SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Bruce Bochy is sending up the bat signal. Or maybe it’s the Freak signal.

Tim Lincecum, if you are out there somewhere, the Giants’ manager would love to chat about visiting spring training as other alumni do, talking to players, maybe even doing some instruction.

The 2008 and 2009 Cy Young Award winner has become a bit of a recluse since he and the team split after the 2015 season, aside from his brief comeback attempts with the Angels in 2016 and Rangers in 2018.

Lincecum does not visit the park in San Francisco and has not attended any of the Giants’ many reunions.

Agent Rick Thurman said Thursday he could not comment on Lincecum’s plans, but did say the 34-year-old is working out. Lincecum last pitched for Texas’ Triple-A team in Round Rock, Texas, making 10 relief appearances last year. He had a 5.68 ERA.

“I love Timmy,” Bochy said. “I know he was really excited about his comeback. I hope to connect with him.”

Bochy wanted to see Lincecum when the Giants were in Seattle last season, but Lincecum was out of town.

Thinner Moronta: Add reliever Reyes Moronta to the list of players who have arrived in camp in the best shape of their lives. Moronta said he lost about 15 pounds over the winter. He was listed at 241 in the 2018 media guide.

“The team advised me if I want to have a long career in baseball I better get in shape and lose weight,” Moronta said through interpreter Erwin Higueros.

Moronta pitched in 69 games as a rookie last year and figures to be a key component of the Giants’ strongest unit in 2019. As the joke goes, you knew Moronta would pitch if the day ended in “y.” The joke did not translate well in Spanish, but Moronta laughed anyway when Higueros translated it.

To keep his arm fresh after the heavy workload, Moronta did not pitch winter ball in his native Dominican Republic.

“We are human beings, not robots,” Moronta said. “Obviously, I can’t pitch every day. But I got ready mentally to pitch every day. I never asked for a day off. I never give the manager the idea that I don’t want to pitch.”

Wet day: The Giants managed to complete a full workout around a rainstorm Thursday. One highlight was Aramis Garcia’s batting practice. The catcher crushed pitch after pitch with a slight uppercut he apparently developed over the winter.

Henry Schulman is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer.