Giants’ bullpen gets pounded in 7-5 loss to Brewers

Photo credit: @SFGiants

By Jeremy Harness

SAN FRANCISCO – The San Francisco Giants’ bullpen will want to get rid of the memories of the last two days as quickly as they can.

After coughing up Wednesday’s game in Seattle, the Giants’ relievers had an even rougher outing on Thursday, completely overshadowing Dereck Rodriguez’s solid outing in a 7-5 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers at AT&T Park on Thursday night.

Rodriguez did his part, going six strong innings and giving up only a pair of runs and giving the Giants a solid chance to win. However, things imploded upon his exit.

The Brewers put together a one-out rally in the eighth against Mark Melancon, when Travis Shaw singled against the shift to put runners on the corners, which brought Ryan Braun off the bench to pinch hit. Braun responded with a single into left field to bring in Christian Yelich, who had led off the inning with a single of his own, to give Milwaukee a 3-2 lead.

Erik Kratz immediately followed that with a single up the middle to bring in another run and send a great deal of Giants fans to the exits.

However, the Giants fought back almost immediately after that. They put together a rally of their own in the bottom of the eighth, scoring a run before Brandon Crawford’s single down the right-field line put runners on the corners with two out.

However, Hunter Pence struck out to end the inning, with the Giants still down a run. Milwaukee then pushed the lead back up to two in the ninth when Jesus Aguilar’s single brought in Yelich, before Travis Shaw’s two-run homer gave the Brewers a 7-3 lead and gave even more fans a solid reason to beat traffic.

The Giants found themselves down early, but their bats sprung to life in the second. The Giants loaded the bases with nobody out, and after Pence’s double-play ball brought home the tying run, Steven Duggar lined one into center to give the Giants the lead.

After giving up the first-inning run, Rodriguez settled down very nicely and was moving right along until the very first pitch of the sixth inning, when Yelich ripped one just beyond the center-field wall – just over the 399-foot sign – to tie the game right back up at 2-2.

NOTES: As to be expected, there was more than a handful of boos waiting for reliever Josh Hader when he entered the game with two out in the sixth in a 2-2 tie.

He then got the third out and then pitched a scoreless seventh before giving way to Jeremy Jeffress. Hader ended up getting the win on Thursday, running his season record to 3-0.

Hader has been quite the lightning rod for controversy lately, as racist and homophobic tweets that he had made as a 17-year-old – seven years ago – surfaced during last Tuesday’s All-Star Game, a game that saw him give up a three-run, game-losing home run.

Following Tuesday’s game, the Giants optioned both left-hander Ty Blach and infielder Kelby Tomlinson to Triple-A Sacramento, upon the return of both Evan Longoria, who returned to the starting lineup Wednesday after completing a rehab assignment, and righty Chris Stratton, who was recalled from Triple-A.

However, Brandon Belt was placed on the 10-day disabled list with a hyperextended right knee, which prompted the team to recall Blach.

UP NEXT: The Giants and Brewers will face off again Friday night at 7:15 pm PDT.

Giants’ Wall of Fame to get three more members

Photo credit: twitter.com

By Jeremy Kahn

SAN FRANCISCO — Even though this is just a four-game homestand for the San Francisco Giants, there is a special day for three former members of the Giants family on this homestand.

Former starting pitchers Matt Cain, Ryan Vogelsong and closer Brian Wilson will have their plaques unveiled on The Giants’ Wall of Fame on Saturday afternoon, prior to the Giants game versus the Milwaukee Brewers.

The trio will bring the number of former Giants on The Wall up to 52, and they are the largest group to be recognized since the inaugural class of 2008, when 43 of the 49 were recognized.

The Wall of Fame recognizes retired Giants players, who played for the organization for a minimum of at least nine seasons, or five seasons with at least All-Star selection as a Giants player since their move to California in 1958.

Here is a list of the players and managers on the Wall, and when they played and/or managed for the Giants.

2008:
Felipe Alou: 1958-1963; Manager: 2003-2006

Gary Lavelle: 1974-1984

Jim Barr: 1971-1978, 1982-1983

Johnnie LeMaster: 1975-1985

Willie Mays: 1951-1952, 1954-1972

Rod Beck: 1991-1997

Jeffrey Leonard: 1981-1988

Vida Blue: 1978-1981, 1985-1986

Kirt Manwaring: 1987-1996

Willie McCovey: 1959-1973, 1977-1980

Bobby Bolin: 1961-1969

Juan Marichal: 1960-1973

Jeff Brantley: 1988-1993

Jack Clark: 1975-1984

Mike McCormick: 1956-1962, 1967-1970

Bob Brenly: 1981-1988, 1989

John Burkett: 1987, 1990-1994

Stu Miller: 1957-1962

Bobby Bonds: 1968-1974

Orlando Cepeda: 1958-1966

Randy Moffitt: 1972-1981

Greg Minton: 1975-1987

Kevin Mitchell: 1987-1991

Will Clark: 1986-1993

Mike Krukow: 1983-1989

Jim Davenport: 1958-1970; Manager: 1985

John Montefusco: 1974-1980

Chili Davis: 1981-1987

Matt Williams: 1987-1996

Robb Nen: 1998-2002

Dick Dietz: 1966-1971

Gaylord Perry: 1962-1971

Darryl Evans: 1976-1983

Jim Ray Hart: 1963-1973

Rick Reuschel: 1987-1991

J.T. Snow: 1997-2005, 2008

Tito Fuentes: 1965-1974

Kirk Rueter: 1996-2005

Scott Garrelts: 1982-1991

Robby Thompson: 1986-1996

Tom Haller: 1961-1967

Chris Speier: 1971-1977, 1987-1989

Atlee Hammaker: 1982-1985, 1987-1990

2009:
Jeff Kent: 1997-2002

2010:
Rich Aurilia: 1995-2003, 2007-2009

Shawn Estes: 1995-2001

2011:
Marvin Benard: 1995-2003

Jason Schmidt: 2001-2006

2017:
Barry Bonds: 1993-2007

Bay Bridge Series: A’s and Giants–Two Teams Going in Different Directions

Photo credit: twitter.com

By: Amaury Pi-Gonzalez

OAKLAND, Calif. — The Oakland A’s took four out the six games from the San Francisco Giants these past two weekends and the A’s won the first ever Bay Bridge Series trophy. The A’s won two out of three at AT&T Park and did the same at the Oakland Coliseum. The two Bay Area teams crossed path like two ships in the open sea with one full steam ahead and the other one just trying to stay afloat.

The A’s acquired Mets closer Jeurys Familia, and on his first day with the A’s on Sunday, the Dominican native saw action as he pitched two effective innings in relief and won the game. Now, Familia is 5-4 and comes from the Mets–a team going nowhere with perhaps a seize of taking the cellar-dweller status away from the Marlins–with 17 saves in 21 opportunities. The A’s are contenders and still looking to land a starter.

On Saturday, a new attendance record was set at the Oakland Coliseum since 1968–a record-setting 56,318 in attendance as Mount Davis was opened to the public for the first time in 13 years. On Friday, 45,606 followed by Sunday’s 44,379. A grand total of 146,303 attended for part two of the Bay Bridge Series.

It is good to see this great rivalry. Also, the Bay Area Champion Trophy was a great idea. At the Coliseum this weekend, a lot of families were in attendance–many of whom had different loyalties. So it was not rare to see,some A’s fans and some Giants fans in the same family. As I walked around for an hour before game time, I noticed nothing but joy among the fans during this great series, the first in Oakland since the All-Star Break, with good weather.

Right now, the Giants have a much different look. Right now, the A’s are young, aggressive and exciting as they’re hitting home runs in bunches, while the Giants are pretty much a veteran ball club trying to hold on and return to the form of their most recent odd-year dynasty.

The Giants have a superb fan base and likely do not want to mention the word “rebuild” and they are hoping against hope that their team have enough to make a comeback. They’re playing in a division, where it looks like the Dodgers (now with Manny Machado) are the favorites to win for a six straight time and maybe earn themselves another trip to another World Series. Duggar, Slater, Moronta and Suárez are some of the young blood on the Giants’ roster trying to make an impression compared to the veterans. Only time will tell, but if the Giants continue to hover around the .500 mark, the powers-to-be might have to star selling players before July 31. In a way, they are very lucky to be playing in the NL West, where nobody has gotten really hot, taken first place and opened a big lead.

But I notice that these two teams are going in different directions. The A’s are playing four games starting tomorrow at Arlington, Texas, against the last-place Texas Rangers, three at Denver against the contending Colorado Rockies, and then return home on July 30 for a eight-game homestand over 10 days–three versus the Toronto Blue Jays, three versus the Detroit Tigers, and finally, a two-game set versus the Dodgers.

The Giants head to Seattle for a couple of games at Safeco Field against the Mariners next Tuesday and Wednesday, travel back to San Francisco to host the contending Milwaukee Brewers for four games and then fly to San Diego to close out July against the Padres for a brief two-game series.

Will the Giants ‘back up the truck’ if by then? If they have not made a run? Only the shadow knows. Stay tuned.

Obviously, the Giants want to continue with this cast and hope that Joe Panik and Evan Longoria get back to play and roll the dice! It’s interesting enough that the Giants’ No. 1 pitcher Madison Bumgarner and No. 2 pitcher Johnny Cueto have not fared that well after coming out of the DL. This Sunday, Cueto gave up four home runs–two to Khris Davis and two to Matt Olson. When Cueto was pitching this week, he doesn’t give the long-ball with that frequency, but the A’s continue to hit home runs with the best of teams in baseball this season.

The Giants have a lot of big contracts locked to players like Cueto, Samardzija and Melancon, while they will have to make a decision with Bumgarner…to extend his contract or even trade him in the current market where everybody is looking for pitchers. We will also find out if other guys like veteran outfielder Andrew McCutchen will say ‘adios’ to San Francisco.

Amaury Pi-González is on his 41st season of broadcasting the MLB. He’s currently broadcasting for the A’s (his first team in 1977) and has also broadcasted the Giants, Angels and Mariners. In 2010, the Cuban-born broadcaster was inducted into the Bay Area Radio Hall of Fame (BARHOD) alongside Jon Miller and Gary Radnich. As far as baseball in Spanish, Pi-Gonzalez is only the second broadcaster in the country as the longtime Spanish voice of the Dodgers, trailing Jaime Jarrin, who has been broadcasting for over 50 years.

A’s rout Giants 6-2 in laugher, thanks to Manaea

Photo credit: @Athletics

By Jeremy Kahn

SAN FRANCISCO — This was not the way that the San Francisco Giants wanted to go into the All-Star break with back-to-back losses against a team that will face when they return from the break, the Oakland A’s.

Andrew Suarez gave up four runs in five innings of work, as the A’s took the finale of the Bay Bridge with a 6-2 victory over the Giants before a sellout crowd of 42,098 at AT&T Park on Sunday afternoon.

Asides from the four runs that he allowed, Suarez also gave up four hits, walked two and struck out five in his final start prior to the All-Star break.

This was the first series loss for the Giants at home since dropping two out of three against the Arizona Diamondbacks from April 9-11, as they went 10-0-2 in that span. The two series that the Giants split were with the Colorado Rockies from May 17-20, and the St. Louis Cardinals from July 5-8.

The A’s got to Suarez in the top of the fourth inning, as five straight batters reached and four of those five scored to give the A’s the only runs that they would need on the afternoon.

American League All-Star second baseman Jed Lowrie got the inning started, as he walked to lead off the inning and then scored on a Stephen Piscotty single to tie up the game for the A’s. Matt Olson then gave the A’s the lead for good, as he drove in Mark Canha with a single of his own.

Matt Chapman then made it three hits in a row, as he singled to score Piscotty with the A’s third run of the frame. Jonathan Lucroy drove in the fourth run of the inning, as he hit a sacrifice fly to score Olson from third base.

The four-run inning made a winner of Sean Manaea, who pitched six innings, allowing two runs on five hits, walking and striking out one, as his record improved to 9-6 on the season.

The Giants took an early lead 1-0 lead in the bottom of the second inning, as Gorkys Hernandez doubled with one out and then scored on a Gorkys Hernandez single.

Piscotty extended the A’s up to 5-1 in the top of the sixth inning, as he took a Reyes Moronta pitch and put it into the left-field bleachers. It was the 12thhome run of the season for Piscotty.

It was the first hit allowed by Moronta since he gave up a single to Matt Kemp of the Los Angeles Dodgers on June 16 at Dodger Stadium. The last run allowed prior to Piscotty’s home run came on June 13 against the Miami Marlins at Marlins Park, and it was the just the second home run he allowed this season. (April 19 at Arizona).

Chase d’Arnaud cut the A’s lead down to 5-2 in the bottom of the sixth inning, as he took a Manaea offering and put it into the Garden beyond the center-field fence. It was the second home run of the season for d’Arnaud.

Lucroy put the finishing touches on the scoring in the top of the ninth inning, as he singled to centerfield off of Will Smith to score Chapman, who doubled with one out in the inning.

NOTES: Dereck Rodriguez will open the second half for the Giants, as they head across the Bay Bridge to face the A’s at the Oakland Coliseum beginning on Friday night.

Following Rodriguez out of the All-Star break will be Madison Bumgarner, Johnny Cueto and then Suarez will start the series opener against the Seattle Mariners on July 24 at Safeco Field.

Steven Duggar’s major league career is only a week old and he is setting team records already. Duggar is the first Giants in the live-ball era (since 1920) to have five or more doubles in his first five games, this according to STATS, LLC.

When the Giants went to the break last season, they were 34-56, their worst record at the break since 2008, when they were 40-55. This season at the All-Star Break, the Giants are 50-48.

UP NEXT: The Giants and A’s will battle it out in round two of the Bay Bridge Series at O.co Coliseum on Friday night at 6:35 pm PDT.

A’s Head to All-Star Break With Win Over Giants, Take First Round of Bay Bridge Series 6-2

Photo credit: @Athletics

By Matthew Harrington

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. — The Oakland Athletics took round one of the Bay Bridge Series, winning the rubber game over the San Francisco Giants 6-2 at AT&T Park Sunday afternoon. Oakland rallied for four runs in the fourth inning off Giants’ starter Andrew Suárez and Sean Manaea (9-6, 3.42 ERA) fired six innings, scattering five hits for a pair of runs to pick up the victory. Oakland (55-42) heads into the All Star break, having won seven of its last 10 contests.

For the Green and Gold, the interruption might be unwanted after a torrid stretch of play. Oakland hasn’t lost a series in over a month since dropping a June 12-14 sweep at the hands of the defending World Champion Houston Astros. Since then, the A’s have gone 21-6, but still find themselves three games behind Seattle for the second Wild Card spot in the American League.

Stephen Piscotty, Matt Olson and Matt Chapman singled in runs in the fourth and catcher Jonathan Lucroy lofted a sacrifice fly for the Green and Gold. Piscotty also hit his 12th homer of the season in the top of the sixth inning to collect a pair of RBIs on the day. Leadoff man Chase D’Arnaud hit a solo homer for San Francisco and center fielder Gorky Hernández plated a run for the home team.

The rookie Suárez was staked to a 1-0 lead after Brandon Crawford doubled with one out in the bottom of the second, then crossed the plate on a single Hernández. He shut down the A’s in the top of the next frame 1-2-3, but struggled after getting the first out in the fourth.

All-Star Jed Lowrie, making his first start since exiting Friday’s game after suffering a contusion following a collision with Stephen Piscotty, worked the one-out walk. Saturday’s hero Mark Canha singled to put runners on the corners. Piscotty, Olson and Chapman then hit consecutive run-scoring singles for a 3-1 lead. Lucroy would fly out to knock in the fourth run of the inning, his first of two RBIs on the day. Suárez finished the frame with a groundout from his counterpart Manaea.

The A’s would chase the eventual loser Suárez (3-6, 3.94) after five innings, bringing reliever Reyes Moronta, the magician who helped the Giants win Friday’s game by coaxing three outs with the bases loaded with A’s in the seventh inning. He didn’t pitch a clean inning Sunday though, with Pleasanton native Piscotty crushing an 82 mile-per-hour slider over the wall in left field for a 5-1 Oakland lead. Jonathan Lucroy singled in an insurance run in the top of the ninth off Will Smith for a six-pack of runs.

Manaea cruised after the A’s took the substantial lead, giving up just two hits over his next three innings of work. The only rough patch came when the Giants third baseman D’Arnaud took a 1-0 offering over the wall in center field for his second homer and second RBI on the season. Manaea finished out the inning with a trio of groundouts, hitting the showers staked to a 5-2 lead after allowing just five hits with a single walk and punch-out each. He threw just 73 pitches in the outing heading into the break.

The A’s bullpen triumverate of Ryan Buchter, Lou Trivino and Blake Treinen held the Giants (50-48) scoreless over an inning each to pick up the win and put the A’s 13 games over .500 at the midseason point.

The Bay Bridge series resumes on the other side of the Midsummer Classic, with first-time All-Stars Jed Lowrie, Blake Treinen, and the A’s welcoming the Giants to the East Bay for a Friday through Sunday series. Oakland can win the outright inaugural trophy made from the original Bay Bridge by winning the series. San Francisco would need a sweep to win it outright. If Oakland drops two of three, they’d tie at three games apiece. Starting pitchers have yet to be announced.

Canha’s pinch-hit lifts A’s past Giants 4-3

Photo credit: @NBCSAthletics

By Jeremy Kahn

SAN FRANCISCO — Mark Canha changed the outcome of game two of the Bay Bridge Series with one swing of the bat.

Canha smashed a two-run pinch hit home run off of Tony Watson in the top of the seventh inning, as the Oakland A’s came back to defeat the San Francisco Giants 5-4 before a sellout crowd of 41,970 at AT&T Park on Saturday night. It was the first pinch hit home run for Canha in his Major League career.

It was a tough game for Watson, who was usually lights out for the Giants, as he gave up a leadoff single to Josh Phegley, and then Canha put a Watson offering half way up the left field bleachers to give the A’s the lead for good.

Buster Posey continues his well against the A’s, as he picked up two hits in his first two at-bats on the night. This is the 11th time in his last 16 games against the A’s that has had multi-hit games against the A’s, during the stretch, Posey is 29-for-67 with a batting average of .433.

Chase d’Arnaud picked up two more hits for the Giants, and is batting .294 since being called up from Sacramento.

Giants starter Jeff Samardzija went just four innings, allowing two runs on three hits, walking two and striking out one, as he did not fare in the decision.

It was a tough night for A’s starter Brett Anderson, as he did not make out of the fourth inning, as he went 3.1 innings, allowing three runs on six hits, not walking a batter and striking out one.

Anderson picked up his eighth career hit in the top of the second inning, and first since April 24, 2017, while a member of the Chicago Cubs against the Pittsburgh Pirates in a 14-3 victory for the Cubs at PNC Park.

The A’s took an early 1-0 lead on Samardzija in the top of the second inning, as Matt Chapman walked and then scored on a Phegley sacrifice fly.

That would be the score for a half inning, as Steven Duggar led off the inning with a double, then scored on a Alen Hanson.

Khris Davis then gave the A’s their second lead of the night, as he hit a sacrifice fly that scored Stephen Piscotty, who led off the inning with a double off of Samardzija.

Duggar continued his hot hitting, as he double in the bottom of the fourth inning to score Hernandez, who doubled just before Duggar.

Over his last two games, Duggar has four doubles against A’s pitching and is hitting .320 since being recalled from Triple-A Sacramento.

Two batters later, Austin Slater gave the Giants the lead once again, as he singled in Duggar from second base.

“d’Arnaud and Duggar had great games tonight,” said manager Bruce Bochy.

Derek Holland came on to replace Samardzija, and he did an outstanding job, as he struck out the first five batters he faced, but then gave up a long single to Chad Pinder off of Levi’s Landing in right field. Holland then regrouped to get Dustin Fowler to ground into a force play to end the threat.

Holland is the eighth National League pitcher this season to strikeout five or more in two innings.

Watson lasted just 0.1 innings, allowing two runs on three hits, walking one and striking out one, as he lost for the third time this season against two wins.

Rookie Ray Black came on to replace Watson, and he responded by striking out Davis and Chapman to end the inning.

Brandon Belt was ejected from the game in the between the fifth and sixth innings by third base umpire Greg Gibson for arguing a third strike call. Belt was ejected after he struck out in the bottom of the fifth inning on a check swing.

“I have not looked at it to be honest,” said Bochy.

The Giants put the winning run on first base, as Andrew McCutchen and Posey each walked with two outs off of A’s closer Blake Treinen, but Treinen was able to strikeout Crawford to end the game.

Crawford was intentionally walked in the bottom of the seventh inning by A’s reliever Leo Trivino, and it was the 11thintentional walk of the season for Crawford, a new career high and the second most in the National League.

NOTES: With the Giants and A’s playing in six straight games prior to and after the All-Star break, this is the first time since July 3-6, 1969 against the Atlanta Braves that the Giants have played the same opponent in six straight games. Both July 4 and July 6 were doubleheaders against the Braves, this according to Stats, LLC.

On this day in 2005, the Giants defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-3, and the Giants became the first team in major league history to win 10,000 games. The Giants, who were founded as the Gothams in 1883 were 10,000-8511 after their win over their longtime rivals.

UP NEXT: The Giants and A’s will battle it out in Sunday afternoon’s rubber game at 1:05 pm PDT.

Giants rookie Andrew Suarez will close out the first half, as he looks for his fourth win of the season. The A’s will send eight-game winner Sean Manaea to the mound.

Giants strike with 5-run 7th inning to take Bay Bridge opener with 7-1 rout of A’s

Photo credit: @SFGiants

By Jeremy Kahn

SAN FRANCISCO — Madison Bumgarner looked like his old self with the exception of one bad pitch, but it was the relief pitching of Reyes Moronta and Sam Dyson that was huge.

Moronta relieved Bumgarner with the bases loaded and nobody out in the top of the seventh inning, and he was able to get out of the jam and the San Francisco Giants took game one of the Bay Bridge Series with a 7-1 victory over the Oakland A’s before a sellout crowd of 41,751 at AT&T Park on Friday night.

“Bum threw a great game,” said manager Bruce Bochy.

The two other remaining members of the Giants’ run when they won three World Championships in five years also came up huge when the team needed it the most, as Buster Posey came through the hit of the night and Pablo Sandoval came up with the defensive play of the night.

Posey gave the Giants the lead for good in the bottom of the sixth inning, as he singled off of Edwin Jackson to score Steven Duggar, who led off the inning with a walk off of Jackson.

“Moronta, Pablo and Craw won the game for us,” said Bumgarner.

Duggar broke up Jackson’s no-hit bid, as he doubled to lead-off the bottom of the fourth inning and scored when Jackson balked with Brandon Crawford at the plate.

The rookie ended up going 2-for-4 at the plate with two doubles, a walk and two runs scored on the evening.

Posey also picked up two hits for the Giants, who reached the 50 win on July 13, last season, the Giants did not win their 50th game until August 18.

Bumgarner gave up a lead-off base hit to Marcus Semien in the top of the first inning, and then proceeded to retire the 14 A’s in a row until Chad Pinder tied up the game with his 10th home run of the season with two outs in the top of the fifth inning.

Pinder’s home run off of Bumgarner was the team’s major league leading 83rd home run on the road this season.

The play of the game came in the top of the seventh inning, as with one out and the bases loaded, Jonathan Lucroy hit a liner heading down the left field line; however, Sandoval made a great grab for the second out of the inning.

Bumgarner got into trouble in the top of the seventh inning, as he gave up a single to Stephen Piscotty, and then issued walks to Matt Olson and Matt Chapman and that was the end of the line for Bumgarner on the evening, as Bochy called on Moronta to get the Giants out of the bases loaded, nobody out jam.

Moronta got Pinder to strikeout for the first out of the inning, then Lucroy lined out to Sandoval, who just missed getting Piscotty at third base and Moronta ended the inning, as he got pinch-hitter Nick Martini to ground out to Crawford to end the inning and the threat.

In all, Bumgarner went six innings, allowing just one run on just three hits, walking three and striking out five. Bumgarner evened up his record at 3-3 on the season after his six-inning performance.

The win gave Bumgarner back-to-back wins at home for the first time since August 18, 2016 versus the New York Mets and 10 days later on August 28 against the Atlanta Braves.

On the other side of things, Jackson also went six innings, allowing two runs, scattering four hits, walking three, striking out one and that balk that gave the Giants their first run of the game in the bottom of the fourth inning. With the loss, Jackson lost for the first time as a member of the A’s and is now 1-1 on the season.

Ryan Dull came on to replace Jackson, but after singles to Alen Hanson and Gorkys Hernandez, Chase d’Arnaud walked to load the bases and that was the end of the night for Dull.

Jeremy Bleich then replaced Dull, as he made his Major League debut and Duggar greeted him by smashing a two-run double to the right field wall that scored both Hanson and Hernandez. Bleich then hit Brandon Belt, and his MLB debut was a short one, as he was replaced by former Giants reliever Santiago Casilla.

Andrew McCutchen drove in the fourth run of the inning, as he hit a sacrifice fly to centerfield that scored Duggar easily from third base.

Casilla then uncorked a wild pitch that allowed Belt to go to second base, and Belt then went to third on a Crawford groundout for the second out of the inning. Unfortunately, Casilla was unable to get out of the inning, as Posey picked up his second hit in as many at-bats, as he lined a double down the left field line to score Belt.

Sam Dyson worked the eighth and ninth innings, as he struck out two and the Giants won for the fifth time in their last seven games. They are now 5-3 on this 10-game home stand that will end on Sunday.

NOTES: Jeff Samardzija looks for his second win of the season on Saturday night, as he takes the mounds against his former team. Brett Anderson will head to the mound for the A’s, as he also looks for his second win of the season.

A’s second baseman Jed Lowrie left the game with a left leg contusion after he collided with Piscotty in the bottom of the third inning. Pinder replaced Lowrie at second base, and Khris Davis came into the game in left field. Davis ended up going 0-for-2, and his 14-game hitting streak came to a halt.

UP NEXT: The Giants and A’s will return to the field on Saturday night at 7:05 pm PDT.

A’s Unlucky in Bay Bridge Opener, Fall to Giants 7-1

Photo credit: @957thegame

By Matthew Harrington

Friday the 13th is an unlucky day by superstition, something the Oakland Athletics can now vouch for after falling to the San Francisco Giants 7-1 at AT&T Park Friday night. After seeing the team MVP exit the game, the bad went to worse. The A’s must have had a black cat or two cross trans-Bay charter on the way to the park after mirroring situations saw the A’s score zero runs and the Giants five.

The A’s loaded the bases with no outs off starter Madison Bumgarner trailing 2-1, but failed to push across a single run after reliever Reyes Moronta punched out Chad Pinder, coaxed an infield lineout from Jonathan Lucroy and pinished off pinch hitter Nick Martini with a bouncer to the sure-handed Brandon Crawford to stymie the threat.

With starter Edwin Jackson lifted for reliever Ryan Dull in the bottom of the innings, the Giants also worked the bases loaded. Reliever Jeremy Bleich enterted the game, making his major league debut after 10 years in the minors. Steven Duggar welcomed him to the bigs with a double down the line in right that scored a pair, then pegged Brandon Belt to reload the bases with Oakland now trailing 4-1.

Former Giant closer Sanitago Casilla replaced Bleich and his infinite ERA, getting Andrew McCutchen out on a sacrifice fly. His wild pitch allowed Duggar to score for 6-1 lead. Buster Posey doubled in a run to add on to the lead.

Oakland starter Edwin Jackson finished his fourth start in as many outings with the A’s by allowing two runs or fewer. He departed the game after six innings with Oakland down 2-1 after he stumbled off the mound in the fourth inning for a run-scoring balk then gave up a Posey RBI single in the bottom of the sixth. He was bolstered briefly by a Chad Pinder solo homer in the top of the fifth of Giants starter Madison Bumgarner, the only run the A’s would score on the night.

Jackson scattered just four hits, while walking three and striking out the one Giant. He was out-dueled ever so slightly by Bumgarner, who allowed three hits, one run and struck out five with his trio of walks. The difference was the pen where Moronta provided the shutdown inning and Sam Dyson pitched two scoreless for San Francisco while Dull, Bleich and Casilla combined for five runs.

Jed Lowrie came out of the game for Oakland, getting pinch hit for by Khris Davis in the sixth inning. He was in a collision with right fielder Stephen Piscotty in the bottom of the third inning. Per the A’s, he exited the game with a leg contusion. It remains to be seen if he’ll appear in Saturday or Sunday’s Bay Bridge series contests.

The A’s will now need to win four of the remaining five contests between the two teams sandwiched around the All-Star break if they want to win the inaugural Bay Bridge series trophy made out of a reclaimed beam from the original Bay Bridge span. Brett Anderson will face Jeff Samardzija, a current trade target of the A’s, in Saturday’s contest. There’s still no word yet on any parade plans for the trophy’s eventual winner.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Bay Bridge Series Set for Friday; Plus Other Rivalries

Photo credit: @NBCSAuthentic

By: Amaury Pi-Gonzalez

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. — The San Francisco Giants will host the Oakland Athletics on July 13, 14 and 15 as the A’s end their last road trip previous to the first half of the season.

After the All-Star break, both teams will play in their first series at the Oakland Coliseum. The two Bay Area franchises have celebrated anniversaries in 2018–the Giants’ 60 years playing in San Francisco since they moved from New York in 1958, and the A’s 50 years in Oakland since they moved from Kansas City, Mo., in 1968.

Today, it is called The Bay Bridge Series or the Battle of the Bay, but it was called the BART Series in the past.

The Oakland Coliseum and AT&T Park are separated by a bridge and a bay 16.2 miles apart. The only two cities in America that have two MLB teams within their city limits are New York and Chicago.

The Yankees vs. Mets rivalry is still going strong after they met for the first time 56 years ago. Back in 2000, these two New York teams were in the World Series. I remember the arguments in the streets of New York, where you have to pick one or the other–because in the Big Apple, you cannot be a fan of both the Mets and Yankees.

Anyways, the Cubs and White Sox both have long, storied histories and a rivalry that spans 100-plus years. It all started in the 1906 World Series when they first met, and the Cubs lost in six games.

There are other rivalries, but are much more geographically apart, and also in different cities like the LA Dodgers and LA Angels, Washington Nationals and Baltimore, and vice versa. Notice these are all American League vs. National League teams. There are others, but they are much far apart inside the same states, like, say, Kansas City Royals and St Louis Cardinals, Houston Astros and Texas Rangers, Miami Marlins and Tampa Bay Rays, etc. It takes hours by land or minutes by air to commute to those series. Of these, the only rivalry with a head-to-head World Series history was in 1985 when the Royals defeated the Cardinals in seven games.

The A’s and Giants met in one World Series in 1989 when the A’s swept the Giants, despite the uncertainty after the Loma Prieta earthquake interrupted the rivalry with a 6.9 intensity prior to Game 3 at Candlestick Park.

For those who were there, that was one of the most unforgettable moments of our lives. Overall, the A’s have won four World Series during their 50-year history in Oakland, while the Giants have won three during their 60 years in San Francisco. Prior to the start of this 2018 season, the odds for these two teams to win the World Series this year where; 200-1 for the Giants and 300-1 for the A’s.

The Giants and A’s met for the first time in the regular season in June 1997 for their first year of inter-league play. For many years, they have played previous to the regular season, but those have been exhibition games as part of Spring Training.

The Giants and A’s will have something more to play for when the two teams meet this year in the Bay Bridge Series during the regular season–an 18-inch steel trophy salvaged from the original eastern span of the bridge. The first three games will be at AT&T Park on July 13, 14, and 15, and the last three at the Oakland Coliseum on July 20, 21, and 22.

Some folks describe the A’s as a small market team, yet they play in the same Bay Area with seven million people like the Giants, yet they do not call the Giants a small market team. It always makes me question their logic.

But, Louis D. Brandeis, an American lawyer and associate justice to the Supreme Court of the United States, once said, “The logic of words could yield to the logic of realities.” He was right. In other words, the reality is that the A’s are not a small market team, but they would be if they were still playing in Kansas City. That, my amigos, is a small market.

AT&T Park notes: First game(s) were played from April 11-13 vs. Dodgers, who swept the Giants. The last three games of 1999 and the final three in Candlestick Park history were also against the rival Dodgers.

It’s hard to believe it happened 18 years ago. I was there to call those games, including the first Splash Hit into McCovey Cove in right field by Barry Bonds on May 1, 2000. The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company paid $50 million for the naming rights for 24 years, so it has been known as the PAC Bell Park and SBC Park before ATT Park.

Also, if you take a closer look at the Willie Mays statue by the main entrance on 2nd and King, there are inaugural bricks of Giants’ broadcasters who were there for the inaugural season in 2000.

Mine read, “For those who could not leave Cuba and enjoy big league beisbol.”

ATT Brick - short.PNG

Play Ball!

Huge throwing error cost Giants in 2-0 shutout loss to Cubs

Photo credit: @SFGiants

By Jeremy Kahn

SAN FRANCISCO — With the possibility of taking the series on the horizon, San Francisco Giants manager Bruce Bochy switched his rotation up and Derek Holland got the start.

Holland pitched well, but it was his double to Addison Russell that proved to what the Chicago Cubs.

Russell doubled off of Holland with one out in the top of the seventh inning, and that was the end of the line for Holland, who pitched a great game.

Sam Dyson uncorked a wild pitch that allowed Russell, and on the play, Nick Hundley’s throw went past Pablo Sandoval that allowed Russell to score and the Cubs defeated the Giants 2-0 before a crowd of 39,113 at AT&T Park on Tuesday night.

Dyson then walked Kyle Schwarber, but Hundley threw Schwarber out at second base for the second out of the inning. It looked like the Giants might get out of the jam, but Dyson walked Ian Happ and then Victor Cartini doubled to right field that allowed Happ to score from first base.

It was a hard-fought loss for Holland, who went 6.1 innings, allowing just one run on five hits, not walking a batter and striking out eight, as he saw his record fall to 5-8 on the season.

The eight strikeouts by Holland tied his season-high, as he also struck out eight on June 26 against the Colorado Rockies in a 3-2 Giants victory.

The two-run seventh inning made a winner out of Jose Quintana, who went six innings, allowing just three hits, walking two and striking out three, as he improved to 8-6 on the season.

Double plays cost the Giants as well, as they hit into two inning-ending double plays that could have possibly given them the lead.

With runners on first and second with nobody out in the bottom of the third inning, Hundley grounded into the first Giants double play of the evening.

Gorkys Hernandez led off the bottom of the sixth inning with a walk, but was cut down at second base, when Andrew McCutchen grounded into a double play that ended that frame and the Cubs took the lead in the following inning.

Hernandez, who was retired on the McCutchen double play to end the bottom of the sixth inning was the Giants runner to reach base, as the Cubs bullpen trio of Carl Edwards, Justin Wilson and Steve Cishek retired the final nine Giants batters.

Ray Black made his second appearance on the mound for the Giants after an inauspicious major league debut, where he walked two and gave up a pinch-hit three-run home run to Matt Carpenter in the top of the eighth inning in the Giants’ 13-8 victory over the Cardinals on Sunday afternoon.

Black struck out National League All-Star starting catcher Wilson Contreras to begin the inning for his first Major League strikeout. Russell then made it two strikeouts in a row, as he struck out for the second out of the inning. After falling behind Schwarber 3-1, Black regrouped to get Schwarber to pop out to Brandon Crawford for the third out of the inning.

Steve Cishek pitched a perfect ninth inning to pick up his third save of the season, just one night after being the losing pitcher in a 2-1 Giants win in the opener of the three-game series.

Even though he committed the error that ultimately gave the Cubs the game, Hundley was able to throw two runners out at second base. Hundley got David Bote to end the top of the second inning, after Bote got the first hit of the game for the Cubs.

Hundley then got Schwarber just after he walked in the top of the seventh inning, where the Cubs scored all the only runs of the game.

Chase d’Arnaud made his first start as a Giant, and responded by getting a single in the bottom of the fifth inning.

NOTES: Johnny Cueto will take the mound on Wednesday afternoon, as the Giants look for the series win., while Mike Montgomery will take the hill for the Cubs.

Unless the two teams meet each other in the postseason, Wednesday afternoon will be the final time that the two teams will meet this season.

After not having a day off since June 25, the Giants will be off on Thursday before opening a three-game series against the Oakland Athletics on Friday night at AT&T Park.

During the 16-game stretch with one game remaining before the day off, the Giants are 8-7, as they faced the Rockies twice, the Arizona Diamondbacks, the St. Louis Cardinals and the Cubs.

Joe Panik could be back in about three weeks, instead of close to six weeks that was originally stated.

“It’s getting batter, still a lot of season left and the team is playing well,” said Panik.

Evan Longoria is increasing his baseball activity, and should be back around the first week of August.

“All hands are on deck, (meaning starters) for guys who need a break out of the bullpen,” said Bruce Bochy.

This was the first time that the Giants were shutout at home this season, and the first time since September 16, 2017 against the Arizona Diamondbacks.

UP NEXT: The Giants conclude their series with the Cubs Wednesday afternoon at 12:45 pm PDT.