SF Giants reliever Luke Jackson compares Atlanta, San Francisco fans

SF Giants reliever Luke Jackson was outspoken over the weekend about his former club (Atlanta) and their fans.
SF Giants reliever Luke Jackson compares Atlanta, San Francisco fans
SF Giants reliever Luke Jackson compares Atlanta, San Francisco fans /
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It’s been nearly two years since Atlanta clinched a World Series title with Luke Jackson as one of their core relievers out of the bullpen. Now with the SF Giants, Jackson talked about his tenure with the team upon his return. The right-hander finished the 2021 season, his last in Atlanta's bullpen, with an outstanding 1.98 ERA in 71 appearances and notched a 9.9 K/9. Once the fall classic rolled around, Jackson excelled by allowing nothing more than a single hit in 3.2 innings of work against the Houston Astros.

SF Giants reliever Luke Jackson said Atlanta sports fans are a "different beast." / Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports

After spending five seasons with Atlanta, Jackson – now a prominent member of the SF Giants bullpen – spoke about his tenure with the team upon his return during the Giants road trip.

“Fans here are unmatched,” Jackson told Justin Toscano of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “San Fran’s got some great fans, too, but no offense to San Fran, Atlanta’s a different beast when it comes to sports in general and being a hometown team."

During his Atlanta tenure, Jackson enjoyed popularity among fans and his Florida upbringing suggests that he may have had a favorable view of the franchise during his childhood as well. However, contrasting the two fanbases led to some displeasure among Giants fans.

It's worth taking the recent context of each franchise into account. Atlanta was first-place finishers in four of Jackson’s five seasons and made it to the National League Championship twice. It was also the first five years of a new ballpark in Cobb County and – aside from the 2021 season, in which they were second – the organization ranked in the middle of the pack for attendance among other NL clubs (averaging 2,503,900 from 2017-19, 2021).

The Giants, on the other hand, have performed marginally better during that time frame with an average of 2,711,770, despite having three seasons under .500.

As a World Series winner with the club, it’s easy to see why Jackson feels a certain attachment to Atlanta's fans. While it’s not a valid comparison because of the higher volume of success, the fans in Atlanta latched onto him as a fan favorite in a similar fashion as Giants fans when they heavily embraced their core bullpen arms during their glory seasons in the early 2010s.

Maybe had Luke Jackson been a part of the SF Giants during that duration, his perspective and views could be shifted. It goes the other way, too – if he had been on the Braves roster five years prior, they were grappling with a challenging rebuilding phase that transformed them into consistent underachievers from 2014 to 2017.

Timing is everything.


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Steven Rissotto
STEVEN RISSOTTO

Steven Rissotto (he/him) is an award-winning journalist who currently covers the San Francisco Giants for SFBay.ca and Giants Baseball Insider. At 19-years-old in 2021, he joined SF Bay Media as the Giants beat writer, covering games a few times a week during the Giants’ record-setting 107-win season. Along with his game story coverage he is also the host of RizzoCast, a baseball podcast he founded in 2020 that features interviews with professional and amateur baseball players, coaches, media, fans, and everyone else around the game. Past guests have included Tyler Glasnow, Bob Kendrick, Shawn Estes, Bill Laskey, Renel Brooks Moon, Dave Dravecky, Ned Colletti, Denard Span, Ron Wotus, Joe Maddon, J.T. Snow and more. He is also a co-host with Tylor Hall on the Shutdown Inning Podcast, a show focused on all the latest happenings around the baseball world. Both podcasts are available on YouTube and everywhere podcasts are found. Currently, he is a student at San Francisco State University where he is majoring in Journalism with an emphasis in print/online and minoring in education. At SF State, he is the managing editor for Golden Gate Xpress, the student-run newspaper. He was formerly a member of the newspaper at Skyline College, where he served as editor-in-chief and news editor while also writing sports and features. He was formerly a student-journalist at Archbishop Riordan High School in San Francisco, where he pitched for the baseball team and covered some of the biggest stories in campus history. This includes a new multi-sports facility on campus, the breaking news coverage of Riordan’s coed announcement and the COVID-19 pandemic. Steven is well-respected by his peers and has been honored numerous times by Student Newspapers Online, JEA, ACP, and the California Publishing Association. In 2021, he finished second in the country for Reporter of the Year for ACP among the two-year college schools.