San Francisco Giants Matt Chapman swings for an RBI single in the bottom of the eighth inning at Oracle Park against the San Diego Padres on Sun Apr 7, 2024 (AP News photo)
Sunday, April 7, 2024
Oracle Park
San Francisco, California
San Diego Padres 2 (5-7)
San Francisco Giants 3 (4-6)
Win: Ryan Walker (1-0)
Loss: Jhony Brito (0-2)
Save: Camilo Doval (1)
Time: 2:16
Attendance: 40,149
By Stephen Ruderman
SAN FRANCISCO–The Giants capitalized on a botched double play, and scored two runs in the bottom of the eighth inning to come back and beat the Padres 3-2 and win the series.
After the Giants’ dramatic walk-off win in the Home Opener on Friday, the Padres beat the Giants on a first inning grand slam by Jurickson Profar. Logan Webb took the mound to make his third start of the season for the rubber match, as the Giants looked to take the series.
Webb got off to a tough start in the top of the first. He got Xander Bogaerts to fly out to right to open the game, but Fernando Tatis Jr. lined a single to left, and then Jake Cronenworth knocked in Tatis with a double to right.
The knuckle-baller Matt Waldron made the start for San Diego, and the Giants threatened in the bottom of the first. Jung-hoo Lee singled on a ground ball up the middle to start the inning, and then got to third on a one-out double by Jorge Soler. However, Michael Conforto popped out to third, and Matt Chapman flew out to right.
Webb ran into trouble again in the top of the second when the Padres put runners on the corner with one out, but he got out of it when Kyle Higashioka hit a ground ball to third for a 5-4-3 double play to end the inning.
From there, both pitchers settled down. Waldron retired 14 of the 15 men he faced from Conforto’s popup through the bottom of the fifth inning. As for Webb, the inning-inning double play in the top of the second started a stretch where he set down nine-straight guys.
The Padres had Webb back on the ropes in the sixth, as three-straight singles by Cronenworth, Manny Machado and Ha-seong Kim plated a run to make it 2-0.
The Giants caught a break when Lee reached on an errant throw by Kim to start the bottom of the sixth. LaMonte Wade Jr. then singled to right, and the Giants would be in business. Soler lined out sharply to center, and Padres Manager Mike Shildt came out to the mound to pull Waldron for Steve Koek, who walked Conforto to load the bases.
Matt Chapman came up and hit a chopper to short that the shortstop Kim fielded and flipped to second to get Conforto for the force. Lee scored on the play to put the Giants on the board, but that would be the only run the Giants would get in the sixth, as Thairo Estrada swung out swinging on a ball in the dirt to end the inning.
With the Giants on the board, the Padres looked to respond in the seventh. Tyler Wade and Jackson Merrill singled to start the inning, and Webb would be in trouble again. Higashioka tried to sacrifice the runners over to second and third, but he struck out on a foul bunt. Bogaerts then reached on a fielder’s choice, which put runners on the corners with two outs, and Tatis grounded out to third, as Webb got out of it unscathed.
Webb had an up-and-down outing today, as he gave up 10 hits, but he was able to work his way out of trouble, and managed to allow just two runs over seven innings.
“Webby’s up against it not getting support,” said Manager Bob Melvin.
“[I’m] still not where I really want to be,” said Webb. “The first inning, my changeup was god awful. Then I started throwing more, and started to figure it out a little better. Still some things I gotta clean up, but as long as the team wins, I’m all good.”
Yuki Matsui pitched a 1-2-3 bottom of the seventh for the Padres, and Melvin brought in Ryan Walker, who pitched a 1-2-3 top of the eighth for the Giants.
Lee popped out to the catcher to start the bottom of the eighth, and then Shildt pulled Matsui for the righty Jhony Brito in response to Wilmer Flores pinch-hitting for Wade. Flores lined a base-hit to left, and Soler singled to right-center to move Tyler Fitzgerald, who pinch-ran for Flores, to third.
Conforto hit a chopper to first, which Cronenworth fielded and stepped on the bag at first for the second out, but when he threw to second to try and nab Soler for the double play, the shortstop, Kim, dropped the ball, and it got away, which allowed Soler to get to third and Fitzgerald to score the tying run. Matt Chapman then came up and hit a ground ball the opposite way to right for a base-hit to score Soler and give the Giants the lead.
“[Chapman]’s really not hitting his stride yet, but he’s finding a way to make contact with guys on third and less than two out, and he’s finding a way to get a big hit,” said Melvin.
Camilo Doval came in for the ninth to try and notch his first save of the season, and he retired the first two men he faced. However, Doval, who has been off to another rocky start his season, wouldn’t get through the ninth so easily. Jackson Merrill singled to right and stole second to put the tying run in scoring position, but Doval struck out Luis Campusano to end the game, and the Giants won it 3-2.
“Our offensive is gonna come around,” said Melvin. “If we can do the little things right, create this kind of identity and win these kind[s] of games, I think we’ll be tougher for it.”
Ryan Walker, who pitched the eighth got the win; Jhony Brito got the loss; and of course, Camilo Doval got his first save of the year.
The Giants improve to 4-6, and they will welcome the Washington Nationals to Oracle Park for a three-game series starting tomorrow night. Tomorrow night will also be big, as Blake Snell will make his Giants debut. First pitch will be at 6:45 p.m.
News and Notes:
- With today’s attendance of 40,149, the Giants have sold out their first three games at Oracle Park, matching their amount of sellouts from all of last season.
Not only that, but this is the first time that the Giants have sold out three straight games since they sold out four-straight at the end of 2018 and the beginning of 2019. They sold out their final three home games of the 2018 Season against the Dodgers (Sept. 28-30), as well as the Home Opener in 2019 against the Tampa Bay Rays (April 5.)
There was also much more energy and enthusiasm at Oracle Park this weekend than there had been for a better part of the last five years. It is no surprise that since the Giants were willing to spend money to build a better team over the off-season, there is a lot of hype around the Giants this season, and fans are showing up. As they say, “Build it, and they will come.”
- Wilmer Flores has seen a decrease in playing time early this season, but Bob Melvin has made it quite clear that Flores is a big part of this team.
“It’s really hard not to have [Flores] in the game,” said Melvin. “The one thing you do know is that you’re going to have a spot in the game where he can come up and [have an] impact, and left, right, it doesn’t matter to him, so when they make the move, it doesn’t matter. It’s Wilmer Flores.”
- There have been a lot of new faces in Mike Murphy’s Clubhouse this season in terms of both players and catchers. 10 games in, the personalities are starting to mesh.
“I think it’s been great,” said Melvin. “[We have] a new coaching staff to an extent, and there were a lot of new players [who come] in during [Spring Training], so there’s a lot [we] have to sort through. I think as far as how these guys get along in the clubhouse, [with] the leadership from previous teams, [and the] leadership from now with some of the players we’ve brought too, I think it’s happened really well. Obviously, our results have not been great yet, and they will, but we [are] still kinda learning each other, I think more so on the field than in the clubhouse.”
Matt Chapman has been heralded as one of the new leaders in the clubhouse.
“Matt Chapman’s always been a leader, so that’s never going to change, and that’s one of the reasons we brought him in here.”
“Honestly, I think the most underrated part of Chappy is his leadership and what he brings inside the clubhouse, inside the dugout [and] the energy he brings every single day,” said Webb. “[At] times when we might get down early, and he’s coming in the dugout [and] saying, ‘Let’s go guys!’ kinda firing the guys up. I think that’s something we might have lacked the last couple of years, and he brings that, so you feel that as a teammate.”
“I’m just trying to show up every day and play to win,” said Chapman. “[I] just do whatever I can to help the team. [I’m] just trying to keep the positive vibes up around this place and do my job.”

