San Francisco Giants podcast with Lewis Rubman: White Sox were just too much for Giants; San Francisco will try to rebound in Arizona tonight

Chicago White Sox pitcher Luis Golitio leaves the dugout to pitch to the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Jul 3, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the Giants podcast with Lewis:

#1 The White Sox Luis Golito pitched six innings gave up six hits, one earned run, two walks, seven strike outs for his fifth win against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park on Sunday and it was quite a performance for him Golito was really keeping the Giants off balance.

#2 The White Sox got some hitting in their 13-4 victory over the Giants on Sunday the Sox Selby Zavala with three hits and three RBIs and Gavin Sheets somebody you were talking about during the game yesterday had an afternoon with three RBIs

#3 The White Sox kept pouring it on Luery Garcia with three hits as the White Sox chalked up a five run top of the eighth inning that pretty much put a fork in the ball game.

#4 The Giants Joc Pederson had the best offensive production with two hits and an RBI double but it wasn’t enough as the White Sox had already put it out of reach.

#5 The Giants try and shake off the previous three game sweep to the White Sox opening a three game series against the Arizona Diamondbacks Monday night at Chase Field with a 6:10 pm PDT first pitch.

Lewis Rubman filled in for Morris Phillips who does the Giants podcasts Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: Rodriguez does all the damage as M’s edge A’s 2-1 at T Mobile

The Oakland A’s Cristian Bethancourt (23) stands in against the Seattle Mariner pitching at T Mobile Field in Seattle on Sun Jul 3, 2022 (@Athletics photo)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara Mason:

#1 Things got off to a rocky start when the Seattle Mariners (39-42) leadoff hitter Julio Rodriguez slugged a solo shot in the bottom of the first inning to get thing rolling for the Mariners 1-0.

#2 Mariners starting pitcher pitcher Robbie Ray threw 6.2 innings, four hits, one earned run for Ray’s seventh win of the season. Ray kept Oakland A’s (26-55) hitters off balance for most of the game.

#3 Bottom sixth Rodriguez was up to his old hitting tricks again with a double that scored Dylan Moore to give Seattle a 2-0 lead.

#4 The A’s finally got on the board with an Elvis Andrus top of the seventh inning home run to left center field but it wasn’t enough as the A’s couldn’t produce enough offense to win it for a 2-1 loss.

#5 The A’s return to the Oakland Coliseum Monday night for a July 4th contest hosting the Toronto Blue Jays (44-36) the Jays will start right hander Alek Monoah (9-2, 2.09), the A’s will start Cole Irvin (2-6, 3.58) a 6:45pm PDT first pitch.

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

Broken Record: A’s fall to the Mariners 2-1, again, and lose Montas in the first inning

By Morris Phillips

Frankie Montas didn’t seem concerned about his shoulder injury, but it’s likely he has some other concerns.

Like his future in Oakland with the A’s.

Montas threw just 13 pitches in the A’s loss to the Mariners in Seattle at which point the alarming news from the radar gun forced manager Mark Kotsay’s hand.

“He had some tightness in the back of his shoulder and just didn’t feel like he could get fully extended. In that situation we are going to err on the side of caution,” Kotsay said of the readings from the radar gun that showed Montas well off the usual speed on his fastball. “We’ll just go day to day from here.”

I don’t have any concern,” Montas said. “I don’t think it’s anything bad, just probably some inflammation. Didn’t have enough time to recover (after his last start).”

Montas’ importance as a trade piece at the upcoming trade deadline has been well documented. But in that atmosphere, the 29-year old has been the A’s most impressive performer, more often than not keeping the A’s in a tight ballgame whether the offense responds to support him or not.

On Sunday at T-Mobile Park, the offense again was absent. The A’s lost 2-1 for the second, consecutive day and they now stand 1-29 in games they score one run or less. With an offense that feeble the home run Montas allowed to Julio Rodriguez on the first pitch Montas threw put the A’s under tremendous pressure.

Rodriguez backed it up in the sixth with an RBI double that gave the Mariners a 2-0 lead. The A’s response–Elvis Andrus’ homer in the seventh–wasn’t enough as the A’s fell for the 25th time in their last 31 games, putting them on track to have their worst season record in over 100 years dating back to their Philadelphia days.

Robbie Ray pitched into the seventh inning and struck out 12 Athletics, energizing manager Scott Servais, who has seen his squad surge from a sluggish start to the season with wins in 10 of 13 games.

“Riding the Robbie Ray train is what we do, and what we will continue to do because he is really good and he is fun to watch,” Servais said.

“My four-seam (fastball) and my slider have been really good but that two-seamer throws a wrinkle into it and allows (the other two pitches) to be that much better,” Ray said.

If the A’s had a “star” on Sunday it was Austin Pruitt, who replaced Montas and retired 13 consecutive batters.

The A’s open a six-game home stand against Toronto on the 4th of July with Cole Irvin, winless in his last eight starts, facing the dynamic Alex Manoah, who has a 9-2 record.

Giants are swept and clobbered by White Sox 13-4 at Oracle

Chicago White Sox’s Josh Harrison, right, gets into second base as San Francisco Giants second baseman Wilmer Flores reaches for the thrown ball for an error on Sunday, July 3, 2022, at Oracle Park in San Francisco (AP News photo)

Chicago (AL) (38-39). 13. 17. 0

San Francisco (40-37). 4. 7. 1

Sunday, July 3, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO-The Giants have played several bullpen games this season. Before today, the last time they used that now fairly commonplace tactic was June 11 against the Dodgers, here at Oracle Park.

They beat the Bums that afternoon, 3-2, using a mound line up of Sam Long, who surrendered both Los Angeles runs, Tyler Rogers, Dominic Leone, Zack Littell, Jarlín García, Camilo Doval, the winner, and José Alvare, who got the save.

They did it again today. Their firing squad consisted of John Brebbia (one inning), Jarlín García (1 IP), Sean Hjelle (2+ innings), recalled today from Sacramento, Sam Long (3 IP), Yúnior Marte (one dreadful inning), and their catcher, Austin Wynn (one inning).

They got massacred, losing a 13-4 Rocky Horror Show to the team from the other windy city.

For their part, the Chisox started with Lucas Giolito (4-4, 4.19 at game time), who didn’t allow a hit until Joc Pederson’s Texas Leaguer dropped into shallow center off the glove of shortstop Tim Anderson, who was trying to make a back to the plate catch in the fourth inning.

It was a fielding mistake that put Chicago up 2-0 in the top of the third, With Hjelle pitching and Josh Harrison, who had singled, on first with one out Anderson hit a grounder to Dalton Walton at short.

He threw to second for what looked like the start of a double play. The ball flew into right field, putting runners on second and third, just waiting for Luis Robert’s single to right with two out to bring them home which it did.

An inning later, with Hjelle still on the mound, a one out double by García, followed an out later by Zavala’s single, both to right center, made it 3-0.

Hjelle came out for the fifth and left with the bases loaded without getting an out. It happened on an infield hit by Andrew Vaughn and singles by Robert and Abreu. Sam Long didn’t help things, surrendering a base clearing two bagger to Gavin Sheets that put the visitors up by a half a dozen runs.

But, once the damage was done and in spite of a walk and a wild pitch, Long retired the side without any more Sox crossing the plate. He continued his good work by putting the Chisox down in order in the sixth and seventh frames

The first solid hit off Giolito came in the bottom of the sixth with Austin Slater’s lead off base knock to right. Pederson followed that with a drive just to the right of the 415 foot marker in Triples Alley, which drove Slater in with the orange and black’s initial tally.

Wilmer Flores’s fly to right, ending the frame also ended Giolito’s stint. He pitched six innings, allowing that one run, which was earned, on three hits and two walks. He struck out seven, all of them against the first eight hitters he faced. He served up 102 pitches, 36 of them balls. He would get the win, bringing his record to 5-4, 4.90.

Matt Foster relieved him, pitching a perfect seventh.

Yúnior Marte replaced Long for the top of the eighth and prompted coughed up the run San Francisco had recuperated in the sixth and more.

Chicago linked consecutive singles by their first three batters, García, Harrison, and Zavala, a walk to Anderson, Vaughn’s single, Robert’s fielders’ choice, and pinch hitter Adam Haseley’s single to add five runs to their total, leaving San Francisco in the dust, looking at an 11-1 deficit when they faced Vince Velásquez, who replaced Foster for the eighth and retired them in order.

Austin Wynn moved from the catcher´s to the pitcher´s box in the top of the ninth for his second stint as a PPP (Position Player Pitching). He got through it with only two runs half heartedly scored against him.

Velásquez stayed in the game to complete the formalities of ending the slaughter, and the Giants bats came alive against him. With one out, back to back to back to back doubles by Yermín Mercedes, hitting for Belt, Flores, and Yastrzemski, and Ruf cut Chicago’s lead to 13-4 and drove Velásquez from the game and brought in José Ruiz to quell the uprising. He accomplished this by fanning Walton and his opposite number, Wynn.

The crestfallen Giants will fly to Phoenix to play the Diamondbacks and won’t return until July 11, when they’ll face Arizona once more.

The Monday night starters for the Giants Carlos Rodon (7-4, 2.62) and for the Arizona Diamondbacks Madison Bumgarner (3-8, 3.63) a 6:10 pm PDT first pitch at Chase Field.

Oakland A’s podcast with Charlie O: Everything was fine until the eighth inning for A’s

Seattle Mariners Abraham Toro (right) gets the waterworks from teammate Adam Frazer (left) after hitting the game winning single in a walk off in the bottom of the ninth against the Oakland A’s at T Mobile Field in Seattle on Sat Jul 2, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Charlie O:

#1 Charlie, the Oakland A’s started off the ball game with a Sean Murphy single that scored Tony Kemp from third base for a 1-0 lead over the Seattle Mariners and that’s the way it stayed for eight innings.

#2 The A’s got some good pitching out of starter Paul Blackburn who pitched a shutout into the seventh going 6.1 innings, four hits, one walk and five strikeouts.

#3 In the bottom of the eighth inning the M’s Justin Upton hit the tying home run to get back in back into the ball game 1-1.

#4 In the bottom of the ninth inning the M’s Abraham Toro slugged a single with the bases loaded to score pinch runner Marcus Wilson and the Mariners got a walk off single for the 2-1 win.

#5 The A’s are back today to face the Mariners for the fourth and final game and the A’s hope to pick up a second win in the series to come away with a 2-2 split. The A’s will be starting Frankie Montas (3-8, 3.20) and for the Mariners Robbie Ray (6-6, 3.78)

Join Charlie O every other Sunday for the A’s podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.

Giants try to recover in late innings fall short to White Sox 5-3

San Francisco Giants catcher Curt Casali (2) puts the tag on Chicago White Sox right fielder Gavin Sheets (32) as he tried to advance on a ground ball hit by the Sox AJ Pollock but is called out by plate umpire Chris Guccione (68), in the top of the fourth at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Saturday, July 2, 2022, in San Francisco.

Chicago (AL) (36-39). 5. 8. 0

San Francisco (40-36). 3. 8. 2

Saturday, July 2, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO-The Giants, in Friday night’s bitter loss to the White Sox, wasted a fine performance by the first half of their Cobb-Webb combo. In this Saturday’s encounter, they pinned their hopes on the second half of that duo, sending Logan Webb (7-2, 3.04 at game time) and his wicked slider to the mound.

But starting pitching hasn’t been San Francisco’s main problem. To stop their slump, they needed to get a jump on the opposition’s mound staff and then hold on to their lead . Saturday it was Dylan Cease, bringing a 6-3, 2.56 record with him, they needed to hit early and often.

The home team did, indeed, get its much needed jump start. LaMonte Wade, Jr. ,leaned into Cease’s second delivery of the game, a 96 mph four seamer, and sent it over the right field wall, 424 feet from home, for his second home run of the year and third career leadoff round tripper.

Joc Pederson followed that with a double to right. But the Chisox starter got them to Cease and desist by retiring Evan Longoria, Brandon Belt, and Tommy LaStella, interspersed by a walk to Mike Yastrzemski to limit San Francisco’s early advantage to just one run.

That lead didn’t hold up, and the final score was 5-3 in favor of the visitors. Webb went six innings and yielded five runs, three of them earned, on six hits, one walk, and a hitter. Two thirds of his 101 pitches were considered strikes.

He took the loss, leaving his record at 7-3, 3.13. Cease lasted five episodes, during which he threw 104 pitches, 62 of which counted as strikes. He struck out four allowed four hits and three walks and hit one batter but he didn’t let San Francisco tack any runs on to its sole, initial tally. That earned him the win, making him 7-3, 2.51).

In the top of the fourth Webb got tangled up in a mess not of his own making. Tim Anderson led off by beating out a grounder to third. Then Andrew Vaughn hit a bouncing ball to the right side that Belt couldn’t handle.

Both runners might have been safe even if he had, but the scorer ruled it an error. Luis Robert’s little nubber in front of the plate moved Anderson and Vaughn up a notch each, and a 3-2 walk to cleanup hitter Abreu loaded the bases with only one out.

That brought up Gavin, who sent a line drive to left. Pederson came in for it, and the ball sailed over his head for a two run double that put Chicago ahead 2-1 and advanced Abreu to third. He crossed the plate on Yoan Moncada’s single to right.

Webb closed the inning with a nice play of his own, tossing Sheets out at home on a soft grounder towards the mound from Pollock’s bat and getting García to ground out to Belt, unassisted. But the damage had been done, and the pale hose were ahead, 3-1, after 4-1/2 innings of play.

Two of those three runs were earned, although Logan pitched well enough to have gotten out of the frame unscathed. He threw the same number of pitches total in that unlucky inning that Cease had in the first, 29.

Things went south again for Webb and the Giants in the top of the sixth. Abreu singled to left center and advanced to third on Sheets’ down the line double to right. Webb plunked Moncada with a pitch, clogging the base paths, and then fanned Pollock.

Disaster struck when Luery García hit what might have been a double play ball to Belt, who threw to second for the force on Moncada. Walton’s throw back to first went wild as Webb stumbled on his way to the base trying to cover.

Two runs scored, one on the error charged to Walton. It now was 5-1. Webb retired Seby Zavala and did not come out to pitch the seventh. He was relieved by Yúnior Marte, who, with a little help from a pitcher´s best friend, kept Chicago off the board.

Jarlín García took over for him in the eighth and allowed just a two out single to Adam Haseley, who had pinch run for Sheets in the fatidic sixth.

Tanner Banks pitched the scoreless sixth and seventh frames for the Chisox, giving way to Joe Kelly for the eighth. He fanned the first two Giants he faced but then walked Mike Yastrzemski on a full count. Yaz stole second with Darin Ruf, who had pinch hit for La Stellla in the sixth at bat.

Ruf rifled a shot down the line in right for a run producing double and shortening Chicago’s lead to 5-2. After Vosler walked, Walton grounded out to the mound.

That’s the way it stood after eight, when Jake McGee took over pitching duties for the orange and black, trying to keep the Sox within striking distance. Wade’s pretty jumping catch of Anderson’s two out fly ball at the right field fence enabled him to do it.

Kendall Graveman entered the game to bury the Giants’ hopes. He got Casali out on a grounder to third. Austin Slater pinch hit for Wade and singled to right and was forced out a second by Pederson’s grounder to García.

With two down, Longoria singled to left center, sending Pederson to third. He scored and Longoria moved to third on Belt´s base knock to center, making it 5-3. Yastrzemski worked a full count before grounding out to second to end a very frustrating loss. Graveman was credited with the save, his fifth in nine opportunities.

The Giants will try to save some face tomorrow at 1:05, when they’ll face Chicago’s Lucas Giolito (4-4, 5,19). Who will pitch for the Giants still is unannounced.

A’s lose to Mariners on Toro’s 9th inning single 2-1 at T Mobile

Tony Kemp (5) slides into third base before he was to score on a Sean Murphy sacrifice fly in the top of the first inning. It would be the only run the A’s would score all game long against the Seattle Mariners at T Mobile Field in Seattle on Sat Jul 2, 2022 (@Athletics photo)

A’s Lose To Mariners in a Walk Off 2-1

By Barbara Mason

After winning Friday night’s game against the Seattle Mariners (38-42) the Oakland A’s (26-54) were looking to take the series lead with a win on Saturday as they started Saturday’s game with the series tied at 1-1. It was not to be as the A’s couldn’t hold a 1-0 lead and lost it in the eighth and ninth innings 2-1 at T Mobile Field in Seattle.

The A’s got on the board in the first inning when Sean Murphy hit a sacrifice fly and Tony Kemp scored giving Oakland the early 1-0 lead. The A’s would not score again through nine innings.

Oakland starter Paul Blackburn had an excellent outing going 6 1/3 innings, five strikeouts and no walks. Domingo Acevedo came in to relieve Blackburn in the seventh inning. The A’s ended the inning with their second double play of the game and the Seattle threat was thwarted for a second time in this game.

The defense for the A’s had been spectacular all afternoon as Oakland hung onto the slim 1-0 lead going into the eighth inning.

Seattle would tie up the game 1-1 in the eighth off a Justin Upton home run and this game took on an ugly turn.

Seattle would load the bases in the ninth inning with Marcus Wilson, Carlos Santana and Cal Raleigh aboard. The Mariners would register the walk off when Abraham Toro hit a single and Wilson scored for the M’s win.

It was a tough loss for the A’s but we saw a lot of good things happen in this game for Oakland. Paul Blackburn was excellent. The A’s defense was really good through eight innings. They just fell short in the ninth inning when it really counted. The home run in the eighth inning for the Mariners was the turning point in this game.

The A’s will get the opportunity to tie up this series tomorrow. Frankie Montas will take the mound for Oakland. He comes in with an ERA of 3.20. The Mariners Robbie Ray comes in with an ERA of 3.78. First pitch is scheduled for 1:10 PM PT.

A’s Murphy homers, gets two RBIs; Kaprielian’s pitching holds Mariners for 3-1 win

The Oakland A’s Sean Murphy (12) gets the forearm bash from teammate Cristian Bethancourt (23) after hitting a solo home run in the top of the seventh against the Seattle Mariners at T Mobile Park in Seattle on Fri Jul 1, 2022 (AP News photo)

Oakland Levels the Series in Seattle with 3-1 win; A’s snap four game losing streak

By Barbara Mason

Friday night the Oakland A’s (26-53) took on the Mariners (37-42) in Seattle and finally got back in the win column with a 3-1 win at T Mobile Field in Seattle snapping a four game loss streak on Friday night. The A’s dropped the first game of their four game series Thursday night 8-6. Oakland was looking to even the series in game two.

Marco Gonzales started the game for Seattle going six innings and allowing two runs. Penn Murfee relieved Gonzales allowing a Sean Murphy home run.

James Kaprielian was on the mound for Oakland. He had six very good innings allowing only one run. He worked himself out of a tough situation in the sixth inning. He kept the walks down and was hoping for his first win this season. He was relieved by Domingo Acevedo in the seventh.

It was a slow offensive start for both teams. In the fifth inning the A’s Tony Kemp scored when Sean Murphy singled giving the A’s a 1-0 lead. Oakland would add to their score in the sixth inning 2-0. Kemp singled driving Sheldon Neuse home.

The Mariners got their first run of the game in the sixth inning. Jesse Winker grounded out and Julio Rodriguez scored.

The A’s were hanging onto a 2-1 lead when in the seventh inning Sean Murphy hit a homer giving the A’s an insurance run 3-1.

Oakland got into trouble in the seventh inning when Seattle loaded the bases. Acevedo lasted less than an inning and was relieved by Zach Jackson who had a terrible outing but got out of the inning unscathed.

The A’s were able to hold onto this game, the final score 3-1. Kaprielian had his first win of the season and Lou Trevino had his second save of the season.

Oakland had a nice offensive game with 12 hits and creating a lot of scoring opportunities. Sean Murphy had a great game with three hits and two RBI’s. He hit the insurance home run in the seventh inning for the A’s.

Saturday the two teams will meet in game three of this series. Paul Blackburn (6-3, 3.12) will be on the mound for the A’s. For Seattle George Kirby (2-3, 4.08) is getting the nod. First pitch is scheduled for 1:10 PM PT.

Sox Lance pitches shutout ball and Garcia gets RBI single for game’s only run to defeat Giants 1-0

The Chicago White Sox starter Lance Lynn delivers against the San Francisco Giants in the bottom of the fifth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Fri Jul 1, 2022 (AP News photo)

Chicago (AL) (36-39). 1. 6. 0

San Francisco (40-35). 0. 3. 1

Friday, July 1, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO-In a column published in The Athletic the day before yesterday, María Guardado quoted tonight’s starting pitcher for the Giants, Alex Cobb, as saying that his team is in “a division that doesn’t allow you to go through slumps. ….You’re trying to climb up the division with two teams in front of you, your margin for error is much smaller. “It’s there, it’s just not all clicking at the same time. …. We know we’re close.

We know we’re a good team. We don’t feel like we’ve played good ball, at least since the beginning stretch when we went on that tear. But we know that we’re capable of being that team. We’re just waiting for that streak to hit.”

The 34 year old veteran of 10 big league seasons, who entered the game at 3-3, 5.48, didn’t contribute much to the streak on which he based his claim to optimism. He went 1-0, 4.82 in April; 2-2, 6.04 in May; and was 0-1, 4.82 for June when he toed the rubber at 7:16.

His best previous outing in ’22 came on May 29 in Cincinnati, where he held the Reds to a pair of runs, both earned, in six innings. He’s already been on the injured list twice this season and hadn’t gone more than six innings in any of the 10 games he’d started.

It’s not as if Cobb’s voiced confidence were unnecessary. The Giants are in sore need of some encouragement. They entered the month in third place in the NL West, their record of 40-34 (.541) putting them 6-1/2 games behind the pacesetting Dodgers and, what is more worrisome, a game behind the Cardinals in the race for the final wild card berth. It’s still early, but not that early; we’re a week away from the halfway point in this strange season.

Tonight, after being defeated 1-0 by the underperforming White Sox, Cobb’s stoic confidence seemed misplaced.

For his part, the 34 year old veteran of ten seasons in the show pitched a fine game, although he showed signs of tiring in his fifth and final frame.

He shut the Sox out in those five innings, allowing only three hits, one of which was of the infield variety, and one walk. He chalked up three Ks on his road to a no decision that lowered his ERA to 4.59.

Cobb’s opposite number, Lance Lynn, who spent eight years with the Cardinals, Twins, Yankees, and Rangers before joining the ChiSox last season, has the history to be a formidable opponent.

He was 115-77, 3.48 lifetime at the end of last season. As with Cobb, injuries got Lynn off to a slow start this year. He tore a tendon in spring training and didn’t return to active duty until June 13.

To get an idea of how serious a blow to Chicago’s chances the sidelining of Lynn was, take a look at what the team did to try to soften the blow. They signed as his replacement one time Giant ace Johnny Cueto, who received a warm ovation from the crowd of 35,266 when he stepped out of the dugout between the third and fourth innings.

Since his return from the IL, Lynn had started three times, in which he went 1-1, 6.19, pitching deeper into the game with each successive outing. It’s early in the season for the 35 year old veteran, if not for MLB as a whole.

It’s also noteworthy that he brought with him today an impressive record against current members of the Giants active roster, having held them to a .111 batting average and an OPS of a mere .372. He has a very effective four seamer, in spite of it not being eye popping fast, a heavy cutter, an excellent sinker, a 12-6 curve, and a changeup. His performance tonight

Before game time, the Giants announced that they had placed Anthony DeScalfani on the 15 day IL due to an inflamed right ankle he suffered in his catastrophic third inning against Cincinnati here on June 26. The right handed hurler was replaced on the active roster by Jason Vosler, who was recalled from Sacramento and started tonight at third base, batting in the seventh spot.

After Cobb set the Sox down in order in the top of the first, Brandon Belt’s single, sandwiched between walks to Wilmer Flores and Mike Yastrzemski, enabled San Francisco to load the bases on Lynn after he’d retired the first two batters he faced. This brought the resurgent Tommy LaStella, who was hitting .349 for his last 15 games, to the plate. Lynn fanned him on an 0-2 cutter to end the threat.

Helped by some outstanding defense, especially Donovan Walton’s brilliant play on Andrew Vaughn’s grounder to short in the fourth and Yastrzemski’s running grab of Yoan Moncada’s drive to the left center field wall in the fifth, Cobb held the visitors scoreless until John Brebbia relieved him to open the sixth episode.

The only damage Chicago could inflict on him was a one out walk to José Abreu, who has been on an offensive tear of his own for the past two weeks or so. Tyler Rogers took over in the seventh, also allowing nothing but a free pass, to AJ Pollock, who was wiped out in a 4-6-3 double play .

Meanwhile, Lynn was magnificent. He went six full innings, allowing only three hits and two walks while shutting out the home team on 104 pitches, 63 of which counted as strikes. He reduced his ERA to 4.50, but all he got for it was a no decision before Joe Kelly replaced him after the seventh inning stretch. As if to emphasize how well matched the two teams were, all Kelly allowed was a walk.

Dominic Leone was the Kapler-Bailey combine’s choice to pitch the top of the eighth. He got his first two men, but Andrew Vaiughn made it interesting with a two strike two bagger to left center, bringing up Luis Robert, who has been enjoying a hot streak in which he hit .349 in his last 15 games. Leone got him to bounce to the mound on a 92mph cut fastball.

Tanner Banks, the first southpaw to pitch tonight, took to the mound for the Giants’ eighth. Naturally, the two left handed batters he would faced were replaced by right handed pinch hitters. Austin Slater replaced LaMonte Wade, Jr., and walked on four pitches.

Then it was Darin Ruf for all-star candidate Joc Pederson. Banks got him to hit into a bespoke 6-4-3 twin killing and then issued Flores a passport to first. The inning ended with Belt looking at a called third strike.

It was Camilo Doval pitching for the Giants in the crucial top of the ninth. Abreu flew out to Slater, now playing in deep center field. Gavin Sheets sent a bouncing ball to Belt at first, but his throw to Doval covering bounced off the pitcher’s glove for an E1.

The intrepid 24 year old recovered to strike out Yoan Moncada looking before yielding a single to third by Pollock that Vosler went into such contortions to catch that his throw to Belt drew the first baseman off the bag.

Then Leury García laced a line drive single to right, scoring Adam Hansley, pinch running for Sheets, from second, which he had reached on Pollock´s single. The play at home was close, but the call was correct. The run was unearned, but it was Doval’s fault.

The Giants would have to score against ex-Athletic Kendall Graveman if they were to avoid another gut wrenching loss. Yaz flew out to left. La Stella, a fellow ex-A, popped out to short, leaving it up to the recently recalled Vosler. He grounded out to second.

The win went to Banks. He’s now 1-0, 3,45, Doval took the loss, leaving. him at 2-4, 2.88.

The three day series resumes tomorrow at 1:05 when the two bleary eyed teams will send right handers Dylan Cease (6-3,2.56) and Logan Webb (7-2,3.04) to do battle in what promises to be another pitchers’ duel. But, as Thomas “Fats” Waller once said, “one never knows, do one?”

Cal alum Vaughn returns home for weekend series

The Chicago White Sox Andrew Vaughn rounds the bases after a hitting a home run on Wed Apr 27, 2022 at Guarantee Rate Field in Chicago against the Kansas City Royals. Vaughn made his return to his native Bay Area when he faced the San Francisco Giants on Fri Jul 1, 2022 at Oracle Park. (AP News file photo)

By Jeremy Harness

SAN FRANCISCO – There haven’t been too many bright spots in this disappointing season for the Chicago White Sox, but Andrew Vaughn is certainly one of them.

The 24-year-old outfielder, who grew up in nearby Santa Rosa and spent many weekend afternoons as a kid going to Giants games at Oracle Park, made another trip to the ballpark Friday night, this time as a player in an opposing uniform.

After winning the Golden Spikes Award – annually given to the best amateur baseball player in the United States – in 2018, he was selected by the White Sox with the third overall pick of the draft the following year, signing with the team for $7.2 million.

He was called up by the big club in 2021 and finished the year with a .235 batting average, and he has really stepped it up in his second big-league season.

He entered Friday’s game with a .307 average with seven homers and 33 RBI, and he currently leads the majors with a .369 average on the road.

He made some loud contact on Friday but did not get much out of it in the beginning. He hit a hard liner in the top of the first, but it was right to shortstop Donovan Walton, who snatched it out of the air for the putout.

In his next at-bat, he hit a chopper to short and had a chance for an infield hit, only to be denied by Walton again, as he bare-handed it and made a perfect throw to first that beat Vaughn by a step.

Vaughn, however, broke through against Giants reliever Dominic Leone in the eighth, as he lined one into the gap in left-center for an easy double. He was then pulled for a pinch runner, ending his night.

HERE TODAY, GONE, WELL, TODAY: Warriors forward Damion Lee, who was best known this postseason by getting cooked by Dallas forward Davis Bertans in the Western Conference finals, threw out the first pitch at Friday’s game.

Mere minutes later, while he was still inside the ballpark, it was confirmed that Lee had agreed to a one-year deal to join the Phoenix Suns next season.

This is part of a rather-tumultuous early free-agency period for the Warriors, as they have seen Juan Toscano-Anderson sign with the Lakers while Gary Payton II signed with the Portland Trail Blazers in recent days.

FINALLY, A HIT: To say that Brandon Belt has been scuffling would be putting it lightly. The first baseman came into Friday night hitless in his previous 15 at-bats and was hitting only .087 with 11 strikeouts in his past nine games.

However, he started a two-out rally in the bottom of the first with a sharp single to left-center, and that led to the Giants loading the bases. The surge was stopped in its tracks, when an overzealous Tommy La Stella struck out swinging while attempting to put the Giants ahead, 4-0.