Giant Strides: SF looks to gain ground in the NL West race with favorable pre-All Star break sked

By Morris Phillips

A week ago the Giants were frustrating themselves and their fans. A week later, things are much brighter. Winning games in bunches, and beating the preferred opponent makes a difference.

Prior to facing the Dodgers and Royals, the Giants had lost 21 of 38, a step back for a club that got off to a roaring start to their 2022 season (13-5 through the first 18 games). Injuries to starters Anthony DeSclafani, Alex Wood and position players Evan Longoria, Brandon Belt and Lamonte Wade Jr. were a major part of a team didn’t measure up to other playoff worthy teams, and/or saw its offense disappear one too many times/or saw the bullpen blow a couple of leads.

Plus, when your coming off a 107-win season and the retirement of Buster Posey, the biggest name in local baseball over the last 15 years, the microscope gets a longer look. But overall, the Giants have held up without looking good throughout. Now with the team’s health improving and the schedule easing considerably, the Giants can–hopefully–look more like themselves.

The biggest thing that needs to change? And road baseball could enhance the chances of it happening? The Giants need more base hits, doubles and triples, anything that improves a .239 team batting average that’s a culprit when the team has scoring droughts.

The pitching’s been good not great with an ERA of 3.92, just ahead of the league average. But the numbers have swelled in recent weeks, suggesting a tweak or additional arm could lower that number. Even more encouraging, the Giants continue to be rough on opposing home run hitters, by allowing a MLB-least 48 homers thus far.

Power hitting could set the Giants apart as the season progresses, with health being the biggest factor. Of the guys who’ve missed time, Brandon Belt has returned to the lineup and hit his fifth home run of the season on Wednesday. Evan Longoria’s return has reached 28 games, but he hasn’t hit a home run outside of a five-homer-in-six-games stretch in late May. Longoria’s gotten fewer at-bats within games as well in June, that could continue when Lamonte Wade Jr. returns.

Darin Ruf, Brandon Crawford, Austin Slater, Belt and Longoria are all hitting below the .239 mark, and are the biggest candidates to pick up their offense. Wade enters this mix as well when he returns in the coming weeks. So far, Wade’s appeared in only ten games.

Twelve of the 28 games remaining before the All-Star break are against the Braves, Brewers and Padres and critical to playoff momentum and seeding. Starting this postseason, the top wild card holds home-field advantage in a short, opening round series. The other 16 games are against teams the Giants internally will be happy to see with the first six of 19 games against Arizona topping the list. The Giants also see the currently under .500 quartet: Reds, Pirates, Tigers and White Sox.

The schedule’s balanced: 15 of the 28 games remaining are at home, 13 on the road, but the Giants have winning records home and away.

The Giants have announced Carlos Rodon as their Friday night starter against the Pirates, who will be pressed to field a formidable lineup against him. The Pirates ranked 6th worst in strikeouts (562 through 62 games) and have a paltry .220 team batting average. Rodon just went more than a month without a victory before he shut down the Dodgers for six innings in his last start.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Will Reds Pham be red hot over T Shirts poking fun over Fantasy Football IR players?

One of the T shirts that San Francisco Giants Joc Pederson wanted pulled and thrown away saying “Stashing players on the IR isn’t cheating” that has set off Cincinnati Reds outfielder Tommy Pham who said he was ready to pimp slap Pederson (image from bucktee.com)

On the Giants podcast with Miguel:

#1 Michael, the San Francisco Giants players thought the better of having the “Stashing players on the IR isn’t cheating” T shirts and had them thrown out after a pretty sensitive Cincinnati Reds Tommy Pham took exception to them. With the Reds coming to San Francisco on Fri Jun 24th was that the wise choice made on the Giants part?

#2 Get ready for the pimp slap: Pham was angry about Giants Joc Pederson’s setting injured players on the Injured List and saying it wasn’t cheating. Pham slapped Pederson in the face during batting practice on May 27th do you believe this is over or there’s plenty more of that coming next weekend?

#3 Pederson said that it was wise not to escalate the situation with the T shirts and Pham said all he had to do was release the IR rules and “text how I told Joc I was going to pimp slap him for cheating” which Pham did.

#4 Pederson was also not happy that his autograph was facsimiled on the T shirts as he did not approve the signature on the shirt and wants to prevent another brouhaha with Pham again. Giants pitcher Alex Cobb saw humor in them and was blown away about how Pederson could be so calm about the whole situation.

#5 The Giants open a three game series in Pittsburgh on Friday night at PNC Park. Starting Friday for the Giants Carlos Rodon (5-4, 3.18) and for the Pirates Zach Thompson (3-4, 3.50) a 4:05 pm PDT first pitch.

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

Bumgarner-like Relief: Kansas City bullpen shuts down the Giants in 3-2 win to avoid a sweep

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–In 2014, Madison Bumgarner threw five innings of scoreless relief to propel the Giants to a victory in Kansas City in Game 7 of the World Series. You may have heard about it.

On Wednesday, the Royals provided their answer–on a much, smaller stage–with five innings of scoreless relief from four relievers to lead Kansas City past the Giants, 3-2. The win snapped the Giants five-game win streak, and sends the host club on the road to Pittsburgh in hopes of continuing their improved play.

“One of the things we know leads to big things for us (is) a couple of walks, a double, a base hit, and all of a sudden we’ve scored three runs in an inning,” manager Gabe Kapler said. “I think that’s been one of our calling cards over the course of the last few years. It’s not always going to be in the cards.”

With the Giants attempting to go 10 games over .500 for the first time in 2022–and the struggling Royals trying to avoid a 13th loss in their last 17 games–things appeared to be going to form as early as the fourth inning when Brandon Belt homered, and Curt Casali added a run-scoring sacrifice fly to tie the game at two. That brought the game to a stage where four relievers for the Royals, and five for the Giants would attempt to avoid a decisive mistake in a game that saw just one more run scored.

Royals manager Mike Matheny liked his chances after the fifth when Amir Garrett successfully relieved starter Jonathan Heasley, who was taxed, throwing 92 pitches in just the first four innings.

“Amir coming in and kind of forcing their hand in those situations, what are they going to do,” Matheny said. “The (Giants have) shown early that they’re going to go to their bench. We need him to come in and throw strikes, pound the zone, get his lefties out. He ended up getting us through that inning.”

Taylor Clarke followed, getting four outs and avoiding trouble by stranding a pair of Giants. Then Jose Cuas came on in the seventh and got three outs that would eventually translate to his first major league win after toiling in the minor leagues for six seasons. Neither Clarke or Cuas were likely to shut down a hot club given their track records, but they got it done. For Cuas, the experience was unforgettable.

“It’s more than I’ve ever dreamed of,” Cuas said. “I can’t really tell you I’ve dreamed of this moment because I didn’t get this far in my dream. It’s amazing. I’m soaking every second of it I can and every day for me is just a dream come true.”

The reward for Cuas: a dousing of ketchup, shaving cream and other substances in the visiting clubhouse by teammates enthused by the rookie’s first mark in the big leagues. Cuas didn’t mention that aspect in recounting his dream.

Cuas’ outing turned victorious in the eighth when the Royals broke through against John Brebbia with a run-scoring, sacrifice fly from Whit Merrifield. The go-ahead run was set up by Andrew Benintendi’s pinch-hit double to start the inning.

For the Giants, the good news was limited to Belt’s return after missing 30 games with injury and a bout with COVID. The bad news started with Brandon Crawford’s first inning fielding error that opened the door for two Royals’ runs to start the game. Crawford was playing in his 1,500 game with the Giants.

“We depend on Craw for his ability on defense and expect it every time out,” Kapler said of the botched play. “I think that ball just kind of jumped up on him a little bit. It’s part of the game. it happens.”

After a 6-3 home stand the Giants travel to Pittsburgh where they will see Pirates’ starter Zach Thompson on Friday night. The Giants have not announced a starter for that game as of yet.

Webb pitches masterfully as Giants win fifth straight game 4-2 over Royals

Kansas City. 2. 8. 0

San Francisco. 4. 6. 1

Tuesday, June 14, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

San Francisco Giants pitcher Logan Webb celebrates the third out of the top of the sixth inning against the Kansas City Royals at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue Jun 14, 2022 (Bay Area News Group photo)

SAN FRANCISCO–The last time the Kansas City Royals (20-41) played at Oracle Park was in August of 2017, when it still was going by its third name, AT&T Park. The San Francisco Giants (35-26) finished that season tied with the Detroit Tigers for the worst record in major league baseball. KC finished up ’17 at 80-82.

A lot of water has flowed under the Golden Gate Bridge since then, and San Francisco entered tonight’s contest at 34-26, three games behind the Dodgers and Padres in what is shaping up to be a tight race for the NL West pennant. The Royals, on other hand, have no gonfalon bubble to be burst. After last night’s loss to San Francisco, they stood at 20-40, mired the cellar of all of MLB.

Each game, though, the season starts anew. That’s why the Cubans say that all we know about baseball is that it’s round and comes in a square box.

Before game time, the Giants announced Brandon Belt’s return from the injured list and the concomitant optioning of Donovan Walton to Sacramento. The left handed Belt, however, was not in the starting line up against KC’s southpaw starting pitcher, Kris Bubic.

Neither starter had faced the other team before. Bubic, selected by Kansas City out of Stanford in the first round of the 2018 draft, sported, if that’s the word, an 0-3,9.13 record when he took the mound. San Francisco’s Logan Webb was 5-2,3.77 after his defense let him down in the fourth frame against the Rockies.

Over the course of his first seven starts before tonight, his slider had lost much of its effectiveness, but it’s achieved a remarkable improvement in his last half dozen outings.

The Giants’ eventual 4-2 victory wasn’t unexpected, but the dramatic quality of the action was.

It started out as a pitchers’ duel. The Giants didn’t get a hit off of Bubic until Brian Crawford laced a single to right with one down in the bottom of the fifth.

All that Kansas City had mustered against Webb up to then had been one safety each to Nicky López and Carlos Santana. Between them, the rival hurlers had K´d 11 oponents, five by Bubic and the remainder by Webb.

Neither team reached third base until the top of the sixth, after Michael Taylor reached first on a slow grounder to third on which Wilmer Flores made a nice bare handed pick up followed by a throw that arrived late at first base.

Taylor proceeded to steal second as López struck out and advanced to the hot corner on Whit Merrifield´s fly to deep left. After Andrew Benintendi drew a controversial 3-2 walk, Bobby Witt, Jr., went down swinging, preserving the scoreless tie.

San Francisco finally broke through in the bottom of that frame. This time it was the defending team that suffered the Curse of the Lead Off Double. (One person’s curse is another person’s blessing). González hit it into the left field corner. Slater struck out , but Flores drove in the game’s initial tally with a sharp single to left.

He moved on to third himself on Pederson’s single to third and then scored on Ruf’s single to right center, which put an end to Boric’s impressive outing. Righty Dylan Coleman relieved the southpaw, which motivated the substitution of Tommy LaStella for Longoria. The pinch hitter lofted a sacrifice fly to right that upped the SF lead to 3-0.

Bubic had lasted 5-1/3 innings and was charged with all three runs. They came on five hits and two walks. He struck out six and threw 95 pitches, only 35 of which were balls.

Kansas City threatened in the top of the seventh, but the Giants escaped by the skin of their teeth. MJ Meléndez drew a full count walk with one out and moved up a base on Santana’s single to right. Webb caught Kyle Isabel looking at a third strike and then surrendered a broken bat single to right by Taylor, but González´s throw beat Meléndez to the plate to end the inning and the incipient rally.

Daniel Mengden pitched a 1-2-3 seventh for the visitors.

Seven innings of shut out ball was enough for Webb this evening. He had held the Royals to five hits and three walks in his 112 pitch outing. 68 of those offerings were counted as strikes. Submariner Tyler Rogers took his place on the mound.

Before you knew it, the score was 3-2. López led off with a single to left and took second on Merrifield´s fly out to the center field warning track. Benintendi reached first on a grounder to short, on which Crawford made a fine play but wasn’t able to nab the speedy Royal at first.

López reached third on the play. He scored on Witt´s sac fly to center, and Benintendi advanced to second on Slater´s throwing error. He crossed the plate on a single to center by Pérez, bringing the Royals to within a run of their hosts.

The resurgent Royals called on Josh Staumont to face the orange and black in their half of the eighth. He reached three balls on each of the three batters he faced, walking two of them, Mike Yastrzemski, hitting for Slater, and Pederson and getting Flores out on a pop to center.

Then Brandon Belt pinch hit for Ruf, and Staumont was lifted, making way for Scott Barlow who hit Belt with his first pitch, loading the bases. Tommy LaStella brought Yastrzemski home with a sac fly to center that gave the home team an insurance run before Crawford struck out to take us into the ninth.

In the KC ninth, Camilo Doval went for his ninth save in 11 opportunities. He got it, striking out his last two opponents, Ryan ÓHearn and Nicky López.

Webb got the win, giving him a record of 6-2, 3.43. The tough loss went to Buic, now 0-4,8.36.

The series and the home stand end tomorrow with Jonathan Heasley (1-3,3.62) going against an as yet unnamed Giant starter.

Giants Stay Hot, Roast the Royals 6-2 at Oracle Park

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–Buoyed by all their success gathered in a sweep of the Dodgers, the Giants kept their momentum going Monday night by breaking open a close game, and beating the Royals 6-2.

Alex Wood stood out, pitching six innings and allowing just four hits. He threw an economical 80 pitches and retired the last ten batters he faced, which was enough for manager Gabe Kapler, who turned to his bullpen to protect a 3-2 lead. Wood pitched with base traffic in the first three innings, but managed to keep the visitors from cashing in outside of a two-run third.

Brady Singer started for Kansas City, and Amir Garrett relieved him in the fifth, and neither seemed comfortable with Singer issuing five walks, and Garrett one to Austin Slater, who advanced to second on a wild pitch, and scored on Thairo Estrada’s base hit that gave the Giants a lead they wouldn’t relinquish. Singer issued four consecutive walks in the third, allowing the Giants to tie the game with free passes issued to Darin Ruf and Joc Pederson coming with the bases loaded, forcing in a pair of runs.

In all Giants’ batters drew nine walks, likely infuriating former catcher and Royals manager Mike Matheny. The walks in combination with the Giants five hits–four of them doubles–put the Giants in position to add on with two runs in the seventh and one in the eighth.

Relievers Mauricio Llovera, Jake McGee and Camilo Doval each pitched a scoreless inning after Wood departed with Doval picking up the save. Llovera was a gameday callup from AAA Sacramento as Heliot Ramos was sent out after another short stint with the big club.

The Giants have won four in a row, impressive in that it brings them within three games of the Dodgers and the division lead, and somehow has kept them in front of the Atlanta Braves in the wild card stack, despite the Braves winning a 12th straight on Monday. The Giants hold the lead wild card spot, significant this season in the expanded playoff field which will see that lead team host an opening round series in the postseason.

On Tuesday, the Giants and Royals play game two of a three-game set with Logan Webb, coming off arguably his most impressive start of the season facing Kris Bubic, who has an unsightly 0-3 record with a 9.13 ERA.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Giants open three game series with Royals tonight at Oracle Park; SF comes off 3 game sweep over LA

San Francisco Giant slugger Mike Yastrzemski takes a trot around the bases after hitting a first inning home run against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Jun 12, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the Giants podcast with Marko:

#1 San Francisco Giants (33-26) pitcher Carlos Rodon who pitched six innings of shutout ball helped lead the Giants and the bullpen to a a 2-0 win for a sweep over the Los Angeles Dodgers (37-23).

#2 The Dodgers have lost four of the last five games and were swept by the Giants at Oracle Park in San Francisco. This comes as a surprise as the Dodgers first in the NL West and have dominate in the regular season.

#3 The Giants Austin Slater and Mike Yastrzemski both homered off Dodgers starter Julio Urias which handed the Dodgers their sixth loss in eight games.

#4 Giants manager Gabe Kapler wisely said that although the Giants are in a solid position divisions aren’t won in June.

#5 The Kansas City Royals (20-39) open a three game series at Oracle Park in San Francisco starting Monday night at 6:45 pm PDT Royals starter Brady Singer (3-1, 4.33) for the Giants Alex Wood (3-5, 4.23).

Marko Ukalovic is filling in for Morris Phillips who does the Giant podcasts Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Rodon shuts out snake bitten Dodgers 2-0 for 3 game sweep

San Francisco Giants starter Carlos Rodon throws against the Los Angeles Dodgers line up in the top of the first inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Jun 12, 2022 (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (NL). 0. 5. 0

San Francisco. 2. 5. 0

Sunday, June 12, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Two days ago, one of the most unlikely scenarios in the world of baseball was that the Giants would be going for a sweep of their current three game series against the division leading Dodgers.

But that’s exactly where things stood when Carlos Rodón toed the rubber at 1:06 this afternoon against the snake bitten visitors from Chavez Ravine. The 29 year old Miami native was toting a 4-4,3.51 record for the season and was 2-2 against the Dodgers, both of his wins coming at home and both of his losses in LA.

Snake bitten or not, the visitors still were at the head of the NL West by half a game over San Diego and four and a half over the resurgent San Franciscans.

Los Angeles put their trust in Julio Urías, making this, at least at the beginning, a battle of southpaws. The Dodgers´seven year veteran started the day at 3-5, 2.78. He threw six innings of scoreless ball at them on May 3 , his only appearance against SF this year. His lifetime mark against the home team stood at 3-3, 2.41.

The two hurlers put on a hell of a pitcher´s duel, worthy of the event that the Giants were celebrating this afternoon, the tenth anniversary of Matt Cain’s perfect game of June 13, 2012. Rodón went six innings, shutting Los Angeles out on two hits and three walks.

He struck out eight and brought his ERA down to 3.18. 64 of his 98 pitches went for strikes. Urías also went six frames, allowing two runs, both earned, on home runs.

He yielded only one safety and struck out 10 without giving anyone a free pass. 61 of his 87 offerings were considered strikes. In the end, the Giants held on to an early lead and won, 2-0, to reestablish themselves as a winner in the division race.

It didn’t take long for the Giants to grab the lead. With the count at 1-2 on Austin Slater, Urías hung a slow curve, and Slater hammered it 405 feet into dead center field for his third career lead off home run. It also was his third round tripper of the season and allowed his RBI total to match his uniform number, 13. (Ironically, Urías sports number 7).

One out later, Mike Yastrzemski doubled the lead by taking a 92 mph four seamer deep to left center, 385 feet into the bleachers, for his sixth four bagger and 22nd ribby of ’22.

After Will Smith connected for a solid two base hit to left center in the second, LA fell victim to the Curse of the Lead Off Double, withUrías retiring the next six batters, three by strike outs, before Freddie Freeman walked to open the top of the fourth. Freeman was stranded at first while Rodón notched his fifth and sixth Ks.

Chris Taylor´s bouncer down the third base line put him on second with nobody out in the fifth. He almost scored from there when Hanswer Alberto hit a sharp grounder to the right side, but Thairo Estrada made a beautiful diving play to nab the ball and throw him out at first.

That moved Taylor on to third. Austin Barnes followed with a full count walk. Then Rodón got Betts to pop out to Crawford at short. The Curse of the Lead Off Double came to the rescue!

Urías was even more impressive. After the Yaz blast in the first, he retired the next 16 Giants in a row before Ruf rifled a two out double to the left field corner in the bottom of the sixth frame. The Dodger lefty recovered to close the ending by striking out Yastrzemski, his tenth K of the day.

John Brebbia replaced Rodón to start the seventh. Talor smacked his first pitch up against the 354 foot sign to the right of the Toyota ad on the left field wall for a two bagger. After Cody Bellinger popped out to a falling Flores at third, Max Muncy stepped in to pinch hit for Alberto.

He worked a full count walk to put the potential tying runs on base with Austin Barnes at bat and the top of the order lying in wait. Barnes whiffed on a 3-2 slider, bringing up the always dangerous Mookie Betts. Brebbia got him to ground into a 6-4 put out. The Curse of the Lead Off Double strikes again!

Evan Phillips took over for Urías once ¨God Bless America” and “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” had been intoned. He last only the required three batters and left with one out and Estrada, who had singled, on second and Crawford, who drew the Giants’ first walk, on first.

The new Dodger pitcher was Alex Vesia, a lefty called on to face Joc Pederson, the left handed hitter who had been announced to pinch hit for Ramos when the right handed Phillips still was on the mound. Pederson took a called third strike, but Wynn walked to load the sacks with two down.

Manager Kapler then called on Evan Longoria to hit for González, and the new three batter minimum rule prevented a counter move by LA. Nonetheless, Longoria’s fly out to deep right kept the lead at 2-0.

Now it was Dominic Leone on the hill, trying to protect that slender margen. He got past Freeman, but Trea Turner punched a single to right. Will Smith then sent a towering fly to deep right center that Slater tracked down and hauled in with a breath taking running catch.

Justin Turner slapped a dying liner to right for a single that sent the runner to third. With the tying runs on base, Leone threw a 90 mph cut fastball and got Taylor to swing and miss for the third out.

Brusdar Graterol retired Slater and Ruf to open the ninth for the Angelinos but surrendered a mighty double to the left field corner by Yastrzemski. Taylor took a terrible tumble on the play and had to leave the game but, I’m glad to say, under his own power. Bellinger popped out to third, and we went into the ninth.

Jake McGee entered the game at 1-1-,6.46, with two saves in four opportunities, to hold the Dodgers one more inning. He did it, retiring the pinch hitting Max Muncy, Austin Barnes, and Mookie Betts in order.

The win went to Rodón; the loss to Urías. The former deserved his win; the latter didn’t deserve his loss. The Giants will open a three game interleague series against the Kansas City Royals tomorrow evening at 6:45.

LA’s Kernshaw takes loss upon return from one month off; Giants nick Dodgers 3-2 at Oracle

Los Angeles (NL). 2. 13. 2

San Francisco. 3. 5. 1

Saturday, June 11, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Klayton Kershaw surrendered a two run RBI in the bottom of the second inning to the San Francisco Giants Luis Gonzalez at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sat Jun 11, 2022 (AP News photo)

SAN FRANCISCO–A bullpen resembles Alka Seltzer; plop, plop, fizz, fizz, oh, what a relief it is! That is, except when the pitchers in it aren’t unanimously effective. Then it’s flop, flop, hiss, hiss. In bullpen games, where your opener is a relief pitcher by trade, the risks and rewards of reliance on the bullpen are multiplied exponentially.

In this afternoon’s game the rewards exceeded the risks, as the. outhit Giants salvaged a thrilling 3-2 win over the hated rivals from the south.

The Dodgers sent the same lineup to this plate as they did last night , although Max Muncy and Justin Turner exchanged bench positions. Muncy, who had been at third in LA’s losing effort on Friday, was today’s DH, and Turner switched from DH to the hot corner.

Their choice for starting pitcher was Clayton Kershaw, who came off the injured list today to resume a campaign in which he was 4-0,1.80 with a total of 30 innings pitched in his five starts. He has struck out more opposing batters than any other Dodger pitcher ever and has the lowest ERA and WHIP of any starting pitcher in major league history with more than 1,500 IP.

The Giants’ lineup featured some significant overnight changes. Most notable were the addition of newcomer Austin Wynns as the designated hitter and the installation of the freshly recalled Heloit Ramos in right field, batting third, between Darin Ruf, who was stationed at first base, and Wilmer Flores, who was shifted to third.

Ramos took the roster spot of Jakob Junis, who was placed on the 15 day injured list because of the hamstring sprain that caused his early exit from last night´s contest. on the roster.

The Giants got to Kershaw in the bottom of the second when Tairo Estrada took him deep, 372 feet deep, into the left field bleachers on an 86 MPH slider, a pitch that the Dodger starter had been using frequently and effectively til then. The one out blast put the home team up 1-0, a lead that they doubled on a walk to Crawford and singles by Wynns and González.

Three innings was the extent of Long´s short mandate. In that time, he threw 48 pitches, 28 of which were balls. He gave up three hits but kept the Angelinos off the board. He struck out one and didn’t issue a single free pass. His successor was Tyler Rogers, he of the weirdly spinning submarine delivery.

71 pitches over four innings would be Keshaw’s limit in his return to active duty. He allowed two runs, both earned, on three hits and two walks, with four Ks before Yency Almonte replaced him to start the bottom of the fifth.

It was Dominic Leone on the mound for San Francisco after Rogers had finished his assigned two innings. Also on the field in the top of the sixth for the orange and black were Mike Yastrzemski in center and Joc Pederson in left, who had pinch hit the previous frame for Slater and Ramos, respectively.

After Estrada led off the Giants’ half of the sixth with a ground out to second that almost hit Almonte in the face, the right handed pitcher was sent to the showers, handing his chores over to southpaw Alex Vesia.

Zack Littell mounted the pitching merry-go-round for San Francisco to open the seventh. The merry-go-round broke down. The first two batters he faced, Chris Taylor and Gavin Lux, took him to full counts. The first walked, and the second bounced a single up the middle that just barely evaded Crawford’s glove.

Then Mookie Betts hit a hard grounder to the side that got past Flores. Crawford made a nice play on it, but his throw to second was late, and the Dodgers had the bases loaded with none out and Freddie Freeman coming to bat. That did it for Littell.

Jarlín García was called on to face the power first sacker. The count reached 3-2, and Freeman swung at and missed a 94 mph four seamer. And then clean up hitter Trea Turner hit into a beautiful U4-3 double play, preserving the Giants’ precarious lead.

Caleb Ferguson took over for LA after the seventh inning stretch and, with a little help from a pitcher´s best friend, kept the Giants from capitalizing on the momentum García’s performance had generated.

And then the momentum shifted. With one out in the top of the eighth, Will Smith singled to left. Justin Turner grounded to second, where Estrada couldn’t handle the ball, which reached right field, allowing Smith to reach third.

Bellinger then unloaded on a hanging slider for a rule book double that bounced into the left center field bleachers, driving in Smith, sending Turner to third, and ending García’s moment of glory. Camilo Doval entered the fray and walked Chris Taylor on a full count.

The bases once more were loaded with Dodgers. This time Lux was at the plate, batting .298. Doval struck him out swinging on a wicked slider.

Now the batter was Mookie Betts, batting .284 with 16 home runs. He took three straight balls. Doval then threw three consecutive, not straight strikes, the last another lead -preserving wicked slider.

Craig Kembrel was entrusted to try to keep the game within reach in the bottom of the eighth. He began inauspiciously, yielding a lead off single to right to Pederson, unleashing a wild pitch to Flores, who eventually walked, and walking Estrada on four pitches.

Suddenly, on this sun filled afternoon, the bases were fog, full of Giants. Los Angeles had no choice but to bring the infield in for Crawford. That was in vain. There’s no defense against a wild pitch, which is what Kembrel threw on a 1-1 count to the Giants’ shortstop.

Crawford ended up striking out, but the home team now led 3-1, and Evan Phillips, who relieved Kembrel, was faced with the ticklish situation of pitching to Wynns with runners on second and third and only one out. Wynns went down swinging, and so did Casali.

The Giants had used six pitchers, and the bullpen was asked to provide one more arm to hold off the Dodgers for three more outs. That arm belonged to José Alvarez, looking for his first save of the year.

It wasn’t pretty. Freddie Freeman tagged him for a 403 foot four bagger to right center to lead off the ninth. Trea Turner followed that with a single to left. Alvarez recovered to fan Muncy and get Smith to force Turner at second on a grounder to third that almost was a double play. Enter Hanser Alberto, pinch hitting for Justin Turner.

He sent a dinky bounder to third that went for an infield single that brought Bellinger to bat with the potential tying run in scoring position and the potential leading run on base. Bellinger hit a hard grounder to second, and Estrada made a grand play to throw him out at first.

Doval , now 2-2, 2,84, was the winning pitcher. Kershaw was charged with his first loss of 2022. And Alvarez got his first save.

Plop, plop! Fizz, Fizz.

Dodgers starter Julio Urías (3-5, 2.78) will try to prevent a Giant sweep on Sunday. The Giants Carlos Rodón (4-4,3.51) will try to help them achieve it.

SF’s Ruf provides power with 2 homers and Junis holds Dodgers to two runs in 7-2 win at Oracle

Los Angeles Dodgers’ Justin Turner, right, scores on a double by Chris Taylor as San Francisco Giants catcher Curt Casali waits for the throw during the second inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Fri Jun 10, 2022 (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (NL) 2-6-1

San Francisco. 7-10-0

Friday, June 10, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–The Los Angeles Dodgers (37-21) came to town leading the Padres by two games for the top spot in the National League Western Division race. They’ve won 12 of the 18 series they’ve played this year. The San Francisco Giants (31-26) started the day in third place, four and a half games behind San Diego.

It’s early in the season, and the situation is fluid, but the outlook wasn’t brilliant for baytown fans tonight. Their team had been 8-12 over the last three weeks, and two thirds of those losses came against teams that were playing below .500 ball.

The Dodgers, in spite of their 37-20 record, showed up at 24 Willie MaysPlaza with problems of their own. Their starting pitcher, Walker Buelher, a five year veteran and two time all star, was the subject of an article by Fabian Ardy in The Athletic five days ago.

Its title was, “Dodgers Pitcher Walker Buehler’s Struggles Persist into June: ‘I Want to Be Good.'” More than one big league hurler would like to have struggles like those; Bulher toed the mound at 6-2,3.84. Not Cy Young numbers, but, given the state of baseball today …..

The Giants had considered holding Logan Webb back a day so that he could start tonight’s contest for them. Instead, he pitched last night and was the victim of another late inning San Francisco melt down.

Tonight’s starter for the orange and black was four year veteran Jakob Junis, who took the mound sporting a record of 3-1,2.51. He used to feature a two seamer, slider, cutter, and change of pace, but this year he’s added a sinker that he throws about 30% of the time,

The result of tonight’s encounter, a resounding 7-2 victor for San Francisco was emotionally satisfying but in the cold, hard, mathematical light of the season long pennant race is no cause for rejoycing.

Los Dodgers struck first. Justin Turner led off the second with a sharp single to right. After Junis fanned Cody Bellinger, Chris Taylor smacked a liner between Joc Pederson in left and Mike Yastrzemski in center for a running scoring double to put the visitors on the board with a 1-0 advantage.

It was the ex-Dodger Pederson who scored the tying tally in the bottom of the frame. He singled to center to lead off and then, with Evan Longoria at the plate after Darin Ruf had struck out, stole second without a throw.

Longoria sent a bouncing ball down the left field line for a double that drove in Pederson. Brandon Crawford’s single to center drove in Longoria with San Francisco’s second run, putting them ahead, 2-1.

After Thairo Estrada popped out to first, Buehler struck out five consecutive Giant batters. Then, with one down in the home fourth, Ruf drove a 93 mph four seamer 389 feet into the left field bleachers for his fourth home run and 18th RBI of the season, increasing the Giants’ margin to 3-1.

In the top of the fifth. Gavin Lux quickly reduced that gap to 3-2 with a lead off 412 blast over the center field fence just over the glove of the leaping Yastztremski.

Buehler didn’t come out to pitch the bottom half of the inning. He went four innings and allowed three runs, all earned, on four hits, including one dinger, and no walks. He struck out six while throwing 70 pitches, 43 of which counted as strikes.

Buehler’s successor, Justin Bruihl. He got Estrada, now playing third, to fly out to center. Then Curt Casali beat out a slow grounder to Bruihl. Austin Slater, hitting for González, slapped a ball to the mound. Bruihl fell on his patootie fielding it and threw wildly to first.

Slater swas awarded a single, and he advanced to second on the throwing error, which put Casali on third. After Yaz went down swinging, Bruihl was issued a free pass. Pederson and Ruf hit back to back singles, and, just like that, San Francisco was basking in a 6-2 lead.

That good news didn’t last long. Pitching to Max Muncy, the first batter in the Dodger sixth, Junis fell off the mound, seeming to have twisted his ankle. It turned out that, if I heard the announcement properly, he had a strained left hamstring.

In any case, he had to leave the game and was replaced by John Brebbia, who retired Muncy on a fly to right Brebbia, who before disposing of thee rest of the side on one hit and a looooong fly to left center that Pederson chased down on the warning track.

Junis´s line was five innings pitched, in which he made 92 deliveries, of which 64 were counted as strikes, and allowed two runs, both earned, on five hits, one of which went the distance. He struck out five.

Phil Bickford replaced the ill-used Bruihl in the sixth and stuck around for one batter in the bottom of the seventh, yielding to David Price when it was Yastrezmski’s turn at bat. Lefty on lefty, natch, and it worked. He also retired the right handed Flores.

But Ruf took him deep, 409 feet deep, to center in the bottom of the eighth, for his second homer, and the Giants’ seventh run, of the game. That gave Ruf five round trippers for the season.

Jake McGee assumed mound duties for SF in the top of the seventh, as did Dominic Leone in the eighth. Camilo Doval closed things out in the ninth.

Junis was the winning pitcher, bringing his record to 4-1, 2.63. Buehler was tagged with the loss. He’s now 6-3, 4,03.

Tomorrow’s first pitch is scheduled for 4:15. It will be a bullpen game for the Giants. Clayton Kershaw (4-0,1.80) will start for Los Angeles.

Giants-Dodgers keeps that same energy

San Francisco Giants’ Darin Ruf, left, is congratulated by third base coach Mark Hallberg (91) after hitting a home run against the Los Angeles Dodgers during the eighth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Fri Jun 10, 2022 (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Harness

SAN FRANCISCO – It doesn’t matter.

Doesn’t matter where these two teams are in the standings. It could be a rather-meaningless game in June or Game 5 of the National League Division Series. Heck, the Warriors could be playing in the NBA Finals at the same time.

One thing remains constant. The rivalry between the Giants and the Dodgers has withstood the test of time, and it will continue to do so. Till death do them part, these two squads will continue hating each other.

They resumed their eternal battle Friday night, as the Dodgers made their first trip to Oracle Park this season. The atmosphere mirrored that of a postseason matchup, which was clearly visible when Even Longoria and Brandon Crawford had back-to-back RBI hits to give the Giants a 2-1 lead in the second inning, en route to a 7-2 win to kick off a three-game weekend series.

Orange towels waving all around the ballpark, quickly followed by the “Beat LA” chants. It all felt like last October’s epic playoff series, which isn’t what you get with a midseason series with, say, the Rockies or the Padres.

Again, these are the Dodgers we’re talking about here.

Los Angeles entered Friday’s game on top of the National League West with a 37-20 mark, while the Giants came in 6 ½ games behind the Dodgers. Furthermore, the Dodgers had taken each of the first two games between the two teams when they linked up in SoCal last month.

The Giants didn’t exactly come into this weekend with guns blazing, either. They had lost five of their previous eight games, including two of three against Colorado at Oracle Park, a team they typically dominate at home.

None of that seemed to matter during Friday’s weekend series opener. It took the Giants’ bats a couple of innings to warm up against Dodgers starter Walker Buehler, who was 7-1 with a 2.55 ERA in his career against the Giants, including a 6-2 overall season mark.

Following the second-inning surge, Darin Ruf came up in the fourth and smashed a solo homer to give the Giants a 3-1 lead, and by the fifth inning, Buehler was out of there.

Friday was in no way consistent with the way the two teams have played leading into this weekend. The only thing that lined up was what has been there over the years, dating back to the early years in New York: the simmering rivalry and the energy that comes along with it.