San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Webb, relievers shutout Braves 6-0; SF avoids getting swept at Oracle

San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Logan Webb waves to the crowd after leaving in the top of the eighth inning after pitching against the Atlanta Braves at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Thu Aug 15, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Michael:

#1 San Francisco Giants starter Logan Webb pitched shutout baseball against the Atlanta Braves into the eighth inning and the Giants avoided getting swept in a 6-0 win at Oracle Park on Thursday afternoon.

#2 Rookie outfielder Grant McCray who made his MLB debut on Wednesday night hit his first home run on Thursday in the sixth inning. McCray went 2-3 on Thursday after going hitless on Wednesday.

#3 McCray also got an RBI single in the first inning that scored a run for his first MLB hit. McCray’s father Rodney who was in the stands was shown on the big board after Grant’s hit excited for his son. As Rodney is a former major leaguer.

#4 Webb picked up his fourth straight win and has allowed a run or less in his last four starts. Webb pitched 7.2 innings, allowed four hits and struck out seven.

#5 The Giants will have Friday off and do battle with the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Saturday night at 4:05pm. Starting pitcher for San Francisco RHP Hayden Birdsong (3-2, 5.40) for Oakland RHP Osvaldo Bido (3-3, 3.92 ERA). Talk about how you see this match up and the Giants last appearance at the Oakland Coliseum.

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

Offense comes alive to back Webb, who pitches 7 2/3 shutout innings, and Giants pick up desperately needed 6-0 win over Braves

San Francisco Giants starter Logan Webb was dealing against the Atlanta Braves at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Thu Aug 15, 2024 (AP News photo)

Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024

Oracle Park

San Francisco, California

Atlanta Braves 0 (64-57)

San Francisco Giants 6 (62-62)

Win: Logan Webb (11-8)

Loss: Max Fried (7-7)

Time: 2:23

Attendance: 29,319

By Stephen Ruderman

SAN FRANCISCO–Logan Webb gave the Giants seven and two thirds shutout innings, as the Giants were able to score some runs and salvage this series with a desperately-needed 6-0 win on Wednesday.

Following Sunday’s tough loss against the Tigers in which they missed a lot of opportunities and committed a pair of devastating base-running gaffes, the Giants have fallen into a predictable spiral.

On Monday, Blake Snell and Chris Sale squared off in what very well may have been the best-pitched game in Baseball this season only for the Braves to win 1-0 with their automatic runner in the 10th inning. On Tuesday, the Braves won again thanks to the automatic runner in the 10th. Then Wednesday night, Robbie Ray couldn’t even make it out of the first inning, as the Braves slaughtered the Giants 13-2.

The one thing that was consistent over the first three games of this series—well, other than the losing—was the Giants’ inability to get the big hit with runners in scoring position. The Giants went 3-for-24 with runners in scoring position in the first three games of this series.

Thursday, Logan Webb would once again have to be the stopper—seems like he’s had to be the stopper a lot this season—as the Giants looked to avert the sweep. The Giants came into today’s game four and a half games back of the Braves for the third wild card spot in the National League, so today was really a must-win game.

To further complicate things, the Braves won the season series against the Giants with their win Wednesday night, so they hold any potential tiebreaker. If the Braves were to win Thursday, the Giants would be five and a half games back and would have to gain six and a half games in their final 38 games. Simply put, the Giants really needed to win Thursday.

Webb got off to a nice start with a one, two three, inning in the top of the first, and the Giants would threaten against Braves’ starter Max Fried in the bottom of the first. Tyler Fitzgerald singled and stole second, but Fried retired the side, and it was another wasted opportunity for the Giants.

Webb threw another one, two, three, inning in the top of the second, and the Giants would mount a rally in the bottom of the second. Jerar Encarnacion, Mike Yastrzemski and Casey Schmitt all singled to load the bases with nobody out, so the question was how they would waste this opportunity.

Catcher Curt Casali struck out swinging for the first out, so yup, here we go again. Grant McCray—the son of former major leaguer Rodney McCray—who was called up to make his major league debut Wednesday night was now up.

Bob Melvin, who likes to bunt from time to time, put on the safety squeeze. McCray tried laying down a bunt at the first pitch from Fried, but he missed. Two pitches later, he got the bunt down right in front of the plate, but when Fried got it and flipped it to catcher Travis d’Arnaud, d’Arnaud juggled it and did not have full control of the ball. Encarnacion scored, and the Giants finally had their first lead of the series.

It wasn’t a base-hit to the outfield, but it was an RBI hit with runners in scoring position, and it was a tremendous shot in the arm, so hey, the Giants will take it! Plus, it was an interesting and cool way for McCray to get his first big league hit and RBI. Fitzgerald then got Yaz in with a sacrifice fly to center to make it 2-0.

Both teams went scoreless in the third, and then the Braves had their first real rally of the day in the top of the fourth. Michael Harris II led off the top of the fourth with a base-hit to left.

Austin Riley then hit a ground ball to short that Tyler Fitzgerald flipped to Casey Schmitt at second to try and get Harris. Schmitt had the ball and grazed the bag at second with his foot, but he dropped it on the transfer, which prompted Second Base Umpire Jeremy Riggs to call Harris safe. The play went to replay, but the call was upheld.

The Braves had runners at first and second with nobody out following a tough break for Webb and the Giants. With everything that has gone on in this four-game losing streak, it could have spelled disaster.

However, with how tough Webb is, it was no problem. Marcel Ozuna worked an 0-2 count into a full count, but Webb got Ozuna looking on a sinker at the knees for a much-need first out. Webb then caught a massive break when Matt Olson lined a bullet to Mark Canha at first, and Canha stepped on the bag to double off Riley for an unassisted double play to end the inning.

Webb escaped the jam without any damage, which was another shot in the arm for the Giants. He then settled down to throw a one, two, three, innings in the fifth and sixth.

Yastrzemski walked with one out in the bottom of the sixth, and that ended the day for Fried. Jesse Chavez then came in for Atlanta, and Casey Schmitt hit a line drive home run to left field to make it 4-0. Two batters later, Grant McCray, who had gotten his first big league hit and RBI with his bunt single in the second, hit his first big league home run to right-center.

Webb hasn’t had the greatest run support this season, but now, he had a 5-0 lead heading to the seventh. Webb pitched another scoreless inning in the top of the seventh, and back-to-back doubles by Heliot Ramos and Matt Chapman off Chavez in the bottom of the seventh plated another run for the Giants to make it 6-0.

Bob Melvin let Webb go back out for the eighth, and Webb retired the first two hitters he faced. With two outs, Ramon Laureano was up with a 2-2 count. Webb threw a pair of pitches that were very close, but were called balls by Home Plate Umpire Dan Iassogna, and Laureano drew the walk.

Webb was a strike away from throwing eight shutout innings, but after Laureano walked, Whit Merrifield singled to right-center to put runners at the corners with two outs. That ended Webb’s day, and he exited to a standing ovation from this grateful crowd of 29,319.

Melvin wasted no time bringing in Tyler Rogers in a 6-0 game. It was definitely a move that would be made in a must-win game, especially with a powerful Braves’ offense very much capable of coming back. The move paid off, as Harris flew out to left to end the inning.

Webb didn’t get eight shutout innings, but seven and two thirds shutdown innings isn’t bad. He gave the Giants an outing they really needed, as he gave up just four hits and a walk, and he struck out seven.

Aaron Bummer, who finished the bottom of the seventh for Atlanta, pitched a scoreless bottom of the eighth. Melvin then brought in Spencer Bivens, who was called back up this morning, for the ninth, and Bivens pitched a one, two, three, top of the ninth to end it.

Logan Webb got the win, and Max Fried took the loss.

The Giants were able to score six runs, and they did a bit better with runners in scoring position, going 3-for-11. However, they are still going to need to consistently get those key RBI hits with runners in scoring position if they want to make a run at the Playoffs.

The Giants get back up to .500, as they improve to 62-62. Funny thing: The Giants were 2-11 when having a chance to get back up to .500 prior to last week, but they have now won three-straight games in that situation.

The Giants also gained a game on the Braves and are three and a half back of the third wild card spot. The Giants will still have to gain four and a half games in their final 38 games, but it’s still a lot better than having to gain six and a half games in that span, which they would have had to do had they lost Thursday. The bottom line is that this was a desperately needed win.

The Giants will have their lone Friday off-day of the season Fri Aug 16th, and then they will begin a short two-game set in Oakland against the A’s on Saturday. It will most likely will be the Giants’ final series at the Oakland Coliseum, and most likely the final Bay Bridge Series ever.

Hayden Birdsong (3-2, 5.40 ERA), who is coming off a pair of rough starts, will look to bounce back as he takes the ball in the series opener at the Coliseum on Saturday. Right-hander Osvaldo Bido (3-3, 3.92 ERA), meanwhile, will make the start for Oakland. First pitch will be at 4:07 p.m.

National League Wild Card Standings:

*1. Diamondbacks 69-53 +4.5

*2. Padres 69-53 +4.5

  1. Braves 64-57 —

Mets 62-59 2.0

GIANTS 62-62 3.5

*Reds 60-61 4.0

*Cardinals 60-61 4.0

Cubs 59-63 5.5

*Tiebreaking procedures taken into account.

Giants News and Notes:

Randy Rodriguez was placed on the 15-Day Injured List prior to the game Thursday due to inflammation in his right elbow. Rodriguez has pitched in 33 games this season, and is 3-2 with a 3.93 ERA. He has also proven to be quite valuable in late-inning situations. It is unknown how long he will be out.

Major League Baseball News and Notes:

Rob Manfred is at it again. As if the atrocious rule changes he has implemented aren’t bad enough, he is now suggesting a rule in which starting pitchers would have to complete six innings with some possible exceptions. Those exceptions could include reaching the 100-pitch mark and giving up four or more runs.

As much as it would be good for the game to see starting pitchers go deeper into games, this is a move that is guaranteed to lead to more injuries.

Speaking of Manfred’s rule changes, the A’s beat the Mets 7-6 at Citi Field in what was the longest nine-inning game since the implementation of the pitch clock last season at three hours and 45 minutes.

The previous longest nine-inning game with the pitch clock was the first of the two games between the Giants and Padres in Mexico City on April 29, 2023. The Padres beat the Giants 16-11 7,350 feet above sea level. That game lasted three hours and 44 minutes.

Giants Ray rocked for 5 runs in first ; Braves win in a laugher 13-2; Yastrzemski relieves in ninth for SF

San Francisco Giants starter Robbie Ray hit two batters, walked a batter with the bases loaded and gave up a grand slam home run to the Atlanta Braves Michael Harris in the top of the first inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Aug 14, 2024 (AP News photo)

Atlanta (64-56) 501 012 022.   13 11 0

San Francisco (61-62).   100 000 100     2. 9 0

Time: 2:26

Attendance: 27,460

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Before Wednesday night’s 13-2 devastating loss to the recovering Atlanta Braves, the vacillating San Francisco Giants promoted Grant McCray from Sacramento. He had played in 47 games for the River Cats and produced a batting average of  only .270 in the hitter friendly triple A Pacific Coast League but his OPS was an encouraging .819. Earlier in the season, McCray’s numbers in those categories were .210 and .732 over 50 games for the Richmond Flying Squirrels of the  double A  Eastern League.

The 23 year old left handed batter started Wednesday evening in center field , occupying the ninth spot in the batting order.  The flip side of McCray’s unprepossessing  offensive record is that he’s considered outstanding in the field.

Anyone who was expecting a pitcher’s duel, or even a close game, after Monday and Tuesday’s ten inning thrillers would have been disappointed. Robbie Ray, only recently recovered from Tommy John surgery, made a cameo appearance as San Francisco’s starter – that’s “starter,”  not “opener” – in which he faced eight batters and hit the first two he pitched to, followed that with a strikeout and then two consecutive walks capped off by a grand slam by Michael Harris II.

Atlanta now led, 5-0. A strike out and a walk later, Ray was gone, and Sean Hjelle was on the mound. Tyler Fitzgerald tagged  Braves’ starter Grant Holmes’ first offering,a 93mph four seamer  for a 358 foot homer to left, the Giants’ shortstop’s 14th round tripper of the year. The loss left Ray with a record of 2-2, 6.00. 

After Ray’s departure,  Matt Olson’s  21st four bagger of the year, a leadoff  371 footer to left, restored the Braves’ five run advantage. Hjelle retired the next six Braves he faced, giving way to Erik Miller, who entered the game at the top of the fifth and promptly gave up a leadoff home run to Austin Riley.

Miller went 1-1/3 innings  and allowed two runs, both earned but one of which was posthumous . Melvin’s minions also used Landen Roup (1-2/3 innings, three hits, and a run, earned), Taylor Rogers (two runs in the eighth on a Laureano single and Sean Murphy’s seventh dinger), and Mike Yastrzemski, who threw soft tosses that resulted in two runs on two hits and a lot of hilarity.

Holmes, making his  fourth career start and 14th appearance  went to work  at 0-0, 3.79  gave a more than acceptable account of  himself. The 28 year old southpaw weakened in the seventh, surrendering a run on Bailey’s uncursed leadoff double and Wisely’s single to right before retiring the side on a fly by McCray to the warning track in left and a pair of  strikeouts.

The went seven frames and allowed two runs, both earned, on eight hits, one of them yard, and a walk while striking out half a dozen opponents. He threw 95 pitches, 68 qualified as strikes, to 29 batters, and went to the team hotel with a mark of 1-0, 3.60. 

Luke Jackson pitched the  eighth in Holmes’ stead and, in spite of a hit batter and a single to Casey Schmitt, kept the Giants off the scoreboard. Jimmy Hergel set the Giants down in order in the ninth.

The Braves’ baker’s dozen of runs was their season’s high. Harris’s homer was the first grand slam of his career and the first visitor’s grand slam splash hit. Atlanta’s leadoff hitter, Soler, hit by a pitch to start the game, now has a 22 game on base streak.

The ex-Giant left the game in the top of the fourth with tightness in his left hamstring. Yastrzemski’s misadventures on the mound were his big league pitching debut.

San Francisco will try to avoid the sweep Thursday, afternoon at 12:45. Logan Webb (10-8, 3.32) will start for the orange and black. He’ll face Max Fried (7-6, 3.56).

He Was A Giant? Rennie Stennett 2B 1980-81 #6

Brandon Crawford of the Giants shakes hands with former Major Leaguer and ex-Giant Rennie Stennett in Miami on Aug. 10, 2016.  They are the last two National League players to get seven hits in a game.  (Photo by Eric Espada/Getty Images) 

By Tony the Tiger Hayes

He Was a Giant?

The Giants have had their share of free agent failures over the years. Hello, Aron Rowand, Armando Benetiz and 2024 flop de jour Jorge Soler.

But as the saying goes, “you never forget your first.”

Rennie Stennett was not only the very first Giants free agent signee to fall flat on his face, he was also the Giants first big name free agent to play for the club after the courts repelled baseball’s reserve clause in 1976.

A former star second baseman for the Pittsburgh Pirates, Stennett was one of the more exciting young players of the 1970s.

Stennett was inked by the Giants to a splashy five – year, $3 million, five year contract after the 1979 season and was expected to provide some the same production he provided the Pirates franchise for much of the ‘70s.

In 1975, Stennett had tied a big league record when he batted 7-for-7 in a nine inning 22-0 molly whopping of the Cubs at Chicago’s Wrigley Field. His seven hits tied the National League record for hits in a nine-inning game, was first established by Wilbert Robinson of the Baltimore Orioles in 1892.

But when Stennett signed with San Francisco in 1980 there was a catch. He was no longer the same player he was in the mid-1970s.

A leg and ankle injury in 1978 had robbed him of some of his quickness and hitting skills.

Stennett made it through only two seasons of his San Francisco contract before being released by the Orange & Black and he never played in the major leagues again.

Why Was He a Giant?

After a miserable fifth place finish in 1979, a season where there were high expectations for San Francisco, Giants management decided it was finally time to dip their toes in the free agent market.

The dawn of the free agent era began in 1976, but the Giants- desperately trying to get back on their feet financially after nearly going bankrupt under a previous ownership, avoided signing big name free agents.

San Francisco inked former American League infielder Mario Guerrero prior to the 1978 season but he was dealt to Oakland in a mega trade that brought superstar LHP Vida Blue back across the Bay Bridge before Guerrero played in an official game for the Orange & Black.

The Giants conservative approach to free agency ended abruptly after the disappointing ‘79 season when in one fell swoop, the Giants inked three established big leaguers on the same days to multi-year pacts.

Incoming were Stennett, veteran catcher Milt May and backup outfielder Jim Wohlford.

The Giants introduced all three players at a splashy press conference from the glorious “Top of the Mark” cocktail bar high atop the Lurie owned historic Mark Hopkins Hotel on scenic Nob Hill.

Giants general manager Spec Richardson discribed Stennett, a 28-year-old Panamanian,

as “the best young player available

Available belie

in the draft.”

The fact that Stennett was not particularly young at 28 was omitted by Richardson.

Stennett had failed to bat over .250 and lost a good deal of mobility and running speed after breaking an ankle and leg in mid-1977.

But the Giants went ahead with the deal anyway and immediately anointed Stennett the starting second baseman for 1980.

Lurie was adamant the Giants had done their due diligence on Stennett’s medical condition and deemed him fully healthy.

“We’ve put him though a couple of physicals,” Lurie commented.

To which Stennett shot back:

“It felt more like 100 physicals. I think I’m the healthiest person in the world and my ankle is 100 percent.

“l’m real excited to be coming to San Francisco,” Stennett continued.” I know I can help. I’m a winner. Now I’ll get the opportunity to win play, and I know the people here are

happy to have me.”

Signing with San Francisco closed out an awkward period of Stennett’s career. After establishing himself as one of the game’s rising stars for much of the 1970s, Stennett was not able to regain his status as a viable starter after the return from his serious injuries.

In 1979, the Pirates permanently replaced Stennett with Phil Garner as their starting second baseman and went on to win the World Series in a classic seven game series vs. Baltimore.

“I know I’ve got something to prove because of thr injury I’ve got the opportunity and I know the people here are happy to have me,” he said.

Before & After

Born in Panama in 1951, Stennett was a stellar school boy athlete for Paraiso High in Colon. Besides baseball, Stennett filled out his varsity jacket with letters in track, volleyball and basketball in which he was a voracious scorer- who collected 45 points in one game.

Unlike his longtime Pirates teammate Manny Sanguillen, a fellow Panamanian who grew up speaking Spanish, Stennett was raised the Canal Zone, then a U.S. Territory and grew up with English as his primary language.

Without a language barrier, Stennett’s transition to professional baseball became all that much easier when he signed with Pittsburgh at age 18.

Originally inked as a pitcher, Stennett made the transition away from the mound early in his professional career. He initially played both the outfield and infield.

In 1970 at Salem (Virginia) of the Class A Carolina League, Stennett led the league in batting (.326), hits (176), and triples (9).

Stennett got an early surprise call-up to the big leagues in mid-1971 when Pirates starting infielders Dave Cash and Rich Hebner were called away for a two week stint in the army reserves, a common practice during the Vietnam War era.

Though just 20 and inexperienced on defense, Stennett batted so played so well be remained

As detailed in an online bio, writer Joseph Wancho detailed Stennett’s rookie 18-game hitting streak from August 22 through September 10. was the longest streak for a Pirate in two years. Fourteen of the games in the streak were of the multi-hit variety, as his batting average rose from .278 to .405.

During that streak (9/1/71) the Pirates recorded a historic note when they became the first major league club to field an “all-minority” starting lineup.

The lineup card read:

Stennett, 2B

Gene Clines, CF

Roberto Clemente, RF

Willie Stargell, LF

Sanguillen, C

Cash, 3B

Al Oliver, 1B

Jackie Hernandez, SS

Dock Ellis, P

Hardly a publicly stunt, the lineup was not so different than the one manager Danny Murtaugh normally put on the diamond for his NL East championship club that season.

Despite Stennett’s stellar rookie season he was left off the Pirates post season roster as Murtaugh went with the more sure-handed veteran former Giant Jose Pagan instead.

Incidentally, the Pirates would defeat San Francisco in the playoffs to advance to the ‘71 World Series before defeating Baltimore in the World Series with Stennett as a bystander.

After spending 1973-74 as a Pirates super-sub – generating starts in both the infield and outfield – Stennett finally got a position to call his own in 1974 when Cash was dealt to Philadelphia in exchange for starting pitcher Ken Brett.

Stennett made 153 starts at second base for Pittsburgh in ‘74 helping the Pirates to the NL East title with a .291, 7, 56 season.

Stennett produced similar seasons for the next few seasons, typically batting around the .300 level.

He also became a fan favorite in the Steel City for his hard-nosed style of play.

His achievements have gone unnoticed by many people,” said Pirates general manager Joe Brown. “There hasn’t been a player in baseball, not even Pete Rose, has hustled more than Stennett this year.”

Stennett was enjoying his best season in 1977, batting .336, when he suffered a traumatic injury to his right leg, he fractured a bone in his right fibula and dislocated his right ankle sliding into second base in a 5-4 home loss against the Giants (8/21/77).

Though he returned to the Pirates active roster to start the 1978 season, Stennett was not the same player, he’d been previously, batting .243 in 106 games.

When the Pirates won the World Series in 1979 with their fabled “We Are Family” club, Stennett was strictly a backup for the scrappy team, batting .238 in 108 contests. He failed to start a single postseason game and registered just a single at-bat in the Fall Classic, notching a pinch-hit single in the Game 1 loss to Baltimore.

The indignity was almost too much for the proud player.

“To me it was embarrassing to sit on the bench in the World Series. I lnow I’m a quality player,” he said a short time later after signing with the Orange & Black.

Stennett saw the move to Fog City as a new beginning and even praised notoriously chilly Candlestick Park.

“One reason the Pirates always played so well in Candlestick is that it was always snowing and raining in Pittsburgh and we’d come out here and the weather would be nice.”

But once Stennett began playing for San Francisco and notoriously taciturn manager Dave Bristol the infielder began to long for his days along the Allegheny River.

“It’s very tough to play for Dave Bristol,” said Stennett. “He puts too much pressure on players. He just doesn’t communicate. He’s old-school and you can’t depend on him for any motivation.”

Stennett played in 120 games as the primary second baseman for the 1980 Giants but batted just .244 for the fifth place club. Still hobbled by his ‘77 leg injuries, Stennett committed 15 errors in the field.

The sour situation got no better in 1981 when new manager Frank Robinson pushed for the Giants to sign future Hall of Fame second baseman Joe Morgan. Stennett made only 18 starts in the strike shortened ‘81 season, batting a career low .230.

Stennett’s days in San Francisco were numbered when the Giants traded for yet another experienced second baseman in Duane Kuiper after the ‘81 campaign.

Stennett would not make it to season three of his five year pact.

He Never Had a Bobblehead Day. But…

Stennett batted over .300 in his first week in a Giants uniform, but soon bottomed out.

He did have one particularly good day that season however, batting 4-for-6 at the sight of the most famous game of his career, Wrigley Field.

Stennett swatted four singles as the Giants pilled up a generous 21 hits in a 14-6 molly whopping of the Cubs (7/23/80).

Giant Footprint

When Stennett arrived in spring training in 1982 he came with a trade request and a bitter disposition.

“Nightmare, that would be the perfect word to describe it,” Stennett said of his first two seasons in Orange & Black.

Despite averaging $600,000 in each of his first two seasons in San Francisco, Stennett claimed a lesser man could not have endured the degradation he was forced to endure by Giants management.

“Out of 100 guys who would have gone through my situation,” Stennett said, “99 wouldn’t be able to take it. They would do something drastic. There could never be a worse situation for a player. If I was a weak minded person I would be out of baseball by now.”

The Giants were just as frustrated with the marriage and tried desperately to end the union via a trade. But according to Tom Haller, the Giants freshly installed General Manager, the club found no takers, even with San Francisco offering to pay some of Stennett’s remaining salary and moving expenses.

“It’s not that we haven’t tried to accommodate Rennie’s wishes to be traded.” said Giants general manager Tom Haller yesterday. “It’s just that nobody wants him.”

“Bollocks” claimed the opinionated (delusional?) Stennett. The Giants were not doing their due diligence to move him out of Bay City.

“It’s a lie,” Stennett said. “When It comes to making a deal, there’s no such thing as ‘can’t.’ I know there’s three or four clubs interested.”

Those mystery teams never materialized and ended up working out a severance package with Stennett just prior to opening day.

Despite attempts to hook back on with Pittsburgh and a brief stint in the Mexican Leagues, Stennett would not play another game in the Major Leagues going forward.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: 50 years since the First Tommy John surgery

Tommy John of the Los Angeles Dodgers getting looking over by the Dodgers physician Dr. Frank Jobe in 1974. This season marks the 50th anniversary of Tommy John’s surgery which took place in 1974. It was know as Tommy John surgery due it’s huge success for pitcher to return from shoulder or arm tears (photo by the Los Angeles Dodgers)

50 years since the First Tommy John surgery

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Tommy John pitched for 26 years from 1963 to 1985, including with the Oakland A’s in 1985. His name has been mentioned thousands of times since he had the first ever surgery with his name in 1974. This season marks the half-century anniversary of the once controversial surgery, now, like going to the dentist for a root canal type of surgery.

I was at the press conference at the Oakland Coliseum when the A’s introduced Tommy John, who was wearing an athletics jersey. 1985 was a damaging season for the A’s, winning only 77 games, but there was a rookie by the name of José Canseco making his debut, he was the only hope for the A’s at that time.

José won Rookie of the Year the following season, Monday, August 12. At Oracle Park, the first game of a series between the Atlanta Braves and the San Francisco Giants, two-time Cy Young winner Blake Snell pitched for the Giants, and this year’s #1 candidate for the Cy Young in the National League, Chris Sale, pitched for the Braves.

Blake went 6 1/3 and struck out 11, and Sale completed seven innings and struck out 12. Braves won 1-0 in ten innings. Even though it is rare to see this type of pitching, it is considered by many a “pitcher’s duel”. But pitcher duels belonged to pitchers that went the distance, which is (9) nine innings. In 1999, while broadcasting SF Giants radio en Español at Candlestick Park, the great Juan Marichal dropped into our booth as a visitor and sat to talk about pitching.

I remember asking him, Juan, “What would you have said to your manager or pitching coach if he told you, “Juan, give me six good innings.” Juan smiled and responded, “I would have laughed at his face.” What do you mean by six good innings?

Juan Marichal pitched for 16 years and completed 244 games, winning 243 of those and ‘for good measure’ the Dominican Dandy tjhrew 52 shutouts. Tommy John pitched a total of 4,710 1/3 innings won 288 games lost 231 with a 3.34 ERA.

Joe Roegele, who tracks Tommy John surgeries as an injury analyst for MLB, says the surgery has increased by 29 percent by pitchers who throw at the highest level since 2016. In 2023, 35% of all MLB pitchers have had the surgery.

Roegele added, “I don’t want to say it’s inevitable, but when you throw it overhand, it’s an unnatural motion. (About this surgery) Tommy John Surgery, more formally known as ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) reconstruction, is used to repair a torn ulnar collateral ligament inside the elbow.

A UCL is a ligament on the inner side of your elbow that helps secure your elbow joint. Some people, typically athletes who play throwing sports, may experience UCL tears. For the last time in history the San Francisco Giants will face the Oakland A’s this Saturday and Sunday at the Oakland Alameda County Coliseum for two. afternoon games. KIQI 1010AM/990 covering the Bay Area and Sacramento will have all the live action.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez does the live play by play with Manolo Hernandez Douen on the Oakland A’s Spanish radio network at 1010 KIQI San Francisco and 990 KATD Pittsburg and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Braves beat Giants in 10th by a run for second consecutive night 4-3 at Oracle

Atlanta Braves Luke Jackson (right) scores and is congratulated by Orlando Arcia (left) for the go ahead run in the top of the tenth inning against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park in San Francisco (AP News photo)

Atlanta (63-56). 021 000 000 1. 4. 10. 1

San Francisco (61-61). 011 000 010 0. 3. 7. 1. (10 innings)

Time: 2:38

Attendance: 30,468

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–After Monday night’s pitching duel for the ages between the aces of the Braves’ and Giants’ rotations, it was inevitable that. this Tuesday’s set-to would be a letdown. Nonetheless, it was a close and exciting battle, another extra inning affair, in which the Giants again fell to the Braves in an extra innings affair.

Raiser Iglesias, Monday night’s winning pitcher got the save, his 25th, and the win went to Dylan Lee, whose record now stands at 4-2, 1.96). It wasn’t a slugfest, but it was no pitchers’ duel either.

The Giants chose 23 year old Kyle Harrison and his 6-5, 4.08 season’s record, which included two games this month. In the first of them, at Cincinnati on the third, he yielded six earned runs in 3-2/3 innings; in the second, four days ago he gave up two earned runs in 4-2/3 innings.

Tuesday night he lasted five full innings, in which he gave up three runs, all earned, on six hits and a pair of free passes, throwing 89 pitches, 54 of which met the criteria for strikes, before giving way to Sean Hjelle, who pitched a scoreless sixth.

San Francisco also called on Landon Roupp (two hits in two innings with three strikeouts), Jordan Hicks (a shutout ninth, and Randy Rodríguez, who took the loss when Travis d’Arnaud’s weak grounder bounced off Casey Schmitt’s glove into right field allowed pinch zombie runner Luke Williams to score the winning run.

The Braves went with the Methusala of the majors, 40 year old, 15 year veteran, Charlie Morton, who came to work with a season’s record of 6-7, 4.47 after having surrendered eight earned runs in his last start, in which he lasted all of 2-2/3 innings against the Brewers.

Morton performed much better tonight. He allowed two runs, both earned, on six hits, one of them a homer, and a walk in six innings of work. 63 of his 98 offerings counted as strikes. Jesse Chávez took over for him after the crowd, which included a lot of vocal Braves fans, had sung “Take Me Out to the Ball Game.”

He set the orange and black down to a conga beat, 1, 2, 3. Pierce Johnson, who entered the fray in the eighth and allowed the tying (unearned) run to score on a wild pitch, Dylan Lee, the winning pitcher, and Raisel Iglesias, who earned the save, also saw action on the mound for Atlanta.

Ramos gave signs of breaking out of his post All Star Game slump, going two for five, including a first inning triple, after which he was stranded on third. The team left seven runners on bases and missed ten opportunities to get a hit with a runner in scoring position.

Ramos was the only Giant to have a multi-hit game and one of the three with an extra base hit. The others were Wade, with a double, and Tyler Fitzgerald, with a 425 foot, 105 mph blast in the third, his 13th round tripper of the season.

Patrick Bailey’s single to center in the fourth ended his hitless streak at 23.

It was the Braves major league leading ninth extra inning win. Three of their batters Riley, d’Arneau, and Laureano, with two apiece. Ex-Giant Jorge Soler, ex-Athletic Ramón Laureano, and Travis d’Arneau went the distance.

The Giants now have two chances to climb over the .500 mark and end the series where they started. They’ll try Wednesday, at 6:45 by sending Robbie Ray (2-1, 3.98) to the mound. Atlanta will counter with Max Fried ((7-6, 3.56).

Snell pitches gem for SF; Braves break 0-0 deadlock in 10th in 1-0 win

San Francisco Giants starter Blake Snell took a shutout into the 7th inning in another strong outing. The Giants couldn’t hold on in the top of the tenth as the Atlanta Braves squeezed by 1-0 on Mon Aug 12, 2024 at Oracle Park in San Francisco (NBC California photo still)

Atlanta (62-56). 000 000 000. 1 1. 4. 1

San Francisco (61-60). 000 000 000 0. 0 3. 0. 10 innings

Time: 2:35

Attendance: 30,134

Monday, August 12, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–In Monday night’s opener of the four game series between two recent powerhouses now battling for the final playoff spot in the National League, the stumbling but recovering San Francisco Giants fell to the bumbling Atlanta Braves, who had been smarting from being swept in four games at Coors Field. The final score was 1-0.

The Giants came to bat eight times with runners in scoring position. The only hit they  got in that situation was Mark Canha’s single in the first. They stranded six runners overall. The Braves went two for five with runners in scoring position and left a total of six on base.

Blake Snell, who finally has recovered the form he showed for San Diego in last year’s Cy Young award winning season and had been 2-0, including a no hitter, 1.15 with 49 Ks and a WHIP of 0.59 in his last six starts for the Giants threw 103 pitches Monday night before yielding his first base hit, a leadoff double to left by Marcell Ozuna, just over the glove of a leaping Matt Chapman.

The Braves’ second safety followed immediately after, a Matt Olson dribbler between third and the mound that didn’t advance Ozuna. After fanning Orlando Arcía, Snell left the game to thunderous applause, replaced by Randy Rodríguez.

He rose to the occasion, fanning Sean Murphy and Jarred Kelenic, pinch hitting for Ramón Laureano on nine pitches. The curse of the leadoff double strikes again! Snell’s totals for his 6-2/3 innings were no runs on two hits and three walks. He struck out 11 and ended up with a pith count of 114, 70 of them classified as strikes. He lowered his ERA to 3.91 but went home with a no decision.

The submariner Tyler Rogers torpedoed Atlanta 1,2,3 in the eighth before yielding to Ryan Walker to start the ninth. He gave the lie to his name by shutting the Braves down on nothing but a broken bat single by Ozuna. Taylor Rogers pitched the top of the tenth and allowed an almost preordained run on pinch hitter Travis d’Arnaeau’s sac fly to the right field warning track that brought in Arcía the zombie runner who had advanced to third on Sean Murphy’s single to left.

San Francisco had been patient with Snell, giving him time to recover from a late start to spring training and two stints on the IL before he hit his stride. The Braves, with Spencer Strider on the 60 day injured list, have been giving the remainder of their rotation an extra day’s rest between their scheduled starts.

Chris Sale, who took the mound at 13-3, 2.75 this evening was the most recent beneficiary of that sabbatical. He responded with a brilliant performance, yielding only three hits and striking out a dozen Giants in his seven inning stint.

No walks, no hit batters. He threw 107 pitches; only 30 were balls. Like Snell, lowered his ERA although he, too, had to settle for a no decision. Sale’s record now is 13-3, 2.61. Joe Jiménez held the Giants to a hit batter in the bottom of the eighth.

Luke Iglesias set the Giants down in order in the ninth to send the game into extra innings and returned to the mound to shut the Giants down in the tenth and earn the win, which left him at 2-1, 1.58.

The series continues Tuesday, at 6:45 with Atlanta’s Charlie Morton (6-7, 4.47) and San Francisco’s Kyle Harrison (6-5) toeing the rubber.

Birdsong struggles, wasted opportunities and base-running blunders cost Giants, who fail to sweep Tigers and drop series finale 5-4

San Francisco Giants Matt Chapman (left) is tagged out by Detroit Tigers pitcher Brenan Hanifee (right) in the bottom of the eighth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Aug 11, 2024 (AP News photo)

Sunday, Aug. 11, 2024

Oracle Park

San Francisco, California

Detroit Tigers 5 (56-63)

San Francisco Giants 4 (61-59)

Win: Keider Montero (3-5)

Loss: Hayden Birdsong (3-2)

Save: Will Vest (1)

Time: 2:52

Attendance: 40,447

By Stephen Ruderman

SAN FRANCISCO–Wasted opportunities and boneheaded base-running burned the San Francisco Giants, and Hayden Birdsong struggled, as the Giants were unable to complete the sweep and lost the series finale to the Detroit Tigers 5-4 on Sunday.

The Giants came into Sunday winners of 12 of their last 15. After finally getting to three games over .500 for the first time all season with their fourth-straight win Saturday, the Giants had a chance to complete the sweep on this beautiful mostly-cloudy afternoon at Oracle Park.

Sunday would be a test for young Hayden Birdsong. After a solid first six big league starts in which he didn’t allow more than three runs, he suffered his first bad outing in his last start in Washington on Tuesday. It doesn’t matter who you are; bad outings happen. The question is how Birdsong would respond Sunday.

Birdsong would be tested right away. Matt Vierling stepped up to begin the game, and he lined a home run to the first row out in left-center field to give the Tigers an early 1-0 lead. Birdsong then retired the side.

The Giants would be up against the young right-hander, Keider Montero in this pitching matchup of kids who made their major league debuts this season. Tyler Fitzgerald would be first up, and he led off the bottom of the first with a ground-rule double to right-center.

One thing was apparent early on: the ball was carrying today. LaMonte Wade walked, and Heliot Ramos got Fitzgerald to third on a flyout to right. 

You gotta give credit to Fitzgerald. Tigers’ right-fielder Akil Baddoo made the catch in shallow right field and made a solid throw to third. It was pure gutsy base-running by Fitzgerald, and it paid off.

Michael Conforto walked to load the bases, and that brought up Matt Chapman. Chapman shot a base-hit into right-center, and two runs scored to give the Giants the lead.

Birdsong retired the first two men he faced in the top of the second, but Zach McKinstry singled with two outs, and that brought up Dillon Dingler. Dingler hit a high fly ball to right-center, and with the ball carrying the way it was today, it sailed into the Tigers’ bullpen, which put Detroit back ahead.

The Giants rallied in the bottom of the second. Jerar Encarnacion walked to start the inning, and Tyler Fitzgerald singled with one out. 

Wade hit a fly ball to deep right-center, and Tigers’ center-fielder Parker Meadows made a tremendous running catch as he collided and even somewhat trampled over right-fielder Alex Baddoo. It was reminiscent of an iconic catch that Willie Mays made while leaping over Bobby Bonds in 1970, but this one came against the Giants, who ended up not scoring.

Birdsong pitched a scoreless top of the third and a 1-2-3 top of the fourth. Montero pitched 1-2-3 innings in the bottom of the third and fourth.

The Tigers have a lineup full of guys whose names you would have expected to see in a lineup in either the 19th Century, or in Star Wars. Considering that Sunday was Star Wars Day at Oracle Park, it made perfect sense. In the top of the fifth, those names did some damage against Birdsong.

Dillon Dingler, who hit the home run in the top of the second, led off the top of the fifth with a ground-rule double to right-center. Akil Baddoo got Dingler to third with a flyout to center, and Matt Vierling laced a double down the left field line to knock in Dingler and make it 4-2. 

That did it for Birdsong, who struggled again Sunday. Birdsong did not struggle anywhere near as much as he did Tuesday in D.C., and he was burned by the fact that the ball was carrying Sunday, but it was still a rough outing. 

Left-handed flame thrower Erik Miller came in, and after Bligh Madris hit a chopped back to the mound, Colt Keith got Vierling in with a base-hit to make it 5-2. 

Montero threw a scoreless bottom of the fifth, and Miller ran into trouble in the top of the sixth. Miller walked Gio Urshela to start the inning, and two batters later, McKinstry walked to put runners at first and second with one out.

Bob Melvin brought in Sean Hjelle to face Dingler, who was 2-for-2 with the home run and ground-rule double. The Tigers were poised to blow this game open, but Hjelle and the Giants caught a break when Dingler hit a bullet right to Matt Chapman at third for the second out. Baddoo flew out to center, and the Giants were able to keep the deficit at three.

The Giants were able to stay in the game, and it paid dividends in the bottom of the sixth. Michael Conforto, who has been heating up here in August, hit one of the wall in left that he was able to leg out for a triple. 

Some weirdness happened while Conforto was at third. As Montero was going into his motion, he stopped and was called for a balk, and Conforto was sent home. However, First Base Umpire D.J. Reyburn had called time, because center-fielder Parker Meadows was out of position. The umpires conferred and sent Conforto back to third.

No big deal. Conforto would score on a base-hit by Matt Chapman. Tigers Manager A.J. Hinch pulled Montero for Tyler Holton, and former Tiger Mark Canha drew a pinch-hit walk. However, Patrick Bailey grounded into a 5-4-3 double play, which seemed to snuff out the rally.

Chapman did go to third on the double play, as Jerar Encarnacion came up with two outs. Encarnacion lined a double the other way to right to score Chapman and make it 5-4.

Hjelle returned to the mound for the top of the seventh, as the Tigers threatened again. Andy Ibanez singled with one out, and Justyn-Henry Malloy walked with two outs. 

Gio Urshela came up, and he hit a sharp chopper off the end of the bat to first. Wade dove to his left to come with it, and he flipped it to Hjelle to end the inning, as the Giants had dodged another bullet. 

Holton and Brenan Hanifee combined for a scoreless bottom of the seventh for Detroit, and Taylor Rogers came in to throw a 1-2-3 inning for the Giants.

Chapman tripled to lead off the eighth, and the Giants had the tying run 90 feet away. The Tigers then played the infield in for Mark Canha, who hit a sharp ground ball to short. Despite the drawn-in infield, Chapman took off for the plate, and he was caught in a rundown for a crushing and embarrassing first out. Chapman sat at the plate in disbelief as he caught his breath. 

Canha alertly took second on the play, but then he was caught in a rundown and tagged out when Bailey hit a chopper back to the mound. Back-to-back boneheaded base-running plays had single-handedly taken the Giants out of a rally, and Jerar Encarnacion grounded out to end the inning.

Jordan Hicks pitched through a pair of singles in the top of the ninth, and Hinch went to Will Vest in the bottom of the ninth. Vest retired the first two men he faced, but Wade worked a 1-2 count into a walk to extend the game for the potential winning run in Heliot Ramos.

Ramos was 0-for-4, and he was up there pressing, as he quickly fell behind 0-2. He then fouled off a fastball and took a changeup down for ball one, but he was caught looking at a 96-MPH fastball right on the outside corner to end it. Ramos had a few words for Home Plate Umpire Charlie Ramos—no relation—but Heliot Ramos had nobody to blame but himself there.

Keider Montero got the win; Hayden Birdsong took his second-career walk; and Will Vest got his first save of the season.

The Giants wasted a lot of opportunities Sunday, as they went 3-for-14 with runners in scoring position. Despite the run they have made, they have gone 31-for-161 with runners in scoring position since July 25. If that does not improve, you can forget about this team getting into October Baseball.

As much as the wasted opportunities hurt Sunday, once Chapman and Canha had their base-running blunders in the eighth, that pretty much sucked the life out of them. 

“[I’m] disgusted at myself for doing that,” Chapman bluntly said, taking full ownership of his mistake like the true leader that he is.

Those were the postgame words of a man who went 3-for-4; knocked in three of the Giants’ four runs; and had two of the Giants’ three hits with runners in scoring position Sunday.

Now, the Giants will have to move on and be ready to go when the Braves come in for a crucial four-game series starting Monday night. Not only are the Giants currently chasing the Braves for the third wild card spot, but if the Giants can at the very least split this series, they will have a winning record against the Braves and will hold the tiebreaker. 

However, with their schedule about to get much harder, the Giants really need to take three of four from the Braves. Another potential problem is that Jorge Soler will be making his return to Oracle Park after Farhan Zaidi traded him at the Deadline on July 30, and Soler will certainly be motivated to stick it to his former team.

Blake Snell (2-3, 4.31 ERA) will make the start for the Giants, and he will be opposed by veteran all-star left-hander Chris Sale (13-3, 2.75 ERA). First pitch Monday night will be at 6:45 p.m.

National League Wild Card Standings:

*1. Diamondbacks 66-53 +4.0

*2. Padres 66-53 +4.0

3. Braves 61-56 —

Mets 61-57 0.5

Cardinals 60-58 1.5

GIANTS 61-59 1.5

Cubs 59-60 3.0

Reds 57-61 4.5

Pirates 56-61 5.0

*Tiebreaking procedures taken into effect.

Tigers avoided Sweep (1-2) against Giants in Final game of the Series, 5-4; Star Wars Day in the City by the Bay

Detroit Tigers Dillion Dingler (above) celebrates his two run home with a big hug to Zach McKinstry (39) in the top of the second inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco against the San Francisco Giants on Sun Aug 11, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Michael Roberson

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. — The Detroit Tigers (56-63) salvaged the three-game series versus the San Francisco Giants (61-59), with a 5-4 victory on an overcast Star Wars Day.

The Tigers pounced upon the Giants right away, with a solo homer from leadoff designated hitter Matt Vierling. After a half inning, the Tigers led 1-0. However, the Giants had an immediate response in their bottom frame.

San Francisco scored during their first at bats on a two rbi single by third baseman Matt Chapman. He knocked in shortstopTyler Fitzgerald and Lamonte Wade Jr.. After an exciting first inning, the Giants led 2-1.

Detroit was right at it again in the top of the 2nd inning, scoring two more runs on another home run. Catcher Dillon Dingler hit his first “Dinger” of his career, plating shortstop Zach McKinstry, as well as himself. After two full innings, the Tigers led 3-2.

That lead lasted until the top of the fifth, when the MoTown Felines extended the advantage to 3 runs. Veiling reared his head again, this time with an RBI double, scoring Dingler. Next, second baseman Colt Keith hit an RBI single to right field, resulting in the aforementioned Vierling to cross the plate, for the Tigers’ fifth and final run. Detroit led 5-2 after 5 innings. Could they hold on to the lead, avoiding the Sweep in San Francisco?

Bottom of the 6th, the Giants made an attempt to cut into the lead and possibly eak out a come from behind win. Chapman belted an RBI single, knocking in Michael Conforto. Later, Jerar Encarnacionhit hit an RBI double, scoring Chapman. After six innings, 5-4 Tigers.

The Giants had an excellent chance to either tie or win the game in the bottom of the 8th inning. After Chapman opened the inning with a triple, they were poised to tie it up on a hit or sacrifice. Unfortunately, Chapman and Mark Canha were thrown out on back to back rundowns. Next, Encarnacion grounded out to Third, and a seemingly promising inning turned feeble, with 0 runs to account for. Still 5-4 going into the ninth inning.

The final inning was just a formality, as the Tigers kept their claws onto the 5-4 lead, while taking down the Giants with ease in the bottom of the 9th, only allowing a walk, while RHP Will Vest closed the game. The Detroit Tigers won 5-4!

The Tigers have Monday August 12 off, before they host Seattle the following day at 6:40 PM EST, with LHP Tarik Skubal (13-4, 2.57) on the mond versus TBD for the Mariners. The Giants host the Atlanta Braves 8/12 at 6:45 PM PDT with LHP Chris Sale (13-3, 2.75) vs. LHP Blake Snell (2-3, 4.31).

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Giants open up four game series with Braves Monday

San Francisco Giants Matt Chapman (left) gets tagged out at home plate by relief pitcher Brenan Hanifee (75) in the bottom of the eighth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sat Aug 11, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Marko:

#1 The Detroit Tigers avoided getting swept by the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park in San Francisco with a 5-4 win.

#2 The Tigers got home run help from Dillon Dingler and Matt Vierling. For Dingler it was his first career home run.

#3 The Giants in the bottom of the eight some bad base running, Matt Chapman was thrown out at home on a run down and then Mark Canha was hung up and thrown out at third base. That was an inning that basically saved the Tigers in the one run game.

#4 The Giants scored twice in the first and twice in the sixth but couldn’t capitalize in the eighth and in didn’t get one those heroic ninth inning walk offs.

#5 The Giants open a four game series with the Atlanta Braves on Monday night at Oracle Park with the Braves sending left hander Chris Sale (13-3, ERA 2.75) against the Giants starter Blake Snell (2-3, ERA 4.31) first pitch slated for 6:45pm

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