That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: A’s open homestand Tuesday night against LA hoping to hang onto wild card hopes; Panda gets ready for Tommy John surgery after send off; plus more

Photo credit: bleacherreport.com

On That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast:

#1 The Kansas City Royals challenged the A’s when they were at Kaufman Stadium and so did the New York Yankees to conclude the road trip. Even through the pit falls, the A’s are only a 1/2 game out for a wild card berth. This thing could go right down to the end of the season?

#2 Pablo Sandoval, the man that San Francisco fans call the Panda, took a curtain call hitting for as a pinch-hitter on Sunday in the seventh inning in what can be considered the Panda’s last game in San Francisco. Sandoval played numerous positions for the Giants and will be having Tommy John surgery.

#3 The Houston Astros continued to prove their a force to be reckoned with after their starter Justin Verlander threw his third career no-hitter against the Toronto Blue Jays on Sunday. It was the second time that Verlander threw a no-hitter at the Rogers Centre in Toronto.

#4. The Oakland Raiders get to open the season at the Coliseum against the Denver Broncos for Monday Night Football. The Raiders had a successful preseason and head coach Jon Gruden is confident about the team going into week 1.

#5 This is the Raiders’ last season at the Coliseum. Gruden certainly wants it to be a great send off for the Raiders and wants to drive them to a postseason that could get them to the AFC Championship to the finally the Super Bowl. He would love to bring a trophy to Oakland for the final year there.

Amaury Pi-Gonzalez is the Oakland A’s Spanish play-by-play announcer heard on KIQI 1010 San Francisco. Also, join Amaury for That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary each Tuesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants get first hand lesson in St. Louis on how to grind, Cardinals win 3-1

By Morris Phillips

The Giants proved to be battlers again Monday in St. Louis, but the Cardinals handed them a first hand lesson on how the art form works.

By winning 3-1, the Cardinals improved to a National League-best 33-16 since the All-Star break, and this one came under difficult circumstances, their fifth game in a little more than 48 hours.

Somehow the Cardinals captured four of five in the stretch, without looking like baseball wizards, but by simply maintaining focus, according to manager Mike Shildt.

“Guys were grinding every single pitch, all five games and they were rewarded for it,” said Shildt.

Adam Wainwright projected to be a centerpiece in the process of wearing down the Giants, and he was, tossing seven, scoreless innings and successfully giving the St. Louis bullpen a break.

The 38-year old did so in 90 degree heat, and preparation was the key, in his estimation.

“That attacking mentality that I used to have,” Wainwright said.  “I’ve sort of gotten away from that the last couple starts.”

The veteran started for the 311th time in his career, winning 158 of those. Seemingly, he’s always been good, but rarely great, winning at least 10 games in ten, different seasons, but only as many as 20 wins twice.

“He’s always got the gas pedal down,” Shildt said. “He’s got a ferocious mindset.”

The Giants weren’t much off what the Cardinals produced offensively, but thanks to Wainwright, they had to wait until the eighth inning to cross the plate. Mauricio Dubon came up with his first career home run off Giovanny Gallegos to break up the shutout. Dubon doubled earlier in the game, producing two of the Giants five hits.

The Cardinals have won 10 of 12, and maintained their three-game cushion over the Cubs in the NL Central. The Giants have lost six of seven, virtually falling out of the wild card chase in the process.

Tyler Beede pitched four innings, taking the loss and falling to 3-9 on the season. Kolten Wong’s run-scoring triple was the big blow off Beede, who hasn’t won a game in nearly six weeks.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Morris Phillips: Giants can’t hold off Padres, lose three out of four

mercurynews.com photo: San Francisco Giants’ Pablo Sandoval said he tried to hold back his emotions as he stands for the national anthem before his last game as a Giant on Sunday at Oracle Park. Giant second baseman Maurcio Dubon stands behind Sandoval.

On the Giants podcast with Morris:

#1. How much did that four-run inning hurt Giants starter Jeff Samardzija to set back the Giants?

#2 Samardzija threw for 92 pitches and walked three batters. He did have respective command until the sixth inning when the Padres scored the four runs.

#3 Padres starter Eric Lauer gave up three earned runs and two home runs. His effort was good enough to hold off the Giants by runs for the 8-4 win.

#4 Acknowledgements during the game going to Giants manager Bruce Bochy, who had a design tribute unveiled during the game recognizing his work as Giants manager, including three World Series championships. Pablo Sandoval made what is considered his last at-bat as a Giant in the seventh inning to a standing ovation.

#5 With the loss, the Giants are now seven games back in the NL Wild Card. At one time, the Giants were down just a game and a half.

Morris does the Giants commentary each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Pads tag Giants Samardzija for six runs in 8-4 win; Giants drop seven games back in NL Wild Card

sfgate.com photo: San Francisco Giants manager Bruce Bochy, who will be leaving the team at the end of the month, after being honored with artwork posted on the outfield wall commemorating his fine handy work in San Francisco. Later Pablo Sandoval got a seventh inning standing ovation coming in to possibly hit for the last time as a Giant.

By Lewis Rubman

San Diego: 8 | 13 | 0

San Francisco: 4 | 7 | 0

SAN FRANCISCO — The Giants sent Jeff Samardzija to the mound this afternoon at Oracle Park, seeking to salvage a split in their four-game series against the San Diego Padres. The Shark (9-10, 3.38 ERA) had pitched well in his last outing, allowing only one run on three hits in five innings of work against the Arizona Diamondbacks. The negative side of performance is that it took him 92 pitches to complete those five frames and that he also granted three free passes in the process. The Padres came away with three games out of four to win the series in the Sunday 8-4 victory.

The Pads chose 24-year-old left-hander Eric Lauer (7-8, 4.48 ERA) to oppose the home team. He had pitched adequately in his last appearance, which was against the Dodgers. His three earned runs, including two homers, in six innings qualified him for the meaningless category of a quality start.

The teams entered the contest with records of 63-72 for the visiting Friars and 66-69 for their hosts from the City of Saint Francis.

Greg García started things rolling early in the game, slamming a line drive home run to right on Samardzija’s eighth pitch. It was the Padres’ shortstop’s fourth round tripper of the season and the first lead off dinger of his career.

A pair of doubles to right by Nick Martini and Eric Hosmer, sandwiching a ground out by Manny Machado, doubled the visitor’s early lead. Josh Naylor’s infield single moved Hosmer up to third, putting runners on the corners with one out. Then Smardzja got out of trouble, ending the inning by getting Wil Myers to hit into a double play, Crawford to Solano at second to Aramis García, just recalled from Sacramento, at first.

Kevin Pillar knotted the game up shortly afterwards when, with Solano on base with a leadoff single and one down, he dumped Lauer’s 82 mph slider into the alleyway that separates the grandstand from the left field bleachers. After one, the game was tied at two.

Ty France untied it with his third home run of 2019, this one into the left field bleachers and coming on an 84 mph slider, with the bases empty and one out in the second.

Once the Shark had retired the Padres for the inning, the Giants unveiled a plaque between the Chevron and Toyota advertisements on the left field fence to honor their soon to be retired manager, Bruce Bochy. The text of the plaque is, “Thank you BOCH!”

No one scored until the visitors’ sixth. Hosmer led off the top of that inning with a triple to left center. He held on at third when Naylor bounced out unassisted to Belt at first. Then Wil Myers sent a weak bouncing ball down the third base line. Longoria charged it, but apparently doubting his ability to cut Hosmer down at the plate and thinking the ball would go foul, jumped over it, and the ball ended up in left field while Myers wound up at second base.

After Smardzija walked Allen Austin, Bochy removed his starter and brought in Fernando Abad, whose first pitch Ty France blasted over the right field wall, to give San Diego a 7-2 lead.

Samardzija’s line for the day was 5 1/3 innings pitched, six runs, all earned, on nine hits and one walk. He struck out two. 71 of his 109 pitches were strikes. He took the loss.

In the Giants’ half of the frame, Longoria atoned for his misplay by hitting his 18th home run of the season, a blast over the fence in straight away center field with Slater on base to narrow the gap to 7-4. Lauer responded by fanning the next two Giant batters.

Conner Menez came out to pitch the top of the seventh, but after he surrendered a one out double to Machado, the left handed reliever came out of the game, giving way to Sam Coonrod, who closed down the Padres by getting Manuel Margot hit into a 6-4-3 double play.

Right-hander Luis Perdomo replaced Lauer to open the San Francisco seventh. Lauer, who would get the win, left the game with six innings to his credit, in which he gave up four runs, all earned, on six hits. He struck out nine of his opponents and didn’t walk any.

The crowd came alive when Pablo Sandoval was announced as a pinch-hitter for Coonrad with one on and one out in the seventh. He hustled down the line after hitting a grounder to third, but the Panda never was a speedster.

Sandoval’s pinch hitting appearance was a prelude to Shaun Anderson’s entry into the game in the top of the eighth. He set the Padres down 1-2-3, with two Ks.

That was a good pitching performance, but nowhere near as exciting as the one Andrés Muõoz provided when he took over against the Giants in the bottom half of the inning. He struck out Mike Yastremski, htting for Slater, when he took something off his 100 mph fast ball to get him with a pitch that measured one less mph by the stadium gun. Then he fanned Pillar on an 86 mph slider. The third strike against Longoria was a called one, a 100 mph fastball that followed out that came in at 101.

San Diego got some additional insurance in their last go-round. With Anderson still on the mound for the Giants, Travis Janbowksy, who had entered the game in a double switch two innings previously, got a leadoff single to center and scored all the way from first on the much booed Manny Machado’s single to right.

David Bednar came in to wrap it up for the Padres in the ninth. Three batters and three outfield fly outs later, he’d done it.

The loss dropped the Giants’ record to 66-90 and left them when the game ended seven games out of wild card contention. It also whittled their elimination number to 20 with only 26 games left in the season.

The Giants fly to St. Louis for a game tomorrow afternoon. They will send RHP Tyler Beede (3-8, 5.56 ERA) against fellow RHP Adam Wainwright (9-9, 4.52 ERA) for the NL Central-leading Cardinals.

Giants fall to Padres 4-1 in SF

Photo credit: @Padres

By Lewis Rubman

San Diego: 4 | 11 | 0

San Francisco: 1 | 9 | 0

SAN FRANCISCO — Before this evening´s Padres-Giants game, I attended a chapter meeting of the Society for American Baseball Research. One of the speakers was César Love, who discussed his forthcoming book, Baseball: An Astrological Sightline, in which he “shows how the stars and planets affect the course of every baseball season and every baseball game.” He concluded by warning those of us who were planning on heading for Oracle Park after the meeting to be alert between 7:15 and 7:30 because the stars showed that an important event might occur in that window. (It’s possible that I got one or two digits wrong). He declined to say what that event might be.

The Padres, neither afraid nor encouraged by Love’s vaticination sent lefty Joey Lucchdesi (9-7, 4.11 ERA) to the mound to face the Giants’ hitters. His best pitch is the change of pace, so there was more the one reason to expect the unexpected.  The Giants countered with righty Logan Webb (1-0, 4.66 ERA). The two or three of us in the stands who had received Love’s warning were on a certain amount of of tenterhooks for the hour and 10 minutes that followed Webb’s opening pitch, eagerly anticipating our entry into the Twilight Zone. (Full disclosure: I babysat for Rod Serling a few times in 1955).

The stars were, if anything in alignment for the Giants in the opening frame because Austin Slater, batting second, hit an 0-2 cutter into the batter’s eye in center field to give the Giants a 1-0 lead.

7:15 p.m. rolled around, and San Francisco still was hanging on to that one run advantage. A quarter of an hour passed, we were in the bottom of the fifth, and still nothing earthshaking had occurred on the shores of McCovey Cove.

All good things come to an end, as the Giants’ lead and Webb’s mound tenue did simultaneously with Manuel Margot’s RBI single that drove in Josh Naylor from second with one down in the top of the sixth. Webb was replaced by Reyes Moronta, who threw two balls and one strike to Luis Urías and immediately fell off the mound, clutching his arm in pain. Tyler Rogers entered the game and was charged with the eventual walk to Urías, who, along with Margot moved up a base on Rogers’ subsequent wild pitch. But San Francisco’s submariner got Hedges to ground out to second, ending the inning and preserving the tie.

When Webb left the game, he had pitched 5 2/3 innings and allowed just that one run, which was earned. He had given up seven hits and struck out an equal number of Padres. He had walked only one Friar. Of the 91 pitches he had hurled, only 33 were balls.

The Giants loaded the bases against Lucchesi with one out in the bottom of the sixth. Posey reached first on a hard grounder to second that García couldn’t handle and which went for a single. Rickhard singled to left, and Belt walked. But Dubón hit into a double play, García, unassisted, to Hosmer.

When Alex Dickerson pinch hit for Rogers to open the bottom of the seventh, he faced Craig Stammen, who had relieved Lucchesi, and greeted him with a line single to center. The departing lefty’s line was six IP, one run, early and earned, eight hits, one walk, and three strikeouts. Now neither starter could get the decision, but both could be proud of a job well done.

Tom Watson started the eighth for the Giants and gave up a lead off triple to Machado. One out later, Josh Naylor drove him home with a single to left through a drawn in infield. Watson stranded him by administering a strike out to Margot and getting Urías to sky out to Pillar, but the damage had been done.

Will Smith was brought in to try to hold the Padres in check and keep the game within reach, but Hedges started off the ninth for the Padres with a single to left center, and Wil Myers administered San Diego’s offensive coup du grace with a homer to center that left Pillar dangling frustrated on the wall.

Kirby Yates, who got the save, ended the game by striking out the three Giants he faced in the bottom of the ninth.

It was a tough loss, but as Cassius says in Shakekspeare’s Julius Caesar, “The fault dear Brutus is not in our stars / But in ourselves….” (But tell that to Reyes Moronta).

Stammen, now 7-6, earned the win. He pitched two innings of shutout ball, striking out two, and allowed one hit. Yates was credited with the save, his 39th.

The defeat leaves San Francisco, at 66-69, in third place in the NL West, seven games out of the wild card running, and with a wild card elimination number of 21 and 27 games remaining in which to stave it off.

The teams will go at it again tomorrow afternoon at 1:05 p.m. It will be lefty Eric Lauer (7-8, 4.48 ERA) facing righty Tyler Beede (3-8, 5.56 ERA).

Bumgarner shines, Giants rout Padres 8-3

Photo credit: @SFGiants

By Lewis Rubman

San Diego: 3 | 7 | 1

San Francisco: 8 | 13 | 0

SAN FRANCISCO — Last night, the Giants were helpless against the Padres’ Chris Paddock, and they fell short in their comeback attempts against relievers Matt Strahm and the fireballing Andrés Muñoz. They looked to do better in tonight’s fray against the Padres. They were, after all, facing Dinelson Lamet instead of Paddock as their opponents’ starting pitcher, and that was a hopeful sign, but nowhere near a guarantee of success. Even though Lamet was only 2-2, 4.30 since his July 4 return from Tommy John surgery, the Giants had reason to be wary of the big right-hander from the Dominican. Before his injury, Lamet had shown promise with only a fast ball and slider in his repertoire. As fangraph’s Ben Clemons reports, since then Lamet has broadened the range of his sliders, throwing both hard and tight ones, so that, for practical purposes, he’s now a three pitch, or perhaps a two and two-half pitch, pitcher.

What put the Giants in a better position as far is pitching is concerned than they had been in yesterday was that they were not starting with the struggling Dereck Rodríguez on the mound. Rather, it was their ace, Madison Bumgarner, at 8-8, 3.71 ERA, toeing the rubber for the home team. Not vintage numbers for Mad Bum, but this year’s version isn’t a vintage Giants team.

The new quality of Lamet’s slider was was irrelevant to the first two batters he faced. Milke Yaztremski slammed a 95 mph four seam fastball down the first base foul line past Eric Hosmer, and Hunter Renfroe slipped trying to retrieve the ball. Yaztremski ended up on third with a little league triple, AKA a major league three-base error, charged to Hosmer. Two pitches later, Brandon Belt sent Lamet’s 96 mph four seamer into the right field stands for his 16th round-tripper of the year.

Lamet wisely used his curve to get Evan Lorriga to swing and miss on a 3-2 count for the first Giant out. The inning ended with San Francisco ahead 2-0 after Alex Dickerson popped out to third and Manuel Margot made a fine grab of Brandon Crawford’s sinking liner to left center, but not before the Giants had threatened again with Buster Posey’s single to center and Kevin Pillar reaching base when he was hit by a pitch.

Lamet settled down after that, and, in the top of the fourth, it was the Padres’s turn to use the long ball. Manny Machado drove a 3-2 cutter into the left center field bleachers to cut the Giants’ lead in half. It was his 28th home run and 75th RBI. Renfroe folowed with a solid single to left center, and the Giants’ slim margin suddenly seemed insecure. But now it was Bumgarner’s turn to settle down, which he did by coaxing a 6-4-3 double play out of Hosner and getting Ty France to ground out to third on a nice play by Longoria.

The Padres’ fifth also ended with a noteworthy piece of defensive work by the Giants. After Urías flew out to right, a patient Austin Hedges worked the count full and walked. Lamet attempted a sacrifice bunt on Bumgarner’s first offering, but he popped it up, Belt caught it, and threw to Dubón, covering first, to complete the double play before Austin could scamper back to first.

After this important failure at the plate, the Padres’ starter faltered on the mound. Yaztremski took his first pitch, a 96 mph two seam fast ball, yard. His blast landed in the left field bleachers, his 18th dinger in his 81st game. San Francisco’s two-run lead was re-established.

That ended Lamet’s labors for the night. His line was three runs, two earned, on three hits in five innings. He struck out 10 and walked two. 63 of his 95  pitchers were strikes. All in all, it was a pretty decent outing, especially when you consider his early difficulties. His replacement, Michael Baez, also experienced some early trouble, some of it not of his own doing, some that was. Posey’s infield single was an example of the former; Crawford’s one-out double off the center field fence, which sent Posey to third, of the latter. But Baez escaped when Posey was thrown out at home trying to score on Dubón’s weak grounder to second and whiffed with a mighty swing at a 2-2 97 mph four-seamer.

That one inning was enough for Baez. Out he went, and in came Robbie Erlin, and there went SanDiego’s chance to stay in the game. Yaztremski singled to left center. Belt, ditto, Yaz to second. Longoria, ditto, Yaztremski scoring, Belt to second. Joe Rickhard pinch hit for Dickerson and singled to center, driving in Belt and sending Longoria to second. Posey singled to right, loading the bases. Pillar’s sac fly to left plated Longoria. Crawford and Dubón ground out second. That added three runs to the Giants’ score, and they led, 7-2.

With a lead like this, Bochy could afford to relieve Bumgarner, who leaves with a line of one run, which, was earned, on four hits and two walks in seven innings. He struck out nine. He got the win, putting his record at 9-8, 3.62. Lamet would be saddled with the walk.

MadBum was replaced by Tony Watson, who gave back one run on a triple that Yaztremski almost caught in right and an RBI ground out by Greg García, who had entered the game in a double switch when Erlin replaced Baez.

But no one replaced Erlin until Oscar Allen pinch hit for him in the top of the ninth. This gave the Giants the chance to score two more runs on doubles by Austin Slater, pinch-hitting for Tony Watson, Belt, and Longoria.

The one San Diego scored off Tyler Rogers, who pitched the ninth, was a footnote.

The Giants’ won-lost record now stands at 66-68. They are seven games out of a play off spot and have an elimination number of 22 with 28 games to go.

In a pair of pre-game moves, the Guants placed catcher Francisco Mejía on the 10-day injured list and recalled Austin Allen from Sacramento to take his place.

Tomorrow’s 6:05 game will pit San Diego’s southpaw Joe Lucchesi (9-7, 4.11 ERA) against the Giants’ righty Logan Webb (1-0, 4.66 ERA) for the west coast orange and black.

One last note: Charge me with an error for having reported in my last dispatch that Mauricio Dubón made his major league debut in last night’s game. It was his first game as a Giant.

San Francisco Giants podcast Part I with Michael Duca: High praise for Giant rookie Dubon; great with glove at second base

sfgate.com photo: Mauricio Dubon #19 of the San Francisco Giants runs to first base for a single for his first Major League hit in the fifth inning of their game against the San Diego Padres at Oracle Park on August 29, 2019 in San Francisco, California. 

On the Giants podcast with Michael:

#1 San Francisco second baseman Mauricio Dubon is the player the Giants just might be looking for at second. On Thursday night at Oracle Park, he made a great defensive stop at second for a put out in the second inning.

#2 Dubon also got his first big league hit with shot down the right field line, which he got the retrieved ball for a souvenir.

#3 Dubon had also studied a lot of film on the key stone combination of Giant shortstop Brandon Crawford and former Giants second baseman Joe Panik. Dubon showed his handy work on a 1-4-3 double play. Dubon is showing that he brought some skills up from the minors.

#4 After having such a great rookie year last season, Giants pitcher Derek Rodriguez struggled. Rodriguez gave up two home runs to the Pads on Thursday night and manager Bruce Bochy might rethink having Rodriguez in the rotation and Derek might find his way back in the bullpen.

#5 This will be the last September for call-ups. Next season, the roster will be kept down to 26. What will that feel like and was it a mistake to take away the 40-man call-up roster in September next season?

Michael Duca does the Giants podcasts each Friday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco Giants podcast Part II with Michael Duca: Dubon might be the second bagger that the Giants have been looking for

mercurynews.com photo: San Francisco Giants second baseman Mauricio Dubon swings at a third inning pitch. In the second inning Dubon picked up his first big league hit of his career Thursday night against the San Diego Padres at Oracle Park in San Francisco.

On the Giants podcast with Michael:

#1 San Francisco second baseman Mauricio Dubon is the player the Giants just might be looking for at second. On Thursday night at Oracle Park, he made a great defensive stop at second for a put out in the second inning.

#2 Dubon also got his first big league hit with shot down the right field line, which he got the retrieved ball for a souvenir.

#3 Dubon had also studied a lot of film on the key stone combination of Giant shortstop Brandon Crawford and former Giants second baseman Joe Panik. Dubon showed his handy work on a 1-4-3 double play. Dubon is showing that he brought some skills up from the minors.

#4 After having such a great rookie year last season, Giants pitcher Derek Rodriguez struggled. Rodriguez gave up two home runs to the Pads on Thursday night and manager Bruce Bochy might rethink having Rodriguez in the rotation and Derek might find his way back in the bullpen.

#5 This will be the last September for call-ups. Next season, the roster will be kept down to 26. What will that feel like and was it a mistake to take away the 40-man call-up roster in September next season?

Michael Duca does the Giants podcasts each Friday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants fall to Padres 5-3

Photo credit: @Padres

By Lewis Rubman

San Diego: 5 | 8 | 0

San Francisco: 3 | 8 | 0

SAN FRANCISCO — The 65-67 Giants opened a four-game series at Oracle Park hoping to inch back to the .500 mark against the lackluster Padres.

San Diego sent rookie Chris Paddack, arguably their best starter, to the mound. Paddack’s traditional statistics, 7-7, 3.84 ERA were mediocre enough, but so was his team’s won and lost record of 61-71, which put them in fourth place in the five team NL West Division. And Paddack has some eye-catching advanced statistics. Going into the game, he could boast of a WHIP of 1.03 and had struck out 121 batters in 117 1/3 innings, while walking only 27, all the while holding opposing batters to a measly on OPS of .668. The tall righty throws the traditional pitchers’ repertoire of fast ball, curve ball, and change of pace, the first and last more frequently than the curve. He hadn’t much of a chance to display his talents in his previous start, a disaster in which he surrendered six runs to the Red Sox in 2 1/3 innings. He sure showed them tonight.

Giants starter, Dereck Rodríguez, toed the rubber, dragging a record of 5-6, 5.26 ERA behind him but still, I assume, hoping to regain the form that had made him so exciting in his rookie 2018 season. D-Rod’s pitching in the opening frame gave the Giants’ rookie second baseman, Mauricio Dubón, making his major league debut, a chance to strut his defensive stuff as the two combined to turn a nifty 1-4-3 double play on Manny Machado to close out the inning. In the Pads’ next turn at bat, Dubón was even more impressive, robbing Wil Myers of a single with a diving grab of the San Diego right fielder’s shot behind second base and a bullet-like throw to first. Mike Yaztremski then stole a single from Luis Urías with another diving catch, this one of a sinking liner to short right.

Rodríguez’s stretch of being saved by brilliant fielding came to an end in the top of the third. With one out, Paddack sent a slow hopper to short that he would have beaten out even if Brandon Crawford could have handled it cleanly, which he didn’t. Then Manuel Margot launched a 2-0 four seamer into the left center field bleachers, and the Giants were looking up at a two-run San Diego lead. Doubles by Josh Naylor and Eric Hosmer to left and right center, respectively stretched the deficit to three.

Yaztremski came close to committing larceny a second time when he dove for Urías’s falling fly just in front of the 309 foot sign and just inside the right field foul line. The result was Urías’s first career triple and the prelude to Austin Hedges’ home run to left, his 10th of the season, upping the Padres’ lead to 5-0.

The worm finally turned a tiny bit against Paddack in the home fourth. After Yaztremski led off by striking out, making it 10 consecutive Giants that Paddack had dispatched since he threw his first pitch of the game, Brandon Belt blasted a change up into McCovey Cove, and the Giants were on the board. That’s only a figure of speech; the main scoreboard showed lots of pictures but no in- game statistics until a Wil Myers thumb nail made a cameo appearance in the top of the ninth.

Dubón laced his first hit in the bottom of the fifth, a one-out single to right that sent Kevin Pillar from first to third. But Rodríguez struck out and Yaztremski flew out to left, leaving the Padres still ahead 5-1 after five innings of play. Those five innings were enough for Rodríguez, who was removed and replaced by Jandel Gustave at the start of the sixth. Rodríguez had thrown 72 pitches (49 strikes). All five of the runs allowed were earned, and they came on eight hits. He struck out three batters and yielded no walks, a slight consolation. Gustave followed him with two innings of perfect relief before giving way to the veteran Fernando Abad for the eighth. He, too, hurled a perfect frame.

After pitching seven outstanding innings, in which he threw 92 pitches (67 strikes) and surrendered only one run (earned) on five hits and no walks while striking out eight, Paddack was replaced by lefty Matt Strahm.

Strahm’s work was not outstanding, but it was serviceable. He gave up singles to pinch hitters Donovan and Joey Richard and a walk to Belt to load thee bases with nobody out. Bu then he induced Evan Longoria to hit into a run scoring 5-4-3 double play and got Alex Dickerson out on a fly ball to Manuel Margot in left center.

Sam Coonrod retired the Friars on two called strike outs interspersed by a hit batter, Myers, who promptly was thrown out stealing.

It was left to Andrés Muñoz to defend San Diego’s 5-2 lead in the ninth. He struck Posey out on a full count. Then he K’d Pilar. Crawford walked on a 3-2, 99 mph four-seamer and advanced to second on a wild pitch with Stephen Vogt, pinch-hitting for Coonrod, at-bat. Vogt brought Crawford home on a double to right, closing the scoring gap to 5-3. But Donovan grounded out to short to end the game. Muñoz broke 100 mph several times in his inning of relief.

Paddack got the well-deserved win and Muñoz, the exciting save. The loss went to Rodríguez. None of the Giants’ relievers allowed a run.

At 65-68, San Francisco is seven games behind in the race to be the second wild card team. Their elimination number is 23.

The probable starters for Friday night’s contest will be right-hander Dinelson Lamet (2-2, 4.30 ERA) for San Diego with left-hander Madison Bumgarner (8-8, 3.71 ERA) going for the home team.

Time for Giants’ young players to get a look

Photo credit: sfexaminer.com

By Jeremy Harness

Slowly but surely, the chances of sneaking into the postseason in the National League have slipped away for the Giants. The back-to-back losses to the Arizona Diamondbacks on Monday and Tuesday seemed to solidify that fact.

At this point, the Giants have decided that it’s about time to give their young prospects a taste of the major leagues, and to see what they can do going forward.

On Tuesday, the Giants released second baseman Scooter Gennett, whom they had acquired at the trade deadline but, other than a brief road trip to Colorado, never really got going. He hit only .234 during a stint that lasted slightly less than a month.

In the process, the team called up right-handed reliever Tyler Rogers, a 28-year old who has a side-winding delivery that features his knuckles coming within inches of scraping the mound, from Triple-A Sacramento.

Coming to Oracle Park with him is infielder Mauricio Dubon, whom the Giants have high hopes for and also grew up a huge Giants fan. He originally came to the Giants organization days before the deadline from Milwaukee when starter Drew Pomeranz and reliever Ray Black were dealt to the Brewers.

He is expected to get plenty of starts at second base and will share time with emerging infielder Donovan Solano, who can also play shortstop to spell Brandon Crawford.

The Giants are now 65-67 and are now in third place in the National League West, and they have slipped to six games back in the wild-card race.

The Giants will host the San Diego Padres, a team that has long forgotten about the postseason despite high expectations going into the 2019 season, for a four-game series that starts tomorrow night.