San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman: Giants hope to win four game series Sunday against Diamondbacks

San Francisco Giants Wilmer Flores (41) greets Patrick Bailey (right) just slugged a bottom of the fifth inning home run against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sat Apr 19, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman:

#1 Stephen, Giants catcher Patrick Bailey really dug in against the Arizona Diamondbacks pitching with three runs and four hits.

#2 One of Bailey’s hits was a two run home run which landed in McCovey Cove and it was the first time a ball was not a splash hit in the cove as it was caught by a kayaker. Although still went into the books as the 165th splash hit in the cove.

#3 Bailey said it was pretty cool to go four for four, have a ball land in the bay and have your own bobblehead all on the same day.

#4 Stephen talk about Jung Hoo Lee got two hits and now is on an 11 game hit streak talk about his focus at the plate to hit in 11 straight games.

#5 Sunday’s pitchers at Oracle Park, the Diamondbacks are going with Merrill Kelly (2-0 ERA 2.19) he’ll be opposed by Giants starter Jordan Hicks (2-0 ERA 1.57) whose been pitching lights out. This should be a good pitching duel which all starts at 1:05pm PDT.

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

Patrick Bailey Goes 4-4 As The San Francisco Giants Beat The Arizona Diamondbacks 7-3

San Francisco Giants catcher Patrick Bailey goes yard with a bottom of the fifth inning home run off the Arizona Diamondbacks at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sat Apr 20, 2024 (AP News photo)

Saturday, April 20th, 2024

By Troy Ewers

SAN FRANCISCO–The San Francisco Giants bounced back with a 7-3 win this afternoon in a quick turnaround after last night’s 17-1 defeat at the hands of the Arizona Diamondbacks. San Francisco is in the midst of its longest homestand of the season with this 10-game stint…after the Diamondbacks depart Oracle Park following Sunday’s game, the Giants will host the New York Mets for a three game series Monday-Wednesday and the Pittsburgh Pirates for three Friday-Sunday. 

Jung Hoo Lee entered Saturday’s game with a ten game hitting streak still intact following his day off Friday. Lee picked up two hits to extend his hit streak to 11 hits. Lee is slashing .349/.378/.395 with two doubles, an RBI, two walks, two steals and eight runs in that stretch (since April 7). On the mound Saturday was duel between Kyle Harrison for the Giants who went four innings giving up six hits and three runs and Zac Gallen for Arizona who went five innings, nine hits and five runs.

Game recap: Christian Walker got the D-Backs on the board first with an RBI single, 1-0. The Giants took a lead the same inning thanks to a Jung Hoo Lee home run and a Wilmer Flores sac fly that scored Lamonte Wade Jr., 2-1 SF.  Patrick Bailey on his bobblehead day, doubled to center, and scored Wade Jr. 3-1 SF. The Diamondbacks tied it up after Blaze Alexander and Kevin Newman got RBIs, 3-3. 

Bailey had a 4-4 day, but the big moment on his day, hit a two run homer, 5-3 SF. He also had a ground rule double. Lee got an RBI double to add to his streak to 11 games and Michael Conforto hit a single that gave the Giants a 7-3 lead and after Doval came in to close, the game was over and the Giants now hold the series lead. 7-3 SF wins.

Final game in the series is Sunday April 21st and on the mound for the Giants is Jordan Hicks (2-0, 1.57). For the Diamondbacks on the mound is Merrill Kelly (2-0, 2.19) 1:05pm PDT.

Giants Lose 17-1 To The Diamondbacks, Blaze Alexander Sets The Tone For Arizona with Grand Slam

San Francisco Giants starter Blake Snell inflated his ERA to 12.86 after surrendering nine hits on five runs against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Fri Apr 19, 2024 (San Francisco Giants X photo)

Friday, April 29th, 2024

By Troy Ewers

SAN FRANCISCO–Winners of two straight for just the second time this season, the San Francisco Giants (9-12) will look to make it three in a row in the second game of this four-game series with the Arizona Diamondbacks (10-11).

Giants starter Blake Snell makes his third start with SF tonight (second here at Oracle Park). Snell has allowed 10 runs on nine hits (12.86 ERA) over his previous two outings while striking out nine. On the other side, Jordan Montgomery will make his D-Backs debut after he was signed to a 1-year contract on March 29th. The Giants got blitzed by Diamondback hitting late in the game getting squashed 17-1 coming away on Friday night at Oracle Park.

Snell had a good first two innings, but Arizona began to pick at him in the third. Blaze Alexander hit what appeared to be a home run, but after review it hit part of the wall and was ruled a ground rule double. Ketel Marte would then hit an RBI single and score Alexander, 1-0 Arizona. 

In the fourth inning Alexander got another double and scored Eugenio Suarez who got on from a walk, 2-0 Arizona. For the Giants, Jorge Soler brought the score within one run with a leadoff solo homer, 2-1 when we ended the 4th. First home run for the Giants at home this season. 

The Diamondbacks piled on Snell in the 5th inning as Christian Walker hit an RBI single and Randal Grichuk hit an RBI double which scored 3 runs total in the inning and that was it for Blake Snell. He ended his night wih 9 hits and 5 runs on him and his slump continues.

Landen Roupp was on the mound after Snell and in the 7th the D-Backs didn’t stop the offensive assault. Bases loaded, Gabriel Moreno got a double that earned 2 insurance runs, 7-1 Arizona, but after Alexander got on base with a walk, Kevin Newman hit a single and scored 2 more runs, 9-1 Diamondbacks. 

Jordan Mongomery left in the seventh, but stood on business in his D-Backs debut. Only four hits and one run during his outing, the one run being Soler’s homer. 

In the eighth inning if the game wasn’t over already, it was official this inning. Six runs scored for the Diamondbacks. Four of those runs came from Blaze Alexander, his third hit of the night was a grand slam, his first grand slam of his career. 15-1 D-Backs. 

The Giants brought in Tyler Fitzgerald to pitch and two more runs scored for Arizona, 17-1. The Giants had one last chance to pull off an amazing comeback and nothing came from it. 

Jordan Montgomery gets the win and Blake Snell gets the loss, his third. 

Next game in the series will be a day game April 20th with Kyle Harrison (2-1, 4.70) for the Giants and Zac Gallen (3-0, 1.64) for the Diamondbacks on the mound first ptich at 1:05pm PDT.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Troy Ewers: Snell looking for his first win; Lee hoping to extend hit streak to 11 tonight

San Francisco Giants center fielder Jung Hoo Lee celebrates the Giants victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks at Oracle Park on Fri Apr 19, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Troy Ewers:

#1 The San Francisco Giants pitcher Logan Webb had himself an outing on Thursday night here at Oracle Park in San Francisco retiring 19 straight batters. He has his pitches and movement working for him in the Giants 5-0 shutout of the Arizona Diamondbacks.

#2 Webb had five strikeouts and had 13 Diamondbacks grounders and gave up just two hits he had the Diamondbacks off balance.

#3 Webb said the game success was indicative of the team that they are. Webb said that the Giants will grind out at bats and battle to the end. Which they did on Thursday with five runs that were scored with authority.

#4 Troy talk about centerfielder Jung Hoo Lee he’s on a ten game hitting streak, he went two for four on Thursday and nearly legged out an infield ground ball that was flipped by the pitcher to first base to just get him in time.

#5 For Friday night’s docket at Oracle Park starting pitcher for the Diamondbacks Jordan Montgomery (0-0) for San Francisco Blake Snell who has been struggling (0-2 ERA 12.86) first pitch at 7:15pm PDT.

Troy Ewers is a San Francisco Giants beat writer for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Webb retires 19 straight hitters in Giants shutout over Diamondbacks 5-0 at Oracle Park

Logan Webb San Francisco Giants pitcher deals to the Arizona Diamondbacks line up in the top of the first inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Thu Apr 18, 2024 (AP News photo)

Thursday, April 16, 2024

Arizona (9-11). 000 000 000. 0. 3. 1

San Francisco (9-11). 001 000 04x. 5. 8. 0

Time: 2:12

Attendance: 26,896

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Returning from an exhausting six day, six game visit to Florida’s two coasts, in which they went a combined 3-3 against the Miami Marlins and Tampa Bay Rays, the San Francisco Giants (9-11) returned to their home on McCovey Cove to face the landlocked Arizona Diamondbacks (9-11) this evening.

Looking at the pitching matchups, it looked like a chance for the home team to finally start playing at a level that the mid-spring training acquisitions of Matt Chapman and Blake Snell seemed to predict. Snell still was rounding himself into shape, but the Giants were sending Logan Webb, the runner up to Snell in last year’s Cy Young voting, against Arizona’s sophomore right hander Ryne Nelson, and his unprepossessing record of 1-2,5.27 complimenting his rookie numbers of 7-8, 5.53.

But a quick glance at the Diamondback’s media notes yields an unsettling bullet point in its summary of Nelson’s ’23 season: “On June 25 @ Giants, tossed a career-high-tying 7.0 innings. . .retired 15 consecutive batters after a first-inning walk to J.D. Davis and was 1 strikeout short of tying his career high of 7 set in his Major League debut.”

Webb, following his one run, six hit win over the Rays five days ago in St. Petersburg, was in fine fettle tonight, retiring 19 Arizonans in a row between two first inning singles and a one out walk in the seventh. In total, he labored seven frames and allowed only those two hits and that walk.

No other Diamondback reached base safely He logged five strikeouts and threw 102 pitches, 66 of them strikes. He earned the win in San Francisco’s thrilling 5-0 triumph in a game that was closer than its final score would indicate. Webb’s performance improved his record to 2-1, 2.93.

Nelson didn’t get a chance to strut his stuff tonight. Mike Yastrzemski lined the Diamondback’s starter’s 27th offering back to the box, where it caroomed off Nelson’s pitching elbow, which suffered a contusion. The injured hurler retrieved the pellet and threw it to first to end the second inning. He didn’t come out for the third in what was at that point a scoreless tie and so wasn’t involved in the decision

Patrick Bailey greeted Logan Allen, Nelson’s replacement, with a double to left. The Giants escaped The Curse of the Leadoff Double when, one out later Lee got his second straight single on a ball hit just past short and into left center field that was scored as another infield hit. LaMonte Wade, Jr’s sacrifice fly to center put San Francisco ahead, 1-0.

That was all the scoring that the orange and black could muster against Allen in his valiant 4-2/3 innings of emergency relief, over which he allowed three hits and a walk before giving way to Bryce Jarvis with two down in the home seventh.

Tyler Rogers pitched a scoreless top of the eighth, helped by a sensational diving catch by Yastrzemski of Gabriel Moreno’s leadoff dying quail to right.

Jarvis had a rough time in the home half of the eighth. Ex Diamondback Ahmed started things with a leadoff double. Lee reached first on an error by second baseman Ketel Marte. Wade walked to load the bases. Soler forced Ahmed out at home on a grounder to short. Manager Torey Lovullo yanked Jarvis and called on Kyle Nelson to stop the Giants’ rally.

He didn’t. Wilmer Flores pinch hit for Conforto and slammed a double to left, which brought in Lee and Wade. Lee’s tally was unearned. Arizona decided to grant Matt Chapman an intentional walk, making the bases FOG, full of Giants, Estrada flew out to right.

Then Yastrzemski came through with a sharp single to right to plate Soler and Austin Slater, pinch running for Flores, and put San Francisco definitively ahead, 5-0. Bailey’s strikeout ended the inning. All the runs but Slater’s were charged to Jarvis.

Ryan Walker needed only 13 pitches to strike out the three Diamondbacks he faced in the t0p of the ninth to nail down the victory. Jung Hoo Lee’s two singles extended his hitting streak to 10 games.

Arizona’s Jordan Montgomery will make his first appearance of the season Friday, evening at 7:15. Blake Snell (0-1, 12.86) we’ll see if he’s gotten into shape when he takes the mound for the Giants.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Giants open homestand tonight against Diamondbacks in four game series

San Francisco Giants Jorge Soler (2) is greeted after scoring by teammate Patrick Bailey (left) in the top of the second inning at LoanDepot Park in Miami on Wed Apr 17, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Michael:

#1 San Francisco Giants pitcher rookie Keaton Winn went six innings and gave up just a run, gave up four hits and struck four batters and it stood up as the Giants wound up defeating the Miami Marlins at Loan Depot Park 3-1 on a Wednesday matinee.

#2 The Giants got hitting help from Thairo Estrada who got two hits and ended up scoring the go ahead run in the top of the seventh inning. Estrada can be clutch at times and he was the key player on Wednesday.

#3 Estrada has some speed too he had to race home when Nick Ahmed hit into a double play against Marlins pitcher DeClan Cronin.

#4 Winn who picked up his first win at 1-3 said that it was nice to get the monkey off his back and wasn’t trying to think of it and the win just came.

#5 The Giants return back to San Francisco tonight here at Oracle Park as they open a four game series against the Arizona Diamondbacks. The Diamondbacks are just ahead of the fourth Giants in third place and like the Giants are playing .500 ball winning five of their last ten games. Starter for Arizona Ryne Nelson (1-2 ERA 5.27) and for San Francisco Logan Webb (1-0 ERA 3.80) first pitch under the lights at Oracle Park 6:45pm PDT.

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

Giants Squeeze out series win in Miami with 3-1 win over Marlins

San Francisco Giant Thairo Estrada is greeted by teammates in the Giants dugout after scoring in the top of the seventh inning against the Miami Marlins at LoanDepot Park in Maimi on Wed Apr 17, 2024 (AP News photo)

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

LoanDepot Park

Miami, Florida

San Francisco Giants 3 (8-11)

Miami Marlins 1 (4-15)

Win: Kyle Harrison (2-1)

Loss: Declan Cronin (0-2)

Save: Camilo Doval (3)

Time: 2:24

Attendance: 8,290

By Stephen Ruderman

Keaton Winn pitched six solid innings, and the Giants were able to squeeze out a series win in Miami with a 3-1 getaway win over the Marlins.

The Giants, who have been off to a slow start this season, came into Miami after losing two out of three to the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field to face a Marlins team off to a horrendous start. This was a golden opportunity for the Giants and their offense to finally get things going.

However, things have been much more difficult for the Giants than they would have hoped. The Giants were able to come back from down 3-0 to beat the Marlins in a weird game Monday night, but they dropped the second game of the series last night.

Today, the Giants turned to Keaton Winn to try and take the series in a getaway Wednesday afternoon affair in Miami. Winn and the Giants would be opposed by the left-hander, Trevor Rogers.

Rogers set the Giants down 1-2-3 in the top of the first inning, and Winn pitched a scoreless bottom of the first thanks to his defense after giving up a one-out base-hit to Bryan De La Cruz.

Jorge Soler lined a single up the middle and into center field to start the second. Matt Chapman struck out swinging, and then Thairo Estrado hit a double down the left field line to score Soler.

Jesus Sanchez singled to right to start the bottom of the second, but Winn retired the side in order. The game turned into a pitcher’s duel in the early going, as Winn set down nine-straight after Sanchez’s single, and Rogers retired 11-straight Giants after Estrada’s RBI double.

Winn’s streak came to an end when Tim Anderson legged out an infield single to lead off the bottom of the fifth, but Winn got out of it thanks to a fly out by Nick Gordon, and a 6-4-3 double play off the bat of Otto Lopez.

Tyler Fitzgerald lined a base-hit to left to start the sixth. Austin Slater struck out swinging, and Wilmer Flores fouled out, but Jung-hoo Lee reached on an infield hit to the shortstop. That would do it for Trevor Rogers, and Marlins Manager Skip Schumaker brought in Declan Cronin. Soler walked to load the bases, but Chapman grounded out to second to end the inning.

The Giants’ offense had wasted another opportunity, which they have done far too many times in the early going here in 2024, and it would come back to bite them in the bottom of the sixth. Winn retired the first two men he faced in the bottom of the sixth, but De La Cruz tied the game with an opposite-field home run to right.

Cronin was back out for the Marlins in the top of the seventh, and he was right back in trouble, as Estrada and Patrick Bailey both singled to put runners at the corners with nobody out for the Giants.

Nick Ahmed came up and reached for an outside slider that he sharply hit off the end of the bat up the middle, but Marlins’ second-baseman Luis Arraez dove to hit right, stepped on second and threw to first for the 4-3 double play. The Giants did retake the lead on the play, but it was a tremendous play by Arraez, and a tough break for the Giants.

Erik Miller came in and threw a 1-2-3 bottom of the seventh, and Anthony Bender replaced Cronin for the top of the eighth. Bender retired LaMonte Wade and Wilmer Flores to start the inning, but Lee and Soler singled to put runners at first and second with two outs for Chapman, who doubled to right to score Lee.

The Giants led 3-1 in the bottom of the eighth, as Bob Melvin turned to his submariner, Tyler Rogers. Rogers got Nick Gordon to ground out to first, but Avisail Garcia and Emmanuel Rivera singled with one out to put Rogers on the ropes. Fortunately for Rogers, he was able to get Luis Arraez to ground into a 4-6-3 double play to get out of the inning.

Sixto Sanchez came in and walked Patrick Bailey to start the ninth. Bailey even stole second, but Ahmed and Tyler Fitzgerald were both called out on strikes, and Mike Yastrzemski flew out to left to end the inning.

Camilo Doval came in to try and notch down his third save of the season, and he pitched a 1-2-3 bottom of the ninth to close this one out. It wasn’t easy, but the Giants were able to take two out of three from the Marlins to win just their second series of the season.

Winn got his first win of the season; Cronin got the loss; and Doval got his third save.

The Giants improve to 8-11, and they will indeed have a happy flight home, as they will begin a 10-game homestand tomorrow night against the defending National League Pennant Winners, the Arizona Diamondbacks. The Giants will send their ace, Logan Webb, to the mound against the Diamondbacks at Oracle Park tomorrow night with first pitch at 6:45 p.m.

Giants Drop Game Two to Marlins 6-3

San Francisco Giants pitcher Ryan Walker (left) waits on the mound to be relieved as he’s joined by third baseman Matt Chapman (right) in the bottom of the sixth inning at Loan Depot Park in Miami on Tue Apr 16, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

The San Francisco Giants took a 2-0 lead going into the bottom of the fourth in their series with Miami Tuesday. The Marlins were able to tie up the game 2-2 in the bottom of the fourth and extended their lead in the sixth inning scoring three times. Miami scored one more run in the seventh inning winning this game 6-3 and tying up the series.

Jordan Hicks took the mound for the Giants for game two and Ryan Weathers started for the Marlins.

San Francisco took a 2-0 lead after the first three innings. Matt Chapman hit a solo home run in the second inning for an early 1-0 lead. Wilmer Flores doubled in the third inning driving Austin Slater home extending the Giants lead to 2-0.

Miami had a quiet first three innings but came alive in the fourth inning tying the game 2-2. Bryan De La Cruz doubled and base runner Luis Arraez scored and the Marlins were on the board 2-1. Jesus Sanchez grounded into a fielder’s choice to shortstop and De La Cruz scored on a San Francisco error. Going into the fifth inning this game was tied 2-2.

Miami took the lead in the sixth inning. Tim Anderson grounded into a fielder’s choice to third and base runner Josh Bell crossed home plate giving the Marlins their first lead of the game 3-2. With two outs, Miami had the bases loaded with the Luis Arraez at the plate. Arraez singled driving Tim Anderson and Emmanuel Rivera home extending the Marlins lead to 5-2.

Starter Jordan Hicks went five innings for San Francisco allowing 3 hits, 2 runs with 5 strikeouts. Ryan Walker came in to relieve. Miami starting pitcher Ryan Weathers went six innings allowing 5 hits, 2 runs with 10 strikeouts. Burch Smith relieved Weathers in the seventh inning.

The Giants go something going in the seventh inning. With runners on second and third and one out, LaMonte Wade singled, Michael Conforto scored and Nick Ahmed advanced to third. With the one out, San Francisco was in business but still trailing 5-3. Wilmer Flores came to the plate and hit into a double play and the scored remained 5-3 in favor of Miami. This was a lost opportunity for San Francisco.

In the bottom of the seventh inning with two on base Miami’s Nick Gordon ripped a single into right field and Jesus Sanchez scored giving the Marlins a 6-3 lead going into the eighth inning. The Marlins went into the ninth three outs away from winning game two and tying up this series one apiece.

Lefty Tanner Scott took the mound looking to close out this game for the Marlins. Scott did not have any command walking Ahmed and Tyler Fitzgerald back-to-back and the Giants had two on with only one out. Unfortunately Wilmer Flores popped out and Miami had evened up the series winning this game 6-3.

Game notes: Tuesday evening the Giants played the second game of their series with Marlins at Loan Depot Park. Monday, the Giants took game one winning on a single run game 4-3. The Giants rallied in the seventh inning with 3 runs beating the Marlins. Wilmer Florres gave San Francisco the lead with a RBI single in the seventh inning. The Marlins are struggling, they are worst team in the NL, and it all came to a head when Miami manager Skip Schumaker was ejected by the plate umpire in the eighth inning. They did pick up game two of the series Tuesday night in a 6-3 win at LoanDepot.

Game three is scheduled for 9:40 AM tomorrow. Keaton Winn (0-3 ERA 5.06) will take the mound for the Giants and Trevor Rogers (0-2 ERA 4.80) will start for the Marlins. San Francisco will be looking to take the series and the Marlins will be looking for their fifth win of the season.

Harrison settles down and Giants come back to beat Marlins 4-3 in weird game Miami

San Francisco Giants Nick Ahmed scores on a Wilmer Flores hit which was the go ahead run in the Giants three run rally in the top of the seventh inning at Loan Depot Park in Miami on Mon Apr 15, 2024 (AP News photo)

Monday, April 15, 2024

Loan Depot Park

Miami, Florida

San Francisco Giants 4 (7-10)

Miami Marlins 3 (3-14)

Win: Kyle Harrison (2-1)

Loss: George Soriano (0-1)

Win: Tyler Alexander (1-0)

Loss: Blake Snell (0-2)

Save: Camilo Doval (2)

Time: 2:36

Attendance: 8,290

By Stephen Ruderman

The Giants got a much-needed win in a flat-out weird game, as Kyle Harrison settled in for a quality outing after struggling early on, and the Giants came back with three runs in the top of the seventh inning to beat the Marlins 4-3.

The Giants came into Miami after losing two out of 3 against the Tampa Bay Rays over the weekend across the state in St. Petersburg. The good news was that the Giants’ offense had finally woken up, as they scored 11 runs on Saturday, and another four yesterday.

The even better news was that the Giants were coming into Miami to play a Marlins team that was off to an abysmal 3-13 start. The Giants would be up against Edward Cabrera, who would be making his 2024 debut after starting the season on the Injured List due to a right shoulder injury he sustained during Spring Training.

Jung-hoo Lee singled to start the game, but he was caught trying to steal second base, and the Giants went down scoreless in the top of the first inning.

Kyle Harrison made his fourth start of the year and struggled early. After wiggling his way out of a jam in the bottom of the first, his first pitch of the bottom of the second was hit out of the park to left field by Asival Garcia.

Harrison got the next two guys out, but he quickly ran into more trouble. Otto Lopez and Luis Arraez singled, and Bryan De La Cruz hit a line drive to left that went under and past the glove of the diving Michael Conforto. Lopez scored, and when Arraez was waved in, the relay throw from shortstop Nick Ahmed sailed to the backstop.

The Giants trailed the 3-13 Marlins 3-0 going to the third, and they responded by going down 1-2-3 in the top of the third. Harrison walked Tim Anderson to start the bottom of the third, but Anderson was thrown out trying to steal second, and Harrison had himself a mostly-quiet inning.

The Giants only had one hit over the first three innings, but they finally appeared ready to break through against Cabrera in the top of the fourth. Lee walked to start the inning, and after LaMonde Wade struck out swinging for the first out, Jorge Soler singled on a ground ball the other way to right to put runners on the corner with one out for Michael Conforto.

Conforto hit a ground ball that ricocheted off the glove of Marlins’ second-baseman Luis Arraez and into right-center for a base-hit to score Lee and put the Giants on the board. It was now 3-1, and the Giants had runners at first and second with one out, but Matt Chapman struck out looking, and Thairo Estrada grounded into a force out to end the inning.

The Giants’ offense wasted a golden opportunity in the top of the fourth, but fortunately for the Giants, Harrison finally settled down, as he pitched a 1-2-3 bottom of the fourth. Cabrera pitched a scoreless top of the fifth, and Harrison a 1-2-3 bottom of the fifth, as Harrison had set down eight-straight Marlins.

Wade hit a long single off the wall in right to lead off the top of the sixth, but after Soler and Conforto struck out, Wade was caught stealing to end the inning. Meanwhile, Harrison pitched a scoreless 1-2-3 bottom of the sixth.

Harrison struggled early on, but he settled down to retire 11 of the final 12 men he faced, and ended up pitching a quality outing.

Cabrera was also done after six, and he did not disappoint in his season debut, as he walked just one and struck out 10 over six innings.

Cabrera was relieved by George Soriano for the top of the seventh. Chapman lined out to center to start the inning, but Thairo Estrada lined a double down the left field line, and advanced to third on a wild pitch to Mike Yastrzemski, who eventually walked.

The Giants had runners at the corners with one out for Patrick Bailey, who knocked in Estrada with a sacrifice fly to left to make it 3-2. Nick Ahmed walked, and Marlins Manager Skip Schumaker pulled Soriano for the lefty, Andrew Nardi, who would face the top of the Giants’ order.

Lee came up and battled Nardi until he was able to hit a fastball over the outer half of the plate the other way to left for a base-hit to knock in Yastrzemski and tie the game. Wilmer Flores, who has not seen much playing time early this season, but has been money for the Giants in key RBI situations over the last four years, came through with a line-drive single up the middle to score Ahmed and give the Giants their first lead of the night.

Bob Melvin brought in the submariner, Tyler Rogers, for the bottom of the seventh. Otto Lopez reached on a throw in the dirt by Ahmed at short to start the inning. Luis Arraez then laid down a bunt on the first base side that he seemed likely to beat out, but Rogers dove to his left, and flipped the ball to first to get Arraez. It was a great play by Rogers, who was not fazed by the early-inning drama, and set down the next two men he faced to end the inning.

Bryan Hoeing pitched a 1-2-3 top of the eighth for the Marlins, and Ryan Walker came in for the Giants in the bottom of the eighth. Walker got Tim Anderson to ground out to third; gave up a single to Jazz Chisholm; and struck Avisal Garcia out looking.

Then there was some real confusion. Melvin summoned his closer, Camilo Doval, from the bullpen to come in for a four-out save, but for whatever reason, the lefty, Taylor Rogers, came in from the bullpen when Melvin clearly motioned for the right-hander, Doval. Rogers was stopped, and went back to the bullpen, as Doval came in.

Meanwhile, Schumaker was furious that the umpires did not start the warmup clock, and felt like Doval should have been limited in his warmup throws as a result. Schumaker made his frustrations with Home Plate Umpire and Crew Chief quite clear, but surprisingly wasn’t ejected.

Dee Gordon came up to the plate, and on the first pitch to Gordon, which was a strike, Chisholm stole second. Then Schumaker came back out of the dugout and was tossed by Diaz, as Schumaker believed that Doval had thrown a pair of warmup pitches after the clock expired, which if true, should have resulted in two automatic balls. Gordon struck out looking, and that would be that.

Hoeing was back out for the ninth, and pitched a scoreless inning after walking Bailey to start the inning. Doval was back out for the bottom of the ninth, as he tried to complete the four-out save. Jesus Sanchez grounded out to second, and Lopez struck out on a foul tip. That was after Patrick Bailey had to call timeout and use mound visit to keep Doval from walking Lopez on a pitch clock violation.

Doval, who was pitching in just his fourth game this season, was once again struggling with the pitch clock, just as he did in his first outing of the season on March 30 in San Diego, and just as he did early last season.

Arraez lined a base-hit to right after a seven-pitch at-bat, in which Bailey had to use another mound visit to keep Doval from getting called for a pitch clock violation, but De La Cruz struck out swinging to end it, and the Giants held on to win this weird game 4-3.

Harrison got his second win of the season; George Soriano got the loss; and Doval got his second save. Doval is finally settling down after his third-straight rocky start to the season, but after Bailey had to use two of the Giants’ four mound visits to rescue Doval from pitch clock violations, and that is something Doval will have to work on.

The Giants improve to 7-10, and they will send Aaron Hicks to the mound tomorrow night, as they will try to get just their second two-game winning streak and second series win of the young season. First pitch will be at 6:40 p.m. in Miami, 3:40 p.m. back home in San Francisco.

Giants Snell coughs up two HRs and 7 runs over four innings in return to Tampa Bay loss 9-4

Rough outing for San Francisco Giant pitcher Blake Snell as he gives up a hit in the first inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field in St Petersburg on Sun Apr 14, 2024 (AP News photo)

Sunday, April 14, 2024

Tropicana Field

St. Petersburg, Florida

San Francisco Giants 4 (6-10)

Tampa Bay Rays 9 (9-7)

Win: Tyler Alexander (1-0)

Loss: Blake Snell (0-2)

Time: 2:20

Attendance: 19,470

By Stephen Ruderman

The Rays returned the favor after yesterday’s offensive explosion from the Giants, and lit up Blake Snell in his return to Tampa Bay, as they pounded the Giants 9-4 to take the series at the Trop.

After the Giants’ offense was stymied again Friday night in a tough 2-1 loss, they exploded for 11 runs yesterday in a performance that included five home runs. The offense looked to keep it going today in what would be a bullpen game for Kevin Cash and the Rays.

Shawn Armstrong was the opener for the Rays, and the Giants carried their momentum from yesterday into the top of the first inning today. Jung-hoo Lee lined a base-hit to right field to start the game and stole second. Wilmer Flores struck out looking, but LaMonte Wade Jr. singled the other way to left to knock in Lee.

Blake Snell would make the start for the Giants. Snell of course began his career with the Rays, as he was called up in 2016 and spent five years in Tampa. He won the American League Cy Young Award in 2018, and helped lead the Rays to the World Series in the COVID-shortened 60-game sprint season of 2020.

After spending three years in San Diego with the Padres, where he won the National League Cy Young Award in 2022, Snell hit free agency at the end of last season. Snell signed with the Giants late in Spring Training, and made his Giants debut on April 8 against the Washington Nationals. Snell struggled with his control, and gave up three runs over three innings.

Today, Snell would coincidentally be making his second start with the Giants back at Tropicana Field, where it all started for him. It was also his first start and visit to Tampa since being traded following the 2020 Season, as the Padres did not go to Tampa Bay to play the Rays in the last three years.

It was a festive return home for Snell, but once the game started, the Rays wouldn’t be so festive. Yandy Diaz doubled to left-center to start the bottom of the first, and scored on a one-out base-hit off the bat of Randy Arozarena to tie the game at 1-1.

With two outs, Amed Rosario came up and hit a two-run home run to left that barely cleared the fence. Bob Melvin asked the umpires to review the play, which did not use up the Giants’ challenge, as challenges are not required to have a home run-related call reviewed. The call was upheld, and Blake Snell ended up giving up three runs in his first inning back at the Trop.

Armstrong and Snell both calmed down and pitched 1-2-3 innings in the second.

Tyler Alexander came in for the Rays in the third, and pitched a 1-2-3 inning. As for Snell, the Rays got to him for another run in the bottom of the third. Harold Ramirez singled with one out and advanced to second on a ground out by Arozarena. Isaac Paredes then lined a single the other way to right to knock in Ramirez and make it 4-1.

Alexander threw another 1-2-3 inning in the top of the fourth, but Snell ran into more trouble in the bottom of the inning. Snell walked Curtis Mead and Niko Goodrun to start the inning, and struck out Jose Siris for the first out. Rene Pinto then came up and hit a three-run home run barely to the left of straight away center.

Snell finished the fourth without suffering any further damage, but that would be the end of his day. For Snell, it was a rude welcome back home, as he was torched for seven runs over four innings. Snell has struggled in his first two outings. The good news is that he also struggled in April and May last season, and bounced back with a powerful final four months to win the cy young.

Tyler Alexander pitched another 1-2-3 inning in the fifth, as he and Armstrong combined to set down 14-straight Giants after LaMonte Wade’s RBI single in the first. Kai-Wei Tang came in for Snell and pitched a 1-2-3 bottom of the fifth for the Giants.

Tyler Fitzgerald, who got another start today, doubled to lead off the top of the sixth. It appeared that Fitzgerald would be stranded after Lee and Flores couldn’t advance him, but after Austin Slater pinch-hit and walked. Jorge Soler then singled to left to knock in Fitzgerald and make it 7-2.

Rene Pinto hit his second home run of the game, an opposite field shot to right, with two outs in the bottom of the sixth, and Michael Conforto homered to right to lead off the seventh. The home run parade continued when Isaac Peredes homered to left with two outs in the bottom of the seventh to make it 9-3.

The Giants couldn’t do anything with a two-out double in the top of the eighth, and that would do it for Tyler Alexander, who ate up the bulk of the game for the Rays with six innings.

Teng retired the first two men he faced in the bottom of eighth, and then he was pulled for the submariner, Tyler Rogers, who struck out Pinto to end the inning.

Kevin Kelly came in for Alexander in the top of the ninth, and the Giants were able to get to him for a run, as Tyler Fitzgerald tripled in Thairo Estrada to make it 9-4. Jung-hoo Lee then popped out to shallow left, as the Rays’ shortstop, Niko Goodrum, made the catch and nearly collided with Arozarena to end the game.

Tyler Alexander got the win for the Rays, and Snell got the loss, as he is now 0-2 to start the season.

The good news is that the Giants’ offense did somewhat keep the momentum from last night into today. They struck early in the top of the first inning, and were able to get a pair of RBI hits with runners in scoring position.

The Giants are now off to a 6-10 start in their first 16 games, but another piece of good news is that they will make the short trip to the other coast of Florida to Miami, where they will take on the 3-13 Marlins for three games starting tomorrow night. This series will be an opportunity for the Giants to pick up two or three wins, get closer to .500 and give them a bit of momentum.

Kyle Harrison will make his fourth start of the season to start the series tomorrow. First pitch will be at 6:40 p.m. in Miami, 3:40 p.m. back home in San Francisco.