San Francisco Giants podcast with Morris Phillips: Doval demoted to triple A Sacramento; Reliver just couldn’t get tracked

Camilo Doval San Francisco Giants reliever on Sun Jun 16, 2024 throws down an ice chest after a rough outing against the Los Angeles Angels at Oracle Park in San Francisco was demoted to triple A Sacramento on Fri Aug 9, 2024 (NBC California TV still)

On the SF Giants podcast with Morris:

#1 Morris, talk about the struggles that Giants reliever Camilo Doval had as Doval was demoted on Friday night to triple A Sacramento.

#2 Doval as opposed to his All Star season he had in 2023 in 46 relief appearances had cooled off with a raised ERA and career worst 4.70.

#3 Asked about what is expected from Doval for his path to get back the show Giants manager Bob Melvin said, “When you’re a guy like him, you don’t expect to hear that, so he’s processing it right now and hopefully he takes it the right way and gets back here and does the role that he’s done in the past very successfully,”

#4 Doval has 22 saves in 27 opportunities what Melvin and the Giants are looking at he’s allowed 42 hits and of the 25 runs he’s surrendered 23 which were earned runs. Do you see this demotion an effort to try and settle him down?

#5 You saw him throw the ice chest in the dugout after being lifted on Sun Jun 16th, he was no doubt frustrated and even after that incident he still couldn’t get tracked. What are some of the things that he needs to work on in Sacramento.

#6 Morris, talk about reliever Ryan Walker and his role as the closer now. Walker as of Saturday is 7-3, ERA 2.24 and is expected to do some impressive work in the closing role.

Morris Phillips is a podcast contributor at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants return to cold and foggy San Francisco for big 3-2 win over Tigers; Canha comes through with RBI sac fly in 9th

Mark Canha(16) of the San Francisco Giants gets the waterworks after hitting a walk off sac fly to score Michael Conforto for the gamer against his old teammates the Detroit Tigers at Oracle Park in San Francisco in the bottom of the ninth on Fri Aug 9, 2024 (AP News photo)

Friday, Aug. 9, 2024

Oracle Park

San Francisco, California

Detroit Tigers 2 (55-62)

San Francisco Giants 3 (60-58)

Win: Tyler Rogers (2-4)

Loss: Jason Foley (3-4)

Time: 2:28

Attendance: 33,037

By Stephen Ruderman

The Giants returned home after an insane day and incredible win in Washington, D.C. Thursday to beat the Detroit Tigers Friday night thanks to three sacrifice flies, including a walk-off sacrifice fly by Mark Canha, 3-2. 

The Giants won one helluva 10-inning game played under the gun, as everyone was trying to get out of Washington, D.C. before Tropical Storm Debby hit. The Giants were able to get out of town, and returned to the cold and foggy confines of San Francisco.

It has always felt great for players to get back to San Francisco after a trip to the hot and humid conditions of the Midwest and East Coast during the Dog Days of Summer. However, considering everything that went down Thursday, there’s a very good chance that the Giants got in very late, and thus, they would have some jetlag Friday night.

Friday night, the Giants would kick off a seven-game homestand with a 2012 World Series rematch against the Detroit Tigers on this cold and foggy night at Oracle Park. Left-hander Robbie Ray took the mound for his fourth start of the season, and he pitched a scoreless top of the first inning to open things up.

Giu Urshela led off the top of the second with a double to left field. Urshela got to third on a wild pitch, and he scored on a sacrifice fly by Ryan Vilade to put the Tigers on the board.

The Tigers went with the bullpen game Friday night, and Beau Brieske was the opener. Brieske was solid over three no-hit innings against a tired and jet-lagged Giants’ offense, as he struck out five. 

Ray pitched a scoreless top of the third, and he pitched his first 1-2-3 inning of the night in the top of the fourth. Former Dodger Kenta Maeda came in, and he threw three perfect innings from the fourth through the six.

Javier Baez doubled to lead off the top of the fifth, and then he stole third and scored on an error to make it 2-0. Ray escaped further damage in the top of the fifth, and he was able to get out of a jam in the top of the sixth unscathed.

Ray was a bit shaky Friday night, as he only pitched one 1-2-3 inning, but he still gave the Giants a solid quality outing. Ray gave up two runs and five hits over six innings, while walking five and striking out seven.

The Giants were getting no-hit as the game went to the bottom of the seventh, but that ended when Tyler Fitzgerald lined a base-hit to left-center field off Maeda to start the inning. Heliot Ramos then singled Fitzgerald over to third, and the Giants had runners at the corners with nobody out.

Michael Conforto came to the plate, and he got the Giants on the board with a sacrifice fly to left. Maeda retired the next two, and the game went to the eighth with Detroit still up 2-1.

Landen Roupp, who was called up prior to the game, pitched 1-2-3 innings in the seventh and eighth, and Maeda returned to the mound for the Tigers in the bottom of the eighth.

Mark Canha lined a base-hit the other way to right to start the bottom of the eighth, and he got to third on a base-hit by Brett Wisely. Patrick Bailey then tied the game with a sacrifice fly to center.

Submariner Tyler Rogers came in for the Giants in the top of the ninth, and he threw a 1-2-3 inning. That sent the game to the bottom of the ninth still tied, and the Giants had a chance to win it.

Jason Foley, who came in for Maeda to finish the bottom of the eighth, was back out for the bottom of the ninth for Detroit. Heliot Ramos was the first up, and hit a ground ball up the middle just to the right of second base to second-baseman Colt Keith. However, Keith kicked it, and Ramos was aboard to start the inning.

Michael Conforto walked, and Matt Chapman was hit in the head to load the bases. Thankfully, Chapman was wearing a helmet, and he stayed in the game after he was checked on.

Tigers Manager A.J. Hinch brought in the veteran and former Giant, Shelby Miller. Mike Yastrzemski hit a ground ball to first, and Ramos was out at the plate on a 3-2 fielder’s choice.

The bases remained loaded for Mark Canha, who grew up a Giants fan, and who was playing in his first home game as a Giant in the park he came to as a kid. With the count 2-2, Canha flew out to just shy of the warning track out in left, and Conforto came in to score the winning run for a magical moment that Canha would never forget.

Tyler Rogers was the winning pitcher, and Jason Foley was the loser.

Not a single run scored Friday night on a base-hit, and four of the five runs scored in this game came on sacrifice flies.

It was another big win for the Giants, who have now won 11 of their last 14 games to tie their season-high two games over .500 at 60-58. They are now just two games back of the Mets, who were shut out 6-0 in Seattle Friday night, for the third wild card spot in the National League.

The Giants will try to get to three games over .500 for the first time this season Saturday afternoon. Logan Webb (9-8, 3.42 ERA) will be on the mound for San Francisco, and the Tigers will go with another bullpen game with their opener still to be determined. First pitch will be at 1:05 p.m.

National League Wild Card Standings:

1. Padres 65-52 +3.5

2. Diamondbacks 64-53 +2.5

3. Mets 61-55 —

Braves 60-55 0.5

Cardinals 60-57 1.5

GIANTS 50-58 2.0

Cubs 58-60 4.0

Pirates 56-59 4.5

Reds 56-60 5.0

Giants News and Notes:

  • Closer Camilo Doval was sent down to Triple-A Sacramento following his blown save in Washington yesterday. Doval had been one of the best closers in Baseball over the last two years, and he went to the All-Star Game last year in Seattle.

Doval got off to a great start this season, but after a blown save in which he gave up two earned runs on May 21 in Pittsburgh, things went downhill for him. He gave up four runs in a blown save against the Yankees on June 2, and continued to struggle over the next two-plus months afterwards.

  • Bob Melvin announced prior to the game that Ryan Walker will be the interim closer while Doval gets things together in Sacramento. Walker is 7-3 with a 2.24 ERA this season, and he has shined in some big situations, which has earned him the trust from his skipper to be the closer as the Giants continue to battle through this pennant race.
  • Catcher Jakson Reetz was also optioned to Sacramento. Right-handed reliever Landen Roupp was called back up, and catcher Curt Casali was activated off the Paternity List following the birth of his son, Cole.
  • According to Jon Heyman of the New York Post, the Giants are open to a long-term deal with Matt Chapman. Chapman, who was signed in Spring Training this season, has been great at the hot corner, as well as in the clubhouse. While Chapman was signed to a three-year deal, he does have an opt-out after next season.
  • As the Giants and Tigers square off in this 2012 World Series rematch, the Giants will have their 2014 world champion reunion prior to Saturday’s game. In attendance will be a variety of players, coaches, trainers and front office members from the team that won the Giants’ third world championship in five years.

Former players in attendance will be Buster Posey, Madison Bumgarner, Brandon Belt, Hunter Pence, Joe Panik, Tim Hudson, Michael Morse, Jeremy Affeldt, Gregor Blanco, Travis Ishikawa, George Kontos, Javier Lopez, Jake Peavy, Ryan Vogelsong, Yusmeiro Petit, Juan Perez, Sergio Romo, Andrew Susac, Jean Machi, Ehire Adrianza, Gary Brown, Juan Gutierrez, Chris Heston and Brandon Hicks.

Former coaches in attendance will be Ron Wotus, Dave Righetti, Tim Flannery, Mark Gardner, Shawon Dunston. Taira Uematsu, who is still on the Giants’ coaching staff, will also take part in the ceremony.

Final Thoughts:

For the third time this season, I gave up on this team, and for the third time, they have come right back to prove me wrong. 

I said at the start of the season that the Giants would get off to a slow and frustrating start over the first two-to-four months of the season and then get it together, but after their brutal 2-5 road trip to start the second half, the Giants were six games under .500 at 49-55 and five and a half games back of the Padres for the third wild card spot.

I just felt that there was no way. The frustrations amongst the players over how Farhan Zaidi was running things were clearly mounting for the third-straight year, and this team seemed poised to collapse just as they did the last two years.

However, something feels different this time, and I really think it’s the manager. Gabe Kapler may have been the most laissez-faire manager in the history of the game. This is the guy who told his players that his preferred way of communication was texting, even if his players were in the same room with him. With the frustrations with Farhan mounting, and a manager that players felt they could not really talk to, the last two years ended in utter disaster, and by the end of last season, Kapler had completely lost the clubhouse.

I don’t know for a fact that Bob Melvin has made the difference this season, but I highly suspect he has. With this team on the verge of collapsing in the second half for the third year in a row, Melvin has been a stabilizing force that has held this team together, and they have turned things around to win 11 of their last 14.

I trashed Farhan for his moves at the Trade Deadline on July 30. He didn’t trade Blake Snell for prospects, and the best he got offensively was Mark Canha. Then on Aug. 2, Snell threw his no-hitter in Cincinnati. Thursday, Canha went 4-for-5 to lead the Giants to their biggest win of the season, and he walked off Friday night with a sacrifice fly.

Farhan knows the Giants most likely have to go to the Playoffs for him to keep his job, and so far his moves have paid off. The Giants are now back at their season-high two games over .500 at 60-58, and they trail the Mets by just two games for the third wild card.

I definitely feel a lot more excited right now, but this team is very streaky, and they have a long 44 games still in front of them. Right now, the Giants are benefiting from having the easiest schedule in Baseball, but the real test of this team is going to come when the schedule gets much more difficult when they go to Seattle on Aug. 23.

When the Giants start their three-game series in Seattle against the Mariners on Aug. 23, they will suddenly have one of the hardest schedules in Baseball the rest of the way with 30 of their final 33 games coming against teams over .500. 

I really do believe in this team’s ability to go to the Playoffs, and the Giants have shown that they can beat the elite teams in Baseball this season, but they really need to continue to take advantage of the easy schedule in front of them over the next 13 days and get a lot of momentum going into what is going to be a very difficult final 33 games.

As of right now, I just don’t know if the Giants are going to go to the Playoffs. This is baseball, and anything can happen, but the one thing I do know is that the offense is going to have to collectively stay hot and keep getting the big RBI hits with runners in scoring position if they want to go to the Playoffs. 

The Giants’ rotation has been solid all season, and with the real Blake Snell finally showing up and Robbie Ray back, the rotation is the best it’s been all season. However, Camilo Doval’s struggles have dampened what has otherwise been a pretty good bullpen. If Doval can get it together in Sacramento and return to his old self, the Giants could suddenly have one of the best seventh-eighth-and-ninth-inning trios in all of Baseball. Ryan Walker in the seventh; Tyler Rogers in the eighth; and the Camilo Doval we know in the ninth will be absolutely lethal

The Giants are a young good team with some growing pains, and they have an offense that is capable of staying hot the rest of the way. All the moves have been made, and this clubhouse has remained strong following the moves at the deadline. They are gelling together and showing what they are capable of.

All we can do at this point is sit back and see what this team does over their final 44 games, but if the offense stays consistent, and if Doval can come back and be his old self, this team will stand a good chance of getting into October Baseball.

Giants win insane 9-5 game in 10 innings to escape tropical storm and take series in D.C.

San Francisco Giants Jerar Encarnacion heads home after a tenth inning bunt single by Brett Wisley against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park in DC on Thu Aug 8, 2024 (AP News photo)

Thursday, Aug. 8, 2024

Nationals Park

Washington, D.C.

San Francisco Giants 9 (59-58)

Washington Nationals 4 (52-64)

Win: Camilo Doval (4-1)

Loss: Robert Garcia (2-4)

Save: Camilo Doval (23)

Time: 3:26 (2:02 rain delay)

Attendance: 12,423

By Stephen Ruderman

The Giants battled through one helluva game in D.C. that featured two rain delays and went 10 innings to pull off their biggest win of the season, as they won it 9-5 to win this four-game series against the Nationals and get back over .500 for the first time since the end of May.

As the Giants tried to get back over .500 for the first time since an off day on May 30, today’s game would be played under unusual circumstances. With Tropical Storm Debby closing in on Washington, the game was moved up four hours, and there was an urgency to get this thing in. However, with spotty storms out ahead of the main storm itself, that was going to make things quite difficult.

They were already up against the clock in this one. Little did anyone know just how crazy this game would be.

It was a matchup of left handers. DJ Herz took the ball for the Nationals, and the red-hot Tyler Fitzgerald would lead things off. Fitzgerald went hitless last night, but he wasted no time today, as he lined a double to left field to start the game.

Michael Conforto and Matt Chapman both walked with one out, and that brought up Mark Canha. Canha worked the count full, but on the payoff, he was wrung up on a changeup a few inches off the plate by Home Plate Umpire Stu Scheurwater.

It was a call that would most likely have not been made if this game was not up against the clock, but Scheurwater most likely wanted hitters to swing the bat today. Bob Melvin, who Scheurwater threw out after a foul tip call on April 21, let Scheurwater know just how he felt, and Melvin was tossed out of the game.

The Giants were able to get a run when Jerar Encarnacion walked following Melvin’s ejection, but the Giants certainly felt that they should have had at least two runs.

Kyle Harrison made the start for the Giants, and the Nationals responded in the bottom of the first. Alex Call walked with one out and stole second. With two outs, Keiburt Ruiz fisted a base-hit to left field, which scored Call to tie the game.

Herz pitched a scoreless top of the second, and Harrison threw a 1-2-3 bottom of the second. After Michael Conforto singled to start the third, the rains came, and the tarp was pulled onto the field.

The game resumed, and after Canha singled with two outs in the top of the third, Mike Yastrzemski put the Giants back ahead with a ground rule double to left-center.

Harrison then threw a scoreless innings in the bottom of the third and fourth, and Eduardo Salazar did the same in the top of the fourth. After Jacob Barnes threw a scoreless inning for Washington in the top of the fifth, the Nationals made some noise in the bottom of the fifth.

Luis Garcia lined a base-hit to center to start the bottom of the fifth and stole second. Jacob Young sacrificed Garcia over to third, and CJ Abrams got Garcia in with a sacrifice fly to right to tie it at 2-2.

After Abrams’ sacrifice fly, Harrison was out of the game. Harrison did alright through four and two thirds innings. He only threw 61 pitches, but sitting through the rain delay earlier most likely shortened his outing, as that can take a toll on starting pitchers.

Sean Hjelle finished the bottom of the fifth for the Giants, and Barnes threw another scoreless inning in the top of the sixth. Jordan Hicks came in for the Giants in the bottom of the sixth, and pitched through a base-hit and a walk for a scoreless inning.

The game then started to somewhat move along, as former Giant Derek Law pitched a scoreless top of the seventh for the Nationals. Erik Miller was brought in for the bottom of the seventh. Ildemaro Vargas would be the first hitter Miller would face. Vargas hit a fly ball to deep left field, and left-fielder Michael Conforto leapt up at the wall to take away a home run from Vargas. For Miller, he ended up pitching a 1-2-3 inning. Despite all the scoreless innings, there didn’t seem to be that many 1-2-3 innings in this one.

The rain started to come down again as the game moved to the eighth. Canha led off the top of the eighth against Law and hit a sharp ground ball to third that hit off the glove of Ildemaro Vargas, and Canha reached on an infield hit. First Base Umpire and Crew Chief Mark Carlson called for the tarp, and the game went into its second rain delay.

Law voiced his displeasure with Carlson. Perhaps Law wanted the delay before the inning started, but he would just have to settle for it coming after Canha’s infield hit.

Law was back out after the second delay ended, and he ended up throwing a scoreless inning. Ryan Walker then threw a 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the eighth.

Kyle Finnegan came in for Washington in the top of the ninth. With one out, Tyler Fitzgerald lined a base-hit to left for his second hit of the game. Heliot Ramos walked, and he and Fitzgerald executed a double steal of second and third. Conforto then walked to load the bases, but Chapman struck out for the second out.

The rain started coming down again, and with two outs and the bases loaded, it would be up to Mark Canha. Finnegan got ahead in the count 1-2, and then Canha got a high fastball and lined it the other way to left for a base-hit. Two runs scored to give the Giants the lead, but after right-fielder Alex Call’s throw home went into the camera well, Conforto scored, and it was 5-2.

It was Canha’s fourth hit of the game, and at that point, the biggest hit for the Giants this season. He was originally awarded second base, but upon review, it was determined that that Call made the throw after Canha had reached third—the rule is that the runners advance two bases at time of a throw that goes out of play—and Canha was awarded third.

The Giants were three outs away from their biggest win of the season and getting back to over. 500,, as Camilo Doval came in for the bottom of the ninth. However, with Doval in, it would get dramatic.

The rain kept falling, and it got heavy, as the stadium lights shined off the infield dirt. This was an official game, but with two rain delays already in the books; a tropical storm on its way; and the fact that suspending this game and playing it at a later date would require some drastic shifts in the two games’ schedules, they kept playing.

Doval walked two, but he also got two outs. The left-handed-hitting Luis Roberts was at the plate, and Doval got ahead 1-2. Doval was a strike away, but Roberts took a 1-2 98-MPH cutter at the top of the zone and hit a home run the other way to the corner in left to tie the game. How Roberts hit that ball out the other way through the rain, I’ll never know, but Doval had blown his fifth save of the season.

The Giants were a strike away from their biggest win of the year and getting back over .500, but it was immediately snatched from them out of thick rainy air. Fortunately, Doval was at least able to get this game to the 10th.

As Robert Garcia, who finished the top of the ninth, threw his warmup pitches, the grounds crew at Nationals Park spent several minutes putting new dirt in the infield. The rain had stopped for the most part, and with dry new dirt in the infield, we were a go for the 10th.

Of course, Jerad Encarnacion, who made the final out in the top of the ninth, was the automatic runner at second for the 10th. Yastrzemski led off the inning by hitting a ground ball to short. Encarnacion foolishly took off for third, and was going to get nailed, but the throw from shortstop CJ Abrams was offline, so everyone was safe.

Brett Wisely was up, and Bob Melvin, who had been sitting either in his office or the runway between the clubhouse and the dugout since his ejection in the very first inning all those hours ago—and who I assume was still managing the game under the shadows—put on the safety squeeze. Wisely got the bunt down and reached first, and Encarnacion scored to give the Giants their lead back.

Patrick Bailey also laid down a bunt, and as Garcia attempted to nab Yaz at third, the throw was dropped by Vargas at third. The bases were now loaded, but Garcia retired the next two.

Conforto then came up with two outs, and he blooped a fastball off the fists into left for a base-hit, and two scored to make it 8-5. Joan Adon came in, and Chapman singled to center to score Bailey and make it 9-5

Taylor Rogers would be the man tasked with closing this baby out in the bottom of the 10th, and he threw a 1-2-3 inning to end this insane game.

When it was all said and done, Camilo Doval got the win, despite blowing the save, and Robert Garcia suffered the loss.

You really have to hand it to the Giants for grinding through this game. They scored nine runs without a single home run, and they went 5-for-21 with runners in scoring position.

Considering the circumstances this game was played under; the Giants’ status in this pennant race; and the ups and down of this wild game itself, they truly showed the fight and resilience of a playoff team.

The Giants improve to 59-58, and with the Braves suffering their fifth-straight loss, the Giants now trail the Braves by two and a half games. However, the Mets won their game to leapfrog the Braves for the third wild card spot, so the Giants are three out. A gain of a game would have been nice, but you can’t complain about a gain of a half game.

The Giants return home for a 2012 World Series rematch against the Detroit Tigers in a series that will feature a 2014 Giants reunion. The series will start tomorrow night with Robbie Ray (2-1, 4.40 ERA) taking the ball for the Giants. First pitch will be at 7:15 p.m.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Chapman homers and Snell goes 6 innings in 7-4 win in DC

San Francisco Giants Matt Chapman (left) get a congratulatory hand shake from third base coach Matt Williams after hitting a home run in the top of the fifth inning at Nationals Park in DC on Wed Aug 7, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 Heilot Ramos and Matt Chapman both contributed with a home run a piece in the top of the fifth inning at Washington’s Nationals Park in a three run 7-4 win. Michael talk a bit about the Ramos and Chapman homers.

#2 The homers by Ramos and Chapman broke a 3-3 tie in the fifth inning and it seems the Giants are getting those clutch hits at critical times.

#3 Ramos is swinging hot bat as Ramos hit a home run in second straight game and Chapman nearly scored a cycle he needed just a triple to accomplish it.

#4 The Giants are going well they have won nine of their last 12 games. Mike Yastrzemski also added some run production with a solo home run and an RBI triple. Talk about how Yastrzemski’s offense has made a difference in the line up.

#5 One more thing about Blake Snell he was coming off the no hitter to pitch against the Nationals and on Wednesday and turned out another successful outing going six innings, gave up four hits, three runs, one walk and eight strike outs. He certainly has recovered from his long injury.

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

Snell strikes out eight in six innings, and offense comes to life for Giants in somewhat-dramatic 7-4 win over Nats

San Francisco Giants pitcher Blake Snell delivers against the Washington Nationals in the bottom of the third inning at Nationals Park in DC on Wed Aug 7, 2024 (AP News photo)

Wednesday, Aug. 7, 2024

Nationals Park

Washington, D.C.

San Francisco Giants 7 (58-58)

Washington Nationals 4 (52-63)

Win: Blake Snell (2-3)

Loss: Jake Irvin (8-10)

Save: Camilo Doval (22)

Time: 2:36

Attendance: 13,310

By Stephen Ruderman

It came with a little bit of drama, but the Giants clicked on all cylinders Wednesday night, as the offense was able to combine power with some timely RBI hits, and Blake Snell delivered another strong quality outing for his second win to get the Giants back to .500 with a much-needed 7-4 win over the Nationals in D.C.

The Giants were unable to get back over .500 Tuesday night, as they lost a tough one 11-5. The Giants’ offense, which has been home run happy since their three-game set in Cincinnati over the weekend, jumped out to a 4-0 lead Tuesday night, but was unable to catch up after the Nationals pounded Hayden Birdsong for seven runs.

Wednesday night would be another overcast and humid night in our nation’s capital, as the Giants looked to get back to .500 again. The Giants scored in the top of the first inning in each of the first two games of this series. However they were unable to do so tonight against Nationals’ starter Jake Irvin, who pitched a scoreless top of the first.

Blake Snell took the ball for the Giants Wednesday night, as he was coming off his long-awaited first win as a Giant in his last start, in which all he really did was throw a no-hitter.

Snell made history in his last two starts. In his previous start prior to his no-hitter on Friday, he struck out 15 over the first six innings of the first game of the Giants’ doubleheader against the Colorado Rockies on July 27, becoming the first pitcher in Modern National League/American League History to do so.

Perhaps expecting him to accomplish another sort of historic achievement would be a tall order, but the Giants had every reason to feel confident with him on the mound. Spoiler Alert: He did not pitch another no-hitter tonight. Juan Yepez singled and stole second with two outs in the bottom of the first, but Snell ended up pitching a scoreless inning regardless.

Matt Chapman doubled to lead off the top of the second, but of course the Giants wasted it, as Irvin retired the side. Snell then threw a 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the second.

Irvin retired the first two men he faced in the top of the third, but the Giants avoided the 1-2-3 inning when LaMonte Wade reached on a bloop single. Heliot Ramos singled back to the mound, and a pair of hits that did not go very far suddenly put runners at first and second with two outs.

Michael Conforto has been swinging the bat better as of late, and he came up with a chance to get a key RBI hit with a runner in scoring position. Conforto fisted a ball out into shallow center field, which Nationals’ center-fielder Jacob Young was unable with, and Wade scored to put the Giants on the board.

Next up was Matt Chapman. Chapman hit a chopper to third that Trey Lipscomb charged and threw to first. Chapman was called out by First Base Umpire Stu Scheurwater, which meant that the inning was over. However, after the Giants challenged the play, Chapman was safe, and Ramos scored to make it 2-0.

The Giants may have struck first, but just like last night, the Nationals struck back with a crooked number. Snell walked Jacob Young to start the bottom of the third and allowed him to get to second when he tried to pick Young off at first, but threw the ball away.

Young got to third on a ground out by CJ Abrams, and that brought up Alex Call, who got Young in with a base-hit to left. The Nationals were on the board, and then Juan Yepez gave them the lead with a home run just fair down the left field line.

Mike Yastrzemski tied the game with a home run to right-center in the top of the fourth, and Snell settled back down in a scoreless bottom of the fourth. With one out in the top of the fifth, Heliot Ramos flipped a home run to the Giants’ bullpen in left-center to put them back ahead.

Two batters later, Chapman hit a home run of his own to almost the exact same spot in the Giants’ bullpen in left-center. The Giants manufactured a pair of runs, so of course they had to hit three home runs. Anyway, Snell followed it up with a 1-2-3 shutdown inning in the bottom of the fifth.

In the top of the sixth, the Giants were at it again. Jose Ferrer came in for Irvin to start the inning, and he immediately hit Tyler Fitzgerald. Yastrzemski then pulled a bullet down the right field line for a triple that scored Fitzgerald and extended the Giants’ lead to 6-3.

Jerar Encarnacion was next up, and he joined the hit parade with a base-hit up the middle to center, which scored Yastrzemski to make it 7-3. See, there’s a couple of manufactured runs for you. They can still do it.

Snell threw a 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the sixth, and his night was over. He may not have struck out 15 or thrown a no-hitter, but he still pitched a quality outing, and other than the three-run bottom of the third, quite a strong inning. Snell gave up just four hits and struck out eight. Simply put, the Giants are getting the real Blake Snell now.

Eduardo Salazar replaced Ferrer to finish the top of the sixth, and Salazar came back out to throw a 1-2-3 top of the seventh.

Erik Miller was the new pitcher for San Francisco in the bottom of the seventh, and he ran into trouble after a one-out triple by Riley Adams. Miller was able to get a brief reprieve when Young flew out to shallow center and was unable to get Adams in.

Though maybe it would have been for the best if Adams scored, because it would have been a rally killer, and it would still be a three-run game. With the rally still going, Miller walked Lipscomb on four pitches, and Abrams poked one off the end of the bat for a base-hit to left, which knocked in Adams to make it 7-4.

Now the tying run was at the plate, and Bob Melvin went out to bring in Ryan Walker. Alex Call lined a base-hit to left, and things were now starting to get a little scary. Juan Yepez was up and worked the count full. On the payoff pitch, Walker got Yepez to strike out swinging at a beautiful filthy slider right on the outside corner, and the crisis was averted.

Everyone could take a deep breath, and the game moved to the eighth. Tanner Rainey threw a 1-2-3 inning for Washington in the top of the eighth, and submariner Tyler Rogers did the exact same for the Giants in the bottom of the inning.

After Joan Adon then threw a 1-2-3 inning in the top of the ninth for the Nationals, it was time for Camilo Doval in the bottom of the ninth. Doval pitched his first 1-2-3 inning in over a month on Monday, so he had to make it dramatic Wednesday night.

Doval hit Keibert Ruiz to start the inning, and Young singled to right to put runners at first and second and bring the tying run up to the plate with nobody out. Here we go again.

Luis Robert Jr. pinch-hit and moved the runners over to second and third, and Abrams walked to load the bases with one out. It was now time to be scared again.

After Giants Pitching Coach Bryan Price came out for a chat, Alex Call stepped up to the plate as the potential winning run. With the year that Doval has had, it was time to fear the worst. However, on the very first pitch, Call chopped into a 6-4-3 double play, and just like that, the game was over. Disaster was averted, and the Giants were back to .500.

Blake Snell got his second win; Jake Irvin took the loss; and Camilo Doval picked up his 22nd save, though he did not make it easy.

Wednesday night’s game was a healthy mix of power and timely situational hitting for the Giants, and as I’ve said many times, they will have to consistently keep getting the timely RBI hits the rest of the way if they want to go to the Playoffs.

Heliot Ramos and Mike Yastrzemski both hit two-hit nights, and Matt Chapman had three hits. As for Tyler Fitzgerald, since he’s been on a tear, and everyone wants to know how he did, he went 0-for-3. It happens.

The Giants are indeed back to .500, as they improve to 58-58. With the Braves’ 10-0 shellacking at the hands of the Milwaukee Brewers, the Giants are now three and a half games back of Atlanta for the third wild card spot.

Thursday is getaway day, and the Giants can take the series and cap off a 5-2 road trip with a win. Kyle Harrison (6-5, 4.09 ERA) will take the mound for the Giants, and DJ Herz (2-4, 4.27 ERA) will start for the Nationals.

Remember, with the outskirts of Tropical Storm Debby coming into D.C. later Thursday, the game has been moved up to 12:05 p.m. in Washington, and a very-early 9:05 a.m. in San Francisco.

National League Wild Card Standings:

*1. Diamondbacks 63-52 +2.0

*2. Padres 63-52 +2.0

  1. Braves 60-53 —

Mets 60-54 0.5

Cardinals 59-56 2.0

GIANTS 58-58 3.5

Pirates 56-57 4.0

Cubs 57-60 5.0

Reds 55-59 5.5

*Tiebreaking procedures taken into effect.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman: Nats hitting too much for Giants Birdsong; Snell starts for Giants today

Washington Nationals James Wood (right) steals second base on San Francisco Giants second baseman Casey Schmitt (left) in the bottom of the sixth inning on Tue Aug 6, 2024 at Nationals Park in DC (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Stephen:

#1 The Washington Nationals James Wood hit a home run, tripled, and scored four runs as the Nationals closed the gap on the San Francisco Giants Tuesday night in a 11-5 win.

#2 Wood also walked twice and stole two bases for the Nats. He’s been an asset for Washington.

#3 Nationals manager Dave Martinez said the game went from “gloom and boom” talk about how the Giants pitching just couldn’t hold them Tuesday night.

#4 For the Giants Michael Conforto hit a three run home run, doubled and walked but it wasn’t enough for San Francisco.

#5 3:45pm PT for today’s first pitch for the Giants LHP Blake Snell gets the call (1-3, ERA 4.29). For the Nationals RHP Jake Irvin (8-9, ERA 3.56) at National Park.

Stephen Ruderman is a podcast contributor at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Home run-happy Giants get off to fast start but unable to catch up after Nationals pound Birdsong to win 11-5

San Francisco Giants centerfielder Heliot Ramos misses the ball hit by the Washington Nationals Alex Call in the bottom of the sixth inning at Nationals Park in DC on Tue Aug 6, 2024 (AP News photo)

Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2024

Nationals Park

Washington, D.C.

San Francisco Giants 5 (57-58)

Washington Nationals 11 (52-62)

Win: MacKenzie Gore (7-9)

Loss: Hayden Birdsong (3-1)

Time: 3:02

Attendance: 17,044

By Stephen Ruderman

The San Francisco Giants got off to a great start and seemed poised to get back over .500, as they scored four runs in the first inning, but Hayden Birdsong could not hold it, and the Washington Nationals ended up winning a wild one by a final of 11-5 Tuesday night at Nationals Park in DC.

The Giants finally had a chance to get back over .500 for the first time since an off day on May 30. They were in a solid position to do so, as had their young phenom, Hayden Birdsong back up and going for them Tuesday night.

There has been some wild weather on the East Coast. Games in New York and Cleveland were postponed, but fortunately, the storm system stayed north of the Beltway, so this game was a go on an overcast but humid night in D.C.

The Giants have been home run happy since they clubbed eight home runs over the weekend at Great American Smallpark in Cincinnati. They also hit two home runs enroute to their 4-1 win in the series opener Monday night.

Tuesday night, they immediately kept it going in the top of the first inning against Nationals’ starter MacKenzie Gore. Tyler Fitzgerald, who led off last night’s game with his 12th home run of the season, flew out to center field to start the game. However, Helliot who was back in the lineup after missing two games due to his jammed right thumb, then hit a home run out to right-center.

Matt Chapman walked with two outs, and then Mark Canha was hit by a pitch. That brought up Michael Conforto, and what did he do? You guessed it; he hit a three-run shot to right-center.

Birdsong had himself a 4-0 lead, and he took advantage of that with a scoreless bottom of the first inning. However, MacKenzie pitched a scoreless inning in the top of the second, the heat and humidity got to Birdsong in the bottom of the second.

James Wood led off the inning with a triple out to center and scored on a ground out by Travis Blankenhorn. Alex Call and Ildemaro Vargas walked, and then Jacob Young fisted a base-hit up the middle to center to knock in Call and make it 4-2.

That brought up CJ Abrams. Birdsong got Abrams to a 1-2 count, and then Abrams took a high fastball from Birdsong and tomahawked it out of the yard to right to suddenly put the Nationals ahead 5-4.

The Giants wasted an opportunity against MacKenzie in the top of the third, but with how home run happy they’ve become, that should be expected.

Birdsong had yet to give up more than three runs in a game, but he had just suddenly just given up five runs in. It may have caught Birdsong and the Giants off guard, but the Nationals were ready to go again in the bottom of the third.

Keibert Ruiz led off the inning with a home run to right to make it 6-4. James Wood then walked, and that ended the night for Birdsong. Wood stole second after Bob Melvin brought in Randy Roriguez, and he scored on a base-hit by Alex Call.

Birdsong gave up seven runs over two-plus innings when all was said and done. It ballooned his ERA all the way up to 4.73, which is unfortunately going to happen when you have a bad outing in just your seventh game. He just needs a few more solid outings like he’s had, and that ERA will be right back down.

Birdsong gave up seven runs over two-plus innings when all was said and done. It ballooned his ERA all the way up to 4.73, which is unfortunately going to happen when you have a bad outing

The Giants got some hope in the top of the fourth. Fitzgerald led off the inning with a base-hit to left, and that brought up Ramos. Ramos singled to left, and then it went under the glove of left-fielder James Wood, which allowed Fitzgerald to score all the way from first.

The Giants had a runner at second and the tying run at the plate with nobody out, and they had a golden opportunity to come right back in a game that had quickly turned into a slugfest. However, Gore retired the side, and the Nationals kept their 7-5 lead.

The Nationals tacked on another run against Rodriguez in the bottom of the fourth to make it 8-5, and the Giants wasted a leadoff double by Matt Chapman in the top of the fifth. Gore set down the side after Chapman’s double to end his night, and that started a streak of 12-straight Giants set down by Nationals’ pitching.

Former Giant Derek Law threw two 1-2-3 innings in the sixth and seventh, and Robert Garcia pitched a 1-2-3 inning in the top of the eighth. The Nationals scored a run off Taylor Rogers in the bottom of the sixth when Call doubled in Wood to make it 9-5. Call hit the double off Sean Hjelle, who had come in for Rogers.

Washington scored two more when Wood hit an opposite-field shot to left-center off Hjelle in the bottom of the eighth to make it 11-5.

Fitzgerald hit a double off Tanner Rainey to lead off the top of the ninth, but of course, Rainey retired the side in order to end the game.

Through this craziness, MacKenzie Gore got the win, and Hayden Birdsong suffered his first major league loss. As I said, this was eventually going to happen to Birdsong. It happens

“Our situational at-bats were terrible tonight,” Melvin bluntly told reporters after the game.

It was true, and with the Giants being completely home run happy right now, it is costing them big time with runners in scoring position. If they are to make a serious run at the Playoffs, they can not continue to play this way.

The Giants fall back to under .500 at 57-58, and their standing in the wild card race will depend on what the Padres do against the Pirates in Pittsburgh. At the moment, the Padres hold a 4-0 lead in the top of the eighth.

The Giants can bounce back and get back to .500 with a win in the third game of this series. Though they’re 3-11 in that position. Blake Snell (1-3, 4.29 ERA), who will be making his first start after his no-hitter Friday, will go Wednesday. Jake Irvin (8-9, 3.56 ERA) will make the start for the Nationals.

Just like Monday night and Tuesday night, first pitch will be at 6:45 p.m. in D.C., 3:45 p.m. PT in San Francisco.

National League Wild Card Standings:

  1. Padres 62-52 +1.0
  2. Diamondbacks 61-52 +0.5
  3. Braves 60-52 —

Mets 59-54 1.5

Cardinals 58-56 3.0

Pirates 56-56 4.0

GIANTS 57-58 4.5

Reds 55-58 5.5

Cubs 56-60 6.0

Giants News and Notes:

Wilmer Flores, who has been dealing with tendinitis in his right knee throughout much of the season, is now done for the year following the non-surgical Tenex procedure on his right quad tendon Tuesday afternoon.

Flores, who turned 33 years old today, and is in his fifth season with the Giants, was hitting .204 with just four home runs. He is a free agent at the end of the season, but he has a $3.5-million player option for next season.

With Hayden Birdsong called up, reliever Spencer Bivens was sent down to the Double-A Richmond Flying Squirrels.

Catcher Curt Casali was placed on the Paternity List, and catcher Jakson Reetz was called up from Triple-A Sacramento

The weather north of the Beltway is not the only storm system expected to affect our nation’s capital this week. With the remnants of Tropical Storm Debby expected to impact the Beltway starting late Thursday and early Friday, Thursday’s game, which had originally had been scheduled for the late afternoon, had been moved up to 12:05 p.m. EDT/9:05 a.m. PDT.

Major League Baseball News and Notes:

The Chicago White Sox, who tied the 1988 Baltimore Orioles for the second-longest losing streak in Baseball History at 21 games, finally snapped their losing streak with a 5-1 win over the Oakland A’s Tuesday night at the Oakland Coliseum.

The White Sox will not catch the 1961 Philadelphia Phillies, who lost a modern major league record 23 games in a row.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Giants open four game stint with Nationals tonight in DC

Cincinnati Reds Elly Del La Cruz (right) slides stealing third base as third baseman Matt Chapman (left) looks for the throw at Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati on Sun Aug 4, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko:

#1 San Francisco Giants Matt Chapman belted 17th home run of the season that helped the Giants in their six runs win over the Red Legs 8-2.

#2 The Giants had Tyler Fitzgerald and LeMonte Wade Jr both hit a home run as the Giants took two out of three from the Reds.

#3 The Giants in the bottom of the sixth avoided the Reds from tying up the game when Chapman barehanded a ground ball hit by TJ Friedl and throwing out Elly De La Cruz at first base.

#4 Taking a look at Chapman’s home run again Chapman hit a two run blast off Reds pitcher Carson Spiers who dropped his record to 4-3.

#5 Giants open a four game series in Washington on Monday night starting pitcher for the Nationals Patrick Corbin (2-8, ERA 5.88) and for the Giants Logan Webb (8-8, ERA 3.49) first pitch 3:45pm PT.

Marko Ukalovic is a podcast contributor at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman : Giants Chapman homers beat Reds by six runs 8-2 at Great American

San Francisco Giants Matt Chapman runs the bases after hitting a two run home run in the top of the eighth inning at Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati on Sun Aug 4, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman:

#1 San Francisco Giants Matt Chapman belted 17th home run of the season that helped the Giants in their six runs win over the Red Legs 8-2.

#2 The Giants had Tyler Fitzgerald and LeMonte Wade Jr both hit a home run as the Giants took two out of three from the Reds.

#3 The Giants in the bottom of the sixth avoided the Reds from tying up the game when Chapman barehanded a ground ball hit by TJ Friedl and throwing out Elly De La Cruz at first base.

#4 Taking a look at Chapman’s home run again Chapman hit a two run blast off Reds pitcher Carson Spiers who dropped his record to 4-3.

#5 Giants open a four game series in Washington on Monday night starting pitcher for the Nationals Patrick Corbin (2-8, ERA 5.88) and for the Giants Logan Webb (8-8, ERA 3.49) first pitch 3:45pm PT.

Stephen Ruderman is a podcast contributor at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Ray strong over five innings, as Giants pull away with five-run eighth en route to 8-2 win

San Francisco Giants Matt Chapman connects for a single in the top of the eighth inning against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati on Sun Aug 4, 2024 (AP News photo)

Sunday, Aug. 4, 2024

Great American Ballpark

Cincinnati, Ohio

San Francisco Giants 8 (56-57)

Cincinnati Reds 2 (53-58)

Win: Robbie Ray (2-1)

Loss: Carson Spiers (4-3)

Time: 2:55

Attendance: 27,692

By Stephen Ruderman

The Giants have now won seven of their last nine, Robbie Ray gave a strong five-inning, nine-strikeout performance, and the Giants pulled away with a five-run top of the eighth inning to put an 8-2 beating on the Reds and take the series in Cincinnati on Sunday.

After Blake Snell’s no-hitter on Friday, the Reds beat the Giants in a weird and boring game Saturday night. Sunday, the Giants had a chance to take the series on a clear and sunny Sunday afternoon at Great American Ballpark.

Unfortunately for Giants’ and Reds’ fans, many of them would not be able to watch today’s game. Why? Because it was on Roku, which requires a paid subscription. Way to grow the game, Rob!

Anyway, Carson Spiers made the start for the Reds, and he got the afternoon started with a 1-2-3 top of the first inning. Robbie Ray made his third start of the season for the Giants, and he, too, pitched a 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the first.

After the Giants went scoreless in the top of the second, Jeimer Candelario put the Reds on the board with a two-out solo home run to left field in the bottom of the second. On the very next pitch, Santiago Espinal followed it up with a home run of his own to left-center to make it 2-0.

After Spier pitched a 1-2-3 inning in the top of the third and Ray threw a scoreless bottom of the third, the Giants were ready to strike in the top of the fourth. Tyler Fitzgerald lined a base-hit to left to start the inning, and with one out, Matt Chapman tied the game with a home run to center field.

Ray threw a 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the fourth, and Spiers threw a scoreless top of the fifth. Ray ran into some trouble in the bottom of the fifth when Espinal singled to lead off the inning and stole second and third. The Reds were in perfect position to retake the lead with Espinal at third and one out, but Ray got out of it by striking out the side.

That would be it for Ray, who had thrown 86 pitches. Still, he gave the Giants exactly what they needed, as he struck out nine over five innings.

The momentum stayed in the Giants’ dugout, and they immediately seized on that momentum in the top of the sixth. On the first pitch of the inning from Spiers, LaMonte Wade gave the Giants the lead with a home run to right.

Ryan Walker came in for San Francisco in the bottom of the sixth, and he was immediately in trouble after he hit Elly De La Cruz to start the inning. Cruz got to third with one out, but Walker retired the next two he faced, and the Giants kept their 3-2 lead going to seventh.

Tony Santillan, who finished the top of the sixth for Spier, combined with Sam Moll for a scoreless inning in the top of the seventh. Erik Miller retired the first two men he faced in the bottom of the seventh, but after a two-out walk to Joey Wiemer, Bob Melvin went to Tyler Rogers, who hadn’t pitched in eight days. Rogers got Tyler Stephenson to ground out, and we went to the eighth.

Moll stayed in for Cicinnati in the top of the eighth. After a one-out single by Wade, Reds Manager David Bell pulled Moll for Fernando Cruz. Cruz would face the red-hot Fitzgerald, who was named the National League Rookie of the Month in July, and Fitzgerald hit his 11th home run of the year out to left-center to extend the Giants’ lead to 5-2.

For the Giants, they were just getting started. Patrick Bailey walked, and Chapman doubled to put runners at second and third. The Giants had been getting home run happy at Great American Smallpark, but after Bell brought in Yosver Zulueta, Michael Conforto lined a double off the end of the bat to left-center to score a pair and make it 7-2.

The Giants manufactured a pair of runs, which made this particular writer happy. Young slugger Jerar Encarnacion nearly hit one out to center, but it went off the wall, and Encarnacion had to settle for a measly RBI double that made it 8-2.

Rogers has been used quite a bit this season, but he hadn’t been used in eight days, so Melvin decided to leave him in in the bottom of the eighth of a six-run game to get some work in. Rogers didn’t disappoint, as he threw a shutdown 1-2-3 inning.

The Giants put runners at first and second against Zulueta to start the top of the ninth, but they were unable to further add on to their lead. Spencer Bivens came in for the bottom of the ninth, and pitched a scoreless inning to close it out.

It looks like the Giants needed to play the Rockies for four and then go to Great American Smallpark for three to get the offense back on track. The Giants got big days from Wade, Fitzgerald, Chapman and Conforto. Wade and Conforto each went 3-for-5; Fitzgerald went 2-for-4; and Chapman went 2-for-5. Conforto in particular had a good series, as he has gone 5-for-8 in his last two games.

For the housekeeping notes: Robbie Way got the win; and Carson Spiers got the loss.

The Giants have now won seven of their last nine, as they improve to 56-57. The Diamondbacks were losing 4-0 to the Pirates in Pittsburgh, but they have since come back to take a 5-4 lead. If the Pirates can come back late, the Giants will be just three and a half games back of the Diamondbacks for the third wild card.

The Giants will not head to our nation’s capital to take on the Washington Nationals for a four-game set. The Giants are 2-11 when they have a chance to get back up to .500, but perhaps it could be different in the series opener Monday night.

Logan Webb (8-8, 3.49 ERA) will be on the mound, fresh off his complete game shutout on Wednesday, and he will be opposed by the long-time veteran left-hander, Patrick Corban (2-11, 5.88 ERA), who has had a miserable season. First pitch will be at 6:45 p.m. in D.C., and 3:45 p.m. back home in San Francisco.

Giants News and Notes:

Heliot Ramos, who jammed his right thumb during the Giants’ doubleheader against the Rockies on July 27, was out of the lineup Sunday. Ramos has since gone 3-for-21, all singles. He is listed as day-to-day.

As mentioned above, Tyler Fitzgerald was named the National League Rookie of the Month for July, which was capped off by an incredible week in which he hit eight home runs in ten games.