Giants Conforto takes advantage of faltering Padres for 2-1 win

San Francisco Giants hitter Michael Conforto gets a two RBI single in the bottom of the eighth inning to take the lead on the San Diego Padres at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Mon Sep 25, 2023 (@SFGiants photo)

San Diego (77-80). 100 000 000. – 1. 9. 0

San Francisco (78-79). 000 000 02x – 2. 7. 0

Time: 2:23

Attendance: 28,557

Monday, September 25, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO—While no one was looking, the fast fading San Francisco Giants found themselves tied in the National League playoff standings with the until recently tail dragging San Diego Padres. That would have been exciting news a week ago when no team had a chance to catch the Dodgers for the division championship but the final playoff berth was up for grabs, but at game time this warm and somewhat humid Monday evening, both the friars and the hometown Giants had an tragic number of only two with six games to go. Not that it matters much, but the Padres enjoyed a tie breaking run differential of 91 to -16.

Monday night’s terrific, hard fought, come from behind 2-1 Giants win eliminated San Diego from. the wild card race, although it also reduced San Francisco’s elimination number to one with five games remaining to be played.

The Giants, 2-8 in their last ten encounters, sent their tough luck ace, Logan Webb (10-15, 3.35 for the first 156 games of the season; 1-2, 2.36 in September). He turned in a tremendous performance tonight, throwing a 110 pitch complete game victory, in which he gave up nine hits, two of them in a stressful ninth inning, and no walks. The one run scored against him was earned and came in the first frame. The win improved his record to 11-13, 3.25.

The Pads went with Blake Snell, 14-9, 2.33 for the heretofore underperforming San Diegans and leading the majors in ERA, opponents’ batting average, opponents’ slugging average, and hits allowed per nine innings. He threw six shutout frames, stymying the Giants, who left seven runners on base under his watch. Three of them, one in each of the first three frames, were in scoring position.

The Cy Young candidate faced 25 batters, threw them 100 pitches, of which only 35 were balls, and allowed them four hits and chalked up seven strikeouts while two walks. His no decision left him at 14-9 but reduced his already low ERA to 2.25.

Tom Cosgrove relieved him in the bottom of the seventh and, after getting two outs and suffering an infield single from Slater, turned the ball over to Robert Suárez, San Diego’s first right hander of the game, who retired the side on a hard bounder to Ji-man Choi at first.

In spite of that clutch out, the Giants’ eighth inning surge made Suárez the losing pitcher, with a record of 4-3, 4.21.

The visitors struck first with a game opening infield single by Xander Bogaerts, a line double to left by Fernando Tatís, Jr., and Manny Machado’s Texas League single to left. Webb escaped further damage when Luis Matos caught Ha-Seong Kim’s line drive to left and doubled up Tatís, trying to get back to second.

The Friars maintained that one run lead until the bottom of the eighth. With Suárez on the mound, a succession of left handed pinch hitters, with one right handed starter thrown into the mix, putSan Francisco ahead, 2-1.

LaMonte Wade, Jr., batting for JD Davis, walked. The starter, Marco Luciano, doubled to right, sending Wade to third. Joc Pedeson, batting for Mitch Haniger, received an intentional walk to load the bases.

Switch hitter Patrick Bailey’s grounder to first forced Wade out at the plate. And then Michael Conforto, pinch hitting for Héliot Ramos, whacked an opposite field single to left that brought in Luciano and Pederson with the tying and winning runs.

But that didn’t end the drama. Webb didn’t just breeze through the top of the ninth. Juan Soto greeted him with a leadoff single. The Manny you love to hate sent him to second with another safety to center. Both runners moved up 90 feet on Ha-Seongs’s ground out to third.

Wade, now playing first, fielded Ji-Man Choi’s hard shot and threw Soto out at home for the second out. And then Matt Baten grounded out to second.

The three game series will continue tomorrow, Tuesday, evening at 6:45. Bob Melvin’s crew will send Seth Lugo (7-7, 3.79) against the orange and black, who’ll entrust their fate to rookie Kyle Harrison (1-1, 4.85)

Oakland A’s relocation special report podcast with Augie Musenburg: Baseball Commissioner Manfred says Oakland Mayor Thao was not truthful

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred addresses the media. Manfred said this week that Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao is not being truthful regarding getting a new stadium deal done in Oakland (AP file photo)

On the Oakland A’s relocation podcast with Augie Musenburg:

#1 A San Francisco Chronicle column written by John Shea title Oakland vs. MLB as Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred and Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao exchange unpleasantries regarding who dropped the ball in trying to get a deal done in Oakland.

#2 You might recall that during the All Star game in Seattle Mayor Thao went to Seattle and presented Manfred with 30 copies of books for each team owner documenting how Oakland was close to a deal with the A’s before team president David Kaval had called and pulled out. Do you feel that this is the crux of why Manfred has some strong words about Thao after giving him the documentation and he felt she’s not telling the truth?

#3 Manfred said that Mayor Thao was good at pointing out how MLB got this wrong and the A’s got that wrong but questioned if Thao handled getting the A’s deal done in Oakland well Manfred said “Don’t think so.” It should be noted that Thao had been newly elected and had only been in office a few weeks when the A’s said they had a binding deal with Las Vegas while they were in the middle of negotiating with Oakland and backed out of the deal.

#4 Manfred also said that Thao is about to lose her third team, making it sound that this happened under her watch and that she’s not telling the truth. Manfred also said he and Thao never talked about Oakland getting an expansion team and the city keeping the A’s name. Was Manfred upset about being presented the books and that he wants this deal in Vegas all along.

#5 Manfred also said that Thao didn’t reach out to him after winning election. Manfred said that Thao didn’t reach out after she won election and took that Manfred took that as a signal they weren’t negotiating about the A’s anymore.

Augie Mesenburg is a podcast contributor at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Giants loss to Dodgers drops them 5 games back of Wild Card

San Francisco Giants’ LaMonte Wade Jr. celebrates in the dugout after hitting a home run during the fifth inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodgers Stadium in Los Angeles on Sun Sep 24, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast:

#1 Chris Taylor got a tenth inning single that scored the game winning run to help the Los Angeles Dodgers defeat the San Francisco Giants 3-2 at Dodger Stadium.

#2 Things started out in the bottom of the second inning when the Dodgers scored two runs. James Outman hit a two run homer to center right field scoring JD Martinez for a 2-0 lead.

#3 The Giants LaMonte Wade Jr slugged a 408 foot home run to center scoring Tyler Fitzgerald ahead of him to tie the game up 2-2.

#4 The Dodgers who are already in the post season have won three out of the last four with the Giants. The Dodgers are one of the favored teams to have a shot at making the World Series but there is some tough competition which includes the mighty Atlanta Braves.

#5 The Giants return home to host the San Diego Padres at Oracle Park. The Padres will be starting Blake Snell (14-9 ERA 2.33) and for the Giants Logan Webb (10-13 ERA 3.35) with a first pitch at 6:40pm PT.

Join Marko for the Giants podcasts each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Fall to Dodgers in Tenth 3-2; SF Drops 5 Games Back in NL Wild Card

San Francisco Giants’ LaMonte Wade Jr., right, celebrates with Tyler Fitzgerald after they both scored off of a home run hit by Wade Jr. during the fifth inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodgers Stadium on Sun Sep 24, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

Despite having the bases loaded numerous times the San Francisco Giants were unable to get past the Los Angeles Dodgers losing in ten innings 3-2 Sunday afternoon at Dodger Stadium.

The Dodgers were first up on the scoreboard in the second inning. J.D. Martinez doubled followed by James Outman who wasted no time knocking the first pitch out of the park for a 2-0 lead.

San Francisco would tie up the game in the fifth inning. Fitzgerald came to the plate and singled to center. Next up LaMonte Wade Jr. homered to center and this game was all tied up 2-2. It was a brand new ball game.

The deadlock would continue into the eighth inning. Both defenses had really stepped up and there was not a whole lot of offensive action from either team.

In the ninth inning the Giants were on the verge of breaking this tie. They had the bases loaded with Heliot Ramos on third, Marco Luciano on second and LaMonte Wade Jr. was intentionally walked.

San Francisco had a huge opportunity to put some runs up on the board and break the tie. Dodgers pitcher Evan Phillips got out of the inning striking out Mitch Haniger giving Los Angeles the chance for a walk off. A Freeman ground out, a Muncy line out and a Martinez strike out sent this game into extra innings.

In the tenth inning the Giants once again loaded the bases with Estrada, Pederson and Haniger on base and Patrick Bailey at the plate. San Francisco did not want to come away empty a second time.

In a horrible twist of fate the Dodgers pulled off a double play and this game went into the bottom of the tenth. You can only toy with the Dodgers for so long before it bites you in the rear. With Amed Rosario on third base, Chris Taylor singled and that was ball game.

The Giants unable to turn loaded base situations into runs was their downfall in this game. They had every opportunity to win the game but just couldn’t pull it off. Although not mathematically out of a Wild Card it does now look pretty grim.

Giants post game notes: Sunday afternoon the San Francisco Giants (77-79) took on the Los Angeles Dodgers (96-59) in game four of their four game series. The Dodgers won the first game of the series 7-2 as well as the third game in a shutout 7-0.

San Francisco won game two 5-1 and are looking to even this series in game four. The Giants are running out of time with only seven games left and still sitting in sixth place for a Wild Card. They will need a lot of help to get into that third spot and they can’t give up anymore games. Making things worse for the Giants every team that is vying for the Wild Card spots won today. The Phillies, Marlins, Cubs, Reds, and Diamondbacks all winners.

Monday night the Giants will begin a three game series at Oracle Park with the San Diego Padres. On the mound for San Francisco will be Logan Webb. He has a 10-13 win/loss record with a 3.35 ERA. The Giants offense will face the Padres Blake Snell with a 14-9 win/loss record and a 2.33 ERA. Juan Soto leads the Padres in home runs with 33, and his batting average is .282 with 105 RBIs.

The Giants have a good one in Wilmer Flores who is having a great season with 22 home runs and a .281 batting average. Thairo Estrada is another offensive weapon for San Francisco with a .274 ERA. First pitch on Monday is scheduled for 6:45 PM.

Giants shutout by Dodgers 7-0

Photo credit: SF Giants opener John Brebbia pitches against the Dodgers on September 23, 2023. (Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports)

By: Mary Anne

The San Francisco Giants played their third game with the rival Los Angeles Dodgers on Saturday night. The Giants were shutout by the Dodgers 7-0 at Dodger Stadium. San Francisco fell to 77-78, while Los Angeles improved to 95-59.

The Giants’ starting lineup featured Austin Slater, Thairo Estrada, J.D. Davis, Wilmer Flores, Mitch Haniger, Marco Luciano, Luis Matos, Tyler Fitzgerald, Patrick Bailey, and John Brebbia. Brebbia (3-2, 3.53 ERA) took the loss after pitching just 1 1/3 innings and giving up one hit, one earned run, one walk, one strikeout, and one home run.

After a scoreless first inning, Los Angeles got on the board in the bottom of the second inning. J.D. Martinez homered on a fly ball to center field for a 1-0 lead.

The Dodgers tacked on two runs in the bottom of the third inning. J.D. Martinez doubled on a line drive to Luis Matos. Mookie Betts and Max Muncy scored to make it a 3-0 game.

The Dodgers added two runs in the bottom of the fifth inning. Freddie Freeman doubled on a line drive to Luis Matos. Austin Barnes scored to extend the Dodgers’ lead to 4-0 as Mookie Betts went to third base. Max Muncy then singled on a fly ball to Tyler Fitzgerald. Betts scored to expand the Dodgers’ lead to 5-0 as Freeman went to third base.

The Dodgers got two runs in the bottom of the eighth inning. Mookie Betts doubled on a line drive to Mike Yastrzemski. David Peralta and Austin Barnes scored to widen the Dodgers’ lead to 7-0.

Notes
The Giants recalled Heliot Ramos from Triple-A Sacramento after placing Scott Alexander on the 15-day injured list with a left hamstring strain — retroactive to September 22.

As part of Hispanic Heritage Month, we remember on this day in 1956, Ozzie Virgil Sr. made his MLB debut as the league’s first player from the Dominican Republic. Virgil Sr. played in the MLB from 1956 to 1969 as a utilityman. Three of Virgil Sr.’s stints were with the New York/San Francisco Giants (1956-57, 1966, and 1969).

Up Next
The Giants and Dodgers will wrap up their rivalry series on Sunday at 4:10 p.m. Pacific. The Giants’ starter is TBD, while the Dodgers’ starter is Lance Lynn (12-11, 5.92 ERA).

Giants Hit Three Home Runs Get Past Dodgers 5-1; SF now 3 games back of NL Wild Card

Top of the fourth inning San Francisco Giants hitter Mike Yastrzemski slugs a home run in front of Los Angeles Dodgers catcher Will Smith at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Fri Sep 22, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

San Francisco Giants (77-77) sluggers Mike Yastrzemski, Thairo Estrada and Tyler Fitzgerald all hit home runs in game two of this series on Friday night. They held the Los Angeles Dodgers (94-59) to five hits and a single run winning the game 5-1.

This game was scoreless through three innings but it was San Francisco that put two runs up on the board in the fourth inning. Mike Yastrzemski knocked a two-run homer with Joc Pederson on base for the 2-0 lead. San Francisco would add to their lead in the sixth inning with a second home run, this one off the bat of Thairo Estrada for a 3-0 lead.

The Giants defense held the Dodgers until the bottom of the eighth when Los Angeles attempted a rally that came up way short. Freddie Freeman singled James Outman home but that would be all that the Dodgers could manage.

San Francisco would belt another home run in the ninth inning. Tyler Fitzgerald had a two-run homer with Marco Luciano on base and the Giants had taken a 5-1 lead and that would be the final. The Fitzgerald home run was his first career long ball giving the Giants the insurance they needed to nail down this win.

The Giants had eight hits in this game and San Francisco pitcher Sean Manaea went seven innings allowing three hits, no runs and two strikeouts. This was Manaea’s first win over the Dodgers. Manaea has the only two wins on the Giants current road trip. He gave up a hit to Miguel Rojas in the third inning but then retired 11 batters in a row in a terrific appearance on the mound.

This win brought the team back to .500 ending their three game skid. The Giants had not been below .500 since June 5th. This was a badly needed win for San Francisco in the crowded NL wild-card race.

Post game notes: Thursday night the Giants lost to the Dodgers amid a host of crazy errors. The Giants were able to tie the game in the top of the sixth inning but that was about it for San Francisco. Wild pitches along with an unbelievable error by right fielder Mike Yastrzemski and another from Wilmer Flores gave the Dodgers a real leg up.

After losing the series to the Arizona Diamondbacks, the Giants find themselves in a precarious situation. Hopes of a wild card berth are quickly fleeting, they won Friday night but they must continue stringing wins. The Reds, Marlins, and Diamondbacks all lost Friday but San Francisco still remains in the sixth spot three games back in the wild card race with the San Diego Padres hot on the Giants trail.

This rivalry will continue on into the weekend with games three and four. Clayton Kershaw will take the mound for the Dodgers on Saturday. The Los Angeles Ace has a 12-4 win/loss record and a 2.52 ERA. A starter for the Giants is still undecided at the time of this post. First pitch for game three is scheduled for 6:10 PM in another must win for San Francisco.

Fitzgerald gets first MLB RBI in Giants’ 7-2 loss to Dodgers

Photo credit: Los Angeles Dodgers’ J.D. Martinez, second from right, heads to first for a solo home run as San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Kyle Harrison, left, watches along with catcher Blake Sabol, second from left, and home plate umpire Erich Bacchus during the fourth inning of a baseball game Thursday, Sept. 21, 2023, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

By: Mary Anne

The San Francisco Giants began a four-game series with their biggest rival, the Los Angeles Dodgers, on Thursday night. The Giants lost a 7-2 heartbreaker to the Dodgers at Dodger Stadium.

John Brebbia (3-1, 3.41 ERA) took the loss for the Giants. San Francisco fell to 76-77, while Los Angeles improved to 94-58.

The Giants’ starting lineup featured LaMonte Wade Jr., Wilmer Flores, Joc Pederson, Michael Conforto, Thairo Estrada, Mike Yastrzemski, Marco Luciano, Blake Sabol, Tyler Fitzgerald, and Kyle Harrison. Harrison pitched for 5 1/3 innings and gave up three hits, two earned runs, one walk, two strikeouts, and one home run.

After two scoreless innings, Los Angeles got on the board first. Enrique Hernandez was out on a sacrifice fly to Mike Yastrzemski. Chris Taylor scored for a 1-0 Dodgers lead in the bottom of the third inning with two outs.

The Dodgers doubled their lead in the bottom of the fourth inning. J.D. Martinez homered on a fly ball to right field for a 2-0 lead.

The Giants finally got on the board in the top of the fifth inning. Tyler Fitzgerald walked, and Mike Yastrzemski scored to cut the Dodgers’ lead to 2-1. Marco Luciano went to third base, while Blake Sabol went to second base.

The Giants tied the ballgame in the top of the sixth inning. Joc Pederson homered on a fly ball to center field to even the score 2-2.

The Dodgers regained their lead in the bottom of the sixth inning. J.D. Martinez was out on a sacrifice fly to Mike Yastrzemski. Will Smith scored for a 3-2 lead with two outs.

Fast forward to the bottom of the seventh inning as the Dodgers extended their lead, thanks to a wild pitch by Luke Jackson. Chris Taylor scored first for a 4-2 lead. James Outman went to third base. Outman later scored to make it 5-2.

The Dodgers expanded their lead in the bottom of the eighth inning. J.D. Martinez singled on a sharp line drive to Tyler Fitzgerald. Freddie Freeman scored for a 6-2 lead. Chris Taylor singled on a ground ball to Michael Conforto. Max Muncy scored to make it 7-2. Miguel Rojas went to second base.

Notes
Tyler Fitzgerald made his MLB debut with the Giants on Thursday. Fitzgerald’s family cheered after he walked to record his first MLB RBI.

The Giants recalled Tristan Beck and Marco Luciano from Triple-A Sacramento while selecting Tyler Fitzgerald after optioning Sean Hjelle to yesterday’s Triple-A Sacramento postgame, placing Brandon Crawford on the ten-day injured list with a right hamstring strain, and placing Paul DeJong on unconditional release waivers.

Up Next
The Giants and Dodgers will meet again Friday night at 7:10 p.m. Pacific. The Giants will start Sean Manaea (6-6, 4.82 ERA). The Dodgers haven’t announced tomorrow’s starter yet.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruder: Three games out of NL Wild Card, four games with Dodgers in the Southland starts tonight

The Arizona Diamondbacks shortstop Geraldo Perdomo (left) gets the force out on the San Francisco Giants Mike Yastrzemski (right) in the bottom of the first inning at Chase Field in Phoenix (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman:

#1 The trip to Arizona is not all that it was cracked up to be. The Giants got swept in two games and fell back three games in the NL Wild Card.

#2 There was problem in the name of Corbin Carroll who hit his 25th home run and stole his 50th base for the Diamondbacks and just made things more difficult for the Giants.

#3 Carroll also used his glove against the Giants tracking down a left field line drive that helped wrap up the Diamondbacks six run win 7-1.

#4 Talk about Giants pitcher Logan Webb who gave up three runs on nine hits and just lost command of the D-Backs line up on Wednesday.

#5 The Giants will try again in Los Angeles as they take on the Dodgers for four games starting Thursday night. Starting pitcher for the Giants Kyle Harrison (1-5 ERA 5.18) for the Dodgers Emmett Sheehan (3-1 ERA 5.44) first pitch 7:10pm PT.

Stephen Ruderman filled in for Michael Duca who does the Giants podcasts Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Four run 7th does in Giants in 7-1 loss to D-Backs in Arizona; SF drops further back in NL Wild Card by 3.5 games

Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2023

Chase Field

Phoenix, Arizona

San Francisco Giants 1 (76-76)

Arizona Diamondbacks 7 (81-72)

Win: Merrill Kelly (12-7)

Loss: Logan Webb (10-13)

Time: 2:30

Attendance: 16,848

By Stephen Ruderman

Photo courtesy of Rob Schumacher of the Arizona Republic

PHEONIX–The Diamondbacks completed a short two-game sweep of the Giants, further dashing the Giants’ already-dwindling playoff hopes. Arizona took game two on Wednesday 7-1 at Chase Field.

After dropping Tuesday night’s series opener, the Giants needed a win to stay afloat in the wild card race. They came into Wednesday’s game three games back of the Chicago Cubs for the third wild card, and three and a half games back of the Diamondbacks for the second wild card.

Giants Manager Gabe Kapler turned to his ace, Logan Webb, and Webb would be opposed by Merrill Kelly. LaMonte Wade stepped in, and led off the game with a home run in the first inning and just like the first inning Tuesday night, the Giants scored and struck first. 

However, the Diamondbacks struck back in the first off Webb, Corbin Carroll led off the bottom of the first inning with a base-hit; stole second; and got to third on a ground ball. With two outs, Christian Walker stepped in and hit a chopper to third that Giants’ third-baseman J.D. Davis charged, but couldn’t get Walker in time, which tied the game at 1-1.

Kelly set the Giants down 1-2-3 in the top of the second, and Webb pitched a quick and quiet bottom of the second. The Giants wasted an opportunity in the top of the third, and then the Diamondbacks pounced in the bottom of the third.

Geraldo Perdomo grounded out to start the inning, but Corbin Carroll then singled; stole second; and advanced to third when Patrick Bailey’s throw sailed into center field. Katel Marte walked, and Tommy Pham just beat out the back end of a 6-4 fielder’s choice, which allowed Carroll to score and the Diamondbacks to take the lead. Christian Walker singled, and Alek Thomas doubled in Pham to give the Diamondbacks a 3-1 lead.

From there, Merrill Kelly was on cruise control, as he pitched 1-2-3 innings in the fourth, fifth and sixth, and set down 11-straight batters he faced. As for Webb, he escaped trouble in the bottom of the fourth, and pitched quick and scoreless fifth and sixth innings. Webb ended up giving up just three runs over six innings, but like much of the season, the run support was not there.

“We’re all disappointed that we haven’t been able to support Webb with run support,” said Kapler. “It doesn’t take away from the excellent season that he’s had. [With] the innings that he’s been able to pile up, [as well as the] games he’s been able to keep in, he’s just been one of the best pitchers in baseball, and I don’t think that’s disputable.”

Michael Conforto laced a double down the right-field line to start the top of the seventh and give the Giants a chance. However, Luis Matos flew out to center, and Patrick Bailey moved Conforto to third on a ground out to second.

Wilmer Flores pinch-hit, and drew a walk, and that did it for Kelly, as Diamondbacks Manager Torey Lovullo brought in Ryan Thompson to face Thairo Estrada. Estrada proceeded to strike out, as he lunged at a pitch in the dirt to end the inning, and it was another opportunity wasted for the Giants.

Ryan Walker came in for Webb in the bottom of the seventh, and the Diamondbacks made the Giants pay. Carroll and Marte led off the inning with back-to-back home runs, as for Carroll, it was his fourth hit of the day, and that would not be all for Arizona. 

Pham struck out swinging, but Christian Walker doubled to get another rally going. Alek Thomas struck out looking, and after Lourdes Guriel walked, Sean Hjelle, who was brought up this morning from Triple-A Sacramento, was brought in to replace Walker. Gabriel Moreno and Emmanuel Rivera each knocked in a run with back-to-back singles. That capped off a four-run inning for Arizona, as they opened their lead to 7-1.

Mike Yastrzemski drew his third walk of the game in the top of the eighth, but the Giants were unable to do anything with it. Hjelle pitched a 1-2-3 bottom of the eighth, and then Kyle Nelson came in to set the Giants down 1-2-3 in the top of the ninth.

The Giants fall back to .500 at 76-76, as they have lost five of their last six to start this road trip. They have also gone 5-25 in their last 30 road games dating back to July 19. The Giants’ also fall to four and a half games behind the Diamondbacks, who won the season series, and thus hold any potential tiebreaker. The Giants are three and a half games back of the third wild card, the Cubs and the Marlins lost their games Wednesday night.

“The math is not on our side,” said Kapler. “Every game [left] is one that we have to win.”

The Giants’ season is now on life support, as they are three and four games back of the final wild card spot with 10 games to go. Things won’t get any easier, as they will be heading to Los Angeles for a four-game series, which will also be the final road series of the year for the Giants.

Notes:

  • The Giants have placed Alex Cobb on the 10-Day Injured List, and he will be out for the remainder of the season. Cobb has been pitching with an injured right hip over his last several starts. However, Cobb Left Tuesday Night’s game in Phoenix against the Arizona Diamondbacks after throwing two balls to start the bottom of the third inning. It was his first first start in eight days. Cobb made the All-Star Game for the first time in his career, but he has struggled since August, going 1-4 with a 6.18 ERA in his last eight starts. Ryan Walker was also placed on the Injured List, and Kyle Harrison and Sean Hjelle were called up to take their places.
  • Brandon Crawford left the game in the third inning due to right hamstring tightness. Manager Gabe Kapler said it could be an IL situation.
  • Giants Director of Pitching Brian Bannister, who has been with the team since 2020, is expected to join the Chicago White Sox Front Office next season.

Carroll, Marte puts on the double steal as Diamondbacks defeat Giants 8-4; SF drops 3 games back of Wild Card

The Arizona Diamondbacks Corbin Carroll (right) who stole third comes home on a throwing error slides under San Francisco Giants catcher Patrick Bailey’s glove (left) to score in the bottom of the second inning at Chase Field in Phoenix on Tue Sep 19, 2023 (AP News photo)

Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2023

Chase Field

Phoenix, Arizona

San Francisco Giants X (76-75)

Arizona Diamondbacks X (80-72)

Win: Zac Gallen (16-8)

Loss: Alex Cobb (7-7)

Time: 2:39

Attendance: 26,093

By Stephen Ruderman

PHOENIX–The Diamondbacks dealt the Giants another tough loss to start a crucial two-game set for the two teams at Chase Field in Phoenix, as Arizona won it by a final of 8-4 Tuesday night.

This was the start of the biggest series of the year for the Giants, who came into the game two games back of the Cubs for the third wild card, and two and a half games back of the Diamondbacks for the second wild card. After nearly blowing a 9-0 lead and barely holding on to salvage a game in the four-game series in Denver against the Rockies on Sunday, the Giants were hoping to create some momentum from Sunday’s win.

Alex Cobb, who was pitching for the first time in eight days, made the start for the Giants, as Manager Gabe Kapler lined Cobb and Logan Webb, his two best starters, to start the games in Arizona. Cobb has had a solid season, which included a trip to the All-Star Game in Seattle, and he continued his success when he came within an out of no-hitting the Cincinnati Reds on Aug. 29 in San Francisco.

“[I] love it,” said Kapler prior to the game. “Both [Cobb and Webb] are ultra competitive. [They] have been our two most trusted starters now for quite some time, and all [of] that is based on their performance.”

However, Cobb has been dealing with a hip injury, and he has struggled on the road this season. He came into tonight with a road ERA of 5.26, and he had particularly struggled in his previous five road starts coming into tonight, in which he had gone 0-3 with a 7.71 ERA. That was in contrast with Diamondbacks’ starter, Zac Gallen, who came into tonight 11-2 at home with a 2.18 ERA

It was a matchup of All-Stars in Cobb and Gallen, as a decent-sized crowd filled up Chase Field for this Tuesday Night Pennant Race game. Diamondbacks fans showed up, but there was a contingent of Giants fans as well, who showed up, and made noise with chants of “Let’s Go Giants,” just as LaMonte Wade was stepping in to start the game.

The Giants got things going off Gallen early. Wade led off, and hit a line drive to right, where Diamondbacks’ right-fielder, Corbin Carrol, had to made a decision whether to try and catch it or let it fall, but as he decided to field it on a hop, it went by him to the wall, and that allowed Wade to go slide into third with a triple just ahead of the relay throw from second-baseman, Katel Marte.

Mike Yastrzemski then hit a sacrifice fly to left to knock in Wade, as the Giants struck first. Wilmer Flores popped out to the catcher, Gabriel Moreno in foul territory, and then Joc Pederson hit a home run to straight away center that just hit the top of the yellow line above the 407 footmarker.

The Diamondbacks immediately responded off Cobb in the bottom of the first. Corbin Carroll singled the other way to left, and Katel Marte singled Carroll over to third. The Diamondbacks had runners at the corners with nobody out for Tommy Pham, who chopped into a 4-6 fielder’s choice to put Arizona on the board. Cobb then got both Christian Walker and Alek Thomas to ground out to third, as Cobb escaped the inning without any further damage.

Gallen struck out the side in a 1-2-3 top of the second, and then things unraveled for Cobb with two outs in the bottom of the second. With Gabriel Moreno, who had been hit by a pitch, at first, Geraldo Perdomo hit a doink double along the left-field line to advance Moreno to third. That set things up for Corbin Carroll, who laced a double off the end of the bat down the left-field line to knock in both runners and give the Diamondbacks their first lead of the night.

It did not stop there. After Katel Marte walked, he and Carroll attempted a double steal, and the throw from Patrick Bailey to third was dropped by third-basemen Wilmer Flores, who then threw the ball away as he tried to nail Carroll at the plate. Not only did Carroll score, but Marte came in to score all the way from first as well, as a four-run second gave the Diamondbacks a 5-2 lead.

The Giants wasted a leadoff single by Thairo Estrada in the top of the third, and then Alex Cobb re-aggravated his hip after throwing two balls to Alek Thomas to start the bottom of the third, which caused him to have to leave the game. Cobb was succeeded by Alex Wood, who ended up pitching a 1-2-3 inning.

“[Cobb] gave us everything he had,” said Kapler in his postgame press conference. “He was unable to get through the outing today, and we had to get him out of there.

“I thought it was something I could pitch through,” said Cobb. “The pain is definitely something you can tolerate, but it starts affecting everything else.”

The Giants wasted a leadoff single by Wilmer Flores in the top of the fourth, and the Diamondbacks made them pay in the bottom of the fourth. With Wood back out on the mound, Jace Pederson led off the inning with a double, followed by Geraldo Perdomo, who reached on an infield hit.

Carroll was hit by a pitch, and that loaded the bases for Marte, who knocked in a pair on a ground ball base-hit to left-center, though he was thrown out at second trying to stretch it into a double.

Mitch Haniger led off the top of the fifth with a base-hit, but the Giants would not waste this one. Patrick Bailey struck out looking, but Brandon Crawford snuck a ground ball just to the left of second-baseman Katel Marte, and into right for a base-hit, which moved Haniger over to third.

Thairo Estrada walked to load the bases, and that brought up Wade, who hit a deep fly ball to right that was caught, but knocked in Haniger to cut the deficit to 7-3. Yastrzemski fell down 0-2, but he worked a walk to load the bases.

Wilmer Flores then walked to make it a 7-4 game. That brought up the potential go-ahead run in Joc Pederson, who was called out on strikes by Home Plate Umpire Adam Beck to end the inning, as he stuck around to argue, but was spared being thrown out of the game.

Alek Thomas tripled to left-center, just out of the reach of Yastrzemski, to start the bottom of the fifth, and he scored on a sacrifice fly off the bat of Moreno, as the Diamondbacks got one of their runs back to make it 8-4.

Gallen was relieved by Miguel Castro, who pitched a 1-2-3 top of the sixth. The Diamondbacks strung a pair of two-out hits off Wood in the bottom of the sixth, but they were unable to add to their lead. The Diamondbacks brought in the lefty, Andrew Sealfrank, for the seventh, and he pitched a scoreless inning, as did Wood, who pitched through a one-out hit and a wild pitch in the bottom of the seventh.

Kevin Ginkel then came in for Arizona in the eighth. Ginkel set down the first two men he faced, but after Joc Pederson drew a two-out walk, Michael Conforto came up and hit a towing fly ball to center field, but Alek Thomas made an incredible catch just in front of the wall to snatch any remaining hopes the Giants may have had tonight right out of thin air. Scott Alexander came in for San Francisco to replace wood in the bottom of the eighth, and pitched a scoreless inning.

Diamondbacks Manager Torey Lovullo brought in his closer, Paul Sewald, in for a non-save situation in the ninth, and Sewald pitched a 1-2-3 inning to close the Giants out.

The Giants fall to 76-75, and also fall to three games back of the Cubs for the third wild card with 11 games left to play.

“You look around the league, and see other teams took care of business,” said Cobb.

Logan Webb (10-12 ERA 3.31) will make the start in what is a must-win game Wednesday afternoon, as the Giants can not afford to keep falling, especially with a four-game series in Los Angeles against the Dodgers starting on Thursday. Arizona will start Merrill Kelly (11-7 ERA 3.45). First pitch 12:40pm PT.

NOTES:

Kapler said after the game that Cobb will continue to be evaluated before a decision is made regarding his next start.