San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Giants go for their 11th straight against Padres today at Oracle

San Francisco Giants’ Blake Sabol, bottom, reacts after scoring against San Diego Padres catcher Gary Sanchez, top, during the fifth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Jun 21, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 Their assembly line approach to pitching earned the San Francisco Giants a hard fought 4-2 victory Wednesday night. Their opener this evening was, right hander Ryan Walker who went an inning with two walks and a strike out did manager Gabe Kapler get what he expected out of Walker as an opener?

#2 Padres pitcher Yu Darvish showed his old brilliance over the first four innings he pitched but fell apart in the fifth, when the Giants batted around and roughed him up for four runs.

#3 Sean Hjelle picked up his second win of the season going four innings giving up three hits, two walks and five strikeouts. Talk about his command and coming in as the second Giants pitcher on Wednesday night.

#4 Comilo Doval picked up the save as the closer for San Francisco shutting the door on the Padres going one inning, one hit, two strike outs.

#5 Giants outfielder Mike Yastrzemski had to leave Wednesday night’s game with hamstring tightness he’s had the same injury before and hopes to avoid going on the IL. He’s been a crucial part of the teams offensive success.

#6 For this afternoon’s thriller at Oracle Park the Padres will start Blake Snell (3-6 ERA 3.48) going for the Giants lefthander Alex Wood (2-1 ERA 4.11) first pitch slated for 12:45pm PT.

Join Michael Duca for the San Francisco Giants podcasts Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: A’s can’t hold onto lead in late innings drop another one run game 7-6 in Cleveland

Oakland Athletics’ Esteury Ruiz steals second base as Cleveland Guardians shortstop Amed Rosario catches the throw during the fourth at Progressive Field in Cleveland on Wed Jun 21, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 The Cleveland Guardians catcher Bo Naylor slugged his first big league hit and then later scored an eighth inning run to put the Guardians on top 7-6 on an Oakland A’s throwing error.

#2 After winning seven straight games, the A’s have lost seven in a row, including the last four games, by a single run.

#3 Unfortunately for Oakland, the pen couldn’t keep the Guardians off the board. The Guardians’ big first baseman, Josh Naylor, blasted his ninth home run of the year to make it a one-run game, 6-5 in favor of the A’s after seven.

#4 The Guardians led 7-6 after eight. The Guardians’ Emmanuel Clase squirmed out of a jam in the ninth to earn his 22nd save of the year. With Tony Kemp at first and no out, Clase received a gift from the home plate umpire.

#5 The A’s finish the three-game series with Cleveland on Thursday. It will be a battle between two lefties. JP Sears (1-4 ERA 4.24) will go for Oakland, and Logan Allen (3-2 ERA 3.95) for Cleveland will oppose him. The game will start at 10:10 am.

Giants unstoppable win 10th straight 4-2 over Padres for sweep; SF rallies for 4 runs in fifth

San Diego Padres manager Bob Melvin, right, gestures while talking to umpire Manny Gonzalez during the fifth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Jun 21, 2023 (AP News photo)

San Diego (35-39). 000 000 110. – 2. 8. 0

San Francisco (42-32). 000 040 00x. – 4. 8. 0

Time: 2:48

Attendance: 33,332

Wednesday, June 21, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Going for their tenth win in a row, the surging San Francisco Giants , entering the fray at 41-32, opted for the 11th time this season, to play a bullpen game. In the those earlier games, the Giants’ hurlers went 7-3, 2.93.

Their assembly line approach to pitching earned the Giants a hard fought 4-2 victory tonight. Their opener this evening was, right hander Ryan Walker. It was his second stint in that role. The other other start for the youngster came in the first of this three game series against the Padres on Monday, when he threw 28 pitches over 1-2/3 scoreless innings, giving up three his but no walks. Sean Hjelle replaced Walker after he had thrown another goose egg but, triue to his name, issued a pair of bases on balls.

San Diego went with the veteran Yu Darvish, now in the twilight of his distinguished international career. The native of Osaka, came into tonight’s contest at 5-5, 4.74 for 2923. The Giants last saw him on April 30, in the gut wrenching series the Giants and Padres played in Mexico City.

He showed his old brilliance over the first four innings he pitched but fell apart in the fifth, when the Giants batted around and roughed him up for four runs. In all, Darvish went six innings and gave up four runs, all earned on seven hits and two walks, He struck out six . His pitch count reached 101, 68 counted a strikes. He was charged with the loss, and his record now stands at 5-6, 4.84.

Hjelle blanked the Pads over two innings, helped by a couple of pitcher’s best friends, The more interesting one came in the fourth and enforced The Curse of the Leadoff Double. Manny Machado deposited a fly in the right field corner in start the frame. He tried to advance on Jake Cronenworth’s foul fly to left, but a Michael Conforto rifled a throw to Brian Crawford, who shot a perfect relay to JD Davis to nab the Manny You Love to Hate at third for the inning ending twin killing, allowing Hjelle to return to the mound in the top of the fifth in a game that still was tied at zero.. Hjelle was somewhat wild in. that inning, allowing a walk and throwing a wild pitch, but he kept San Diego. off the board to complete a very successful four inning stint.

San Francisco unknotted the tie in the bottom half of the inning. Luis Matos lead off by beating out Xander Bogaerts’ throw to first of his grounder to deep short the rookie center fielder’s second infield single in a many. at bats. He stole second on the next pitch, which was to Blake Sabol, who smacked a single off Bogaerts’ glove into left field, putting runners on the corners.

After David Villar walked, Crawford drove Matos home with a sacrifice fly to left.. With two down, Pederson singled to right, and Sabol tried to core from second. Home plate umpire Quinn Wolcott called him out. The Giants claimed that catcher Gary Sánchez had blocked the plate.

The reviewing umpires in New York agreed with them, and the call was reversed, giving SF a 2-0 lead. This displeased Padres manager Bob Melvin enough to get him thrown out of the game by Wolcott. The Giants’ onslaught continued. Mike Yastrzemski singled Villar home. Davis singled Pederson, who had gone to second on the previous play home, upping the SF lead to four.

Tyler, the left handed Rogers brother, defended that cushion in the top of the sixth. His successor in the seventh, Luke Jackson, allowed the Padres their first run, scored by Hae-Seong Kim after he had reached first on a force out, duly challenged and confirmed, and stolen second. Grisham’s single to center brought him home.

Brent Honeywell, Jr., kept it. a 4-1 game in the bottom of the seventh.

Tyler, the right handed submariner, Rogers came to pitch the top of the eighth and immediately gave up back to back singles to Juan Soto and Manny Machado. Soto ended up scoring the Padres’ second run. Croneworth’s sacrifice fly to center brought hit home.

Adrián Morejón was the third Padres hurler, He set the Giants down in order in the eighth, which set the stage for Camilo Doval – who else – to attempt the save. He earned it, his 20th of the year and brought his ERA down to 1.87.

The win went to Hjelle. His record now stands at 2-1, 7.79.

The series. will be wrapped up tomorrow, Thursday. Game time is 12:45. Blake Snell (3-6, 3.48) will be on the mound for San Diego. San Francisco will counter with Alex Wood (2-1, 4.11)

Headline Sports podcast with Jessica Kwong: Could Marlins Arraez arrive at .400 for the season? Giants-Cards to play on Willie Mays’ first pro field in 2024; plus more

Rickwood Field in Birmingham will host the St Louis Cardinals and San Francisco Giants in June 2024 a the first regular season Major League game held there. It was the field that Willie Mays broke in on 72 years ago for the Birmingham Barons. (AP News photo)

On Headline Sports podcast with Jessica:

#1 The Miami Marlins second baseman Luis Arraez is hitting at a .400 clip if he finishes the season at .400 he would be the first player to hit .400 or over since former Boston Red Sox Ted Williams did it in 1941.

#2 The San Francisco Giants and the St Louis Cardinals will play a regular season game at Rickwood Field in Fairfield Alabama in 2024. The game will be a tribute to Willie Mays who broke in with the Birmingham Barons some 75 years ago.

#3 The Boston Red Sox Tanner Houck took a come backer to the face on Monday night as New York Yankees catcher Kyle Higashioka hit a 89.7 MPH pitch that struck Houck in the face that caused him to bleed out. Houck was able to walk off the field under his own power. Houck is listed as out indefinitely with a facial fracture.

#4 The Boston Red Sox who are last place in the AL East are showing interest in the Oakland A’s who are in last place infielder Aledmys Diaz. Diaz is in the first year of his two year contract worth $14 million with the A’s. Diaz is hitting .212, six doubles, two home runs, and 11 RBIs for 2023. The Red Sox like his glove and he could help the club up the middle.

#5 In just three games the New York Yankees have scored just eight runs and they badly miss Aaron Judge out of the line up who out with a right toe sprain. The Yankees are 4-8 and have lost four straight games.

Join Jessica Kwong for Headline Sports every other Wednesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

A’s lose another one run game fall to Guardians 7-6; Loss is Oakland’s 7th straight

Oakland Athletics’ Ryan Noda watches his three-run home run off Cleveland Guardians starting pitcher Gavin Williams during the third inning at Progressive Field in Cleveland on Wed Jun 21, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg.

The Oakland A’s (19-57) lost another one-run game to the Cleveland Guardians (35-38) Wednesday night at Progressive Field in Cleveland. The final score was 7-6. After winning seven straight games, the A’s have lost seven in a row, including the last four games, by a single run.

The A’s gave starter Paul Blackburn a 4-0 lead in the top of the third. Cleveland scored three in their half of the inning. Cleveland tied the game in the fifth. The As’ went ahead 6-4 in the top of the seventh. The A’s needed the bullpen to stop the Cleveland offense in the seventh and eighth to secure the win.

Unfortunately for Oakland, the pen couldn’t keep the Guardians off the board. The Guardians’ big first baseman, Josh Naylor, blasted his ninth home run of the year to make it a one-run game, 6-5 in favor of the A’s after seven.

Naylor also drove in his 55th RBI with the homer. A’s skipper Mark Kotsay summoned Austin Pruitt from the bullpen to pitch the eighth. The Guardians found a way to put two more runs on the board. The rally began when Myles Straw singled with one out.

When he singled, Bo Naylor, Josh’s younger brother, recorded his first Major League hit, sending Straw to second. It was Bo Naylor’s first hit in Major League baseball. Pruitt now had to face the Guardians’ left-fielder Steven Kwan, the young man from Fremont doubled to drive in Straw with the Guardians’ sixth run of the night.

Ramon Laureano’s throw to second base went awry, and Naylor was able to score on the errant throw. The Guardians led 7-6 after eight. The Guardians’ Emmanuel Clase squirmed out of a jam in the ninth to earn his 22nd save of the year. With Tony Kemp at first and no out, Clase received a gift from the home plate umpire.

Aledmys Diaz was called out on strikes when charged with a time clock violation. Diaz stepped out of the batter’s box and nodded to the umpire for time. When Diaz stepped back into the box, the umpire called the violation, and Diaz was out.

Confusion reigned as Diaz and Kotsay argued for clarification. It was to no avail. Esteury Ruiz singled, sending Kemp to third. Ruiz stole second. It was Ruiz’s second steal of the game and 38th of the year. Clase struck out Ryan Noda for the second out and retired Seth Brown on a fly ball to center.

The A’s scored four in the third. Kemp and Tyler Wade singled to get the rally going for Oakland. Ruiz singled to drive in Kemp with the A’s first run Ryan Noda followed with his ninth big fly of the season to make it 4-0.

The Guardians scored three times in their half of the third. Catcher Bo Naylor walked to start the rally. Singles by Steven Kwan, Amed Rosario, Jose Ramirez, and Josh Naylor produced three runs. Cleveland sent eight men to the plate in the inning.

In the fifth, Jose Ramirez tripled to right field, leading off the inning. Josh Naylor’s infield single drove in Ramirez with Cleveland’s fourth run. The score remained tied until the top of the seventh. The A’s scored twice to take a 6-4 lead.

With one out, Tony Kemp singled. Aledmys Diaz, pinch-hitting for Tyler Wade, singled, sending Kemp to third. Terry Francona brought in setup reliever Trevor Stefan to pitch. Esteury Ruiz singled driving in Kemp. It was Ruiz’s second RBI of the game.

Stefan retired Ryan Noda for the second out. Seth Brown broke an 0-for-14 slump with a single to drive in Ruiz with the A’s sixth run. As mentioned above, Cleveland scored in the bottom of the seventh when Josh Naylor Homered. Cleveland added two more in the eighth to win 7-6.

Game Notes- With the loss, the A’s are 19-57. Cleveland improved to 35-38. The line score for Oakland was six runs, nine hits, and two errors. The line for Cleveland was seven runs, 13 hits, and no errors.
The Winning pitcher was Elijah Morgan. Austin Pruitt took the loss.

A’s starter Paul Blackburn went five innings and allowed nine hits and four runs. He struck out seven and walked one. Cleveland’s starter, rookie Gavin Williams went five and 2/3rds innings. He allowed four hits and four runs. Williams struck out four and walked three.

The A’s Esteury Ruiz had three hits, all singles, drove in two and stole two bases. Tony Kemp also had three hits. The hitting stars for Cleveland were Hosh Naylor and Jose Ramirez. Naylor had three singles and a home run. Ramirez had two singles and a triple.

The A’s finish the three-game series with Cleveland on Thursday. It will be a battle between two lefties. JP Sears will go for Oakland, and Logan Allen will oppose him. The game will start at 10:10 am.

He was a Giant? Roger Metzger-By Tony the Tiger Hayes

Roger Metzger black and white photo for autographing (photo by the San Francisco Giants)

Roger Metzger – SS – 1978-80 – #16

He Was a Giant?

By Tony the Tiger Hayes

For the first decade of his professional baseball career Roger Metzger was known as a quintessential “good field, no hit” shortstop. But after joining the Giants in mid-1978, the trajectory of not only his playing career, but his life, changed forever.

For the Cubs and Astros from 1970-78, Metzger, a career . 231 hitter, was a steady if unspectacular performer who could without question schedule a short vacation with the family during the annual All-Star Game break as the likes of Dave Concepcion and Larry Bowa lined up to tip their caps on the foul lines for mid-Summer Classic introductions during that era.

Metzger could usually also count on playing for a team without a shot at the post-season.

But that changed – at least for a few months – when San Francisco acquired Metzger from Houston in a trade deadline deal.

For the first five months of the 1978 season the Giants were a surprise legitimate contender for the National League West title.

After joining the Orange & Black Metzger would spilt time at shortstop the rest of the season with incumbent starter Johnnie LeMaster.

While San Francisco would eventually finish in third place in the West in ‘78, six games back of the Dodgers, Metzger thrived with the Giants, playing his typical stellar defense up the middle and batting .260 in 75 games after hitting just .220 in 45 games that season for the Astros before the deal.

Why Was He a Giant?

After a rather blah fourth place finish in 1977, the Giants came out blazing in 1978. Slugger Jack Clark blossomed into an All-Star, first baseman Mike Ivie scalded the baseball with a number of memorable hits including a magnificent pinch-hit grand slam against the Dodgers and cross bay trade acquisition Vida Blue gave the club an instant pre-fab ace and star attraction.

The club would stay near or atop the western division though out the summer of ‘78.

On June 15, the shocking Giants led the West by 2.5 games over the Reds when they acquired Metzger in a straight cash deal.

Before & After

Originally a first round draft pick of the Cubs in 1969, Metzger made his MLB debut just a year later, appearing in one game with Chicago in 1970. But with Don Kessenger established as their starting shortstop the Cubs dealt Roger to Houston the following offseason. The deal came as a blessing to Metzger who would not only be returning to his native Texas to play, but was joining an Astros team that was looking to upgrade defensively at shortstop.

The untested Metzger was immediately installed as the Astros starting shortstop, playing in 150 games as a rookie. Though Metzger would bat just .235, the speedy youngster took full advantage of the spacious Astrodome and led the NL with 11 triples. He would repeat the three bagger feat again two years later.

While Metzger’s overall batting average typically hovered just south of .250 and he possessed virtually zero power (just five career homers in more than 1,200 big league games), Metzger was also among the best defensive shortstops in the game during the ‘70s.

He won the NL SS Gold Glove Award in 1973, when he led the Senior Circuit with a .982 fielding percentage (just 12 errors) in 149 games. He had an even better statistically fielding season in 1976, but lost out in the Gold Gold voting to the more hyped Concepcion of the World Champion Reds who captured the fielding award every year from 1974-77.

He Never Had a Bobblehead Day. But…

In his third game with San Francisco, Metzger batted 2-for-4 and drove in two runs in a 3-0, Ed Halicki shut-out over Tom Seaver and the visiting Reds (6/21/78). In the fourth inning, Metzger laced a bases loaded single to center field off Seaver to score Clark and Willie McCovey.

That game would spark the hottest batting streak of Metzger’s career. After a three hit game in a 6-5 win at Pittsburgh which increased the Giants divisional lead to 3 games (7/15/78), Roger had batted .410 in over his first month (22 games) with the Orange & Black and temporarily replaced LeMaster as the Giants starting shortstop.

Giant Footprint

After his inspiring 1978 Giants debut, the club didn’t hesitate to bring Metzger back in 1979. While the club fell on its face with a disappointing fifth place finish, Metzger was his typical steady self, batting .251 in 94 games as a backup.

Just 32 years old, Metzger seemed to have a few more years left of pro ball. But during the winter offseason of ‘79, disaster struck Metzger. While involved with his beloved wood working hobby, Metzger accidentally severed parts of four fingers (index to pinky) on his fingers on his right hand with an electric table saw.

A dotting father of two sons, Metzger had been making a wooden playhouse for his kids as a Christmas gift in his Brenham, TX workshop.

“The saw hit across the grain the wrong way,” he told the New York Times. “I was pushing the wood with my left hand and guiding it with my right. When the saw grabbed the wood, the wood’s momentum pulled my right hand into it.”

Metzger, his right hand jammed into a bucket of ice, along with the severed tips in another container of ice, rushed to a local ER. Sadly, reattachment surgery could not be performed.

Despite the catastrophic injury to his throwing hand, Metzger soldiered on.

With former big leaguer Carlos May – who lost part of his thumb as a Military Reservist before resuming his playing career, as a role model, just three months later, Metzger reported to Giants spring camp.

Metzger stunned onlookers as he casually played catch with teammate Tom Griffin, who stood 70 yards away, on the first day of spring training.

“I couldn’t tell the difference,” said fellow shortstop LeMaster. “The guy has as much determination as anyone I’ve ever seen.”

Metzger though was cautious about his ability to hit at the big league level. The injury forced him to abandon switch-hitting and focus purely on left-handed batting.

“It’s the top hand that supplies the power,” Metzger noted. “I have to doubt whether I can hit right-handed.”

Miraculously, Metzger wound up making the Giants opening day roster in 1980 as the club’s utility infielder.

Roger would appear in 28 games, including seven starts at shortstop. In 69 innings on defense, he was charged with just one error.

Metzger was correct however about his batting. With his damaged hand, the valiant Giant could muster just a .074 average (2-for-27). He was released by the Giants on August 16.

It takes ten innings for Cleveland Guardians to down A’s 3-2

Oakland Athletics relief pitcher Luis Medina walks to the dugout after a groundout by Cleveland Guardians’ Will Brennan during the sixth inning at Progressive Field in Cleveland on Tue Jun 20, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s (19-56) lost for the sixth straight game Tuesday night. The A’s lost 3-2 in ten innings. While the pitching has improved in the last two weeks, the A’s could not snap the five-game losing streak. They needed a key hit in the tenth, but they could not get the one they needed. The Cleveland Guardians(34-38) rallied from a 2-0 deficit in the seventh to tie the game. Cleveland scored in the tenth to end it. The game summary follows below.

The A’s scored the first run of the game in the top of the third. Singles by Tony Kemp and Esteury Ruiz put men on at first and third with one out. A’s first baseman Ryan Noda’s ground out drove in Kemp with the run.

The A’s went ahead 2-0 in the seventh. Tony Kemp slugged his second home run of the year into the seats in right field. Cleveland tied the game in their half of the inning. Center fielder Myles Straw started the Guardians’ rally with a double.

With one out, A’s manager replaced Luis Medina with lefty Sam Moll. Moll retired Steven Kwan for the second out. Sam Moll gave up a single to Amed Rosario. Straw scored to make it 2-1. Jose Ramirez was the next hitter. Ramirez, a switch hitter and very dangerous in the clutch hit a line drive that got by a diving Seth Brown in left field. The ball rolled to the wall. Rosario scored on the play to tie the game.

Neither team scored in the eighth or the ninth. In the tenth, with Shea Langeliers as the ghost runner, Guardians’ reliever Enyel De Los Santos shut down the A’s offense. The Guardians scored in the tenth. Jose Ramirez was the ghost runner. The A’s issued a free pass to Josh Naylor.

Tyler Freeman laid down a sacrifice bunt. The A’s tried to nail Ramirez at third. The throw did not get there in time. The Guardians had the bases loaded with no out. All Cleveland needed was a sacrifice fly to win the game. The next hitter, Andres Gimenez, settled the affair with a single to right field to win the game for Cleveland. The A’s lost 3-2.

Game Notes: With the loss, the A’s are now 19-56. The guardians improved to 34-38.

The line score for Oakland was two runs, six hits, and no errors.

Cleveland’s line was three runs, ten hits, and one error.

The A’s Ken Waldichuk started the game. He was the opener and went one and 2/3rd innings. Luis Medina replaced him, and he pitched 4.1 innings. He gave up four hits and one run. Sam Moll replaced Medina and allowed two hits and one run. 

The Guardians’ starter Aaron Civale gave his team a quality start. He went six and 2/3rd innings of work. Civale allowed five hits and two runs. 

Tony Kemp had a single and a home run to extend his hitting streak to five games. Esteury Ruiz singled in the third and has now hit in six straight games.

The hitting star for Cleveland was Amed Rosario. Rosario had two singles and a double.

Game two of the three-game series will be played Wednesday night. The A’s will send Paul Blackburn to the hill. Blackburn is 0-0, with a 3.48 ERA. The Guardians’ starter will be Gavin Williams. Williams will be making his Major League debut. A 4:10pm PT first pitch at Progressive Field in Cleveland.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Were horses traded in the Nevada Legislature in order to approve the A’s Vegas ballpark?

Oakland A’s have billboards up and around Las Vegas extending their congratulations to the recent NHL Stanley Cup champions Vegas Golden Knights. The A’s are already trying to make inroads in the Las Vegas community. (photo by the Las Vegas Review Journal)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 The Las Vegas Review Journal got a letter from a reader that says they rarely disagrees with the Journal saying that there will be new taxes and the Nevada tax payer will be on the hook for the new Las Vegas A’s ballpark at the Tropicana Hotel and Casino.

#2 Amaury, the paper points out, the average wage for the Nevada citizen $44,000, the average salary for a player is $724,000, while A’s owner is a multi billionaire. The paper goes onto to say that the citizens should not have to pay for a wealthy owner who owns a ball club.

#3 Amaury, a vote on the A’s relocation could come as soon as next week. This would be well ahead of the MLB drop date of Dec 2023. Will the MLB owners vote no because there is no share of relocation money to be divided or will they vote yes because the next owner who wants to move can do so without paying the relocation fee?

#4 Amaury, how interesting do you find it that despite 87 percent who were polled in a written opinion poll at the Nevada Legislature were against the funding of public dollars for the new A’s ballpark the Nevada Legislature had voted 25-15 in favor of funding the park worth $380 million in tax credits.

#5 Amaury, I know you wrote about this in your column yesterday that gambling is in the veins of those who live in Vegas and baseball is coming to casinos right outside of the ballpark and across the street from the park and that asks the question should lifetime banned players Shoeless Joe Jackson of that famous 1919 Chicago Black Sox team and former Cincinnati Reds player-manager Pete Rose be reconsidered for induction to the Baseball Hall of Fame?

Amaury Pi Gonzalez if the vice president of the Major League Baseball Hispanic Heritage Hall of Fame Museum and does News and Commentary podcasts Tuesdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Yastrzemski magic in the tenth propels Giants to their eighth victory in a row 7-4

Photo courtesy of San Francisco Giants. Yastrzemski celebrates his walk off hit at home plate on 6/19/23.

By Titus Wilkinson (@TitusWisme)

SAN FRANCISCO- The Giants winning streak was brought up to eight tonight by a Yastrzemski walk-off homer in the tenth as they beat the Padres 7-4.

Getting the start for the Giants was right hander Ryan Walker in his first ever start while for the Padres right hander Michael Wacha started.

First pitch was thrown at 6:45 p.m. and Adrian Johnson would be the one calling the balls and strikes in tonight’s game.

This game got off to an interesting start as Fernando Tatis Jr. lead off the game with a double. Then Tatis got caught trying to steal third despite originally being called safe. After Tatis was called out Juan Soto then launched one into left field that was deep enough to get over the wall making it 1-0 Padres. The homer was Soto’s 12th of the season.

After Manny Machado grounded out Xander Bogaerts drew a walk thankfully though for Walker Jake Cronenworth brought the inning to an end by grounding out.

The bottom of the first and entire second inning passed by rather quietly with each team only getting a hit apiece. In the second Taylor Rodgers came in for Walker who finished his night going 1.2 innings and giving up three hits, one homer, and walking one hitter.

In the third with Jakob Junis now on the mound San Diego threatened once again as Tatis reached on a rare error by Brandon Crawford and Machado hit a single. Bogaerts would kill the momentum though by grounding into a double play keeping the score 1-0.

With Junis still pitching in the fourth Cronenworth lead off the inning with a single followed by Gary Sanchez striking out. With Rougned Odor now hitting he got a double and with runners now on second and third Ha-Seong Kim got them both home with a base knock. Junis was able to get the next two hitters out but the damage had been done as the score was now 3-0.

The Giants couldn’t get a response going in the bottom of the fourth as they went down in order. In the top of the fifth Keaton Winn came in to replace Junis who finished with 1.2 innings pitched, four hits given up, and two earned runs.

The first batter Winn had to face was Soto who had already homered in the game. Despite the different pitcher it did not seem to matter to Soto who took the first pitch thrown at him and crushed it over the left field wall once again. The homer was Soto’s 13th of the season and made it 4-0.

This time in the bottom of the inning the orange-and-white got a rally going as with two outs David Villar responded by homering to left center field making it 4-1. Lamonte Wade Jr. also got a base hit but Joc Pederson flew out bringing the inning to a close.

Following up the fifth the Giants kept the momentum going as Mike Yastrzemski smashed one over the right field wall getting his ninth homer of the season. The homer made it 4-2 and despite the Giants not being able to get anymore runs in the inning the winds had certainly shifted.

The seventh and eight went by quickly as neither team got a hit though Tim Hill did take over for Wacha in the seventh inning. Wacha finished with six innings pitched, four hits given up, two earned runs, and two hitters walked.

With Winns able to close out the top of the ninth it all came down to the bottom of the inning for the Giants to formulate a comeback.

The inning got off to a good start as Blake Sabol who was pinch-hitting for Michael Conforto drew a walk. Yastrzemski then got a base hit putting runners on the corners with no outs. Feeling the pressure Luis Garcia who had come in to close the game for the Padres threw a wild pitch that got Sabol home. Now it was only a one-run game at 4-3 with still zero outs.

Luis Matos then flew out to center field but it was deep enough to get Yastrzemski to third. J.D. Davis then drew a walk to once again put runners on the corners with only one out. With Patrick Bailey up all he needed to do was put a ball in play to tie the game up. Bailey would do just that as he hit one to right field that was deep enough to get Yastrzemski home tying the game 4-4.

The Giants kept the lineup moving as Villar and Casey Schmitt drew walks loading the bases. Pederson had the opportunity to walk it off but was not able to as he struck out meaning extra innings were on the way.

In the tenth Tatis was the runner at second and Soto lead things off. Kapler did not let him see a pitch though as he intentionally walked Soto bringing up Machado. Camilo Doval was now on the bump and him and Machado got into a battle at the plate. Doval managed to get the win over Machado and then took care of the rest setting up a big end of the tenth.

The Padres responded in the bottom of the tenth by intentionally walking Thairo Estrada with Pederson on second. Sabol then laid a perfect bunt to advance both Estrada and Pederson. With Ray Kerr on the mound for the Padres he faced down Yastrzemski who had that late game swagger about him like he always does. With the count 3-1 Kerr threw a fastball right down the plate that Yastrzemski did not miss.

The smack of bat on ball was all you needed to hear as Yastrzemski had just walked it off to get the Giants their eighth victory in a row. The home run was a splash hit which was number 102 and Yastrzemski’s tenth home run of the season.

Doval got the win which brought his record to 2-2 while Kerr took the loss.

“Everybody’s gonna talk about Yas and for good reason that was a clutch of an at bat as it gets and he had several of them in the game,” manager Gabe Kapler said after the game.

The Giants next game will be the second of this three game home series against the Padres and the first pitch will be at 6:45 p.m.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman: Giants go for 8th straight win tonight against Padres to open series

San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Ryan Walker looks for his third win against the San Diego Padres at Oracle Park on Mon Jun 19, 2023 (San Francisco Chronicle file photo)

On the Giants podcast with Stephen:

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman:

#1 The San Francisco Giants swept the Los Angeles Dodgers for the sixth time between the franchises since they both moved to the west coast in 1958.

#2 The Giants turned up the offense in this three game series with a combined 29-8, the Giants clobbered the Dodgers in the second of the series on Saturday night 15-0.

#3 Stephen talk about the two errors committed on the Giants on the same play with five fielders trying to get the runner on a run down at Dodgers Stadium. There was also some bad base running on that play.

#4 The Giants also are on a seven game win streak which started back on Jun 11 against the Chicago Cubs and the Giants went onto sweep the Cardinals in three games in St Louis and Dodgers in Los Angeles in three games.

#5 Giants pitcher Logan Webb said that the Giants couldn’t be more happy with this road trip and they played really good baseball.

#6 The Giants host the San Diego Padres, the Padres Michael Wacha (7-2 ERA 2.89) for the Giants Ryan Walker (3-0 ERA 1.23) a 6:45 pm PT.

Stephen does the San Francisco Giants podcasts Tuesdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com