple of hitters to give their lineup more pop, they’d have the makings of a club that could compete in the NL West. Their top three pitchers are solid, Zito might succeed more at the back of the rotation and the Big Unit is solid as a fourth or fifth starter.
But this team is so void of hitters that they probably won’t be able to compete for a couple of years unless they surprise people and add a bat like Manny, which is highly unlikely.