
Tony Vitello’s first game in a San Francisco Giants uniform didn’t come with grand theatrics, dramatic ejections, or over-the-top gestures. It came with a foul ball off the shin, a lopsided early deficit, and a calm, steady presence on the top step as the Giants opened Cactus League play vs. the Seattle Mariners in Peoria.
For a manager whose entire professional life has lived in the college game, even just being there was something new. The Giants’ matchup with Seattle marked not only Vitello’s first game as San Francisco’s skipper, but also the first spring training exhibition he had ever attended in any capacity
Vitello spent nearly 25 years in college baseball, including eight high-energy, high-expectation seasons at Tennessee, where he helped transform the Volunteers into a national powerhouse. His winters and early springs were usually filled with workouts, scrimmages, and recruiting—not leisurely Cactus League afternoons. He never worked as a pro scout, roving instructor, or special assistant. Instead, he focused on developing college players, sending the best of them into the draft, and then starting the cycle over again.
On Saturday, a few of those former players were right there with him in orange and black. Right-hander Blade Tidwell and outfielder Drew Gilbert, both products of Vitello’s Tennessee program, were on the Giants’ travel roster as their former college coach stepped into his first big-league game-day role.
Vitello’s debut came with a literal sting. In the fifth inning, he tracked a pitch just a beat too long and took a foul ball off his shin—another line on a growing list of coaching battle scars. He has already endured two broken facial bones from baseballs during his coaching career, and now he can add a bruised leg from his first Cactus League afternoon.
On the mound, things started just as painfully. Giants right-hander Hayden Birdsong faced six batters and recorded only one out in the first inning, allowing two walks, two ground-ball singles that found holes, and a grand slam to Miles Mastrobuoni as Seattle jumped out to a quick 5–0 lead. It meant Vitello had to make his first walk to the mound as a major-league manager almost before the national anthem singer had cleared the field.
From there, the afternoon settled into exactly the kind of game a new manager can appreciate. The Giants’ bullpen stacked zeros the rest of the way as nine pitchers combined to shut out the Mariners after the first inning. Tidwell stood out among that group, flashing a wipeout slider and striking out three in a scoreless frame, looking every bit like a future bullpen weapon for San Francisco.
Caleb Kilian, back with the organization on a minor-league deal more than four years after the Giants traded him to the Cubs, reportedly touched 99 mph, adding another intriguing arm to track this spring. Left-hander Juan Sánchez worked out of trouble with help from catcher Jesús Rodríguez, whose poise and feel for the game earned praise from Vitello after the win. Nick Zwack, in camp as depth from the minor leagues, shook off a misplay behind him and finished a scoreless ninth to send his manager into his first handshake line as a big-league skipper.
The Giants’ bats did their part as well in the 10–5 victory. New center fielder Harrison Bader ripped a high fastball for a two-run double, putting an early stamp on his first game with San Francisco. Top prospect Bryce Eldridge delivered one of the most impressive swings of the afternoon, staying short and direct while shooting an opposite-field double off a 98 mph heater from Mariners closer Andrés Muñoz.
Gilbert, the player Vitello once joked he’d be “babysitting” when he took the Giants job, got a pair of late at-bats, lined an RBI single, scored a run, and capped one trip down the dugout steps with a quick fist tap to his old coach. It was a small moment, but a fitting snapshot of Vitello’s journey from Tennessee to San Francisco and the relationships that came with him.
For all the novelty of the day, what stood out most was what didn’t happen. There were no lineup-card mishaps. No pitchers were summoned before they were warm. Nobody hit out of turn. The game operation—always a potential minefield for a first-time big-league manager—ran clean and uneventful.
Vitello spent the day on the top step, sometimes using a clipboard to shield his eyes from the afternoon sun, and did what he has always done: lock in on every pitch. Tidwell noted that his former coach preaches concentration and confidence, telling players that the team that stays locked in the longest usually wins. On Day 1 of his Giants tenure, Vitello lived that message.
A Cactus League-opening win doesn’t promise a playoff run or a division banner. But for the Giants, this first exhibition under Tony Vitello offered a clear look at his style—steady, focused, and decidedly “nothing crazy”—and a glimpse of how his college-built edge and attention to detail could translate at the highest level.
