Updates from Saturday, May 10
John Dickinson of 950 AM radio reports the latest on Belt:
Original Text
San Francisco Giants first baseman Brandon Belt has been diagnosed with a broken thumb after being hit by a pitch and exiting Friday night's game against the Los Angeles Dodgers, the team announced.
Dodgers starter Paul Maholm hit Belt on the first pitch of his second-inning at-bat. In obvious pain, Belt was seen grimacing as he walked to first base and was attended to by the Giants' training staff on the field.
After a brief talk, Belt initially stayed in the game before going back for X-rays in the bottom half of the inning. Joaquin Arias replaced Belt at first base.
Andy Baggarly of Comcast SportsNet provides postgame comments from Bruce Bochy:
Henry Schulman of the San Francisco Chronicle names candidates most likely to replace Belt:
An injured thumb is among the worst injuries an everyday player can suffer, as it affects everything from your grip on the bat to your ability to bring it quickly through the zone. Recently, Washington Nationals third baseman Ryan Zimmerman was ruled out four to six weeks with a broken thumb, so one would assume a similar timetable here.
The timing of the injury is decidedly cruel, as he was seemingly starting to bust out of a recent slump. Belt was 6-for-13 with one home run and three RBI over his last four games, a hot streak that came after a 2-for-30 slump.
"I've been just looking at the video, seeing what I was doing when I was hitting well," Belt told reporters Wednesday. "Obviously, the adjustment was a timing issue. I've been working on that the last few days and I'm starting to come around."
For the season, Belt is hitting .264/.317/.504 with nine home runs and 18 RBI. The former top prospect was on pace for the finest year of his young career, putting together a solid defensive season to go along with his offensive production.
The Giants have no immediate replacement options. Buster Posey and Mike Morse can occasionally play first base, but both already occupy other spots in the field. Arias, a light-hitting second baseman by trade, is decidedly not an option. The only feasible option at the moment is bringing up Travis Ishikawa, who signed with the club last month after being let go by the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Either way, it's a giant hole for Bruce Bochy to fill in his lineup. Ishikawa hit .206/.263/.382 in 15 games as a Pirate and has largely been a below-replacement-level player since leaving San Francisco for the first time in 2010.
With the Giants already struggling to find consistent scoring, this was the fundamental opposite of what the NL West leaders needed right now.
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