GOOD NEWS: Logan Webb Feels the Shift — Tony Vitello’s Arrival Brings a Surge of Energy That Has the Giants Believing Again
You could hear the change before you could see it—the laughter, the louder music, the quick chatter bouncing off the clubhouse walls. Logan Webb noticed it first. “It’s different in here now,” he said, leaning back in his chair after a workout at Oracle Park. “It’s healthy energy. You can feel it.”
For months, San Francisco had been quiet. Too quiet. The 2024 season ended with frustration, self-reflection, and the feeling that something fundamental was missing. Now, with Tony Vitello stepping in as manager, the silence has broken.
Vitello, known for his fiery intensity and modern-player rapport from his college success at Tennessee, has brought a new rhythm to a team that badly needed one. His first few days on the job haven’t involved analytics presentations or lineup debates—they’ve been about connection. “He wants to know what makes you tick,” Webb said. “That’s the part that hit me right away. He actually listens.”

Webb, the ace and emotional anchor of the Giants’ rotation, has long been the tone-setter for this clubhouse. His endorsement carries weight. “When your best player buys in,” one team staffer noted, “everyone else follows.”
Vitello’s message has been simple: passion is allowed again. Players describe team meetings filled with energy, jokes, and honest conversation. The emphasis, according to Webb, isn’t on rebuilding—it’s on reclaiming pride. “He told us, ‘You’re Giants. Play like it means something,’” Webb said with a grin. “That sticks.”
The front office views the hiring as both a cultural and competitive reboot. Buster Posey and ownership wanted someone who could bridge eras—command authority but still relate to a generation raised on emotion and individuality. Vitello fits that mold perfectly: part teacher, part motivator, part firestarter.
“He’s got this edge,” Webb said. “It’s not about screaming or being over the top—it’s belief. It’s contagious.”
For a franchise steeped in even-keeled professionalism, that edge feels almost rebellious. But inside the organization, it’s being embraced. Coaches have described early workouts as “alive.” Even veterans who’ve seen multiple managerial changes admit there’s something new this time—a spark that feels sustainable.
Vitello’s presence may also lighten the load on Webb, who’s carried both the rotation and the emotional expectations of the fan base since his breakout 2021 campaign. “He wants me to lead, but he also wants me to enjoy it,” Webb said. “That balance matters.”
San Francisco isn’t promising miracles overnight. The roster still needs upgrades, the division remains unforgiving, and the pressure of living up to the franchise’s championship legacy never fades. But for the first time in a while, the conversation around the Giants isn’t about what they’ve lost—it’s about what they’re building.
And Webb, the pitcher who wears his heart on his sleeve, sounds ready to pitch that story forward. “This city deserves a team that plays with fire,” he said. “Vitello’s bringing it—and we’re following.”
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