Patrick Bailey’s inside-the-park walk-off home run propels Giants past Phillies for series win

San Francisco Giants’ Patrick Bailey, middle right, celebrates with teammates after hitting three-run inside the park home run during the ninth inning of a baseball game to defeat the Philadelphia Phillies in San Francisco, Tuesday, July 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

By Lincoln Juarez

SAN FRANCISCO – Patrick Bailey played hero with his walk-off inside-the-park home run as the Giants took an exhilarating game two from Philadelphia. 

Tuesday night the Giants took the field for game two against the Phillies behind their newly-named All-Star starter Robbie Ray. Ray, who got selected to participate in his second career All-Star game on Sunday, is also coming off of one of the best starts of his career last Thursday night. He tossed a complete game for just the second time in his 11 year career, only allowing two runs on three hits and a walk. 

Ray got off to another beaming start, setting the Phillies down in order on just eight pitches. 

The Giants offense couldn’t match the start of their All-Star southpaw in a scoreless first inning at the plate. 

Ray continued his stellar start in the top of the second, carving three K’s into the Phillies lineup (Castellanos, Kemp, Sosa) to keep the game scoreless. 

Phillies starter Taijuan Walker, who has worked a lot out of the bullpen this year, went into game two of the series at 3-5 with a 3.64 ERA. Facing a Giants lineup who does particularly well against right-handed starters (40-27), Walker had a tough time keeping them off the scoresheet in the home second. 

Yastrzemski walked to lead off the inning and two batters later Jung Hoo Lee executed a hit-and-run to perfection, placing runners on the corners and one out. On the first pitch he saw, Dom Smith sent a check-swing base-hit down the third base line, out of the reach of Alec Bohm. 

The Giants led 1-0 after two full. 

Philadelphia followed with pressure in the third on a walk issued to nine-hitter Johan Rojas and a 10 pitch at-bat to Trea Turner which resulted in a single to left. Rojas and Turner put Patrick Bailey’s 1.89 pop time to the test and succeeded on the double-steal. With two runners in scoring position, Ray struck out lefty Kyle Schwarber and got Bryce Harper to ground out to Adames at short and kept the Phillies off the board. 

Taijuan Walker seemed to settle in by setting the Giants down in order in an eight pitch third inning. 

Both starters made quick work of opposing lineups in the fourth. Robbie Ray threw 11 pitches in the fifth to retire the side in order as the Phillies had just two hits after five innings. 

Four innings would be all Taijuan Walker saw, going four for the first time since May 30 against Milwaukee. Left-hander Tanner Banks replaced Walker in the fifth against a Giants offense that looked for more than their two hits, one run to that point. 

Two more hits were all they would get. 

The Phillies bell rang in the sixth as the offense came alive and chased Robbie Ray out of the ballgame. Two free bases (HBP, BB) and two hits allowed Alec Bohm to come around and score the game’s tying run. 

Ray departed with two out in the sixth after another quality outing. 

Bob Melvin handed the ball to right-hander Spencer Bivens who completed the inning without further damage. 

In the seventh, the Phillies tried to build on their emerging offense. Hot off the bench, pinch-hitter Brandon Marsh dropped a single just inside the left-field line and advanced to second base after a bobble by Heliot Ramos. 

Two batters later, Kyle Schwarber sent one swimming, 402 ft into McCovey Cove. Philadelphia took a 3-1 lead on Schwarber’s 28th home run of the year. 

Into the home eighth, it was still a 3-1 Philadelphia lead. Righty Daniel Robert was the new pitcher who got welcomed to the game with a Heliot Ramos single and Rafael Devers walk that ignited the Oracle Park crowd. It was up to Willy Adames to keep the momentum swinging the Giants’ direction but failed to take advantage of a shaky Robert outing. He struck out swinging on a slider that would’ve been ball four. 

Manager Rob Thomson took to the mound to make a change and bring his closer, Jordan Romano in to face Matt Chapman. The righty-righty matchup resulted in a pop-out to second-baseman Edmundo Sosa. 

Yastrzemski, the next hitter, put the fans back in their seats with a fly-out to center, ending the Giants threat in the eighth. 

After signing a minor league contract with the Giants on June 10, left-hander Scott Alexander made his season debut with the club. He spent the beginning of the year with Colorado going 1-1 with a 6.06 ERA in 19 relief appearances. The Giants expect him to bring some veteran experience to the bullpen in his second stint with the team (2022-23). 

Following a two-out double by Schwarber and a walk to Bryce Harper, he was dismissed from his outing by manager Bob Melvin, to play the match-up game with righty Ryan Walker set to face righty Alec Bohm. 

One pitch later, Bohm was retired on a 3-1 put-out. 

Casey Schmitt started the home ninth with a rocket double down the left-field line. Two batters later Wilmer Flores singled to center. Matt Williams held Schmitt at third base with the winning run due up in Patrick Bailey with one out. 

On the first pitch he saw, Bailey launched one off the bricks in right-center field. Inches away from a normal walk-off home run, the ball ricocheted along the warning track all the way to dead center field. Center fielder Brandon Marsh had to chase it down and Bailey was on the move. Right behind Schmitt and pinch-runner Brett Wisely, Bailey crossed the plate on the walk-off inside-the-park home run. 

Electrifying the Oracle Park crowd the Giants celebrated the first inside-the-park walk-off home run in MLB since CLE’s Tyler Naquin in 2016 vs. Toronto, and the second by a Giant since the start of 1932, with the other being Angel Pagan’s vs. Colorado back in 2013.

When asked about the team’s ability to produce late and never feel out of a game, Bailey described it with the oh-so familiar slogan from the Giants last winning season in 2021 (107-55, NL West champions), “resilient”. 

Resiliency is exactly what the Giants have shown in this recent stretch. Winners of six of their last seven and now just five games behind the Dodgers, who lost their fifth in a row Tuesday night in Milwaukee, the men in orange and black have given this fanbase a lot of hope heading into the final half of the season. 

The upcoming weekend series against the Dodgers gets more intriguing by the day, but the Giants aim to take care of business with the potential to sweep the NL East leading Phillies with Justin Verlander on the mound still looking for his first win in 2025. 

Win or lose Wednesday afternoon, Tuesday night’s win will keep the energy high for days to come. 

Game three, Luzardo (7-5) vs. Verlander (0-6) Wednesday at Oracle Park, first pitch 12:45.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Giants Rafael Devers missed three scheduled Workouts

San Francisco Giant Rafael Devers (16) strikes out against the Boston Red Sox in the bottom of the ninth at Oracle Park on Fri Jun 20, 2025. Devers has missed three practices where he was supposed to train for playing first base and to be coached by former Giants first baseman Will Clark. Nonetheless Devers was in the line up on Tue Jul 8, 2025 against the Philadelphia Phillies at Oracle Park (AP News photo)

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Giants Rafael Devers missed three scheduled Workouts

Giants Rafael Dever missed three scheduled Workouts

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

San Francisco Giants legend Will Clark serves as a Special Assistant in the Giants’ front office. In this role, he represents the organization at various events. Clark stated on the No Filter Network that Rafael Devers, who was recently traded from the Boston Red Sox to the San Francisco Giants missed three scheduled workouts for him, which were intended to help Devers acclimate to playing first base.

The voice of the Red Sox initially reported this information, Will Fleming, on the WEEI afternoon radio show, and then later, Clark confirmed Fleming’s story. The Red Sox broadcaster has been critical of Rafael Devers since Devers was traded to the Giants, suggesting a lack of commitment from the recently acquired player and expressing doubt that Devers can ever become a face of the franchise.

While playing in Boston, Rafael Devers was a fan favorite and a talented hitter, but had a complicated reputation in Boston up to the trade to the Giants. In Boston, Devers was criticized for his defense and perceived lack of leadership, creating some tension with the Red Sox front office.

In the opinion of some, that precipitated the trade to San Francisco. Will Clark also revealed that manager Bob Melvin and third base coach Matt Williams asked him to meet with Rafael Devers and work around first base, but Devers failed to show for practice.

While Red Sox manager Alex Cora labeled the stunning trade “not personal,” reports indicate that Devers left Boston with souring relationships within the organization, and in just a few weeks with the Giants, a similar dynamic seems to be unfolding.

This sometimes happens in baseball when a trade of this magnitude occurs, which is why the Red Sox got rid of such a talented player. Well, we might now have the answer. So, around and around it goes, where does this soap opera end? Nobody knows.

Amaury Pi-Gonzalez – Cuban-born Pi-González is one of the pioneers of Spanish-language baseball play-by-play in America. Began as Oakland A’s Spanish-language voice in 1977 ending in 2024 (interrupted by stops with the Giants, Mariners and Angels). Voice of the Golden State Warriors from 1992 through 1998. 2010 inducted in the Bay Area Radio Hall of fame.

While in the Bay Area, great food and great prices. 998cuba.com

Sacramento A’s podcast Jeremiah Salmonson: Wilson first A’s shortstop since 1975 to start in All Star Game

Sacramento A’s shortstop Jacob Wilson (5) is the first A’s shortstop since 1975 to start in an All Star Game since Bert Campaneris (AP News photo)

Sacramento A’s podcast Jeremiah Salmonson:

#1 The Sacramento A’s lost a tough series to the San Francisco Giants with a 6-2 loss on Sunday night. San Francisco takes the regular season series overall finishing, 5-1.

#2 Giant Willy Adames continues his batting presence going 1-3 at the plate with one run, one home run, two BB’s, and three RBI’s last Sunday evening. He now joins former legendary Giant Rich Aurilia with three or more RBIs in consecutive games since September 2000.

#3 A’s starting pitcher Jacob Lopez pitched 4.1 inning, allowed five hits, four earned runs, one walk and eight strikeouts. The Giants scored three runs off Lopez in the top of the fifth inning that caused most of the damage for Sacramento.

#4 The Atlanta Braves are in town to face off with the Athletics at Sutter Health Park. One of the most feared lead off hitters in the game the Braves Ronald Acuna Jr and is hitting .331, with nine home runs, 18 RBIs and 46 hits.

#5 It’s back to the drawing board for the A’s who host the Atlanta Braves Tuesday night at Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento. Starting pitcher for the Braves RHP Didier Fuentes (0-2 ERA 9.00) and for the A’s LHP Jeffrey Springs (6-6 ERA 4.07) first pitch 7:05pm PT.

 Jeremiah Salmonson does the A’s podcasts each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Whether you’re pre-gaming with the Kings or celebrating an A’s win, Cyprus Grille at the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena is your downtown go-to.

⚡Craft cocktails? Check.
🔥Game-day bites? Oh yeah.
🏟️Steps from Golden 1 Center? You bet.

Open daily, Cyprus Grille is serving up local flavor with a front-row seat to the action. Stop by before or after the game—or make it your new downtown hangout.

Cyprus Grille—where fans fuel up.

📍Located inside the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena @ 300 J Street

Happy Hour – 4pm-6pm

Show your ticket for additional discounts when dining in. 

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Big names come up as teams pursue Bucs Skenes; Yanks Chisholm moves back to second; plus more MLB news

Teams like the Atlanta Braves and the Minnesota Twins might pursue Pittsburgh Pirates Paul Skenes during the July trade deadlines (AP file photo)

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Here’s a crazy potential trade that was brought up on ESPN today the Atlanta Braves Ronald Acuna Jr for the Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Paul Skenes or Skenes for the Minnesota Twins Byron Buxton as the baseball trade deadline heats up here in July.

#2 New York Yankees All Star Jazz Chisholm Jr after starting 28 games in a row at third base will be returning to his second base position. Yanks manager Aaron Boone said. Chisholm is hitting .245, 45 homers, 38 RBIs with ten steals in 59 games. Chisholm had been suffering right shoulder soreness which is one of the reasons for moving back to second base.

#3 San Diego Padres Manny Machado picked up his 2,000th career hit on Monday night against the Arizona Diamondbacks hitting a bullet off the glove of the D-Backs shortstop Geraldo Perdomo. Machado got the hit off pitcher Zac Gallen in the fourth inning and got a standing ovation from the Petco Park fans.

#4 Boston Red Sox third baseman Alex Bregman whose been out since May 24th with a strained right quad believes he can skip the minor league rehab session and get right back into the show and in the line up joining the Sox just before the All Star break. His return could happen as soon as the end of this week.

#5 The last time an Sacramento Athletics shortstop started an All Star Game you’d have to go back to 1975 when Bert Campaneris started at that All Star Classic. Jacob Wilson was voted the starting shortstop for the 2025 All Star game representing the A’s in Atlanta on Wed Jul 15th. Wilson has had himself a season hitting .331, nine home runs, 111 hits, and 42 RBIs.

Amaury Pi-Gonzalez – Cuban-born Pi-González is one of the pioneers of Spanish-language baseball play-by-play in America. Began as Oakland A’s Spanish-language voice in 1977 ending in 2024 (interrupted by stops with the Giants, Mariners and Angels). Voice of the Golden State Warriors from 1992 through 1998. 2010 inducted in the Bay Area Radio Hall of fame

 @Central Park Fremont – Fremont CA

http://goaquaadventure.com

Sacramento A’s podcast Tony Renteria: A’s open up series with Braves tonight at Sutter Health

The Atlanta Braves Ronald Acuna Jr is one of the most successful lead off hitters in the game and will face off against the Sacramento A’s on Tue Jul 8, 2025 (Athlon Sports photo)

Sacramento A’s podcast Tony Renteria:

#1 The Sacramento A’s lost a tough series to the San Francisco Giants with a 6-2 loss on Sunday night. San Francisco takes the regular season series overall finishing, 5-1.

#2 Giant Willy Adames continues his batting presence going 1-3 at the plate with one run, one home run, two BB’s, and three RBI’s last Sunday evening. He now joins former legendary Giant Rich Aurilia with three or more RBIs in consecutive games since September 2000.

#3 A’s starting pitcher Jacob Lopez pitched 4.1 inning, allowed five hits, four earned runs, one walk and eight strikeouts. The Giants scored three runs off Lopez in the top of the fifth inning that caused most of the damage for Sacramento.

#4 The Atlanta Braves are in town to face off with the Athletics at Sutter Health Park. One of the most feared lead off hitters in the game the Braves Ronald Acuna Jr and is hitting .331, with nine home runs, 18 RBIs and 46 hits.

#5 It’s back to the drawing board for the A’s who host the Atlanta Braves Tuesday night at Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento. Starting pitcher for the Braves RHP Didier Fuentes (0-2 ERA 9.00) and for the A’s LHP Jeffrey Springs (6-6 ERA 4.07) first pitch 7:05pm PT.

 Tony Renteria does the A’s podcasts each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Whether you’re pre-gaming with the Kings or celebrating an A’s win, Cyprus Grille at the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena is your downtown go-to.

⚡Craft cocktails? Check.
🔥Game-day bites? Oh yeah.
🏟️Steps from Golden 1 Center? You bet.

Open daily, Cyprus Grille is serving up local flavor with a front-row seat to the action. Stop by before or after the game—or make it your new downtown hangout.

Cyprus Grille—where fans fuel up.

📍Located inside the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena @ 300 J Street

Happy Hour – 4pm-6pm

Show your ticket for additional discounts when dining in.

Giants pitching keeps Phillies bats quiet as late-inning offense strikes in 3-1 win

San Francisco Giants Matt Chapman (left) slides in safely past Philadelphia Phillies catcher JT Realmuto (right) in the last of the eighth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco Mon Jul 7, 2025 (AP News photo)

By Lincoln Juarez

SAN FRANCISCO – Landon Roupp and the Giants bullpen held a juiced Phillies offense to just one run in a 3-1 win Monday night at Oracle Park and the Giants rallied for two runs in the eighth to start the homestand strong. 

After a .500 (5-5) roadtrip the Giants looked to ride a two-game win streak into Oracle Park Monday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. 

Sunday night the Giants beat the Athletics in Sacramento by a score of 6-2, winning four of their last five games. 

Phillies starter Cristopher Sanchez (7-2) and his career 1.53 ERA against the Giants aimed to put out the fire that’s been Willy Adames’ bat and a resurging Giants offense. Career versus Sanchez going into Monday, Adames had hit .143 in seven at-bats but the team had scored six or more runs in each of their last four wins and hoped to keep the bats hot.

After a quick two outs to start the ballgame, Bryce Harper stepped up and sent a hard ground ball past the diving second baseman Casey Schmitt for the game’s first hit. Schmitt, in his first game since being reinstated from the 10-day IL, got the start at second base as IF Tyler Fitzgerald was once again optioned to Triple-A Sacramento. 

Fitzgerald had a short stint back with the big league club due to Casey Schmitt’s injury and didn’t have the time he needed to find his swing and regain confidence with Sacramento. 

The Giants offense got right to work in the home second with back-to-back singles by Chapman and Flores, followed by a walk to Schmitt to set up a bases loaded, no-outs opportunity. All the Giants could get was a single run on a fielder’s choice. Seven, eight, and nine in the order couldn’t come through as the offense continued to struggle with runners in scoring position. 

Defensively the Phillies were exposed in the bottom of the third inning. Rafael Devers reached on a miscommunication between the right fielder Castellanos and center fielder Marsh. The next batter Matt Chapman lined one into deep center field that put Marsh in a blender. Spinning a full 360, Marsh couldn’t track it down but the Phillies caught a fortunate break as it bounced over the wall for a ground-rule double, preventing Devers from scoring on the play. 

The Phillies escaped the inning without allowing a run. 

It wasn’t until the fifth inning before Philadelphia could scratch across a run against Giants starter Landen Roupp. He had only allowed two hits to that point until Bryson Stott doubled and eventually reached third on a ground out to the right side by Brandon Marsh. In the next at-bat, Trea Turner took a wild pitch that allowed Stott to score and tie the game 1-1. 

Roupp would finish the inning and it would turn out to be his last. His final line, 5 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 3 K. Bob Melvin described his outing as having “early in the season energy”. The right-hander did indeed look fresh on the mound and has only gotten better each of his last few starts.

Ryan Walker took over in the sixth and Joey Lucchesi in the seventh. Both exchanged scoreless innings with Cristopher Sanchez, who outlasted Roupp and pitched seven or more innings for the sixth time this season. His night would end after seven strong, 7 H, 1 ER, 1 BB, 8 K. 

Tyler Rogers entered the game in the eighth coming off of a six-pitch scoreless inning on Sunday. He retired the Phillies offense in just four batters, keeping the game tied at one. 

The San Francisco offense put together some late-night magic in the bottom of the eighth. Twenty-four year old Orion Kerkering couldn’t keep runners off the bases. Adames led off with a hit-by-pitch, Chapman singled to right putting runners at the corners with nobody out. Wilmer Flores then got hit by a pitch, loading the bases for Schmitt in his first game off the 10-day IL. He came through, putting the ball in play and bringing home Adames on a fielder’s choice for a 2-1 Giants lead. Jung Hoo Lee then hit into another fielder’s choice bringing home Chapman and the Giants were ahead by two. 

Camilo Doval entered the ninth inning in a save situation and walked Max Kepler on four pitches to start the inning. The next batter, Realmuto, saw 13 pitches from Doval before lining out to a leaping Casey Schmitt. Bryson Stott was the last Phillie to step in the box as he grounded one to first base where Wilmer Flores stepped on the bag and threw to Adames covering second for the tag-out to complete the double play and end the game. 

Winners of five of their last six games and now sitting just six games back of the Dodgers in the NL West, the Giants look to take advantage of left-hander Robbie Ray (9-3) on the mound in game two of the series tomorrow night against the Phillies Taijuan Walker (3-5). 

First pitch at 6:45pm. 

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Welcome to A’s Baseball! Your Seats are Waiting

Seats at Sutter Health Park at section 105 seat 20 (photo by rateyourseats.com)

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Welcome to A’s Baseball! Your Seats are Waiting;

Welcome to A’s Baseball! Your Seats are Waiting

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

For the first time in their history, the Sacramento A’s hosted the San Francisco Giants at Sacramento for a three-game series on July 4, 5, 6. The Giants won two of the three games, previously on May 16 and 18, and 19, while in San Francisco, the A’s were beaten again by the Giants who won two out of three at Sutter Health Park this past weekend.

That is it for the Northern California rivals (excluding the Bay Area) for the current 2025 season. Many Giants fans drove or took Amtrak to this recent series at Sutter Health Park in Sacramento. Used to attend Oracle Park to see their adored Giants, by the beautiful San Francisco bay, a real Major League Park with all the amenities and great fan experience, they witnessed with their own eyes their team playing in a Triple A Park, ironically the same park where their Triple A team makes his some, the Sacramento Rivercats.

It’s like a wealthy family living in Pacific Heights, in San Francisco, and then visiting a Trailer Park outside Colma. However, for the A’s, such is life during this 2025 season. Many players enjoy playing on the road; some have publicly expressed this sentiment, while others have shared the same opinion with their families and fellow players.

However, in the end, they must adjust to everything. I hate to repeat this, which has been said a zillion times. Baseball is a game of adjustments. In this case, you need to adjust to the specific settings of where you play, including major or minor league parks and cities.

Sacramento is not a Major League City, nor is it home to a Major League Park; that is why the River Cats play at Sutter Health and not at Oracle Park. The two California rivals now go different ways. The Giants return home to San Francisco for a very interesting home-stand, which could define if they are contenders or pretenders, as they will play three against the Philadelphia Phillies and three against the hated Los Angeles Dodgers.

The A’s go on the road to visit two Major League cities; first a three-game series against the Braves in Atlanta, then they cross the border and go north to Canada to play the red-hot first-place Toronto Blue Jays. Good luck to both the A’s and Giants for the rest of the way. One team is trying to be relevant during the second half and advance to the postseason, while the other is “surviving” its first of (at least three) temporary seasons at Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento.

Attention A’s Fans…your seats are still waiting! Quote: Many players express a love for the history and tradition of older parks. For example, Ted Williams, while acknowledging the need for a new park in Boston, also stated, “I won’t shed a tear,” according to redsox.com. Rob Neyer wrote about the special feeling of a walk-off home run in Fenway, stating, “Say what you want, but that moment would not have been the same in a ballpark”.

Amaury Pi-Gonzalez – Cuban-born Pi-González is one of the pioneers of Spanish-language baseball play-by-play in America. Began as Oakland A’s Spanish-language voice in 1977 ending in 2024 (interrupted by stops with the Giants, Mariners and Angels). Voice of the Golden State Warriors from 1992 through 1998. 2010 inducted in the Bay Area Radio Hall of fame

@Central Park Fremont – Fremont CA

http://goaquaadventure.com

Sacramento A’s podcast Barbara Mason: A’s Springs goes after seventh win, faces Braves Tuesday night

Sacramento A’s pitcher Jeffrey Springs pitches to the Texas Rangers in the bottom of the first inning at Globe Life Field in Arlington on Thu May 1, 2025. Springs will be the starting pitcher against the Atlanta Braves on Tue Jul 8, 2025 at Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento. (AP News file photo)

Sacramento A’s podcast Barbara Mason:

#1 The Sacramento A’s lost a tough series to the San Francisco Giants with a 6-2 loss on Sunday night. San Francisco takes the regular season series overall finishing, 5-1.

#2 Giant Willy Adames continues his batting presence going 1-3 at the plate with one run, one home run, two BB’s, and three RBI’s last Sunday evening. He now joins former legendary Giant Rich Aurilia with three or more RBIs in consecutive games since September 2000.

#3 A’s starting pitcher Jacob Lopez pitched 4.1 inning, allowed five hits, four earned runs, one walk and five strikeouts. The Giants scored three runs off Lopez in the top of the fifth inning that caused most of the damage for Sacramento.

#4 The Giants have won five of six against the Athletics this season, and the Giants home record at eight games above .500 as they return Monday night back to San Francisco. They finished their 10-game road trip with a 5-5 record on Sunday night. The A’s current home record drops to 16-29.

#5 It’s back to the drawing board for the A’s who host the Atlanta Braves Tuesday night at Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento. Starting pitcher for the Braves RHP Didier Fuentes (0-2 ERA 9.00) and for the A’s LHP Jeffrey Springs (6-6 ERA 4.07) first pitch 7:05pm PT.

 Barbara Mason does the A’s podcasts each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Whether you’re pre-gaming with the Kings or celebrating an A’s win, Cyprus Grille at the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena is your downtown go-to.

⚡Craft cocktails? Check.
🔥Game-day bites? Oh yeah.
🏟️Steps from Golden 1 Center? You bet.

Open daily, Cyprus Grille is serving up local flavor with a front-row seat to the action. Stop by before or after the game—or make it your new downtown hangout.

Cyprus Grille—where fans fuel up.

📍Located inside the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena @ 300 J Street

Happy Hour – 4pm-6pm

Show your ticket for additional discounts when dining in. 

San Francisco Giants Podcast Marko Ukalovic: Giants take the season series against the Athletics after Sunday evenings victory, 6-2

San Francisco Giant Willy Adames celebrates his solo home run in the Giants dugout with teammates in the fourth inning against the Sacramento A’s at Sutter Health Field in West Sacramento on Sun Jul 6, 2025 (AP News photo)

The Giants wrapped up their road trip with a 6-2 win over the Athletics, finishing 5-5 on the stretch. San Francisco takes the regular season series overall finishing, 5-1

San Francisco Giants podcast Marko Ukalovic:

#1 San Francisco Giant Willy Adames continues his batting presence going 1-3 at the plate with one run, one home run, two BB’s, and three RBI’s last Sunday evening. He now joins former legendary Giant Rich Aurilia with three or more RBIs in consecutive games since September 2000.

#2 Giants starter Hayden Birdsong now has a 4-3 win ratio with a 4.11 ERA after he claimed the winning pitcher of the game. He put up six strike outs, five walks, one earned run, and three hits. In the past three of his starts, he has walked at least four.

#3 Giant reliever Spencer Bivens appears to be gaining more trust out of the bullpen, even appearing ahead of Ryan Walker in the order. Do you believe the Giants are preparing him for a larger late-inning role given how successful he has been lately, allowing just one hit in his last three appearances?

#4 The Giants have won five of six against the Athletics this season, and their home record at eight games above .500. They now finished their 10-game road trip with a 5-5 record. How concerning is it that the Giants fell short against weaker teams now that the Phillies and Dodgers are visiting San Francisco? Can the team continue its two-game winning streak coming up against a more difficult homestand?

#5 The San Francisco Giants Monday will take on the Philadelphia Phillies as they prepare for their six game home stretch just shortly after leaving Sacramento. Giants will start Landen Roupp with a 6-5 win ratio, and a 3.48 ERA against Phillies Cristopher Sanchez with a 7-2 win ratio, and a 2.68 ERA.

Marko Ukalovic does the Giants podcasts Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Win First Series Since June Behind Adames, Pitching Staff over A’s 6-2

Willy Adames after going 5-11 with two walks in the series against the Athletics in Sacramento. (Photo: San Francisco Giants on X)

By Jeremiah Salmonson

WEST SACRAMENTO — After the home cooking that Logan Webb enjoyed on Saturday night, the Giants looked to win their first series since June 20-22 against the Boston Red Sox. The Giants had taken two out of three from the Red Sox directly following the Rafael Devers trade, but it had been mostly downhill since. They were swept by the Marlins at home, then dropped two of three to the White Sox in Chicago. It was a grim stretch for the Giants, who were trying to find their offensive rhythm in the early days of the Devers era in San Francisco.

On Sunday night, they finally got back on track, winning their first series since Boston by taking two of three from the A’s, including a 6-2 victory in the rubber match.

The feeling in the clubhouse postgame was one of relief. Granted, the Giants still have work to do as they return home to face tough National League opponents—the Phillies and Dodgers for three games each—but the club can breathe a little easier.

“We played cleaner, got some big hits,” Giants manager Bob Melvin said after the win. “Willy was fantastic this series, swinging the bat great at this point in time. We got some hits when we needed to and just did enough on the pitching end…”

The big series win was in large part thanks to shortstop Willy Adames. Adames, who struggled at the plate early in his new six-year, $182 million contract signed this offseason, went 5-for-11 with two walks in the series against Sacramento. Melvin praised Adames even more after the game.

“[He, Adames] just looks more comfortable at the plate. When you get some hits and knock some runs in, it makes you feel a little more comfortable. I think maybe there was some pressure on him early on and he kinda got past it, and now we are seeing some better swings… He’s been pretty instrumental in the wins.”

The Giants’ pitching also played a key role in the series victory. Starter Hayden Birdsong labored through his outing on Sunday, throwing 90 pitches with only 46 strikes. Yet, he held the A’s to just one run on three hits, despite walking five.

“Obviously Birdie was a little off with his command,” Melvin said. “I think he finished 50/50 balls to strikes but found a way to get outs when he needed to, and I think that’s progress for what he has been dealing with recently.”

The Giants bullpen—Spencer Bivens in the sixth, Randy Rodriguez in the seventh, and Tyler Rogers in the eighth—allowed only one combined hit over three scoreless innings. Camilo Doval pitched the ninth and gave up a run on two hits and a walk in a slightly shaky but manageable outing that kept the game firmly in the Giants’ hands. The pitching staff did an excellent job silencing the A’s bats in the final two games after Sacramento exploded for 11 runs on Friday night.

With the win, the Giants improved to 49-42, while the A’s dropped to 37-55. If the season ended today, the Giants would be tied with the San Diego Padres for the third wild card spot in the National League. They hold a one-game lead over the Cardinals, who trail them, and sit seven games back of the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NL West. Not ideal, considering the Giants were a game out of first when they played the Dodgers in L.A. at the end of June—but such is the game of baseball.

The Giants will return home to take on the Philadelphia Phillies in a three-game series starting Monday at 6:45 p.m. PT. Landen Roupp (6-5, 3.48 ERA) is scheduled to start for San Francisco, countered by Cristopher Sánchez (7-2, 2.68 ERA) for Philadelphia.

Note of the day: In the early innings of the game, Jacob Lopez and Hayden Birdsong combined to strike out 11 straight batters—Lopez with seven in a row, and Birdsong with four. Birdsong is known for his swing-and-miss movement and velocity, while the league is still learning what makes Lopez so deceptive. Lopez, who typically sits around 89–91 mph with his fastball, told me that the fastball is the key to his strikeouts.

“I think I have a pretty good fastball,” Lopez said.

When I followed up and asked if that was due to “late life” on the pitch, he quipped, “I don’t know, I’ve never hit against myself.”

From someone who never has—and never will—face Lopez in the box, it certainly seems that “late life” is the likely explanation. Lopez ranks in the 97th percentile in MLB for extension, releasing his pitches just over seven feet from the mound, which often leads to a fastball that appears to jump on hitters. Whatever it is, Lopez put his strikeout ability on full display Sunday night.