[新聞] Schmidt, Benard added to Giants Wall of Fame
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Schmidt, Benard added to Giants Wall of Fame
By Chris Haft / MLB.com | 08/27/11 10:35 PM ET
SAN FRANCISCO -- Becoming the latest additions to the Giants' Wall of Fame
enabled Marvin Benard and Jason Schmidt to add the final touches to their
baseball lives.
For Benard, Saturday's ceremony on King Street outside AT&T Park gave him the
opportunity to deliver a heartfelt "thank you" to his parents, Vern and
Cherryl, who moved their family from Nicaragua to Los Angeles when Marvin was
12.
"It all starts with them," said Benard, who was briefly overcome with emotion
during his speech, which was attended by a couple of hundred fans.
During a subsequent interview session with reporters, Benard explained why he
got choked up.
"You're so focused on the next task -- how do I get better, what do I need to
do -- and you forget about the things you went through and the sacrifices
your family ends up making," he said. "When you get a chance like this, you
get to reflect on all that and you remember the ups and downs and hard work.
You try to let those people know, 'Thank you for sticking with me and being
there.'"
Benard stuck with the Giants from 1995-2003 despite being a 50th-round Draft
choice.
"That shows you what kind of a person he really is," said Giants instructor
Shawon Dunston, one of Benard's former teammates.
Benard hit .271 with 54 home runs and 260 RBIs in 891 games, mostly from the
leadoff spot. His best seasons included 1998, when he hit .322; 1999, when he
batted .290 with a career-high 16 home runs and 64 RBIs; and 2000, when he
scored a career-high 102 runs.
"He always had a chip on his shoulder and that's why he was good," former
Giants left-hander Shawn Estes said. "He always believed that he was
underestimated, and he was out to prove to everybody that he belonged here
and nobody was going to get in his way."
For Schmidt, returning to San Francisco settled his soul. He never got to say
a proper goodbye to the organization or the city after signing with the
Dodgers as a free agent following the 2006 season.
"To come out here and get this, it's good closure for me," Schmidt said.
Schmidt was the acknowledged ace of the staff through most of his Giants
tenure (2001-06). The three-time All-Star compiled a 78-37 mark as a Giant
and owns a .678 winning percentage, the highest among pitchers with at least
100 decisions since the franchise moved to San Francisco in 1958. Schmidt
ranks among the all-time San Francisco leaders in wins (seventh), ERA
(fourth, 3.36), shutouts (tied for 10th with nine) and strikeouts (fourth,
1,065). Schmidt also tied Christy Mathewson's 102-year-old franchise mark in
2006 when he struck out 16 Florida Marlins.
Though the Giants possessed solid pitching when they moved to AT&T Park in
2000, pitching coach Dave Righetti said that the acquisition of Schmidt from
Pittsburgh in a midseason trade the following year gave the staff a stronger
identity.
"Jason became the cornerstone of that staff and also the guys who came up
after him," Righetti said.
Schmidt reveled in the fact that right-hander Ryan Vogelsong, whom the Giants
traded to Pittsburgh in the deal that brought Schmidt to San Francisco, is
now thriving for the Giants.
"What a great guy," Schmidt said of Vogelsong. "It's awesome to see that
happen. I think it's movie material."
Benard and Schmidt swelled the number of honorees whose plaques are displayed
on the King Street wall to 48. The Wall of Fame commemorates the
accomplishments of retired players who performed for a minimum of nine
seasons as a San Francisco Giant, or five seasons with at least one All-Star
selection while representing the club.
Chris Haft is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the
approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
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