Cardinals beat Giants at their own game, win series opener 5-3 at Oracle Park

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–Major League hitters don’t come to the park at spray line drives all over the place for nine innings like in days past. Now, they sport paltry batting averages, pick their spots and keep their focus on trying to impact the game with something big.

That’s the Giants winning style. And on Monday, the Cardinals adopted that style and thrived.

Matt Carpenter’s two-run triple in the seventh inning broke a scoreless tie, and sent to the Cardinals to a 5-3 win at Oracle Park in the opener of the Giants’ final homestand before the All-Star break. The Cardinals came to San Francisco sporting a chip on their collective shoulders from too many, narrow losses in recent weeks.

“We’ve been in a lot of close games and we’ve won some and we’ve lost some lately that have stung,” manager Mike Shildt said.

Carpenter cashed in a competitive at-bat against Giants’ All-Star Kevin Gausman, who was on his way to dropping his miniscule ERA even lower when he left a pitch over the plate to Carpenter in a hitters’ count. The breakthrough wasn’t easily had; Gausman had dealt to that point, allowing just one hit over the first six innings.

Carpenter, hitting just .174 coming into the at-bat, described his blast off the base of the left field wall as a breath of fresh air.

“I’d be OK if that was the swing that turned it around,” Carpenter said. “If we can have those kind of competitive at-bats that we showed and we did against a guy who is as good as anybody we’re going to face all season — if we can do that consistently, we’re going to catch some people.”

While the loss kept the Giants from extending their lead in the NL West, and their perch above all MLB clubs with the best record in baseball, the Cardinals got a needed boost from their spot in fourth place in the NL Central. For a proud franchise like St. Louis, the season hasn’t been what’s expected, but they’re of the mindset to turn it around even if that transition comes against the Giants, who they host coming out of the All-Star break next week as well.

The Giants attempted to rally with a run in the eighth and two in the bottom of the ninth, but came up short. Gausman suffered losses in back-to-back starts for the first time this season, and the Giants failed to build on their home dominance after 26 wins in their first 37 home contests.

Kwang Hyun Kim matched Gausman with a seven-inning outing in which he allowed three hits and two walks and departed with a 2-0 lead. Alex Reyes pitched an eventful ninth inning, allowing RBI singles to Donovan Solano and Steven Duggar, but he closed out with a strikeout of LaMonte Wade Jr. with a runner at third base.

Curt Casali got the start behind the plate in place of the injured Buster Posey, who injured his finger in the finale in Arizona on Sunday. Manager Gabe Kapler didn’t offer much of an update on Posey, other than to say that he remains on the roster, and the possibility of him avoiding a trip to the injured list is still a possibility.

The Giants are also awaiting updates on Evan Longoria, Tommy La Stella, Mike Tauchman and Brandon Belt as a major chunk of their offense is on the shelf heading into the break. Only Longoria appears to be a possibility to return to action during this homestand that concludes with the Washington Nationals over the weekend.

On Tuesday, veteran pitchers Adam Wainwright and Johnny Cueto matchup in the series’ second game at 6:45pm.

Preview of the A’s series with the Houston Astros

Oakland A’s starter Chris Bassitt whose been on a role starts for the A’s on Tuesday night at Minute Maid Field in Houston (AP file photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s are on their way to the state of Texas to face the Astros and Rangers. The three-game series with Houston begins on Tuesday at 5:05 pm from Minute Maid Park. The A’s then go to Arlington for three more before the annual All-Star Game.

The A’s are having a hard time winning baseball games these days. They have lost ten of the last sixteen played. They lost series to the Yankees, Giants, Rangers, and Red Sox The A’s fell to second place in the AL West, 3and 1/2 games behind Houston.

They lost two out of three to Boston last weekend. All three games were decided by one run. The A’ lost 3-2 in ten on Friday night, won 7-6 in 12 on Saturday and lost a heartbreaker 1-0 Sunday. The A’s have had their chances but have not been able to get hits when needed to get the runs needed to win on the board.

They have a chance to reverse things the next six days. It will not be easy when they face the Astros in Houston. The Astros are 7-3 against the A’s this year. The Rangers, in last place in the AL West, have not rolled over for Oakland. The Rangers split the four-game series with the A’s in Arlington took two out of three last week in Oakland.

On Tuesday, the A’s will send their ace, Chris Bassitt, to the mound. Bassitt is 9-2 with a 3.04 ERA. Lefty Framber Valdez will oppose him. Many A’s fans were furious that Bassitt was not picked to play in the All-Star game a week from tomorrow in Denver. Sean Manaea will pitch on Wednesday. His opponent will be Luis Garcia. Frankie Montas will go on Thursday. Lance McCullers, Jr. goes for Houston.

The A’s pitchers will have their hands full with the Houston lineup. Alex Bregman, Houston’s slugging third baseman, is on the 10-day IL and will not be available. Houston still has players that can do damage. Second baseman Jose Altuve, shortstop Carlos Correa, first baseman Yuli Guriel all are playing well. The Houston DH, Yordano Alvarez, is not an easy out. Michael Brantley is a hitting machine. The A’s cannot take Myles Straw or Kyle Tucker lightly.

The A’s are going to find a way to get their offense going. They miss their leadoff hitter, Mark Canha. Canha is on the 10-day IL with a hip injury. He may not be available until after the All-Star break. His presence in the lineup is missed. The A’s will need Matt Chapman, Ramon Laureano, Seth Brown, Stephen Piscotty, Elvis Andrus, and Matt Olson to come through with big hits.

Olson will be the A’s only player to participate in this year’s All-Star game. The A’s DH Mitch Moreland is also on the 10-day IL. There is speculation that the A’s will be active in the trade market before the June 30th trade deadline. There are rumors that they might be interested in acquiring Minnesota’s DH, Nelson Cruz. Another player of interest is the Rangers’ right fielder, Joey Gallo.

The Rangers are paying Gallo $6.2 million this season. Gallo has one more year of arbitration and will be a free agent after the 2022 season. He could play right field for the A’s or be used as a left-handed bat in the DH slot.

The A’s do not want to make the playoffs as a Wild Card. Major League Baseball has gone back to the format before the 2020 season. There will be three division champions and two wild cards. There will be a game-playoff between the two wild card teams. The A’s have not fared well in those games. They hosted the 2019 Wild Card game against the Tampa Bay Rays. The outcome was a loss.

If the A’s are to gain ground against Houston, they have to take two out of three. They would cut the deficit to 2 and 1/2 games. A three-game sweep would leave them just 1/2 game behind. However, if the Astros sweep them, they will be six and 1/2 games behind. A’s manager Bob Melvin will have his troops ready. They know the importance of the next two series—the A’s need to make a statement this week. They will be able to enjoy the four-day break.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Morris Phillips: Cardinals-Giants open series at Oracle with matinee

St Louis Cardinals starter Kwang Hyun Kim puts his all into this pitch against the Arizona Diamondbacks Wed Jun 30, 2021. Kim will be the starting pitcher of record Mon Jul 5, 2021 at Oracle Park in San Francisco against the Giants (AP News file photo)

On the Giants podcast with Morris:

#1 Morris after the San Francisco Giants (53-30) trip in Los Angeles they had better outcome in their meeting with the Arizona Diamondbacks (23-63) at Chase Field over the four game series.

#2 The one opponent the Giants need to really get up for is the Los Angeles Dodgers (53-31) who they started this road trip with getting swept in two games.

#3 Lots of credit to the Giants Austin Slater for an outstanding performance on Saturday night hitting two home runs in helping the Giants cause in their narrow 6-5 win.

#4 The Giants open up a six game homestand against the St Louis Cardinals and Washington Nationals anytime your coming towards the All Star break with a half game margin in the standings over the Dodgers it’s hair raising.

#5 The St Louis Cardinals (41-44) will be starting Kwang Hyun Kim (2-5 ERA 3.75) the Giants will start Kevin Gausman (8-2 ERA 1.68) for Monday afternoon’s game at Oracle Park. Morris you’ll be on hand for this game how do you see these two teams matching up?

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

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s open three game series against first place rival Astros at Minute Maid Tuesday

Oakland A’s starter Chris Bassitt throwing against the Texas Rangers Wed Jun 30, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum will pitch against the Houston Astros Tue Jul 6, 2021 at Minute Maid Field (AP News file photo)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 Barbara the Oakland A’s (49-36) are hoping to turn up the heat just a little bit after their series with the Boston Red Sox. The A’s are now chasing the Houston Astros (51-33) in the American League West by just 3.5 games.

#2 The A’s who won Saturday in 12 innings are starting to show that fight again something that was concerning in the previous series at home against the Texas Rangers (33-50).

#3 Tony Kemp has been a huge help during the Red Sox (52-32) series on Saturday despite making an error he was all over defensively including chasing a shallow pop in left field that he couldn’t quite reach, at the bat Kemp hit a sacrifice fly that scored Seth Brown in the 12th inning for the game winner.

#4 Just an update on right fielder Steven Piscotty, Piscotty is played in a rehab game on Sunday and again later tonight at the A’s single A affiliate in Stockton. Piscotty hit second during the rehab game and is expected to be back in the show in Houston on Tuesday night.

#5 Barbara the A’s open up a three game series against the Houston Astros Tuesday night at Minute Maid Field the A’s will start Chris Bassitt (9-2 ERA 3.04) he’ll be matched up against Framber Valdez (5-1 ERA 2.18) set this one up for us.

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

DeSclafani goes 8.2 innings in Giants win over D-backs 5-2

San Francisco Giants starter Anthony DeSclafani seen here pitching in the first inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field in Phoenix Sun Jul 4, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

On the same day that Buster Posey discovered that he would have two teammates joining him at the All-Star Game at Coors Field, he was forced to leave the final game of the road trip early.

Posey, who was elected to the start in the annual midsummer classic was hit on his glove hand in the bottom of the sixth inning after he took a bat to the hand, with fellow catcher Daulton Varsho at the plate.

Manager Gabe Kapler and trainer Dave Groeschner immediately ran to the side of Posey, who said that he was okay; however, after Varsho struck out, Posey left the game and was replaced by Curt Casali. X-Rays on Poseys thumb were taken at Chase Field, and they came back negative.

Posey drove the first run of the game, as he singled in Austin Slater in the top of the first inning and the San Francisco Giants defeated the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-2 at Chase Field.

That was not the only run of the inning by the Giants, as Darin Ruf doubled to center field and Posey scored easily from first base.

Anthony DeSclafani pitched a tremendous game, as he went 8.2 innings. DeSclafani allowed two runs, on six hits, walking two and striking out seven and he saw his record improve to 9-3 on the season.

DeSclafani, who was one out away from his third complete game of the season gave up a long single to Christian Walker with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning that scored David Peralta, who singled and then went to second on defensive indifference with two outs.

Tyler Rogers walked Pavin Smith, but then got Josh Reddick to groundout to Donovan Solano at second base, as he picked up his 10th save in 14 chances on the season.

With the victory, the Giants maintained their one-half game lead over the Los Angeles Dodgers, who have nine games in a row since they were no-hit by the Chicago Cubs on June 24 at Dodger Stadium.

After starting the road trip by getting swept against the Dodgers, the Giants came back to finish the road trip at 3-3 and won three out of four in Arizona against the Diamondbacks. The Giants also are now 9-1 on the season against the Diamondbacks.

Slater, who the game-winning two-run home run in the top of the eighth inning on Saturday night was at it again on Sunday, as he hit a solo home run in the top of the third inning for his ninth home run of the season.

Ruf got in the home run act in the top of the sixth inning, as he hit a two-run home run that gave the Giants a 5-0 lead.

Reddick drove in the Diamondbacks first run of the night in the bottom of the seventh inning, as he singled to centerfield that scored Asdrubal Cabrera; however, on the play, Reddick was thrown out at second base by Casali, when he tried to advance after Duggar threw home.

Caleb Smith went six innings, allowing five runs on five hits, while walking one and striking out five and he lost for the fifth time on the season.

NOTES: Brandon Crawford and Kevin Gausman will join C Posey in representing the Giants in this year’s All- Star Game in Colorado. It is the third career All-Star appearance for Crawford, who also to the midsummer classic in 2015 and 2018, and this is the first for Gausman, who grew up in the Denver area.

Crawford ranks among the NL leaders in home runs (17, T-10th), RBI (52, T-7th), SLG (.537, 8th) and OPS (.885, 9th). Gausman sports the second-lowest ERA in the Majors (1.68) behind NYM’s Jacob deGrom and has also thrown 101.2 innings, tied for the ninth-most in MLB while his eight wins are tied for seventh-most in MLB.
The last time that the Giants had at least three representatives in the game was 2016 when Brandon Belt, Madison Bumgarner, Johnny Cueto and Posey all were All-Stars in the game at Petco Park in San Diego.

This was the first time that the Giants have played on July 4 since the 2018 season, as they were off in 2019 and did not play in 2020 due to Covid-19.

With the victory over the Diamondbacks, this was the first time since the 2016 season that the Giants won on July 4 (Colorado Rockies) and now are 24-39-1 on fourth since moving to California in 1958.

UP NEXT: Gausman takes the mound on Monday afternoon, as he looks for his ninth win of the season and the Giants return home to face the St. Louis Cardinals at Oracle Park. The Cardinals will send left-hander Kwang Hyun Kim to the mound, as he looks for his third win of the season.

Fireworks Cancelled: A’s shutout by Red Sox 1-0, face questions and the Astros next

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND–Envision Nelson Cruz or Kyle Seager in an A’s uniform. After a listless 1-0 loss at the Coliseum, the Oakland offense could use some pop.

“We’re down some guys,” said manager Bob Melvin, trying to make sense of his 49-win club going through a stretch of 10 losses in 15 games. “Mitch is out and Canha is out, too. We’re going to have to dig a little deeper. But I think every day we have a chance to break out of it. Obviously didn’t look good today with four hits, but I think it was just as much about them pitching well today.”

Nick Pivetta took control from the start, allowing two hits in seven innings of dominant work. The Red Sox starter didn’t win in June, going 0-3 with three no-decisions. The stretch was so tough, members of the Boston media in the press box tried to anticipate the juncture the hyped up pitcher would show his temper in a such a close, competitive game. But this time, Pivetta had all the answers, especially when the A’s tried to mount rallies in the first and seventh inning. Instead of being grumpy Pivetta, the pitcher instead talked afterwards of his ability to inspire his teammates.

“I really care about everybody on this team, I really want to do good for them, every single day I want to show up for them,” Pivetta said. “And I want to pump them up, too. I want to be energetic and I want us to have fun, and I want us to go out there and show ourselves every single night.”

James Kaprelian virtually matched Pivetta pitch for pitch in seven innings for Oakland. Kaprelian allowed just one run (on a non-RBI, double play ball), struck out 10 and scattered five hits. Like Pivetta, he was determined to keep the ball in the park as both pitchers had been hurt by long balls in recent starts. So when the Red Sox tensed up, Kaprelian eased up, leaning heavily on his changeup that had the Boston lineup flailing.

But ultimately the A’s offense was absent. After Pivetta departed, the A’s tried to cobble something together on the strength of a base hit in the eighth, and an infield single in the ninth. Neither effort struck gold, and they fell 3 1/2 games behind the Astros with a critical series against their rivals set to begin on Tuesday.

How alarming is all of this? Well, the A’s are 49-37, that’s as good a start to a season as the club has had in all but one of the last 31 seasons. But they haven’t been this far from first place since April 10, two games into their 13-game win streak that turned things around. And while they get bold checkmarks for pitching and defense, their offense is noticeably thin. With catalyst Mark Canha and Mitch Moreland currently on the injured list, they could use some help. Could they find it in the trade market?

Sure.

Well, the A’s aren’t known for spending but with such a glaring hole in their lineup, and the exemplary performance of the club to this point, they’re too smart to try to do without. And there’s that issue of home attendance as well. The A’s had their first opportunity to fill the Coliseum with COVID restrictions lifted and they failed miserably. Sunday’s attendance was a mere 13,000 plus. They won’t want that to happen again, especially with the pernicious timing of the holiday weekend not a factor going forward. So look for a bold move.

The A’s open a three-game set in Houston on Tuesday with Chris Bassitt facing Framber Valdez. Look for a performance statement from Bassitt, who was an All-Star snub despite a 9-2 record. Also, an All-Star statement could be issued by Matt Olson, who received his first mid-summer nod on Sunday and will be part of the AL’s first base rotation.

Slater with a big home home run to give the Giants a come-from-behind victory 6-5

The San Francisco Giants Mike Yastrzemski gets congratulations from Thairo Estrada after hitting a third inning home run against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field in Phoenix on Sat Jul 3, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

Austin Slater came up with the biggest hit of the game when the San Francisco Giants so desperately needed it.

Slater launched a two-run home run in the top of the eighth inning, as the Giants came back to defeat the Arizona Diamondbacks 6-5 at Chase Field. The Giants are now 8-1 versus the Diamondbacks this season, as they have scored 70 runs in those eight games, while the Diamondbacks have 38 runs in those games.

The Slater home run was originally measured at 482 feet that would have been the longest home run by a Giants player since STATCAST began back in 2015, breaking the record of Alex Dickerson, who hit a 480-foot home run earlier this season against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field; however, it was eventually measured at 463 feet.

Entering the at-bat that gave the Giants the victory, Slater was mired in a 4-for-41 slump and that all ended with that one swing of the bat.

The Giants jumped out to a 4-0 lead in the top of the third inning, as Mike Yastrzemski hit his 12th home run of the season, then Brandon Crawford tripled in Dickerson that made it 3-0 and then Donovan Solano drove in the final run of the frame that scored Crawford. It that inning, the Giants as a team hit for the cycle.

Unfortunately, the Giants and Sammy Long were unable to hold on to the lead, as the Diamondbacks cut the lead in half, when Asdrubal Cabrera singled to centerfield that scored Jake Faria and then Christian Walker singled to score Nick Ahmed for the second run of the inning.

Ahmed tied up the game in the bottom of the fourth inning, as he hit his second home run of the season that also scored Andrew Young.

The usual Giants defense faltered in the bottom of the fifth inning, as LaMonte Wade, Jr., was unable to field the ball, when the ball hit by Pavin Smith went through his legs that sent Cabrerat to third and Smith up to second.

Following the Wade error, Jose Alvarez replaced Zack Littell, who came on to start the inning in place of Long.

David Peralta greeted Alvarez rudely, as he singled to score Cabrera that gave the Diamondbacks the lead. Alvarez was able to regroup, as he struck out Josh Reddick and then got Daulton Varsho on a great play by Crawford, who threw to Darin Ruf to end the inning.

That would be the score up until Slater hit that two-run home run in the top of the eighth inning that gave the Giants the lead for good.

Long went four innings, allowing four runs on seven hits, walking one and struck out six on the evening.

The quintet of Littell, Alvarez, Dominic Leone, Tyler Rogers and Jake McGee went the final five innings, allowing one unearned run on three hits, walking one and striking out seven. Leone pitched the seventh inning, his only inning of work, as he allowed a hit and struck out one, ended up the getting his second win of the season.

Rogers came on in the top of the eighth inning, where he gave up a hit and struck out that then bridged into closer Jake McGee, who struck out one and picked up his 16th save of the season.

Faria went four innings for the Diamondbacks, allowing four runs on seven hits, walking two and striking out three.

Thairo Estrada, who hit a grand slam in the top of the ninth inning on Friday night made a huge mistake on the bases just prior to the Yastrzemski walk and the Slater home run. Estrada walked with one out; however, he was picked off at first base by pitcher Ryan Buchter that was challenged by Gabe Kapler, but the call was upheld.

Crawford picked up three hits on the evening, including a double that gave him 616 in his career, passing J.T. Snow for ninth-most since the Giants moved to California in 1958.

NOTES: Prior to the game, as the Giants reached the halfway point of the season, the Giants were 51-30 (.630) at the halfway point of the 2021 campaign and the .630 mark is tied for the third-best winning percentage in the SF-era (1958-present) at the halfway point of the season and only the 1993 Giants (53-28, .654) and the 1962 club (52-29, .642) were better.

When Estrada hit his first career grand slam in last night’s win, it was the fifth grand slam by the Giants this season,
which is third-most in the Majors behind the
Braves and Dodgers, who each have seven
apiece entering play today…Estrada became
the sixth Giant since at least 1900 to hit a HR in
his first start with the team…the last to do it was
OF Alex Dickerson, who also did it here in Arizona on June 21, 2019.

Estrada joins Crawford, Brian Dallimore, Alberto Castillo and Bobby Bonds as the only players to hit a grand slam in their first ever game with the Giants.

UP NEXT: Anthony DeSclafani goes for his ninth win of the season on Sunday evening, as the Giants close out the series, while the Diamondbacks will send left-hander Caleb Smith to the hill, as he looks for his third win of the season.

A’s capitalize on Sox pitching in 12th to get by 7-6 at Coliseum

Oakland A’s Tony Kemp hits a sacrifice fly that tagged up and scored Seth Brown from third base for the A’s winning run against the Boston Red Sox at the Oakland Coliseum in the bottom of 12th inning (AP News photo)

Boston 6 – 9 – 0

Oakland 7 -15 – 2

By Lewis Rubman

Saturday July 3, 2021

OAKLAND–You would have thought that nothing could match Friday night´s gut wrenching defeat of the Athletics at the hands of the Red Sox for pure baseball agony. You’d have been wrong. Friday was a preliminary bout. Today’s 7-6 win by the comeback kids was the main. event, an 12th round knock out by fighters who would not give up

The contest didn’t start auspiciously for the local team this afternoon.

In the bottom of the second, Rafael Devers showed why he was elected as the A’s all-star third baseman, robbing Laureano of extra bases by throwing Oakland’s speedy center fielder out at first after making a sparkling backhand grab of Ramón’s liner down the line for the second out of the inning.

Things began looking up when Sean Murphy dumped a Texas League single into shallow ccenter field and Seth Brown unloaded a triple off of Boston’s starting pitcher, Garrett Richards. Brown’s blast, which banged against the right centerfield fence, gave Oakland an early one run lead.

The Sox erased that slender lead in the fourth. With one down, Tony Kemp, playing second, muffed Xander Bogaerts’ easy grounder, allowing him to reach base safely on the error. Devers followed that with a hard shot towards Kemp, which ate him up on its way to right and moved Bogaerts up to second.

A moment after Hunter Renfroe took the strike that evened the count on him to 1-1, Murphy sent a pick off throw towards first that ended up in right field. Bogaerts ended up crossing the plate, and Devers got to third.

Hunter Renfroe’s sacrifice fly to Laureano scored Devers, and the A’s early advantage had turned into a one run deficit. Neither tally was earned, which was good for the stats of A’s starter, Cole Irvin, but irrelevant to his task for the day, stopping the streaking invaders from the east.

The run Boston scored in the fifth was earned. With one out, Irvin walked Hernández. Verdugo hit a hard grounder to Kemp, who fumbled it but recovered in time to throw Verdugo out at first while the runner advanced to second. Not only wasn’t that an play an error, but Kemp probaby couldn’t have gotten the ball to Andrus in time to force Hernández. Be that as it may, DJ Martínez singled Hernández home to stretch Boston’s lead to 3-1.

Chapman broke an 0 for 13 dry spell with a lead off single to left in the sixth. Frank Schwindel, who had pinch hit for Mitch Moreand as DH before Moreland made his first plate appearance in the first, rapped a solid double to left that sent Chapman home with the A’s second tally.

It also sent Richards to the shower and brought Hirokazu Sawamura to the mound. When asked after the game why Moreland was pulled from the lineup when he was, all he would say was that it was a for a non-baseball related issue. The A’s skipper also said that he wouldn’t be playing tomorrow

Sawamura came through for the Bosox.He retired Laureano on a grounder to short, walked Murphy, got Brown out on a fly to left, and induced Jed Lowrie, pinch hitting from his weak side, to ground out to short. Josh Taylor succeeded him in the seventh and kept the A’s off the obare, even tough they managed to get runners on the corners with two down before Taylor struck Schwindel out to preserve the lead. He, in turn, gave way to gave way to Yacksel Ríos after finishing his inning of work

Richards ended his day’s work having thrown 92 pitches over five innings. 60 of those offerings were strikes. He allowed two runs, oth earned, on five hits, three walks, and a hit batter and lowered his ERA from 4.96 to 4.88.

Kike Hernández, who’s been having quite a series against the A’s, got that run back for the Red Sox with a two out homer to left that left his bat at 102mph and landed 400 feet away. The pitch had been an 85 mph change of pace. Hernández´s nickname, by the way, is pronounced KEY-kay.

Irvin exited the game after hurling seven full frames. He gave up four runs, only half of them earned. Boston got five hits off him, including Hernández´s home run, and he walked one batter. Of his 98 pitches, 69 were strikes. He brought his ERA down from 3.64 to 3.56. Yusmeiro Petit, who came out to replace Irvin in the eighth, shut Boston down with only a Texas League single by Bogaerts to sully his record.

The A’s got to Ríos in the eightth. Laureano popped out to first, but then Murphy sent a single eto center, and Brown hit the State Farm advertisement above the Kaiser Permanente-DeWalt ad in right center, between the 362 and 388 foot markers. It was an RBI double forBrown, as Murphy crossed the plate.

Boston skipper Alex Cora called on lefty Darwinson Hernández to face the switch hitting Lowrie, now batting from his strong side. He popped to second. In a lefty on leftty match up with Kent, Hernández threw his third ball against one strike. It got past Chrilstian Vázquez for a passed ball, and Brown, representing the potential tying run, was now 90 feet away from home. Hernández threw a second strike to Kemp and then walked him.

The potential leading run now was on the basepaths, and Andrus, who had gone 1 for 2, was at the plate. He came through with a line single to right center. The run was charged to Ríos. Matt Olson then launched a majestic fly to right center that Santana caught just short of the warning track, and the teams went into the ninth tied at four.

As he did last night, BoMel entrusted the delicate situation to Lou Trivino. But today it was the ninth, not the tenth, inning, and the A’s closer didn’t have to contend with a placed runner on second. The Sox tried to put a runner there when Marwin González, hitting for Bobby Dalbec, walked and tried to pilfer the bag. Murphy threw him out, 2-6.

Adam Ottovino, who had gone the save in Friday night’s game, The first batter he saw was Chapman, who singled, making him 3 for 5 on the day. Skye Bolt pinch hit for Schwindel and dropped a beatuiful sacrifice bunt towards first that Ottovino fielded and threw to González, now playing second base and covering on the play. Ottovino proceeded to strike out Laureano on a sinker that home plate umpire Dan Bellino generously called a strike, followed by Murphy’s ground out to third.

Sergio Romo, who had pitched a perfect ninth inning yesterday, was called on to face the top of Boston’s batting order with Santana the placed runner on second.

He fanned Hernández on a 78 mph slider. With Alex Verugo at the plate, Santana tried to steal third. Once more, Murphy cut down potential pilferer, throwing a perfect strike to Chapman at third. Romo went back to the business at hand and struck out Verdugo.

The first thing Brandon Workman did on taking the mound in the bottom of the tenth with Murphy as the placed runner on second was declare a walk to Seth Brown. The second thing he did was surrender a single to Jed Lowrie, which loaded the bases.

Kemp attempted to bunt the winning run home, but he popped out to Workman. Lightening struck twice. Last night, The A´s stopped a runner at third with no outs and then sent him home on an outfield out that resulted in an inning ending double play. They did it again today. This time it was a line drive caught by Martinéz, whose throw caught Murphy at home. Last night, though, it ended the game. Today, it sent the game into the eleventh inning.

Romo stayed on the mound. Verdugo was placed on second. Romo struck Martínez out looking. Bogaerts flew out to Brown in right. And Romo left the game to tumultous applause, replaced by Jake Diekman, who got Devers to fly out to Laureano.

Workman began the eleventh as he did the tenth, with a declared walk, this time to Olson. Chapman sent a fly to the right field warning track that allowed the placed runner, Andrus, to get to third. Witth runers on the corners and the infield playing in, Bolt grounded out to second, and Andrus had to stay on third. Laureano flew out to left, and it was on to the 12th, with JB Wendelken pitching for Oakland.

Devers was the placed runner when Wendelken got the first out, on a foul pop up to Chapman. Vázque managed a single to shallow center that advanced Devers to third and brought up González.

He broke the tie with a single to left that plated Devers and advanced Vázquez to second. Santana flew out to left, bringing up Hernández. He reached out over the plate for an opposite fieeld single to right that just cleared the glove of a leaping Lowrie and drove in Vázquez and sent González to second.

Oakland would have to score twice against the incoming Red Sox hurler, Matt Andriese, to stay alive. They had. a fast runner, Laureano, on second and a powerful but .218 hitter, Murphy, at the plate. Bogaerts couldn’t handle his ground to short, an infield single that put runners on first and second.

Brown followed with a more resounding single, a line drive to left that scored Laureano and sent Murphy to third. Lowrile now was at bat from his weak side. That didn’t keep him from slamming a double to the left center field wall that tied the game and gave Oakland runners on second and third with none out and Tony Kemp at the plate he hit the second pitch he saw for a sacrifice fly to center that scored Brown with the winning run.

Wendelken got the win and now is 1-0, 4.02. Andriese was charged with a blown save and the loss, His record now stands at 2-3, 5.70.

With the win, the Athletics are 49-36, two and a half games behind Houston in the AL West.

Before the game, the A’s announced that right handed rel ef pitcherJeremy Weems had been designated for assignment and that the contract of Sam Moll, a southpaw reliever, had been sold by the Diamondbacks to Oakland, who added him to their active roster.

Oakland will close out the series and their home stand Sunday. James Kaprielian (4-2, 3.06) is scheduled to pitch against Nick Pivetta (6-3, 4.43).

Estrada goes 3-for-5 including a grand slam in Giants win 11-4

The San Francisco Giants Thairo Estrada belts out a ninth inning grand slam against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field in Phoenix on Fri Jul 2, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

If the San Francisco Giants (51-30) wanted to get out of their recent rut, they needed a change in their lineup and they may have found it in Thairo Estrada.

All the youngster did was go three-for-five, including a 431-foot grand slam in the top of the ninth inning and the Giants put an end to a season-high four-game losing streak with a 11-4 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks (23-61) at Chase Field. This was the seventh win in eight games for the Giants over the Diamondbacks this season.

The Estrada grand slam broke open a close game, helping Alex Wood to his eighth win of the season for the Giants, who maintained their half-game over the Los Angeles Dodgers in the National League West, after the Dodgers defeated the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park by the final score of 10-5.

Estradas grand slam came with two outs after Buster Posey walked, then Austin Slater grounded into a double play and then the Giants way to break the game wide open began. Brandon Crawford drew a walk, then Wilmer Flores reached on a throwing error by Nick Ahmed that allowed Crawford advance to third base, after a walk to Steven Duggar that loaded the bases, Estrada launched a J.B. Bukauskas pitch deep into the left field seats.

Wood went the required five innings, as he allowed two runs on four hits, walking three and striking out eight before giving way to the bullpen.

It was a tough night for the Diamondbacks pitching staff, as their starter Zach Gallen was forced to leave the game in the top of the third inning with a strained hamstring and then manager Torrey Lovullo was forced to use his bullpen for the rest of the game.

Prior to leaving, Gallen went two innings, allowing three runs on five hits, walking three and struck out three, as he saw his record fall to 1-4 on the season and the Diamondbacks lost for the 25th time in their last 28 games.

Crawford, like Estrada also picked up a three-hit game in four at-bats and scored twice in the big win for the Giants, who continue to have the best record in the National League.

Lamonte Wade, Jr., who was surprisingly sent down to Sacramento a few weeks back continues his hot hitting, as he went 2-for-3 with a run scored and three runs batted in that included his seventh home run of the season.

Wade drove in the first run of the game, as he hit a sacrifice fly that scored Flores and then Mike Yastrzemski drove in the second run of the inning with a single that scored Duggar.

Alex Dickerson then added to the Giants lead, as he hit a solo home run deep into the Phoenix night, as it landed 415 feet away from home plate.

After the Diamondbacks began to cut into the Giants lead, Wade hit a two-run home run to give the Giants a 7-2 lead and they needed those runs, as the Diamondbacks began to comeback.

Edwin Escobar and Pavin Smith each hit solo home runs in the bottom of the eighth inning off of Jimmy Sherfy that saw Jake McGee get up at the end of the inning, as he was getting ready to come on to close the game; however, that all changed when Estrada hit the grand slam the put the game away for the Giants.

NOTES: Buster Posey was officially selected to his seventh All-Star Game. Posey won the fan vote at catcher and has been selected to start the game by the fans for the fifth time in his career (first time since 2017). With five fan elections, he joins Barry Bonds (12 fan selections) as the only players in Giants history to be voted in by the fans at least five times and Posey joins Hall of Famers Johnny Bench (10), Gary Carter (8) and Mike Piazza (11) as the only NL backstops with at least five fan elections.

The Estrada grand slam was the fifth of the season, for the Giants, joining Brandon Belt, Duggar, Mike Tauchman and Yastrzemski.

Since the 2019 season, the Giants are 12-5 in their 17 games at Chase Field against the Diamondbacks and have hit 17 home runs during this time and have also outscored the Diamondbacks 100-71 in those 17 games.

UP NEXT: Sammy Long will go for his second win of the season, as he takes the mound on Saturday night, while the Diamondbacks will start Jake Faria, who is 0-0 on the season.

Sox Rodriguez holds down A’s through six innings; Boston edges Oakland 3-2

Boston 3 – 6 – 1

Oakland 2 – 3 – 0. Ten innings

By Lewis Rubman

Friday July 2, 2021

OAKLAND–During the last few pre-COVID seasons, the countdown to the All-Star break included watching the A’s creep upward towards .500. This year, it again includes watching the team approach the break-even mark, only this time it’s from above. How long the decline in Oakland´s performance will last and what its consequences will be are vexing questions that will take time and, as Giants fans of the 2010 vintage would say, torture to resolve.

But today, the struggle.

The Boston Red Sox, leading all of the American League and second only to San Francisco in all of MLB in winning percentage, brought a seven game winning streak with them to the Coliseum for a three game series with the faltering green and gold this evening. The Sox sent southpaw Eduardo Rodríguez to the mound. His 6-4, 5.83 record was not prepossessing, but you have to take into account that he missed all of last season and that he went 15-6, 3.81 in 2019.

Nonetheless, we’re half way through 2021, and Rodríguez has not looked good. Last Sunday, in his previous start, he threw five scoreless frames against the Yankees at Fenway but then surrendered a home run too Aaron Judge with a runner on base and no outs in sixth.

He finished up that inning without giving up another run and came out the winner by a score of 9-2. That victory put the Sox in first place in the AL East, a position they haven’t yet relinquished. His best game against Oakland was in 1996, when he pitched an eight inning one hitter in the Coliseum, with Marcus Semien’s two out single in the eighth breaking up the no-hitter.

Rodríguez’s lifetime numbers going into today were 57-35, 4.21, and his entry in the Bosox’ media guide contains the ominous notation that over the 2018 and 2019 campaigns his team had a higher winning percentage of games he started than the team of any other pitcher in the majors, .789. (Gerritt Cole and Clayton Kershaw ran second and third, respectively).

Oakland countered with Frankie Montás (7-7, 4.32). The Athletics starter has had moments of brilliance this season, but he’s also suffered several meltdowns. He pitched respectably in his last outing, which was last Saturday at Oracle Park, but lasted only five innings, over the course of which he gave up two earned runs on two hits in a contest that the A’s eventually lost in 10 innings. He went 5-2/3 innings tonight, but also gave up two earned runs, and the A’s lost in 10 innings.

Montás set down the first six Red Sox he faced batters he faced.. He did this with a little help from his daring and resourceful outfield, with Tony Kemp making a leaping grab of Alex Verdugo’s foul at the wall of the left field corner in the first and Ramón Laureano racing deep to the xfinity sign in center and, with an elegant jump, hauling down Hunter Renfro’s bid for at least extra bases in the second.

Montás lost his aura of invincibility in the third when he clipped lead off man Christian Vásquez with a 96 mph sinker and then uncorked a wild pitch fast ball to Danny Santana. The A’s started regained his poise and coaxed infield grounders out of the next two Bosox. Danny Santana hit the first to the Lowrie at second, which enabled Vázquez to take third.

The next was a sharp shot to the mound that Montás grabbed in time for his throw to Olson to retire the batter, Michael Chavis, at first. After walking Hernández, Montás retired Alex Verdugo on a harmless grounder to Lowrie.

Oakland´s only threat in the first three innings came in the second frame came on two balls hit to the infield. Marwin González´s throw to first on Chad Pinder´s lead off grounder drew Santana, and, with Pinder on second and two down, Xander Bogaerts made a nifty catch of Frank Schwindel´s sharp bounder into the hole between second and third to save the run that otherwise would have puet the Á’s in the lead. Home plate umpire Stu Scheurwater then gave Rodríguez a hand by calling Kemp out a what looked like a high third strike.

In the fourth, Bogaerts started things for the team from the hub by drawing a full count walk. He scored when Kemp decided to make a diving catch of Rafael Devers´sinking liner to left. Kemp couldn’t come up with ball, and Laureano wasn’t backing him up.

The resulting double put Boston ahead, 1-0, with a runner in scoring position and no outs. Once again, Montás stayed cool. He got his next three opponents on infield ground outs without even allowing Devers to get past second base.

The Bosox added to their lead in the fifth with a lead off single to center by Santana and a hit batter Chavis. It looked as if Montás might pull off another Houdini when Hernández hit into a nifty 3-6-3 double play, but Verdugo punished him with a single to center that drove in Santana. Bogaerts’ strike out came three pitches too late.

Montás was in hot water again in the sixth. Devers started it with a ground ball to shallow right. Andrus took it in the shift and sent a soft throw to first that Devers beat out.

Then Renfroe hit a sharp shot to the right of Andrus, now playing in his regular position at short, that went into left field for a single and put runners on first and second with nobody out. Montás got González to hit into a 3-6 force out, and now there were runners on the corners with one down. Vázquez popped to first, and now there were two down.

Then, with Santana at bat, González stole second. Santana followed that with a walk, JB Windelken. followed Montás to the mound and saved his bacon with one pitch, a curve ball that Chavis popped into Murphy´s mitt on the first base side of the plate.

Montás´s line was 5-2/3 innings pitched, two runs, both earned, allowed on five hits, three walks, two hit batters, and a wild pitch. He threw 95 pitches, 57 for strikes.

Wendelken stayed on in the seventh and was the beneficiary of a spectacular play by Kemp, again in the foul territory of the left field corner. He run into and bounced off the fence to grab and hold on to Hernández´s towering fly ball. Pinder rounded out the inning by making a sliding catch of Bogaerts´sinking liner to right.

Rodríguez lasted six innings, during which he quieted the A’s bats, holding them to one hit and two walks. He threw 89 pitches, 57 of them strikes.

His replacement, Garrett Whitlock, wasn’t as effective. After retiring the first two Athletics he faced, he threw Lowrie a 95 mph sinker that rose from the A’s second baseman’s bat to travel over the right field scoreboard for his eighth home run and 35th RBI, narrowing the gap between the teams to 2-1. Whitlock remained in the game through the eighth.

After pitching 1-1/3 perfect innings, Wendelken gave way to Jake Diekman in the eighth. Devers hit him hard, sending Laureano to the center field warning track to haul down his blast. Renfroe hit him hard to left, and González to right. All three balls were caught. After that, it was Sergio Romo who tried to keep Oakland´s deficit at one run in the top of the ninth. He did it with dispatch, on two fly balls and a strike out.

Alex Cora called on his closer, Matt Barnes, who entered the game second in saves for the AL with 18 and with more strike outs than any other big league releliever, 59. He hadn’t allowed an earned run in his last six appearances.

Until Elvis Andrus led off the ninth a home run to straightaway center field. That game tying blast was his first round tripper of the year. It came on a 2-1 count and off a 95 mph four seamer. Barnes was impermeable for the rest of the inning.

The tenth frame started with Lou Trivino on the mound for Oakland and Michael Chavis on second for Boston. Trivino broke Hernández´s bat with his first pitch, and ball dropped into right for a run scoring single. The inning ended with a double play into the shift, Chapman to Andrus to Olson, and Trivino’s strike out of Bogaerts. The run, of course, was uearned.

Adam Ottavino faced Lowrie with Seth Brown on second to start the A’s last chance tenth. Lowrie punched a single through the shift into left, and third base coach Mark Kotsay gave Brown stop sign att third. Skye. Bolt came in to pinch run for Lowrie at first with Sean Murphy at bat with runners on the corners and no outs.

Murphy hit fly to medium deep center. This time Kotsay sent the runner home. Hernández caught the ball and made a perfect throw home to. complete the double play. Schwindel´s fly out to left was anti climatic.

The win went to Barnes, who also got a blown save. His record now stands at 4-2, 2,75, Ottavino earned his sixth save, and Trivino got the tough loss.

They go at it again Saturday afternoon at 4:15. It will be Cole Irvin (6-7, 3.64) going for the green and gold and Garrett Richards (4-5,4.96) for the Red Sox.