Giants bats swinging with 10 doubles, Chapman goes yard; SF clobbers LA 10-4 at Oracle

San Francisco Giants Matt Chapman connects for a two run homer in the bottom of the fourth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco against the Los Angeles Dodgers on Sun Jun 30, 2024 (AP News photo)

Sunday, June 30, 2024

Oracle Park

San Francisco, California

Los Angeles Dodgers 4 (52-33)

San Francisco Giants 10 (41-44)

Win: Spencer Bivens (2-1)

Loss: James Paxton (7-2)

Time: 2:27

Attendance: 40,428

By Stephen Ruderman

SAN FRANCISCO–The Giants made a statement today following a tough reality check loss last night, as they annihilated the Dodgers in a huge 10-4 win to take the series from their hated rivals.

Brett Wisely walked off the Dodgers with a two-run home run to end Friday night’s thriller, and then the Dodgers pounded a tired Sean Hjelle for seven runs in the top of the 11th inning Saturday to even the series. Sunday, the Giants looked to take the series on another beautiful day for baseball at Oracle Park.

It appeared that today was going to be another bullpen day for the Giants, but Bob Melvin decided to go to Spencer Bivens for his first major league start. Bivens started the day with a 1-2-3 top of the first inning.

The Dodgers went to left-hander James Paxton. For the second game in a row, Jorge Soler led off the bottom of the first inning with a double down the left field line. Austin Slater walked, and Heliot Ramos lined a base-hit the other way to right field to load the bases with nobody out.

However, Patrick Bailey did exactly what he did with the bases loaded in the bottom of the tenth inning Sunday, and struck out. Matt Chapman knocked in Soler with a sacrifice fly to left, but Luis Matos popped out, and the Giants were only able to get a run out of it.

Bivens threw another 1-2-3 inning in the top of the second, and David Villar and Nick Ahmed started the bottom of the second with base-hits.

Tyler Fitzgerald lined a base-hit off the end of the bat down the right field line, and the bases were going to be loaded. However, Third Base Coach Matt Williams held Villar up at third base after he had already rounded the bag, and Ahmed, who was almost half-way to third was thrown out when he tried to get back to second.

Soler lined a double off the wall in center to score Villar, and Austin Slater knocked in Fitzgerald with a sacrifice fly to right to make it 3-0. However, with the wasted opportunity in the bottom of the first, and the snafu with Williams, Villar and Ahmed, the Giants should have had a bigger lead.

Bivens pitched a scoreless top of the third, and Luis Matos hit a two-out double in the bottom of the third, but got to third on an error by Dodgers’ left-fielder Teoscar Hernandez. Villar doubled the other way to right to make it 4-0, and the Giants had scored in each of the first three innings.

The Giants would finally get a bigger lead in the bottom of the fourth. In fact, it would be a much bigger lead. Fitzgerald grounded a single to left to start the inning, and Soler drew a walk to put runners at first and second with nobody out.

Austin Slater flew out to center, but Ramos hit a double out to the gap in right-center to score Fitzgerald and make it 5-0. Bailey then came through with a two-run double to left to open the lead to 7-0.

That brought up Matt Chapman, who put his stamp on the rally with a two-run home run to left to make it 9-0. The Giants scored five runs in the bottom of the fourth, and they got to James Paxton, who had only lost one game all season coming into Sunday for nine runs over four innings.

Chris Taylor put the Dodgers on the board with a solo home run to straightaway center to make it 9-1. Bivens then gave up a base-hit to Kiké Hernandez, but he struck out Ohtani to end the inning, and let out some emotion on his way off the field.

“[We] just tr[ied] to hit low line drives,” said Manager Bob Melvin. “[Paxton] manages the top of the zone pretty good. [We] tr[ied] to stay off that pitch up there, and to that, a lot of times, you want to stay on top of the ball.”

Bivens was not supposed to go any more than four innings, but Melvin let him back out for the fifth, and he gave the Giants five strong innings when his team needed it the most.

“To go five innings, and strike out Ohtani to get the win, pretty special day for him,” said Melvin. “I think everybody got goosebumps on that one.”

“The first-career start, I’ve been waiting my whole life for that,” said Bivens. It was really special to be able to help the team win…..Whatever they have me do, I’ll do it. [I’m] just happy I was able to help them out.”

“He’s got a much better pitch mix now with the changeup,” Melvin added. “To let him go through Ohtani three times, we have a lot of faith in him. Two times tops [was] what I was looking at, but [we] wanted to get him the win out there…..After a couple of outings, he’s got control of his emotions. We leaned on him today pretty hard, so he’s rewarding us almost every time he goes out there.”

Michael Peterson pitched a 1-2-3 bottom of the fifth and a scoreless bottom of the sixth for the Dodgers. Taylor Rogers pitched a 1-2-3 top of the sixth for the Giants, but the Dodgers got to Landen Roupp, who was called up prior to the game, for a run in the top of the seventh.

Yohan Ramirez pitched through some trouble in the bottom of the seventh for the Dodgers, and Roupp pitched a scoreless top of the eighth for the Giants. Evan Phillips came in for Los Angeles in the bottom of the eighth, and with one out, Ramos was hit on the hand by a 96-MPH sinker from Phillips that he swung at for a painful strike.

Ramos appeared to be a bit dinged up, as Melvin and the trainer came out to check on Ramos, but he stayed in, and ended up lining a double down the right field line for his third hit of the game. Bailey then hit a ground-rule double to right-center to knock in Ramos and make it 10-2.

Ramos had cooled off over the last couple of weeks, as the league has begun to figure him out. However, he is making his counter adjustment, and he is showing the poise of a true major leaguer.

Melvin had Roupp go back out for his third inning in the top of the ninth, but after Roupp retired the first two men he faced, Chros Taylor walked, and Kiké Hernandez singled to left.

The Dodgers were not going to make it easy for the Giants to win the series. Melvin brought in Tyler Rogers, who was not available last night, and was now pitching for the fourth time in the Giants’ last six games. Austin Barnes doubled to right to knock in a pair and make it 10-4, but Rogers struck out Ohtani swinging to end the game.

Spencer Bivens got the win, and James Paxton took just his second loss of the season.

In addition to Ramos’ three hit game, Soler, Bailey, Villar, Ahmed and Fitzgerald all had two-hit games, every single Giants’ starting position player got a hit Sunday.

The Giants, just as they have all season, went out and responded to a tough loss with an offensive explosion and a big win.

“We’re resilient,” said Melvin. “After tough losses, we come out and do stuff like that, it seems, almost every time.”

“We’re in a tough position right now,” Melvin continued. “We have to start winning series. We gotta roll some games together leading up to the [All-Star] Break, and this was a good start in what is a tough stretch right now.”

The Giants improve to 41-44, and they will head back out on the road for a six-game road trip through Atlanta and Cleveland against two more strong teams. After a day off Monday, the Giants will begin a three-game series Tuesday night at Truist Park in Cumberland, Georgia, just northwest of Atlanta, against the Atlanta Braves.

Hayden Birdsong (0-0, 5.79), who gave up three runs in four and two thirds innings against the Chicago Cubs in his major league debut on Wednesday, will take the ball for the Giants on Tuesday, He will be opposed by Reynaldo Lopez (6-2, 1.70 ERA). First pitch will be at 7:20 p.m. at Truist Park, 4:20 p.m. back home in San Francisco.

Giants News and Notes:

Right-handed pitcher Landen Roupp was called up prior to Sunday’s game, as mentioned in the recap. The Giants designated right-handed pitcher Spencer Howard for assignment as the corresponding roster move

San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman: Giants recover Sunday after Dodgers comeback Saturday

San Francisco Giants pitcher Sean Hjelle got lit up in the top of the 11th inning for six runs by the Los Angeles Dodgers at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sat Jun 29, 2024 (McCovey Chronicle file photo)

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen:

#1 Stephen, the Giants coughed up a lot of runs in the top of the 11th inning against the Dodgers on Saturday night at Oracle Park no doubt it was a breakdown in Sean Hjelle’s effort in trying to close the door.

#2 The Dodgers Will Smith got a hit that knocked in two runs that help start the 11th inning rally and the difference was seven runs as the Giants would lose by a touchdown 14-7.

#3 Hjelle was hit hard in the 11th after Shohei Ohtani was walked Smith got a two run double and the Dodgers put together five hits in row for the win in extra innings.

#4 It was a tight close game until the 11th inning arrived and took the Giants out of it for good. Talk about how close this one was until the 11th inning.

#5 Ohtani always a threat and a concern comes into today’s game as the lead off hitter with a .321 average, 26 home runs and 62 RBIs. One thing he’s understated about he can steal bases he has 16 and has been caught only twice.

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

Dodgers open up the floodgates with seven run 11th inning beat Giants 14-7

Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani (17) joins the chorus of teammates with manager Dave Roberts left and to the back concluding Sat Jun 29, 2024’s contest against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park in San Francisco (AP News photo)

Saturday, June 29, 2024

Oracle Park

San Francisco, California

Los Angeles Dodgers 14 (52-32)

San Francisco Giants 7 (40-44)

Win: Daniel Hudson (5-1)

Loss: Sean Hjelle (3-2)

Time: 3:45

Attendance: 39,663

By Stephen Ruderman

SAN FRANCISCO–After a tight and hard-fought seesaw game through 10 innings, the Dodgers exploded for seven runs in the top of the 11th inning to beat the Giants 14-7.

After Brett Wisely hit a walk-off home run to cap off a thrilling 5-3 Giants’ win over their hated rivals last night, the Giants and Dodgers were set to go at it again today in a nationally-televised late-afternoon affair at Oracle Park.

Without a single cloud in the sky, the 4:15 p.m. start time meant there would be a lot of shadows, which would make it a very hard day for hitting.

It would be yet another bullpen game for Bob Melvin’s beat-up pitching staff. Erik Miller would be the opener, and as the Giants took the field, he ran in from the bullpen in left-center field. Hey, he’s a reliever, and the man has his routine. Anyway, Miller started off the day with a 1-2-3 top of the first inning.

Tyler Glasnow made the start for the Dodgers, and Jorge Soler lined a double down the left field line to lead off the bottom of the first. Soler moved to third on a ground out by LaMonte Wade. Ramos then knocked in Soler on a sacrifice fly to right-center field.

The Dodgers responded off Spencer Howard in the top of the second. Andy Pages doubled on a duck snort off the end of the bat to right, and Miguel Rojas knocked in Pages with another suck snort to tie the game

Matt Chapman led off the bottom of the second with a double, just as Soler did in the first. However, the rally was immediately snuffed when Chapman was picked off while taking off for third base prior to the pitch.

It was unfortunate, because he would have scored when Michael Conforto immediately followed that with a double off the center field wall. The Giants would end up wasting the opportunity entirely, as the game went to the third tied 1-1.

Chapman’s gaffe and the Giants’ wasted opportunity would come back to bite them in the top of the third. Shohei Ohtani in particular made it hurt with a home run to straight away center to give the Dodgers a 2-1 lead.

Not to worry, the Giants had a response in the bottom of the third. Nick Ahmed walked to start the inning, and Soler doubled to right to knock in Ahmed and tie the game. Wade reached on a broken-bat ground ball to short, in which Soler was thrown out trying to advance to third.

It was the Giants’ second base-running gaffe of the game, but thankfully, it didn’t hinder the rally. Heliot Ramos singled up the middle to center, and Patrick Bailey singled to right to score Wade and put the Giants back ahead.

Matt Chapman reached on an infield hit to third that was bobbled by Dodgers’ third-baseman Cavan Biggio—which could have been ruled an error—to knock in Ramos and make it 4-2. Michael Conforto walked to load the bases, and Bailey scored when Luis Matos reached on a fielder’s choice to make it 5-2.

The Giants scored four runs in the bottom of the third, and the Dodgers would score four of their own against a tired Spencer Howard in the top of the fourth. Andy Pages walked with one out, and base-hits by Jason Heyward and Miguel Rojas made it 5-3.

Gavin Lux singled to right, and as Dodgers Third Base Coach Dino Ebel waived in Heyward, Luis Matos threw a perfect strike to the plate, but it was dropped by catcher Patrick Bailey. Heyward scored, and Rojas, the tying run, was now standing just 90 feet away at third.

Biggio laid down a bunt but popped out to first base, and Ohtani walked to load the bases. That did it for Howard, as Melvin brought in Randy Rodriguez.

Will Smith came up and hit a slow ground ball to short that Nick Ahmed charged and bare handed, but Smith beat it out, and Lux scored to tie it. Freddie Freeman then walked with the bases loaded, and the Dodgers were back ahead.

Tyler Glasnow was pulled after the Giants’ four-run bottom of the third, and it was the first time this season that he did not go at least five innings. He was replaced by Yohan Ramirez for the bottom of the fourth. Ahmed reached on an infield hit to start the inning, but Ramirez retired the side in order afterwards.

As the shadows started to eclipse home plate, the scoring almost stopped entirely. Rodriguez threw a 1-2-3 top of the fifth, and Ramirez got Bailey to ground out to start the bottom of the fifth.

Matt Chapman lined a base-hit the other way to right, and Dodgers Manager Dave Roberts pulled Ramirez for Alex Vesia, who immediately walked Michael Conforto to put runners at first and second with one out.

Matos was unable to get the job done, as he flew out to left, but Brett Wisely got jammed and floated a broken-bat base hit to center to score Chapman to tie it.

It was now a 6-6 game heading to the sixth. Rodriguez and left-hander Taylor Rogers combined for a 1-2-3 top of the sixth. Wade doubled off Vesia with one out in the bottom of the sixth, and Ramos walked after Roberts brought in Michael Petersen. However, Bailey and Chapman both struck out and the game remained tied.

Freeman doubled off Rogers with one out in the top of the seventh, but Ryan Walker came in to strike out Teoscar Hernandez and Andy Pages. Anthony Banda threw a scoreless inning in the bottom of the seventh, and the game remained tied going to the eighth.

Walker got out of a jam in the top of the eighth, and Blake Treinen pitched a scoreless bottom of the eighth for LA to send it to the ninth.

Camilo Doval came in for a non-save situation in the top of the ninth. Doval has had a rough go of things here in June, but he has particularly struggled in non-save situations.

Doval struck out Ohtani to start the inning, but Will Smith singled, and Freeman walked. However, Doval bore down and struck Hernandez and Page out—both swinging—to get out of it unscathed.

Evan Phillips then pitched a scoreless bottom of the ninth for the Dodgers to send this game into extra innings. This would be the second time in their last three games that the Giants were going extras.

Melvin went to Sean Hjelle for the tenth, and Andy Pages was the automatic runner at second for the Dodgers. Miguel Rojas gave the Dodgers the lead with a base-hit to center.

The veteran, Daniel Hudson, came in for LA in the bottom of the 10th, and Brett Wisely was the runner at second. Nick Ahmed grounded out to short to start the inning, but David Villar hit a pinch-hit double into the gap out in left-center to tie it.

Hudson fell behind 3-1 to Wade, and then Roberts decided to put him on. Ramos then reached on a swinging bunt along the third base line to load the bases for Patrick Bailey. It was a break for the Giants, as the ball appeared to have hit Ramos’ foot, but it was not a reviewable play.

Roberts brought in Chris Taylor from center field to be the fifth infielder, as the Giants had a chance for their second-straight walk-off win, but Bailey struck out swinging at a low slider, and Matt Chapman fouled out.

So it was off to the 11th, and with Tyler Rogers not available after pitching in three of the Giants’ last four games, Hjelle was back out. I’m not going to waste everyone’s time with the long and painful details, but the Dodgers pounded Hjelle into submission for seven runs.

Melvin had Ohtani put on to start the inning, and once Will Smith drove in a pair with a double to left-center, the floodgates opened. The first out of the inning wasn’t even made until Jason Heyward scored the inning’s seventh run on a sacrifice fly by Miguel Rajos.

As for the bottom of the 11th, Ryan Yarbrough pitched a 1-2-3 inning to end it, and the Giants took a brutal loss on the chin 14-7.

The win goes to Daniel Hudson, and the loss goes to Sean Hjelle, who was just thrown into a tough situation having to eat innings for the Giants’ beat-up bullpen at a bad time.

The Giants fall to 40-44, and they can once again try to win the series in the finale Sunday afternoon. Lefty James Paxton (7-1, 3.39 ERA) will make the start for the Dodgers, and for the Giants, you guessed it, it will be another game bullpen game. First pitch will be at 1:05 p.m.

Giants News and Notes:

Blake Snell will make another on Wednesday in Sacramento against the Reno Aces. If his start goes well, the Giants hope to have him return to the rotation the following week during the Giants’ series against the Toronto Blue Jays at Oracle Park.

The Giants added a memorial pass for Hall-of-Famer Orlando Cepeda, who passed away yesterday. Like Mays’ memorial patch, Cepeda’s has the orange number 30 under the name “Cepeda.” which is also in orange in a black circle surrounded by a circular orange outline.

Giants Wisely takes Dodgers deep with ninth inning 2 run homer in 5-3 win

San Francisco Giants Brett Wisely (0) is congratulated at the plate by Jorge Soler (2) after Wisely’s two run home run in the bottom of the ninth to defeat the Los Angeles Dodgers at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Fri Jun 28, 2024 (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (51-32). 000 020 001. 3. 7. 1

San Francisco (40-43). 000 012 002. 5.8. 0

Time: 2:15

Attendance: 40,052

Friday, June 28, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–On this pleasant Friday night on McCovey Cove, Bob Melvin’s ragtag bundle of past their prime and perhaps not quite ready for prime time fugitives from the injured list and the triple A roster, fighting to get a toehold in the race for a wild card slot, defeated the division leading Los Angeles Dodgers, 5-3 in a game that made McCovey Cove look like Playland at the Beach; it was a roller coaster of a contest.

Logan Webb, who constitutes a virtual one man rotation, took the mound with a record of 6-6, 3.16, although his totals for June were a less pleasing 2-2, 4.09. His supporting cast was bolstered by the return of LaMonte Wade, Jr. and his .333 batting average from the injured list.

Wade wasn’t even listed in the media notes’ thumbnail biographies of active players. Brett Wisely played second, replacing the ailing (but still on the active roster) Thairo Estrada, giving slick fielding Nick Ahmed a chance to strut his stuff at short.

Webb gave the Giants just what they wanted of him, seven strong innings, after which he left with a 3-2 lead. In that span, he threw 93 pitches, 62 for strikes. Both of the runs he allowed were earned and came on five hits and three walks. He struck out six. All he got for it was a no decision that lowered his ERA to 3.12.

The Dodgers sent their second round choice in the 2020 draft, Landon Knack, to duel with the Giants’ ace. The 26 year old, who had gone 1-1 with an impressive ERA of 2.10, did a decent job and left with his team ahead, 2-1. He, too, got a no decision.

His mound tenure lasted a mere 4-2/3 frames in which he threw 76 pitches, 49 of which were counted as strikes. The run was earned and came on a home run, one of the five hits he gave up. He logged seven strikeouts and didn’t give. up any walks.

The rival nines traded zeroes until the top of the fourth. Miguel Rojas led off with a single to right and scored on Gavin Lux’s double. After Cavin Biggio took a called third strike and 大谷 翔平, ,AKA Shohei Ohtani, took an intentional walk, Will Smith singled Lux home. Fiat Lux.

The Giants took one run back after Webb got Freddie Freeman to bounce into an inning ending 1-6-3 double play. They did it on a 410 blast by Luis Matos over the Bank of America sign in left center field. It was his fourth round tripper for the Giants this year and his second since having been recalled from Sacramento a week ago. After two more hits and an out, Athony Banda retired Wade to close out the frame.

Right after that, the Giants announced over the PA system the news of Orlando Cepeda’s death. There was a moment of silence in honor of the fallen Hall of Famer. Then the game resumed. Sic transit gloria mundi.

San Francisco picked up where it had left off after LA failed to score in the sixth. Ramos beat out hit to first to lead off the frame against Daniel Hudson. After Bailey flied out to left, Matt Chapman sent the ball in the same direction, 414 feet deep, for his 10th dinger of the season and a 3-2 Giants lead.

Tyler Rogers entered the game in the top of the eighth and maintained that margin in spite of a lead off infield single by Ohtani.

That was more than Camilo Doval could do in the ninth. Andy Pagés led off against him with a triple to center. In the blink of an eye, Jason Heyward’s sacrifice to medium deep center knotted the game at three. Nonetheless, the Giants’ closer got the win and now is 3-1, but an earned run average of 4.56.

Ryan Yarbrough had held the Giants at bay in the eighth, but it was ex-Athletic Blake Treinen who gave up the walk off homer into the seats of Levi’s Landing that brought the hard won victory to the home team. Wisely, hit it with Matos, who had drawn a lead off walk, on base.

Fireworks followed the mobbing. But Fitzgerald’s homer was fireworks enough.

The game scheduled for Saturday, afternoon at 4:15 will feature Tyler Glasnow (8-5, 2.88) on the mound for the boys in blue. The Giants will round up the usual suspects, that is, their starter is yet to be announced, an indication that it will be another bullpen game.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Giants catcher Casali calls a great game for Webb in win over LA

San Francisco Giants catcher Curt Casali (left) and reliever Camilo Doval (right) exchange congratulations after defeating the Los Angeles Dodgers at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed May 16, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 It was the return of catcher Curt Casali who was in the Chicago Cubs Triple A Iowa system after being released by the Cincinnati Reds and the he quickly signed a one year deal with the Giants and started at catcher on Wednesday night against the Los Angeles Dodgers and did superb work behind the plate in calling pitcher Logan Webb’s pitches.

#2 Webb went six innings and gave up three hits and struck out five hitters. Casali when he was catching for the Giants in 2021 and parts of 2022 was noted for handling the pitchers well and after being away from San Francisco for two seasons looks like he hasn’t lost a step.

#3 The Giants made room for Casali putting catcher Tom Murphy on the 60 IL with the sprained left knee and Jackson Reetz was demoted to Triple A Sacramento. Do you see Casali getting most of the starts behind the plate until Patrick Bailey returns from his concussion protocols?

#4 Yes and we have to ask you about Webb’s performance on Wednesday night. He went six innings and gave up three hits. It was quite a performance keeping the Dodgers off balance in a 4-1 win.

#5 Giants and Colorado Rockies match up on Friday night at Oracle Park. For the Rockies RHP Ryan Feltner (1-3, 5.20) and for the Giants LHP Kyle Harrison (3-1, 3.42 ERA) for a 7:15pm PT first pitch.

Michael Duca does the Giants podcasts each Friday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giant’s Webb goes 6 innings hold Dodgers to 3 hits in 4-1 win at Oracle

San Francisco Giants pitcher Logan Webb delivers against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the top of the first inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed May 15, 2024 (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (29-16) 000 000 010.  1. 7. 1

San Francisco (20-25) 002 001  01x.  4 7.  0

Time: 2:23

Attendance: 36,027

Wednesday, May 15, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–The San Francisco Giants avoided being swept by the Los Angeles Dodgers in Wednesday night’s finale to their three game series, defeating their rivals from the south, 4-1,  in an exciting contest that wasn’t decided until the last out.

 San Francisco’s for the time being ace, Logan Webb, was on the hill for the hosts and began his evening with a respectable earned run average of  3.38 in spite of poor performances in his April 30 and May 5 starts, which he followed on May 10 with an acceptable but losing effort against the woeful Cincinnati Reds.

Webb was throwing tonight to Curt Casali, with whom the Giants had signed a one year contract earlier in the day in an effort  to buttress the team’s injury plagued catching corps. Casali had been hitting .362 for the Iowa Cubs. This is his second stint with San Francisco. He was a Giant in the wildly successful 2021 season and part of ’22.

The Dodgers certainly didn’t choose anyone from the top of their rotation. Dave Roberts and Company took its time deciding who would be on the mound  in Wednesday night’s game before settling on Eliéser Hernández, a five year veteran with a lifetime mark of 10-21, 5.04 with the Marlins, as their starter.

The 28 year old righty was signed by the Dodgers in January and invited to spring training but assigned to Oklahoma City before being placed on the Dodgers’ 26 player roster today. Although Hernández has been used primarily as a starting pitcher, the Dodgers’ thumbnail sketch of him in their game notes appears in the “Bullpen” section

Logan had control issues in the early going, throwing 67 pitches while holding the Dodgers scoreless in the first three frames. Hernández, on other hand, held San Francisco hitless until Casali singled to right with one down in the third.

Mike Yastrzemski immediately converted that hit into a run, two runs, in fact, with a 345 foot home run over the brick facing in right field. When the inning was over, Hernández had delivered only 45 pitches, but he and his team were trailing, 2-0.

That almost became 2-1 when  Teoscar Hernández led off the fourth with a towering drive over the fence in front of the visitors’ bullpen in right center, Over the fence or not, the ball came down in Luis Matos’ glove, a spectacular catch that preserved the Giants’ lead.

The score remained 2-0 stayed until the bottom of the sixth, when, after Estrada’s lead off single to left, Hernández retired Chapman and Wade, bringing up Héctor Ramos, He whacked a 3-2 pitch into left center field, splitting the outfielders and bouncing off the 391 foot marker, driving in Estrada and increasing SF’s lead to 3-1..

Hurling six innings was enough work for Hernández. He had reached a pitch count of 91 that included 63 strikes and allowed three runs, all earned, on four hits, one of them yard, and a walk. He was the losing pitcher, making him 0-1, 4.50 in his return to the show. Eduardo Salazar followed him on the mound. Salazar  kept the Giants off the board in the seventh but coughed up a tally in the eighth

Webb didn’t come out to pitch the seventh either.  He’d thrown 103 pitches, 62 for strikes, in his six frame exercise and held the Dodgers to three hits, three bases on balls, and a hit batter, He stood in line for the win and got it, evening  his won-lost balance sheet to 4-4 and 

dropping  his ERA to 3.03. Sean Hjelle replaced him, retired Andy Pages  and James Outman before allowing Betts to single to right.

That was it for Hjelle. Southpaw Erik Miller was assigned the tough task of facing Ohtani. Miller struck him out looking at a four seam fastball.

Tyler, the torpedo tossing Rogers twin, had to face the heart of the Dodgers order in the eighth.  He was, at best, moderately successful. Freeman and Smith started things with back to back singles that put runners on the corners. Muncy’s sacrifice fly to the warning track in left diminished the Giants’ lead to 3-2. 

Matos came through again in the penultimate frame. He tacked on another tally with a broken bat single to right that plated Wade, who ha walked and  advanced to second on a passed ball.

The stage was set for Camilo Doval, in search. of his seventh save.  He struck out Pages and Outman but walked Betts. This brought up Ohtani, who dropped a 2-2 pitch into left for a single that moved Betts up 90 feet. Freeman was now at bat, representing the potential tying run. The count reached 2-1. Doval threw a cutter. Freeman swung … and grounded out to second.

The Giants will have a well earned day off tomorrow and return to work on Friday the 17th for the first game of three against Colorado.

The Rockies will throw Ryan Feltner (1-3, 5.20) against San Francisco’s Kyle Harrison (3-1, 3.42) on Friday night at Oracle Park with a 7:15pm PT first pitch.

Giants get lit up by Dodgers 10-2 at Oracle Park; Sho-Time-Ohtani homers and doubles for LA

Los Angeles Dodgers Shohei Ohtani (right) crosses the plate and is greeted by teammate Freddie Freeman (5) in the top of fourth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue May 14, 2024 (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (29-15). 000 410 104. 10 13 0

San Francisco (19-25). 000 001 001. 2. 9. 2

Time: 2:36

Attendance: 33,575

Tuesday, May 14, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–The most important news concerning the San Francisco Giants’ travails wasn’t the 10-2 shellacking they suffered at the hands of the Los Angeles Dodgers at Oracle Park tonight. It was María Guardado’s report that the results of Jung-Hoo Lee’s MRI showed possible structural damage to his left shoulder that could require season ending surgery. Lee will see Dr. Neal ElAttrache on Thursday for a second opinion.

The Giants’ terrible performance tonight served to underline the severity of the threat posed by the impending loss of Lee’s. contributions and those of the other occupants of the injured list.

San Francisco’s starting pitcher had not looked good in his previous start last Thursday, where he took his second straight loss, this time to Colorado at Coors Field, where he one hit the Rockies for three innings before allowing seven runs on as many hits in the fourth. Hiis performance tonight parallelled that. Although he shut the Dodgers out on no hits in the first third of the game, the 26 year old righty left after throwing 78 pitches, 49 for strikes, in 4+ innings, in which he allowed five runs, all earned, one of which was posthumous, and three walks while notching four Ks. With the loss his record declined to 3- 6,6.17.

25 year old Gavin Stone, the Dodgers’ fifth round draft choice four years ago, broke into the show last May, was 1-1, 9.00 after going 18-12, 3,19, with a 1.21 WHIP in his minor league career. He was a post-season All Star in the PCL in ’23. He was tonight’s winning pitcher, having held San Francisco to one run, earned, on five hits and three walks over six innings. He struck out a couple opf batters and had a pitch count of 90 with 58 strikes. His redcord now stands at 4-1, 3.27.

The rivals traded zeros for the first three frames, which. were notable for at least two plays. One was Luis Matos’s three base error on Freddie Freeman’s first inning drive to deep center, a premonition of what might happen if Lee’s diagnosis is confirmed. An optimist might have observed that Winn pitched out of the jam. The other was the nifty double play that shut down LA in the top of the third. With James Outman, who had walked, stole second, and advanced to third on Blake Sabol’s throwing error (another example of the perils of a bulky injured list) on second, Matt Chapmans snatched Mookie Betts bouncer down the line, tagged Outman, and threw the speedy Betts out at first.

But Los Angeles asserted itself in the next few innings. Their designated hitter, 大谷 翔平, AKA Shohei Ohtani, powered the Winn’s initial offering in the fourth, an 88 mph slider, into the right centerfield bleachers, 446 feet from home to give him an even dozen homeruns for the season and the Angelinos a 1-0 lead. Back to bak walks to Freeman and Will Smith, followed by a double to center by Teoscar Hernández and Max Muncy’s sacrifice fly, and the Giants were reeling from a 4-0 deficit

Two batters into the fifth and Winn was out of the game. Back to back singles to center by Betts and Ohtani brought Randy Rodríguez to the mound. A one out single to left by Will Smith drove Betts in with an inherited run, which was charged to Winn

The Giants staged a comeback of sorts in the sixth on a walk to LaMonte Wade, Jr. and, after Wilmer Flores popped out to short, two wild pitches while Héctor Ramos was at bat, Ramos, when he got a hit he could pitch, drove Wade in with the Giants’ first tally, a run that LA responded to in their next turn at with a leadoff triple to right by Betts and Ohtani’s automatic double to left.

Nick Avila, a right handed rookie who was recalled from Sacto yesterday, set the Dodgers down in order in the eighth.

The home team hit Gus Varland, LA’s third pitcher of the fray, Gus hard – line outs to left by Estrada ahd Wade, and Chapman’s double into the right field corner, but he escaped unscathed when Ramos lined out to second.

Avila wasn’t as effective in the visitors’ half of the ninth as he had been an inning earlier. Outman led off with a double to right. Miguel Rojas, who had replaced Betts at short, replicated Outman’s two bagger, driving in Rojas. He, in turn, was driven in by Freeman’s single down the line in right after Ohtani finished his three for five night’s work by grounding out to second. Will Smith then doubled to right, but Freeman stopped at third because Yaz almost made a spectacular catch before the ball glanced off his glove. Both Freeman and Smith crossed the plate on Hernández’s triple to right center.

And so it came to pass that Nabil Crismatt gave up an automatic double to Sabol, an RBI single to Matos, an another safety to Shmitt to preserve the Dodgers’ win with a final score of 0f 10-2.

We don’t yet know who will start for the Dodgers when the series is wrapped up tomorrow, Wednesday, 6:45. It will be Logan Webb (3-4,3,88) trying to get the Giants and himself back on track.

LA’s Will Smith clubs two run RBI double to beat SF in extras 6-4

Los Angeles Dodgers Enrique Hernandez (8) is jubilant rounding the bases after hitting a solo home run in the top of the seventh against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Mon May 13, 2024 (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (28-15). 100 011 100 2 . 6 11. 0

San Francisco (19-24). 030 001 000 0. 4. 6. 1 10. innings

Time: 2:55

Attendance: 35,033

Monday, May 13, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–After their come from behind 10 inning defeat of Cincinnati gave them the series win over the Reds, the struggling home team lost a 10 inning thriller. The loss was one more blow to a team that has suffered some bad breaks in the past few days.

Jung-Hoo Lee today joined Jorge Soler, Blake Snell, Michael Conforto, Austin Slater, Nick Ahmed, Tom Murphy, Robbie Ray, Austin Warren, and Ethan Small on the injured list. The Giants recalled catcher Jackson Reetz, who barely had time to unpack his bags after he’d been optioned to the River Cats, to replace the injured Lee.

An article in Sunday’s Los Angeles times would have you believe that the Dodgers also were kind of beat up. Pain had caused Shoei Orhani to sit out yesterday’s loss to the Padres, who have won their last two series against the talent laden socal rivals.

Ohtani was in the lineup tonight, batting second, going two for five and driving in a run. The Times bemoaned Mookie Betts’ recent slump. He showed up at Oracle Park with a batting average of .339 and led off the game with a 363 foot home run to left and also went two for five. The Giants should have such troubles!

San Francisco’s starting pitcher, 27 year old Jason Hicks, with a game time record of 3-1, 2.3 was nothing to sneeze at. Hicks, who had gone five frames and allowed three earned runs to gain his third win of the season, in his last outing, Hicks acquitted himself well tonight, although he threw too many pitches, 93, in his five innings of work.

He surrendered seven hits, one of which was Betts’ long ball, and two runs, both earned. didn’t walk anybody and struck out four. He wasn’t involved in the decision although his earned run average rose to a still better than respectable 2.44

It’s not often that you get to see a 25 year old major league pitcher who’s won three consecutive most valuable awards, but that’s what we saw tonight when Yoshinobu Yamamoto took the mound for the Giants tonight.

He isn’t a household name in MLB–yet–but fans of the Nippon Pacific League know 1山本 由伸 as the winner of that major league’s MVP from 2021 through 2023. The right hander brought a lifetime record in Nippon Professional Baseball of 75-30, 1,72 with him when he signed his 12 year contract with Los Angeles, and added four wins and a loss, with an ERA of 2.79, before his no decision against San Francisco tonight.

Yamamoto wound up throwing 84 pitches, 55 for strikes, over 5-2/3 innings, in which he allowed four runs, all earned, on five hits, one a homer, and two bases on balls, and struck out six. His earned run average climbed to 3.21.

Luis Matos, recalled from Sacramento yesterday, got his first big league hit of the season and put the Giants ahead, 2-1, in the home second with a 385 foot blast over the center field fence with Blake Sabol, also recently recalled, on base.

LA almost caught up in the third when, after Ohtani who had reached first with one down on a force out was picked off first, Hicks to Wade. Unfortunately Wade’s throw to second bounced off shortstop Casey Schmitt’s glove and the Dodgers’ designated hitter made it to third.

Schmitt originally was charged with an error, but that was changed to an error on Wade’s throwl. In any case Hicks maintained his poise and got Freddie Freeman to ground out to second, ending the inning and preserving SF’s precarious lead.

They lost that advantage in the fifth, but almost escaped that fate. Andy Pages led off with a double to left. After Hicks fanned James Outman, Betts sent a looping fly ball to right. Yastrzemski made a magnificent tumbling catch of the ball, racing 63 feet at 27.2 mph to grab the ball. Then Ohtani beat out a slow roller to second that Thairo Estrada fumbled. It was scored, correctly, as a hit, a game tying hitl

Los Angeles untied the knot against Luke Jackson, Hicks’ successor. After fanning Will Smith, he walked Max Muncy, heaved a wild pitch that allowed Muncy to take second before Teoscar Hernández whiffed, That brought up Gavin Lux, whose automatic double to center put the visitors ahead, 3-2.

The Giants knocked Yamamoto out of the box in the bottom of the sixth. It was Ramos who did it, driving in Chapman, who had walked and gone to second on a walk to Wade, with a single to left. That brought in Alex Vesia, who struck out Reetz, pinch hitting for Sabol to end the inning. Michael Grove set SF down in order in the seventh.

The pinch hitter LA sent to the plate to face Erik Miller, who took the mound in the top of the seventh, was Kike Hernández. The veteran did a lot better than the rookie Reetz. Hitting for Outman, Hernández hit it out of the park, 406 feet down the left field fence, just to the right of the foul pole. We were back to a tie game, 4-4.

The right handed Rogers, Tyler the submariner allowed a single to Will Smith in eighth, and that was it.

Daniel Hudson was the Dodger pitcher in the bottom of that frame. In spite of Wade’s drive to the back of the warning track in center field, he set the Giants down in order in their half of the eighth, which set the stage for Camilo Doval’s technicolor Hollywood epic entrance in the top of the ninth. He lived up to it, pitching a 1,2,3 inning that included a 102 mph cutter.

Blake Treinen, recently returned from the injured list, was the Dodgers’ choice to pitch the bottom of the ninth. He walked Flores Fitzgerald pinch ran for him and, in the twinkling of a eye, got picked off. Ramos then beat out a roller for an infield singer, 3-1, a call that was upheld after video review. But Treinen held firm and retired the next two batters, sending sending us into extra innings.

Tyler Rogers’ brother Taylor had to face Ohtani with Betts on second as the zombie runner. Ohtani whiffed, but Freeman walked ,and Smith smacked a two run double to the base of the center field fence. Both runners scored. Muncy took a called third strike, and Teoscar Hernández skied out to center.

Brett Wiselty pinch hit for Schmitt against JP Feyereisen, trying to wrap things up for LA, with Matos on second as the courtesy runner. Feyereisen fanned Wisely but walked Yastrzemski, bringing Estrada to the plate. He grounded into an around the horn double play, and that put an end to a game that was worthy of the Giant-Dodger rivalry.

Treinen was the winning pitcher. He now has a season record of 1-0, 0.00 over four innings. Taylor Rogers, now 1-2, 4,11, was charged with the loss.

Los Angeles hasn’t yet announced who they’ll send to the mound, Tuesday, at 6;40. The Giants will go with their struggling ace, Logan Webb (3-4, 3.38)

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Giants open series with Dodgers tonight at Oracle

San Francisco Giants Heliot Ramos (right) celebrates with Casey Schmitt (left) after scoring in the bottom of the fifth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun May 12, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Marko:

#1 What started off as a disastrous game turned into possibly the biggest win of the season for the Giants, as despite Kyle Harrison’s wildness and Jung-hoo Lee going down to injury in the first inning, the Giants came back to beat the Reds in a wild 10-inning game 6-5.

#2 Jeimer Candelario hit a high fly ball to right-center field that center-fielder Jung-hoo Lee kept from going out of the park with a grand slam with a leap over the wall, but the ball deflected off his glove, and all three runs scored on a double by Candelario to give the Reds an early 3-0 lead.

#3 Lee sat on the ground for a few minutes, as he was tended to by Manager Bob Melvin and two of the Giants’ trainers, and he had to come out of the game with a dislocated left shoulder.

#4 The Giants have already lost a good chunk of players to injuries over the last week: Patrick Bailey, Jorge Soler, Nick Ahmed, Tom Murphy, Austin Slater, Michael Conforto and Lee just to name a few. 

#5 Giants open up a three game series starting Monday night at Oracle Park at 6:45pm PDT against the Los Angeles Dodgers. For the Dodgers starting pitcher RHP Yoshinobu Yamamoto (4-1 ERA 2.79) and for the Giants RHP Jordan Hicks (3-1 ERA 2.30).

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

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Too much Sho-Time for Giants in LA; SF home opener on Friday

Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani (17) reaches home after hitting his first home run in the bottom of the seventh inning at Dodger Stadium against the San Francisco Giants and catcher Patrick Bailey looking on (left) on Wed Apr 3, 2024 (AP News photo)

On SF Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani hit a home run a solo shot his first of the 2024 season in the bottom of the seventh inning that help lift the Dodgers past the San Francisco Giants 5-4 in a three game sweep for LA.

#2 This was Ohtani’s ninth game for the Dodgers and hit connected with a 93.2 MPH sinker and smoked it for 430 feet and Giants reliever Taylor Rogers threw the pitch and the left Ohtani’s bat at 105.6 MPH.

#3 The Giants got home run production from Jorge Soler and Patrick Bailey but it wasn’t enough as the Giants are now on a four game skid and drop their record to 2-5.

#4 Michael, talk about Kyle Harrison’s (1-1) pitching performance giving four runs and six hits in five innings of work.

#5 Michael lets talk about Friday’s starters for the Giants home opener the San Diego Padres are going with RHP Dylan Cease (0-1 ERA 3.86) the Giants will counter with RHP Jordan Hicks (1-0 ERA 0.00) first pitch at Oracle Park is at 1:35pm PDT. Talk about the Giants coming off a four game split with the Padres and having opening day at home?

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