Jocamania: Pederson belts 11th inning walk off RBI single for 4-3 win at Oracle

San Francisco Giants’ Wilmer Flores (41) hits an RBI single in front of Boston Red Sox catcher Jorge Alfaro during the fifth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Jul 30, 2023 (AP News photo)

Boston (56-49). 000 000 130 00. – 3. 8. 1

San Francisco (58-48) 010 010 010 01 – 4. 11 0

Time: 3:13

Attendance: 37,026

Sunday, July 30, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–After Saturday’s last minute turnaround victory over the Boston Red Sox, the Giants were 57-48, in second place for the NL West lead, three games behind the Dodgers and six games behind the three teams tied in the race for a wild card berth.

That put the exhilaration of the win in some perspective. The Giants kept the excitement up with the same momentum but this time in 11 innings picking up narrow 4-3 win over the Bean Town Dudes at Oracle Park on Sunday.

Similarly, the return to the lineup of Brandon Crawford, high on the list of San Francisco’s all time list of shortstops but clearly showing the effects of his 12 years in the major leagues, was both encouraging and concerning at the same time. Who would you rather have as your shortstop, Crawford or the wunderkind of the week, Marco Luciano, today’s DH?

Whose bat would you prefer to have in your lineup? When today’s game had ended, with the Giants winning a 3-2 11 inning thriller Crawford had gone 2 for 5 and made a pretty backhanded flip to start a double play in the sixth, while Luciano had gone 0 for 2 as a pinch hitter. It’s still an open question.

Both teams went the opener route, San Francisco going with Scott Alexander (6-1, 3.41) and his sinkers, sliders, and change ups. Boston entrusted the task to a southpaw, Bernardo Bernadino (1-0,2.31). Those were their game time numbers. Anthony DeScalfani, whose name had been. bandied about as a possible starter in this series, was placed on the IL yesterday.

Alexander, making his third start of the ’23 season, threw 1-2/3 perfect innings before his scheduled removal and replacement by Ross Stripling, who threw 4-1/3 innings of one run, four hit ball. The Giants also used Taylor and Tyler Rogers, Camilo Duval, and Tristan Beck, the eventful winner, now 2-0, 2.94.

Bernandino held the Giants to a walk in the first but plunked the first two batters he faced in the second, Michael Conforto and Luis Matos. Blake Sabol loaded the bases by beating out a bunt in front of the plate. That was it for Bernadino. Right hander John Schreiber replaced him.

Casey Schmitt drove a hard drive down the third base line that Rafael Devers snared. He slapped his glove on the base to force Matos out as Conforto crossed the plate.

Then Crawford hit a liner to center that Duvall captured and returned the ball to Christian Arroyo at second before Sabol could get back to the bag. As they did yesterday, the Giants missed a chance to blow the game open early and had to settle for a 1-0 lead. They missed another opportunity one inning later.

Mike Yastrzemski pinch hit for Slater and invoked The Curse of the Leadoff Double. He moved to third on Flores’s nubber to the mound and died on third after Luciano and Davis fanned. Yastrzemski left the game in the top of the fifth because of hamstring tightness. Joc Pederson replaced him.

John Schreiber (two innings), Chris Murphy (3-1/3 innings), Josh Winckosxki (1-2/3), Richard Bleier (1), Chris Martin (1), and Mauricio Llovera, who got no one out in the 11th and took the loss, also performed mound duties for the Bosox.

San Francisco managed to tack a run onto their lead in the fifth. Schmitt led off with a single. Devers couldn’t handle Crawford’s grounder to third, putting runners on the corners, After Pederson flew out to center, Flores sent Schmitt home with a single to right.

The Giants might have scored more, but Crawford was put out in a rundown between third and home on Luciano’s grounder to the hot corner. Davis grounded out to end the threat.

The Red Sox drew closer in the top of the seventh with Duvall’s lead off 381 foot homer over the National Car Rental advertisement in left center field. He hit it off a change up on Stripling’s 63rd and final pitch of the game, Taylor Rogers, the left handed brother, relieved him and, in spite of a single and a walk, kept Boston off the board, thanks, in part to an 8-4 double play that the Giants pulled off on a broken bat fly by Tristón Casas.

Boston went ahead in the next frame. The right handed Rogers brother, the submarining Tyler, went to the mound at the start of the visitors’ eighth and gave up a leadoff Texas League double to a pinch hitting Jarren Duran. One out later, the Red Sox went ahead, 3-2.

The much booed Justin Turner sent his 17th round tripper of the season on a line 382 feet into the left field bleachers. The pitch, a slider that came in 73.1 mph left Turner’s bat at 104.7 mph.

The Giants came roaring back in their next at bat. With one down, Conforto beat out a grounder to third, and Matos slammed a double off the top of the Bank of America ad just to the left of the 399 foot marker in left center field. Conforto rounded third but scrambled back to the bag.

The roar was modulated when Patrick Bailey, who had replaced Sabol in the sixth, hit a bouncer to the mound and was tagged out by Winckowski. But Conforto scored, and the game was tied. Schmitt then struck out amidst a chorus of boos from the umpires in the stands.

Camilo Doval came in to pitch the Red Sox ninth and kept the game tied, allowing only a single to Casas.

Richard Bleier replaced Winckowski preserved the tie in the bottom of the ninth, and so we went into extra innings.

Tristan Beck now was on the hill for San Francisco, He blanked the Bosox, in spite of the zombie runner.

Chris Martin faced the Giants in their half of the tenth. He had to face five batters (if you count his two. intentional walks), but he sent us into the eleventh.

And it was in the eleventh, against their recent teammate Mauricio Llovera, that the Giants won it. Bailey, the zombie runner, scored after Schmitt was hit by a pitch, Crawford’s bunt died on the grass between home and third, and Pederson laced a single to right.

With all its frustrations, a most satisfying victory.

There’s been no word yet on who will pitch for either Arizona or the San Francisco Monday, evening at 6:45pm PT when the Giant and Diamondbacks will begin a four game series.

BoSox Lose Game 4-3 and Series 2-1 Versus Giants in Extra Innings

San Francisco Giants pitcher Ross Stripling throws against the Boston Red Sox during the fourth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Jul 30, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Michael Roberson

SAN FRANCISCO–The Boston Red Sox (56-49) dropped their second straight game 4-3 and lost the series 2-1 to the San Francisco Giants (58-48) in 11 innings on a beautiful afternoon in the City on the Bay.

Boston was hitless until the top of the fourth when third baseman Rafael Deavers hit a double to left field,  Nothing materialized after that scoring opportunity.

The Giants on the other hand, scored twice in each of their halves of the second and fifth innings.  Casey Schmitt hit into a fielder’s choice at third, scoring Michael Conforto, while Joc Peterson singled to right field in the fifth inning, scoring Schmitt.  2-0 SF.

Boston finally got on the board in the seventh inning on a homer to left by first baseman Adam Duvall, but that was all they could muster that inning, which ended on a (8-4) double play.

The Red Sox came right back the following inning and took their first lead (3-2) on a two-run blast to left by Justin Turner, who also scored Jarren Duran.

The Giants came back to tie it at three on a fielder’s choice play to the pitcher by Patrick Bailey, while Conforto snuck in from third.

After nine hard fought innings, the two combatants went to extra frames.  The new rules are implemented with a runner in scoring position to start off the inning.

In the bottom of the 11th inning, with the bases loaded, Joc Peterson lined a single to right field, scoring Alex Verdugo and ending the thriller of a ballgame.

Boston stays on the West Coast and travels north to Seattle, Monday July 31.  Their starting pitcher is yet to be determined.  The Giants host Arizona on the same date, while neither pitcher is determined at press time.

Michael Roberson is a http://www.sportsradioservice.com staff writer

SF’s Davis gets walk off homer to defeat Boston 3-2; A Saga of Blown Chances, But a Win Nonetheless

San Francisco Giants’ J.D. Davis (7) tosses his bat after hitting the winning home run next to Boston Red Sox catcher Connor Wong, left, during the ninth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sat Jul 29, 2023 (AP News photo)

Boston (56-48). 000 000 002. – 2. 5. 0

San Francisco (57-48). 100 001 001. – 3 11. 0

Time: 2:38

Attendance: 37,470

Saturday, July 29, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–After finally snapping their six game losing streak but beating the Oakland Athletics in both of the two games of the Bay Bridge Series that were played here earlier in this week, the city by the bay took on the team from the Bay State last night and resumed their losing ways, dropping the first of a scheduled three series. This afternoon, they defeated the Boston Red Sox, 3-2, in a thrilling saga of blown chances and recovery.

The Giants, as they had last Wednesday night in their win over the A’s, went the opener route, once again choosing Ryan Walker, who had held Oakland scoreless in his 2-2/3 innings on the hill, which left him 3-0, 2.70.

This afternoon marked his seventh performance as an opener this year, and he again threw 2-2/3 frames of shutout ball, allowing a double to Justin Turner in the first but not permitting anyone else to reach base safely.

Sean Manaea replaced him, struck out Duran on three pitches and remained in the game for another 4-1/3 innings, which included his striking out the side in Boston seventh. He gave up only two hits, both singles, and didn’t walk anybody. Manaea was followed on the mound by Tyler Rogers and Camilo Doval.

The visitors chose James Paxton as their starting pitcher. The veteran of 149 big league starts, in which he had a WHIP of 1.20 and opponents batting average of .236, held the Mets to three runs, two of them earned, on three hits and a walk, while striking out seven in his last outing six days ago at Fenway Park.

It brought his season’s record to a respectable 6-2, 3.46. This afternoon, The Big Maple dodged tr0uble for most of five innings, allowing one run, which was earned, on nine hits, a walk, and a wild pitch.. He struck out five.

He threw 104 pitches, 66 for strikes before Richard Bleiler relieved him to open the home sixth. He escaped with a no decision, making his record 6-2, 3.34 for the season. Mauricio Llovera, traded to Boston yesterday, took over when his ex-teammates came to bat in the eighth, and Kenley Jansen made a cameo appearance in the ninth.

The San Franciscans started off strong. Austin Slater smacked Paxton’s first offering to center for a leadoff single. Wilmer Flores followed up with a line drive that took a couple of bounces in left center field before bouncing off the AAA Insurance advertisement for an RBI double.

He advanced to third on JD Davis’s single to left. Patrick Bailey went down swinging, but in the process Davis took second on a wild pitch. That’s when the tide turned Luis Matos grounded out to third, and Michael Conforto to first. A wasted opportunity that left the Giants with a mere one run lead.

The Giants missed another opportunity to add on to their lead in the third. After a one out single by Flores and a walk to Davis, Bailey hit into an around the horn double play to end the inning. They missed another in the fourth.

Conforto got a one out single to right and moved to third when Luciano lofted an opposite field double to right. With the infield in, Schmitt sent a hard line drive straight into the glove of Tristón Casas at first. Mike Yastrzemski walked to load the bases, but Slater flew out to right, and the score remained a tenuous 1-0, San Francisco.

They threatened again in the sixth, but, with two down and two men on base, Conforto took a called third strike on Paxton’s 104th pitch. (It seemed to me that home plate umpire Junior Valentine made the wrong call).

San Francisco finally got their second run in the sixth, against Richared Bleier. Luciano led off with a single to left and went to second when Bleier hit Schmitt with a pitch. Yastrzemski laid down a sacrifice bunt to third that moved both runners up a notch.

Slater sent a hard shot on which Christian Arroyo made a beautiful rapid response catch at second and threw him out at first. Luciano scored on that plate, finally upping the Giants’ lead to 2-0.

San Francisco loaded the bases with two outs in the eighth against Llovera a double by Matos, the leadoff hitter, back to back strikeouts by Luciano and Smith, and an intentional walk to Yastrzemski and an unintentional one to Slater. But Flores, who had gone three for four, took a called third strike. The Curse of the Leadoff Double had struck again.

That meant that it was a 2-0 lead that Camilo Doval was called on to. preserve in the top of the ninth. He began by issuing a 3-2 walk to Masataki Yoshida, pinch hitting for Yu-Cheng Chang, Duran put the tying runs in scoring position with a double off the bricks under Levi’s Landing. And Turner drove them home with a single up the middle.

The Giants came up in their half of the ninth with a 2-2 tie on their hands. That’s because Bailey threw Turner out trying to steal second, Devers flew out to the warning track in left, and Casas went down swinging.

That tie lasted exactly one pitch. Davis blasted Kenley Jansen’s first offering, a 92.1 mph cutter, into the left field bleachers, 387 feet from home. It was his 14th home run and 52nd RBI of the year.

Doval was charged with a blown save but got credit for the win. His records now is 3-3, 2.68. Jansen, now 2-5, 3.15, was the loser.

The rubber game of the current series will start Sunday, afternoon at 1:07. Neither team has announced its probable starter. Count on this one being a bullpen game.

Marco Luciano gets first career hit against Red Sox but Giants lose 3-2

Photo courtesy of San Francisco Giants. Marco Luciano poses with his commemorative first hit ball.

By Titus Wilkinson (@TitusWisme)

SAN FRANCISCO- The Giants opened their weekend series against the Red Sox in disappointing fashion losing 3-2.

On the mound for the Giants was their ace Logan Webb who came into this game with a 8-8 record and 3.48 ERA. While for Boston right-hander Kutter Crawford got the start with a 4-5 record and a 4.04 ERA.

Wilmer Flores continued his torrid pace as he got the first hit of this game with a single to left field in the first inning but with two outs Mike Yastrzemski was unable to bring him home.

In the top of the second the offense got going for the Red Sox as after Rafael Devers went down Adam Duvall got a double. It was not the most conventional double as on accident the ball dude along the left field wall accidentally caught the ball despite it being fair.

So Duvall was given an automatic double and then Triston Casas got a ground rule double as he smacked one to triples alley that went over the wall. After the run given up Webb was able to get back in the zone and struck out the next two batters keeping the damage at 1-0.

In the top of the third Jarren Duran singled then tried to steal but of course Patrick Bailey caught him with a great throw to second getting his 17th thrown out runner of the season. That thrown out runner brings his stats up to 17-46 caught base stealers.

After a quiet fourth inning were neither team registered a hit Triston Casas lead off the 5th inning with a bang as he launched a solo shot over the left field wall making it 2-0. The home run was Casas’s 16th of the season with an exit velocity of 109.5 mph and distance of 435 ft.

The offense for San Francisco was quite slow to get going after the first hit by Flores but in the sixth it found its footing. The inning was kicked off by Marco Luciano getting his first career hit and then advancing to second on a wild pitch.

After Joc Pederson flew out Michael Conforto brought the rookie home with a single to center field making it 2-1. Flores almost gave the Giants the lead right after but did not quite get enough on it as it was caught on the warning track.

Flores would end up being the last hitter Crawford faced as the Red Sox went to the bullpen bringing in Brennan Bernardino. Crawford finished the night with 5.2 innings pitched, three hits given up, one earned run and seven K’s.

Bernardino was able to close out the sixth inning by striking out Austin Slater who had come in to pinch hit for Yastrzemski.

In the seventh the Red Sox went to the bullpen once again this time calling on Josh Wincowski. Much like the sixth the Giants lead things off strong as J.D. Davis and Bailey got back-to-back base knocks. Blake Sabol then came up to bat pinch-hitting for Luis Matos.

Sabol hit a chopper that looked like it would squeak out of the infield but Justin Turner made a great play keeping the ball in the infield and getting the out at second. With Brett Wisely striking out it all came down to Luciano but he was called out looking stranding Davis and Bailey.

The eighth saw the Giants go to the bullpen as well after a hit by Connor Wong and sacrifice bunt by Yu Chang. To relieve Webb they called on Taylor Rogers as Logan finished the night with 7.1 innings pitched, six hits, two earned runs, and four K’s.

Rogers did not start his outing off on a great note as he gave up a hit to Rob Refsnyder who came in to pinch hit for Duran. The hit was enough to knock in a run making it 3-1. The Giants were then able to turn a 5-6-3 ending the inning and bringing up the top of the order.

Similar to the fifth this time the Giants started things off with a bang as Pederson smoked one to center field making it 3-2. The exit velocity on the home run was 109.5 mph and it traveled 412 feet. The rest of the orange-and-blacks lineup went down in order meaning the ninth had to be a big inning for San Francisco.

The top of the ninth saw Rogers do what he needed to do as he gave up no runs meaning the Giants only needed one run to tie it.

To close out the game the Red Sox called on right hander Kenley Jansen someone Giants fans are all too familiar with.

Jansen was able to make quick work of the Giants hitters sitting them down in order and securing a Red Sox win.

“I just like to attack the zone if I see something that is near the strike zone I’m going to swing,” Marco Luciano said after the game.

The second game of this series is tomorrow at 4:15 were the Giants will look to bounce back.

San Francisco Giants preview: SF prepares to host Boston Friday in three game set

San Francisco Giants’ Casey Schmitt reacts after hitting an RBI double against the Oakland Athletics during the second inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Jul 26, 2023 (AP News photo)

Giants in Weekend Match-Up With Red Sox

By Barbara Mason

Thursday, the San Francisco Giants had a long overdue day off. They finally came home after a lengthy road trip on Monday afternoon. Monday morning they played a makeup game from April 16 taking on the Detroit Tigers. They ended up losing that game, their sixth loss in a row. The Giants were not getting the hits. You could blame the slump on road fatigue but San Francisco just wasn’t getting the job done.

Tuesday and Wednesday night they seemed to snap out of it winning a come-from-behind game against the Oakland A’s 3-2 in the ninth inning on Tuesday. The Giants won game two of that short series, on Wednesday night 8-3. Thursday they have some well-deserved time off before taking on the Boston Red Sox this weekend in a three game series.

The Giants and the Red Sox have nearly identical season records and this series should be a good one. The Giants record is 56-47 and the Red Sox have a 55-47 record. The Giants are currently in second place behind the Dodgers in the NL West. The Red Sox are in fourth place in the tough AL East.

Starting pitchers for the two teams have been announced as Logan Webb for the Giants with an 8-8 win/loss record and a 3.48 ERA and Kutter Crawford with a 4-5 win/loss record, and a 4.04 ERA. Webb had a very tough outing last Saturday against the Washington Nationals in the 10-1 loss going 1.1 innings and giving up five hits and six runs. He will certainly be looking for an improved game in this first game of the series.

San Francisco will need the continued stellar play of Wilmer Flores who was one of the saving graces of the recent losses. Joc Pederson and J.D. Davis also contributed in this recent road trip. The Giants really came to life in game two against the A’s with nine hits and the eight runs.

The Giants saw some nice work out of Casey Schmitt, Austin Slater, Patrick Bailey, Brett Wisely and Mike Yastrzemski in that game. They will need all hands on deck against the Red Sox. Rafael Devers and Masataka Yoshida are just two of the Boston weapons the Giants will face in this one.

First pitch is scheduled for 7:15 PM.

San Francisco Giants game wrap: Slater’s pinch hit two run homer gets Giants on roll in 8-3 win over A’s

San Francisco Giants’ J.D. Davis (7) celebrates with Michael Conforto after hitting a two-run home run against the Oakland Athletics during the first inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Jul 26, 2023 (AP News photo)

Oakland (28-76). 000 300 000 – 3. 8. 1

San Francisco (56-47). 210. 002 03x. – 8. 9. 1

Time: 2:28

Attendance: 36,142

Wednesday, July 26, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–It’s no secret that the Giants have a problem at short. Brandon Crawford has been battling the interrelated difficulties of injuries and the ageing process for the past few years, and Casey Schmitt, who at first seemed to be ready for prime time has, at least for now, shown himself to be not quite ready.

So the Giants looked once more to their farm system and today promoted Marco Luciano from Sacramento and optioned David Villar, another momentary hope for the left side of the infield, to the Rivercats.

Luciano made his big league debut Wednesday night, batting eighth in the order, playing short, and receiving a thunderous ovation on being introduced for his first at bat. He made some nice plays in the field and went 0 for two at the plate, including a deep shot that was caught, but you couldn’t say that he was instrumental in the Giants’ 8-3 decisive victory over the A’s.

It was a bullpen game for the home team, who used Ryan Walker (3-0,2.93) as their opener, the sixth time this season that he’s served the Giants in that capacity. After 2-2/3 innings of scoreless pitching, in which he threw 40 pitches and allowed a single and two walks, he was relieved by Scott Alexander, who had opened last Sunday’s game against the Nationals. Jakob Junis took over for Alexander at the beginning of the visitors’ fourth. Alex Wood, Tyler Rogers, and Luke Jackson followed him.

The cross bay visitors also used an opener. They alternated between announcing Freddy Tarnok (0-1, 4.76 at game time), who in his most recent appearance had pitched three innings of one run ball in relief of Hogan Harris against the high flying Astros last Thursday, and Harris.

Harris’s last outing was in that same July 20 contest. That evening, he hurled six frames of four hit ball, in which he allowed two runs, both earned. Both runs and all but one of the hits came in the sixth inning of that start.

Wednesday, it was Tarnok who was the opener. What he opened seemed like a can of worms. After a lead off walk to LaMonte Wade, Jr. Wilmer Flores went down swinging, but not before Wade had taken second on a wild pitch.

Then JD Davis unloaded his 13th homer of the season, a 353 foot fly to right. Just like that, the Giants were up, two zip. Tarnok had allowed three runs, all earned, on three hits and a walk in his 49 pitch stint on the mound when Harris replaced him with none on and two away in the bottom of the third and fanned Michael Conforto.

The A’s also used Angel Felipe, who entered the game to open the home seventh, and Sam Long, who came in after the A’s challenge to the safe call at second on Luis Matos’s two out double was denied on review.

After receiving his welcoming ovation, Luciano produced a resounding fly to the right field wall that Ramón Laureano brought down for the second out of the home second. The cheering for Luciano continued for a bit, and, when it had died down, Schmitt doubled to left center, driving in Mike Yastremski with San Francisco’s third tally.

The Athletics closed the gap when Jakob Junis took over in the fourth. Brent Rooker popped out to first. Bleday smacked a two bagger to right center. After Jordan Díaz whiffed, Laureano drew a base on balls, and Jace Peterson, hitting for Aledmys Díaz, singled to center, driving in Bleday.

Laureano also scored on the play because of Matos’s throwing error, which also allowed Peterson to take third. He scored the tying run on Shea Langeliers’ single to right.

Needless to say, Alexander didn’t come out for the fifth. Alex Wood did, and he kept Oakland off the board through the seventh. Tyler Rogers allowed a single to Rooker in the eighth, and that was it for the Giants’ pitching staff until Jackson put the game in the books in the top of the ninth/

Wilmer Flores broke the 3-3 tie, leading off the bottom of the sixth with a four bagger that travelled over the Bank of America advertisement just to the left of the 399 foot sign in left center. An out later, Austin Slater pinch hit for Conforto and drove one over the Toyota ad in left. Two blinks of an eye, and the Giants were leading, 5-3. The home runs were Flores’s 14th and Slater’s fifth.

Back to back two out doubles by Matos (off Felipe), Bailley (off Moll), and Yastrzemski (also off Moll), plus a single by Wisely (again, off Moll), who was thrown out trying to advance to second, added three runs to the Giants’ lead, giving Luke Jackson a 7-3 lead to protect in the top of the ninth.

He allowed a leadoff infield single to Jordan Díaz before putting the game on ice

The winning pitcher was Wood, now 5-4, 4.75. The loss went to Harris, now 2-5, 6.07.

The Giants will have a well earned day off tomorrow before Boston comes to town on Friday the 28th.

Oakland A’s game wrap: Giants rout A’s 8-3 sweep two-game series at Oracle Park; A’s open series in Colorado on Friday

Oakland Athletics’ Ramón Laureano (22) celebrates with Tony Kemp, left, after scoring against the San Francisco Giants on Jace Peterson’s single during the fourth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Jul 26, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The San Francisco Giants offense woke up Wednesday night as they beat the A’s 8-3 to sweep the two-game series. The Giants had scored just five runs in their last four games. San Francisco needed the win to pick up a game on the LA Dodgers.

The Dodgers lost to the Toronto Blue Jays 8-1 and now own a three-game lead over the Giants. The A’s were hoping to win, but that did not happen. The guys from Oakland still have the worst record in all of baseball. With the trade deadline this weekend, it will be interesting to see if the A’s will be making any transactions. The game summary follows below.

In the bottom of the first, with one out and a runner on second, Giants’ third baseman J D Davis sent Freddy Tarnok’s pitch out of the park. For Davis, it was his 13th big fly this season to give the Giants an early 2-0 lead.

The Giants put their third run of the night on the board in the bottom of the second. With one out, Mike Yazstermski singled. Tarnok retired Marco Luciano on a fly ball to right field. Luciano was making his Major League debut. Second baseman, Casey Schmitt, mired in a slump, doubled to drive in Yaz with the run. The G-Men lead 3-0 after two.

The A’s put a three-spot on the board in the top of the fourth. With one out, JJ Bleday doubled. Jakob Junis, the Giants’ third pitcher of the night, struck out Jordan Diaz for the second out. Ramon Laureano walked. A’s manager Mrk Kotsay sent in Jace Peterson to pinch hit for Aledmys Diaz.

Peterson singled to drive in Bleday, and Laureano went to third. However, Luis Matos’ throw home got by everyone for an error. Laureano scored, and Peterson went to third on the error. Shea Langeliers followed with a single to drive in Peterson with the A’s third run. The game is tied 3-3 midway through the fourth inning.

The Giants regained the lead in their half of the sixth. Wilmer Flores led off the inning with a ground-rule double. Harris retired J D Davis for the first out. Giants’ skipper Gabe Kapler had Austin Slater pinch-hit for Michael Conforto, Slater, for the eighth time in his career, hit a pinch-hit homer run to put the Giants ahead, 5-3. For Slater, it was his fifth dinger this year.

The Giants put the game out of reach in the eighth. With two outs, three consecutive doubles, and a single produced three runs to give the Giants the lead 8-3. Giants’ reliever Luke Jackson gave up an infield single to Jordan Diaz leading off in the ninth. Jackson then retired the next three hitters to end the game. The Giants win 8-3.

Game Notes: With the loss, the A’s are now 28-76. The Giants improved to 56-47 and now trail the first-place Los Angeles Dodgers by three games in the NL West division.

The line score for Oakland was three runs, eight hits, and one error.

The line for San Francisco was eight runs, nine hits, and one error. J D Davis and Austin Slater each had a two-run dinger. 

Both teams used a reliever to open the game. Ryan Walker started for the Giants and went two and 2/3rds innings. He did not allow a run. The Giants used six pitchers in the game. The A’s opener was Freddy Tarnok. Tarnok also went two and 2/3rds innings, but he gave up three hits, three runs, and a home run. The A’s used four pitchers.

Hogan Harris was the losing pitcher. His record is now 2-5. Alex Wood was the winning pitcher. 

The A’s do not play on Thursday, and they start a six-game road trip starting Friday night against the Colorado Rockies. After facing the Rockies, the A’s travel to Los Angeles to face the Dodgers.

The A’s nor the Rockies have yet to announce their starter for Friday. 

Attendance at the game was 36,142. 

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Yastrzemski is clutch again for Giants; Manfred gets re-elected as MLB Commissioner what it means for A’s relocation

San Francisco Giants third baseman J.D. Davis throws to first for an out on Oakland Athletics’ Nick Allen during the third inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Jul 26, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael:

#1 After the kind of road trip the Giants had how big was it for them to come home and snap that six game loss streak against the Oakland A’s on Tuesday night.

#2 The Giants Mike Yastrzemski has come up big in the past and he was clutch again slugging for an RBI double putting the Giants ahead for the eventual 2-1 win.

#3 Talk about Brandon Crawford his with left leg injury is he day to day or will he be out for sometime?

#4 Casey Schmitt said he hopes Crawford will return soon but he’s just excited to be able to start at shortstop until Crawford gets back.

#5 Miguel talk about tonight’s starters for the A’s Hogan Harris (2-4 ERA 6.11) going up against Ryan Walker (3-0 ERA 2.93) for this second game concluding the series tonight at 6:45pm PT.

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

San Francisco Giants recap: Yastrzemski’s go ahead double caps Giants win 2-1 over A’s; Six game skid comes to an end for SF

San Francisco Giants’ Casey Schmitt (6) celebrates with teammates at the dugout after hitting a sacrifice fly against the Oakland Athletics during the fifth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue Jul 25, 2023 (AP News photo)

Oakland (28-75). 000 000 010 – 1. 5. 1

San Francisco (55-47). 000 010 01x. – 2. 4 0

Time: 2:20

Attendance: 40,014

Tuesday, July 25, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Tuesday’s game by the shores of McCovey Cove began with a pair of reversals. The just barely contending Giants showed up at Oracle Park with a longer losing streak (six games) than the just barely Oakland A’s (one game).

Giant fans and Athletics fans united in a demonstration designed to keep the A’s in Oakland. When it was over, the Giants had defeated the 2-1, in front of a crowd of over 40,000 paying customers, and the chances of the A’s staying in Oakland remained negligible.

The battered Giants came home exhausted from their distressing trip east without the benefit of a day off between the shellacking they took in Washington and tonight’s thrilling victory. Their long flight to SFO meant a three hour time zone adjustment, which is pretty rough in any case but worse if you have to play a sport in which time is of the essence.

In addition to the players who aren’t expected to be able to play for the rest of the season, the Giants have three position players and a pitcher on the IL. Thairo Estrada is expected to miss four to six more weeks; Brandon Crawford was placed on the 10 day list 10 days ago and has no timetable for return; Luis González, out since mid April, is on a rehab assignment; and their is no expected return date for reliever John Brebbia, on the 15 day list since June 17.

Against this dismal background, Alex Cobb, their all star right handed starter toed the rubber for San Francisco, sporting a 6-3, 3.1 record at game time. His work was frankly magnificent. He allowed three hits over six shutout innings, striking out nine and allowing just one base on balls. He threw 95 pitches, 55 for strikes. He had to settle for a no decision, but he brought his ERA down to 2.97.

The A’s chose to go the opener route, choosing Tayler Scott, a journeyman righty from Johanasberg now with his sixth team in the show since 2019, for the role. Before tossing his scoreless opening frame, Scott was 0-4, 4.50.

He passed the baton to Ken Waldichuk (2-6, 6,75 when he toed the rubber), who lasted 4-2/3 innings and allowed one, unearned, run on. one hit before passing the baton to Austin Pruitt in the bottom of the sixth. Lucas Erceg, who took the loss and now is 2-2, 5.46, and Sam Moll also saw action.

Cobb got off to a strong start Thee in his first 5-1/3 innings of work was Seth Brown, who suffered The Curse of the Leadoff Double in the second. Loud chants of “SELL THE TEAM” began with Brown’s second at bat, in which he grounded out. and continued, mixed with “STAY IN OAKLAND,” through Jace Peterson’s single and Cobb’s strikeout of Shea Langeliers.

They died out when the Giants’ appeal of Tyler Soderstrom’s infield single was being decided. The appeal was denied. The chants died out until they were revived when Oakland tied the game in the top of the eighth.

The orange and black went ahead on an unearned run in their half of the fifth. Wllmer Flores led off with a walk, the first base runner allowed by Waldichuk. Patrick Bailey followed with a single to left, sending Flores to second.

Brett Wisely bunted to the mound; Waldichuk unwisely – or at least inaccurately – threw to third, and the basses were loaded. Waldichuk recovered to fan Slater, but Casey Schmitt lifted a sacrifice fly to right that brought Flores in with the first run of the game.

Luis Matos almost doubled the Giants lead when he led off the home sixth with a mighty blast above the left field wall. Above, but not over, it. Tony Kemp made a marvelous leaping grab that converted what looked like a sure home run into an out. Waldichuk fanned JD Davis and walked Joc Pederson. It was then that Austin Pruitt relieved Waldichuk.

Tyler Rogers and his submarine slants relieved Cobb with a 1-2-3 seventh, but he coughed up the tying run in the eighth on a pinch hit single by Aledmys Díaz, Kemp’s sacrifice bunt, and a sharp single by Bleday to right center.

Lucas Erceg allowed a Texas League single to LaMonte Wade, Jr., and a walk to Davis. in the bottom of the eighth before giving way to Sam Moll, who had to face Mike Yastremzski, who had entered the game as a pinch runner in the sixth, with Matos, who had forced Wade out at second, and Davis on base with two away. He slammed a double down the right field, bringing in Matos with what proved to be the winning run.

Camilo Doval, who hadn’t had many. save opportunities recently, came in for the ninth and struck out the three men he faced, That earned him his 31st save.

The A’s and the Giants will wind up the San Francisco portion of their 2023 encounters tomorrow, starting at 6:40. Hogan Harris I2-4, 6.11) will be on the mound for Oakland; San Francisco has yet to announce who will start (or open) for them. But don’t count on it.

Oakland A’s game wrap: A’s Lose Game One Of The Battle of The Bay 2-1 In A Nail Biter

Oakland Athletics’ Seth Brown walks to the dugout after striking out against the San Francisco Giants during the sixth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue Jul 25, 2023 (AP News photo)

Tuesday, July 25th, 2023

By Troy Ewers

San Francisco, CA – Tuesday’s game in Oracle Park in front of 40,014 fans, both the San Francisco Giants (55-47) and the Oakland A’s (28-75) fans and it’s the yearly battle of the Bay. On the mound the starters were Alex Cobb and Tayler Scott. 

A’s started off the game where Cobb struck out the whole side, but Oakland’s starting pitcher Scott pitched one inning and recorded two K’s and one hit, but that was the end of his night and in the second inning on the mound for Oakland was Ken Waldichuk who kept the Giants at zero until the fifth when a sac fly from Casey Schmitt scored Wilmer Flores who got on from a walk. 1-0 Giants.

During the top of the fifth, the A’s fans in the park stood up and chanted to sell the team so that it could be heard by every fan in the park it felt like. The chants died out once a manager’s challenge debating a play at first.

A major moment for Oakland came when Tony Kemp stopped a potential hit for extra bases with a big catch at the wall. After two outs in the sixth Oakland took out Waldichuk and put in Austin Pruitt, who got them out of the jam.

After seven innings, the A’s kept it close at 1-0. Aledmys Diaz pinch hits for Nick Allen to leadoff the 8th and gets a base hit. JJ Bleday hits a single that scores Diaz and ties it up at one. Bleday has seven RBIs over his last seven games.

Tyler Rogers strikes out Seth Brown, but it was a close call, because Bleday also stole second. Pruitt gets taken out to put Lucas Erceg on the mound in the eighth. Mike Yastrzemski comes into the game to pinch hit for Joc Pederson and hits an RBI double that scores Luis Matos. 2-1 Giants.

The last chance effort for the A’s came in the top of the ninth, but the best closer in the league right now Camillo Doval came in and struck out the side and recorded his 31st save which leads the league at the moment.

The next game between these two is Wednesday and the starting pitchers are Hogan Harris for Oakland and it hasn’t been announced for San Francisco. The A’s are now 6-13 in July and this is the start to a eight game road trip. For Oakland after tonight’s loss, they go 47 games below .500, which is the most in franchise history since 1979 when they finished the season 54-under. 

Starting pitchers for Wednesday night for Oakland Logan Harris (2-4 ERA 6.11) San Francisco has not announced a starter first pitch is slated at 6:45pm PT.