Fitzgerald homers twice as Giants rout Rockies 11-4

San Francisco Giants Tyler Fitzgerald (49) gives thanks to the good Lord after belting a two run home run waiting at the plate teammate Jorge Soler (2) in the bottom of the sixth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Fri Jul 26, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Daniel Dullum

Friday, July 26, 2024

San Francisco’s quest to remain on the NL West race took a positive step Friday at Oracle Park, as the Giants rolled past Colorado 11-4. It was a needed win for the Giants, who have lost five of their last seven games since the All-Star break.

The Giants (50-55) led 6-1 after four innings, while Kyle Harrison (6-4) gave
Dan Francisco a quality start, striking out 11 while giving up a run on one hit and two walks.

Tyler Fitzgerald delivered a pair of two-run home runs for the Giants – the first one in the fourth and the second one came in the bottom of the sixth, his seventh and eighth home runs of the season.

Fitzgerald was 3-for-5 with four runs batted in while continuing his recent power surge. He’s the first San Francisco player to hit seven home runs in an eight-game stretch since Barry Bonds did it in 2004.

Jorge Soler, batting leadoff as the DH, opened the scoring with a solo home run to left center in the bottom of the first inning. Soler added RB( singles in the second and fourth innings while going 3-for-3, scoring four runs and driving in three.

Heliot Ramos added a three-run shot for San Francisco in the bottom of the eighth off Rockies reliever Ty Bloch, his 15th of the season to go with 52 RBI. Ramos and Mike Yastrzemski each had two hits,

The Rockies (38-66) cut the San Francisco lead to 3-1 I the third on a sacrifice fly by Ezequiel Tovar. Colorado scored again in the eighth on a two-run triple by Brenton Doyle and picked up a run in the ninth on an infield ground out by Elias Diaz.

Most of the Giants’ damage came early against Rockies starter Kyle Freehand (2-4), who surrendered six earned runs on eight hits and s walk. He also struck out eight.

The San Francisco bullpen of Luke Jackson, Mike Baumann, Ryan Walker and Camilo Doral gave up three runs on a combined four hits in the last 2 1/3 innings.

Off the field, Giants right-hander Keaton Winn is scheduled to undergo season-ending elbow surgery next week. Also, infielder Thairo Estrada (wrist) was placed on the 10-day injured list, and infielder Casey Schmitt recalled from Triple-A Sacramento.

The Rockies and Giants have a scheduled doubleheader on Saturday. In the first game, San Francisco goes with left-hander Blake Snell (0-3, 5.83) against Colorado right-hander Ryan Feltner (1-10, 5.19). Starters for the second game had yet to be announced.

Giants finish brutal road trip with late 6-4 loss to Dodgers, as season hangs in balance

San Francisco Giants Jorge Soler swings for a single in the top of the eighth inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on Thu Jul 25, 2024 (AP News photo)

Thursday, July 25, 2024

Dodger Stadium

Los Angeles, California

San Francisco Giants 4 (49-55)

Los Angeles Dodgers 6 (62-42)

Win: Blake Treinen (5-2)

Loss: Tyler Rogers (1-4)

Save: Brent Honeywell (1)

Time: 2:38

Attendance: 52,291

By Stephen Ruderman

The Giants dropped the finale to the Dodgers at Dodger Stadium 6-4 to end this brutal road trip on Thursday afternoon, as back-to-back home runs by Nick Ahmed and Shohei Ohtani did the Giants in in the bottom of the eighth inning, and things are starting to become grim for the 2024 San Francisco Giants.

The Giants picked up a much-needed win Wednesday night, and they were hoping to salvage not just a split in this series, but a decent end to what has been a rough road trip to open the second half. Incredibly, here on July 25, this would be the final game between the Giants and the Dodgers this season.

This would also be a massive game for the Giants, who came into Thursday 49-54, and four and a half games back of the Cardinals for the third wild card spot. With the Trade Deadline coming up in five days, this would be a game that could potentially seal what Farhan Zaidi decides to do at the Trade Deadline next Tuesday.

The two rivals played a rare afternoon day game at Dodger Stadium, and Clayton Kershaw, one of the greatest left-handed pitchers in Dodgers History, would make his season debut. Kershaw and the Giants have had a lot of history since he first came up in 2008, and the Giants would once again be up against him in a big game.

Kershaw retired the first two men he faced to begin the game. Heliot Ramos doubled to center field, and Matt Chapman walked, but like the Giants have done throughout this road trip, they wasted this opportunity when Patrick Bailey struck out swinging to end the inning.

Giants’ ace Logan Webb took the ball in the bottom of the third. Webb gave up three runs in the bottom of the third inning at the All-Star Game in Arlington, Texas last Tuesday, and he labored through a rough outing in Denver on Saturday.

Thursday, Webb made his biggest start of the season in a rivalry game that could very well determine the fate of the team. He got off to a good start, as he walked Shohei Ohtani to start the bottom of the first, but retired the side in order afterwards.

Kershaw pitched a scoreless top of the second, and the Dodgers struck first in the bottom of the second. Gavin Lux walked to lead off the inning and advanced to second base on a ground out by Jason Heyward. With one out, Kiké Hernandez singled the other way to right to knock in Lux.

The Dodgers were preparing to do more, as Austin Barnes singled to right to put runners at first and second with one out. However, Webb settled down and retired the next two hitters to end the inning.

The Giants would then strike in the top of the third. Jorge Soler lined a base-hit to left to lead off the inning, and the suddenly-red-hot Tyler Fitzgerland lined a triple into the corner down the left field line to tie the game. Ramos hit a bullet off Kershaw, which reflected over to second base for a base-hit, and Fitzgerald scored to give the Giants the lead.

Matt Chapman lined a base-hit to center to move Ramos over to second. The Giants were looking to do more, but that was of course too much to ask from them, and Kershaw retired the next three to end the inning.

Webb pitched a 1-2-3 bottom of the third, and Kershaw threw a scoreless top of the fourth. The Dodgers retook the lead with a pair of runs in the bottom of the fourth. Kiké Hernandez doubled in Gavin Lux, who walked to start the inning, and Austin Barnes singled in Hernandez.

Shohei Ohtani doubled Hernandez over to third, and Teoscar Hernandez walked, but Freddie Freeman popped out to third to end the inning. Being unable to add on had become an interesting theme in this game.

Joe Kelly came in for Kershaw in the top of the fifth, because Dave Roberts—or whatever nerd is managing the game in the Dodgers’ front office—obviously wasn’t going to stretch Kershaw in his first start back. Kershaw threw 72 pitches in his four innings Thursday.

The Giants wasted a shot against Kelly in the top of the fifth, and the Dodgers made them pay for it in the bottom of the inning. Andy Pages and Gavin Lux each singled to put runners at the corners with one out, and Pages scored when Jason Heyward grounded into a double play to make it 4-2.

Of course, Heyward did not get an RBI, as a player cannot get credited with an RBI if they ground into a double play. As for Webb, he was done after five, and it was another rough outing for him, as he gave up four runs and nine hits.

Daniel Hudson came in for Los Angeles and threw a scoreless top of the sixth. The Dodgers threatened to blow it open when they loaded the bases against Sean Hjelle with one out in the bottom of the sixth. For Hjelle, he was able to get Andy Pages to ground into a double play, and it remained 4-2 going to the late innings.

Evan Phillips threw a 1-2-3 top of the seventh inning, and Luke Jackson struck out the side in a 1-2-3 bottom of the seventh.

The Giants showed that they still had some fight in them in the top of the eighth. David Villar doubled off left-hander Alex Vesia to start the inning, but Brett Wisely and Mike Yastrzemski both struck out. Michael Conforto hit a double off the bottom of the wall out in right-center to make it 4-3, and Roberts brought in Blake Treinen.

Jorge Soler came up, and he lined a base-hit to left to knock in Conforto and tie the game. The Giants indeed still had some fight in them, and they even had a chance to retake the league after Soler stole second. Though the Giants scored two runs to tie it, it was still too much of an ask for even the red-hot Fitzgerald to give them the lead, as he struck out to end the inning.

Submariner Tyler Rogers came in for the bottom of the eighth, and with one out, former Giant Nick Ahmed came to the plate. Ahmed and Ohtani may have put the dagger in the heart of the Giants’ season with back-to-back home runs to put the Dodgers back ahead 6-4. Brent Honeywell then threw a scoreless top of the ninth.

Blake Treinen got the win; Tyler Rogers took the loss; and Brent Honeywell picked up his first-career save.

The Giants end up going 2-5 on the road trip, as they fall back down to six games under .500 at 49-55, and they are now five and a half games back of the San Diego Padres for that third wild card spot in the National League.

The Giants end up going 4-9 against the Dodgers this season, and 1-6 at Dodger Stadium.

The Giants have the talent, and they’ve shown their potential at various times throughout the season. However, with the 2-5 start to the second half; the fact that they are now five and a half games back of the nearest playoff spot; and the frustration clearly mounting with the team, it is very possible that Farhan Zaidi could decide to sell at the Trade Deadline next Tuesday.

The one thing the Giants have going for them is that they are going to have the easiest schedule in Baseball over the next month. That will start when the Giants return home to face the Colorado Rockies in the first game of a four-game series Friday night.

Friday’s game will be a matchup of two left-handed Kyles. Kyle Harrison (5-4, 3.86 ERA) will make the start for the Giants, and Kyle Freeland (2-3, 5.63 ERA) will take the ball for Colorado. First pitch will be at 7:15 p.m.

Giants News and Notes:

The Giants signed Derek Hill, who was activated Wednesday. He got the start in left-field today and went 0-for-2.

Some interesting facts about Hill, who comes from a baseball family. His father, Orsinom, was a scout for the Dodgers, the Rockies and the Arizona Diamondbacks. His cousin is Darryl Strawberry, and he was teammates with J.D. Davis and Rowdy Tellez at Elk Grove High School.

With Hill and Robbie Ray’s addition to the roster Wednesday, Luis Matos and Randy Rodriguez were sent back to Triple-A Sacramento.

According to Alex Pavlovic, the Giants’ beat writer for NBC Sports Bay Area, Jordan Hicks, who got off to a great start in April and May, after he was brought over by Farhan Zaidi and converted from a reliever into a starter but has struggled as of late, could be heading back to the bullpen.

Hicks was originally expected to start Sunday, but after saying his body felt “worn down,” he could be moved to the bullpen as early as this weekend.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Ray takes no hitter into fifth in Giants 8-3 win over Dodgers

San Francisco Giants starter Robbie Ray makes first season appearance on Wed Jul 23, 2024 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 San Francisco Giants starter Robbie Ray looked like he never missed a step throwing five innings of no hit ball against the Mighty Los Angeles Dodgers at Chavez Ravine for a 8-3 win. Ray had been recovering from Tommy John surgery and this was his first appearance of the season.

#2 The Giants Matt Chapman slugged his 14th home run of season helping the Giants in getting a five run win over the Dodgers in the third game of this four game series.

#3 Ray coming back from surgery after rehabbing was in the Giants plans to make his first appearance of the season in July but no one expected him to out baffle, keep the hitters off balance and help keep the Dodgers run count down.

#4 Ray after loading the bases in the first inning allowed just one bases loaded walk and no hit the Dodgers for his first five innings.

#5 The Giants will start RHP Logan Webb (7-8, ERA 3.59) and the Dodgers will start LHP Clayton Kershaw (0-0, ERA 0.00) Kershaw is making his first appearance of the 2024 season after having shoulder surgery. This game will conclude the four game series.

Join Michael Duca on the San Francisco Giants podcasts Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Robbie Ray throws five no-hit innings in long-awaited Giants’ debut, and offense explodes late for much needed 8-3 win at Dodger Stadium

second from left San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Robbie Ray talks with Giants pitching coach Brian Price second from right in the bottom of the fifth inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Wed Jul 24, 2024 (AP News photo)

Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Dodger Stadium

Los Angeles, California

San Francisco Giants 8 (49-54)

Los Angeles Dodgers 3 (61-42)

Win: Robbie Ray (1-0)

Loss: Tyler Glasnow (8-6)

Time: 2:51

Attendance: 54,070

By Stephen Ruderman

Robbie Ray pitched five no-hit innings in his long-awaited Giants’ debut, and the Giants’ offense finally came to life and exploded in six-run top of the eighth inning enroute to a desperately-needed 8-3 over the Dodgers Wednesday night at Chavez Ravine.

There’s no sugar coating any of this. The Giants have been off to a horrendous start here in the second half. The offense has gone dead again, and they have dropped four of their first five.

The Giants were in need of a spark, and perhaps with left-hander Robbie Ray making his long-awaited Giants’ debut after signing with the team over the off-season, Wednesday night was the night they would get it.

The Dodgers also started a man tonight who was coming off the Injured List in Tyler Glasnow. Granted, he last pitched on July 5, and he’s been having himself a solid season, as he came into Wednesday night 8-5 with a 3.47 ERA. What his injury did was prevent him from pitching in his first all-star game.

Jorge Soler walked to lead off the game, and Matt Chapman drew a two-out walk three batters later. However, the Giants were unable to come though off Glasnow in the top of the first inning, as Michael Conforto struck out on a curveball in the dirt to end the inning.

We finally got to see Robbie Ray in the bottom of the first. Ray first came up with the Detroit Tigers in 2014, and then was traded over to the Arizona Diamondbacks, where he spent the next five and a half years.

Ray was traded from the Diamondbacks to the Toronto Blue Jays in the middle of the 60-game COVID-shortened sprint season of 2020. Ray had his best season with the Blue Jays in 2021, when he went 13-7 with a 2.84 ERA and struck out 248. Ray had another solid season with the Seattle Mariners in 2022, going 12-12 with a 3.71 ERA and 212 strikeouts.

Ray made his first start of last season on March 31, when he allowed five runs, three of them earned, to the Cleveland Guardians in three and a third innings. Ray ended up injuring himself, and had to have Tommy John surgery, which ended his season.

When the Giants signed him over the off-season, it was with the explicit understanding that he would not pitch until the middle of the season. The Giants had hoped to have him back sooner, but now was better than never.

Ray’s first inning back would be a long one. Shohei Ohtani flew out to deep left to begin the bottom of the first, but Ray hit Will Smith and then threw a wild pitch to Freddie Freeman, which moved Smith over to second base.

Freeman walked, and both runners advanced to second and third on another wild pitch by Ray. Just like Tuesday night, the Giants’ starting pitcher threw wild pitchers in the bottom of the first inning. Teoscar Hernandez was hit to load the bases, and Andy Pages walked to knock in a run. Ray then settled down and minimized the damage to one run.

Glasnow pitched a scoreless top of the second, and Ray a 1-2-3 bottom of the second. Brett Wisely singled and stole second to start the third, and Soler walked, but Heliot Ramos grounded into an inning-ending double play, as the Giants’ offense wasted another opportunity. Ray pitched another 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the third, as he had settled down to retire eight-straight.

Matt Chapman led off the fourth with a home run just to the right of straight away center field to tie the game. Later in the inning, Tyler Fitzgerald, who had homered in five-straight games coming in, doubled. Mike Yastrzemski then grounded a base-hit up the middle into right-center to knock in Fitzgerald to give the Giants the lead. It was a much-needed RBI hit with runners in scoring position for the Giants.

Ray pitched two more 1-2-3 innings in the bottom of the fourth and fifth, and that would do it for him after five no-hit innings. His control was all over the place, when he gave up a run after walking two and hitting two, but he settled down to retire the final 14 men he faced, and he ended up striking out eight. With his pitch count at 86 in his first start in a year and a half, there was no way he was going any longer, but it was still a much-needed spark for the team.

Glasnow, meanwhile, threw a 1-2-3 top of the fifth to end his night. Anthony Banda came in for Los Angeles in the top of the sixth, and after striking out Chapman and Michael Conforto, he walked Fitzgerald and hit Yastrzemski. However, Curt Casali struck out swinging to end the inning.

Ryan Walker came in for the Giants and threw a 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the sixth, and Banda and Yohan Ramirez combined for a scoreless top of the seventh. Submariner Tyler Rogers came in and allowed a two-out double to Chris Taylor, who injured himself and had to leave the game. Rogers then got Kiké Hernández to fly out to end the inning, so no problem.

Ramirez was back out for the top of the eighth, and the Giants finally exploded. Chapman walked to start the inning; Conforto singled to right to put runners at the corners; and Fitzgerald walked to load the bases. Yastrzemski fisted a base-hit to right to score Chapman to make it 3-1, and Patrick Bailey pinch-hit for Casali and made it 4-1 with a base-hit to right.

The Giants were keeping the line moving, as Dave Roberts lifted Ramirez for veteran right-hander Joe Kelly. Brett Wisely flew out to left for the first out of the inning, and Soler knocked in Fitzgerald on a ground out to short to make it 5-1.

Kelly intentionally walked LaMonte Wade, which loaded the bases for Ramos. Ramos singled the other way to right to knock in a pair and open it up to 7-1. Matt Chapman knocked in Wade with a base-hit up the middle to make it 8-1, and the Giants’ offense had finally shown what they were capable of with a six-run top of the eighth.

Freddie Freeman doubled in Nick Ahmed—yes, that Nick Ahmed, who started the season with the Giants; was released; signed this very morning with the Dodgers; and made the start Wednesday night—off Erik Miller in the bottom of the eighth to make it 8-2.

Ryan Yarbrough pitched a 1-2-3 top of the ninth, and the Dodgers got to left-hander Taylor Rogers in the bottom of the ninth, but it was for moot, as the Giants won it 8-3.

Robbie Ray got the win in his first big league start in a year and a half, and Tyler Glasnow took the loss. The Giants improve to 49-54, and they are now four and a half games back of the St. Louis Cardinals, who have slipped into the third wild card spot. The Giants are also now 5-0 when they are a season-high six games under .500.

Anyway, the Giants can salvage a split on getaway day Wednesday. Giants’ ace Logan Webb (7-8, 3.59 ERA) will try to bounce back from his rough all-star game appearance and rocky start in Denver Saturday. Clayton Kershaw of all people will come off the IL Thursday to make his 2024 debut for the Dodgers. First pitch will be at 1:10 p.m.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: 2024 The Final Season of the A’s at the Coliseum (Part IX)

1989 World Series logo (image from baseball.wikia.com)

2024 The Final Season of the A’s at the Coliseum (Part IX)

A’s vs. Giants rivalry

By Amaury Pi-González

OAKLAND–The Giants arrived in San Francisco from New York in 1958; ten years later, the A’s arrived from Kansas City in Oakland. The Bay Area rivalry between Oakland and San Francisco has grown, drawing huge crowds at the stadiums on both sides of the Bay.

The rivalry became more intense (but still friendly) after the 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake on October 17, 1989, a few minutes past five in the afternoon, when the ground shook at Candlestick Park.

It all began at Oakland. The first two games of the World Series took place at the Oakland Coliseum; the Athletics won 5-0 and 5-1. We moved to San Francisco’s Candlestick Park for games three and four, but on Game three, a surprise, when the earth moved violently with a 7.1 intensity earthquake (later downgraded to a 6.9), still enough for interim Baseball Commissioner Fay Vincent to postpone the World Series for some 11 days until both teams resumed the action in early October for games three and four, which the A’s also won 13-7 and 6-5.

For us, broadcasting that classic was an experience we will never forget for the rest of our lives. This is the first and only time a World Series has been stopped and postponed because of an Earthquake. Note: The Giants returned to the World Series in 2002 (13 years later) and lost to the Anaheim Angels 4 games to 3.

The famous and historic 1989 World Series, which began at the Oakland Coliseum, was the first held there since the team won the last of three consecutive World Series in 1974. Fifteen years later, the Oakland A’s were the talk of baseball, and the Oakland Coliseum was “the place to be.” Coliseum attendance in the 1989 regular season was 2,667,225.

The Good Old Days at the Oakland Coliseum, as we remember this 2024, a historic year and the last season they will play at this huge facility,

Schedule: The Oakland A’s will face the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park on July 30-31. The last time these Bay Area rivals will face each other is next August 17-18 at the Oakland Coliseum. All these games will air live in Spanish on KIQI 1010AM Bay Area/990AM Sacramento, on the Oakland A’s Spanish Radio Network.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the vice president of the Major League Baseball Hispanic Heritage Hall of Fame Museum and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants drop four of five to open second half to fall five back of playoff spot, as Hicks struggles in 5-2 loss to Dodgers

Shohei Ohtani belted a two run double in the bottom of the fourth inning at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles against the San Francisco Giants on Tue Jul 23, 2024 (AP News photo)

Tuesday, July 23, 2024

Dodger Stadium

Los Angeles, California

San Francisco Giants 2 (48-54)

Los Angeles Dodgers 5 (61-41)

Win: Landon Knack (4-7)

Loss: Jordan Hicks (3-3)

Save: Evan Phillips (15)

Time: 2:55 

Attendance: 52,627

By Stephen Ruderman

The offense was dead again; Jordan Hicks had to push his way through three and two thirds innings; and the Dodgers beat the Giants 5-2, as the Giants have now dropped four of five to open the second half.

After a tough loss in the series opener Monday night, the Giants hoped for better luck Tuesday night against Landon Knack—hey, another good baseball name. Knack pitched a scoreless top of the first inning, and the Dodgers came to bat against Jordan Hicks in the bottom of the first.

Hicks has struggled since a great start to his season in April and May, and Tuesday night, the Giants were leaning on him to keep their rivals at bat. Hicks’ night appeared as if it was going to get off to a good start, as he struck out Shohei Ohtani (swinging) and Will Smith (looking) for the first two outs in the bottom of the first. 

However, Hicks hit Freddie Freeman, who got to second base on a wild pitch, and he walked Teoscar Hernandez. The runners advanced to second and third on another wild pitch with Gavin Lux at the plate, and then Lux roped a double down the right field line to knock in both runners, but he was thrown out at third trying to stretch it into a triple.

Knack struck Matt Chapman and Michael Conforto both out swinging to start the top of the second, but Tyler Fitzgerald homered in his fifth straight game with a high soaring drive to left field to put the Giants on the board. Fitzgerald became the first rookie in Giants’ franchise history to homer in five-straight games, as well as the first rookie shortstop in National League/American League history to accomplish the feat.

Hicks was able to work his way through the second and third, but thanks to four walks, his pitch count was up to 65 through his first three innings. Knack also had a high pitch count, as he threw 74 pitches in his first four innings.

Hicks struck out Andy Pages in a six-pitch at-bat to start the bottom of the fourth, but after that, Hicks really struggled. He walked Jayson Heyward and gave up a base-hit to Cavin Biggio. 

During that time, Bob Melvin and Senior Director of Athletic Training Dave Groeschner came out to check up on him, but he stayed in the game. Hicks struck out Kiké Hernandez for the second out, but Ohtani knocked in a pair with a double to right to make it a 4-1 game, and that did it for Hicks.

Hicks threw 92 pitches over three and two thirds innings, and he had himself some interesting final totals. He gave up four runs on three hits, and he walked five, but he also struck out seven. 

Knack threw the game’s first 1-2-3 inning in the top of the fifth, and that capped off his night, as the Giants were stymied by another Dodgers’ rookie. For Knack, he gave up just a run on two hits and two walks, and he struck out six.

Sean Hjelle, who finished off the bottom of the fourth for the Giants, pitched through a jam in the bottom of the fifth. Brent Honeywell Jr. was the new pitcher for Los Angeles in the top of the sixth, and he threw a 1-2-3 inning. Left-hander Taylor Rogers gave up a leadoff base-hit to pinch-hitter Chris Taylor in the bottom of the sixth, but he pitched a scoreless inning.

Honeywell pitched a scoreless top of the seventh, and Luke Jackson came in for the bottom of the seventh to pitch the first 1-2-3 inning of the night for the Giants. Jorge Soler drew a walk off Blake Treinen with one out in the top of the eighth, and Heliot Ramos singled with two outs, but Patrick Bailey grounded out to second to end the inning.

Randy Rodriguez came in for San Francisco in the bottom of the eighth. Andy Pages was hit by a pitch—the third Dodger to be hit Tuesday night—to start the bottom of the eighth, and Heyward singled Pages over to second. 

Rodriguez got a reprieve when he struck Taylor and Kiké Hernandez both out swinging. Pages, meanwhile, had moved over to third on a wild pitch, and runners were at the corners with two outs for Shohei Ohtani.

In an unpleasant deja vu from the bottom of the eighth inning Tuesday night, in which Teoscar Hernandez lined a two-out, two-strike base-hit to knock in a run for the Dodgers last night, Ohtani knocked in a run with a two-out, two-strike base-hit in the bottom of the eighth Tuesday night to make it 5-1.

The Giants then teased us in the top of the ninth. Alex Vesia walked Matt Chapman and Michael Conforto to start the ninth, and Fitzgerald lined a base-hit to left to score Chapman and make it a 5-2 game. 

Fitzgerald’s base-hit also brought the tying run up to the plate. Wilmer Flores pinch-hit and popped into an infield fly, and Brett Wisely struck out swinging. 

After Wisely struck out, Dave Roberts brought in his closer, Evan Phillips to face Jorge Soler. Soler then walked with two outs to load the bases for Late Night LaMonte Wade. The stage was set for the Giants to have another epic come-from-behind ninth-inning win at Dodger Stadium here in late July like they did twice in the crucial four-game set at Dodger Stadium in 2021.

Wade, who had so many big hits late in games for the Giants that season, including what proved to be the game-winning hit on July 22 of that year in the ninth inning at Dodger Stadium, was up. It was the perfect time for him to come up with the biggest hit of the season here in 2024.

However, it was not meant to be. Wade ended up grounding out to second, and the Dodgers won it 5-2.

Landon Knack got the win; Jordan Hicks got the loss; and Even Phillips got his 15th save.

There were at least a couple of positives to take out of this one. Heliot Ramos, who has slumped a bit following his all-star appearance last week, went 2-for-4 Tuesday night. Tyler Fitzgerald, who of course has now hit home runs in five-straight games, went 3-for-3, and knocked in both of the Giants’ runs Tuesday night.

However, the negatives far outweigh the positives. Really, reality outweighs the positives. The reality is that the Giants have lost four of five to start off the second half, and have tied their season-high six games under .500 at 48-54. They are also now five games back of the New York Mets for the third wild card spot. To be blunt, the Giants are in serious trouble.

The good news is that the Giants are 4-0 when they’ve been six games under .500 this season, and they will need some luck Wednesday. Left-hander Robbie Ray will make his long-awaited Giants’ debut Wednesday night, and he will be opposed by Tyler Glasnow (8-5, 3.47 ERA), who is also coming off the injured list Wednesday. First pitch will be at 7:10 p.m PT.

Snell solid again, but River Ryan shuts down Giants’ lethargic offense in big league debut,Teoscar Hernandez carries LA to 3-2 win with two key RBI singles

San Francisco Giants Jorge Soler (right) is tagged out by Los Angeles Dodgers third baseman Chris Taylor (left) in the top of the first inning at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Mon Jul 22, 2024 (AP News photo)

Monday, July 22, 2024

Dodger Stadium

Los Angeles, California

San Francisco Giants 2 (48-53)

Los Angeles Dodgers 3 (60-41)

Win: Blake Treinen (4-2)

Loss: Erik Miller (3-3)

Save: Daniel Hudson (7)

Time: 2:26

Attendance: 49,576

By Stephen Ruderman

The Giants’ offense sputtered against River Ryan in his major league debut, as they were unable to support Blake Snell, who pitched another strong outing, and the Dodgers beat the Giants 3-2, thanks to a pair of RBI base-hits by Teoscar Hernanez, in the opener of this four-game series at Dodger Stadium.

The Giants were able to get out of Denver with a win Sunday, averting a disastrous sweep at the hands of the third-worst team in Baseball. With the Giants in need of a spark, they are in LA for a four-game series just as they were this very week in 2021. The Giants took three of four in that series, which featured two epic come-from-behind ninth inning wins on July 21 and 22.

That series is when everybody realized that 2021 was going to be a magical season. Three years later here in 2024, the Giants have come into this four-game series four games under .500 at 48-52, and three games back of the New York Mets for the third wild card spot in the National League.

For the Dodgers, they send the young right-hander, River Ryan, who has a great baseball name, to the mound to make his major league debut. Ryan was originally drafted by the San Diego Padres in 2021 out of the University of North Carolina, where he was a two-way player. He was traded to the Dodgers on March 28, 2022, and then bounced around the minors this season before getting the call to start tonight.

This was one of those rare games where the designated hitter was the lead off guy for both teams. For the Giants, it was Jorge Soler, who walked to start off the game. The Giants appeared to be in business when LaMonte Wade lined a base-hit to left-center field, but Soler was nailed by left-fielder Miguel Vargas trying to take third base.

Wade advanced to second on the throw, but that essentially killed the rally for the Giants. Heliot Ramos lined out to left, and Patrick Bailey popped out to short, as Ryan ended up getting out of his first big league inning in a quite unusual way.

Blake Snell nearly got his first win as a Giant after he took a perfect game into the seventh inning of the first half finale last Sunday against the Minnesota Twins. However, that was not to be, as Camilo Doval blew the save and gave up two runs in the top of the ninth.

Still, it was the first time the real Blake Snell showed up for the Giants, and he was looking to build off that Monday night. Snell walked Shohei Ohtani to start the bottom of the first inning, but catcher Patrick Bailey nailed Ohtani trying to steal second, and Snell ended up facing the minimum.

Ryan pitched a pair of 1-2-3 innings in the second and third. Snell escaped a two-out rally in the bottom of the second, and then he threw a 1-2-3 bottom of the third.

Wade walked to start the top of the fourth, and Bailey grounded a single up the middle with one out. Michael Conforto moved the runners over to second and third on a ground out to first, and they left things up to Matt Chapman.

Unfortunately, after the Giants’ offense finally showed what they were capable of over the final four weeks of the first half, they have fallen back on their old bad habits to begin the second half.

Chapman did work the count full to 3-2, but the Giants caught a break when Ryan threw a fastball on the outside corner that was dropped by catcher Will Smith and went to the Giants’ on-deck circle, which allowed Wade to score. The Giants were unable to come through with that key RBI hit with runners in scoring position. Instead, they got their run on a passed ball.

The Dodgers struck right back when Teoscar Hernandez, who won the Home Run Derby last Monday night in Arlington, Texas, tied the game with his 21st home run of the season. It was a no-doubter, as Hernandez hit it half way up into the pavilion out in left field.

Both pitchers threw 1-2-3 innings in the fifth, and base-hits by Wade and Bailey put runners on the corners for the Giants with one out in the top of the sixth. That ended the night for Ryan, but he had himself one helluva of a major league debut, as he was thrown into a rivalry game and gave up just an unearned run over five and a third innings. Not bad.

Looks like I gave away the ending to the Giants’ rally. Of course they wasted it, as left-hander Alex Vesia came in and struck out both Luis Matos and Chapman to end the inning.

Well, the Dodgers made the Giants pay in the bottom of the sixth. With Freddie Freeman at second and two outs, Hernandez got a hanging curveball from Snell and lined a base-hit out to center field to score Freeman and give the Dodgers their first lead of the night.

Snell escaped the inning without any further damage, and that would end his night. It was a good night for Snell, who went six innings, and gave up two runs and four hits. We’re now seeing what Snell is capable of, and if he can keep pitching like this, it will be huge for the Giants down the stretch.

Snell was unfortunately unable to get his first win as a Giant, but he didn’t get the loss either. Tyler Fitzgerald tied the game with one out in the top of the seventh when he hit a home run off Ryan Yarbrough. For Fitzgerald, he has now homered in three-straight games.

Ryan Walker threw a 1-2-3 bottom of the seventh for the Giants. Bailey drew a two-out walk off Blake Treinen in the top of the eighth and stole second, but with a full count, Matos struck out when he chased a slider down and away to end the inning.

It was another wasted opportunity for the Giants—a sentence I have written far too many times this season—and Erik Miller ran into trouble right away when he came in for the bottom of the eighth. Kiké Hernandez led off the inning with a double to center, and Will Smith walked with one out.

Freeman grounded into a 6-4 fielder’s choice for the second out, and the Giants were hoping that they could get Will Smith on interference for his slide at second, as Bob Melvin challenged that play. The play was upheld, and Melvin went to Randy Rodriguez to face Teoscar Hernandez

Hernandez was up with the go-ahead runner at second with two outs, just as he was in the sixth. Rodriguez was a strike away from getting out of it with the count at 2-2, but he threw a 98-MPH fastball right on the outside corner that Hernandez lined off the end of the bat and up the middle into center field for a base-hit that scored Smith to put the Dodgers back ahead.

It was deja vu all over again. Just as he did in the sixth, Hernandez gave the Dodgers the lead with a base-hit up the middle.

Daniel Hudson came in for the ninth, and while Fitzgerald walked with two outs, Brett Wilsey flew out to left to end the game.

Blake Treinen got the win; Erik Miller got the loss; and Daniel Hudson picked up his seventh save of the year.

The Giants’ offense are struggling again at the worst possible time. As Marcos Breton pointed out on Twitter—yes, I’m still calling it that—Jorge Soler, Heltiot Ramos, Luis Matos, Matt Chapman, Mike Yastrzemski and Matt Chapman went a combined 0-for-22, and Yastrzemski ended up with the hat trick. To be blunt, things need to change, and they need to change soon.

The Giants fall to 48-53 and four games back of the Mets for the third wild card. They will need a win Tuesday night. Jordan Hicks (4-6, 3.79 ERA), who has hit a rough patch as of late after a great start to his season will make the start for the Giants Tuesday. Landon Knack of all people will counter to make his season debut for the Dodgers. First pitch will be at 7:10 p.m.

Giants News and Notes:

Following his dominant 12-strikeout performance in Colorado Sunday, Hayden Birdsong was sent all the way down to the Low-A San Jose Giants. The move was simply made to clear a roster spot for right-handed reliever Mike Baumann, whom the Giants acquired in a trade with the Seattle Mariners yesterday.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Thin air, two long homers give Giants lift at Coors Field Sunday

San Francisco Giants Jorge Soler takes off up the first base line after he connects for a first inning solo shot and the longest homer for the Giants this season at 478 feet against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field in Denver on Sun Jul 21, 2024 (AP News photo)

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic:

#1 San Francisco Giants Jorge Soler tattooed the longest Giants home run this season at 478 feet to deep centerfield in the top of the first for the Giants first run of the game.

#2 Tyler Fitzgerald got ahold of one and took it 434 feet for a top of third inning home run to center taking advantage of the thin Coors Field air and putting the Giants on top 2-0.

#3 A crucial passed ball by the Rockies catcher Jacob Stallings allows the Giants Matt Chapman what would be the game winning run in the top of the fourth inning as the Giants took a 3-0 at that point.

#4 The Giants got pitching from Hayden Birdsong who picked up his second win of the season against no loses. Birdsong pitched six innings, allowed two hits and two earned runs and struck out 12 batters. As the Giants avoid getting swept.

#5 The Giants head to Dodgers Stadium for a four game series which opens on Monday night at 7:10pm PT. Starting pitcher for the Giants LHP Blake Snell (0-3, ERA 6.31). Updated the Dodgers will be starting RHP Landon Knack (1-2, ERA 3.23).

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

San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman: Giants on cusp of getting swept in Colorado today

The San Francisco Giants and Mike Yastrzemski seen here hitting a fifth inning triple against Colorado Rockies pitcher Kyle Freeman at Coors Field on Sat Jul 20, 2024 are hoping to avoid a three game sweep today (AP News photo)

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman:

#1 The Colorado Rockies Ezequiel Tovar is rolling with his third homer in this third straight game which helped edge the San Francisco Giants on Saturday night 4-3

#2 The Rockies got good pitching from starter Kyle Freeland who improved going six innings and allowed three Giants runs.

#3 Giants pitcher Logan Webb who struggled in his All Star appearance no exception on Saturday night as Webb pitched six innings allowed eight hits, four runs, four hits, four walks, and struck out four hitters.

#4 Freeland kept the Giants off balance he threw four pitches for strikes and said he was filling in the strike zone.

#5 Giants are on the cusp of getting swept today in Denver. The Giants are going with starter RHP Hayden Birdsong (1-0, ERA 3.72) for the Rockies LHP Ryan Feltner (1-9, ERA 5.36). Stephen taking a look at this match up today Birdsong has had some good outings and Feltner has struggled and has nine loses coming into this game.

Stephen Ruderman is podcast contributor for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Webb braves through six innings and gives up four, and Giants’ offense unable to take advantage of Coors Field in 4-3 loss

San Francisco Giants starter Logan Webb is frustrated after giving up a bottom of the fifth inning home run to the Colorado Rockies Ezequiel Tovar at Coors Field in Denver on Sat Jul 20, 2024 (AP News photo)

Saturday, July 20, 2024

Coors Field

Denver, Colorado

San Francisco Giants 3 (47-52)

Colorado Rockies 4 (36-63)

Win: Kyle Freeland (2-3)

Loss: Logan Webb (7-8)

Save: Victor Vodnik (3)

Time: 2:14

Attendance: 44,178

By Stephen Ruderman

The Giants have now dropped the first two games of this three-game series in Coors Field to start the second half, as Logan Webb braved through six innings but gave up four runs, and the Rockies held on for a 4-3 win on Saturday night.

The Giants were looking for a fresh start after a tough loss last night, and there were many reasons to feel better about Saturday night. First of all, their ace, Logan Webb, was on the mound. Second, they were facing Kyle Freeland, who came into tonight with an ERA of 6.00. Plain and simply, Freeland’s having a bad season.

Unlike last night, the sun was out as the game got underway, as Freeland pitched a 1-2-3 top of the first inning. Webb, who gave up three runs in the bottom of the third inning at the All-Star Game Tuesday in Arlington, Texas, had a rough go of things in the bottom of the first.

The Rockies loaded the bases right away with nobody out, and Elias Diaz grounded into a double play to score Charlie Blackmon for the game’s first run—of course, Diaz was not credited with an RBI, because you can not be credited with an RBI under any circumstances if you ground into a double play.

The Rockies got their next run when first-baseman Wilmer Flores made a bone-headed play. On a ground ball off the bat of Brenton Doyle that was headed right for second-baseman Thairo Estrada, Flores, who was playing halfway between first and second dove to his right to field it, and the ball spat out of his glove. The play was ruled an infield hit, and Ezequiel Tovar scored to make it 2-0 Colorado.

Both pitchers threw scoreless innings in the second, and Tyler Fitzgerald put the Giants on the board with a solo home run out to left-center field with one out in the top of the third. Webb narrowly escaped a jam in the bottom of the third, and Heliot Ramos was doubled off at first to end the top of the fourth.

Webb finally pitched his first 1-2-3 inning of the night in the bottom of the fourth, and the Giants were able to put Freeland in a hole in the top of the fifth after Mike Yastrzemski hit a one-out triple. Curt Casali struck out looking for the second out, and up came Fitzgerald.

The first pitch from Freeland to Fitzgerald was a slider at the knees called a ball by Home Plate Umpire Chris Conroy. The pitch was a nut cutter and could have gone either way, but Freeland did not like the call, and he made his frustration with Conroy quite clear when he lightly threw his arms in the air.

After Conroy took his mask off for a light stare at Freeland, the next pitch was a sinker off the outside corner for ball 2. As Freelend continued to stew, Rockies Pitching Coach Darryl Scott came out to calm down the left-hander.

It was expected that Scott would wait for Conroy to come to the mound to toss him, but Conroy stayed behind the plate and kept his mask on, and Scott went back to the dugout without incident. Fitzgerald then hit a double to left to score Yastrzemski and tie the game. Surprisingly, nobody ended up getting tossed at all.

It was a new game heading to the bottom of the fifth. However, the Rockies got right back ahead when Ezequiel Tovar hit a two-run home run to left to make it 4-2.

Freeland retired the first two men he faced in the top of the sixth. Matt Chapman then reached on an error, and Wilmer Flores lined a double out to center to make it 4-3. Webb, meanwhile, pitched a scoreless bottom of the sixth, and both pitchers were done.

For Webb, he braved through six innings, as he gave up four runs and eight hits. Webb also only threw one 1-2-3 inning. Hey, it was Coors Field, and Webb gave it his best.

Freeland’s outing was quite surprising, as he gave up just three runs, two of them earned over six innings. Though Freeland’s success had more to do with the Giants’ offense falling back on their old bad habits than anything else.

Anyway, as the clouds gathered above Coors Field, Nick Mears threw a 1-2-3 top of the seventh for Colorado, and Erik Webb did the same for the Giants in the bottom of the seventh. Mears threw another 1-2-3 inning in the top of the eighth as the rain started to fall, and Sean Hjelle threw a 1-2-3 bottom of the eighth for San Francisco.

Victor Vodnik then came in for the top of the ninth and closed this thing out with a 1-2-3 top of the ninth.

Kyle Freeland got just his second win of the season; Logan Webb took the loss; and Victor Vodnik picked up his third save.

The Giants’ offense has gone dark again. The fact that Kyle Freeland of all people was able to shut them down tonight was bad. Jorge Soler, Luis Matos, Matt Chapman, Thairo Estrada and Curt Casali went a combined 0-for-16. Soler struck out twice, and is once again struggling with runners in scoring position.

The Giants have fallen back to five games under .500 at 47-52, and now they are staring down the barrel of getting swept by the lowly Rockies. Hayden Birdsong (1-0, 3.72 ERA) will make his fifth big league start tomorrow, and he will be opposed by left-hander Austin Gomber (2-6, 4.61 ERA).

Giants News and Notes:

Robbie Ray struck out seven and gave up just one hit over five and a third shutout innings in what was likely his final rehab start for the Sacramento River Cats. He is expected to make his Giants’ debut in the team’s four-game series in Los Angeles next week.