San Francisco Giants game wrap: Giants can’t move past A’s in 2-1 one run loss at Coliseum

San Francisco Giants center fielder Luis Matos makes a great grab in the webbing of his glove on Oakland A’s hitter Seth Brown at the Oakland Coliseum on Sat Aug 5, 2023 (AP News photo)

Saturday, Aug. 5, 2023

Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum

Oakland, California

San Francisco Giants 1 (61-50)

Oakland Athletics 2 (31-80)

Win: Trevor May (3-4)

Loss: Ryan Walker (4-1)

Time: 2:34

Attendance: 37,553

By Stephen Ruderman

OAKLAND–Fans packed into the Coliseum for the Giants and A’s first game in Oakland since the A’s announced their intent to move to Las Vegas, as Giants and A’s fans saw the A’s edge out the Giants 2-1 in the series opener on a cloudless afternoon at the Oakland Coliseum.

The Giants made solid contact off A’s starter, Paul Blackburn, in the top of first inning, as LaMonte Wade, whose home run accounted for the Giants’ lone run on Thursday, hit a high fly ball just foul down the right-field line before lining out to the A’s right-fielder Seth Brown.

Thairo Estrada, coming off the injured list and taking his first at-bat since July 2, also lined out to right. Wilmer Flores then singled to left, but that was all the Giants were able to show for it.

The Giants were gifted an opportunity in the top of the second when J.D. Davis reached on catcher’s interference to start the inning and got to second on a one-out walk to Patrick Bailey, but they were unable to get the hit to knock in Davis.

Ross Stripling, whose last outing came on July 30 in a bullpen game against the Red Sox, made the start, and he did not disappoint. Esteury Ruiz led off the bottom of the first with a single to left, but Stripling then set down the next 12 men he faced.

The Giants had runners reach in the third, fourth and fifth innings as well, but they had nothing to show for it. Just like in the Giants’ 1-0 win over the Diamondbacks on Thursday, their offense remained neutralized throughout the game.

Jordan Diaz then led off the bottom of the fifth with a home run to left-center to put the A’s on the board. Blackburn followed that up with his first and only 1-2-3 inning in the top of the sixth, and Stripling and Sean Manaea combined to throw a 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the sixth.

The A’s brought in Austin Pruitt for the top of the seventh. Patrick Bailey led off the inning with a walk, which brought Brandon Crawford to the plate. Crawford hit a fly ball to left that seemed like it was going to fall in, but A’s left-fielder, JJ Bleday, made a sliding catch, and then got up to throw a strike to double up Bailey off first.

Manaea threw a scoreless bottom of the seventh, and Angel Felipe came in for the A’s in the eighth. LaMonte Wade struck out looking to start the inning, but Thairo Estrada then walked, and got to third on a base-hit by Wilmer Flores.

The Giants had runners at the corners with one out for Joc Pederson, as the A’s brought in their closer, Trevor May, to go for a five-out save, and Pederson hit a sacrifice fly to Esteury Ruiz to put the Giants on the board and tie the game.

It was 1-1 going to the bottom of the eighth, as Gabe Kapler brought in Ryan Walker. Mark Kotsay pinch-hit Aledmys Diaz for Tyler Soderstrom, and Diaz led off the inning with a base-hit up the middle. Tony Kemp walked to put runners at first and second for the A’s with nobody out, and Ruiz then bunted a foul ball off the home plate umpire, Dan Merzel, who went down, but remained in the game.

To add insult to injury, Kotsay challenged the play to see if the ball hit Ruiz, and after the call was upheld, Kotsay went out to argue with the third-base umpire and crew chief, Lance Barksdale, who surprisingly did not throw Kotsay out of the game. Ruiz was then able to successfully bunt the runners over to second and third.

Kapler then brought in the left-hander, Scott Alexander. Kotsay countered by pinch-hitting Jonah Bride, who lined out to Thairo Estrada at second for the second out.

Kapler elected to intentionally walk Zack Gelof to load the bases for Seth Brown, who singled to right to knock in Diaz and put the A’s back ahead. Kemp also tried to score on the play, but he was thrown out at the plate on a perfect strike from Michael Conforto to end the inning. Kemp tried to barrel past Patrick Bailey, but he was tagged out.

Trevor May came back out for the top of the ninth, and threw a 1-2-3 inning, as he got Brandon Crawford to ground out to second to end the game.

The Giants fall to 61-50, and they will try and salvage a split tomorrow afternoon with Alex Cobb on the mound.

Meanwhile in the stands, Giants and A’s fans stood in unison, and chanted “SELL THE TEAM,” following 30 seconds of silence to start the top of the fifth. Despite the fifth inning chants not being as loud as chants in prior games, they chanted even louder during the replay review in the bottom of the eighth, as fans continued to make it clear that the A’s belong in Oakland.

Starters for Sunday for the Giants right hander Alex Cobb (6-3 ERA 3.05) and for the A’s right hander Luis Medina (3-8 ERA 5.35) first pitch is slated at 1:07pm PT at the Oakland Coliseum.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman: Wade provides offense for Giants; Giants-A’s open Bay Bridge series tonight

San Francisco Giants’ LaMonte Wade Jr., right, celebrates with Joc Pederson, left, after hitting a solo home run against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the fourth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Thu Aug 3, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen:

#1 Stephen you got to hand it to Giants LaMonte Wade Jr who came through with the only run of the game Thursday against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the bottom of the fourth inning.

#2 The Giants also got some great pitching from the opener Scott Alexander and five other pitchers that followed him.

#3 The Giants second pitcher on Thursday Tristan Beck went the longest with four innings of work giving up just two hits and three strikeouts.

#4 Giants manager Gabe Kapler really worked his pitching staff outside of Beck he had Alexander and four other pitchers go less than two innings and the Giants pulled off a shutoff.

#5 Diamondbacks starter Brandon Pfraadt pitched a fine game but lost going seven innings, two hits, one earned run, and seven strikeouts. Pfraadt pitched good enough to win but didn’t get the run support.

#6 Giants and A’s battle here at the Oakland Coliseum tonight for a brief two game series in another Reverse Boycott contest where A’s fans invited Giants fans to chant “Sell the Team” in efforts to stop the move of the Oakland A’s to Las Vegas is this message getting through to MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred or is it getting lost in the preparation of the relocation vote coming in November?

Join Stephen for the Giants or MLB podcasts Tuesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco Giants day off report: Giants prepare for Bay Bridge Series vs. A’s

Photo credit: @SFGiants

By: Mary Anne

The San Francisco Giants took a much-needed day off after winning three of four games against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Oracle Park and seven out of nine at home. Here’s what you need to know.

A Crosstown Rivalry
The Giants (61-49, 2nd NL West) are preparing for the upcoming Bay Bridge Series with the Oakland Athletics (30-80, 5th AL West) at the Oakland Coliseum this weekend. The first game will be on Saturday at 4:07 pm Pacific, while the second will be on Sunday at 1:07 pm Pacific. The starting pitchers for both games are TBD.

Notes
Giants right-handed pitcher Camilo Doval (3-3, 2.47 ERA) made his MLB-leading 33rd save in Thursday’s game against the Diamondbacks.

Giants fans can retweet this tweet to win an Alaska Airlines trip for two as part of the Giants’ Happy Flight Sweepstakes. More information can be found here.

History Matters
The Giants and St. Louis Cardinals will play a regular-season game at Rickwood Field in Birmingham, Alabama.

Rickwood Field, the former home of the Negro League’s Birmingham Black Barons, where former Giants star Willie Mays once played, will host these two historic teams on June 20, 2024, at 4:00 pm Pacific on FOX. Rickwood Field’s the oldest professional ballpark in the United States.

The Giants-Cardinals was scheduled around Juneteenth and will include a tribute to Mays, a Birmingham, Ala. native and the oldest living Hall of Famer at 92, and the Negro Leagues. Mays, better known as the Say Hey Kid, played for the Black Barons in 1948 before his professional career with the New York/San Francisco Giants from 1951-52 and 1954-72 and the New York Mets from 1972-73.

Giants score pair of runs in 6th and 7th to come back in 4-2 win over D-Backs

Arizona Diamondbacks catcher Jose Herrera, right, tags out San Francisco Giants’ Patrick Bailey at home during the sixth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Aug 2, 2023 (AP News photo)

Arizona (57-52). 200 000 000. – 2. 5. 1

San Francisco (60-49). 000 022 00x. – 4 10 1

Time; 2:13

Attendance: 28,956

Wednesday, August 2, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Slade Cecconi made his major league debut this evening, starting for the Arizona Diamondbacks in a bid halt their slide from first place in the NL West to the third slot they continue to occupy after their 4-2 defeat by in tonight’s game.

Cecconi, a first round draft pick out of the University of Miami, had gone 4-8, 6.38 with 104 strikeouts in 20 starts for the Reno Aces in 20 in the hitter friendly PCL before his call up yesterday. He made a good first impression.

After walking Michael Conforto, the second batter he faced, the rookie didn’t allow a baserunner until Wilmer Flores banged a double off the four smiling cars in the left field Chevron. advertisement with one out in the fourth. Cecconi worked his way out of that difficulty, but the novelty had worn off.

JD Davis led off the home fifth with a single to left center and scored on Brandon Crawford’s mighty triple to right. Crawford went to third on a single by Isan Díaz. Diaz got wiped out by a double play, but Crawford scored the tying run on Wade’s two bagger to the right field corner.

In all, Cecconi went 4-2/3 innings before being relieved by Tyler Gilbert. The starter allowed two runs, both earned, on four hits and a walk. He delivered 59 pitches, 36 for strikes. His no decision left him with an ERA of 3.86.

The youngster faced an established veteran. Logan Webb, with his slate at 8-9, 3.49 at game time, had won more games for the 2023 Giants than any other hurler on the staff. Tonight, after a weak opening frame , the righty was masterful.

In all, Webb spent seven innings on the hill and allowed two runs, both earned and coming in the first frame. He surrendered four hits and a walk, striking out five. He threw 105 pitches, only 37 of which were balls. He earned the win, improving his record to 9-9, 3.45. Like Cecconi, he got a no decision.

Arizona got off to an early two run lead. Geraldo Perdomo opened the game with a clean single to right and stole second while Ketel Marte was in the process of striking out. Perdomo then moved on to third on a throwing error by last night’s strong and accurately armed hero, Patrick Bailey.

Bailey came home on Corbin Carroll’s ground out to short, which might easily have gone for a hit if it weren’t for a sparkling play by Crawford. An automatic double to left by Lourdes Gurriel, Jr. followed by Jace Peterson’s humpbacked single to center brought Gurriel home with the Rattlesnakes’ second tally.

The Giants tied went ahead with Gilbert still on the mound in the sixth Back to back to back singles by Flores, Pederson, and Bailey clogged the basepaths.

A double to left by Davis plated the first two runners. Scott McGough got the Diamondbacks back to their dugout, retiring Matos after Gilbert had managed to get the second out. San Francisco now was up, 4-2. Gilbert would prove to be the losing pitcher; his record now is 0-2, 4.50.

The seventh inning stretch took an encore when, with Austin Slater, who had pinch hit for Conforto in the fifth at bat, a streaker interrupted the on field action. Needless to say, the intruder was chased, captured, and led off the playing field.

Tyler Rogers, the right hander, pitched a scoreless eighth for SanFrancisco, and lefty Joe Mantiply set the Giants down in order in their half of the inning.

If it’s the top of the ninth at Oracle Park, it must be Camilo Doval on the mound. It was, and he earned his 32nd save by not retiring the side in order.

At 60-49, the Giants now are in second place in the NL West, three games ahead of Arizona and two games behind the Dodgers, who still were playing the A’s when the game here ended.

The four game series winds up, Thursday Aug 3 at 12:45. Arizona has announced Brandon Pfaadt (0-4, 8.20) as their probable pitcher. The Giants haven’t made their announcement yet for a starter.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Bailey becoming a crucial part of the defense; D-Backs-Giants face off for game 3 of series tonight

San Francisco Giants’ Luis Matos hits an RBI double against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the sixth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Aug 2, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 Talk about the swift move by San Francisco Giants catcher Patrick Bailey last night in throwing out Arizona Diamondbacks runner Gerald Perdomo at first base to end the ball game.

#2 It was a crucial out for Bailey to pick off Perdomo to end the game as the score was 4-3 and the Diamondbacks would try just about anything to get back in this game.

#3 Bailey certainly is making a name for himself as the defensive catcher throwing out his 19th runner in 449 innings trying to steal. This is the most by a catcher since the Philadelphia Phillies Jorge Alfaro did it in 2018 throwing 21 runners in 869 innings.

#4 Giants manager Gabe Kapler said that the catchers are just as responsible as anyone else in helping the club win ball games adding that Bailey can really change a ball game with his defense.

#5 The Diamondbacks come back for game three of the four game series tonight, the Diamondbacks have Slade Cecconi (0-0 ERA 0.00) as starter and the Giants will start pitcher Logan Webb (8-9 ERA 3.49). Talk about he has only one win in his last six starts.

Join Michael for the Giants podcast Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

He was a Giant? Feature on Dick Phillips

Former San Francisco Giant infielder Dick Phillips who played on the 1962 Giants is the He was a Giant? feature with Tony the Tiger Hayes (photo from Trading Card Data Base)

Dick Phillips – 1B – 1962 – # 14

He was a Giant?

By Tony the Tiger Hayes

Dick Phillips’ flaccid performance for the 1962 Giants was so inefficient that a lesser man might be left seriously despondent and in search of the type of solace the denizens of Sixth Street hope to find in bottles swaddled in brown paper sacks.

The long-time bush leaguer’s hitless performance in five games as a Giant, left him with him the mortifying distinction of being the least productive of all 31 players who suited up for the ’62 NL Champions.

But Phillips – a 30-year-old MLB rookie who looked closer to 40 -made no plans of taking a one-way trip to the Golden Gate Bridge.

After years of minor league bus rides on dubious shock absorbers and meals at greasy spoon diners – as well as seeing heavy action in the Korean War – heading up to his brief sojourn with the top-notch Giants was reason enough for his heart to take courage and forge forward in the field of his dreams.

Indeed, buoyed by his brief San Francisco cameo, Phillips would spend most of the next four decades in various pro baseball roles.

Phillips would return briefly to the majors as a player and later as a coach, but most of his assignments in the sport spent in the minors leagues.

And from all indications, Phillips enjoyed every moment of it.

Why was he a Giant?

After toiling away in the minors for years without so much of a sniff of a big league clubhouse, not to mention a spring training invite, things finally started to trend in Phillips direction in 1961.

That year, Phillips led the Giants’ dominating Triple-A Tacoma club (97-57) to the Pacific Coast League Championship and was named the loop’s MVP with a .264, 16, 98 season. The genial graybeard was also voted as the club’s most popular player by the Puget Sound fan base.

The following off-season Phillips was added to the Giants 40-man roster.

“All I’ve ever wanted was a chance,” Phillips was quoted as saying in January of 1962. “Maybe I can’t make it, but this way, I’ll know.”

After a fine Cactus League performance in the Spring of ‘62, Phillips got the happy news, he’d be heading north with the club to Candlestick Park making the cut along with a fellow 24-year-old rookie from the Dominican Republic – Manny Mota.

Opening Day vs. the was just hours away.

“The game’s the same, but it’s nice to be up here. I’ve hung around in baseball. I knew if I stayed long enough I’d get to the top,” a relieved Phillips, puffing a celebratory cigar, told the beat writers.

In 1962 the Giants were not only stocked with a bevy of legitimate All-Stars, former Rookies of the Year and Gold Glove winners, but also numerous future Hall of Fame ball players.

First base, Phillips’ best suited defensive position was already being wrestled over by a couple of young sluggers by the names of Orlando Cepeda and Willie McCovey – back to back winners of the NL Rookie of the Year award respectively in the Giants first two years in San Francisco (1958-59).

In the Giants coaching staff’s eyes, Phillips appeared to have the right amount of seasoning and temperament and versatility- he played seven positions (save pitcher and catcher) on Fan Appreciation Day for Tacoma in 1961, to come off the bench and sizzle a line drive or fill in for Chuck Hiller at second base or Harvey Kuenn at third in a late inning situation.

“A fellow of Phillips’ age and background realizes there is an opportunity as a pinch-hitter,” manager Alvin Dark told The Sporting News.

“You have to believe you’re better than the pitcher when you go to the plate,” Phillips said of his pinch hitting theory. “If you don’t, you might as well not go up at all. No one likes to sit on the bench but if I’m not needed that means the Giants are winning. That’s all right with me.”

Before & After

Phillips broke into pro ball on a high note at age 19 in 1951, batting .293 for the Fulton Railroaders, a Class D club of the original Washington Senators, managed by one Samuel Lamitina.

But then another Sam called. Uncle Sam that is.

Phillips would spend the next few years as a member of the United States Marine Corp, serving much of his hitch overseas during the Korean War.

A veteran of many fierce combat battles during the conflict, Phillips didn’t have much time to play catch over that time frame but the Wisconsin native caught shrapnel during one particularly ferocious assault by the enemy.

When he reentered civilian life Phillips attended Valparaiso University on G.I. Bill. But Phillips itched to fulfill his professional baseball dreams and hooked on with his hometown Milwaukee Braves farm system after a tryout in 1951.

After being away from pro ball for five seasons Phillips batted a sizzling .320 for the Class C Eau Claire Braves in 1955.

Phillips climbed a rung in the Milwaukee system the next few seasons before topping out at Triple-A Sacramento in 1959. Phillips consistently hit for each classification in the Braves system and produced impressive home run totals- but he never got a call-up to the parent club.

The Giants acquired Phillips in a trade for a fellow minor league player in 1960.

After his brief stay with the Giants in 1962, Phillips returned to the Tacoma club for the remainder of the season. He watched as the Orange & Black advanced to a NL Pennant – beating the Dodgers in a special three game playoff series – before taking on the Yankees in the ‘62 World Series.

Phillips was planted on his living room coach, riveted to the television in his Racine, WI home when McCovey lined out in the bottom of the ninth of Game 7 of the Fall Classic as the New York dynasty broke the hearts of Giants fans.

In the spring of 1963 the Giants cut the well-liked minor league vet a break by shipping him to Washington in a cash deal. Though nick-named the “Senators” this was not the same franchise that Phillips became his pro career with more than a decade earlier.

The original Washington Senators had decamped to Minnesota and rebranded themselves as the “Twins.”

The new D.C. expansion club retained the “Senators” nickname and unfortunately for fans of the long suffering Washington fans base, the original Senators second division status as well.

After losing 100 games in their first two years of existence, the Senators were in dire need of skilled professionals and they found one in the adroit Phillips.

Just as he had in ‘62, Phillips began the 1963 season in the majors and this time he stuck.

The Senators again dropped 100 games for the third straight season, (56-106) but Phillips still must have had a smile.

The club’s top utility man, Phillips played wherever his managers Mickey Vernon and his mid-season replacement, Gil Hodges asked, seeing action primarily at first base, but also at second and third base. In 124 games, Phillips batted .237, 10, 32.

Phillips returned to the Senators for another full campaign in 1964. The 1965 season saw Phillips back in Triple-A, but Lady Luck was shining upon Phillips – the franchise’s top minor league club just happened to be located In Honolulu. Phillips family naturally fell in love with Hawaii’s tropical setting and would eventually relocate to the Islands on a year round basis. Phillips would later serve as the manager and General Manager of the Islanders club.

After starting the 1966 campaign with Hawaii, Phillips was recalled to Washington (regrettably?) and remained with the big club through the end of the ‘66 season concluding his big league playing career. Phillips would return for one final season with the Islanders in 1967 where he concluded his playing career for good at age 36.

Phillips was hardly done with the game as he would spend the next three decades in various roles in baseball including a dozen seasons as a minor league manager.

He once described his managerial style as this: “I like to play the running game if I have speed. I like the hit-and-run, and I try and out-think the other guy,” Phillips said. “I expect the players to hustle all the time. If they don’t hustle, they don’t play.”

After piloting the Islanders – then the top farm club for San Diego- for three seasons in the late-1970s, Phillips was promoted to big league club as first base and hitting coach for the club’s new manager Jerry Coleman in 1980. However the season went notoriously bad for Coleman – who had never managed previously- and the big league coaching gig ended after just one season for Phillips.

He wasn’t McCovey or Cepeda. But…

Phillips long awaited big league debut came as a pinch hitter for Juan Marichal vs. the visiting Cincinnati Reds at Candlestick Park (4/15/62). With the Reds winning 4-0, Phillips flew out to right fielder and future Giants manager Frank Robinson off Reds starter Bob Purkey (also a future Giant) to lead off the 7th inning. Cincy would win the game 4-3.

Phillips didn’t collect a hit as a Giant, but he did record the first of 60 career MLB RBI with San Francisco and it must have tasted good because it came against Milwaukee. The team that never promoted him to the majors.

In a road game at County Stadium, (4/18/62) Phillips was sent to pinch hit for Jim Davenport with runners on second and third, with one out in the top of the ninth. With Don Nottebart pitching, Phillips hit a slow roller to Braves second baseman Frank Bolling and Orlando Cepeda scampered home. The Giants were defeated in that contest 6-4.

Giant Footprint

Though Phillips on-field play really had no impact on the Giants Pennant winning campaign of ‘62, there is no doubt he was well liked by his San Francisco cohorts.

When it came time to divvy up World Series bonus money, Phillips was awarded a third of a full share.

And as far as manager Dark projection of Phillips as a potentially lethal major league pinch hitter? That didn’t really pan out.

Phillips would bat 115 times in his big league career as a pinch hitter – collecting 15 knocks for a .152 average with 13 RBI.

Meanwhile Manny Mota, the other rookie who made the Giants ‘62 opening day roster, primarily for his speed and defensive versatility only lasted slightly longer than Phillips on the Giants active roster in ‘62.

Mota however would one day develop into the game’s most dangerous all-time great pinch batters – collecting 150 career pinch hits for a .299 average in pinch situations.

Tony the Tiger does “He was a Giant?” features every Tuesday Giants home game at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Crawford and Wade take D-Backs Gallen deep; SF edges Arizona 4-3 at Oracle

San Francisco Giants LaMonte Wade Jr does the home run trot after hitting a solo shot in the bottom of the fourth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue Aug 1, 2023 (AP News photo)

Arizona (57-51). 000 012 000. – 3. 6. 0

San Francisco (59-49). 000 003 100. – 4. 9. 0

Time: 2:22

Attendance: 25,806

Tuesday, August 1, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–When the Giants duked it out with Arizona tonight, there were a couple of players in the Diamondbacks’ dugout who looked as if they’d shown up early for this coming weekend’s continuation of the Battle of the Bay. Third baseman Jace Peterson and southpaw reliever Sam Moll now wear the Rattlers’ rags, a costume change that I suspect will benefit both the traded players and their new team.

Peterson is likely to have better hitters behind him than he did with Oakland, although Carson Kelly (.174) and Alek Thomas (.237), who followed him in tonight’s D-Back lineup, hardly strike fear in the hearts of opposing pitchers. Moll will enjoy having a less porous defense than he had with the green and gold.

The Giants, on the other hand, did little to strengthen their roster at the trade deadline. The addition of AJ Pollock, who started tonight in left field, batting ninth and went 0 for 3, may prove to be helpful, but old and injury sounds like more of the same to me.

They did, however, complete another transaction that affected tonight’s lineup, recalling Isan Díaz from the River Cats, to replace Mike Yastrzemski, who was placed on the 10 day injured with a strained left hamstring. Díaz batted in the eighth spot and took the field at second base.

Whatever the effects of the teams’ response to the trade deadline turn out to be, tonight the Giants beat the Diamondbacks, 4-3 in a thrilling, come from behind battle.

For the first time since July 25, San Francisco’s starting pitcher was a member of their rotation, Alex Cobb, who also started that game for them. In it, he hurled six scoreless innings of three hit ball in a 2-1 win over the Red Sox at Oracle Park, which left him with the 6-3, 2.97 mark with which he came came to work today.

No one in San Francisco’s rotation has better traditional numbers. Cobb pitched extremely well for 4-2/3 innings tonight After that, not well at all. He ended up throwing six full innings an allowing three runs, all earned, on four hits, three of them home runs. He struck out four and issued one base on balls with a pitch count of 84, 53 counting as strikes. He escaped with a no decision and saw his ERA rise to 3.05.

For their part, the Diamondbacks entrusted their fate to the six pitch repertoire of Zac Gallen (11-5, 3.36 at game time), who pitched a scoreless first inning in this year’s All Star Game. (I guess the ASG is the bullpen game to end all bullpen games). He also allowed three runs, all. earned, over six innings and left with a no decision.

Gallen allowed seven hits, one of them a three run homer to Brian Crawford. 59 of his 91 pitches met the definition of strikes, His ERA also rose, to 3.41.

Both pitchers pretty much coasted through the first four innings. No one scored, and Gallen allowed three hits; Cobb, one. Lourdes Gurriel, Jr., changed that in the top of the fifth. With one down, he hammered a 94.6 mph Cobb sinker 413 feet deep into the left center field twilight for his 16th home run of the season and a 1-0 Diamondbacks lead.

Number nine batter Alek Thomas did a encore in the next frame, dumping fly just over the National Car Rental advertisement in left center for a solo home run, his seventh dinger of the year. The ball traveled 385 feet and also came off a Cobb sinker. Ketel Marte varied the script, sending another sinker sailing out of the park to right, making it 3-0, Arizona, after six. It was Marte’s 18th round tripper and 57th RBI of ’23.

San Francisco cane roaring back. with two out in their half of the sixth. Sabol singled to left and scored on a double by Luis Matos that split the outfielders in right center. Then Crawford showed he still had enough pop in his bat to propel a 93.3 mph four seamer 420 feet into for a game tying round tripper to center.

Ryan Walker took over for Cobb to pitch a scoreless seventh and eighth. Miguel Castro relieved Gallen after the seventh inning stretch only to cough up the lead on a solo shot to Levi’s Landing by LaMonte Wade, Jr., giving the Giants’ first baseman 10 homers and 29 RBI for the year. That blast put the Giants ahead for the first time since the 6;45 opening pitch

Austin Adams threw two pitches in the bottom of the eighth. The first was a ball to Joc Peterson, who ined the second pitch off of Adams’ body, causing him to leave the game. Luis Frías replaced him and retired the three Giants he faced.

Walker was back on the mound for the ninth. He surrendered a 3-2 single to Perdomo and got Marte to foul out to third before passing the ball to Sean Manaea. Carroll lined out to left . Then, with Christian Walker at the plate, Patrick Bailey, who had replaced Sabol behind it in the top of the eighth, picked Perdomo off first. The call was reviewed and confirmed.

Walker got well deserved credit for the win. His record now stands at 4-0, 2.35. Castro, now 5-5, 4.06 took the loss. Manaea got the save, his first. Patrick Bailey should have gotten it.

With this win, the Giants are back to a two game lead over the Dbacks for second place in the NL West.

The series will continue tomorrow, Wednesday, at 6:45. Slade Cecconi, with no record this year, is slated to pitch for Arizona; Logan Webb (8-9, 3.49), for the Giants.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman: Giants looking at some defense in picking up AJ Pollock in stretch drive

San Francisco Giants hope to get some defense out of AJ Pollock (left) formerly with the Seattle Mariners as he joined the Giants on Mon Jul 31, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen:

#1 The Giants picked up right handed hitters AJ Pollock and Mark Mathis from the Seattle Mariners. Mathis was optioned to triple A Sacramento. The Giants who were looking for right handed hitting. Outfielder Mike Yastrzemski and pitcher John Brebbia are both out with injuries on the 10 day IL.

#2 Pollock who is 35 and arrives with the Giants is hitting .175 in 138 at bats, the Giants are looking for Pollock’s defensive help with Mitch Haniger and Yastrzemski out of the line up. Pollock is expected to cover their position as the Giants try to push for a post season drive.

#3 Stephen, talk about the rotation of outfielders once Yastrzemski returns of Michael Conforto, Luis Matos, Austin Slater with not only their defense but hittting.

#4 The Giants might be shopping Mariners outfielder Teoscar Hernandez there are three teams seeking his services, the Philadelphia Phillies, Toronto Blue Jays and Giants. Hernandez is hitting .238, 98 hits, 16 home runs and 59 RBIs. Besides his defense the Giants would like to pursue his bat.

#5 Giants continue this four game series with the Arizona Diamondbacks tonight at Oracle Park. The Giants lost a close contest to open the series on Monday night 4-3. The D-Backs are just a game behind the Giants in third place and 3.5 games back of first. The Giants in second are 2.5 games back in the NL West as things are expected to tighten up in the standings between these two clubs.

Stephen Ruderman does the Giants or MLB podcasts Tuesdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Lose In Extras To Diamondbacks 4-3 On The Skipper’s Birthday

San Francisco Giants hitter Wilmer Flores rounds third base after connecting for a home run and gets congratulations from third base coach Mark Hallberg against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the bottom of the third inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Mon Jul 31, 2023 (AP News photo)

Monday, July 31st, 2023

By Troy Ewers

San Francisco, CA -The San Francisco Giants began a four game series with the Arizona Diamondbacks it didn’t quite end as planned as the Diamondbacks edged San Francisco 4-3 at Oracle Park on Monday night.

On the mound Jakob Junis for the Giants and Ryne Nelson for the D-Backs. First three batters for starter Jakob Junis went down easily and set the tone for the Giants.

Wilmer Flores then sparked the crowd with a big pop that looked like it was going over the wall for the first run of the game, but Alek Thomas snatched it out of the air. First hit of the game for Arizona comes from Lourdes Gurriel Jr. and is hit straight back at Junis in the leg and shakes him up, but he stays in the game and gets back to back strikeouts to get out the inning.

First hit for the Giants came from Blake Sabol on a chip shot over the head of the third baseman and was followed by a single from Patrick Bailey. Isan Diaz ‘first at bat after being called up from Sacramento results in a walk and bases loaded with Luis Matos coming to the plate.

Matos grounded into a fielder’s choice to stop the rally for San Francisco in its tracks. Flores sparked the crowd again with his second at bat, but this time the homer wasn’t robbed and it’s out of here, 1-0 Giants.

Alex Wood replaced Junis in the fourth inning and continued right where Junis left off. The Giants scored a second run after a rally was started by Sabol who got on from a walk. Bailey moved him over on a double and then a sac fly from Crawford scored Sabol, 2-0 Giants.

In the sixth, Arizona scored two runs to tie the game up. The first came when Corbin Carroll hit a single and scored Ketel Marte, then Gurriel Jr. hit a double and scored Carroll and now it’s tied at two. Camillo Doval came in the ninth, but not for a save this time around.

Doval gets three strikeouts in a row and Giants head into the bottom of the ninth hoping for another walk off. One, two, three inning in the bottom of the ninth for San Francisco and we then headed into extra innings.

Arizona started extras with McCarthy as the ghost runner and Emmanuel Rivera hit a double that would score McCarthy and take a one run lead. 3-2 Diamondbacks. In the bottom of the tenth a wild pitch brings in the ghost runner Brandon Crawford and the Giants tie it up. 3-3.

Lamonte Jr looked like he had a walk-off home run, but it wasn’t hit deep enough and the tenth continued. In the 11th Marte hits a ground rule double that scores the ghost runner Perdomo, 4-3 D-Backs.

Taylor Rogers gets out of the inning, but now it was on the bats to send the fans home happy. The Giants get sat down one, two three and the game ends with Giants losing 4-3. The win is rewarded to Kevin Ginkel, Taylor Rogers gets the loss, and the save goes to Scott McGough.

The next game is Tuesday August 1st with Zac Gallen (11-5 ERA 3.36) pitching for Arizona and Alex Cobb (6-3 ERA 2.97) on the hill for San Francisco first pitch 6:45pm PT.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Giants open four game series with Diamondbacks tonight at Oracle

San Francisco Giants’ Marco Luciano, right, hits a double in front of umpire Junior Valentine, left, and Boston Red Sox catcher Connor Wong, center, during the fourth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco Sat Jul 29, 2023 (AP News photo)

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic:

#1 San Francisco Giants Joc Pederson got the game winning hit in the bottom of the 11th inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco as the Giants defeat the Boston Red Sox 4-3.

#2 The Giants picked up their first home series win over the Boston Red Sox since 2004 the year the Red Sox went all the way.

#3 Pederson said after Sunday’s game that you have to be aggressive if you want to win games when your behind and the Giants got two walk off wins on Saturday and Sunday.

#4 Giants pitcher Scott Alexander said sometimes you have to come alive after the seventh inning and they won twice on come backs in the bottom of the ninth with JD Davis’ home run and on Sunday Pederson gets a RBI single.

#5 The Giants open a four game series with the Arizona Diamondbacks Monday night. The Diamondbacks are starting Zac Gallen (11-5 ERA 3.36) the Giants have not determined a pitcher as of yet.

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