D’Backs Strike Back: Arizona’s heroics stand up in 3-2 win over the Giants

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–The Giants got bailed out by their rock on Tuesday. On Wednesday, the Diamondbacks relied on their Stone.

Stone Garrett picked his first Major League game as the occasion to knock in a tying run and later score the go-ahead run in a 3-2 win over the Giants. The Giants saw their five-game win streak snapped as they couldn’t back another impressive start from Carlos Rodon.

Garrett, 26, spent eight seasons in the minors despite being an eighth round pick, but he failed to put up eye-catching stats until this season at Triple-A Reno were he hit 28 home runs and knocked in 95 runs in 103 games.

“I wanted it bad so I just persevered and said ‘keep going, keep going, never lose faith,'” he said. “I knew if I put in the work I would eventually get here.”

His parent flew in from sweltering North Texas upon word of his call up. Predictably and comically, Garrett’s father Greg wasn’t dressed appropriately and had to hit the concession stands for a sweatshirt.

“I knew he was going to come without a long-sleeve shirt,” Garrett said. “That was just funny to see.”

The Giants brought the heat first with Lamonte Wade Jr.’s third inning home run and J.D. Davis’ blast in the sixth. The Homer’s gave the Giants 1-0 and 2-1 leads.

Garrett’s RBI double tied in the fourth, and Garrett and Christian Walker were aboard ahead of pinch-hitter Jake McCarthy’s two-run single in the eighth.

Rodon was seeking a fourth win in the same number of starts, and he was on his game. Rodon lasted six innings, and allowed one run on two hits while fanning 11. Dominic Leone, the Giants’ second reliever brought into the game, allowed McCarthy’s single and took the loss.

“He was unable to execute his slider where he wanted to go, as a result two guys put good swings on him,” Kapler said of Leone.

The Giants took the first five games of their homestand before Wednesday’s loss. Now they’ll focus on capturing the finale on Thursday afternoon for a 6-1 stretch. Logan Webb (11-5, 3.00 ERA) will face Zach Gallen (8-2, 2.94).

Crawford belts two run blast in ninth for Giants 2-1 walk off over D-Backs at Oracle

San Francisco Giants Brandon Crawford (35) blasts a two run home run in the bottom of the ninth to walk off a Giant win at Oracle Park in San Francisco against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Tue Aug 16, 2022 (AP News photo)

Arizona (53-63). 1. 5. 0

San Francisco (59-57). 2. 7. 0

Tuesday, August 16, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–It’s encouraging that the Giants came to work this evening on a roll. Since being swept by the Dodgers a dozen games ago, San Francisco has gone 7-2 and were on the verge of a five game winning streak and had, at long last, clawed their way over .500, at 58-57.

Of course, those seven wins were against the A’s, Pirates, and Diamondbacks, none of which is an awe inspiring opponent. Tonight’s starting pitcher for Arizona, however, was a prophylactic against over confidence. The Giants Brandon Crawford hit a walk off home run in the bottom of the ninth inning to help get the Giants a one run win at Oracle Park on Tuesday night.

Merrill Kelly, the Rattlers’ 33 year old righty who honed his skills in the Korean Baseball Organization, showed up with a 10-5, 2.93 mark for the MLB season. More pertinent to his start against the Giants tonight was his 2-0, 1.69 record against the orange and black, whom he had held to a batting average of .139.

On July 25, in his last start against San Francisco, he shut them out over eight innings, allowing only 3 hits and no walks, striking out seven. Like the Giants, Kelly was going for a five game winning streak.

The Giants’ answer to Kelly was Jakob Junis, whose unprepossessing record of 4-3, 3.78 when he toed the rubber at 6:45 inspired neither great expectations nor fear and trembling. His career record against the Diamondbacks also was ambiguous 2-2, 2.61 in a scant 10-1/3 innings of work.

In his only appearance against Arizona this year, he lasted 4-1/3 innings, giving up a run, earned, on three hits and a walk, while striking out a pair of Diamondbacks. That was the game in which Kelly stymied the San Francisco bats over eight frames.

It was a battle between these two hurlers that we witnessed, at least until Alex Young relieved Junis after the starter had treated the 20,897 fans in attendance to a splendid performance.

The Giants eventually won 2-1 in a contest that featured superb pitching by both starters and, with one notable exception, both bullpens.

For San Francisco, Junis went seven innings of excellent ball. His 101 pitches, 72 of them strikes, limited the visitors to a single run, on four hits, one of which left the park. He didn’t walk anyone but did hit one batter. He notched seven strikeouts and lowered his ERA to 3.53. He got a no decision.

Kelly also went seven frames. He held the Giants scoreless on four hits, two of them doubles, and two free passes.He struck out seven Giants and threw 93 pitches, 61 of which were strikes. He, too, got. a no decision, lowering his ERA to 2,81.

Joc Pederson banged a two bagger off the Bank of America sign just to the left of the 399 marker in center field to open the Giants’ half of the first. Brandon Belt was up next, and he drew a walk. Wilmer Flores followed him by flying out to center, bringing the cleanup hitter, Evan Longoria, to the plate. He hit into a tailor made 6-4-3 twin killing. The Curse of the Leadoff Double strikes again!

Neither team crossed the plate in the first three innings. That changed in the top of the fourth when Chrilstian Walker led off by lifting a 2-1 slider 397 feet into the left field bleachers, over the spot where the GAME UP sign meets the one for National Car Rental to the right of the 354 foot marker. It was the 29th round tripper and 69th run batted in of the year for the Diamondbacks’ first sacker.

The Giants responded with a one out double to the right field corner by Belt. Once more Longoria had a man on second with one out, only this time there was no one else on board. Kelly struck him out swinging on a lovely change of pace. After Kelly and Yastrzemski battled each other to a 3-2, Kelly fanned Yaz on another changeup, stranding Belt and leaving the home team behind 1-0 after four.

With the score still 1-0 Longoria led off the seventh with a double to left that fell safely to the ground in spite of a diving effort by McCarthy. Longoria stayed on second when Mike Yastrzemski flew out to medium deep right center for the first out.

Estrada dropped a bunt that moved Longoria to third. The rule book instructs scorers to assume that a bunt that advances a runner is a sacrifice, but common sense (which often is in conflict with the rules of major league baseball) says that he had to be bunting for a hit.

Crawford drew a walk. Now there were runners on the corners with two down and Joey Bart, hitting .314 since his return from Sacramento, at bat. The count reached 2-2 before he skyed out to right.

Alex Young took over on the mound and pitched a perfect eighth for the Giants. Another southpaw, Joe Mantiply, relieved Kelly in the bottom of the frame. He struck out pinch hitters Austin Slater and JD Davis, but yielded a two out double to Flores. Then he fanned Belt when the Giants’ first baseman couldn’t check his swing on a 1-2 change up.

It was John Brebbia on the hill for San Francisco, trying to keep the Giants in striking range of the Diamondbacks. To do that, he had to get through the heart of the Arizona order, Rojas, Walker, and McCarthy.

The first of the trio singled to left. Brebbia fanned the second. McCarthy forced Rojas at second but beat out Crawford’s throw to first. Alek Thomas went down swinging, and the Giants had one last chance at bat.

They faced Ian Kennedy, who had converted eight of his 11 save opportunities. Longoria popped out to short. Yastrzemski sent Thomas to the 399 foot sign in center field. Thomas leaped. And came down with the ball in his glove for the second out.

Now Thairo Estrada, the hero of Sunday’s come from behind walk off victory, had a chance for an encore. He sent a 2-2 93 mph four seamer deep into right and legged out a triple. That put Crawford in the batter’s box. He swung and missed on Kennedy’s first pitch. He swung and connected on Kennedy’s second offering. The ball cleared the center field fence, it having travelled 406 feet.

The Giants won, 2-1.

Brebbia (6-1) got the win; Kennedy (4-6), the loss.

You can’t make this stuff up.

Tomorrow’s 6:45 matchup between Zach Davies (2-4, 4.11) and Carlos Rodón (11-6, 2.95) promises more thrills and chills.

Butch Metzger; He was a Giant? By Tony the Tiger Hayes

Former San Francisco Giant pitcher Butch Metzger is the latest in a series of topics by Tony the Tiger in the feature “He was a Giant? (photo by Topps Baseball cards)

Butch Metzger – RHP – 1974 – # 48

He Was a Giant?

By Tony the Tiger Hayes

During the 1970s, the cash-strapped Giants were dominated in the standings by the meat -grinding Reds and Dodgers mega teams. But the decade that brought us Watergate and neck ties as wide as Van Ness Avenue was not a total disaster for the Orange & Black.

At least the Giants looked cool during the “Me Decade.”

While the conservative leaning Cincinnati and Los Angeles clubs had square grooming guidelines for their players, the Giants let their players let it all hang out.

Perhaps the club was more concerned about keeping the club financially afloat than fussing about the length of their shortstop’s shag hairdo.

Gravity defying Afros, corkscrew perms, droopy horseshoe mustaches, mutton-chop sideburns and the odd shaven head was the Giants signature look of that era.

If they had traded their Orange & Black baseball threads for leather jackets, bell-bottom jeans and aviators, the Giants would have resembled actors on hip-cop TV shows such as “Kojak” or “Starsky & Hutch.”

But, what was more impressive for a San Francisco club that wobbled at the edge of bankruptcy throughout the decade of unbreathable fabrics, was the franchise’s unique ability to introduce a steady stream of hot-shot award-winning rookies.

Catcher Dave Rader (1972) and outfielder Larry Herndon (1976) were each named National League Rookie Players of the Year by The Sporting News. Right-handed pitcher John D’Acquisto (1974) snagged TSN’s NL Pitcher of the Year honor.

More prominently, the Giants farm system originated three official NL Rookie of the Year Award winners (each player also received corresponding TSN nods): outfielder Gary Matthews (1973) and back -to -back winners right-handed pitchers John Montefusco (1975) and RHP Butch Metzger (1976).

Wait. Butch… Who?

Say you don’t remember Metzger’s record setting 1976 season when he dazzled the Senior Circuit with a 11-4, 2.92 record with 16 saves.

That might be because Metzger’s ROY campaign came as a member of the Gravy Brown & Hot Dog Mustard Yellow color schemed San Diego Padres – two seasons after Metzger’s cameo with the 1974 Giants.

Why Was He A Giant?

Hailing from the Sacramento area, Clarence “Butch” Metzger was drafted by San Francisco with their second-round selection of the June, 1970 amateur draft.

A standout at the Capital City’s John F. Kennedy High School, Metzger played three years of varsity ball, posting a 15-5, 1.49 record with 253 strikeouts over 149 innings.

The lanky, boyish-looking pitcher was signed by legendary Giants scout Eddie Montague who famously inked Willie Mays to his first Giants contract in 1950.

Between 1970-74, San Francisco wasted little time advancing Metzger throughout the farm system. He climbed a rank every season – Great Falls, Decatur, Amarillo and Phoenix.

In the minors, Metzger was primarily used as a starting pitcher. But once he reached the majors, all but one of his 191 appearances came in relief.

After striking out 148 for Triple-A Phoenix in 1974, Metzger, age 22, was green lighted to Candlestick Park and deemed ready for prime time.

Just as the ultimate ‘70s cop show – the ratings grabbing “Streets of San Francisco” was beginning it’s third season on ABC television – Metzger walked to the mound in Atlanta for his MLB debut (9/8/74).

The first batter he faced was coincidentally a fellow athlete from River City – the Braves’ outfielder Dusty Baker.

“Strangely enough I was not as nervous as I thought I would be,” Metzger told Tom Kane of his hometown Sacramento Bee. “I knew Dusty by reputation, but I had never pitched against him.”

Metzger retired Baker on a fly ball, then allowed one unearned run over two innings in a 5-3 Atlanta win.

Bizarrely, in 1995, Metzger, age 42, and long removed from organized baseball, would return to the Orange & Black and pitch in an unusual spring training exhibition.

The San Francisco manager who sent Metzger into the game? Dusty Baker.

Before & After

After his debut outing, Metzger appeared in nine more games down the stretch for San Francisco in ‘74 – posting a 1-0, 3.55 ledger.

Butch appeared to have a bright future in the Giants bullpen. But then suddenly, he was gone.

Metzger had just fully digested his Thanksgiving dinner when word came on 12/6/74 that he had been dealt to San Diego along with second baseman Tito Fuentes in exchange for utility-man Derrel Thomas.

Metzger would spend most of 1975 in with minors for San Diego before breaking camp – still technically a rookie – with the Padres in 1976.

Metzger celebrated the country’s Bicentennial with a fabulous 11-4, 2.93 record to go with 16 saves. His 77 appearances for San Diego set a big league rookie record.

Metzger would share 1976 NL ROY honors with Cincinnati RHP Pat Zachry. Each pitcher received 11 votes. It marked the first time in the then 25-year-history of the award that the honor went to more than one player.

Furthermore, in ‘76 Metzger tied former New York Giants sensation Hooks Wiltse’s 72-year -old MLB record by starting his career 12-0. Metzger won his only Giants decision in 1974, then began his Padres career a perfect 11-0.

But for Metzger, it was a case of “no good deed goes unpunished.”

The Padres thanked Metzger by immediately signing All-Star free agent closer Rollie Fingers to anchor their bullpen in 1977.

Metzger slid into an alternate bullpen role, but after an ugly implosion in an embarrassing 23-6 loss at Chicago (5/17/77), in which he was bombarded for three straight home runs and threw behind a batter out of frustration – San Diego traded Metzger to St. Louis.

Despite joining the Redbirds seven weeks into the season, Metzger still placed second on the club in pitching appearances (58). In total, Metzger posted a strong season: 4-2, 3.59 in 75 overall appearances.

But after pitching in 148 games over two seasons – the work load started to catch up to Butch as he developed arm issues.

The Cardinals unceremoniously dumped Metzger prior to the 1978 campaign. He was quickly scooped up by the Mets and pitched briefly alongside Zachry in New York’s bullpen – but Metzger, his arm lifeless and his efforts largely ineffective – only lasted a half a season in Queens.

After last gasp efforts in the Phillies and Braves organizations – Metzger found himself back in Sacramento. His pitching days seemingly over at age 28.

But that was far from the case. The fame and big league pay checks were distant memories, but Butch’s desire to compete was not.

He Never Had a Bobblehead Day. But…

When Metzger joined the Giants for the final four weeks of the 1974 campaign, the Orange & Black had long been eliminated from competition for the Western flag.

But with a dozen games remaining vs. the division leading Dodgers and the persistent second place Reds, San Francisco’s mod squad had ample opportunities to be spoilers.

When Cincinnati rolled into Candlestick Park for a four game series beginning 9/19/74, the Reds trailed the Dodgers by just 2.5 games.

But the scrappy Giants took three of four contests. By the time The Big Red Machine sputtered out of town, their deficit had doubled to 4.5 games. Cincinnati was never able to make up the difference and finished the season four games back of L.A.

Metzger corralled his first big league victory in the third game of the set (9/21/74).

After the Giants started with a bang, scoring five in the 1st inning, the Reds battled back to make it a game. With two runs in the 9th, the Reds tied the game 6-6.

Metzger took over in the 10th. After walking slugger Tony Perez, he sat down Dan Driessen, Dave Concepcion and Ken Griffey in succession to preserve the tie.

With a runner on and two outs in the bottom of the 10th, the Giants Ed Goodson drove a screaming bolt over the left field fence off Reds RHP Pedro Borbon to make it an 8-6 finale.

An ebullient Metzger, his ERA sitting at 1.69 through 9.2 big league innings, was feeling his oats – but also cautious.

“I know it can’t be that easy, and some day I’ll have my problems,” acknowledged Metzger, before offering his pitch repertoire. “My fastball isn’t really overpowering so I change speeds a lot and make good use of a curve that breaks sideways instead of down – my “swerve” I call it.”

The precious Metzger even produced a smile from normally brusque Giants field general Wes Westrum.

“Metzger has sacrificed speed for control and that is what a relief pitcher needs – the ability to throw strikes,” Westrum opined, before spitting tobacco juice into a styrofoam cup.

Giant Footprint

Ironically, after serving as a bullpen fireman, Metzger became a real life fireman in Sacramento.

But he never extinguished his love of baseball. For years, Metzger was an enthusiastic participant in the City of Trees’ vibrant semi-pro baseball scene, regularly pitching up to 100 innings per season for the Sacto Smokies.

Butch also volunteered as an associate scout for the Giants.

When baseball’s work stoppage – which obtusely led to the cancellation of the 1994 World Series – bled over into 1995, MLB began assembling slapdash replacement squads.

Metzger was one of several former major leaguers to head back to big league diamonds.

21 years after leaving the Giants, Butch found himself outfitted again in Orange & Black. The fit and trim fire fighter made it easy on equipment man Mike Murphy. Metzger’s uniform pants were shockingly still the same size.

After years of running into burning buildings and breathing life back into total strangers, Metzger expressed no qualms about crossing the baseball millionaires virtual picket lines.

“When you’ve zipped up a few body bags and washed down a few freeways, you find out what’s important in life,” Metzger told the Bee’s Nick Peters. “I’m not in this for the money… I’m here because I want to play the best baseball I can be exposed to.”

The pitching primed Metzger stepped directly on to a spring training mound for the substitute Giants.

“My biggest concern was whether I’d be taken seriously or be laughed off,” he acknowledged. “I’m comfortable now because people who have seen me pitch say I could still pitch at Triple-A.”

The Giants didn’t disagree.

“It’s not like we’re trying to pass this guy off as a one-eyed person. When you see him in person you’ll be surprised,” said Brian Sabean, then the Giants head of scouting. “When you get up next to him, obviously you see his age, but his body is in good shape.”

Whether management was calling the striking players bluff or not, teams began formalizing their plans to play actual major league games with stand-ins.

It looked like it might actually happen when rag-tag versions of the Giants and A’s met in the Bay Area for their traditional end of spring training Bay Bridge Series.

Stunningly, the Friday night opener (3/31/95), attracted 10,179 baseball starved ticket buyers to Oakland.

With the Giants trailing 2-1, Metzger came on to pitch the bottom of the 8th. He allowed a single to open the frame, but quickly got a double-play grounder. Metzger recorded the third out too and walked from the mound unscathed.

Giants fans, and more than a few Oakland loyalists, stood and cheered.

“Just being out there, the bright lights, having a significant number of people in the stands, I had the fire burning,” said Metzger, pun possibly intended, after the 2-1 Oakland victory.

Whether it a calculated move or not, playing with stopgaps such as Metzger served as a spring board to getting idle major leaguers back on the field.

Once the dueling sides in the labor dispute realized that fans were willing to part with hard-earned cash to watch real life heroes such as Metzger serve as alternate big leaguers, it suddenly hit them that the game would survive without them.

Within a day, an accord was reached.

Bum Bashed: Giants take advantage of their Series hero in 6-1 win over Arizona

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–Madison Bumgarner competed “mad” as always, but he didn’t have the substance to match his familiar style.

The Giants did, winning 6-1 over the Diamondbacks and wearing down Bumgarner in the process.

The 2014 World Series hero cruised through the first three innings but ran into adversity in the fourth when J.D. Davis doubled and Evan Longoria homered for a 2-0 Giants’ lead.

Joey Bart, swinging a hot bat for the first time in his big league career, doubled in the fifth ahead of Austin Slater’s RBI single. That increased the lead to 3-0 and the Giants added three more in the sixth to chase Bumgarner, who exited to extended applause.

Bart’s two-run single highlighted the final rally, and stood as the biggest piece of his three-hit night. The young catcher has a seven-game hit streak for the first time, and after his hitting struggles needed to be rectified at Triple-A Sacramento.

“What it means is we have a threat at the bottom of the lineup, somebody that can drive the baseball, keep the line moving and is really grinding out at-bats right now,” manager Gabe Kapler said. “Not to get too far ahead of ourselves, but now it’s starting to get a little consistent. It’s very encouraging.”

Alex Cobb survived a lengthy first inning by striking out Carson Kelly with the bases loaded. Cobb went on to throw six innings, winning for the fourth time with a Christian Walker home run as his only blemish.

The Padres were blanked in Miami allowing the Giants to gain ground in the wild card chase. With 47 games remaining, the Giants are 5 1/2 games behind San Diego, and 3 1/2 behind Milwaukee. The Brewers were shut out at home by the Dodgers on Monday.

On Tuesday, the Giants face 10-game winner Merrill Kelly, who already has a win over them this season. Jakob Junis will start for the Giants, another chance for Junis to regain his early-season form.

SF’s Estrada belts two run walk off homer to defeat Pirates 8-7

San Francisco Giants Thairo Estrada belted a two run home run in the bottom of the ninth to win it celebrates at home plate with his teammates against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Aug 14, 2022 (AP News photo)

Pittsburgh (45-70). 7. 11. 0

San Francisco (57-57). 8. 13. 1

Sunday, August 14, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–The Giants came to work this afternoon having won five of the last seven games. Unfortunately, they also had won five of their last 11 and still were a game under .500 and 6-1/2 out in the race for the last wild card spot.

Alex Wood, their starting pitcher for today’s contest, pitched a fine game in his last outing, against the current occupants of that coveted fourth wild card place, the San Diego Padres. The 31 year old southpaw went 6-1/3 frames in a 1-0 win in which allowed three hits and struck out five opponents, throwing 89 pitches.

He wasn’t that impressive in his only appearance against Pittsburgh this year, allowing four earned runs on six hits in a 7-5 Giants win. His season record when he threw the his first offering, at 1:07 this warm, sunny afternoon was 8-9,4, 4.17)

The Pirates sent 28 year old righty Zach Thompson and his 3-9, 5.08 record against the possibly resurgent home team. He has been used as both a starter and reliever in his season and a half in the show this year, all but one of his 20 previous appearances were starts, while last season he started only 14 of the 26 games in which he was on the mound.

The game ended in a 8-7 walkoff win for the Giants. Wood threw 101 pitches, 64 for strikes, over six innings before leaving with a 5-3 lead.The three runs he allowed were earned and came on five hits, a walk, and two hit batters. All he got was a no decision that left him at 8-9, 4.18.

Thompson lasted only four innings, having thrown 90 pitches, 38 of them balls, and surrendering five runs, all earned, on seven hits, one of them yard, two walks, and a hit batsman. He escaped with a no decision and wound up with a record of 3-9, 5.34.

Brandon Belt was back in the San Francisco lineup, playing first and batting cleanup. It was his 1,394 game played as a Giant, tying Robbie Thompson for seventh place in that category since the team moved to San Francisco in 1958.

Kevin Newman wasted no time in attacking Wood and his defense. He lashed a leg double to right on the first pitch of the game. Although Wood put Bryce Reynolds on base by plunking him two pitches later, neither runner advanced.

It was a case of The Curse of the Leadoff Double in spades. Not only did the Pirates fail to score in the first, but Wood struck out four straight Buccos after he hit Reynolds with an 83 mph slider.

That strikeout streak ended when Greg Allen grounded into the second out of the second frame and Wood’s luck turned against him. Tucupita Marcano hit a dinky ground ball to second and got. an infield hit out of it.

Jason Delay was in no hurry and went to a full count before depositing a single to left that put runners on first and second, setting the stage for Newman to load the bases by being hit by another of Wood’s sliders. Reynolds flew out to deep right center, which preserved the scoreless tie.

That situation didn’t survive the Giants’ second inning onslaught. After Thairo Estrada took a called third strike, Brandon Crawford walked and scored on Tommy LaStella’s double to right. Joey Bart dropped a Texas League single that would have been called an error if MLB rules accepted the concept of team errors.

LaStella moved up to third. Both runners trotted home after LaMonte Wade, Jr. whalloped his seventh home run of the year, a. 406 foot no doubter to center that came off an 86 mph change of pace. The home team now had an early 4-0 lead to protect.

They didn’t merely protect it; they stretched it. Joc Pederson got hit by a Thompson fastball with two down in the home fourth and motored all the way home on Flores’s down the line double to left. Pederson left the game a couple of innings later with a contusion on his right hand.Rodolfo Castro’s relay throw to the plate might have nailed him if the Bucs’ third sacker had released the ball a mige quicker.

The Giants’ seemingly comfortable five run margin quickly shrunk to three in the fifth on Delay’s leadoff single to left center, followed by a full count walk to Newman, and a Bryan Reynolds double to left. Reynolds advanced to third on Chavis’s fly out to right and scoreddon Ben Gamel’s ground out to second. The Giants’ advantage now was down to two, 5-3.

The orange and black also had a new pitcher to face when they came to bat in their half of the fifth, the left handed Manny Bañuelos, who held them to Crawford’s single in his inning of work and was replaced in the sixth by Colin Holderman.

Kevin Newman beat out a hit to third, and Reynolds went way deep to center field, 442 feet, to be exact, for his 17th home run and 36th, 37th, and 38th RBI of the season, putting Pittsburgh up 6-5.

A single to center by Chavis sent Brebbia to the showers and Jarlín García to the mound. He fanned Gamel and Cruz, with Castro banging out a single to left sandwiched between them. Then he caught Allen looking at a changeup for an inning ending called third strike.

But it was a whole new ball game when Flores came to bat to face Holderman in the home seventh, who led off with a base knock to right that ended Holderman’s mound tenure. Southpaw Eric Strong came on to pitch a move countered by Evan Longoria pinch hitting for Belt.

He flew out to left but Yaz drew a four pitch walk that put Flores in scoring position. Estrad grounded into a short to second force out and just barely beat the relay to first, putting runners on first and third. Crawford then lifted a pop fly to shallow center field.

Allen and Newman collided, and the ball dropped off of the latter’s glove for what originally was scored as a two base error as Flores crossed the plate with the leading run. Upon review, the scorer reversed his decision and Crawford was credited with a double and an RBI, and Stout was charged with an earned run.

Stout didn’t come out for the San Francisco eighth. Wil Crowe relieved him and kept the Giants off the board with the help of a diving grab of Wade’s hard ground behind first for the second out.

Camilo Doval, who had earned his 17th save last night and his 16th the night before, came out of the bullpen, hoping to hold the Giants’ deficit at a single run. Reynolds led off with a clean single to right and took second on Chavis’s productive ground  out to short. Gamel then walked to put the potential leading run on base but also setting up a double play. Castro hit a weak grounder to third. Longoria made a barehanded pick up and threw wildly and late to first. Reynolds reached third on what was ruled Castro’s hit and scored on Longoria’s throwing error.

Gamel also tried to score, but Flores’s throw from first nipped him at home. The Pirates challenged the call, claiming that Bart had illegally blocked the plate. Sam Holberg and Greg Gibson in New York thought otherwise, and the scoreboard had the Buccos ahead 7-6 after Doval fanned Cruz to end the threat.

Longoria made amends for his error by leading off the bottom of the ninth with a single to left. JD Davis came in to run for him and was forced at second by Yastrzemski’s grounder to Newman. It might have been a double play if the Bucs’ second baseman had made a decent throw to the bag. The next pitch was to Estrada. It began as a 95 mph sinker. It ended as a game winning home run, 395 feet deep in center field.

What a game!

Doval didn’t get his save. Instead he got his fourth win against five losses. His ERA dropped to 2.76.

The loss went to Crowe, who now is 4-7. 3,34,

Arizona comes to town tomorrow for a 6:45 game. Alex Cobb (3-6,4.15) will start for the Giants. The Diamondbacks haven’t announced who will pitch for them.

Giants Webb was dealing in 2-0 shutout of Pirates at Oracle Park Saturday night

San Francisco Giants starter Logan Webb pitches in the top of the first inning against the visiting Pittsburgh Pirates at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sat Aug 13, 2022 (AP News photo)

Pittsburgh (45-69). 0. 5. 1

San Francisco (56-57). 2. 4. 0

Saturday, August 13, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Before tonight’s game against the Pittsburgh Pirates, the Giants held a reunion and celebration of the team that won the 2012 World Series. The game itself featured another sort of reunion.

The Pirates’ starting pitcher, Tyler Beede, who toiled for the Giants from 2018 through early May of this year, with the exception of 2020, the COVID-shortened season, which he spent recovering from Tommy John surgery.

Beede went 0-0, 4.66 for the Giants this year and was 1-1, 3.28 for the Pirates, and 1-1, 3.57 overall when he first toed the rubber this evening. While playing college ball for Vanderbilt in 2012, his roommate was Mike Yasetrzemski.

Following that, during his tenure with San Francisco, the Bucco’s righty was good friends-indeed, he still is-with the Giants’ starter, Logan Webb, who came to do battle with his friend, bringing a record of 10-5, 3.17 in his duffel bag.

When the dust had settled, Webb had pitched a beautiful game, earning the win in a 2-0 Giants’ victory, in which the loser outhit the winners 5-4.

Beede lasted a scant three innings, during which he yielded a pair of runs, both earned, on three hits, one of them a home run, and three walks. He threw 74 pitches, 39 of which resulted in contact or were strikes. He was charged with the loss, which made his overall record 1-2, 3.72.

Webb, on the other hand didn’t throw his 74th pitch until, nursing a 2-0 lead, he faced his second batter of the seventh inning. He held on through the eighth and improved his record to 11-5, 3.00, allowing only four hits and two walks. Both runs scored against him were earned, and he struck out nine Bucs. The threw a total of 99 pitches, 34 of which were balls.

Tommy LaStella started at first base for San Francisco, replacing Brandon Belt, who was nursing a sore thumb.

The Giants overcame the dreaded Curse of the Leadoff Double, getting back to back two baggers from MonteWade, Jr., and Joc Pederson to start their half of the first inning. They did, however, fall victim to a mutated strain of the Curse; Pederson died on third.

The Pirates fell victim to the scourge in the top of the third when Rodolfo Castro’s leadoff shot went right through LaStella into left field for a generously scored two base hit. The frame ended with Castro on third when Webb made an exciting dive for the bag after fielding Newman’s weak grounder between the mound and first, getting the out by an eyelash.

Wade followed that exploit by opening the bottom of the third with a 410 foot blast into McCoy Cove, stretching the Giants’ lead to 2-0. The pitch was a sinker, but. I couldn’t see whether the splash hit floated or sank.

Eric Stout relieved Beede at the start of the Giants fourth. Wilmer Flores pinch hit for La Stella, who was due up first and tempted fate with a … you guessed it … leadoff double. Fate won, and San Francisco didn’t score in the fourth.

Stout walked JD Davis on a full count to open the fifth and then retired Mike Yastrzemski and Crawford before leaving the game in favor of Duane Underwood, Jr. He plunked Estrada, his first batter, with a change of pace before getting Flores out on a sinking liner to right, on which Greg Allen made a lovely diving catch.

Stout pitched a scoreless sixth and was succeeded in the seventh by Chase DeJong, who set the Giants down to conga beat, striking out Davis and Crawford in the process.

Pittsburgh threatened in the top of the eighth, loading the bases with two down. This was the first inning in which that had more than one runner on base. Webb rose to the occasion, striking out DH BenGamel on his 99th pitch of the game.

Camilo Doval, who earned his 16th save last night, fanned Oneil Cruz to open the top of the ninth. He walked Greg Allen, who proceeded to steal second and then advance to third on Bligh Madris’s ground out to second.

Allen’s potential run meant nothing but Rodolfo Castro, who was two for three on the evening, represented the possible tying run. He lined out to left to end a nerve wracking inning and a heartening Giants win.

The series ends tomorrow with a 1:05 contest in which Pittsburgh’s Zach Thompson (3.09, 5.08) will face San Francisco’s Alex Wood (8-9, 4.17).

San Francisco Giants podcast with Morris Phillips : Giants had it all in 2012 to win World Series in a four game sweep

The 2012 World Champion San Francisco Giants reunite at Oracle Park before the 2022 San Francisco Giants hosted the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sat Aug 13, 2022 (@SFGiants photo)

On San Francisco Giants podcast with Morris Phillips :

#1 Morris, kind of a special day at Oracle on Saturday night where the San Francisco Giants paid tribute to the 2012 World Championship team. The celebration included two of the remaining Giants who are still part of the starting line up Brandon Crawford and Brandon Belt.

#2 Belt said that it was ten years ago but said it’s kind of cool seeing all those guys again who will be part of the guest list for the Saturday night reunion.

#3 The Giants battled the Detroit Tigers and swept them in all four games to win the World Series and their second World Series win in two years winning their last one two year previous in 2010.

#4 During the 2012 reunion key players Tim Lincecum and Buster Posey didn’t attend. Lincecum whose wife passed away in June as announced by the Giants this week and Posey who moved back to Georgia had family obligations.

#5 One of the biggest ovations was for former Giants manager Bruce Bochy who managed the team to three World Series Championships.

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

Rodon pitches Giants to 5-3 win over Pirates at Oracle Park

San Francisco Giants third baseman Wilmer Flores (41) makes the catch for a force out on the Pittsburgh Pirates Josh Van Meter (26) in the top of the sixth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Fri Aug 12, 2022 (AP News photo)

Pittsburgh (45-68).     3. 10.  0

San Francisco (55-57) 5.   7.  0

Friday, August 12, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–If you glanced at the MLB standings and probable pitchers for tonight’s first game of the weekend series between the Giants and the visiting Pirates, you’d think that a San Francisco win was in the bag. The Giants got help from starter Carlos Rodon holding the Pirates to three runs in a 5-3 win.

After all, the Buccos came to town at 45-67, 14 games behind in the race for the National League’s last wild card spot while Kapler’s Crew, at  54-57, was only (only!) 7-1/2 short of a playoff shot. Pittsburgh sent Bryce Wilson, a 24 year old right hander who has bounced back and forth between the Pirates and their triple A affiliate, the Indianapolis Indians, all season, and all he had to show for it was a 2-6, 5.86 big league mark. It should be said in his favor, however, that between July 1 and today, he had gone 2-2, 3.34. 

The Giants, on the other hand, entrusted their fortune to one of  the two aces on their staff, the left handed veteran Rodón, who, at 10-6, 2.55, had been credited with  18.51% of the team’s victories. If he had been the winning pitcher in that percentage of the 107 games San Francisco won last year, Julio Urías would have been the only major league pitcher to have won more games, and that only by a fraction of a game. 

Your sanguine assumption would have been reasonable, but you would have been wrong. The Giants won, all right, but it was a gut wrenching victory that wasn’t decided until the last pitch. The Giants 5-3 win was no walk in the park.

Both teams announced roster changes earlier today. The Pirates promoted Austin Price, a right handed pitcher, to replace Yerry de los Santos, ditto, who went on the 60 day IL. San Francisco optioned Yunior Marte to Sacramento and recalled southpaw hurler Thomas Szapucki from the River Cats.

Wilson lasted 5-1/3 innings and surrendered four runs, all earned, on six hits and two walks. He fanned one Giant and allowed one home run. Of his 85 pitches, 34 were balls. He took the loss, bringing his record to 2-7, 5.93.

Rodón, who, in spite of having thrown a complete game in June, had averaged a little less than six innings per start this season, lasted exactly six tonight. He gave up two runs, both earned, on six hits, both of which went yard,, and didn’t walk a man. He threw 110 pitches, 72 going for strikes. He improved his won-lost  record to 10-6, although his ERA rose to 2.95.

Mike Yastrzemski, batting cleanup, put the orange and black on the board with a leadoff home run in the second, a 384 foot blast that sailed over the National Car Rental sign in left center. It came off an 89 mph sinker and gave Mike Yastrzemski an even dozen round trippers for the season. The Giants continued attacking after Yastrzemski crossed the plate.

Brandon Crawford singled to left and moved up a notch when Thairo Estrada followed suit. Both advanced on beautiful sacrifice bunt by LaMonte Wade, Jr. Crawford scored on Luis González’ sacrifice fly to left, but Estrada rounded third too widely and got put out in a rundown, Tucupidta Marcano to ONeil Cruz to Kevin Newman to Cruz, left field to short to second to short, to end the frame with San Francisco up 2-0.

The Giants loaded the bases quickly in their half of the third. Ausin Wynns singled to left, and  Wilson hit Joc Pederson with a pitch. After Brandon Belt fouled out to third, Wilmer Flores clogged the basepaths with a sharp single to center. Yaz grounded to second, and it looked like Newman’s throw home might force Wynn out at home. But the ball bounced off the mitt of Pittsburgh catcher Jason Delay, allowing Wynns to score. The play was ruled a fielder’s choice, giving Yastrzemski his second RBl of the evening and 43rd of the season. The Giants now led 3-0.

The team from Steel City got one run back in the top of the fourth, thanks to a full count, two out dinger by third baseman Rodolfo Castro, who parked a 96 mph four seamer 409 feet into the left field bleachers for his second home run of 2022, of which this was his 25th game.

Yastrzemski made it 4-1 in the home half of the fifth. With two down and Belt, who had walked, on first, the Giants’ center fielder sent a towering fly to the warning track in front of the 391 foot sign in dead center.

Bryan Reynolds let the ball fall for an RBI double that gave Yaz three RBIs for three ABs. Crawford then was granted an intentional walk but got picked off at first by Delay, who promptly fired a strike to first sacker Michael Chavis after Estrada had swung at and missed Wilson’s first delivery.

The three run margin didn’t last long. Rodón struck out his first two batters in the Pirates´ sixth, but Ben Gamel sent a 98 mph four seamer over the fence in left center, between the National Car Rental and Bank of America advertisements. The ball traveled 397 feet. Castro, up next for Pittsburgh, also traveled,  270 feet from home to third, on a triple to the left field corner.  Rodón recovered to strike out Cruz, his third K of the inning and seventh of the game.

After Estrada led off for the Giants in the sixth by flying out to left, the Pirates sent Manny Bañuelos to relieve Wilson, a move San Francisco countered by sending Evan Longoria to the plate to hit for the DH Estrada. He went down swinging.

.Newcomer Thomas Szapucki made his Giants debut to start the top of the seventh. (He previously had made one appearance for the Mets). He pitched an ugly third of any inning, allowing a leadoff homer to Allen that made it a 4-3 ball game and a single to Marcano before unleashing a wild pitch on his way to striking out Delay.

John Brebbia replaced the unfortunate Szapucki after he’d faced the reglementary three hitters. He got the Giants out of the inning without any further damage, although he needed a favorable ruling from Sam Holbrook and Greg Gibson in New York on a challenge to the second out, a close play at first on Newman’s grounder to short.

When Austin Slater was announced as pinch hitting for Pederson with one out in the home seventh, the Bucs responded by bringing in the right handed Colin Holderman to replace his left handed predecessor. 

Holderman held the Giants at bay even though he walked Slater and Flores and required a fine catch of Yastrzemski’s hard, falling liner to right to end the frame.

Josh Van Meter hit for Chavis to lead off the Bucco’s half of the eighth. He and Gamel hit singles to right. Castro tried to bunt them along, but his attempted sacrifice was foiled by Brebbia’s throw to third. It was a close play, but Pittsburgh couldn’t contest it because they lost their challenge in the seventh. That was it for Brebbia, though.

Alex Young entered the game and walked Cruz to load the bases. He fanned Allen but still had to deal with Marcano, whom he retired on a grounder to second. The Giants still clung their 4-3 lead.

Austin Brice set down Crawford and Estrada in the bottom of the eighth but granted a base on balls to Longoria. Then González looped a fly that landed between the two fielders in left center to send Longoria home with San Francisco’ s fifth tally, a much needed insurance run.

Camilo Doval had to hold on to the 5-3 lead the Giants now enjoyed if he were going to gain 16th save in 18 opportunities. Bligh Madris, hitting for Delay, grounded out to second. Newman hit a grounder to third; Flores made a nifty play on it,  and there were two outs.  Doval struck him out, and that was it, a hard fought win for the beleaguered San Francisco Giants.

Tomorrow at 6:05, Pittsburgh will send Tyler Beede (1-1, 3.57) against the Giants’ other ace, Logan Webb (10-5, 3.17).

San Francisco Giants podcast with Daniel Dullum: Giants post season chances are fading fast; Tim Lincecum wife passes away

Former San Francisco Giants pitcher Tim Lincecum and his wife Cristin at the 2012 World Series celebration on Market Street in San Francisco. Cristin passed away on Jun 27, 2022 as announced by the San Francisco Giants on Thu Aug 11, 2022. (sfgate.com file photo)

On the Giant’s podcast with Daniel:

#1 The San Francisco Giants have been struggling losing six of their last ten games dropping their last two games in San Diego and are in third place in the NL West some 23 1/2 games behind first place Los Angeles the Giants chances of a wild card birth fading fast.

#2 Since the All Star break the Giants are 6-14 and have lost by 37 runs this stat shows they really need some help with middle and closing relief.

#3 The Giants opened their last three game series in San Diego last Mon Aug 8th with a 1-0 win thanks to the pitching efforts of Alex Wood who pitch six plus innings and the bullpen came through to uphold the shutout effort. The Giants lost the next two games to the Pads by scores of 7-4 and 13-7.

#4 Daniel, some sad news on Thursday the San Francisco Giants announced the passing of former pitcher Tim Lincecum’s wife Cristin Coleman. It should be noted that Cristin had been battling cancer. Lincecum who is extremely private didn’t even tell the Giants that Cristin and he were married and that she had died June 27th. It was also Cristin’s parents who made a statement regarding their daughter’s bout with cancer. Lincecum has not made a statement of any kind and did not go to the 2012 World Series reunion. He last appeared at a reunion when former Giants manager Bruck Bochy retired in 2019.

#5 Daniel the Giants open a three game series tonight against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Oracle Park a 7:15pm PDT first pitch. Starting pitcher for the Pirates Bryse Wilson (2-6, 5.86) going for the Giants Carlos Rodon (10-6, 2.95).

Join Daniel for the Giants podcasts Thursdays or Fridays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Giants look to rebound after losing two out of three to Padres

The San Francisco Giants JD Davis watches the flight of his second inning home run at Petco Park in San Diego against the San Diego Padres on Wed Aug 10, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 Michael during the series against San Diego Padres the Padres got a huge incentive after being shutout 26 straight innings with a home from Juan Soto on Tuesday night and ended up defeating the San Francisco Giants 7-4 and again on Wednesday 13-7.

#2 Soto after Wednesday’s game said that the Padres are on the road to recovery and got their hitting shoes on with a six run win over the Giants 13-7 at Petco Park in San Diego.

#3 The Padres made a recovery after Padres starter Sean Manaea gave up three runs in the top of the third inning and the Padres offense came back scoring seven runs in the bottom of the sixth inning.

#4 This was only the second time the Padres came back and won a game when they were down by four runs and it was first time they came back when they were down twice in a game for this season.

#5 The Pittsburgh Pirates are coming to open a three game series against the Giants on Friday night. The Pirates Bryse Wilson (2-6, 5.86) Giants will be going with Carlos Rodon (10-6 ERA 2.95)

Join Michael for the Giants podcasts each Thursday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com