Urias comes up huge at the plate and on the mound in Dodgers win 9-2

Los Angeles Dodgers starter Julio Urias leans over the Dodgers dugout railing along the first base side at Oracle Park in San Francisco during game 2 of the NLDS on Sat Oct 9, 2021 (@Dodgers photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

SAN FRANCISCO-Julio Urias came with the biggest hit for the Los Angeles Dodgers, and it helped the defending World Champions get even.

Urias singled to right field immediately after Kevin Gausman intentionally walked A.J. Pollock to get Urias, and the plan backfired, helping the Dodgers to a 9-2 victory over the San Francisco Giants before a sellout crowd of 42,275 at Oracle Park.

It’s a good feeling, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. It’s interesting how the narrative changes from game to game. Right now, it’s a three-game series, we have home-field advantage and we have Max (Scherzer) on the mound. I like where we’re at.

With the victory by the Dodgers, it tied up the National League Division Series between the two longtime rivals.

Obviously looking forward to turning the page on tonight’s game and getting ready for Los Angeles,” Giants manager Gabe Kapler said. “It was not our best effort tonight. Dodgers just swung the bats better than us, made more pitches than us, made more plays than us.

Mookie Betts followed up the Urias single with one of his own that scored Pollock; however, Gausman was able to get out of the inning by striking out Corey Seager to end the inning.

Chris Taylor, who sent the Dodgers into the Division Series, when he hit a two-run walk-off home run off of Anthony Reyes on Wednesday night, led off the inning with a double off of Gausman and scored the first run of the game for the Dodgers.

Urias, who went 20-3 during the regular season pitched the first five innings for the Dodgers, as he allowed one run on just two hits, walking one and striking out five, as the series heads to Dodger Stadium tied up at a game apiece.

I felt good, Urias said. I thought the pitches were working really well. It is the fifth or sixth time I have seen them so it is a little bit trickier to get through that lineup, but I felt good Offensively the team put some runs and all in all it was a good game.

Gausman, who was making his first ever postseason start went 5.1 innings, allowing four runs on four hits, walking three and striking out seven. This was not the first postseason appearance for Gausman, as he appeared in four games in the 2014 postseason for the Baltimore Orioles and in 2018 for the Atlanta Braves.

I mean I made, I thought I made a pretty good adjustment after the second inning, Gausman said. After then, I felt like I kind of got in my zone a little bit and retired a lot of hitters in a row. Obviously, I wish I would have got through that sixth inning.

The Giants cut the Dodgers lead in half in the bottom of the second inning, as Wilmer Flores led off the inning with a walk, moved to second on a Brandon Crawford single. Flores then went to third on an Evan Longoria fly out to Taylor in centerfield and then scored on a Donnie Solano fly out to Taylor.

Unfortunately, that is all that the Giants muster against Urias, and finally in the top of the sixth inning, the Dodgers broke the game open from an unlikely source this season; however, a former Most Valuable Player.

With the bases loaded and one out, Cody Bellinger, who won the National League Most Valuable Player in 2019, and who was mired in a season long slump after being injured earlier in the year, came with a two-run double that gave the Dodgers a commanding 4-1 lead and then scored Pollock hit a two-run double of his own that gave the Dodgers a commanding 6-1 lead.

Crawford picked up his second run batted in of the series, as he singled to right field to score LaMonte Wade, Jr., who came off the bench to pinch hit for Austin Slater and drew a walk against Joe Kelly.

Mookie Betts came up with the defensive play of the night that killed the Giants rally that ended the bottom of the sixth inning.

Sometimes you just do things you can’t really explain, Betts said of his play. And that was just one of them.

Crawford singled to score Wade, Jr., however, on the play, Wilmer Flores, who was on first base try to test Betts and go to third, but Betts made a perfect throw to Justin Turner to get Flores and not only end the inning but the threat as well.

Yeah, 100 percent, Flores said. I just thought the ball was more in the corner, No, it was my decision.

Will Smith then greeted Zack Littell rather rudely, as he launched a solo home run deep into the San Francisco night on the first pitch that Littell allowed in the top of the eighth inning.

Taylor and Pollock each picked up singles in between Bellinger, who struck out for the third time on the evening.

Matt Beaty came up with a pinch-hit single that scored Taylor and after Jarlin Garcia came on to replace Littell, Seager singled to right field to score Pollock.

The usual stellar Giants bullpen was anything but that on this night, as the quintet of Dominic Leone, Jake McGee, Littell, Garcia and Kervin Castro pitched the final 4.2 innings, allowing five runs on seven hits, walking just one and striking out just two.

The quartet of Joe Kelly, Brusdar Graterol, Corey Knebel and Phil Bickford pitched the final four innings, allowing one run on three hits, walking one and striking out three.

Buster Posey was a bright spot for the Giants despite the seven-run loss that tied up the series, as the veteran catcher went 3-for-4 on the night against Dodgers pitching.

NOTES: When Posey singled in the bottom of the sixth inning, it was the 54th career hit postseason hit for him, passing former teammate Pablo Sandoval.

When Posey caught the shutout in Game 1 of the NLDS against the Dodgers, it was the 13th time that the Giants won a game via the shutout, by far the most in MLB history, this according to Elias Sports Bureau. The 13 shutouts are five ahead of Yadier Molina (8) and six ahead of Yogi Berra (7). In his career, Posey has been a part of exactly half of the Giants postseason shutouts in team history.

Logan Webb became just the fourth Giants pitcher ever to strikeout 10 or more in his playoff debut, joining Carl Hubbell in Game Three of the 1933 World Series versus the Washington Senators, Tim Lincecum in Game One of the 2010 NLDS versus the Atlanta Braves and Jonathan Sanchez in Game Three of the 2010 NLDS. In all of those instances, the Giants won the World Series.

UP NEXT: Alex Wood will start Game 3 for the Giants of the NLDS against the Dodgers on Monday night at Dodger Stadium. During the 2021 season, the Giants were 12-2 with Wood on the mound after a loss. Scherzer will make his second postseason startfor the Dodgers in 2021, as he went 4.1 innings, in the Wild Card game on Wednesday night.

Webb tangles Dodgers in Game 1 win 4-0

San Francisco Giants pitcher Logan Webb seems to be yelling “Your Dog gone right” in the sixth inning after striking out Los Angeles Dodgers hitter Trea Turner in the top of the sixth inning in game 1 of the NLDS at Oracle Park Fri Oct 8, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

In his first ever playoff start, Logan Webb looked like a veteran instead of someone on the biggest stage for the first time in his Major League career.

Webb pitched the first 7.2 innings, allowing zero runs on five hits, not walking a batter and striking out 10 and the San Francisco Giants defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-0 in Game One of the National League Division Series at Oracle Park.

The Rocklin native left the mound after he allowed a two-out single to Mookie Betts with two outs in the top of the eighth inning.

Buster Posey hit a two-run home run in the bottom of the first inning off of Dodgers starter Walker Buehler that bounced off the water-spraying pillar on the right field arcade on a 3-0 pitch that gave the Giants an early 2-0 lead.

The home run by Posey was his first in the postseason since Game 4 of the 2012 World Series off of Max Scherzer, then of the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park in Detroit.

Webb got help from his defense in the top of the fourth inning, as Tommy La Stella mde a dazzling stop with his glove, flipped the ball to Brandon Crawford, who then threw to Wilmer Flores to complete the double play on the ball hit by Justin Turner that ended the inning.

La Stella also came up big at the plate, as he picked up two hits on the evening.

Posey helped out Webb immensely from his spot behind the plate, as the veteran, who sat the 2020 season to care for the twin girls that he and his wife adopted.

Just having him back there, honestly, Webb said. “Hell calm me down.

Webb, who helped lead the Giants to their first division title since 2012, last lost against the Colorado Rockies on May 5 at Coors Field.

Kris Bryant hit a solo home run in the bottom of the seventh inning to give the Giants a 3-0 lead, and then Crawford closed out the scoring, as he launched a solo home run into the Dodgers bullpen in the bottom of the eighth inning.

Bryant, who helped lead the Chicago Cubs to their first World Championship in 108 years, went 3-for-3 at the plate.

Walker Buehler went the first 6.1 innings, allowing three runs on six hits, walking just one and struck out five.

“Obviously it’s on me to try to create some momentum and I kind of sucked that out of our dugout,” Buehler said.

NOTES: This is the Giants first appearance in the playoffs since they lost to the Cubs in the 2016 NLDS and their 27th appearance since 1900 and 13th time since moving to California in 1958. As for the Dodgers, this is their ninth consecutive appearance in the postseason, as they are the defending World Champions.

In Giants’ playoff history, the team has an overall
record of 26-12 in Game 1 action since 1903 (17-7 in SF era) and 5-3 in Division Series Game 1s…the Giants have won seven of their last eight Game 1s dating back to the 2012 World Series.

UP NEXT: Kevin Gausman will take the mound for the Giants in Game 2, while the Dodgers will send left-hander Julio Urias to the hill on Saturday night.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: A rivalry series for the ages Dodgers and Giants face off Friday night at Oracle

San Francisco Giants starter Logan Webb acknowledges the Oracle Park crowd on the last day of the regular season on Sun Oct 3, 2021 as he is relieved in the eighth inning from pitching against the San Diego Padres. Webb will be the starting pitcher Fri Oct 8, 2021 against the Los Angeles Dodgers for game 1 of the NLDS in San Francisco (AP News photo)

On the Giants podcast with Michael:

#1 Logan Webb Giants starter has been sensational all season talk about how he’s handled the Dodgers when he’s had to face them?

#2 Kevin Gausman starter has been lights out and has had a career season. With his mix of pitches do you see him keeping the Dodgers off balance.

#3 The Dodgers are missing Clayton Kershaw and Max Muncy. That didn’t seem to slow the Dodgers down in their come back on the Cardinals. That said how much will the absence of Kershaw and Muncy impact this club going into Division series.

#4 The Dodgers have been on the Giants heels in the NL West all season long. Giants manager Gabe Kapler has been able to stay of ahead of them talk about the job Kapler has done this season.

#5 Walker Buehler Dodgers starter 16-4 ERA 2.47 is one of the Dodgers aces. The Giants were able to beat him this season how do you see the Giants hitting against Buehler in this upcoming series.

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

LA’s Taylor wins it with a walk-off home run as Cards one and done 3-1

Los Angeles Dodgers Chris Taylor runs the bases after hitting a ninth inning walk off home run against the St Louis Cardinals Wed Oct 6, 2021 in the NL Wild Card game at Dodgers Stadium Los Angeles (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

This was not the first rodeo in the postseason for the Los Angeles Dodgers and the St. Louis Cardinals facing each other, but the first in the Wild Card Game.

Chris Taylor hit a two-run home run in the bottom of the ninth inning, giving the Dodgers a dramatic 3-1 victory over the Cardinals in the Wild Card game at Dodger Stadium.

In the longtime rivalry between the Dodgers and the Cardinals, the Dodgers now hold a 4-1 lead overall in the postseason.

With the victory, the Dodgers will now face longtime archrival San Francisco Giants in the National League Division Series beginning on Friday night at Oracle Park in the best of five series.

This will be the first time ever that the Dodgers and Giants will face each other in the postseason.

Taylor hit an 88 mile per hour slider off of Alex Reyes and put it into the left-center bleachers to send the fans at Dodger Stadium into an absolute frenzy.

Cody Bellinger walked with two outs, and after Reyes replaced T.J. McFarland, Bellinger stole his second base of the night and then Taylor hit a 2-1 pitch that ended the game and sent the Cardinals home for the season after a heartbreaking loss.

This was the third postseason walk-off home run in Dodgers history, following Kirk Gibsons two-run home run off of Dennis Eckersley of the Oakland Athletics in Game 1 of the 1988 World Series and then 29 years to the day later, on October 15, 2017, Justin Turner hit a two-run walk-off home run to give the Dodgers a 2-0 lead in the National League Championship against the Chicago Cubs, who were coming off their first World Series Championship since 1908.

Longtime Dodgers closer Kenley Jansen pitched the ninth inning to pick up the win for the Dodgers, and despite allowing a hit, Jansen struck out the side.

Following the departure of Max Scherzer with one out in the top of the fifth inning, Dave Roberts, turned to his bullpen and the quintet of Joe Kelly, Brusdar Graterol, Blake Treinen, Corey Knebel and Jansen allowed zero runs on just two hits, walked one and struck out six.

Scherzer, who grew up in the St. Louis suburb of Chesterfield before playing his college baseball at the University of Missouri went just 4.1 innings for the Dodgers, allowing one run on three hits, walking and striking out four.

On the other side of the field, Cardinals veteran Pitcher Adam Wainwright went 5.1 innings, allowing one run on four hits, walking two and striking out five.

Both Scherzer and Wainwright did not fare in the decision for their respective teams in the winner take all game.

The Cardinals got on the board in the top of the first inning, when Scherzer unleashed a wild pitch that scored Tommy Edman from third base, who led off the game with a walk, then stole second and moved to third on a fly ball hit by Tyler ONeill to Mookie Betts.

That was the score until Turner tied up the game with a solo home run off of Wainwright, and it was the 13th career postseason for Turner, a Dodgers record.

NOTES: This was the second winner take all Wild Card game for the Cardinals, who defeated the Atlanta Braves in the 2012 Wild Card Game at Turner Field. That Cardinals team, who were the defending World Champions would make it all the way to the National League Championship Series, where they would lose to the eventual World Champion San Francisco Giants in seven games after being unable to hold a 3-1 lead in the series.

Despite playing in the Wild Card Series in 2020, on their way to their first World Series Championship since 1988, this was the debut for the Dodgers in the Wild Card Game.

UP NEXT: The Dodgers will open up the NLDS at Oracle Park against the Giants on Friday night, while the Cardinals season is over and will regroup again in 2022 at Spring Training in Jupiter, Florida.

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: The Ultimate Baseball Face-off – Dusty Baker vs Tony LaRussa

Houston Astros manager Dusty Baker (left) and Chicago White Sox manager Tony LaRussa meet at Minute Maid Field in Houston on Thu Oct 7, 2021 for game 1 of the ALDS (file photo NBC Sports)

The Ultimate Baseball Face-off – Dusty Baker vs Tony LaRussa

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

The American League Divisional Series is an attractive one. Two of the best hitting teams in all of baseball with very good pitching also. Manager Dusty Baker of the AL Western Division Champion Houston Astros, who will host Tony La Russa Manager of the Chicago White Sox Champion of the AL Central Division. Two excellent managers, who both return to the show after a few years of “unemployment”.

The two managers cut their teeth here in the Bay Area, Tony (The Hall of Famer) with the Athletics and Dusty (The Players Manager) with the Giants, they are two “old school” managers, not necessarily going by today’s super hyper stats of high-velocity pitches and hits, infield shifts, launch angle and all the other stuff which some media and fans overdose these days. Both not afraid of using the bunt, sacrifice, or as well as the hit and run or ‘run and hit’ and very much manage with their guts in-game situation.

Tony LaRussa is the active manager with the most wins ever 2,821, which places him second all-time behind the legendary owner and manager of the Philadelphia Athletics, Connie Mack who won a total of 3,731 baseball games.

Dusty Baker occupies No.12 in the all-time managers in wins with 1,987. Having covered both managers and traveled with them, there is a rivalry between both, the two oldest managers in baseball this season, Tony 77, Dusty 72.

They both speak conversational Spanish. In the 1980’s I recorded “El Show de Tony LaRussa” which was a three minute inside pregame show for radio. Tony would talk about the previous game with his take as a manager. With Dusty, many times I interviewed him including in the late 1990s when he was managing the Giants including 2002 when he won the National League Pennant and lost the World Series to the LA Angels.

This American League Divisional Series begins this Thursday, October 7 at Minute Maid Park, home of the Houston Astros, who finished the season with 95-67 winning the West, while the Chicago White Sox ended with 93-69. This is the best-of-5 and Houston owns home-field advantage. Prediction: It will be a 5 game series. Houston is a much experienced postseason-proven team than Chicago. They didn’t clinch until the last week of the regular season.

Chicago White Sox won the Central Division (the weakest in baseball, second-place Cleveland Indians finished 13 games from Chicago). The Sox had their share of injuries, but they were never really challenged, they are a dynamic and mostly young ball club, which many critics believe (before the season) that LaRussa would be “too old” to win with this young group of players, but he proved those guys wrong and here is another Tony LaRussa team in the postseason.

Some great hitters for Houston in the series: José Altuve, Carlos Correa, Jordan Alvarez, Alex Bregman, Yuliesky Gurriel, who just won the league batting title with a .319 average, which today is the equivalent of hitting .340 decades ago, a breakthrough year for Kyle Tucker who was a First Round pick in the 2015 Draft, for the Astros and ended this season with his best numbers at 24 years of age, hit .294 with 30 home runs and 92 RBI. Their rotation is solid and a good bullpen to complete the game.

The Chicago White Sox can swing it with anybody. Tim Anderson, José Abreu, Yoán Moncada, Luis Robert, César Hernández, Eloy Jiménez, Yasmani Grandal, some of the names that can hit and hit for power. A very good pitching staff with Carlos Rodón, Lucas Giolito, Lance Lynn, Dylan Cease, and a very strong bullpen with Craig Kimbrel and Liam Hendricks to close the game.

I give the edge to Houston in 5 games, but if Chicago wins, they have the potential to run the table and go all the way and win the World Series.

About the Wild Card game: (Note) I never liked the Wild Card game, just one game to decide a season. The LA Dodgers won 106 games this year and finished second. The first team ever to finish with 106 wins and not win their division. The Dodgers play the St. Louis Cardinals on Wednesday, Oct 6.

The winner advances, the other team goes home. Just image winning 106 games and getting eliminated in the first round of the postseason? Something is not right here. This is not the NFL. Solution? Wild Card should be the best of 3 games. Just reduce the season to 152 games instead of 162 to even the whole year schedule, so the World Series doesn’t end by Thanksgiving Day. Who really likes the ‘due or die games’? Fans and especially, television, who usually score very good ratings.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez call post season baseball on CBS Spanish radio and reported for Telemundo TV and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: Dodgers are slight favorite over Cardinals; Red Sox are favorites over Yankees

St Louis starter Adam Wainwright tips his cap to the crowd while being interviewed after pitching in the clinching game against the Milwaukee Brewers on Tue Sep 28, 2021 at Busch Stadium in St Louis. Wainwright will be the Cardinals starting pitcher against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NLWC game at Dodgers Stadium Los Angeles Wed Oct 5, 2021 (AP News photo)

On That’s Amaury’s commentary:

#1 After the St Louis Cardinals won 17 of 18 before losing two in a row to end season does the Cards odds look the best amongst the Los Angeles Dodgers in the upcoming NL Wild Card game on Wednesday?

#2 The Dodgers in their own right finished off the season winning seven straight and during that time got some excellent pitching from pitcher Julio Urias who finished the season winning 20 games going 20-3 ERA 2.96.

#3 With someone of the likes of Urias and a potent Dodgers starting rotation in the regular season Urias puts the Dodgers in a pretty good position if they can get past the Cardinals and reach a Division Series.

#4 In the American League Wild Card series talk about tonight’s game between the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park for the Wild Card. Starting for the Yankees Gerrit Cole and for the Sox Nathan Eovaldi two right handers in a game that could advance the winner to the Division Series. Oddsmakers have the Red Sox as the ALWC winner.

#5 Going back to the Cardinals and Dodgers Wild Card starting pitcher for St Louis Adam Wainwright against Max Scherzer for Los Angeles a 5:10 pm first pitch at Dodger Stadium on Wednesday. The oddsmakers have the Dodgers as 1.5 run favorites.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez gives his analysis of the MLB post season teams throughout the playoffs at http://www.sportsrasdioservice.com

San Francisco Giants podcast with Charlie O: Giants will miss Belt’s bat for NLDS; SF’s photo finish to division title

San Francisco Giants Brandon Belt swings for a single against the Colorado Rockies on Sep 25, 2021 the next day he broke his thumb on a bunt at Coors Field. Belt will be out for most of the post season and could be eligible for the World Series. (AP News file photo)

On the Giants podcast with Charlie O for Morris Phillips:

#1 Charlie no breathers for either the San Francisco Giants () or the Los Angeles Dodgers () both teams who got to the finish line, both team who made post season but one team won the division by a photo finish.

#2 The Dodgers series with the Atlanta Braves was no picnic, the Dodgers were on a six game win streak before the start of Sunday’s game but still remained two games behind the Giants in the NL West standings.

#3 Charlie, will the absence of Brandon Belt make a huge impact going into post season and going a club like the Dodgers or the St Louis Cardinals.

#4 The Giants got some crucial pitching out of their starters this season Johnny Cueto, Anthony DeSclafani, Alex Wood, Logan Webb and Kevin Gausman.

#5 How did players like Tommy LaStella, LaMonte Webb Jr, and Donavon Solano make a difference in the mix to win 107 games.

Charlie O is filling in for Morris Phillips for the Giants podcasts heard on Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants crowned NL West Champs, Dodgers streak of division titles end at 8; SF picks up 107th victory over SD 11-4

The San Francisco Giants celebrate their 2021 Western Division Championship clinch at Oracle Park in San Francisco vs. the visiting San Diego Padres on Sun Oct 3, 2021 (AP News photo)

San Diego 4 – 7 – 0

San Francisco 11- 10-0

By Lewis Rubman

October Sunday, October 3

SAN FRANCISCO–It’s over. The Giants are the champions of the National League’s Western Division. They trounced the Padres 11-4 behind the brilliant pitching and hitting (yes, hitting!) of Logan Webb. There will be no tie-breaker tomorrow. The Giants won’t have to face the Cardinals in a wild card game, and they will have the home field advantage for as long as they last in the postseason..

This afternoon’s game against San Diego opened auspiciously for the Giants. It took Webb, who brought a record of 10-3, 2.93 with him to the mound, a mere 14 pitches to strike out Trent Grisham, Fernando Tatís, Jr., and Manny Machado. He pitched two more innings without allowing a base runner.

Webb’s counterpart for the Padres, rookie Reiss Knehr (1-1, 4.85 at game time) pitched well, but not as commandingly as Webb, for two innings but ran into trouble in the third. With one man out, he gave up an improbable single to Webb, who advanced to second on a wild pitch to Tommy Lastella, whose subsequent fly to center resulted in the second out of the frame.

Wilmer Flores singled to center, sending Webb to third, and advanced to second on Grisham’s throw. A walk to LaMonte Wade, Jr., loaded the bases with Giants. Buster Posey’s single to left drove in Webb and Flores. Only an impressive diving catch of Brandon Crawford’s sinking line drive to right center prevented San Francisco from opening up a bigger lead.

The Padres countered with a lead off double by Grisham. He held his ground at second while Longoria threw Tatís out at first and then broke for third and made it safely. Maldonado plated him with a sacrifice fly to center that brought the Pads to within a run of the Giants.

Dinelson Lamet took over for Knehr in the bottom of the fourth. The Padres’ starter had given up two runs, both earned, on three hits, two walks, and a wild pitch in three innings, during which he threw 45 pitches, 28 for strikes. Lamet walked the first two batters he faced, Bryant and Yastrzemski, but got Longoria on a called third strike .

The brought Webb to the plate. After showing bunt on Lamet’s first delivery and almost getting hit by a pitch that bounced off his bat into foul territory, San Francisco’s new found offensive threat walked on a full count to clog the base paths. They stayed clogged after Lastella’s RBI single to right, each runner moving up a station.

That was it for Lamet, who threw 30 pitches in a third of an inning, gave up on run and one hit, and was responsible for the three men who were on base when Craig Stammen relieved him. Two of them scored on Wilmer Flores’s double to left put San Francisco up, 5-1. The third score sac fly to left that advanced Flores to third with two out.

Buster Posey quickly brought him home with a single to center. When the ninth Giant batter of the inning, Brandon Crawford, struck out swinging, the scoreboard read San Diego 1, San Francisco 7.

San Diego crept towards a comeback in the fifth. Adam Frazier sliced a one out double to left. Jake Marisnick took an 81 mph slider in the ribs. Webb then retired Rivas on a fly to right and struck out a pinch hitting Tommy Pham

Nabil Crismatt pitched the fifth frame for the Padres. He got through his first three batters, yielding only a walk to the first, Bryant. But he didn’t reckon with Wonder Worker Webb, who blasted. Crismatt’s second pitch, an 83 mph change up, 368 feet into the left field bleachers. Need I say that this was his maiden round trip voyage?

The orange and black continued to pile it on. They opened the seventh, still facing Crismatt, with back to back singles by Crawford and Bryant, both of whom Yastrzemski brought home with a ringing double to center, fluffing up the Giants cushion to 11-1. After Longoria struck out, Logan received a standing ovation and then struck out, his only unsuccessful plate appearance of the day.

It was clear in the top of the eighth that Webb was tired. He yielded consecutive singles to Marisnik, Rivas, and pinch hitter Victor Caratini that producd San Diego’s second tally. That was it for Webb on the mound, and Kervin Castro took over. He allowed an RBI single to Grisham, scoring Rivas. Profar struck out, but Ha-Seong KIm and Cronenworth drove in Caratini with a sinking sacrifce fly to left.

After Castro walked Myers, Jarlín García relieved him. Webb had thrown 88 pitches, 63 for strikes. He was charged with four runs, but two of them crossed the plate while Castro was on the mound. Webb struck out eight Padres and didn’t walk anyone. Castro gave up two walks and a hit in his ineffective two-thirds of an inning on the mound.

James Norwood set the Giants down in order in the eighth, setting the stage for Dominic Leone to come in to close the Pads down in their last half inning.

To chants of “Beat LA,” Leone got Marisnick to ground out to Crawford. Then he struck Rivas out swinging. All that stood between the Giants and undisputed possession of first place was the pinch hitting Eric Hosmer. He went down swinging.

It was Logan’s day, and he got the win. The loss went to Knehr.

On Friday, the winner of the NL wild card game between Los Angeles and St. Louis will come to Oracle Park to face the NL West Champion San Francisco Giants in the first game of the NLDS.

Giants drop crucial game 3 to Padres 7-6 in 10th inning stay one game above Dodgers

San Diego Padres Victor Caratini (17) gets congratulations with Fernando Tatis Jr after Tatis scores on an RBI single in the bottom of the 11th inning at Petco Park in San Diego on Wed Sep 22, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jessica Kwong

The San Francisco Giants lost 7-6 to the San Diego Padres in extra innings at Petco Park on Thursday afternoon.

They blew their chance to sweep San Diego and saw their lead atop the NL West narrow to one game as the defending champion Los Angeles Dodgers beat their opponent on the same day.

The Giants rallied from a couple of deficits but lost on a walk-off infield single from Victor Caratini against Padres right-handed pitcher Dominic Leone.

The Padres scored four times in the first inning off Giants starter Logan Webb. With the bases loaded, Jurickson Profar was hit by a pitch. Trent Grisham hit a sacrifice fly to bring San Diego’s lead up to 2-0. Ha-Seong Kim and Caratini had RBI singles to put the Padres up 4-0.

In the second inning, Mike Yastrzemski hit a home run on a fly ball to right field and LaMonte Wade scored to cut the Padres’ lead to 4-2.

Austin Slater hit a home run on a line drive to left field in the sixth inning and Tommy La Stella and Brandon Belt scored, putting the Giants up 5-4.

But Trent Grisham homered on a fly ball to right field to tie the game and Ha-Seong Kim hit a home run to center field to help San Diego regain a 6-5 lead.

In the seventh inning, La Stella doubled on a line drive to center field and Wilmer Flores scored, tying the game again at 6-6.

Meanwhile, the Dodgers won 7-5 in 10 innings against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field.

When Slater hit a three-run homer in the sixth inning, the Giants could see on the out-of-town scoreboard that the Rockies were one out away from beating the Dodgers.

“Our focus was solely on this game, this is a good team across the other side of the field,” Slater said. “But they flash the scores and it’s hard to miss sometimes. You’re aware of it.”

Only nine games are left on the Giants’ schedule and they will finish the regular season facing the Padres again for a three-game series at home.

The Giants (99-54) are just one game ahead of the Dodgers (98-55), meaning the Padres will have a defining role in deciding that fierce division race.

San Francisco starts a three-game series against the Colorado Rockies on Friday. First pitch is at 5:10 p.m.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Bullpen keeping Giants in the slim hunt with Dodgers in NL West race

San Francisco Giants pitcher Dominic Leone has done a bang up job as a starter and reliever in helping the Giants in their pennant drive (file photo KNBR)

On the Giants podcast with Michael:

#1 Michael talk about Dominic Leone he’s been pitching in the starting role and a reliever he’s 3-4 ERA 1.69 and has been lights out.

#2 Over the last three outings for Leone he’s pitched against the Atlanta Braves twice and the San Diego Padres once and has shut them out each of the one inning appearances he’s made and giving up only one hit.

#3 Michael talk about that crucial sixth and seventh innings last night in San Diego. Where the Giants scored two runs in the sixth and three in the seventh as they won by two runs 8-6 every run and every win counts these days.

#4 Michael, talk about the bullpen strength how they’ve been closing down games in late innings and managing to keep the Giants heads above water and the surging Los Angeles Dodgers in the NL West.

#5 Giants conclude their three game series with the Padres today the Giants will start Logan Webb (10-3 ERA 2.79) and for the Padres Yu Darvish (8-10 ERA 4.13) a 1:10 PM PDT

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