San Francisco Giants podcast with Daniel Dullum: Giants Kapler gets boot after sticking up for pitcher Garcia in four game sweep

San Francisco Giants manager Gabe Kapler argued with umpire Phil Cuzzi regarding pitcher Jarlin Garcia getting ejected during Thu Aug 4, 2022 game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Oracle Park in San Francisco (photo from Fox Sports)

On the Giants podcast with Daniel Dullum:

#1 Daniel, Clayton Kershaw left Thursday’s game after suffering back pain pitched four innings, gave up three hits, one earned run, and pitched well enough to win if he had the opportunity.

#2 The 5-3 win gives the Dodgers another four game sweep over the Giants for the second time in the last month.

#3 Giants manager Gabe Kapler got ejected after Giants pitcher Jarlin Garcia got ejected for making gestures at the Dodgers Mookie Betts.

#4 Betts and Trea Turner both hit home runs to help the Dodgers get their first four game sweep of the Giants in San Francisco since 1977.

#5 The Giants open a three game series in Oakland on Saturday night. Giants starting pitcher Carlos Rodon (9-6, 3.00) and for the A’s Adam Oller (1-4, 7.68) a 7:07 pm PDT first pitch.

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

“Who wouldn’t be frustrated? We’re all frustrated. We don’t want to play like this.”

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–A season after winning 107 regular season games, the Giants are stuck trying to win one. It’s been a process, and it’s still ongoing.

Losing eight straight to the Dodgers? Eleven straight to NL West opponents? Frustrating, even more so after Thursday afternoon’s 5-3 loss to the Dodgers that saw manager Gabe Kapler ejected along with reliever Jarlin Garcia.

“Obviously, I took exception to sort of being scolded in front of our dugout about how to approach and address our players,” Kapler said after the game.

The Giants struck early when newly-acquired J.D. Davis homered to put the Giants up 2-1. But in the top of the fourth, Mookie Betts’ three-run homer gave the Dodgers a lead that stung. Starter Jakob Junis walked number nine hitter James Outman, and Betts, the first batter faced by John Brebbia, struck with two runners aboard. Betts’ innocuous hand to side of the head gesture to his teammates caught the attention of Garcia, who wasn’t even in the game at that point.

When Garcia entered in the sixth, he was effective, preserving the two-run deficit with a pair of strikeouts. But when leaving the field Garcia mimicked Betts and followed with a few words for the slugger, who was in the on-deck circle. That drew the attention of first base umpire Phil Cuzzi, who followed Garcia and Kapler back to the Giants’ dugout. Cuzzi demanded that Kapler get his guy off the field, which he had, and that led to Kapler losing his cool with the umpire, and getting tossed.

“I had already gotten Jarlín off the field. Things were completely under control,” Kapler said. “I wasn’t happy with it and probably didn’t handle it perfectly.”

In the seventh, the Dodgers’ lead grew to 5-2 when Trae Turner homered off Yunior Marte. The Giants managed just five hits in the game, and did little to threaten after the Turner home run, falling four games below .500 for the first time this season.

Chris Martin picked up the win for the Dodgers, pitching a scoreless sixth inning. Starter Clayton Kershaw departed after four innings complaining of back discomfort. Kershaw threw 66 pitches, allowing the Davis home run, but the news of his discomfort was the only bad news for the visitors.

“Given it’s his back which has been problematic at times — we just won’t know more until we get some tests,” manager Dave Roberts said.

The Giants have Friday off before traveling to Oakland for two over the weekend with the A’s. Beware: the A’s also are playing well, and less likely to be trumped by the Giants, who are hopeful of Evan Longoria’s return and Brandon Crawford.

Dodgers Dance Again: 3-0 win gives LA seven, consecutive wins over the Giants

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–What the Dodgers have going right now you could set your watch to. It’s that succinct and matter of fact, way more than the Giants can handle right now.

Julio Urias pitched six, scoreless innings in the Dodgers’ 3-0 victory Wednesday night, striking out six with no walks. His counterpart, the Giants’ Alex Cobb was pretty good, but not flawless, pitching into the seventh inning with three runs on four hits allowed. The win gives the Dodgers seven, consecutive wins against their rival, a feat they last accomplished in 1980.

“If we had the answer we would’ve called a team meeting and made a quick fix and it’d be all over,” said Cobb. “It just hasn’t been great baseball.”

Miguel Vargas made his Major League debut for Los Angeles, and doubled in the second inning, scoring Trayce Thompson with the game’s first run. Vargas’ presence compensated for Justin Turner’s continued absence, and he was one of three players that showed the NL West leader’s depth and talent along with Thompson and James Outman, who started in left field and went 1 for 4.

Joey Bart had three hits, and Brandon Belt two for the Giants, who couldn’t come up with the big hit despite having several chances. The Giants were 1 for 7 with runners in scoring position and left 10 baserunners stranded.

Longtime, iconic Dodgers’ announcer Vin Scully was memorialized on the visitor’s jerseys with a classy patch and the performance of the team, which has one seven of eight since the All-Star break and increased their lead in the division.

Urias won his eight, straight start, over a nine-game span illustrating how the host’s performance can quickly get lost when their rival is playing this well.

The Giants loaded the bases in the ninth inning, only to see Craig Kimbrel induce a pop-out from Mike Yastrzemski and strike out Austin Slater to end the game. Kimbrel notched his 19th save.

The Giants had new acquisition J.D. Davis available, but elected not to use him. Reliever Sam Long and outfielder Jason Vosler were outrighted to Sacramento to make room for Davis.

The Giants get one more look at the Dodgers in this series on Thursday, but Clayton Kershaw will be their main concern. Kershaw has two no-decisions this season against the Giants, which means he’s due. Kershaw has won more than 20 games in his career against the Giants.

He Was a Giant? Reggie Smith By Tony the Tiger Hayes

Former Giants Jack Clark (22) and Reggie Smith (14) celebrate a big hit during their Candlestick Park days in San Francisco during the 1982 season (photo provided by Tony the Tiger Hayes)

He Was a Giant? Reggie Smith

By Tony the Tiger Hayes

When big league teams explore signing prospective free agents, one attribute you rarely see in scouting reports is: “plus ability to leap into stands and sock paying customer in the jaw.”

Yet that was all anybody was talking about when the Giants shockingly signed long-time Dodgers slugger (the term had dual meaning in this case) Reggie Smith, to a one-year $300,000 contract just prior to the start of spring training in 1982.

After missing a good portion of the previous two seasons with a shoulder injury, the seven time All-Star’s most recent headline grabbing event had come six months earlier when the eternally gruff Smith – sporting a satin, Dodgers blue warm-up jacket, a billowing Afro and a snarl – climbed into the stands during a game (9/24/81) at Candlestick Park to throttle an abusive heckler.

A 38-year-old fan sitting adjacent to the visitors dugout had spent most of the game verbally deriding the Dodgers from his perch.

Nothing unusual about that. But when the guy upped the hectoring to a new level by whipping a plastic souvenir batting helmet in Smith’s direction, the muscular Dodger lost it.

In the wink of an eye Smith was up in the stands and working over the besotted punter with an impressive one-two combo. For several moments the boiling-mad Dodger mixed it up with the offending belligerent blowhard and a bunch of his boozed-up buddies before city cops broke up the brouhaha.

Smith, who was ejected from the game and later fined $5,000, left the field enveloped within a battalion of San Francisco Police officers. At least two beer bottles were thrown in Smith’s direction as he made his way down the right field line to the Los Angeles clubhouse.

This would be the player the Giants would soon introduce as their new starting first baseman.

Why Was He a Giant?

After coming up short three previous times in World Series action – Boston (1967) and Los Angeles (1977-78) – Smith was finally a member of a World Championship club in 1981 when the Dodgers up ended the Yankees in the Fall Classic.

But the ‘81 world’s title season had left a bitter taste for Reggie. Unlike his previous World Series experiences in which he was knee deep in the action, Smith rode the pine in the ‘81 Fall Classic, generating just a pair of measly pinch-hit at-bats.

The World Series was a frustrating extension of Smith’s ‘81 regular season. Due to a slow to heal shoulder injury, Reggie had been a forgotten man and hardly saw the field during the Dodgers strike abbreviated ‘81 campaign.

Permanently replaced in the Dodgers lineup by young slugger Pedro Guerrero, the fiercely-proud Smith spent the season on the bench counting down the days to his impending free-agency.

Smith’s relationship with the Dodgers had been deteriorating since 1979 when he said he was “lied to” by the Dodgers, claiming the club had reneged on a contract promise. Dodgers executive Al Campanis shot back, calling Smith a “disruptive influence.”

After the ‘81 season, Smith, who never exactly fit the Dodgers Hollywood rah-rah image, was free to choose his own path. But not many teams were were beating down the doors to invest in a soon to be 37-year-old outfielder, who hadn’t actually played the outfield in close to two years.

The Yankees were interested in signing Smith as a full-time designated hitter. But the macho ball player had long felt that DH-ing was emasculating. Also, given his previous torturous experience of playing in Boston, Smith wanted nothing to do with the East Coast.

So, despite his recent run-ins with the Creatures of Candlestick, San Francisco was at the top of his destination list.

He brushed off any lingering resentment from the fight in the stands.

“That incident occurred because I was doing well against the Giants,” Smith lectured the press. “So if I do well for the Giants there shouldn’t be a problem.”

Smith couldn’t help himself from tacking on: “But, I don’t play for the fans, anyway.”

Smith rattled off some of the reasons he longed to sport the Orange & Black:

The Bay Area’s close proximity to his L.A. home. A chance to play for the like-minded, hard-nosed manager Frank Robinson. And his belief that the Giants were a franchise on the come.

But everyone knew the unspoken driving force behind Smith’s Golden Gate longings was the fact that the Giants offered the best opportunity to aggrieve the shabby treatment he believed he received in his waning days as a Dodger.

As it turned out in his one-year as a Giant, Smith rarely passed on a opportunity to skewer his former club. With San Francisco Smith batted an even .300 vs. L.A. (15-for-50) and played in more games against his former club (16) than he did against any other team.

Overall, Smith enjoyed a fantastic season with San Francisco. In 106 games, Smith batted .284 with 18 home runs and 54 RBI. He was a finalist for ‘82 NL Comeback Player of the Year, but lost out to Giants teammate Joe Morgan.

Smith also crushed career home run No. 300 as a Giant, taking Cardinals right-hander Dave LaPoint deep in a 8-3 loss at Candlestick Park (5/25/82).

With San Francisco, Smith was far from a “disruptive influence” in fact he and fellow veteran star Joe Morgan often acted as on-field coaches for a resurgent Giants club that burned rubber down the tail end of the ‘82 season, falling just just two games short of a division title.

Of course Smith may have been the happiest guy in the Giants clubhouse when Morgan hit his walk off homer off the Terry Forster to spoil the Dodgers post-season dreams on the last day of the season.

Before & After

Despite is prowess as a ferocious power hitter and run producer – Smith typically took a backseat to more colorful and media friendly players in baseball during his career.

Though his career numbers are comparable to some Hall of Fame inductees, Smith – his 314 career long ball are third most by a switch hitter – he’s never been a serious candidate for Cooperstown induction.

A good portion of Smith’s career drama stemmed from his perceived image as a surly loner. And to be fair, Smith never went out of the way to portray a warm and fuzzy image.

But, on the other hand, who could blame Smith if at times he felt like a one-man band.

During his seven years with Boston, Smith established himself as a productive switch-hitter with power – cracking 149 long balls for the Red Sox. But despite his consistent production at the plate, Smith was never comfortable in New England.

As the Bosox’s first full-time black star, the fiercely independent Smith was often in the bullseye of unrelenting criticism. Disturbingly the constant panning was often tinged with racial overtones.

Critiques of his style of play came from all directions: fans, the press, team management and on one occasion, even teammate Carlton Fisk who dinged Smith for his attitude.

Smith’s stoic demeanor was interpreted as aloofness by many. Smith was accused of not running hard on routine plays and of being unwilling to play though injuries.

The Boston vitriol became so intense that the center fielder began wearing a batting helmet in the field to protect himself from projectiles (batteries, bottles, coins) hurled his way.

In 1973, Smith went AWOL from Fenway Park after leaving during the second inning of one game in which he was jeered for failing to run out a double play grounder and letting a routine fly ball drop. Smith said his cranky knees prevented him from doing his best.

Smith was fined and suspended by the team.

After Smith was traded to St. Louis after a miserable 1973 Red Sox season. The Cardinals provided Smith a respite from the Boston drama and he played very well in the shadows of the Gateway Arch.

Smith loved the more aggressive style of National League ball and established himself as one of the league’s performers, batting .300 in back-back seasons in 1974-75. He was named to the All-Star team each season, slugging a home run in the ‘74 All-Star Game.

But after a listless start to the 1976 season, Smith was on the move again – this time he was homeward bound to Los Angeles.

The Dodgers would be the perfect fit for Smith. With the slugger dropped into the heart of L.A.’s already made to win lineup, the Dodgers overtook Cincinnati’s Big Red Machine, and won the NL Pennant in 1977-78.

In ‘77, Smith was one of four Dodgers to clobber at least 30 home runs on the year.

Smith went off in the 1977 World Series bopping three home runs. Alas he was over-shadowed by another Reggie – Mr. October – Reggie Jackson, who crushed five long balls, including three in his iconic series Game 6 performance.

At age 35, Smith’s right shoulder gave out when he torn the capsule in the joint in August of 1980 and would not play the rest of that season. In 1981 Smith did not start a single game, appearing in just two games in the field.

After his one year sojourn with the Giants, Smith went overseas to play for the Yominuri Giants of Japan. Though Smith feasted on Japanese pitching, he faced some of the same prejudices that he experienced in Boston.

He Never Had a (Giants) Bobblehead Day. But…

After a season of inactivity, more than a few pundits wondered if Smith could still sting big league pitching when he joined the Giants in 1982.

But in his first official game as a Giant – played coincidentally at Dodger Stadium – Smith quickly shutdown any talk that he had lost any bat speed when he batted 2-for-3 and scored a run in an opening night 4-3 loss. (4/6/82).

“You don’t forget how to hit,” Smith commented. “I could hit in a snowbank.”

That season Smith would play his home games in a ball park that was about a cozy as a snowbank.

But Smith did fantastic at Candlestick, batting .279 and swatting 10 of his 18 home runs in the meat locker-like environments of the old concrete bowl.

In one of his more memorable games as a Giant, Smith swatted a walk-off pinch home run to lead San Francisco to a 5-4 come from behind victory over the Mets at the ‘Stick (4/31/82)

After swinging and missing two pitches from Neil Allen, Smith clocked a screaming liner in the Candlestick Park right field seats for a dramatic three-run homer to give the Giants a 5-4 victory 4/31/82).

“I’m up there to take three swings – whatever happens, happens,” Reggie said afterwards. “I’ve been there before.”

In another thriller, Smith, had four hits and a walk, leading the Giants to a comeback 7-6 win over visiting Houston (8/6/82).

Smith and Jack Clark who each homered earlier in the contest, led off the ninth with back-to-back round trippers off reliever Dave Smith. Darrell Evans then drove home the winning run with a pinch single.

After his ninth inning blast the crowd kept chanting “Reggie, Reggie, Reggie” until Smith popped out of the dugout for a rousing curtain call.

It was a slap-on -the -back compliment unlike any other Smith had received in his career.

Giant Footprint

The intense Giants and Dodgers rivalry has produced some of the most notorious fights in baseball history. But those brawls have typically taken place on the field – naturally between the players.

But beginning in the late 1970s, a good portion of the brawling during Giants/Dodgers games was being staged in the grand stands.

Where once Juan Marichal was tearing after John Roseboro with a Louisville Slugger, Gene the Giants Groupie was going dukes up with Donnie the Dodger Devotee.

The increase in fan fisticuffs dates back to the Dodgers hiring of Tommy Lasorda as manager in 1977 and an influx of transplanted Dodgers fans in the Bay Area.

By the mid-1970s, kids who grew in Southern California as first generation L.A. Dodgers fans had began migrating north for work and school.

Things did not go well when they visited Candlestick Park and rubbed the Dodgers success and abundance of riches in the faces of fans of the then threadbare Giants.

The heat was really turned up on the rivalry after the vociferous Tommy Lasorda took over as L.A. skipper, replacing the staid Walter Alston.

The rotund head Dodgers cheerleader was more than willingly to fan the flames of the rivalry by talking up his nonsense about the “Big Blue Dodger” and entering the field of play at the ‘Stick by blowing kisses to agitated Giants fans as if he were a professional wrestling heel.

With stadium beer flowing like a bathtub spigot it didn’t take much to get tensions sparked up in the ‘Stick stands.

But Smith’s 1981 rumble was something never seen before: a fight between player and fan.

Tensions had been tightener than usual that night after Giants starter Tom Griffin hit a Dodgers batter earlier in the game.

According to Smith, who was not in the lineup and spent the game standing to the right of the dugout, he and a few Giants fans had been verbally jousting in jest most of the game.

But things began turning ugly in the late innings as the alcohol consumption and the Dodgers lead increased.

The ribbing began taking more of a personal nature.

Smith explained after the game:

“The guy tells me, ‘if I come down on the field my company will lose a $40,000 employee. And if I break your arm the Dodgers might lose the pennant race.’

“I told him I kind of doubted it. Then he threatened to throw his helmet at me and I said, ‘Now that could get me in there.’ Then he whisked it at me, and I went in.”

Giants manager Frank Robinson said the whole ugly affair could have been avoided. He blamed the Dodgers manager.

“It was all Lasorda’s fault. If he gets his players back in the dugout where they belong no one is out there for the fans to yell at,” Robinson lectured. “Lasorda’s too damn interested in the TV cameras and the press box to do his job right.”

The San Francisco Police ended up filling up a paddy wagon with about a half dozen fans and carted them off to the city lock-up.

Smith did not join them at the gray bar hotel, despite apparently landing the most punches.

“I got in my licks,” Smith said post-game. “It was very dangerous because he had friends. But I took my chances. He threw the first punch and missed. I didn’t. One of his friends got me. He paid for it, too. Another guy with glasses took a shot at me too. He’s not wearing glasses anymore.”

Tony the Tiger does He was a Giant? features after Tuesday home games at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Dodgers score early and big for five run win 9-4 over Giants at Oracle; Giants honor Vin Scully on scoreboard after game

The San Francisco Giants scoreboard pays tribute to Los Angeles Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully who passed away on Tue Aug 1, 2022 as the Dodgers line up to congratulate each other after defeating the Giants at Oracle Park in San Francisco (@juantoribio photo)

Los Angeles (70-33). 9. 13. 0

San Francisco (51-53). 5. 7. 2

Tuesday, August 2, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–This season’s trading deadline came and went at 3:00 o’clock this afternoon, and Joey Gallo came to Los Angeles. The Dodgers acquired the 29 year old left handed all or nothing at all batter in exchange for Clayton Beeter, a right handed starting pitcher who was 0-3, 5.75 for AA Tulsa when he left the Dodgers’ system. Gallo is expected to report to the Dodgers tomorrow.

Two Giants on the active roster, one farm hand, and a member of the injured list went. At the deadline, San Francisco sent Darin Ruf to the Mets for left handed pitcher Thomas Szapucki and a pair of pitching prospects, rated #24 and 27 by Baseball America. They are, in that order, righty Carson Seymour and lefty Nick Zwack.

The Giants also dealt backup catcher Curt Casali and double A pitcher Matthew Boyd to the Mariners, getting in return righty hurler Michael Stryffeler and high A catcher Andy Thomas. Reliever Trevor Rosenthal, who might have saved the A’s bacon last year if he hadn’t gone on the IL in spring training and who joined the Giants’ IL earlier this season was off to the Milwaukee roster. The Giants got the Brewers’ 19th prospect in the MLB.com rankings, Trilstan Peters, a outfielder currently hitting .306 in High A.

And, as the TV detective Colombo used to say, just one more thing. San Francisco recalled left handed pitcher Alex Young from Sacramento.

San Francisco opened this evening’s contest with Alex Wood, a 6’4″, 214 pound southpaw with a season record of 7-8, 4.11, and a inventory of four seamers, changeups, curves, and sinkers, on the bump to face the team with the best record in major league baseball, the 69-33 Los Angeles Dodgers.

The Angelinos countered with another tall lefty, one who brought a more impressive record to the mound with him. 6’2″ Tyler Anderson tipped the scales at 220 and toed the rubber at 11-1, 2.6.

By the time the game was over, a definitive 9-5 Dodgers victory, the visitors’ record stood at 70-33 and the Giants’ at 51-53. Wood had pitched 5-1/3 innings, leaving with his team trailing 6-5 and a man on base. He had made 99 deliveries, 65 of which were counted as strikes. All slix of the runs he allowed were earned, and they came on nine hits, a walk, and a hit batter. Wood struck out a half a dozen batters and took the loss, giving him a record of 7-9, 4.42.

Anderson didn’t last quite as long. He was on the mound for five plus innings, leaving with runners on first and second. Those runners didn’t score, so Anderson’s line read five runs, all earned, on six hits, one for the distance, four walks, and a wild pitch. He struck out three and had a pitch count of 86, 32 of which were balls. He got his 12th win against but one defeat but saw his ERA rise to an admirable 2.89.

Sloppy play put the Giants behind in the second inning. Hanser Alberto led off with what sounded like a broken bat single to left and strolled to second when Wood issued a free pass to Trayce Thompson. Both runners moved up a notch when Wood tried to pick Alberto off second and heaved the ball into left center field.

Gavin Lux was at bat during that play and followed it with a single to center that drove in Alberto and moved Thompson to third while Lux advanced to second. Austin Barnes was hit by a pitch to fill the bases with Dodgers. Cody Bellinger’s sacrifice fly brought Thompson home with LA’s second tally.

Mookie Betts then laced.a line drive that bounced off center fielder Slater’s glove, was fielded by González and scored as an RBI single that sent Barnes to third, and Slater was charged with an error that allowed Betts to take second. Turner’s sac fly to center plated Barnes with the so-called Bums’ fourth run of the inning and of the game.

They made it five in the third. An infield single put Will Smith on first. Alberto’s single to center moved him to second. Dixon Machado made a lovely play on Thompson’s ground to force Alberto at second while Smith went on to third. He scored on a fielder’s choice lin which Belt fielded Lux’s bouncer to first and lobbed the ball home too late to catch Smith.

Mookie Betts’ 24th home run, leading off the fourth, landed’ in the Giants’ Garden, over the 391 foot sign in dead center field, to put the visitors up by a half a dozen runs and extended the slugging left fielder’s hitting streak to 20 games.

Anderson held the Giants hitless for three frames, but their bats came alive in the fourth. Belt led off by slicing a cutter into left for a single. After Mercedes fouled out to first, Flores singled to right center, sending Belt to third. González singled to right, and Belt came in with SF´s first tally.

Villar dropped a double into medium deep right field, close to the foul line that made it 6-2 and put González 90 feet from home. He covered that distance on a wild pitch to Bart, who added to the momentum by slamming a 93mph four seamer, 408 feet into center field, over the Konica Minolta sign between the 399 and 391 foot markers. Almost before you knew what had happened, the orange and gold had turned a Dodger rout into a 6-5 ball game.

As though the Giants’ revived competence were contagious, Wood responded in the top of the fifth by throwing his first 1-2-3 inning of the game, setting LA down on a groundout and a pair of Ks.

John Brebbia relieved Wood when Betts came up in the sixth for his fourth at bat. He. had been two for three. Bellinger was on first. Brebbia ended the inning with a (called) strike him out throw him out double play.

After back to back walks to González and Villar, leading off the bottom of the sixth drove Anderson from the mound, Evan Phillips entered the fray and gave up a bunt single to Bart before retiring Wade, Machado, and Slater in order to preserve the Los Angeles lead.

Tyler Rogers pitched a perfect seventh for the home team.

After the seventh inning stretch, Alex Vesia replaced Phillips for the Dodgers and set the Giants down to a conga beat, one, two, three, kick.

Rogers continued his dominance against the right handed Alberto and Thompson in the eighth, but the left handed Lux touched him for a two out triple off the brick wall in right center. Then the left handed hitting Barnes lined a double to left center. scoring Lux with an insurance run.

The Giants challenged the safe call at second, but Mark Carlson and Paul Emmet confirmed it in New York. That brought the newly promoted Alex Young into the game to face Bellinger. He laced Young’s third delivery into triples alley and scored one pitch later on Betts’ down the line double to left. Just like that, the ball game had become a rout again. Mercifully, Turner flew out to right to end the bleeding, with Los Angeles ahead at the working person’s score of 9-5.

Chris Martin took over mound duties for the visitors in the home eighth and put the Giants away handily.

Young set down Freeman, Smith, and Alberto, the heart of the Dodgers’ batting order, one, two, three to give San Francisco one last chance. David Price was given t;he task of denying it to them. He got Wade to go down swinging. Alberto made a magnificent diving grab of Machado’s hard hit grounder behind third and threw him out at first. Slater bounced out to the mound, ending the night’s frustration for the orange and black.

While the game was in progress, the sad news came through that Vince Scully, the voice of the Dodgers in Brooklyn and Los Angeles from 1950-2016, passed away today at the age of 94. Our heartfelt condolences go out to his family.

The series continues tomorrow at 6:45 with Julio Urías (10-6, 2.71) going against Alex Cobb (3-5, 4.06).

Los Angeles Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully dead at 94; Nov 29, 1927 to Aug 2, 2022

Vin Scully towards the end of his career on Sep 24, 2016 meets with the news media at a press conference to take questions about his long and glorious career (AP News file photo)

By Michael Duca and Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–Long time Los Angeles Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully has passed away at the age of 94 years old. Scully broadcasted Dodger baseball from 1950-2016. Scully had the opportunity to break in with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1950 with Hall of Fame broadcaster Red Barber and Connie Desmond. Scully replaced another Hall of Fame broadcaster Ernie Harwell who left to call New York Giants games Harwell would later gain his fame as a Detroit Tigers broadcaster.

Scully replaced Red Barber in 1953 on the Dodgers TV broadcasts when Barber got into a contract dispute with sponsor Gillette. Scully upon taking the job became the youngest broadcaster to call a World Series that year a record that still stands today. After Barber left to call New York Yankee games in 1954 Scully became the team’s number one announcer. Scully called Dodger games in Brooklyn until 1957.

The Brooklyn Dodgers moved from New York at the end of the 57 season and Scully left to call Dodger games in their new home in Los Angeles at the Los Angeles Coliseum. The Dodgers stayed at the Los Angeles Coliseum where Scully called games there from 1957 until the Dodgers moved into Dodgers Stadium in 1962.

Longtime Yankee broadcaster Mel Allen got fired in 1964 and Scully was offered the job which he declined to remain in Los Angeles as the Dodgers broadcaster and a chance to move back to New York. Los Angeles would remain Vin’s home for the rest of his broadcast career until his retirement in 2016. Scully also called the NFL on CBS Sports from 1975-1982.

Amongst some of Scully’s achievements he was inducted into the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame in 1982, he won the Commissioners Achievement Award in 2014, Presidential Freedom Award (2016), The Hollywood Walk of Fame, and had his Dodgers microphone retired, he famously called Sandy Koufax’s no hitters, Kirk Gibson famous World Series home run in 1988, and one of the early TV broadcasts of the 1965 World Series that went seven games. In game seven Koufax closed out the Minnesota Twins to win the World Series for the Dodgers.

Giants fall to rival Dodgers 8-2; Rodon and Belt for Soto possible in trade deadline deal

Los Angeles Dodgers Trea Turner heads home after rounding third and third base coach Dino Ebel (9) in the top of the seventh inning against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Mon Aug 1, 2022 (AP News photo)

Giants Fall to the Rival Dodgers 8-2

By Barbara Mason

Monday night the San Francisco Giants (51-52) took on their rivals, the division leading Los Angeles Dodgers (69-33). The Dodgers not only lead their division, they have the best record in the National League. The Giants have been struggling since the all-star game but they did win a couple over the weekend against the Cubs. The Dodgers scored twice in the second and three times in the third to jump on San Francisco for a 5-1 lead which would prove to pay off later winning by six runs 8-2.

The Giants got on the scoreboard early in this game. They had the bases loaded in the first inning but could only come away with one run for the early 1-0 lead. Villar walked and with the bases loaded, Darin Ruf who was on third got a free pass home.

The Dodgers got their bats going in the second and the third inning proved to be a nightmare for SF pitcher Logan Webb. Max Muncy hit a home run in the second inning with Jake Lamb on base and Los Angeles took a 2-1 lead going into the fateful third inning.

The Dodgers started stringing hits together and by the end of the third Los Angeles had a 5-1 lead. James Outman, Mookie Betts, Trea Turner and Freddie Freeman all had hits in the third inning for the Dodgers.

It was a quiet fourth inning for both teams. The Giants and the Dodgers would both score a run in the fifth inning. Will Smith hit a double bringing Freeman home. The Giants Wilmer Flores homered to left so a productive inning for both clubs. San Francisco still trailed 6-2 and had an uphill climb ahead of them.

The Dodgers refused to let San Francisco into this game. In the seventh inning, Trae Turner hit his 17th home run of the season extending their lead to 7-2.

Los Angeles added insult to injury in the ninth inning scoring another run. Freddie Freeman singled bringing in Outman for an 8-2 score. It was all Dodgers in this game. The Giants had a chance back in the first inning with the bases loaded but that was about all that Los Angeles was willing to give up. Phil Bickford closed this game out for the Dodgers. It was three up, three down and that was the ball game 8-2.

It will be back to the drawing board for the Giants as they look ahead to game two of this four game series. They will send Alex Wood to the mound. Wood has a 4.11 ERA and an 7-8 record. The Dodgers will start Tyler Anderson who comes in with a 2.61 ERA and an 11-1 win loss record. First pitch is scheduled for 6:45 PM PT.

Notes: Jon Moorsi of the MLB Network said that the Giants could be a sleeper in the Juan Soto sweepstakes.one possible scenario could have the Giants dealing pitcher Carlos Rodon and first baseman Brandon Belt to the Washington Nationals for Soto. Moorsi said that the Giants have gotten older and obtaining the 23 year old Soto and some prospects could be a huge benefit for a Giant team whose chance to make post season would improve by acquiring Soto.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Dodgers catch Giants stealing signs; LA comes to Oracle tonight as SF hosts four game series

San Francisco Giants first base coach Anton Richardson and manager Gabe Kapler were called out by the Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts and pitching coach Mark Pryor for stealing signs on Fri Jul 22, 2022. (file photo from Sports Illustrated)

On the Giants podcast with Marko:

#1 The San Francisco Giants were stealing signs as reported by Dodgers Nation during Fri Jul 22’s contest at Dodgers Stadium Dodgers pitching coach Mark Pryor and manager Dave Roberts noticed that Giants first base coach Anton Richardson was relaying the Dodgers catcher Will Smith’s signs to Giants batter Austin Slater. Pryor called time and went out to the pitchers mound to relay such information to Dodgers pitcher Tyler Anderson. It was then that Richardson started laughing while speaking with the first base umpire. The umpires met on the field to relay what was happening after talking with Pryor and Giants manager Gabe Kapler. Richardson was told to stay in the coaches box.

#2 The Giants knew the jig was up as Kapler and Richardson didn’t argue and going forward Richardson was no longer suspected of sign stealing.

#3 Marko, how much is sign stealing part of the game this incident in LA was not to the level of the trash can and cameras the Houston Astros used but there’s no doubt after the Dodgers past World Series experience with the Astros their on the look out for any kind of sign stealing.

#4 In their last meeting in LA the Dodgers swept the Giants. The Dodgers were in command with a three, four, two and three run wins during the four game series. The Giants couldn’t have come into LA in that last meeting with the Dodgers at a worse time as the Dodgers were coming off a four game sweep of the Los Angeles Angels.

#5 The Dodgers starting pitcher for Monday night is Andrew Heaney (1-0, 0.47) and for the Giants Logan Webb (9-4, 2.91) to start the four game series. Anytime these two teams meet it never fails something interesting always seems to happen?

#6 Will Clark’s number retirement speech was true to form that captured his character throughout his career with him thanking his family, friends, former teammates, and the Giants organization. By the way Will stayed to the very end of the game on Saturday night.

Marko is filling in for talk show host Morris Phillips who is heard Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Rodon sculpts a masterpiece shuts out Cubs 4-0 at Oracle Park

San Francisco Giants catcher Austin Wynns (16) congratulates closer Camilo Doval (75) after their contest against the visiting Chicago Cubs at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Jul 31, 2022 (@SFGiants photo)

Chicago (41-60). 0. 4. 0

San Francisco (51-51). 4. 9. 0

Sunday, July 31, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–It was over 110 years ago that Franklin P. Adams published his best known piece of doggerel, “Baseball’s Sad Lament.” It begins,

These are the saddest of possible words: “Tinker to Evers to Chance.” Trio of bear cubs, and fleeter than birds, Tinker and Evers and Chance. Ruthlessly pricking our gonfalon bubble, Making a Giant hit into a double— Words that are heavy with nothing but trouble: “Tinker to Evers to Chance.”

Sunday, neither team has a gonfalon bubble to be pricked. Before game time, San Francisco was 4-1/2 games behind St. Louis for the last National League wild card slot, and Chicago trailed the Giants by another 8-1/2.

Nonetheless, the two teams still have a rivalry that dates back to a couple of decades before FPA, who was a Cubs fan living in New York, penned the words that got the Chicago infielders into the Hall of Fame because, as Warren Brown, the father of the All Star Game, put it, “Don’t let anyone tell you that the poet’s pen isn’t mightier than the scorer’s pencil.”

What this scorer’s pencil recorded Sunday afternoon and evening was that the Giants made a four run outburst in the fourth inning stand up for a 4-0 shutout win over the visitors.

Earlier in the day, the Giants announced that the beaning Thairo Estrada suffered in Saturday night’s game had sent him to the seven day concussion list. We all wish him a full and speedy recovery.

To replace the versatile and talented Estrada, the team took advantage of the Cubs’ visit to acquire their farmhand Dixon Machado, a utility man who has a .227 major league batting average over 458 at bats. The Giants sent right handed pitcher Raynel Espinal to Chicago. Dixon started the game at short, batting in the seventh slot.

The Giants’ southpaw starter, Carlos Rodón, came to work with a record of 8 -6, 3.18. His favorite pitch is the four seamer, which he throws at an average of almost 96 mph. His slider clocks in at about 85-1/2 mph.

Those two pitches account for 92% of his offerings. He mixes in a curve and a change of pace, just to keep opposing batters guessing. He went seven scoreless, two hit innings, throwing 98 pitches without 34 of his offerings were balls, but he didn’t yield a single walk.

Rodón struck out ten, the eighth time he reached double digits in that category this season and the 16th time he’s done it in his career. John Brebbia replaced him to open the eighth. He earned, and the verb is absolutely correct, the win, improving his stats to 9-6, 3.00.

His opponent was right hander Adrian Sampson, who was 0-3,3.81 with the Iowa Cubs and 0-1, 3.20 with their parent team. He went 1-2, 2.80 for the south side squad last year and also has a year in Korea, where he went 9-12, 5.40 in 2020.

This was the first time he faced the Giants as a team; the only Giant he ever pitched to before today was Tommy LaStella, who had gone 0-2 against him before singling to right center to open the home first and doubling to right in the third.

Adrian Sampson pitched three shutout innings and a disastrous fourth. He threw 72 pitches, 45 of which were counted as strikes. He yielded four runs, all earned, on five hits, a walk, and a hit batter. He took the loss, and now stands at 0-2, 3.74.

The game began with a rush of excitement. Christopher Morel led off with a high drive to the left field wall, where Luis González made a perfectly timed leap to bring the ball down for the first out.

That was the closest either team came to scoring until two were down in the bottom of the fourth, when LaMonte Wade, Jr., drew a walk, Mike Yastrzemski, singled to right, and the newcomer, Machado, was hit by a pitch to load the bases for Jason Vosler.

Jason Vosler lined a 2-2 fastball to right for an RBI single. Austin Wynns, not to be outdone, took a 1-2 pitch to the base of the center field wall at the 391 foot sign that cleared the bases and put the orange and black on top, 4-0.

After Rodón struck out the side in the Cubs’ fifth, Brandon Hughes replaced Sampson on the mound.

Two fans, one of whom was wearing a Darth Vader mask, leaped onto the field and interrupted the action with Christoher Morel at bat with one out in Cubbies’ half of the sixth. They were carrying signs that read, “Expose Smithfield’s Death Star.” They were ejected and Morel struck out on the way to a 1,2,3 frame for Rodón.

Rowan Wick replaced Hughes, who had thrown an inelegant but scoreless inning, to open the home sixth. Steven Brault followed him in the seventh. Brault surrendered a one out single to Luis González, who, with Slater at the plate, stole second.

Chicago appealed the call, but Jeff Nelson and Mark Wegner in New York would have nothing of it. Their decision, however, didn’t enable San Francisco to stretch its lead although Slater singled to center, sending González to third, and Belt walked, clogging the bases with Giants and driving Brault from the mound, replaced by Eric Uelmen, who struck out Mercedes and Yastrzemski.

On Erich Uelmen’s third pitch, Yermin Mercedes sent a popup into foul territory that first baseman PJ Higgins made a valiant attempt to catch, banging himself up badly against the railing. But he recovered and stayed in the game.

After the San Francisco threat had subsided John Brebbia took over for Rodón. In spite of yielding a pair of base knocks, he kept Chicago off the board.

Uelmen hit two batters in the Giants´half of the eighth but still managed to kept the score at 4-0.

Camilo Doval pitched the ninth for the orange and black. It took him all of 14 pitches to dispose of the Cubs on a hit.

The Dodgers come to town Monday night for a 6:45 pm PDT game that will feature LA’s Andrew Heaney (1-0, 0.47) and SF’s Logan Webb (9-4, 2.91) as starting pitchers.

Gonzalez and Bart take Cubs deep in 5-4 win

San Francisco Giant Luis Gonzalez launches a two run home run in the bottom of the fourth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sat Jul 30, 2022 (AP News photo)

Chicago (41-59). 4. 10. 0

San Francisco (50-51). 5. 7. 1

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Ring Lardner famously remarked, “I went to the fights last night, and a hockey game broke out.” That was New York; this is San Francisco, where 40,971 thrill seekers went to a love in this afternoon, and an hour later a baseball game broke out. The love in was a celebration of Will The Thill Clark on the occasion of his uniform number 22 being retired. The game was a nailbitting San Francisco Giants’ win over the Chicago Cubs 5-4.

29 year old right hander Jakob Junis toed the rubber at 6:16 with a record of 4-2, and finished his labors for the day after hurling six innings of shutout ball that included five hits and a walk against four strikeouts. He threw 74 pitches, 45 for strikes. Because he hadn’t pitched the requisite five frames, he got a no decision. His performance lowered his ERA to 3.78.

Pitching for the Windy -but not as windy as Clark’s beloved Candlestick Park- City was southpaw Drew Smyly, totting a 3-5,3.93 record with him. He, too, lasted only four innings on the mound, but with less impressive results. He gave up five runs, all earned, on seven hits, two of which left the park (one into McCovey Cove), and a pair of walks He managed to rack up five Ks. He took the loss that left him 3-6, 4.42.

It was the Giants who drew first blood. With one away in the bottom of the third, Darin Ruf drew a walk and motored his way home on Austin Slater’s booming double to center. Slater, in turn, notched San Francisco’s second tally on an authoritative single to left off the bat of Yermín Mercedes. That’s where the score stood when the inning drew to a close, 2-1 in favor of the home team.

The Giants extended their lead in the next frame. David Villar led off with a grounder that bounced off the glove of third baseman Wisdom, going to his left, and into left field for a single. Luis González then launched a 394 foot splash hit for his fourth home run of the season, only to be followed by Joey Bart´s seventh, a 411 shot into the left field bleachers. That one-two punch put San Francisco ahead five zip.

One inning short of qualifying for the win, Junis left the game in favor of submariner Tyler Rogers, who pitched a perfect fifth and sixth. Jarlín García replaced him in the top of the seventh

Smyly also exited after four innings. replaced by Mark Leiter, Jr., whose performance in the home fifth was marred by his beaning Estrada with an 84 mph changeup that kept the Giants’ shortstop supine and motionless, for several minutes before he was moved to the clubhouse. Lieter remained in the game until there were two down and a runner on first in the bottom of the seventh. That’s when Steven Brault relieved him.

After García yielded singles to pinch hitter PJ Higgins and second sacker David Bote, interspersed with a strikeout of Alfonso Rivas, Yuniór Marte took over mound duties of the home team. Nelson Velásquez as pinch hitter was the countermove and he hit a run producing single to right that brought in PJ Higgins with Chicago’s first tally.

It was charged to Jarlin García. Marte then quickly disposed of Willson Contreras and Seiya Suzuki to keep the score 5-1.

Austin Slater just missed a home run to open the Giants’ half of the seventh. He slammed a drive inches outside the left field foul pole before striking out. Leiter walked Yermin Mercedes and then caught Flores looking.

At this point, southpaw Steven Brault came in to face the left handed Belt and Jason Vosler, who had replaced the injured Thairo Estrada. The tactic worked, and we went into the eighth with San Francisco leading the Cubs, 5-1, where it stayed after Marte’s one, two, three put down of the North Siders.

Marte came out in the top of the ninth to face the bottom third of Chicago’s batting order. He began by plunking Yan Gomes with an 85 mph slider. He advanced to second on a hit to third that was so weak it didn’t draw a throw.

But it was enough to drive Marte from the mound and bring in Dominic Leone in search of his third save in six opportunities. David Boite touched him for a first pitch single to center that loaded the bases with none out and the top of the order coming up.

Nelson Velásquez hit a grounder to short, and for some reason second base umpire Charlie Ramos called Bote safe at second, which scored a run. Contreras hit another double play ball to short but Wilson Flores´s relay to first drew Belt off the bag at first. Higgins scored, and Boite went to third.

Suzuki also grounded out to short, which brought in David Bote. Just like that, it was. one run game. Then, with the count at 3-1, Ian Hopp grounded out to second, and the Giants had pulled off a 5-4 skin of their teeth victory.

The scorer named Tyler Rogers as the winning pitcher. He’s now 2-3, 4.56. Leone got that third save.

So far, there has been no report on Estrada’s condition.

The series continues tomorrow at 4:08 pm PDT. Adrian Sampson (0-1, 3.20) will start for Chicago and Carlos Rodón (8-6, 3.18) will take the mound for the home team at Oracle Park.