That’s Amaury News and Commentary: The President Founder and CEO of the Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum Hall of Fame

Masanori Murakami the first Japanese MLB player and Gabriel (Tito) Avila Jr. president of the Baseball Hispanic Heritage Hall of Fame Museum (photo from Baseball Hispanic Heritage Hall of Fame Museum)

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

The President Founder and CEO of the Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum Hall of Fame

By Amaury Pi-González

The face of baseball today is Japanese mega-star Shohei Ohtani, a two-way player with the Los Angeles Dodgers and the most famous two-way player in the history of baseball since Babe Ruth (1914-1935). Still, the first Japanese player to play in the United States in Major League Baseball was Masanori Murakami, who pitched for the San Francisco Giants 1964-1965.

Murakami was the first Asian-born baseball player to come to America and play in the Major Leagues. The Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum Hall of Fame’s President Founder and CEO Gabriel “Tito” Avila, Jr. met in Japan with Masanori Murakami and Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame representatives.

The Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame first opened in 1959 adjacent to Korakuen Stadium in Tokyo. Later, in 1988, the hall of and museum moved to a new site within the Tokyo Dome. Gabriel “Tito” Avila, Jr. represented The Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum Hall of Fame https://hhbmhof.com/ in this goodwill trip to the land of the rising sun.

This 2024 MLB season began on March 20 in South Korea when the Los Angeles Dodgers played a 2-game series against the San Diego Padres. Shohei Ohtani was the “main attraction,” and thousands of fans arrived early to look at the world’s #1 baseball player.

The Hispanic Baseball Museum was founded in San Francisco in 1998. Since its foundation, this museum hall of fame has traveled and exhibited in multiple cities across the United States, at baseball parks, libraries, expositions and community baseball events, from New York to San Francisco and in between.

Mr. Avila Jr envisions the HHBMHOF traveling to Japan, with an exhibit of the great history and richness of Hispanic / Latino baseball. “This was a goodwill trip and I am thrilled specially and meeting such icons as Murakami and other Japanese players and executives representatives in the world of baseball”. The Founder President and CEO of the HHBMHOF also were very impressed as Japanese baseball officials gave him a personal tour of The Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame.

Many Hispanic / Latinos are playing today in the Japanese Baseball Leagues however, the first Hispanic / Latino player to have ever played in Japan was Roberto “Chico” Barbon a Native from Matansas Cuba was an Infielder from the 1954 -1965 for the Hankyu Braves and Kintetsu Buffaloes of the Pacific League, Nippon Professional Baseball. Barbon played 11 seasons.

Latin America and Japan are united by their love of the game of baseball. The Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum hopes to work with Japan for the love of the game that continues to grow in popularity in Asia and all around the world. The Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum and Hall of Fame, has been around for 25 1/2 years and is looking forward to their first permanent location in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Giants Shutout Struggling Rockies 5-0; SF’s Harrison throws 7 innings of shutout ball

San Francisco starter Kyle Harrison pitched shutout ball into the seventh inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field in Denver on Tue May 7, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

After getting swept by the Philadelphia Phillies this past weekend the San Francisco Giants (16-21) got back on track on the road in Colorado winning the first game of the series defeating the Colorado Rockies (8-27). A slow first three innings turned into a terrific fourth inning for the Giants scoring four runs. San Francisco had another run in the seventh inning for a final of 5-0.

Game recap: Neither team got much going through the first three innings. The Giants had a couple of hits in the first three innings but were unable to string any hits together. Jung Hoo Lee singled in the first inning and Mike Yastrzemski doubled in the second and that was about it for San Francisco. The Rockies walked four runners in the opening innings. San Francisco was about to turn this game around.

It was a terrific fourth inning for the Giants. They had a couple of infield singles plus a couple of outfield singles and when the dust had settled San Francisco had a 4-0 lead. The first infield single brought Matt Chapman home for the first run of the game. 1-0. A Thairo Estrada ground out was good for a second run. LaMonte Wade Jr and Michael Conforto both singled bringing two runners home for a 4-run inning.

San Francisco added another run in the seventh innings now leading 5-0. Conforto singled Estrada home. The Giants Kyle Harrison had a great seven innings on the mound finishing with 85 pitches. He had seven shutout innings in his first appearance at Coors Field.

Harrison handled the altitude like a pro which is always a challenge at Coors. Ryan Walker relieved Harrison in the eighth inning finishing the inning with no hits, no runs, no walks and 3 strikeouts in an uneventful inning for the Rockies.

Camilo Doval came in to close this game in the ninth inning. He struggled to start walking two runners but came on strong finishing off the Rockies and completing the first win in this series for San Francisco.

Game notes: After a rough series the past four days against the Phillies the Giants traveled to rocky mountain country taking on Colorado for a three-game series. The Giants really struggled against the top-dog in MLB getting swept in the four game series with Philadelphia. Tuesday night they took on the Rockies that shares the basement with the White Sox and got a win to open the series in Colorado.

The Rockies have had an awful start to the 2024 season after a disappointing 2023 season. Kyle Harrison for the Giants pitched seven innings, four hits, two walks, and two strikeouts for the win and for the Rockies Dakota Hudson picked up the loss pitching 3.2 innings, five hits, four earned runs, walked five and struck out two. The Giants went into this series with high hopes and were able to win it to open the series.

Game two Wednesday: In this second game will feature Jordan Hicks on the mound for San Francisco with a 2-1, 1.89 ERA. Peter Lambert will start for the Rockies with a 2-1 5.66 ERA. First pitch in this game is scheduled for 5:40 PM.

A’s Stripling gets rocked early; Rangers pour on 10 run 2nd inning in 15-8 win at Coliseum

Oakland A’s pitcher Ross Stripling (36) stands on the mound to be removed from the game next to catcher Kyle McCann (52) in the top of the second inning against the Texas Rangers at Oakland Coliseum on Tue May 7, 2024 (AP News photo)

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum

Oakland, California

Texas Rangers 15 (21-17)

Oakland Athletics 8 (17-20)

Win: Jose Urena (1-2)

Loss: Ross Stripling (1-6)

Time: 3:07

Attendance: 3,965

By Stephen Ruderman

OAKLAND–The Rangers beat the A’s 15-8 thanks to a 10-run second inning to hand the A’s their third-straight loss, but the A’s showed tremendous resilience despite it.

Following their six-game winning streak that got them up to .500, the A’s dropped two-straight. Today, they would send Ross Stripling, who has been off to a tough start this season, to the mound as they looked to stop the snide.

Stripling’s struggles continued when Marcus Semian hit a home run just to the left of straight-away center field on the first pitch of the game. The Rangers threatened further damage after base-hits by Nathaniel Lowe and Evan Carter, but Stripling got Josh Smith to fly out to center to end the inning after giving up just the run on the home run.

Texas went with the veteran right-hander, Jose Urena. Abraham Toro lined a base-hit up the middle and into center field to start the bottom of the first, and Seth Brown walked with two outs, but J.D. Davis lined out to right to end the inning.

Stripling may have escaped further damage in the top of the first, but the top of the second would be an absolute nightmare for him. Travis Jankowski and Jonah Heim singled to put runners at the corners with nobody out. Leody Tavares and Marcus Semien then singled to knock in Jankowski and Heim respectively, and the Rangers led 3-0.

The Rangers were just getting started. Corey Seager hit a ground ball to first-baseman J.D. Davis, and when Davis threw to second to try and get Semien, the ball sailed into left field, as Tavares scored to make it 4-0. Lowe walked to load the bases, and Adolis Garcia walked to make it 5-0.

Evan Carter popped out to third-baseman Brett Harrris for the first out eight batters into the inning, and Josh Smith singled to score Seager and move each runner up one base. Jankowski struck out swinging for the second, but the Rangers were still far from done.

Heim singled on a ground ball up the middle to knock in a pair and make it 8-0, and Tavares hit a texas-leaguer to left to score Smith and make it 9-0. That did it for Ross Stripling, who lasted just an inning and two-thirds.

“[I’m] definitely bummed,” said Stripling. “I feel like one thing I’ve been able to mostly do this year is get through five [innings] and into the sixth, and save the bullpen…..today, [I was] not able to do that.”

Mark Kotsay brought in Hogan Harris, who immediately gave up a two-run double to Marcus Semien, who had already hit for three legs on the cycle in just the second inning. Seager singled and Lowe walked to bring up Adolis Garcia, who was the 16th batter of the inning.

The Rangers were two batters away from batting around twice in the inning, but Garcia struck out swinging, and Texas would have to settle for just 10 runs in the top of the second inning. Of the 10 runs, only four of them were earned, as the other six came as a consequence of Davis’ error.

To the A’s credit, they did not go down quietly in the bottom of the second. Kyle McCann doubled on a fly ball to left that left-fielder Evan Carter lost in the sun. Lawrence Butler grounded out to second to move McCann over to third.

The A’s got on the board when Darell Hernaiz reached on a throwing error by shortstop Corey Seager, but Hernaiz injured his left ankle after his foot landed awkwardly on the bag at first. Hernaiz was down for a few minutes, as the injury looked quite severe. He did have to leave the game, but he was able to walk off on his own power, as Max Schuemann came in to pinch-run.

Brett Harris walked, and Abraham singled to load the bases. Bren Rooker then hit a squibber off the end of the bat to third that Josh Smith charged and had to play on to make it 11-2. Seth Brown grounded out to end the inning, but the A’s would not be done either.

The third inning was the exact opposite of the second. Hogan Harris was back out for the top of the third and threw a 1-2-3 inning, as did Urena in the bottom of the third.

The Rangers scored four more runs off Harris in the top of the fourth to extend their already-enormous lead to 15-2, and Urena pitched a scoreless bottom of the fourth. Urena pitched a 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the fifth to end his afternoon.

Hogan Harris was still going and threw a 1-2-3 top of the sixth. Bruce Bochy made a plethora of defensive changes for Texas and brought in Jonathan Hernandez to pitch the bottom of the sixth.

McCann, Schuemann and Brett Harris all walked to load the bases for Abraham Toro. Hernandez threw a wild pitch, which allowed McCann to score to make it 15-3, and Toro grounded out to second to make it 15-4.

JJ Bleday and Brent Rooker walked to load the bases, as the A’s had an opportunity to put a further dent in Texas’ lead, but Bochy pulled Hernandez for Yerry Rodriguez, who got Seth Brown to ground out to first to end the inning.

Hogan Harris pitched through a two-out error in the top of the seventh, and that would be the end of his afternoon. Harris didn’t have the greatest outing of all-time, but he did exactly what the A’s needed him to do after Stripling only went an inning and two-thirds. Harris ended up going five and two-thirds, and with a doubleheader tomorrow, he single-handedly saved the A’s bullpen.

“Hogan did a nice job coming in,” said Kotsay. He had one bad inning, but other than that, he threw up some zeroes, had some life to his fastball and threw strikes. For Hogan to get that deep into a game, coming into a game in the second and [getting us through the seventh], it was nice.”

Yerry Rodriguez stayed out for the bottom of the seventh, but Bochy removed Marcus Semien after a 4-for-5 performance despite being a triple away from the cycle. J.D. Davis grounded out to first to start the inning, but McCann hit a home run to center to make it 15-5. For McCann, he ended up scoring three of the A’s five runs this afternoon.

Kotsay then brought in 30-year-old Tyler Ferguson, who finally made his major league debut after over eight years in the minor leagues. It was the Rangers who drafted Ferguson in 2015, so his debut had extra significance to it. Ferguson walked Leody Tavarez to start the inning, but he got Jonathan Ornelas to fly out to left, and he struck out Davis Wendzel and Nathaniel Lowe, both looking.

Rodriguez was still on the mound for Texas in the bottom of the eighth, and he struck out Toro looking to start the inning. However, the A’s still had life in them, just as they had all game. Bleday lined a base-hit to center; Rooker walked; and Seth Brown hit a three-run home run to right-center to make it 15-8.

Ferguson was back out for the ninth and set down the first two men he faced, but he ran into trouble with two outs. Josh Smith doubled to right; Jankowski was hit by a pitch; and Andrew Knizer walked to load the bases. Ferguson then engaged in a 10-pitch battle with Leody Tavares and won it, as Tavares ended up flying out to left to end the inning.

“[Ferguson] got his first major league strikeout, which was great,” said Kotsay. “[He] pitched out of a bases-loaded jam there in the ninth and made pitches when he had to. [He was] maybe a little nervous, [and] a little anxious in terms of his command, but he did a nice job as well in [helping us] not having to go back into the bullpen again and pitching those two innings for us.”

“[I] really liked him in Spring Training,” said Stripling. “He obviously was there to the very end. It felt like he was probably one of our last guys that we were debating whether he would make the team or not…..some [journey men] like that make it, and [I] just couldn’t be more happy for him…..hopefully a day like today makes it all worth it for him.”

Cole Winn was summoned by Bochy for the bottom of the ninth, and he pitched a scoreless inning to end it, as the A’s simply ran out of juice.

The A’s have dropped three straight and fall to 17-20, but despite the 10-run second inning and the lopsided score, they showed resilience all afternoon and believed they could come back the entire time. This A’s team clearly believes in themselves, and that is really what has made them fun and exciting to watch this season.

“[Our] offense continued to take good at-bats, and that shows their character, that shows their grit,” said Kotsay. “They didn’t just give at-bats away…..for our guys to continue to fight, continue to put up some runs there and add to a score where we were really far behind and give us a chance to continue forward, it was good.”

The A’s will close out the series with a doubleheader tomorrow. The left-hander, JP Sears, will make the start in the first game, which will get underway at 12:37 p.m.

News and Notes:

Darell Hernaiz underwent an MRI on his left ankle after the game. Manager Mark Kotsay believes it is most likely a sprain, but the A’s will give an update on Hernaiz before the game tomorrow.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Environmental law suit could hold up Coliseum sale

African American Sports and Entertainment president Ray Babbitt addresses the media at the Oakland Airport Hilton. Babbitt and AASEG intend to purchase the Oakland A’s half of the Coliseum property and also the other half from the City of Oakland (African American Sports and Entertainment file photo)

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Amaury, Alameda County’s sale on half it’s share at the Oakland Coliseum is due to go through on May 14 when the Oakland A’s are scheduled to make the final payment of the property at $85 million. However a lawsuit has been filed in Alameda County court for Sep 24.

#2 The lawsuit filed by Communities for a Better Environment who are a California non profit environmental health group say that team owner John Fisher in the sales agreement ignored the Surplus Land Act which is mandated by state law.

#3 The A’s who purchased half of the Coliseum site back in 2019 in the event that if their new ballpark site at Howard Terminal falls through they could go back to the Coliseum. The A’s later claimed the Coliseum was unfit for baseball but the A’s plan to continue with the purchase.

#4 The A’s are currently in negotiations to sell their half interest to Oakland group the African American Sports and Entertainment Group. AASEG is also negotiating with the City of Oakland to purchase their half of their interest to develop, residential, commercial and sports.

#5 Ruby Acevedo an attorney for the environment group CBE said the county could argue that the SLA is regularly ignored statewide however Acevedo state there is case law that the counties would take demand letters seriously. CBE is asking for the county to engage in housing development for affordable housing. Affordable housing was an issue with Fisher when it was a requirement for his ballpark village at Howard Terminal.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez does News and Commentary podcasts Tuesdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

#1

San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman: Giants open three game series in Colorado tonight

On the SF Giants podcast with Stephen:

#1 Stephen, The San Francisco Giants were swept in four games at Citizens Bank in Philadelphia by the Philadelphia Phillies Monday and it wasn’t close in a a five run 6-1 loss for San Francisco.

#2 The Phillies got some offense as superstar slugger Bryce Harper took Giants pitching deep with a three run home run off Giants rookie pitcher Mason Black in the bottom of the fifth inning to extend Harper’s hit streak to 19.

#3 The Phillies got some pitching as well from Zack Wheeler who sat down 11 Giant hitters on strike outs in seven innings of work. When your dealing like that and keeping guys off balance it’s difficult to get some kind of rhythm going and for the Giants line up Wheeler was just a mystery.

#4 For Black he made his big league appearance in front of family and friends who come from the Philadelphia area was able to get a 1-2-3 inning against the Phils in the first inning which included striking out Harper on a 88 MPH change up but that all changed later when the Phillies touched up Black for eight hits and five runs in 4.1 innings of work.

#5 The Giants continue their road trip and head to the Rocky Mountains to battle the Colorado Rockies on Tuesday night at Coors Field in Denver for the first of a three game series. Starting pitcher for the Giants LHP Kyle Harrison (2-1, ERA 3.79) and for the Rockies RHP Dakota Hudson (0-5, ERA 5.93) first pitch 5:40pm PDT.

Stephen Ruderman is a staff beat writer for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Rangers Seagar 8th inning three run bomb passes up A’s in 4-2 win at Coliseum

The Texas Rangers Corey Seagar watches the flight of his three run homer against the Oakland A’s in the top of the eighth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Mon May 6, 2024 (AP News photo)

Texas (20-16). 000 000 031. 4. 5. 2

Athletics (17-19). 010 010 000. 2. 7. 1

Time: 2:26

Attendance: 2,895

Monday, May 6, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–The Athletics hoped to rebound from the drubbing they received at the fins of the Miami Marlins on Sunday afternoon, and they came within a few hare’s breaths of pulling it off, but they fell short, succumbing 4-2 in a game that featured strong pitching and crucial error by both squads.

11 year veteran Alex Wood didn’t bring impressive credentials to his eighth start of the season. His ERA of 6.32 was the fifth highest of big league hurlers who’d thrown 30 frames or more, and it was accompanied by a won and lost balance of 1-2.

This was consonant with his performance for the Giants last year, when he went 5-5. 4.33 with an opponents’ batting average. But he was sharp tonight, throwing six innings of two hit, shutout baseball. He allowed only one free pass. His pitch count was an economical 78, and only 24 were balls. He had to settle for a no decision but improved his earned run average, 5.30. Austin Adams took over mound duties for the seventh and put the Rangers down, 1,2,3.

The Rangers also went with a veteran lefty. Andrew Heany broke into the show with the Marlins in 2014 and has pitched for them, both Los Angeles teams, the Yankees, and the Rangers, for whom he went 10-4, 4.15 last year. He pitched almost as well as Wood, also going six frames, but allowing seven hits and two runs, one of them earned, striking out five, and also getting a no decision. He threw 97 pitches 71 for strikes, leaving with an ERA of 4.50.

The Athletics were the first to score. JD Davis led off the bottom of the second with a single to left and moved up a notch on Abraham Toro’s single to right. Shea Langeliers’ fly to right was deep enough for Davis to advance another 90 feet. Toro scored on Darell Hernaiz’s sacrifice fly to left, and Hernaiz took second on left fielder Ezequiel Durán’s errant throw home but was stranded when JJ Bleday’s pop up to first closed the door on the green and gold.

Durán played a pivotal role in the Athletics’ doubling their lead in the bottom of the fifth. With one out, JJ Bleday lifted a fly to left that Durán dropped. Bleday stopped at first, although if he had been running at full speed he probably could have reached second. He made to third on Brett Harris’s single to right center and came home on Esteury Ruíz’s sac fly to the center field warning track.

Bleday didn’t stop at first when he led off the “home” seventh with a line drive that bounced off the center field wall, just missing Leody Taveras’s glove, for a leadoff double that drove Heaney from the mound, replaced by José Leclerc. Both teams now had replaced their left handed starter with a right handed reliever. Leclerc was the agent of The Curse of the Leadoff Double, and the score remained 2-0, A’s, after seven.

Kotsay and Company called on Lucas Erceg to be the A’s setup man in the eighth. He walked a pinch hitting Josh Smith and fanned the pinch hitting Travis Jankowski but allowed a single to right by Taveras. There was a moment of calm after Marcus Semien lined out to second, but Corey Seager smacked a 92 mph changeup way deep, 422 feet deep, into the center field stands, over the Xfinity sign. The Athletics’ 2-0 lead had turned into a 3-2 deficit. The Rangers fans, who seemed to comprise a large portion of the 2,895 people in the stands, cheered loudly.

David Robertson set the A’s down in order in the bottom half of the frame.

Dany Jiménez pitched the top of the ninth and couldn’t contain the Texans, although it wasn’t entirely his fault. He issued a one out walk to Evan Carter, who batted for Carter two innings earlier. Josh Smith’s single to right put runners on first and second, bringing up Jankowski.

He hit a bouncer to Nevin, who had moved from right to first base. It might have become a rally killing double play, but we’ll never know Nevin couldn’t handle the ball, and Carter ran all the way home with the Rangers’ fourth tally while Smith made it to third. Jiménez walked Taveras to load the bases but wiggled out of trouble by retiring Semien and Seager.

There was a glimmer of hope when Bleday worked a one out walk against Ranger closer Kirby Yates, but Nathaniel Lowe nabbed Harris’s hard line drive to first and stepped on the bag to double off Bleday and put an end to the incipient rally.

Leclerc got the win for his 19 pitch effort and now is 3-2, 5.14. Yates earned his sixth save. Erceg was tagged with the loss and now has a record of 1-2, 3.60. It was his second blown save of the season.

These two well matched teams will meet each other again Tuesday, afternoon at 12:37, with Ross Stripling (1-5,4.24) facing a pitcher to be named later. The series will be wrapped up on Wednesday in a double header, with the first game also scheduled for a 12:37 start and 4:07pm for the night cap.

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s open four game series with Rangers tonight

Oakland A’s pitcher Alex Wood deals against the Texas Rangers to open the four game series at the Oakland Coliseum on Mon May 6, 2024 (AP file photo)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 The Miami Marlins Nick Gordon contributed big to the Marlins offense with four hits which one of them was a home run that helped the Marlins broadside the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Sunday afternoon.

#2 The A’s had a six game winning streak going into Sunday’s game but A’s starter Joe Boyle gave up four runs in the first inning. Boyle didn’t even get out of the first pitching one inning giving the hit that was the home run and a total of four runs. He was relieved by Mitch Spence.

#3 Josh Bell hit for two RBI singles and Marlins teammate and former Oakland A Jonah Bride had an two RBI single. The Marlins picked up their third win in 12 games.

#4 The A’s Brent Rooker who hit two home runs in the bottom of the third inning on Saturday got two hits on Sunday and is hitting .240.

#5 The A’s drew 12,212 on Sunday their largest crowd since opening day when they hosted the Cleveland Guardians.

#6 The first place Texas Rangers come calling at the Oakland Coliseum for a four game series starting Monday night. The Rangers starting left hander pitcher Andrew Heaney (0-5 ERA 5.10) against LHP Alex Wood (1-2 ERA 6.32) first pitch at 6:40pm PDT.

Join Barbara Mason for the Oakland A’s podcasts Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Bryce Harper and Phillies Handle San Francisco 6-1; Giants swept in four games in Philadelphia

Philadelphia Phillies second baseman Whit Merrifield (9) throws to first base for a double play after retiring San Francisco Giants runner LaMonte Wade Jr (31) in the top of the first inning at Citizens Bank Ballpark in Philadelphia (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

The Philadelphia Phillies (25-11) took another one from the San Francisco Giants (15-21) Monday afternoon 6-1. The Phillies handed the Giants four loses sweeping San Francisco this past weekend and took it to San Francisco again adding a fourth win Monday afternoon in as many games in Philadelphia.

The pitching from the Phillies Zack Wheeler really turned the tide in this game. He struck out 11 in seven innings allowing four hits and the one run. San Francisco really struggled at the plate against Wheeler. This was the sixth straight win for Philadelphia, winning 17 of their last 20 games. These guys are rolling. The Giants came away with only five hits in this game. Mason Black had a rough one on the mound for San Francisco going 4.1 innings allowing eight hits and five runs with four strikeouts.

Again it was Bryce Harper who spear-headed the assault with a homer and two hits. Kyle Schwarber added another home run in the eighth inning, a solo shot to complete the sweep.

Neither team was able to score through the first three innings but in the fourth Philadelphia got rolling scoring once in the fourth and adding four runs in the fifth taking a 5-1 lead. Whit Merrifield singled Nick Castellano home and a Bryce Harper 3-run home run in the fifth gave the Phillies a nice lead going into the sixth inning. A fifth run came in the fifth inning when Castellano doubled bringing Brandon Marsh home.

The single run in the game from the Giants came in the sixth inning off a Wilmer Flores sacrifice fly allowing Thairo Estrada to cross home plate but that would be all for San Francisco. Another home run off the bat of Kyle Schwarber in the eighth inning gave the Phillies the 6-1 final and the sweep.

Post game notes: Monday afternoon the Giants met the Phillies in game four of their series and couldn’t avoid a sweep. The Phillies hammered them in game two 14-3 but games 1 and 3 were one run affairs and the Giants lost in a five run decision 6-1 in this fourth and final game of this wrap around series at Citizens Bank. The Giants are now six games below .500.

The Giants will remain on the road for their next series taking on the Colorado Rockies for a three game series before heading home to take on the Reds next weekend. The Rockies are struggling with an 8-26 record taking up residence in the basement of the National League West.

The Giants are holding down fourth place in the same division eight games out of first place. The Rockies are 14 games out of the top spot and are tied for the worst record in baseball with the White Sox.

San Francisco will be looking to hand them another loss Tuesday with first pitch scheduled for 5:40 PM. Probable assignment on the mound for the Giants will be Kyle Harrison 2-1 with a 3.70 ERA and for the Rockies Dakota Hudson 0-5 with 5.93 ERA.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Phils Harper on tear homers and extends hit streak to 19; Wheeler K’s 11; Giants swept in 4 games Philadelphia

San Francisco Giants pitcher Mason Black pitched in his Major League debut against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Ballpark in Philadelphia on Mon May 6, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Marko:

#1 Marko, The San Francisco Giants were swept in four games at Citizens Bank in Philadelphia by the Philadelphia Phillies Monday and it wasn’t close in a a five run 6-1 loss for San Francisco.

#2 The Phillies got some offense as superstar slugger Bryce Harper took Giants pitching deep with a three run home run off Giants rookie pitcher Mason Black in the bottom of the fifth inning to extend Harper’s hit streak to 19.

#3 The Phillies got some pitching as well from Zack Wheeler who sat down 11 Giant hitters on strike outs in seven innings of work. When your dealing like that and keeping guys off balance it’s difficult to get some kind of rhythm going and for the Giants line up Wheeler was just a mystery.

#4 For Black he made his big league appearance in front of family and friends who come from the Philadelphia area was able to get a 1-2-3 inning against the Phils in the first inning which included striking out Harper on a 88 MPH change up but that all changed later when the Phillies touched up Black for eight hits and five run in 4.1 innings of work.

#5 The Giants continue their road trip and head to the Rocky Mountains to battle the Colorado Rockies on Tuesday night at Coors Field in Denver for the first of a three game series. Starting pitcher for the Giants LHP Kyle Harrison (2-1, ERA 3.79) and for the Rockies RHP Dakota Hudson (0-5, ERA 5.93) first pitch 5:40pm PDT.

Join Marko for the Giants podcasts each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Harper belts 3 run homer extends hit streak to 18 games as Phils edge Giants 5-4 at Citizens Bank

Philadelphia Phillies slugger Bryce Harper acknowledges the Citizens Bank crowd in Philadelphia after hitting a third inning home run off San Francisco Giants pitcher Logan Webb that landed in the Phillies bullpen on Sun May 5, 2024 (AP News photo)

Sunday, May 5, 2024

Citizens Bank Park

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

San Francisco Giants 4 (15-20)

Philadelphia Phillies 5 (24-11)

Win: Taijuan Walker (2-0)

Loss: Logan Webb (3-3)

Save: Jose Alvarado (7)

Time: 2:45

Attendance: 41,058

By Stephen Ruderman

The Phillies beat the Giants for the third-straight night, as they got to Logan Webb for four runs in the bottom of the third inning, and while the Giants got back into it to make it a close game, the Phillies held on to win it by a final of 5-4.

After the Giants wasted a couple of golden opportunities and lost the opener of the series Friday night, the Phillies absolutely annihilated them Saturday night 14-3. Saturday night, the Giants sent their ace, Logan Webb to the mound on ESPN Sunday Night Baseball to try and get their first win of this series.

Following a rocky spring and a so-so start to his season, Webb had a pair of dominant outings on the Giants’ homestand and seemed to finally be in a groove. However, he struggled in his start this past Tuesday night at Fenway Park against the Boston Red Sox, as he gave up four runs and nine hits over just three and two-thirds innings of work.

The Phillies went with Taijun Walker, whom the Giants got to for a run in the top of the first inning. With two outs and LaMonte Wade on first base, Michael Conforto hit an opposite-field double to left field to put the Giants on the board. Webb responded with a 1-2-3 bottom of the first.

The second inning would prove to be the opposite of the first. Walker set the Giants down 1-2-3 in the top of the second, and Logan Webb ran into trouble in the bottom of the second after Alec Bohm reached and advanced to second base on a throwing shortstop Nick Ahmed to start the inning.

Brandon Marsh got Bohm to third on a ground out to second, and Nick Castellanos struck out swinging, as Webb had a chance to get out of the inning unscathed. However, Webb walked Bryson Stott, who ended up stealing second, and Edmundo Sosa reached on a broken-bat single to second, which knocked in Bohm to tie the game.

The Giants went down scoreless in the top of the third, and the Phillies were right back at it in the bottom of the third with the top of the order up. Kyle Schwarber walked; J.T. Realmuto lined a single up the middle and into center field; and Bryce Harper hit a three-run home run that just cleared the wall in right-center to put the Phillies up 4-1.

Webb retired the next two batters, but Nick Castellanos lined a base-hit to left and stole second. That brought up Bryson Stott, who lined a double to left to knock in Castellanos, and that extended the Phillies’ lead to 5-1.

The Giants’ offense, who had been held to three runs or less in nine-straight games coming into tonight, had their work cut out for them, but they continued to flounder, as Walker set them down 1-2-3 in the top of the fourth.

Webb set down the first two men he faced in the bottom of the fourth, but he ran into more trouble after Realmuto reached on an infield hit and Michael Conforto dropped a fly ball in left off the bat of Harper. Webb struck Bohm out swinging, but that would be all for the Giants’ ace.

Other than the four-run bottom of the third inning, Webb was actually fine, as he dealt with a couple bad breaks. He would’ve had a 1-2-3 inning in the second had it not been for the error by Ahmed, he got screwed in the fourth with the bad-luck broken bat single and the dropped fly ball by Conforto.

Walker hit Thairo Estrada to start the fifth, but then retired the side in order. Sean Hjelle came in for Webb and survived a leadoff base-hit by Brandon Marsh.

Both pitchers pitched scoreless innings again in the sixth, but the Giants finally had some action against Walker in the top of the seventh. Mike Yastrzemski reached on an infield hit with one out, and then Thairo Estrada, who was hit by a pitch his last time up, hit a two-run bomb to left to cut the Giants’ deficit to 5-3.

Estrada’s home run ended the night for Taijuan Walker, who was replaced by Gregory Soto. Soto hit Austin Slater and then walked Nick Ahmed to put runners at first and second with one out. The Giants had another golden opportunity, but they once again wasted it, as Jung-hoo lee popped out to second, and Wade grounded to third for a fielder’s choice to end the inning.

Left-hander Taylor Rogers was summoned for the bottom of the seventh and was able to escape a leadoff double by Alec Bohm unharmed.

Jeff Hoffman came in for the Phillies in the eighth, and Michael Conforto tripled with one out on a ball that went off the glove of center-fielder John Rojas. The Giants once again had a golden opportunity, but of course, the Giants once again wasted a golden opportunity, as Matt Chapman and Yastrzemski both struck out swinging to end the inning.

Ryan Walker threw a 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the eighth for the Giants, and the Phillies brought in their closer, Jose Alvarado, for the ninth. Catcher Jakson Reetz, whom the Giants called up prior to the game, blasted one out to left with one out to make it 5-4.

Sunday night was the first time since April 23 that the Giants had scored four runs in a game. The Giants were hoping it would spark something, but it didn’t. Nick Ahmed struck out swinging, and Lee flew out to right to end it.

Taijuan Walker got the win; Webb got he Loss; and Alvarado picked up his seventh save. With this loss, the Giants have now dropped five of their last six, and they fall to a new season-high—or shall I say low—five games under .500 at 15-20.

The Giants were able to salvage a game in Boston, and they will hope to do the same Monday. The Giants will send young right-hander Mason Black to the mound to make his major league debut, and he will be opposed by former Giants’ farmhand Zack Wheeler. First pitch will be at 4:05 p.m. in Philadelphia, 1:05 p.m. back home in San Francisco.

News and Notes:

Tom Murphy was indeed placed on the 10-Day Injured List with a left knee sprain after he hurt himself chasing a wild pitch by Mitch White last night.

Jakson Reetz, who was called up to replace Murphy on the roster, and who hit the home run in the ninth had an interesting story.

Reetz was drafted by the Washington Nationals in the third round in 2014, but it took him seven years to reach the majors. He finally made his major league debut for the Nationals on July 10, 2021 against the Giants in San Francisco. He doubled in his first major league at-bat in the ninth inning of that game against John Brebbia, and then flew out to left in the seventh inning the next day.

However, Reetz was sent back down to the minors, and he bounced around in the Brewers’ and Royals’ farm systems before signing a minor league deal with the Giants last season. Reetz finally got the call back up tonight, and going 2-for-3 with a double and a home run in three major league games over three seasons, not too shabby.

Mitch White was designated for assignment, and Daulton Jefferies was called back up.