Giants Force Arizona to Pound Sand in 13-0 Blowout

The San Francisco Giants starter Logan Webb who threw six innings of shutout ball against the Arizona Diamondbacks for the win fields a Carson Kelly grounder in the top of the sixth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco (AP News photo)

By Tony The Tiger Hayes

SAN FRANCISCO–The San Francisco Giants (44-42), as they tend to do in their florescent tangerine Tuesday night “City Connect” uniforms, connected early and often on the pitch offerings of the Arizona Diamondbacks (39-49) beleaguered Dallas Keuchel tonight and jumped off to a quick 7-0 lead.

The Giants rapped out six hits, including three booming home runs by Joey Bart, Yermin Mercedes, and Thairo Estrada over the first three innings as San Francisco cruised to a 13-0 win 12th inning at Oracle Park.

The embarrassed D’Backs brought infielder Carson Kelly to pitch the eighth. He promptly surrendered four straight hits and three runs.

Giants starter Logan Webb received the win to increase his record to 8-4. Webb threw six shutout frames, allowing five hits while striking out eight.

He gave way to right-gander Yunior Marte in the seventh inning. Outfielder Luis Gonzalez threw the final frame of the onslaught.

Keuchel, a former 2015 Cy Young Award winner for the Astros, who has fallen on hard times was charged with eight hits and seven earned runs in 2.1 innings.

Keuchel entered the game with an unsightly 7.63 ERA and departed with it bloated to 9.64. His record dropped to 2-7.

The Giants center fielder Austin Slater got the team off to a memorable start when he snagged Arizona’s lead off batter Josh Rojas’ drive with a leaping grab at the wall to begin the game.

Slater began the home half of the first with a lead off double. After Yermin Mercedes doubled and Darin Ruf walked David Villar brought both men home when his sinking drive to right skipped past Jake McCarthy. Villar raced to third and scored on a throwing error on the play to make it 4-0.

The Giants then turned on the power, slugging three long balls that got increasingly more impressive as the night went on.

Bart blasted a 2-0 Keuchel pitch far over the center field wall with one out the second. It was Bart’s 5th long ball on the season and extended the Giants lead to 5-0.

Later that inning with two outs and a runner on, Mercedes smoked a shockingly hard line drive down the left field line that would have killed a sea gull had it been perched on the fence, for a two run homer. The sizzler, Mercedes’ first career Giants long ball was was clocked at 112 miles per hour.

Mercedes, recently acquired from the White Sox had his best games as a Giant, batting 3-for-3, with a walk. The chunky utility man fell a triple shy of hitting for the cycle.

Estrada led off the the third inning by doing his best Andres Galaragga impression by clobbering a long solo home run half way up the left field bleachers. Estrada wasn’t done. He again went deep to left with a two run poke in the seventh to make the score 10-0. Estrada now has a career high nine homers on the season.

The Diamondbacks and Giants conclude the series on Wednesday afternoon at Oracle at 12:45pm PDT starting for Arizona RHP Zac Gallen (4-2, 3.62) and for San Francisco TBA.

Two runs in the 8th too little too late for Giants in 4-3 Diamondbacks win

Arizona Diamondbacks’ Daulton Varsho belts a two single against the San Francisco Giants in the top of the third inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Monday, July 11, 2022.

Arizona (39-48). 4. 10. 0

San Francisco (43-42). 3. 8. 1

Monday, July 11th, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–In Monday’s game notes, the Giants published this item about Alex Cobb, their starting pitcher, who brought a 3-3 record with him to the mound: “While his ERA is currently 4.58, his ERA is 2.70 … that is in the top 12 percent of the MLB.” They made the same comment before his last previous start, which came a week ago against the White Sox, although his expected ERA then was in the top five percent.

That remark intrigued me. On what exactly, I wondered, is the expected ERA based? So I went to https://www.mlb.com/glossary/statcast/expected-eraExpected ERA (xERA), and here’s what I found.

“Definition

“Expected ERA, or xERA, is a simple 1:1 translation of Expected Weighted On-Base Average (xwOBA), converted to the ERA scale. xwOBA takes into account the amount of contact (strikeouts, walks, hit by pitch) and the quality of that contact (exit velocity and launch angle), in an attempt to credit the pitcher or hitter for the moment of contact, not for what might happen to that contact thanks to other factors like ballpark, weather, or defense.

“By converting this to the ERA scale, it puts xwOBA in numbers that are more familiar, and allows it to be compared directly to the pitcher’s actual ERA. (If you’re familiar with FIP, or Fielding Independent Pitching, the idea is similar, just that now Statcast quality of contact can be included.)

“xERA is not necessarily predictive, but if a pitcher has an xERA that is significantly higher than his actual ERA, it should make you want to take a closer look into how he suppressed those runs.”

At least it isn’t based on fielding independent pitching, a statistic that has bothered me for a long time. After all, a good pitcher not only relies on his fielders; he makes his pitch choices based on them, their range, their arms, their positioning But MLB’s cclosing suggestion raised my eyebrows.

Why not ask what made the pitcher yield all those runs that the individual components of his performance would be expected to prevent? Was it an improper weighting of the importance of exit velocity at its companions? Or was it bad fielding?

Errors, of course, wouldn’t effect a pitcher’s earned run average, but not all fielding mistakes are errors. I decided to try to increase my awareness of the Giants’ fielding mistakes that were scored as errors, and see if scoring rules like “never anticipate a double play” and other such minutiae were responsible, at least in part, for Cobb’s anomalous statistics.

His performance in tonight’s disappointing 4-3 loss which brought the home team’s record to just one game over .500 at 43-42, wasn’t particularly noteworthy.

He allowed three runs, all earned, on six hits in as many innings and four walks, accompanied by an equal number of strikeouts. He threw exactly 100 pitches, 57 counting for strikes. He took the loss, bringing his record to 3-4 but lowering his ERA to, 4.57.

Cobb’s opposite number was the 33 year old right handed veteran of the Diamondbacks, the SK Wyverns of the Korean Baseball Organization, and the Tampa Bay system, Merrill Kelly, sporting a 7-5, 3.42 mark.

He threw an impressive 7+ frames, during which he delivered 101 pitches, 38 of which were balls. He left with a runner on first, having allowed just one, earned run, on five hits and two walks, having earned four Ks.

He was charged with a second, posthumous, run when LaMonte Wade, Jr., whom he had walked to start the inning, scored. DECISION, and now has a won-lost record of 8-5 and an earned run average of 3.36.

Arizona took the lead in their half of the third. Alek Thomas singled to right with one out. Ketel Marte hit a grounder to second baseman Wilmer Flores, who threw to Brandon Crawford for the force on Thomas, but Marte beat Crawford’s relay to first.

Perhaps crisper fielding would have resulted in an inning ending double play. In any case, Christian Walker singled to right, driving in Marte with the game’s initial tally. David Pealta followed with a base knock to right and advanced to second while Walker moved on to third when Luis González let the ball get away from him.

That went as an error on the Giants´right fielder. After Buddy Kennedy walked to load the bases, Daulton Varsho unloaded them with a line drive double into the right field corner. Bam! The Diamondbacks were up, 3-0. All three runs were earned, so those fielding lapses weren’t the type I was looking for.

San Francisco got a run back in the bottom of the fourth. Flores smacked a one out double into the left field corner and advanced to third on Belt’s single to right. Varsho didn’t control the ball, so I don’t know why Flores didn’t keep running.

It turned out that he didn’t have to; González hit into a force at second to bring Flores home. It looked as if the orange and black might keep the line moving long enough to come all the way back when, with David Villar at the plate, González stole second, and then Kelly issued a free pass to Villar. But Crawford grounded out to second, and the inning ended with San Francisco trailing Arizona, 3-1.

Jarlín García replaced Cobb to open the seventh and stayed around long enough to give up a single to Josh Rojas and get Thomas to ground into what was effectively a double play but which was scored, precisely and correctly a fielder’s choice force out, short to third in the shift, and an out on Thomas trying to advance by turning the wrong way after he crossed first.

García’s last act on the mound was to yield a rule book two bagger to Ketel Marte and exiting the scene in favor of Mauricio Llovera, who walked Walker before fanning Peralta to keep the ‘backs from extending their 3-1 lead.

Llovera continued his stint by hurling the eighth. He walked leadoff batter Jake McCarthy, pinch hitting for Kennedy. With Varsho, who eventually popped out to first, at bat, McCarthy swiped second.

Sergio Alcántara, pinch hitting for catcher Carson Kelly, came through with a single to left center to score McCarthy with the visitors´fourth run. Alcántara took second on the throw, and Llovera was through for the night, yielding to Sam Long, who unleashed a wild pitch to Geraldo Perdomo that brought Alcántara 90 feet from home.

But Long stymied the Diamondbacks, getting Perdomo to ground out to Crawford with a drawn in infield and getting Rojas on a called third strike.

The Giants weren’t dead yet. Wade drew a leadoff walk in the eighth. Ball four was Kelly’s last pitch. All-StarJoe Mantiply relieved him and surrendered an infield single to Darin Ruf, hitting for Pederson, that moved Wade to second.

Flores then hit as ball down the third base line that bounced off the bag and went into left field for a run producing double. He advanced to third on Belt’s ground out to short. A walk to González ended Mantiply´s brief tenure on the mound.

He was succeeded by Noé Ramírez, who walked David Villar on a full count with the Giants just one behind, 4-3, and Crawford at the bat. He grounded into what, in an extremely close call, first base umpire Quinn Wolcott ruled was a 3-6-1 double play. The Giants challenged the ruling, which was confirmed by Laz Daz and Bill Miller in New York.

Dominic Leone, coming in to pitch the top of the ninth, yielded a leadoff double to Thomas on a solid liner to right. Marte popped up to Crawford, playing to the right of second base. Walker flew out to right, but the ball went deep enough for Thomas to move up to third.

DeLeone conceded an intentional walk to Peralta, setting up the force at second and bringing José Herrera, who had replaced Carslon Kelly as catcher, to the plate. He hit a grounder that went through Ruf´s legs at first, but Flores threw him out to end the frame.

Mark Melancon came in to try to save the game of Arizona. Yaz led off with a single to left. Yermín Mercedes hit for the still struggling Bart and hit a sharp grounder to second, Alcántara threw to shortstop Pedromo, who couldn’t get off a throw to first because Yastremzki’s slide had taken him out.

The Diamondbacks challenged the legality of the slide, but the play was ruled legal on review. This brought up Wade, who was one for three so far in the game. He fouled out to third. Melancon now faced Ruf. The count went to 2-2, and then. … Ruff swung and missed at a 92 mph cutter.

Melancon earned the sve, his 12th.

Tomorrow at 6:45 Logan Webb (7-3,2.98) will try to keep the Giants from falling to .500. He’ll face southpaw Dallas Keuchel (2-6,7.63)

Snatched By Snakes: Giants can’t rally late, lose to the D’Backs 4-3

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–When the losses pile up, they fall into categories. For the stumbling Giants, home losses by two runs or less are starting to multiply.

Monday’s opener with the Diamondbacks went to the snakes as they established an early 3-0 lead, and led 4-1 when they held the Giants off in the eighth and ninth, winning 4-3. In the process, Brandon Crawford failed to come up clutch, and Lamonte (Wade Jr.) didn’t do anything spine tingling in the late night. The Giants were 2 of 8 with runners in scoring position and left eight men on base.

The Giants have lost nine of 13, and they failed to win a third, consecutive game for the first time since June 14. And six of their last eight losses at home have been by two runs or less.

Alex Cobb had an uneven performance, pitching six innings, allowing three runs while walking four. Daulton Varsho’s hard hit single off the low wall in right field knocked in two runs in the third, and registered as the big blow against Cobb. The Giants off-season acquisition hasn’t won any of his last five starts, dating back to May 17.

Mauricio Llovera walked two batters in the eighth, and that set up Sergio Alcantara’s pinch-hit, RBI single that put the D’Backs up 4-0.

The Giants struck back with a pair of runs in the bottom of the eighth, but blew a big occasion when Brandon Crawford grounded into a double play with the bases loaded to end the inning. Wade got his opportunity with one out in the ninth and Thairo Estrada on first base, but the slugger fouled out near the third base bag.

The Giants (43-42) will have their 275-game streak of maintaining an above .500 record on the line on Tuesday. Logan Webb will face Arizona’s Dallas Kuechel in that one.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: All sorts of hitting for Giants in San Diego on Sunday; San Francisco opens up series with Arizona Monday night

The San Francisco Giants Wilmer Flores (right) gets the welcome at home plate from Austin Slater (13) after hitting a two run home run in the top of the third inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park in San Diego (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Morris:

#1 On Sunday San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Alex Wood threw shutout ball against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park in San Diego and the Giants ended up winning in a laugher 12-0 to split the four game series with the Padres.

#2 Wood had his mojo going throwing no hit ball in the bottom of the sixth inning against the Pads until rookie CJ Abrams hit a single to leftfield to end the no hit bid.

#3 The Padres were in a no hit drought going back to Saturday’s game when they last got a hit in second inning going 12 innings without a hit until Sunday’s sixth inning.

#4 Marko knowing Padres manager Bob Melvin as well as you do these last two games have to be a little unusual play of the Padres and losing to the strengths of two strong pitchers for the Giants Carlos Rodon on Saturday and Wood on Sunday.

#5 The Giants open a three game series Monday night with the Arizona Diamondbacks at Oracle Park. The Diamond backs will be starting Merrill Kelly (7-5, 3.42) and for the Giants Alex Cobb (3-3, 4.74) for a 6:45 pm PDT first pitch at Oracle Park in San Francisco.

Marko is filling in for Morris Phillips on the Giants podcasts Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants beat up Padres 12-0 in fourth game

San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Alex Wood pitches to the San Diego Padres line up in the bottom of the fifth inning at Petco Park in San Diego on Sunday, July 10, 2022. 

Giants Beat Up Padres in Game Four 12-0

By Barbara Mason

The San Francisco Giants (43-41) were apparently fed up with losing. They came roaring into Petco Park Sunday and plowed through the San Diego Padres (49-38) lineup with ease. They tied up the four game series 2-2 but most importantly they are playing lights up baseball as evidence by the two final games of this series. Lots of hitting with an 11-0 win for the Giants ending their road trip at San Diego’s Petco Park.

The Giants got on the scoreboard in the second inning and never looked back. Nine players in the starting lineup had hits. By the fourth inning the Giants were leading 8-0 and there wasn’t much the Padres could do to stop the assault.

Alex Wood had a great start going seven innings allowing three hits and eight strikeouts, in fact, he was unhittable for five innings. He had a no-hitter going into the sixth inning. The Giants gave up nothing to the Padres. Yunior Marte finished off San Diego in the eighth and ninth innings for the 12-0 win. He also allowed three hits and had four strikeouts.

What a follow-up to the brilliant show that Carlos Rodon put out there in game three. San Francisco has really shown some encouraging signs of completely turning this whole season around. It is only two games but it is certainly looking good for the Giants.

Wilmer Flores had an outstanding game with four hits two of them out of the park with runners on base. This is first time that the Giants have won consecutive games since June 16-17 in Pittsburgh.

The Giants offense was totally on task with 17 hits and walking four times. San Francisco sent three shots out of the yard two of them with a runner on base. It was a near perfect offensive defensive effort by the Giants.

Next up for San Francisco will be the Arizona Diamondbacks on Monday with first pitch scheduled for 6:45 PM PT. Alex Cobb will take the mound for San Francisco. He comes in with an ERA of 4.74 with a 3-3 W-L. Arizona will send Merrill Kelly with a 7-5 W-L and a 3.42 ERA.

Rodon goes nine innings for SF win over San Diego 3-1

San Francisco Giants starter Carlos Rodon expresses his excitement after getting the win over the San Diego Padres at Petco Park in San Diego on Sat Jul 9, 2022 (AP News photo)

Rodon Goes Nine Innings for SF Win Over Padres 3-1

By Barbara Mason

Saturday night the San Francisco Giants (42-41) took on the San Diego Padres (49-37) in game three of their four game series. The Giants dropped games one and two and needed a win if they want to have a chance at an even series by game’s end on Sunday and even the series they did with a 3-1 win over the San Diego Padres at Petco Park.

After a quiet first inning, the Giants scored a run in the second inning. Brandon Crawford hit a sacrifice fly and Brandon Belt scored for the early 1-0 lead.

The Padres tied up the game in the second when Jose Azocar grounded into a fielders choice to first and Jorge Alfaro scored for a 1-1 game.

It was a pitchers duel through the next five innings. Neither team was able to get much offense going until things turned around for San Francisco in the eighth inning. Wilmer Flores belted a rocket out of the yard and with Joc Pederson on base, he gave the Giants a 3-1 lead.

San Francisco pitcher Carlos Rodon had a masterful performance on the mound. He went nine innings allowing only 3 hits, 2 walks with 12 strikeouts. He finished the game with 112 pitches. At one stretch he retired 22 in a row. His fast ball was dominating from start to finish bringing home the 3-1 victory. The win put the Giants just over five hundred still trailing the first place Dodgers and the second place Padres.

This series will wrap up on Sunday in game four. Alex Wood will take the mound for San Francisco coming in with an ERA of 4.83 and a 5-7 win-loss record. The Padres will send Mackenzie Gore who has a 3.18 ERA and a 4-3 win-loss record. First pitch is scheduled for 1:10 PM PT.

Padres dominate Giants at Petco Park in game two 6-3; SF drops 14th game out of last 18

San Francisco Giants’ Austin Slater, below, safely advances to third on a wild pitch as San Diego Padres third baseman Manny Machado is late with the tag during the fourth inning of a baseball game Friday, July 8, 2022, in San Diego. (AP News photo)

Padres Dominante Giants In Game Two 6-3

By Barbara Mason

Friday night the San Francisco Giants (41-41) took on the San Diego Padres (49-36) in game two of their four game series and later took one on the chin in a 6-3 loss to the Padres at Petco Park in San Diego. Thursday night the Padres took game one in ten innings 2-1.

San Diego got off to a quick start in the first inning of this game. Manny Machado slugged one out of the ball park with Ha-Seong Kim and Jake Cronenworth on base for an early 3-0 lead.

In the fifth inning the Giants got on the board when David Villar hit a solo home run. The Padres answered in the sixth inning off a Nomar Azara single that drove Jose Azocar home and extended the Padre lead 4-1.

San Francisco had the bases loaded in the fourth inning but couldn’t take advantage and the Padres got out of a shaky situation.

Going into the seventh inning San Diego maintained their 4-1 lead looking for a W in game two of this series.

Giants pitcher Sam Long came out after 2.1 innings and was relieved by Tyler Rogers who went two innings. Long allowed four hits and the homer putting the Giants behind the eight ball from the start of this game. Zack Little relieved Rogers and John Brebbia relieved Little.

The Padres Blake Snell pitched through six innings having a great outing allowing only three hits and the Villar homer. He was relieved by Nick Martinez in the seventh inning. Martinez would finish the game.

This whole game came apart for San Francisco when they began walking far too many players (seven walks) and San Diego began stringing hits together. The Padres extended their lead in the eighth inning. Nomar Mazara singled bringing CJ Abrams home, and Cronenworth singled driving Mazara home. Going into the ninth inning San Diego had a healthy 6-1 lead. San Francisco was running out of outs and was three away from dropping game two of this series.

With two outs in the ninth inning Brandon Belt would knock one out of the park driving Brandon Crawford home but San Francisco came up short losing 6-3.

Notes: San Diego Padres announced that left fielder Jurikson Profar who collided with shortstop CJ Abrams on Thursday night has been placed on the seven day IL. Profar sustained neck and concussion injuries when he and Abrams went after a San Francisco Giant Tommy LaStella pop up to shallow left field and Abrams knee met Profar’s left cheek as both players were laid out. Abrams remained in the game while Profar was carted off and sent to the hospital for a further look by doctors.

First pitch Saturday is scheduled for 4:15 PM. Carlos Rodon will take the mound for the Giants. He has a 2.87 ERA. The Padres will send Yu Darvish who also has a solid ERA of 3.53.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Profar sent to hospital after collision with Abrams; Giants take seventh loss out of last eight games

The San Diego Padres Jurickson Profar raises a fist acknowledging the crowd after colliding with teammate CJ Abrams in the top of the fifth inning at Petco Park in San Diego on Thu Jul 7, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Marko:

#1 San Diego Padres left fielder Jurickson Profar collided with rookie shortstop CJ Abrams left a lot of people concerned at Petco Park on Thursday night in the opening game of the four game series when Profar and Abrams went chasing after a San Francisco Giant Tommy La Stella shallow pop to left apparently neither made a call for the ball and Abrams knee ended up hitting Profar in the left jaw as both players fell down on the field.

#2 The scary part of it was that Profar had to be carted off the field after getting help from the training staff but collapsed when he reach the infield portion of the diamond and the trainers called for a cart and stretcher to assist Profar off the field.

#3 While Jurickson was carted off he had to have his neck and head braced and he received a nice applause from the Padre fans and Profar raised a fist in appreciation. Abrams who was laid out as well was able to continue and was deemed alright. Padres manager Bob Melvin said that Profar will be getting tests in the hospital and will have an update on Friday.

#4 The Padres got good starting pitching from starter Joe Musgrove who went seven innings, gave up only one hit, four walks and six strikeouts. He looked like he could have completed the game if it weren’t for the pitch count.

#5 The Giants and Padres play game two of the series tonight at Petco starting for the Giants Sammy Long (0-1, 1.78) for the Padres Blake Snell (0-5, 5.13) a 6:40 pm PDT first pitch at Petco.

Marko filled in for Daniel Dullum for the Giants podcast heard Fridays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Tough Loss, Scary Collision: Giants fall in San Diego, 2-1 as Padres’ Profar suffers head, neck injury

By Morris Phillips

Two hits don’t usually get a team on the scoreboard and into extra innings. Those two knocks, one a two-out, ninth inning RBI single from Brandon Crawford and an extremely timely stolen base from Austin Slater did just that on Thursday for the Giants.

Unfortunately, it didn’t get them much more as the visitors fell 2-1 at San Diego’s Petco Park to the Padres.

Jorge Alfaro’s bases loaded base hit in the 10th inning won it for the Padres, who had lost eight of ten coming in and were just as desperate as their opponent. The Giants, have lost seven of eight after they interrupted their losing spell with a come from behind win at Arizona on Wednesday.

Jurickson Profar was involved in a scary, outfield collision with C.J. Abrams in the fifth inning in which his neck and head were put into a precarious position from the impact of Abrams’ leg. After a few minutes, Profar attempted to exit on his own power only to collapse on the field.

The Giants continued to shake things up with their personnel as Jose Alvarez was placed on the injured list due to swelling in his elbow. Zack Littell was recalled to take Alvarez’ place on the active roster. David Villar saw his rapid ascent through the minors peak with his placement in the starting lineup, at third base in place of the injured Evan Longoria.

Mauricio Llovera had a big moment in the ninth inning, plying his trade out of the bullpen against Manny Machado, Nomar Mazara and pinch-hitter Ha-Seong Park. Llovera struck out three, with the dangerous Machado and Park dispatched after swinging at sliders. Mazara took his looking as the slider froze him.

San Diego’s Joe Musgrove and Logan Webb locked into a spirited pitching duel with Musgrove allowing just one hit, and Webb flawless with the exception of a home run allowed to Machado. Webb pitched eight innings, and Musgrove seven, only to see Crawford send the game into extras and leave both starters with no-decisions.

Several Giants hitters had rough nights, most notably Wilmer Flores, hitting third in the order, and going 0 for 4 with two strikeouts in big situations. Despite managing just two hits, the Giants went 1 for 12 with runners in scoring position and left nine baserunners stranded.

In his six, Major League seasons, Joe Musgrove has never been this good. Not even close. In this one, he struck out six and lowered his ERA to 2.09. Taylor Rogers, brother to the Giants’ Tyler, allowed the base hit to Crawford and the Giants’ only run.

The Giants will see former Ray Blake Snell in a starting role on Friday for San Diego, but manager Gabe Kapler has not announced a starter as of yet.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Giants snap six game skid in Arizona: San Francisco opens four game series in San Diego tonight

The San Francisco Giants Darren Ruf (right) hive fives Austin Slater (left) after hitting a two run home run against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the top of the eighth at Chase Field in Phoenix on Wed Jul 8, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 The San Francisco Giants (41-39) avoided a seventh straight loss with a 7-5 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks (37-45) and it’s a win that the Giants hope to turn the page tonight in San Diego. When you lose six straight how much pressure is there to get back in the win column.

#2 There was that fear again after the Diamondbacks scored early getting a run in the bottom of the first inning and three runs in the bottom of the third inning and they jumped out to a 4-0 lead. After the first two innings were the Giants worried here we go again?

#3 How important of a role has Austin Slater played for the Giants getting a that tie breaking bases loaded ninth inning double making it 7-5?

#4 Giants reliever John Brebbia in the eighth got the Diamondbacks out in order and picked up his fourth win of the season.

#5 The Giants open a four game series in San Diego the Giants will start Logan Webb (7-3, 3.13) and the Padres will start Joe Musgrove (8-2, 2.25) a 6:40 pm PDT first pitch.

Join Michael for the San Francisco Giants podcast Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com