My dad used to always tell me that you only get one chance to make a good first impression. He’s right, though thankfully in baseball, the playoff teams aren’t chosen based on their first impressions.

For their first series of the season — a putrid, feckless, and deeply uncompetitive sweep at the hands of the New York Yankees — the San Francisco Giants made a very obvious impression.

If you were to prorate that series to a full season, you would have a team with a blatant identity:

  1. Basically no offense, but…

  2. Intermittent flickers of offense that are met by emphatic rally killers

  3. Pitching that’s pretty good, but can’t resist giving up the big hits in the crucial moments

  4. The occasional late-game rally that comes up frustratingly short

The Giants have been gifted 159 games to adjust and restore their identity so that it doesn’t align with the first impression, and I like their chances, because my one bold prediction for the 2026 season is that the Giants won’t be the hands-down worst team in the history of professional baseball.

San Francisco hit the road on Monday, and took their first step towards restoring the narrative, with a move both so bold and so simple that only a new coach who hasn’t yet been hardened by the realities of Major League Baseball could think of it: the reverse Uno card. Tony Vitello witnessed the script that had led to an 0-3 start and thought, hey what if instead of doing that, we have the other team do it?

It worked. And by a margin of 3-2 over the San Diego Padres, the Giants have their first win of the season — and Vitello his first victory as an MLB manager.

While it was remarkable just how good of an impression of the Giants the Padres did, the Giants first warned you that they might reprise the role for a fourth time. Facing old frenemy Walker Buehler, the Giants had a remarkably Giantsy first inning. Vitello opted for the unconventional decision to move Willy Adames, the coldest hitter on the team, into the leadoff spot to jump start him, and Adames responded with a single to open the game. Three pitches later, Rafael Devers erased that single with a double play, and Buehler would later end the inning with just 10 pitches thrown.

It doesn’t get more Giant. Except apparently it does. The Padres are what “getting more Giant” looks like.

San Diego’s offense was useless for much of the game, which is, yes, a great bit to talk about, but mostly a testament to how awesome Landen Roupp was in his season debut. Roupp has spoken openly about his desire to go pitch for pitch with Logan Webb, and Monday’s start was one hell of an audition for the role of co-ace.

He set down the side in order in the first inning, striking out Jake Cronenworth and Manny Machado. He cruised through the second, giving up a single but striking out Gavin Sheets and Ramón Laureano. He needed just seven pitches and one magnificent bit of leather wizardry from Adames to defeat the third.

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