Longoria, Rodon lead Giants past Detroit 3-1

San Francisco Giants center fielder Mike Yastrzemski (5) catches a Detroit Tigers’ Eric Haase fly ball in the bottom of the fifth inning at Comerica Park in Detroit on Tue Aug 23, 2022 (AP News photo)

By Daniel Dullum

Tuesday, August 23, 2022

Carlos Rodon tossed seven innings of one-hit baseball, Evan Longoria went deep, and the San Francisco Giants took the first of a two-game set with a 3-1 win over the Tigers in Detroit.

Detroit had a chance to win, loading the bases in the bottom of the ninth inning, but came up empty. In the Tigers’ ninth, Victor Reyes doubled off Giants closer Camilo Doval with one out, and took third on a passed ball. Doval then committed an error trying to field a grounder back to the mound by Javier Baez.

With runners at the corners, Eric Haase drew a walk to load the bases. Doval struck out Miguel Cabrera looking, and Harold Castro grounded out to end the game, giving Doval his 18th save.

In the Giants’ sixth, after a two out walk issued to Joc Pederson by Detroit reliever Daniel Norris, Longoria drove a slider for a two-run home run.

Rodon (12-6) lowered his earned run average to 2.81, and, after giving up a leadoff single by Riley Greene in the first inning, did not allow another baserunner until Castro reached with a two-out single in the fifth. He allowed one run on five hits and struck out 10, giving him eight double-digit strikeout games this season.

San Francisco took a 1-0 lead in the top of the first after Tommy La Stella singled, and LaMonte Wade Jr. walked before a double play moved La Stella to third. Pederson followed with a run-scoring single.

Drew Hutchinson (1-7) took the loss for the Tigers. He struck out three and walked two, giving up one run on four hits over five innings.

Longoria and Pederson each had two of San Francisco’s five hits.

The teams wrap up the brief series with 10 a.m. getaway start on Wednesday. Logan Webb (11-6, 3.08) starts for the Giants, facing Detroit’s Matt Manning (0-1, 2.81).

A’s can’t make a comeback in ninth; Marlins win by two runs 5-3

Oakland Athletics’ Kirby Snead pitches against the Miami Marlins in the top of the ninth at the Oakland Coliseum on Tue Aug 23, 2022 (AP News photo)

Miami (54-69). 5. 8. 0

Oakland (45-79). 3. 8. 0

Tuesday, August 23, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Monday night the A’s were handcuffed by Maimi’s novice hurler Edward Cisneros, who held them to a couple of hits over eighth innings in a riveting contest that the Marlins won, 3-0. Tuesday night, the home team came up against Pablo López, now in his fifth major league campaign after seven years’ seasoning in the minors.

He came to work today with a 7-8, 3.83 record for the 53-69 Fish and a well earned reputation as a strikeout pitcher. Indeed, last year he set a major league record when he struck out the first nine hitters he faced in a game against the Atlanta Braves.

When tonight’s contest ended with 5-3 win for the Marlins, the Venezuelan right hander got win, giving him a record of 8-8, 3.66. He shut out Oakland over six innings, allowing them only four hits and a walk while setting five of them down on strikes. He threw 91 pitches, 30 of which were walks.

The Athletics went with southpaw Zach Logue, who had logged a 3-7, 6.35 mark in the majors while shuttling a half dozen times between the Las Vegas and Oakland rosters. He went 3-4, 6.29 with the triple A Aviators.

Logue pitched effectively over 5-1/3 frames tonight, holding the Marlins to two runs on three hits , one of which went the distance, over that span. One of those runs was posthumous. Logue struck out seven and didn’t allow a walk. He threw 66 pitches, 47 of them counting for strikes. His bullpen let him down, and he ended up being charged with the loss, leaving him 3-8, 6.04 at the end of the game.

The teams swapped goose eggs for three innings until Brian Anderson, leading off the fourth for the fish, sent Logue’s second offering, a 90 mph four seamer 403 into left field, flying over the Mechanics Bank sign and into the sparsely populated front row seats. It was the 11th homer off Logue in 48-1/3 major league innings this year.

Logue recovered to retire the next six men he faced, but Luke Williams led off the sixth with a double to the left field corner and moved on to third on Miguel Rojas’ productive ground out to second. That ended Logue’s mound tenure, and he gave way to Domingo Acevedo.

The right handed reliever walked Anderson. The wheels started coming off the A’s wagon when Jesús Aguilar hit a bouncing grounder that Vimael Machín let bounce off his glove at third. Williams would have scored in any case, but Aguilar’s hit-for that is how it was scored-kept Miami in attack mode.

Joey Wendle grounded out to Machín, but Aguilar and Anderson each moved up 90 feet. That set up Jerar Encarnacióń’s double to left, which brought the two runners home and upped the Marlins’ lead to 4-0. But Miami kept on rolling.

Jacob Stallings singled to right center, and, when Kemp made a brilliant catch of Peyton Burdick’s fly to shallow right field to end the slaughter, the fish were five up on the battered Athletics.

Battered but unbowed, Oakland loaded the bases on López in their half of the sixth on an infield single by Cal Stevenson, a double by Murphy, and a walk to Brown. But Pinder went down swinging for the third out.

Recent addition Joel Payamps made his Oakland debut in the top of the seventh and gave up a two out double to Rojas but emerged unscathed when he got Anderson to pop out to Vogt at first. He also pitched a scoreless eighth, allowing a two out single to Encarnación.

Tommy Nance replaced López at the start of the home seventh and retired the side in order. He also pitched a scoreless eighth.

Kirby Snead performed the formality of pitching a perfect top of the ninth before Cole Sulser left the Miami bullpen to try to put the A’s away for the night. He gave up a leadoff double to right by Murphy.

After Brown flew out to left, Pinder’s single to right moved Murphy to third. Vogt then sent grounder past second sacker Williams into center that plated Murphy, moved Pinder to third, and ended Sulser’s brief mound tenure. In came southpaw Tanner Scott, so Jonah Bride pinch hit for the left handed hitting Machín. Scott retired Bride on a grounder to short, earning his 19th save.

Tomorrow afternoon at 12:37, ex-Athletic Jesús Luzardo (3-5,3.44) will start for the fish against his old teammates. Cole Irvin (6-11,3.33) will be on the mound for the A’s.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Moreno selling Angels just another brick in the wall of trouble for suffering franchise

Los Angeles Angels owner Arte Moreno announced the sale of the team Tue Aug 23, 2022. Former Angel superstar Rod Carew said he approved the sale of the team. (AP file photo)

On That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast:

The Los Angeles Angels have been under a dark cloud of sorts and it all started when they tragically lost the late Angels pitcher Nick Adenhart on April 8, 2009 hours after pitching against the Oakland A’s in a car crash.

Then on Jul 1, 2019 the Angels lost pitcher Tyler Skaggs due to an oxycodone overdose after Angels media relations assistant Eric Kaye provided the pills for Skaggs.

Anaheim Mayor Henry Sidhu had to resign over corruption regarding the Anaheim Stadium deal in trying to get campaign contributions for the stadium deal.

When Angels superstar Albert Pujols was released by the team May 6, 2021 the departure was not that all diplomatic and it was reported that he got into a verbal altercation with then general manager Perry Minasian over the release. Pujols joined the Los Angeles Dodgers after leaving the Angels.

Minasian would later fire manager Joe Maddon when the team was in the middle of a 12 game losing streak.

The Angels star outfielder Mike Trout developed back spasms which later doctors called costovertebral dysfunction at T5.

The future superstar Shohei Ohtani was in question around the All Star break as to whether he would stay or not but Ohtani made it clear he likes the Southland and remained with the Halos. Ohtani could option to leave next season.

Owner Arte Moreno 76 said he spoke with his family about selling the team, he will leave baseball but will continue with his billboard advertising business.

Join Amaury Pi Gonzalez with Manolo Hernandez Douen for all Oakland A’s home game broadcasts on the A’s Spanish radio network and on flagship station Le Grande 1010 KIQI San Francisco

Giant Wish: Can SF get hot, catch the Brewers and either the Phillies or Padres?

By Morris Phillips

What the Giants need to happen, didn’t happen tonight.

At Citizen’s Bank, Nick Castellanos and Bryson Stott hit majestic home runs and Noah Syndergaard improved to 3-0 following his trade to Philadelphia as the Phillies beat the Reds, 4-1.

That means the Giants will take the field in Detroit on Tuesday needing to make up 6 1/2 games on either the Phillies or the Padres, and 5 games on the Brewers in their final 41 games to qualify for the post-season.

After winning on Sunday against the Rockies, 9-8 in 11 innings, they seem up for the challenge.

“There are still signs of life in here,” said Evan Longoria, after his grand slam and game-ending catch and tag play highlighted his best performance of the season.

“We’ve been really streaky. We win five, we lose five, you know what I mean?” Jakob Junis said. “Anyway to shorten those losing streaks and get back on track… I think going into the off day, especially, losing this game would’ve been really tough. Thankfully we pulled it out.”

The Giants (60-61) were headed in the right direction with five straight wins, but followed them with four, consecutive losses. Rollercoaster rhythm won’t close the gap.

The biggest positive for the Giants is the three clubs they’re chasing haven’t run and hid, and they only have to catch two of them. There aren’t any other moving parts. For a wild card chase, the small number of contending clubs is rare.

With the NL playoffs incorporating six teams for the first time, we’ll say 87 wins is the mininum the Giants need to have a realistic chance. But it’s never just that, it’s posting a dominant record in the head-to-head match-ups, and there are 11 of those.

That points us to the home stand beginning a week from tonight: three against the Padres (68-56), followed by the three against the Phillies (67-55). The Giants also visit Milwaukee for two on September 8, an oddly-placed doubleheader that is preceded by a series in Los Angeles and followed by a trip to Chicago with no travel days.

Survive all that and just maybe the Giants remain mathematically alive for the season’s final series: three with the Padres at Oracle Park.

Daunting? You bet. This theoretical challenge requires a 27-14 finish, and it’s got to be the right 27 wins against the critical opponents.

Baseball-reference numbers don’t usually favor unlikelihoods. That’s the case here, the baseball historical and statistical website says the Giants have just a 3.2 percent chance of running this gauntlet.

What aspects provide hope for the Giants? The Phillies lost seven of 10 before beating the Reds on Monday. The Padres have nine games remaining with the Dodgers, who have their foot on the gas despite an insurmountable 18 game lead in the NL West. And the Brewers (65-56) have a weird spirit enveloping them in the wake of the unpopular trade of closer Josh Hader to San Diego.

Carlos Rodon is nearing career bests in starts (24 so far, 28 his personal best), wins (11,13), innings pitched (140.1, 165) and of course, strikeouts (179, 185). The strikeout mark could be eclipsed Tuesday night at Comerica Park in Rodon’s matchup with the Tigers’ Drew Hutchison.

Marlins Cabrera shuts out A’s 3-0 to open three game series at Coliseum

Edward Cabrera was untouchable as the Miami Marlins pitcher threw for a shutout and was relieved after pitching eight innings against the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Mon Aug 22, 2022 (AP News photo)

Miami (52-69). 3. 7. 0

Oakland (45-77). 0. 3. 0

Monday, August 22, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Your Oakland A’s, fresh from taking two out of three games from the Seattle Mariners, a feat that dropped the M’s into a four way virtual tie for the last American League playoff slot, faced a less daunting opponent at the Coliseum tonight.

The Miami Marlins, coming to town with a mark of 52-69, aren’t within hailing distance of an NL wild card berth, but they’re having a better season than the A’s, whose success against the Mariners left them at 45-77.

Still, the records of tonight’s struggling opponents would lead us to expect a tight game between them. What we got didn’t start that way, but it ended up as one, a 3-0 Miami win that went down to the wire.

Sometimes you can’t win for losing. Last night, Austin Pruitt earned his first major league save, shutting the Mariners down in the pressure packed ninth inning of a 5-3 Oakland victory. Today he was designated for assignment to make room on the roster for the newly acquired Joel Payamps, like Pruitt a right handed pitcher.

The visitors sent 24 year old Edward Cabrera, a right hander rated by MLB.com as Miami’s number two prospect at the season’s start. He’d been living up to that evaluation so far, entering the game at 3-1, 1.79

Starting for the home team was another righthander, Adam Oller, who has shuttled between the Las Vegas Aviators and the Athletics and between starting and relieving. He was 2-5, 6.31 when he threw the first pitch of the game at 6:41. He was 7-2, 6.63 for August, his best month in the bigs.

He struggled early, giving up three runs, all earned, in his first three innings on the mound. His pitch count had reached 82 after four, and yet he hung in until seventh, throwing 111 pitches over six innings, holding the Marlins hitless and scoreless in the last three of them.

Oller gave up a total of five hits and another five walks while notching a pair of strikeouts. 62 of his offerings were considered strikes. He took the loss and now owns a record of 2-6, 6.41.

If Oller’s outing was gutsy, Cabrera’s was outstanding. He threw eight scoreless innings of two hit ball in which he allowed three walks while striking out seven. Of his 101 pitches, 63 went for strikes. The rookie was masterful and earned his fourth win against one loss, lowering his ERA to 1.41 in the process.

Miami threatened early with a one out double off the State Farm sign in right center by Jon Berti and walks to Bryan Anderson and JJ Bleday.

Oller wriggled out of that jam thanks to a sparkling double play that featured a behind the back flip from Nick Allen at short to second baseman Jonah Bride, whose throw to Seth Brown easily beat catcher Nick Fortes to first. It took Oller 28 pitches to get through the frame.

Cabrera also had control problems in the first, walking the first two batters he faced. But he escaped with 24 offerings. A long night seemed to be in store for us.

There was no waiting around for Miami to score in their half of the second. Charles Leblanc took a ball and then launched an 88 mph cutter 409 feet into the largely unpopulated left field seats.

Tony Kemp was having a busy night out there in left. He had gone to the warning track to catch Joey Wendle’s deep fly that opened the game and made a fine jumping grab of Lewin Díaz’s blast up against the wall on the at bat that followed Leblanc’s round tripper, the second of his one month old major league career.

Allen made another brilliant play in the fourth, a breathtaking barehanded grab in the shift of a Díaz ground ball up the middle and a laser throw that beat him to first.

One inning later Anderson became the second fish to hit the State Farm sign for a double. This one came with a man out and Berti on first with a walk. Berti scored, making it 2-0. For variety’s sake, Bleday tatooed the left centerfield wall to drive in Anderson with another two bagger. The back to back doubles now had the home team down, three-zip.

The score still was 3-0 when Oller left the game after his six innings of hard labor, replaced by Norge Ruíz. With one down, he gave Berti a free pass and struck Anderson out looking. Then Bleday hit a strange single. It was a liner that landed in medium right field, in front of. Bride, who was playing there in a shift.

The ball took a weird bounce to the right and, before you knew it, instead of three outs, there were runners on first and third. Bleday stole second, and now there were two runners in scoring position with Fortes at the plate. Ruíz rose to the occasion and caught the Miami catcher looking at a fast ball for the third strike.

Ruíz ran into. more trouble in the eighth, some of it of his own making. Leblanc sent Stevenson to the center field warning track to haul down his lead off blast to center. Díaz fisted a single to left and advanced to second on a wild pitch to Fortes.

Peyton Burdick whacked a high line drive to left on full count slider. It took another spectacular running catch by Kemp on the warning track to convert what would have been an RBI double or worse into the third out.

Portslider Kirby Snead took over to pitch the top of the eighth for Oakland and set the visitors down in order.

Southpaw Tanner Scott, with 17 saves in 22 attempts, threw a 1-2-3 bottom of the ninth for his 18th save.

Let’s hope that tomorrow’s 6:40 game, with Zach Logue (3-7, 6.35) starting for the A’s and Pablo López (7-8, 3.83) will prove as exciting. Reportorial ethics prevent me from suggesting whose victory we should hope for.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Langliers knows how to make an entrance; A’s rookie powers with 3 hits on Sunday; plus 49ers and Raiders news

Girlfriend of Alex Rodriguez of ESPN2 TV Kathryne Padgett (left) and girlfriend of Oakland A’s designated hitter Shea Langliers and sister of Kathryne, Raegan Padgett (right) selfie with Langliers standing by A’s dugout in the background for a post game interview (instagram photo by katpadgett)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Oakland A’s catcher Shea Langliers has been a huge addition in the A’s line up and Sunday afternoon was no exception as Langliers ended the A’s 81 game tripleless drought and slugged three hits.

#2 Langliers triple ended the 81 game tripleless drought fro the A’s a Major League record that last happened back in 1901. Langliers now has two triples this season the other was in triple A baseball.

#3 The A’s open up a three game series Monday night against the Miami Marlins. Starting for the Marlins Edward Cabrera (3-1, 1.78) and for the A’s Adam Oller (2-5, 6.63) a 6:40 first pitch at the Oakland Coliseum.

#4 Amaury turning to the NFL the San Francisco 49ers still haven’t found a taker for quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo is it because some teams are shying away from his $25 million final year of his contract or teams who have looked into picking up Garoppolo have looked and were staying with what they had at quarterback.

#5 The Las Vegas Raiders according to UFC president Dana White blew an opportunity to get future Hall of Famers Tom Brady and Rob Gronkowski before the 2020 season but former head coach Jon Gruden vetoed the deal.

Join Amaury Pi Gonzalez on the Oakland A’s Spanish radio network is the lead play by play announcer and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco Giants podcast with Morris Phillips: Flores’ go ahead sac fly puts Giants in drivers seat for 9-8 win over Rockies in 11 innings

San Francisco Giants Evan Longoria who hit a grand slam home run is greeted in the Giants dugout at Coors Field in Denver on Sun Aug 21, 2022 (NBC Bay Area photo grab)

On the Giants podcast with Morris:

#1 Morris, nothing like getting the key hit which turned out to be a sac fly by the San Francisco Giants Wilmer Flores in the top of the 11th inning that gave the Giants an eventual win over the Colorado Rockies 9-8.

#2 The Giants Evan Longoria is swinging a hot bat with a grand slam and three hits against the Rockies on Sunday.

#3 Elehuris Montero is swinging a hot bat for the Rockies hitting a home run in each of his last three games. Randal Grichuk and Brian Serven contributed with a homer a piece but all for not as the Rockies fell short by a run in the loss.

#4 The San Francisco Giants starter Jakob Junis was the first of eight pitchers, Junis went 6.2 innings, five innings, three earned runs, and six strikeouts. The Rockies scored a lot of runs but Junis went long enough to help in the starting role.

#5 The Giants snapped a four game losing streak they got grand slam help from Evan Longoria it seems that everything had to go just right for the Giants go come away with this win on Sunday.

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

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: Langliers ends A’s 81 triple-less drought with 8th inning triple

The Oakland A’s Shea Langliers is excited about his eighth inning triple against the Seattle Mariners at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Aug 21, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 Since joining the Oakland A’s catcher Shea Langliers has been a huge plus in the A’s line up and Sunday afternoon was no exception as Langliers ended the A’s 81 game tripleless drought in the bottom of the eighth inning to help defeat the visiting Seattle Mariners at the Oakland Coliseum 5-3.

#2 Langliers on the afternoon clouted a total of three hits as one of those ended the 81 game tripleless drought a Major League record that last happened back in 1901. Langliers now has two triples this season the other was in triple A baseball.

#3 Langliers belted the eighth inning triple that went off the left field wall that went far enough that Mariners leftfielder Dylan Moore had to chase it down and it gave Langliers time to safely reach third base. Langliers said after the game that he got lucky that the ball kicked off the wall long enough for him to get time to reach third.

#4 JP Sears has been sharp in his outings for Oakland (5-0) threw for five innings of work with six hits one earned run, a walk and three strike outs. The only run Sears surrendered was a home run to the M’s Mitch Haniger in the top of the third inning.

#5 The A’s open up a three game series Monday night against the Miami Marlins. Starting for the Marlins Edward Cabrera (3-1, 1.78) and for the A’s Adam Oller (2-5, 6.63) a 6:40 first pitch at the Oakland Coliseum.

Join Barbara for the A’s podcasts each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

What’s Your Mindset? A’s keep their spirits positive, beat the Mariners, 6-5

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND–The A’s came to the park loosey goosey, ready to swing the bats, then bear down to get some critical outs.

The contending Mariners admittedly were tight, overthinking things and probably burdened by the longest post-season drought any of us have ever seen.

The unlikely result? The youthful and hopeful A’s built on the momentum they gained Saturday night, and booted the Mariners in a 6-5 win on Sunday that captured the series, and highlighted the team’s promise and hopeful approach.

JP Sears outpitched Seattle’s higher-profile in-season acquisition, Luis Castillo, and the A’s built a 4-1 lead after five innings. The Mariners drew closer with two runs in the seventh, but were stymied in the eighth with runners in scoring position. Shea Langeliers tripled home an insurance run in the bottom of that inning and the A’s held on.

Afterwards, the Mariners expressed frustration with their play, and blowing an opportunity to boost their standing in the AL Wild Card hunt by not taking advantage of the league’s worst team.

“We know how important these games are and what they mean,” said Ty France, who hit into a third inning double play that spoiled a potential, big inning for Seattle. “I think sometimes we are trying too hard and trying to make things happen instead of just playing our style of baseball. We are trying to force things when he don’t have to. Usually, when we go out there and play our game, we are in a good spot.”

Conversely, the A’s clearly enjoyed their 4-3 extra-inning walk-off win Saturday night (on a FOX Network national broadcast as well) and walked into their clubhouse Sunday morning with improved posture. Their aggressive approach at the plate was noticeable in Sean Murphy’s first inning RBI double, Langeliers’ double in the left field gap that initiated a rally in the second inning and Nick Allen’s RBI single that put the A’s up 3-0.

“Luis has been awesome for us since we acquired him,” manager Scott Servais said. “Maybe left a few balls in the middle of the plate, but they were super aggressive. They were hunting they fastballs and didn’t miss them.”

Sears had just one hiccup, a home run allowed to Mitch Haniger in the third. He went five innings and scattered six hits with one walk issued. He worked seamlessly with Langeliers behind the plate, showing chemistry that was built off one outing the pair had earlier this month at Triple-A Las Vegas.

“He’s one of the most poised young catchers I’ve ever seen,” Sears said of Langeliers.

Six A’s relievers followed with Sam Moll and Domingo Acevedo the only two entrusted to get as many as three outs. Moll came up the biggest by retiring J.P. Crawford and Dylan Moore with runners at the corners in the seventh.

San Francisco Breaks Four-Game Losing Streak Beats Colorado In 11th Inning 9-8

San Francisco Giants third baseman Evan Longoria (10) gets congratulated as the Giants defeat the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field in Denver on Sun Aug 21, 2022 (@SFGiants photo)

San Francisco Breaks Four-Game Losing Streak Beats Colorado In 11th Inning 9-8

By Barbara Mason

Sunday afternoon the Colorado Rockies (53-70) and Coors Field hosted the San Francisco Giants (60-61) in the final game of their three game series. The Rockies took the first two games of the series and the Giants were hoping to avoid the sweep.

Unlike the first two games, San Francisco got on the scoreboard early. Brandon Crawford singled in the second inning driving in Evan Longoria for an early 1-0 lead. The Giants extended their lead in the same inning when Austin Wynns also singled driving in Thairo Estrada, the score now 2-0.

Just when it looked like the Giants had something going in this game, Colorado tied it all up in the fifth inning. Brian Serven sent a bullet out of the park and Sam Hilliard scored. The Rockies had evened the score at 2-2.

In the seventh inning, the Giants after four quiet innings, erupted with an Evan Longoria homer with the bases loaded. Mike Yastrzemski, Austin Slater and J.D. Davis all scored giving San Francisco a 6-2 lead. The Rockies added another run in the seventh inning off a Elehuris Montero solo home run.

The Giants were leading after eight innings 6-3 and Colorado was running out of time if a sweep was in their future. Although the Giants only had seven hits in the game the turning point was the grand slam from Longoria.

The Rockies continued to hang around and scored a run in the eighth inning. Charlie Blackmon singled driving in Ryan McMahon, the Rockies now trailing 6-4. Colorado tied up this game when Randal Grichuk homered and Blackmon scored. San Francisco found themselves in the same position as they did yesterday; tied up going into the ninth inning.

Neither team could finish this game off in the ninth inning and again the teams went into extra innings, a repeat of yesterday’s game. Unlike yesterday, the Giants took the lead in the tenth inning Thairo Estrada singled driving in Joc Pederson for a 7-6 lead.

The Giants would add to that lead off a Wynns double that scored Estrada. Leading 8-6 San Francisco was three outs away from breaking their four-game losing streak.

The Giants were not off the hook by a long shot. In the bottom of the tenth inning Colorado’s McMahon hit a single and Bernard on second scored, now only trailing by a single run. Blackmon would remedy that.

He singled driving in McMahon and we had a tie game 8-8. With the bases loaded and two outs, Colorado was looking for the sweep. San Francisco held on and this game was on to 11th inning.

Wilmer Flores hit a sacrifice fly in the 11th inning giving the Giants back the lead 9-8. Yastrzemski scored the run that would prove to be the winner. The San Francisco Giants were able to grind this one out the final 9-8.

They had to pull out all the stops to win this game and put an end their losing streak. It was long and at times ugly but the Giants refused to give this game away.

Tuesday night the Giants begin a two-game series with the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park in Detroit. San Francisco will be sending ace Carlos Rodon to the mound with a 2.89 ERA and an outstanding win/loss record of 11-6. The Giants offense will be facing Tiger pitcher Drew Hutchison (1-6, 4.23). First pitch is scheduled for 4:10 PM PT.