San Francisco Giants Information
The San Francisco Giants, formerly known as New York Giants and New York Gothams, is an American professional baseball team based in San Francisco, California. The team is a member of the National League’s West division. The Giants play their home games at Oracle Park. As one of the most successful and longest-established baseball teams, the Giants have won the most games compared to any team in American baseball history.
The franchise was founded in 1883 as the New York Gothams. Since relocating to San Francisco, the Giants have won three World Series championships (2010, 2012, and 2014), 23 NL Pennants, 8 West Division Titles, and 3 Wild Card berths.
Famous moments in the team’s history include the 1922 World Series, in which the Giants defeated the Yankees in four games. They were unable to achieve success in their first fifty years. From 1958-2009, the team won three NL pennants and made nine playoff appearances. The 2001 season is considered the team's most significant highlight in which OF Barry Bonds hit 73 home runs.
The San Francisco Giants have a uniform color theme of black, orange, metallic gold, and cream. The official mascot of the team is Lou Seal.
The team’s famous Hall Of Famers is Peter Magowan, Bill Rigney, Dick Bartell, Ernie Lombardi, Tony Lazzeri, Joe Morgan, Matt Williams, Dusty Baker, Vida Blue, Matt Cain, Jeff Kent, Orlando Cepeda, and many more.
Numerous players have won NL Gold Glove Award, including Willie Mays, Jim Davenport, Rick Reuschel, Kirt Manwaring, Matt Williams, Robby Thompson, Barry Bonds, and Darren Lewis. The Giants' overall win-loss record was 11,088–9,602 from 1883-2018.
Current Coach: Gabe Kapler
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