Monster Third Inning Pushes Minnesota Past San Francisco 9-0

Joc Pederson struck out in the top of the third inning as the San Francisco Giants drop the first of three games to the Minnesota Twins at Target Field in Minneapolis on Fri Aug 26, 2022 (AP News photo)

Monster Third Inning Pushes Minnesota Past San Francisco 9-0

By Barbara Mason

Friday night the San Francisco Giants (61-63) took on the Minnesota Twins (63-61) in a three game series at Target Field. The Giants are just coming off a disappointing split in their two game series with the Tigers earlier this week. The disappointment continued as the Giants dropped the first of the three game series to Twins 9-0.

The Twins got off to a great start in the first inning with a Carlos Correa home run scoring Kyle Garlick jumping off to a 2-0 lead.

The third inning was a disaster for the Giants. San Francisco loaded the bases twice in the inning. Giant pitcher Alex Wood hit two Twins at the plate and Minnesota went on a scoring frenzy. They scored six runs in the inning taking an 8-0 lead.

The Twins had their second home run of the evening off the bat of Gary Sanchez. Jose Miranda got the barrage underway with a sacrifice that brought Sandy Leon home. Gilberto Celestino doubled so deep to right center field that the Twins brought in three runners Garlick, Jorge Polanaco and Correa. Minnesota finished off the third with the Sanchez homer for a whopper of an inning.

Through five innings the Giants only had two hits but couldn’t get much else going. It would be an uphill battle for the remainder of the game. Wood left the game after the third with Zack Little pitching the fourth inning. Bay Area native Joe Ryan had a great showing in this game. He pitched six innings allowing only two hits, no runs and eight strikeouts.

The Twins would add insult to injury in the eighth inning when Garlick, who was having a banner game, hit a homer extending the Minnesota lead to 9-0 This was the Twins third home run of the game.

The Giants only had four hits but managed to hit into two double plays so not much went right for San Francisco in this one.

The Giants will try to regroup for tomorrow’s game with first pitch at 4:15 PM PT. They will send Alex Cobb 4-6 to the mound with a 3.99 ERA. Minnesota will start Sonny Gray with a 7-4 win/loss record and a 3.10 ERA.

San Francisco 49ers podcast with Daivd Zizmor: Questions on Lance’s timing and accuracy

San Francisco 49ers Trey Lance (5) scrambles and leaps to make a throw under pressure from the Houston Texans defensive line in pre season action at NRG Stadium in Houston Fri Aug 26, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the 49ers podcast with David:

#1 Dave, do you agree with a good quarterback should throw 90% strikes to receivers but in San Francisco 49ers quarterback Trey Lance is throwing below 65% any cause for concern on the part head coach Kyle Shanahan?

#2 Lance under center struggled going 7-11 for 49 yards. He was under pressure as the offensive line struggled to contain the Houston Texans pass rush.

#3 It was three drives that Lance struggled in the 49ers open their regular season Sun Aug 11 against the Bears in Chicago at Soldier Stadium will Lance be ready by then?

Join David for the 49ers podcasts heard weekly at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Yanks pour it on and early defeat A’s 13-4; A’s Neuse first position player to pitch more than an inning since 1984

Oakland Athletics pitcher Cole Irvin, left, interrupts a hug to rub the face of former teammate New York Yankees pitcher Lou Trivino before the game at the Oakland Coliseum on Thu Aug 25, 2022 (AP News photo)

New York (77-48). 13. 20. 0

Oakland (46-80). 4. 8. 0

Thursday, August 25, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND-After the American League Eastern Division leading New York Yankees, behind the excellent pitching of ex-Athletic Frankie Montás, had finished sweeping their two game series against their interborough rivals, the Mets, the Bronx Bombers arrived in Oakland boasting a record of 76-48.

The Yanks seemed to be emerging from a rough patch, having gone 2-5 in their last home stand before their twin triumphs over the NL East leaders, a turnaround that before indicates that tonight’s visitors have recovered their mojo.

On top of that, slugger Giacarlo Stanton returned from the injured list today. In spite of his .228 batting average, he’d hit 27 home runs in a mere 80 games. Having him in the number three spot of the batting order only made the pinstripers, disguised in their road greys, a more formidable opponent for the lowly A’s, who. stood (perhaps “stumbled” is a better word) at 46-79.

The home team, with a won-lost balance of 46-79 took the field with the second worst winning percentage in major league baseball. The game promised to be a mismatch, and it was. The Yankees massacred the Athletics, 13-4.

The green and gold faced 30 year old right hander Jameson Taillon, a first round draft pick for the Pirates a dozen years ago. He had three previous career starts against the Athletics, in which he went 1-0, 6.75.

One of them was a no decision in the Yanks 5-3 in the Bronx, in which Oakland touched him up for three earned runs on seven hits over five innings. He brought an 11-4, 4.00 record to the mound. This was his 25th start of 2022. His ERA in the first 10was 2.30; it was 5.35 in the next 14.

He went six strong innings, limiting the A’s to one run, earned, on six hits, one of which was a roundtripper. He didn’t issue a single base on balls and logged a pair of strikeouts on the way to earning his 12th win of the year against four losses and improving his earned run average to 3.89.

On the hill for the hosts was fellow righty James Kaprielian, 3-7, 4.29 when he threw his first pitch. The trajectory of Kaprielian’s season had been the opposite of Taillon’s. In May and June, he went 0-5, 5.88 allowing opposing hitters a BA of .251 and an .825 OPS. Those figures had improved to 3-2, 2.59, .217, and .682 in July and four starts so far in August.

Kaprielian’s performance was frankly horrible. He lasted only 2-2/3 disastrous innings, leaving with the bases loaded. He ended up being charged with eight runs, all earned, one of them posthumous. They came on seven hits and six walks, offset by two strikeouts. The A’s starter threw 86 pitches, 48 for strikes, and was charged with his eighth loss against three wins. He saw his ERA rise to 4.88.

The Oakland starter dug himself a hole in the top of the second. After striking out Gleyber Torres, he walked Josh Donaldson, the man whom Matt Chapman made you forget. Then Oswaldo Cabrera pulled a single to left, and Kaprielian loaded the bases with a free pass to José Treviño.

Number nine batter Isiah Kiner drove a liner up the middle for a single that scored Donaldson and Cabrera. Andrew Benintendi also singled to center, loading the bases for Aaron Judge and his load of 48 home runs and 105 RBI. Kaprielian got him to pop out to first, but the now healthy Giancarlo Stanton drove in his 62nd and 63rd runs of the year with a single to left. Two innings into the game, New York led 4-0.

In the third, the Yankees, who had batted around in the second, picked up where they’d left off. Gleyber Torres led off with a walk and scored when Donaldson smacked a double off the left center field wall.

After Cabrera flew out toright, Trevino lashed a grounder to the right of shortstop Nick Allen, who made a great backhanded grab of it and let off a strong throw to first. But the Yankee catcher beat it out, and the threat continued, with runners on first second.

Wildness continued to plague Kaprielian, who walked Kiner-Falefa on a full count to clog the basepaths with the top of New York order coming to bat. Benintendi skyed out to left with a sac fly that brought Donaldson in with the Yanks’ sixth tally. Another walk, this one to Judge, reloaded the bases. Stanton walked on a full count, bringing in Treviño and sending Kaprielian to the showers. Kirby Snead replaced him.

Snead got Anthony Rizzo to hit a grounder to second, but it pulled Vogt out of position to attempt to field it, and there was no one covering first. It went as a single,driving in Kiner-Falefa with the eighth Yankee run. In 2-2/3 innings, every batter in the New York lineup had reached base safely. Torres then mercifully grounded out to end the frame.

A Donaldson single and Treviño double, followed by singles from Kiner-Falefa and Benintendi and a bases loaded RBI out from Judge tacked a couple of additional more runs on the board for the Yanks in their half of the fourth, Kirby’s last inning of the game. Norge Ruíz took over for him in the fifth.

The A’s finally scored with two down in the bottom of the sixth. Promising rookie Shea Langeliers took a changeup waaay deep, 419 feet to left field for his second big league homer and sixth RBI.

The visitors got that back in spades when they came to bat in the seventh, perhaps because Ruíz had been affected by the line drive he took in the leg off Judge’s bat in the previous inning. With one out, back to back singles by Rizzo and Torres were followed by back to back doubles by Donaldson and Cabrera, all hit to either right or right center field, netted the Bombers a trio of talleys. They also ended Ruíz’s up to then successful stint and brought Joel Payamps to the mound. He closed out the frame, which ended with the Yankees sitting on a 13-1 advantage.

Greg Weissert toed the rubber for the New Yorkers in the home seventh. It took. him two pitches to hit Jonah Bride, commit a balk, and hit Skye Bolt.

After getting Allen out on a fly to center, he walked Kemp to load the bases and then walked Machín to force Bride in with Oakland´s second run. That brought Lucas Luetge in to stop the bleeding before it could become a hemorrhage.

He retired Murphy but plunked Brown, the third Oakland hit batsman of the inning, bringing Bolt across the plate with the third Oakland run of the game. An infield single by Langeliers (his third safety of the night) brought in. Kemp, and it was 13-4

But when things go wrong, everything goes wrong. Benintendi led off the Yankee eighth with a single. Aaron Hicks, now playing center field, struck out. Kyle Higashioka pinch hit for Stanton and got an infield single.

Payamps was injured on the play and had to be helped off the field. I’ve not yet received a report of his condition. The A’s called on infielder Sheldon Neuse to quiet the Yanks for the rest of the game, which he did, retiring all five Bronx Bombers he faced. But the game was irretrievably lost.

Baseball, for all its reliance on the statistical analysis of the past to foretell future performance, is an unpredictable game. Tomorrow’s 6:40 confrontation between the two teams, with Gerrit Cole (9-6, 3.41) on the mound for the Yanks and erstwhile Yankee JP Sears (a combined 5-0,1.93 for his work for both teams) opposing him, could turn out to be a nail biter. After all, the Athletics did put up that improbable three run seventh, didn’t they?

Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah Salmonson: How playing every team in 2023 will effect A’s

Oakland A’s starter James Kaprielian was the starting pitcher against the New York Yankees on Thu Aug 25, 2022 at the Oakland Coliseum. Here he is pitching against the Seattle Mariners on Sat Aug 20, 2022. (AP file photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jeremiah:

#1 Major League Baseball has gone to a face team format starting next season and they have the A’s opening up their regular season in Oakland against the LA Angels on Thu Mar 29.

#2 New York Mets manager Buck Showalter said that it’s great for the game and that it beats playing the same people all the time.

#3 The high profile rival games have been cut down from 47% to 32% which featured teams like the Giants-Dodgers, Cubs-Cardinals, and Yankees-Red Sox. Seeing that the A’s are not part of those rivalries that might make things interesting for them seeing different clubs.

#4 The A’s are a huge draw when hosting the New York Yankees such as tonight’s first of four game series. The A’s next season will be hosting the Yanks on Jun 27, 28, and 29th.

#5 The Yankees did not announced a starting pitcher before tonight’s game in Oakland. New York manager Aaron Boone did not announce starting pitchers for the four game series will he surprise the A’s for each game with a bullpen starter or a starter. The A’s went with James Kaprielian (3-7, 4.29) on Thursday night.

Jeremiah Salmonson does the A’s podcasts Thursdays or Fridays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

You Be The Judge: Should the Giants pursue the Yankees slugger in free agency?

By Morris Phillips

The Giants have been down this road before. In need of a focal point offensively, and wanting to get younger and usher in a new era, they signed 28-year old Barry Bonds as a free agent in 1993.

That move worked out tremendously.

The initial outlay was $43.75 million over six years, then the highest priced contract in total, and average value per year in the game. The Giants enjoyed a decade of success, and moved into their new downtown ballpark during that run. Bonds went on to be the biggest name in baseball with the records and accomplishments to match.

The 2022 Giants, coming off a 107-win season in 2021, have faltered and are on the verge of turning the page, and likely moving on from their most established stars and several pricey contracts.

The Yankees and slugger Aaron Judge have failed to consummate a contract extension, and the 30-year old is poised to hit the free agent market in the off-season as the game’s biggest prize.

Should the Giants be interested? Would the $200 million cost be a shrewd investment or a boondoggle? Let’s look.

In seven Major League seasons, Judge has showcased his trademark power, hitting 206 home runs to date. His high strikeout numbers and injury history have tempered the buzz surrounding his 6’7″ frame with his 2018 through 2020 seasons truncated due to injury.

But in the last two seasons, Judge has put it all together with 48 home runs and a .297 batting average to date, and attempting to register one of the biggest offensive seasons in the last 25 years. Judge is slugging at .663 clip with 1.056 OPS that leads all of MLB along with his home runs and RBI (105).

What players have put up a full season of comparable numbers? The list is short: Bonds, Ted Williams, Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruth.

Adding to the Judge aura: He’s cut down on his strikeouts, lifted his batting average to a career-best, and he’s a credible base stealer, successful on 14 of 15 attempts.

So why would the Giants be in play? Here’s where it gets interesting. Barring a triumphant run to the World Series, the Yankees and Judge may consider parting ways. Their contract negotiations have been contentious and eventually stalled prior to this season’s start exacerbated by the labor strife that pitted the player’s union against the 30 team owners.

The quiet and private Judge may have grown tired of New York City, and might be amenable to a change of scenery. His childhood home of Linden, California outside of Stockton would be nearby if he chose San Francisco.

And here’s the biggest reason the Giants and Judge might be a fit. The limited market for Judge’s services point toward the Giants as several other teams have made free agent moves in recent seasons while the Giants have swung and missed on Giancarlo Stanton, Bryce Harper, Shohei Ohtani and Juan Soto.

And this time a superior trade package won’t Trump the Giants. Money and a belief that Judge can maintain is superstar status throughout a five or six-year deal will be all that’s needed.

Would you pull the trigger on such a move? You and the Giants are on the clock.

Texans shutout 49ers 17-0 in final preseason game

Houston Texans quarterback Davis Mills (10) is pressured by San Francisco 49ers defensive end Samson Ebukam (56) during the first half at NRG Stadium in Houston on Thu Aug 25, 2022 (AP News photo)

by Marko Ukalovic

In the final tune-up before the regular season, the Houston Texans defeated the San Francisco 49ers in a 17-0 shutout in the final preseason game on Thursday evening at NRG Stadium.

San Francisco finished the preseason 2-1 while Houston went undefeated at 3-0.

49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan had the opening day starters begin the game on offense. Quarterback Tre Lance played the entire first quarter and the first drive in the second quarter before being pulled in favor of Nate Sudfeld. Running back Jeff Wilson Jr. started at halfback. The first drive stalled at the Texans 36-yard line after Steven Nelson broke up a deep ball to Deebo Samuel.

On the flip side Texans’ head coach had his opening day starters in the lineup as well. Quarterback Davis Mills led an opening drive that went 85 yards on 11 plays that resulted in rookie running back Dameon Pierce one-yard rushing touchdown. Pierce rushed for six carries on 36 yards during the drive. Charles Omenihu’s roughing the passer penalty kept the drive alive after the defense had stopped a third down conversion attempt.

Lance finished with 7 of 11 for 49 yards as the next three drives didn’t amount to much as the Texans defense forced the second year quarterback to check down the ball that resulted in failed third down conversions. San Francisco was also shutdown on a fourth down conversion attempt.

Mills played the entire first half and opened up the second half with a six play 77-yard drive that was capped off with a 16 yard touchdown reception by Chris Moore. Mills finished 6 of 10 for 58 yards with one touchdown and one interception.

Sudfeld and Brock Purdy battled for the backup quarterback role as they rotated in on offense in the second half. Neither distanced themselves from one another in winning the backup role. A combination of penalties, turnovers and dropped balls plagued the offense throughout the second half.

Sudfeld finished 5 of 10 for 49 yards with one interception. Purdy was 13 of 20 for 182 yards and one interception.

The lone offensive bright spot for San Francisco was backup tight end Ross Dwelley who had three catches for 42 yards.

The 49ers coaching staff now has some tough decisions to make between now and August 30th when teams have to cut the rosters down to 53 players for the regular season. There’s a crowded room at running back with Trey Sermon being a possible casualty of the talented backfield.

GAME NOTES: San Francisco was 6-for-15 on third down conversions. Houston was 6-for-14.

UP NEXT: San Francisco opens the regular season on the road against the Chicago Bears on Sunday 9/11 at 10:00am at Soldier Field.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Daniel Dullum: Longoria’s hot bat keeping Giants in ball games; Longoria hitting .340 over last 16 games

Evan Longoria gets congratulated by teammates in the San Francisco Giants dugout after hitting a top of the sixth two run homer off the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park on Thu Aug 25, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the Giants podcast with Daniel:

#1 On Wednesday the San Francisco Giants Evan Longoria continued his hitting ways with a home run in the top of the sixth inning in Detroit to help the Giants in a 3-1 win at Comerica Park in Detroit.

#2 Longoria is hitting .340 over his last 16 games and has scored ten runs, with seven extra base hits which includes a grand slam home run. Longoria also has nine RBIs during that period.

#3 Giants starter Carlos Rodon threw for seven innings, five hits, one run, one earned and ten strikeouts for his 12th win against Detroit.

#4 Giants first baseman Brandon Belt is suffering a knee injury that is said to threaten Belt’s career. Belt himself is not sure if he can bounce back from the chronic knee saying it’s upsetting when he thinks about it.

#5 The Giants make their very first trip to Minnesota to face the Twins at Target Field. The Giants will be starting left hander Alex Wood (8-10, 5.45) he’ll be opposed by the Twins right hander Joe Ryan (9-6, 3.86) a 5:10 pm PDT first pitch.

Join Daniel Thursdays for the Giants podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Why is Arturo Moreno selling the LA Angels?

Los Angeles Angels owner Arte Moreno plans to sell the troubled ball club the team has even discussed moving out of Anaheim and moving to Long Beach (USA Today file photo)

Why is Arturo Moreno selling the LA Angels

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Mr. Arturo (Arte) Moreno purchased the LA Angels from Disney Corporation for $180 million in May 2003. The team is listed today with a value of over $2 Billion. Mr. Moreno when asked yesterday about a potential sale of the team said “It has been a great honor and privilege to own the Angels for 20 seasons”. I can understand why he is done with baseball.

I met Mr.Moreno when I was broadcasting Angels baseball in Spanish for Fox Sports West. Many times prior to a game he would walk into our booth (José Mota was the analyst with me for this telecast; I handled the play by play) Moreno was always jovial and engaging with us, liked to talk baseball, and was very enthusiastic about the game overall and his team, he will always say “let’s win today.”

Sometimes he would begin a conversation in Spanish. Arte Moreno is a businessman, 76 years old, who became the first Mexican-American to own a major sports team, born in Tucson, Arizona.

Some team owners are criticized (mostly by the fans) because they never seem to spend enough money for super star players. But nobody can say that about Arte Moreno. Right after he bought the team from Disney one of his first signings was the great Vladimir Guerrero, he is now in the Hall of Fame. Just before the 2019 season began he signed center fielder Mike Trout to $426.5 million, the largest contract in professional sports history.

Anthony Rendon signed a 7 year $245 million contract, with a $4 million signing bonus and this 2022 season his base salary is $36 million. Rendon, the Angels third-baseman played just 58 games in 2021, groin, knee, hamstring, hip injuries. Rendon is out this 2022 with wrist surgery.

This is what Mr. Moreno got from Anthony Rendon’s $245 million contract. Rendon played just 52 games in 2020 granted this was the covid abbreviated 60-game season, his first season with the Angels, 58 games in 2021 and just 45 games this 2022 season. That is frustrating for everybody, fans and management, but injuries are part of the game. Bad luck.

There were other signings during Moreno’s ownership that did not worked out very well. The one that I remember, as I was doing their games, was pitcher CJ Wilson who signed a $77 million 5-year contract around 2012-2015, but Wilson under performed. Prior to 2012 season Arte signed Albert Pujols to a 10-year $240 million dollars, he will be in the Hall of Fame by 2027.

Shohei Ohtani plays for Arte Moreno’s team. Arguably the most exciting player in many decades. There is nobody today with the god-given talent of this Japanese mega star. He can pitch with the best and hit (with great power) with the best, he is the whole package and just like Mike Trout a tremendous asset to the Angels organization, affable, a great teammate, totally the dream player for anybody. The American League MVP last season. Ohtani makes $5.5 million during this 2022 season, maybe the greatest bargain ever.

However, after the 2023 season Trout be an unrestricted free agent and can sign with whomever he wants. There is a good chance Mr. Moreno will not have to open the pocket-book to sign that monster of a contract that the Japanese star deserves and will probably get.

There is no mystery why this owner is selling this team. He expected a much better return on his investment and he is not having the fun he was anticipating. The Angels have been short of pitching now for a longtime, and nobody can win without pitching, even a lineup that was as loaded as the Angels.

Bad luck has run in his organization with other scandals that have been well publicized. The dead of pitcher Tyler Skaggs perhaps the biggest shocking news for the Angels.

A federal jury found former communications director Eric Kay guilty on two felony counts. The jury agreed with the government that he distributed the deadly drug fentanyl and caused the death of Angel’s pitcher Tyler Skaggs while the team was playing the Rangers in Texas.

In 2009 just a few hours after the best performance of his young and promising major league career, pitching in Anaheim against the visiting Oakland A’s, Nick Adenhart, a 22-year pitcher for the LA Angels was one of three people killed when the car they were traveling in was struck by a vehicle driven by a suspected drunken driver.

This season the Angels are lucky that the Oakland A’s began another rebuilding before the season got under way and have the cellar already reserved, otherwise they would be the occupants. The Angels occupy the fourth place and that is more than likely where they will finish this season.

Finally this year three-time American League MVP, Mike Trout has been dealing with a complicated condition, what is known as ‘costo vertebral dysfunction’ at T5 of his spine. The team has to monitor this condition for the rest of the season and also “through the rest of his career”

By the way, there is the Anaheim City Council who canned Angel Stadium deal after FBI corruption probe into City Hall.

Mr. Arte Moreno’s dream of winning a World Series, or two, during his ownership has not materialized. Ironically he bought the team from Disney (as mentioned here) in 2003; one year after the Angels won their only World Series against the San Francisco Giants. Interesting years under his ownership, but I think it was just time for him to sell, and I do not blame him. Heck, if I was him I would sell also.

Join Amaury Pi Gonzalez for exclusive exciting Oakland action on the A’s Spanish radio flagship station on Le Grande 1010 KIQI San Francisco and for That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Headline Sports podcast with Michael Roberson: Sky knock off Liberty 90-72; Seahawks Carroll will wait it out for next quarterback; plus much more

Chicago Sky forward Candace Parker (3) drives to the basket against New York Liberty forward Natasha Howard (6) during the first half in WNBA playoff action at the Barclay Center in Brooklyn on Tue Aug 24, 2022 (AP News photo)

On Headline Sports podcast with Michael Roberson:

#1 Michael, the Chicago Sky (26-10) knocked off the New York Liberty (46-20) in the WNBA playoffs on Tuesday night 90-72. The Sky’s guard Kahleah Cooper and Allie Quigley both scored 15 each to lead Chicago to victory. There is no doubt the Sky is having an incredible post season.

#2 Michael, Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll said the Hawks will take all the time they need in finding a new quarterback. There was that push for San Francisco 49ers quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo but the Hawks are waiting for the 49ers release him.

#3 Michael in spite of the Tom Brady headlines Las Vegas Raiders quarterback Derek Carr says to “just keep trying to play football” Carr will not let the Brady story be a distraction.

#4 Michael, the San Diego Wave are setting attendance records in the NWSL the Wave sold over 27,000 tickets for it’s Sep 17th game against Angel City FC. The Waves’ Alex Morgan was proud to announce the Women’s soccer sale number for the September game.

#5 Los Angeles Dodger Walker Buehler will be sorely missed. Buehler will undergo his second Tommy John surgery to repair a flexor tendon and will miss not only the rest of this season but all of 2023 as well.

Join Michael Roberson does the Headline Sports podcasts Wednesdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Untangling A Webb: Tigers chase Giants’ ace in decisive fifth inning, and win 6-1

By Morris Phillips

On the day of MLB’s 2023 interleague-heavy schedule release, the Giants ironically found themselves in a strange ballpark. Like a scary movie, things seemed normal at first, then veered wildly toward strange.

Logan Webb cruised into the fifth inning with a no-hitter, and retired 13 of the first 15 batters he faced, with the exception of two walks he issued. Then the downtown Detroit skyline became eerie, and figuratively, the roof caved in.

Jeimer Candelario broke up the no-no with a one out single, and Tucker Barnhart, hitting .208, followed with a double to put two runners in scoring position. Akil Baddoo, hitting ninth with a .190 batting average, drew a walk to load the bases. Then Brandon Crawford misjudged Riley Greene’s hard-hit ground ball up the middle against a shift. Crawford was in position, but watched the ball kick up and over his glove on its way to center field. That gave the Tigers a 2-0 lead, and we segue for some analysis from manager Gabe Kapler.

I think when Logan is ahead in the count he’s getting more swings and misses,” Kapler said. “So there was some contact in that inning. Some of it was unfortunate, some of it was hard. I think if Logan could have that inning back, he’d probably get ahead of the bottom of the lineup.”

Webb started the next two batters–Kody Clemens (Roger Clemens’ son) and Harold Castro–with strikes, but it mattered little. Both produced RBI singles. Down 4-0 with a pair of runners aboard, Webb’s afternoon was finished.

 “I can’t really explain it,” Webb said. It just wasn’t very good.”

Thomas Szapucki was Kapler’s choice to end the Tigers’ rally, but Willi Castro sent his fifth pitch into the left field gap, scoring two more runs. Szapucki, acquired from the Mets in the Darin Ruf-J.D. Davis swap, tried to retire Castro with a low-80’s curve ball, but he had seen it three times in the four previous pitches, and he was ready for it.

Down 6-0, the Giants’ attempts to rally didn’t amount to much. Mike Yastrzemski, Joey Bart and Tommy LaStella strung together two out hits in the seventh to get the Giants on the board, but Lamonte Wade Jr. struck out to end that inning. The Giants realized baserunners in the eighth and ninth, but couldn’t bring them around in either frame.

The Giants finished 1 for 13 with runners in scoring position.

Along with Webb, Wade’s afternoon was especially rocky. He finished 0 for 4 with a strikeout, and saw his smash to centerfield go 415 feet only to be caught by Greene, who provided an impressive jump to settle underneath the fly out in front of the 420 foot sign. Wade won’t cherish this August; he’s hitting .175 with just seven hits, none of them singles (two doubles, five home runs). He’s 0 for his last 13 across the most recent five games.

The other piece of adversity for the Giants surrounds Brandon Belt, who was put on the 10-day list with chronic knee issues. Speculation is that this injury could short circuit the remainder of Belt’s career, but the 35-year old said he chooses not to ponder that conclusion at this juncture.

The Giants won’t have a winning record to take to Minneapolis, falling to 61-62, but they will encounter a struggling Twins team without the injured Byron Buxton. The Twins have lost nine of 14 and are losing tonight in Houston at press time, 5-1.

The Giants will have Alex Wood on the mound Friday night in their first visit to Target Field. The Twins have not announced a starter.

More irony: the schedule reveal for next season has the Giants revisiting Detroit and Minnesota and opening the season in the Bronx against the Yankees, as all major league teams will see their interleague schedule go from 20 to 46 games, and see them play one three-game series against all 15 American League clubs with the only home-and-home against the A’s (two games at home, two games in Oakland).