San Francisco Giants manager Tony Vitello responded to mounting criticism of third base coach Hector Borg by reminding reporters that he didn't make the hire. The comment, delivered after Sunday's loss to Arizona, marks the first time Vitello has created visible daylight between himself and the front office this season.
Borg's baserunning decisions have cost the Giants seven runs on the season according to Baseball Prospectus's send-rate model, tied for third-worst in the majors. Three separate outs at home plate in high-leverage situations over the past six weeks have drawn fan ire and increasingly pointed questions in the press room. Vitello's response: "Hector was brought in by the organization. We work with what we have."
The phrasing matters because it names the problem without claiming ownership. Front offices hire coordinators; managers manage them. When a manager publicly separates those two functions, he's either protecting his own contract extension or preparing for someone else's exit. Vitello signed a three-year, $9 million deal last November after Tennessee pursued him for their baseball program. The Giants' front office, led by president of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi, negotiated that deal and assembled this coaching staff. Borg came from the Dodgers' system, where he spent four years as a minor-league coordinator but never held a major-league coaching box.
The tension is operational, not just optical. Clubhouse sources describe a coaching staff that operates in silos, with Vitello handling pitching strategy and veteran bench coach Kai Correa managing in-game positioning, while Borg runs baserunning drills in near isolation. One scout who has watched 22 Giants games this season noted that Borg's send decisions don't appear to incorporate real-time defensive positioning data—he's coaching 2019 baserunning in a 2025 information environment. That's a teaching problem, which belongs to the manager, or a hiring problem, which belongs to the front office. Vitello is now saying it's the latter.
This matters because Oracle Park's 41,915-seat revenue model depends on October baseball, and the Giants are 4.5 games out of the final Wild Card spot with 31 games remaining. Sponsor renewal cycles begin in mid-September. Suite holders are already asking their account reps whether the team plans coaching changes. The answer determines whether they commit luxury inventory dollars for next season or shift budgets to the Warriors, who just opened a practice facility twelve miles away and are aggressively courting the same corporate hospitality base.
Zaidi's contract runs through 2026, but ownership led by Greg Johnson has shown willingness to make moves mid-cycle when product quality slides. The Giants haven't won a playoff series since 2021 despite maintaining a top-eight payroll. Vitello, by contrast, has the cushion of a recent extension and a reputation built on player development. If someone gets reassigned this winter, the manager just told you who he thinks it should be.
Watch for Zaidi's response in his scheduled Thursday press availability. Also watch whether Borg remains in the third base box for the Dodgers series starting Friday—Vitello has the authority to move coaches mid-series if he chooses. The coordinator meetings for next season's staff typically begin in late October. Borg's presence in those meetings will answer whether this was strategic deflection or a public execution.
The takeaway
Vitello's blame-shift signals either contract protection or front-office execution as Giants enter offseason reset window.
giantscoachingfront officegovernancezaidi
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