San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Did Littell blow up fire up Giants?; SF takes series with 4-1 win over Braves

San Francisco Giants starter Carlos Rodon delivers against the Atlanta Braves at Oracle Park in the top of the first inning on Wed Sep 14, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the Giants podcast with Michael:

#1 San Francisco Giants (69-74) reliever Zack Littell who was demoted to triple A Sacramento on Monday night after he exchanged words with manager Gabe Kapler during a pitching change seemed to have fired up the team with the Giants winning on Monday and Wednesday to take the series from the Atlanta Braves (88-55).

#2 The win on Wednesday had Giants starter Carlos Rodon dominate over the Braves line up with five innings of work giving up two hits and striking out eight in one of the toughest line ups that Rodon has to face.

#3 Rodon got a blister after leaving the game. Rodon said in the post game scrum that he’s been dealing with the blister all year long.

#4 Rodon has been pitching well all year long also on Wednesday he allowed only one unearned run, two hit and walk and second in baseball with strikeouts 220 to the New York Yankees Gerrit Cole who had 228.

#5 The Giants have Thursday off and host the Los Angeles Dodgers on Friday at Oracle Park for a 7:15 pm PDT. The Dodgers will go with starter Dustin May (1-2, 4.29) he’ll be opposed by the Giants Logan Webb (13-8, 2.88).

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

Spoil Sports: Giants win 4-1, keep the Braves from gaining the NL East lead

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–This time, the weight of a long, draining baseball season fell squarely on the shoulders of the Atlanta Braves.

The Giants–on the strength of a couple of good night’s sleep in their own beds–were poised to take advantage.

Austin Wynns drove in three runs, and Carlos Rodon cruised through five innings before a blister issue forced him from the mound. The Giants have won four of five, following a five-game slide.

“I think we’re more than capable (of being) a winning team,” Rodon said. “Unfortunately, the way it’s gone this year, it’s been up and down for us and we’ve kind of been behind often. But as of late we’ve played really well.”

The Braves looked sluggish facing Rodon and the four relievers that followed, with their top of the order guys–Ronald Acuna Jr. batting leadoff, Darby Swanson, Austin Riley and Matt Olson–all posting 0 for 4 games.

Charlie Morton, the Braves’ starter with a long history of success against the Giants (15 starts, four wins, 2.55 ERA coming in) took the loss, allowing four runs on four hits before he departed in the sixth inning. Morton suffered his first loss since July 27.

The Braves concluded an eight-game, three-city trip (Oakland, Seattle and San Francisco) with a thud. Manager Brian Snitker commented after the game that he felt like his club hadn’t been home in forever. It showed on Wednesday, their fourth loss in five games, and they failed to overtake the Mets for the NL East lead with the loss.

“You’re trying to win every game,” Snitker said. “Every game is big. They all mean a lot now.”

Rodon’s blister issue can’t be taken lightly. So much speculation has been spent on whether the former White Sox pitcher will opt-in to his $22 million option for next year with the Giants, or choose to test the free agent market. Which ever decision he makes, a bunch of money will be involved, and the Giants will want to make their best impression in hopes of keeping him.

“We felt like where we were in the season, it was the right decision to get him out of there,” Giants manager Gabe Kapler said. “I don’t anticipate (Rodon missing time) but we’re going to be cautious with Carlos and talk to him tomorrow and see how he’s feeling and go from there.”

“It’s just something I’ve been dealing with all year,” Rodon said. “Whenever I get a lot of pressure on that slider, it just tends to crack and get that blood blister, so just something we’ve got to manage.”

Rodon improved to 13-8 with the win, matching Logan Webb for the team lead in wins.

The Giants open a weekend set with the Dodgers on Friday night. Webb will be matched with Los Angeles’ Dustin May in the opener.

Braves three run third inning does in Giants in 5-1 loss

Dansby Swanson circles the bases after connecting with his 20th home run of the season against San Francisco Giants pitching in the top of the third inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco (AP News photo)

Atlanta (88-54). 5. 10. 0

San Francisco (68-74). 1. 4. 0

Tuesday, September 13, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Bay area sports pages and talk shows, when they’re not going on about football and other usurpers of the headlines of September, are full of post mortems for the Giants and Athletics’ autumn hopes.

Since the Giants’ 5-1 defeat by the Atlanta Braves tonight isn’t going to change the fact that the team is, for 2022, dead in the water, I thought I’d bring up one possible cause of the team’s demise before going on to what seemed to me the significant details of tonight’s encounter.

Every so often, the Giants send their fans a survey in which they ask questions like what makes you want to attend Giant games and then give a list of possible answers that the fans are supposed to rank.

In the last one I saw, which was less than a month ago, “because I like baseball” wasn’t one of the options. Now, I understand that baseball is a business and its owners want to put people in the seats (and in front of their screens).

I don’t want to imply that the Giants are indifferent to the team’s inadequate performance this year, but I think the absence of the baseball option says something important-and negative-about the attitude of the San Francisco ownership and, indeed, of the monopoly that is Major League Baseball, Inc.

The Baseball Operations staff was, in fact, busy before this evening’s game began. They recalled southpaw reliever Thoma Sszapucki from Sacramento and optioned right handed ditto Zack Litell to the River Cats

Tuesday game wrap: In tonight’s entertainment, the 87-54 Atlanta Braves sent right hander Kyle Wright (17-5, 3.23) against the woebegone 68-73 Giants. That’s the same Kyle Wright who, in his last start, a week ago today, went into his game against the even more woebegone Oakland Athletics with an ERA of 2.85).

The Bay Area treated Wright more kindly tonight. He went 5-1/3 innings and surrendered one run, earned, on three hits, three walks, and a wild pitch. He threw an even 100 pitches, 42 of which were balls. He earned his 18th win and brought his ERA down to 3.18.

Jakob Junis, coming to the mound at 4-5, 3.98, made his 16th start of the season and first ever against Atlanta.

The slider-sinker artist pitched better than his numbers indicated but still not very well. A few plays that were ruled hits-and, according to the not always fair rule book, those rulings were correct-were just bad breaks.

Junis went four plus innings and allowed four runs, all technically earned, on seven hits, one of which left the park, and a walk. He had five strikeouts and threw 92 pitches, 60 for strikes. He took the loss, his sixth against four wins and saw his ERA rise to 4.15.

The Giants touched Wright for a run right away. Mike Yastrzemski dropped a dying quail to left that got past Eddie Rosario for a one out double in the first. After Evan Longoria took a called third strike, Yaz took second on a wild pitch with Joc Pederson at the plate. Pederson’s single to right drove in Yastrzemski for the initial tally.

The Braves evened it up in their next at bat. Michael Harris II split the difference between Pederson and Yazk to bounce a two bagger off the Game Up sign in left center. He moved up 90 feet on Rosario’s single to center and scored when Robie Grossman beat out second sacker Thairo Estrada’s relay from Brandon Crawford on a missed double play opportunity.

They missed an offensive opportunity when a pair of walks and a single by Joey Bart enabled San Francisco to load the bases with two down in the second.Yastrzemski’s fly to the warning track in left ended that threat.

In the third frame, Dansby Swanson’s fly to left, to just about the same spot as Yaz’s, went a little further and cleared the fence, landing 385 feet into the bleachers with Acuña, who had led off with a single, on base.

That put the Braves ahead 3-1. Two outs later, Travis D’Arnaud whacked a line drive that glanced off González’s glove in right. It was ruled a hit because González had lost it in the lights. Harris singled to center to bring in D’Arnaud with Atlanta’s fourth run of the fray.

When Crawford, attempting a backhanded catch, bobbled D’Arnaud’s lead off grounder to short in the sixth, Kapler, Bailey, & Co., removed Junis and replaced him with portsider Jarlín García.

Wright struck out Longoria with a curve to open the home sixth. It was his 100th and last pitch of the night. His replacement, southpaw AJ Minter, retired David Villar, pinch hitting for Pederson, on a fly that drove Rosario to the left field wall and a strike out of Crawford.

Cole Waites made his major league debut, coming in to pitch the top of the seventh. He had a rocky time of it. He walked the first batter he faced, Ehire Adrianza, on four pitches and then surrendered a double to Acuña, putting runners on second and third.

The rookie showed he had heart and talent. Adrianza held third when Swanson bounded out , Crawford to Villar at first. Austin Riley followed with a grounder to Villar, who threw Adrianza out at home, while Acuña stayed put at second. The powerful Matt Olson flew out to left to end Waites’ scoreless baptism of fire.

Minter remained in the game long enough to strike out Estrada and walk Wilmer Flores, batting for DH Willie Calhoun, in the home seventh. When JD Davis was announced as pinch hitter for González, Collin McHugh took over pitching duties for the visitors.

(Go your left, your right, your left). He walked Davis on a full count, putting the potential tying run at the plate in the person of the resurgent Joey Bart. He slashed a vicious one hop line drive to Adrianza at second, who converted it into a rally killing 4-6-3 double play.

Luis Ortiz, San Francisco’s fourth pitcher of the night, allowed a leadoff single off the left field wall to lead off the top of the eighth. He was erased on a 4-6-3 pitcher’s best friend before Rosario flew out to the center field. warning track.

Raisel Iglesias was Atlanta’s setup man for the eighth. He set the Giants down to a conga beat.

Ortiz came out for the ninth and gave up the bull pen’s only run of the night. A walk to Adrianza, who advanced to second on Acuña’s ground out to the mound and scored on Swanson’s single to left made it 5-2 when Kenley Jansen came in to close it out for Atlanta in the bottom of the ninth.

Wednesday at 12:45 Charlie Morton (8-5. 4.08) will toe the rubber for the Braves, facing the Giants’ Carlos Rodón (12-8, 2.93) to conclude the three game series.

He was a Giant? Bill Faul by Tony the Tiger Hayes

Former San Francisco Giants pitcher Bill Faul who pitched for three different clubs including the Giants from 1962-1970 is the subject of Tony the Hayes feature, He was a Giant? (photo from 1971 Topps baseball)

Bill Faul – RHP – 1970 – # 38

He Was a Giant?

Bill Faul was not an All-Star pitcher. All-Star eccentric? Well, now you’re in the ballpark.

Baseball adores an intriguing character and for a short time Faul was among the sport’s most savory. The Cincinnati native was a professional pitcher for more than a decade, but his fastball, slider or change up were rarely discussed.

The chatter surrounding Faul almost always had to do with his multitude of personal quirks.

Chief among Faul’s idiosyncrasies – but far from limited to – was the right-handler’s infatuation with self-hypnosis. Faul claimed he regularly induced himself into hypnotic trances before ball games to increase his confidence and focus.

“Most people think I’m crazy. But they don’t understand, that’s all. Sure I hypnotize myself what’s wrong with that?” asked Faul who claimed a degree in hypnosis from something called the Scientific Suggestion Center of California. “I lie down, put myself in a trance and keep telling myself to keep the ball low, throw hard and don’t get tired. “

Faul was a Giant for only a spell, but there is little evidence to suggest that he ever played for the Orange & Black while under a spell.

Or at least one that worked very well.

As a member of the Giants, Faul didn’t exactly hyptonize opposing batters. In his brief seven game trip with San Francisco, hitter’s swatted a laser-focused .357 off the 30-year-old veteran. After seven games, Faul was sent back to Triple-A Phoenix – his ERA frozen in suspended animation at 7.45.

Faul would never again appear in another major league game.

Why Was He a Giant?

A one-time starting pitcher for the Cubs and Tigers, Faul – who pitched with an old fashioned wind-mill windup – had been languishing in the minors for four seasons before the Giants brought him back to the Show in May of 1970.

A space was vacated on San Francisco’s roster when right -handed relief specialist Don McMahon was forced to “sit out” a few games due to hemorrhoid surgery.

Seriously. They put that in the paper. The team couldn’t even come up with a phantom injury for the ignominious McMahon.

Before & After

At one point in his career, Faul was one of the top pitching prospects in baseball. A University of Cincinnati legend, Faul was featured on the cover of the official annual collegiate baseball guide in 1962. In one game, Faul struck out 24 batters, a Cincinnati school record. He holds other Bearcat records, including career strikeouts (296), and single season ERA (0.80).

After posting a 18-5, 1.43 record in three college seasons, Faul was signed by Detroit to a bonus contract in ‘62.

Talk of Faul’s mind-control tactics began early on in his professional career. Initially, the Detroit brass was enthusiastically on board with Faul’s far-out beliefs.

“If Faul keeps up with his self-hypnosis. I’ll let him give the whole staff a few pointers,” a giddy Tigers manager Bob Sheffing said after his young charge dominated Washington and Boston in his first two big league starts in 1963.

But by 1964, when Faul’s pitching production dipped and the kinks in his unorthodox persona increased – Tigers management became alarmed.

They wondered aloud if their nonconformist pitching prospect had gone off the deep end.

During that time frame, Faul also became a enthusiastic practitioner of karate and started studies to become a minister in the Universal Christian Church.

More weirder was Faul’s habit of swallowing live frogs. Yep. He claimed it game him more “hop” on his fastball.

Weirder yet, Faul also reportedly had a fetish of biting the heads off live parakeets. No performance benefits were reported for that stunt however .

“You know that kid is something of a kook. ,” said a bewildered Chuck Dressen, the Tigers 1964 skipper. “He certainly has a major league arm. But whether or not he thinks or acts like a major leaguer is a different story.”

After Faul was bombed for six runs in the Tigers final game of the 1964 campaign, he was dealt to the Cubs.

Despite the blowback he received in Motown, Faul double downed on his advocacy of mind-control when he blew into the Windy City.

“Hypnosis cannot bring out talent in a player that has no talent. People just don’t understand it. They think it’s some kind of witchcraft,” Faul explained when he arrived at the Friendly Confines. “There’s nothing bewildering about it. When you’re under Hypnosis you’re really vividly alive. “

Faul thrived for awhile in the less uptight environment of Chicago. Wearing uniform number “13,” Faul hurled three shutouts for the Cubs in 1965 and remarkably, the team’s defense turned three triple plays when Faul was pitching.

A north side favorite, Faul brought color and publicity to the dismally horrible 90-loss 1965 Cubs.

The uninhibited hurler was a dream come true to the sporting press. The copy hungry scribes often portrayed the avuncular Faul as a cross between a baseball beatnik and a member of the Addams Family.

“Faul comes on like Bela Lugosi in a vampire role. Dark-eyed intense and about as animated as a sesame seed,” syndicated reporter Tom Tiede wrote in a profile. “He doesn’t look at you but through you. Any minute you expect him to bite your neck.”

Faul was primed for a breakout season in 1966, but then the Cubs hired the taciturn manager Leo Durocher. Durocher, who’s battle cry was “Nice Guys Finish Last” apparently felt the same about free-spirits. The pair were like oil and water. “The Lip” unceremoniously deep-sixed Faul to the minors in mid-1966 after the pitcher questioned the Hall of Fame manager’s decision making.

Faul would remain beating the bushes until the Giants called 45 months later.

He Never Had a Bobblehead Day. But…

Not surprisingly, Faul took part in a couple of truly uncommon games in his brief stay with the Giants.

In his initial Candlestick Park appearance (5/23/70), Faul allowed three of a combined 44 hits in a chaotic Saturday afternoon matchup with the expansion Padres. When the dust had settled, San Diego limped away from the five hour and 30 minutes long slug fest with a 15-inning, 17-16 win and the Giants announced they were changing managers.

Three days later with Clyde King now departed from the manager’s chair, the Giants met the Dodgers for the first time with Charlie Fox at the helm – it did not go well.

Los Angeles ransacked San Francisco 19-3. The 19 plate scrapers were the most ever surrendered by the Orange & Black during their west coast era.

Faul entered the game to start the sixth inning with the Dodgers up 9-1 and did not survive the frame – allowing four runs (three earned). Faul was greeted into the game by opposing pitcher Claude Osteen, who promptly ripped a double. Osteen by the way went the distance for Los Angeles and batted 4-for-5 (home run, double and two singles) with four RBI in the embarrassing poll axing (5/26/70).

Giant Footprint

In modern baseball, creative approaches to the sport are not only acceptable, but in some cases celebrated. Hunter Pence and Barry Zito scored two of the most lucrative contracts in Giants history while eating kale and viewing the game and life through kaleidoscope eyes.

The Giants currently have a staff psychologist and a “mental-skills” coach.

But during Faul’s era, the nail that stuck out in baseball was promptly hammered down.

Even though he would have been in step with the Bay Area’s counter-culture movement at the time, by the time Faul got to San Francisco in 1970 he was no longer publicly discussing “auto hypnotic twilights” or stopping at the pet store for pre-game snacks.

After spending the previous three and a half seasons pitching in minor league limbo, Faul believed – and probably rightfully so – that his free-form chitchat sessions and alternative behavior traits had led to being blackballed from the major leagues.

“Nobody wanted the bad publicity I kept getting. They kept saying I was a bad reflection on their club. I hurt their image,” said Faul in 1971, during the waning days of his pro career. “The Giants said that if they saw anything more in the papers about the Hypnosis stuff I’d be in bad trouble.”

Scott Alexander, save us from ourselves!: Weary, cranky Giants record eventful 3-2 win over the Braves

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–The adjectives surrounding the disappointing 2022 Giants–streaky, weary, cranky, engaged–collided Monday night in an eighth inning pitching change that said everything about the club’s mindset entering the final weeks of a trying season.

What’s clear? They’re not calling it in.

The Giants built a three-run lead, and almost squandered it in the tumultuous eighth, only to emerge with a 3-2 win over the NL East-contending Braves. The Giants’ third straight win after a five-game slide was improbable, to say the least, given their circumstances.

Alex Cobb was the focal point for the first seven innings by scattering six singles and no walks. Cobb’s performance was critical as he was the only member of the team’s contingent to avoid a trying night of travel back from Chicago that saw the team arrive at SFO airport at 4:18am.

At 4:18am, Cobb was undoubtedly tucked away and asleep at his Bay Area home, as it’s common protocol to send the pitcher designated to start a home stand on an earlier flight, insuring him a regular night’s rest. In this case, that rest was apparent.

Also avoiding the difficult travel after a head-scratching Sunday night game on ESPN between two teams that have been eliminated from post-season contention was Willie Calhoun, a Vallejo native who posted credible numbers in his 41 games at Triple-A Sacramento since being acquired from the Rangers.

It was Calhoun that got the Giants ignited with an RBI hit off the bricks in right that scored Brandon Crawford with the game’s first run. Luis Gonzalez followed with a RBI single that gave the Giants a second-inning lead on Braves’ starter Spencer Strider.

Head scratching could describe the Giants’ breakthrough against Strider, unquestionably the hottest pitcher in the National League with a 6-1 record in his previous eight starts, including 16 strikeouts against the Rockies on September 1. Strider posted his typical strikeout numbers with nine but uncharacteristically allowed a season-high nine hits. He departed after the Giants scored an unearned run in the fifth trailing 3-0.

“For those guys to get a few hours of sleep, wake up, do their routines and go out there and get three runs off probably one of the better pitchers in all of baseball and play the type of defense they did, just gutsy,” Cobb said.

Zach Littell, not John Brebbia, was the first reliever to appear in the eighth and the departure from manager Gabe Kapler’s normal bullpen deployment created chaos. Littell allowed the first four Braves he faced to reach (two singles, a double and a four-pitch walk to No. 9 hitter Robbie Grossman) and the Giants’ cushion vanished.

Littell recovered by inducing the run-producing Austin Riley to hit into a double play and–in that moment–felt he had regained ownership of the inning.

Kapler felt otherwise and in a typical decision rooted in left-right matchups summoned Scott Alexander. As only the myriad of ballpark cameras can capture, the Oracle Park crowd was witness to the angry exchange of the baseball with Littell offering a few words to Kapler as he departed with the manager and catcher Austin Wynns left stunned.

“I wanted Olson,” Littell said afterwards, referring to the ensuing Braves’ batter. “Not that I pitched well enough to deserve it.”

“Obviously he’s a competitor and wanted to finish that inning. And I think it was just his wanting me to know that he wanted to finish that inning,” Kapler said. “We discussed it and it and he knows when I come out to get the ball he needs to put the ball in my hand and we’ll talk about anything later.”

The hero in the maelstrom? Alexander, who induced an inning-ending flyout, then returned for the ninth, and recorded the four-out save.

Giants Win Second In a Row Against Chicago 4-2

San Francisco Giants hitter Thairo Estrada smacks a top of the fourth inning single against the Chicago Cubs on Sun Sep 11, 2022 at Wrigley Field in Chicago (AP News photo)

Giants Win Second In a Row Against Chicago 4-2

By Barbara Mason

The San Francisco Giants (67-73) finished off their three game series with the Chicago Cubs (58-82) Sunday evening. Saturday the Giants offense came to life with 11 hits scoring five runs and winning game two 5-2.

Sunday San Francisco got more production at the plate again to not only win game three but also the series as they defeated the Cubs 4-2 at Wrigley Field.

The first run of the game came in the fourth inning when Thairo Estrada singled and J.D. Davis scored giving San Francisco a 1-0 lead.

In the fifth inning Chicago tied up the game 1-1. Rafael Ortega singled and Zach McKinstry scored on a San Francisco error.

The game remained tied into the seventh inning. Thairo Estrada, who was having an amazing offensive game, hit a solo home run in the inning to take back the lead for the Giants 2-1.

In the eighth inning more long balls for San Francisco. Wilmer Flores homered with Lewis Brinson on base extending their lead to 4-1. This was Flores’ 18th homer of the season. Chicago’s Seiya Suzuki homered in the eighth inning, a solo, but that would be it for the Cubs.

The Giants win their second in a row. They had eight hits in this game continuing to swing the bats very well.

The Giants will be back home for a three game series with the red-hot Atlanta Braves on Monday night. The Braves will be sending Spencer Strider (10-4, 2.69) going up against Giants starter Alex Cobb (5-6, 3.68) a 6:45 pm PDT first pitch at Oracle Park in San Francisco.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: A’s retire Dave Stewart’s #34 at Coliseum today; White Sox manager Tony LaRussa to pay tribute to Stew

Former Oakland A’s pitcher Dave Stewart had his number 34 retired on Sun Sep 11, 2022 at the Oakland Coliseum and pushing for to keep the A’s in Oakland (AP file photo)

#1 Jerry, the A’s will be retiring the number 34 for the second time the first time was for former A’s reliever Rollie Fingers this time for former A’s starter Dave Stewart talk about how popular Stew was and what retiring #34 means for him?

#2 One of Dave Stewart’s biggest push since retiring from baseball is his association with the African American Sports and Entertainment Group and the group’s efforts to keep the A’s in Oakland and if the A’s ever went up for sale Stewart and his group would be interested in purchasing the team.

#3 Jerry, this week MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred approved changes through the competition committee on three rule changes, increasing the size of the bases from 15 inches to 18 inches, the pitcher must throw the ball within 15 seconds and 20 seconds with runners on base, and the shift is out with players staying in their tradition territories on defense. What do you make of Manfred’s rule changes?

#4 The Players Union said the do not agree with the changes on he pitch clock and the shifts. The report from the union stated that MLB refused to discuss or meet with the players competitive committee to hear their objections and the new rules will be implemented next season.

#5 The A’s travel to Arlington to face the Texas Rangers for a brief two game series Tuesday and Wednesday. Starting for the A’s on Tuesday Ken Waldichuk (0-1, 3.60) and for the Rangers Cole Ragans (0-2, 3.80) a 5:05pm PDT first pitch.

Jerry Feitelberg was heard in place of Charlie O who does the Oakland A’s podcasts every other Sunday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Break Five-Game Skid Beating Cubs 5-2

San Francisco Giants catcher Joey Bart swings for a two run home run against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field Chicago in the bottom of the second inning (AP News photo)

Giants Break Five-Game Skid Beating Cubs 5-2

By Barbara Mason

After losing the opening game of their series Friday the San Francisco Giants (66-73) were aiming for a win in game two. The Chicago Cubs (58-81) took the first game Friday night 4-2. The Giants will be looking for some offense in this game, something that has been lacking on this road trip.

Although the Cubs were first up on the scoreboard with an Ian Happ double that drove in Nico Hoener, the Giants came back with a highly efficient second inning. David Villar doubled and Joc Pederson scored to tie the game 1-1.

Villar scored on a balk giving the Giants a 2-1 lead. Joey Bart knocked one out of the park with Tommy La Stella on base extending their lead 4-1.

The Cubs answered in the second inning with a single run. Alfonso Rivas tripled to deep right and scored on a throwing error by second baseman David Villar. Chicago continued to trail 4-2.

Five scoreless innings followed going into the eighth inning. San Francisco would top this game off with a Villar solo homer and the Giants had broken their five game slide 5-2.

The Giants had another great performance on the mound from Logan Webb who went seven innings, with six hits and two runs. Along with the great pitching the San Francisco offense stepped up with 11 hits. Solid pitching and life at the plate for the Giants was all the difference in this game.

The Giants will be back on the field tomorrow trying to win this series. First pitch is scheduled for 5:00 PM. The starting pitcher for the Giants is still undecided. The Cubs will send Wade Miley 1-0 with a solid ERA of 3.13.

San Francisco Loses Fifth In A Row to Chicago 4-2

San Francisco Giants starter Carlos Rodon wipes his brow after giving up a two run homer to the Chicago Cubs Yan Gomes in the bottom of the second inning at Wrigley Field in Chicago on Fri Sep 9, 2022 (AP News photo)

San Francisco Loses Fifth In A Row to Chicago 4-2

By Barbara Mason

The San Francisco Giants (65-73) took on the Chicago Cubs (58-80) in a three game series Friday afternoon. The Giants are coming off two losses in a doubleheader played Thursday against the Brewers at American Family Park in Milwaukee. The Cubs are out of the playoff picture and the way it has been going for San Francisco their hopes for a playoff spot are rapidly fading.

Friday game recap from Wrigley Field: It was not a great start for the Giants allowing two home runs, one in the second inning and a second in the sixth inning. Yan Gomes hit the first one with Nico Hoerner on base taking the early 2-0 lead. In the sixth inning Hoerner hit another homer with Franmil Reyes on base extending Chicago’s lead to 4-0.

San Francisco pitcher Carlos Rodon who had been having some great games went 5.1 innings and allowed two runs and three hits before Giant relievers Yunior Marte and Jarlin Garcia took over on the mound. Marte took one squarely on the chin in the sixth inning allowing the second home run of the day for the Cubs. Marte struck out the first batter he faced and then allowed the home run that won this game for Chicago

Rodon had a great game with 11 strikeouts but did not get offensive support from his team. The Giants did not get on the board until the eighth inning when Longoria hit a double and J.D. Dean and Joc Pederson both scored. The final score was 4-2 and the Giants had lost their fifth game in row. It was just another disappointing loss for the Giants whose bats have gone cold.

The Giants will play in game two Saturday with first pitch at 11:20. Right now San Francisco does not have a lot of offense that they can count on. They have been getting some nice pitching but it has been wasted on the failed efforts at the plate.

The Giants will send another solid pitcher to the mound Logan Webb 12-8 with a 2.89 ERA. San Francisco will need hitting if they hope to break this losing streak in game two. The Cubs will send Marcus Stroman (3-6, 3.73) to the mound for Saturday’s contest at Wrigley Field.

Brewers sweep twin bill from Giants, 2-1 & 4-2

Milwaukee Brewers Luis Urias is laid out after getting beaned by a San Francisco Giants pitch in the bottom of the sixth inning at American Family Stadium in Milwaukee Thu Sep 8, 2022 (AP News photo)

By Daniel Dullum

Thursday, September 8, 2022

The Milwaukee Brewers made progress in their quest for a National League playoff berth with a doubleheader sweep of San Francisco Thursday at American Family Stadium.

The Brewers won the first game 2-1 and the second game 4-2. Milwaukee is 2 ½ games behind Philadelphia for the third NL Wild Card spot. The Giants are 10 games behind in the Wild Card race.

GAME 1

The Giants took a 1-0 lead on Mike Yastrzemski’s RBI double to right-center, driving in LaMonte Wade. Milwaukee went ahead to stay in the bottom of the fourth on back-to-back run-scoring douibles by Christian Yelich and Hunter Renfroe.

Corbin Burnes (10-6) gave up a run on three hits over eight innings while striking out 14 without a walk. Devin Williams earned his 11th save with a scoreless ninth.

Jakob Junis (4-5), the second of three Giants pitchers, took the loss. Junis threw six innings with four strikeouts and two walks. He also gave up three hits. Tyler Rogers finished up with a scoreless eighth.

GAME 2

Milwaukee jumped to a 3-0 lead in the bottom of the first and never looked back. Mike Brosseau and Willy Adames both scored when Evan Longria committed an error on Hunter Renfroe’s infield grounder. Christian Yelich moved to second on the play and scored on a sacrifice fly to right by Keston Hiura.

The Brewers padded their lead in the sixth when Garrett Mitchell doubled to the gap in left-center, driving in Luis Urias.

San Francisco battled back with one run in the seventh and eighth innings. In the seventh, Mike Yastrzemski scored when Luis Gonzalez hit into a fielder’s choice. Joc Pederson’s solo home run in the eighth cut the Brewers lead to 4-2.

Both teams used a bullpen game. Freddy Peralta worked the first two innings for Milwaukee, followed by winning pitcher Peter Strzelecki (2-1), who struck out two in two scoreless innings. Taylor Rogers picked up his 31st save.

Giants opener Alex Young (0-1) gave up an earned run on one hit and two walks in 2/3 of an inning. Young was followed by Sean Hjelle, Dominic Leone and Luis Ortiz.

The Giants continue their road trip in Chicago with a weekend series against the Cubs. Carlos Rodon (12-7, 2.92) is on the mound for San Francisco on Friday, facing the Cubs’ Drew Smyly (5-8, 3.84).