The Giants opened the season looking for a steadier offensive identity, but the early numbers have told a harsher story. San Francisco hasn’t just struggled to score — it has struggled to make any kind of meaningful contact. The team sits near the bottom of the league in batting average, on‑base percentage, and slugging, a combination that has made every game feel like an uphill climb.
The most revealing number is their lack of extra‑base damage. Even when the Giants put the ball in play, it hasn’t carried with authority. Balls that should be driven into the gaps have died on the warning track, and pitches in the zone that should be punished have turned into weak grounders or routine flyouts. The lineup hasn’t produced the kind of innings that flip momentum or force opposing pitchers into uncomfortable spots. .
What makes this start more concerning is that it isn’t tied to one cold bat. It’s a lineup‑wide issue. Veterans haven’t found their timing, younger hitters haven’t delivered the spark the club hoped for, and the middle of the order hasn’t produced the kind of sustained pressure that keeps innings alive. The Giants have also continued to struggle with velocity, a problem that carried over from last season. Teams have pounded them with high fastballs, and until San Francisco proves it can handle that approach, the scouting report won’t change.
The lack of situational hitting has only magnified the problem. Too many promising counts have ended with harmless outs, and too many innings have slipped away without a single threatening swing. The Giants haven’t been able to build innings, and without traffic on the bases, the offense has lacked any real rhythm.
The pitching staff has done its part to keep the Giants in games, but baseball eventually exposes imbalance. When the offense can’t produce, every mistake on the mound becomes magnified. A missed location becomes a deficit. A routine inning becomes a high‑stress one. A bullpen that should be protecting leads instead finds itself trying to keep games within reach.
That’s not a sustainable formula over a full season, and the Giants know it. The pitching has shown up. The bats haven’t. And the numbers make that impossible to ignore.
The Giants don’t need to become an offensive powerhouse overnight, but they do need to establish a baseline of competitive at‑bats. That starts with sharper swing decisions, more consistent contact in hitter’s counts, and a top‑of‑the‑order presence who can set the tone early. They need innings that build on each other, not isolated singles that lead nowhere.
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