Giants blow solid start from Harrison in wild 7-3 loss at Coors Field

San Francisco Giants reliever Tyler Rogers reaction after he gave up a three run bottom of the eighth inning home run to the Colorado Rockies Jake Cave at Coors Field in Denver on Fri Jul 19, 2024 (AP News photo)

Friday, July 18, 2024

Coors Field

Denver, Colorado

San Francisco Giants 3 (47-51)

Colorado Rockies 2 (35-63)

Win: Jalen Beeks (6-4)

Loss: Tyler Rogers (1-3)

Time: 2:45

Attendance: 40,115

By Stephen Ruderman

Coors Field struck again to start the second half, as the Giants blew a 3-0 lead and a five-inning shutout performance from Kyle Harrison, and the Rockies came back to win a flatout weird game by a final of 7-3 on Friday night.

Following a thrilling win on a walk-off little league home run by Mike Yastrzemski on Sunday to cap off the first half, Logan Webb and Heliot Ramos went to Arlington, Texas for the All-Star Game, and the rest of the team had four much-needed days off. Friday night, they reconvened in Denver to open the second half and pennant race.

With the Giants playing at Coors Field, you just knew that it was going to be a weird and wild night. In fitting Coors Field fashion, it was overcast and rainy at the start of the game, as the Giants went down 1-2-3 against Rockies’ starter Cal Quantrill in the top of the first inning.

Kyle Harrison made the start for San Francisco Friday night in his third start back off the Injured List. In his first start back on July 6 in Cleveland, the Guardians got to him for four runs over three and a third innings. However, he fared much better last Friday, when he allowed just a run to the Twins over five and a third at Oracle Park. Harrison got off to a solid start Friday night with a scoreless bottom of the first.

Quantrill retired the first two men he faced in the top of the second, but Matt Chapman lined a double to left field with two outs, and Yastrzemski drew a walk. That brought up Thairo Estrada, who lined a base-hit to left that went under the glove of the diving Sean Bouchard in left and went to the wall. Two runs scored, and Estrada went into third with a triple.

Harrison pitched a 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the second, and the Giants had Quantrill back on the ropes in the top of the third. Jorge Soler lined a base-hit to right, and LaMonte Wade doubled Soler over to third. Heliot Ramos was unable to knock in Soler on a ground out to first base, but Bailey was able to on a ground out to second.

Harrison threw a scoreless bottom of the third, and Quantrill was in trouble once again in the top of the fourth. Chapman walked to start the inning, and Estrada was hit by a pitch with one out. The Giants then suffered a really bad break.

Brett Wisely hit a bullet off the bag at first that ricocheted and hit First Base Umpire Chris Conroy. The ball caromed over to first-baseman Michael Toglia, who slid to the bag to get Wisely. The ball was ticketed for extra bases, and the Giants were likely to get two more runs and a 5-0 lead, but it wouldn’t happen, and Soler struck out to end the inning.

Harrison survived a bit of a jam in the bottom of the fourth, and Quantrill threw a 1-2-3 top of the fifth. Harrison escaped another jam in the bottom of the fifth, and after 93 pitches over five shutout innings, he was done.

Harrison was solid, but his wildness, which has been his weakness, once again got to him Friday night. While he gave up just one hit, he walked four, which got him into trouble and extended his pitch count. Still, he has had two-straight solid outings, and he is having an all-around solid season.

Despite the tough break in the top of the fourth, the Giants seemed to be in control Friday night, but this was Coors Field, and as we all know, things can change very quickly. Quantill pitched a scoreless top of the sixth to end his night, and Randy Rodriguez took the ball for the Giants in the bottom of the sixth.

Elias Diaz was grazed by a pitch with one out, but after Home Plate Umpire Brian O’Nora sent him down to first, Diaz claimed he wasn’t hit. Bob Melvin challenged the call, and it was upheld. It was close, but one of three things happened: O’Nora blew the call; Diaz didn’t feel it; or Diaz was trying to pull an Albert Belle and wanted to keep hitting.

Anyway, Brenton Doyle immediately hit a home run out to left-center to put the Rockies on the board and make it a 3-2 game. The Giants wasted a golden opportunity against Tyler Kinley in the top of the seventh, and Ryan Walker came in and ran into trouble in the bottom of the seventh.

Jake Cave doubled to lead off the inning. Sam Hilliard got Cave over to third with a fly out to left, and Charlie Blackmon struck out swinging. Walker now had a chance to get out of the inning unscathed, and with the Giants’ lead still intact.

Ezequiel Tover was now the hitter, and he hit a ground ball half way between second and third that third-baseman Matt Chapman fielded to his left, 360’d and threw the ball away, which allowed Cave to score to tie the game.

It was a tough break, and Chapman, one of the most sure-handed third-basemen in all of Baseball, would probably tell you that he should have had Tovar at first. It was ruled a base-hit, and since Tovar moved to second, Chapman got a rare error. Rare, because errors have gone mostly extinct this season.

Off to the eighth! Jalen Beeks, who finished the top of the seventh for Kinley, was back out for the top of the eighth, and threw a 1-2-3 shutdown inning.

The very-reliable Tyler Rogers came in for the bottom of the eighth, but at Coors Field, he ran into trouble too. Brendan Rogers reached on an infield hit to short; Toglia doubled Brendan Rogers over to third; and Cave hit a three-run home run to right to give the Rockies their first lead of the night.

Sam Hilliard popped out to third for the first out, and Melvin brought in Luke Jackson, who struck out Blackmon for the second out. Tovar then lined a home run down the left field line to make it 7-3.

There’s no getting around it. That was a brutal bottom of the eighth inning. Rogers and Jackson combined for 44 pitches, and the Rockies scored four runs.

Victor Vodnik then finished off the game with an eight-pitch 1-2-3 top of the ninth.

Jalen Beeks got the win, and Tyler Rogers took the loss. The Giants fall to 47-51, and in order to bounce back tomorrow, they just have to acknowledge that this is Coors Field, where weird things happen.

Giants’ ace Logan Webb (7-7, 3.47 ERA), who gave up three runs in the bottom of the third in the All-Star Game on Tuesday will take the ball for San Francisco Saturday night in the second game of the series. He’ll be opposed by veteran left-hander Kyle Freeland (1-3, 6.00 ERA). First pitch will be at 6:10 p.m. in Denver, 5:10 p.m. back home in San Francisco.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Yastrzemski has last say in beating Twins; Ramos and Webb to represent Giants at All Star Game

San Francisco Giants Mike Yastrzemski (right) is greeted at the plate after scoring the game winning run on a throwing error by Minnesota Twins second baseman Brooks Lee at Oracle Park in San Francisco (photo by San Francisco Giants)

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic:

#1 In a come back game the San Francisco Giants edged the Minnesota Twins at Oracle Park on Sunday. The Giants had led for most of the game 2-0 until the Twins tied it up in the top of the ninth when Manuel Margot hit a double to score Byron Buxton and Diego Castillo making it 2-2.

#2 The Giants came back in the bottom of the ninth when Mike Yastrzemski hit a triple and was able to keep on going when Twins second baseman Brooks Lee made a throwing error to third base that sailed over towards the Giants dugout and Yastrzemski scored on a walk off error for the 3-2 win.

#3 Up until the ninth the Giants held onto a 2-0 lead and and starter Blake Snell looking for his first win of the season pitched a dandy, pitching seven innings allowing one hit and striking out eight. Snell shut the Twins out for all seven innings.

#4 The Twins got good pitching out Chris Paddock going five innings allowing five hits and one earned run striking out six batters. The Twins just couldn’t get any run production except for their two run ninth to tie the game.

#5 It’s the All Star break the Giants will be represented by centerfielder Heliot Ramos and pitcher Logan Webb. Talk about the job both of them did in the first half to earn getting in the All Star Game?

Join Marko for the Giants podcasts each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Yastrzemski scores on triple and throwing error to defeat Twins 3-2 in ninth

San Francisco Giants Mike Yastrzemski (center with eye black) is greeted by teammates after hitting a triple and scoring on an throwing error by the Twins second baseman Brooks Lee for the game winning run in the bottom of the ninth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Jul 14, 2024 (AP News photo)

Minnesota (54-42). 000 000 002. 2. 3. 2

San Francisco (47-50). 011 000 001. 3. 8. 0

Time: 2:17

Attendance: 34,115

Sunday, July 14, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Sunday afternoon’s 3-2 walk off victory by the Giants over the visiting Minnesota Twins would have been exciting even if it hadn’t come at a time when the home team was trying to establish itself as a serious contender for postseason play.

It’s no secret that the Giants had been counting on Sunday’s starting pitcher, Blake Snell, to carry them into the postseason. Nor is it a secret that his slow, injury plagued performance before last Tuesday’s strong showing against the Blue Jays was a troubling development.

Snell held Toronto to one hit over five frames that evening to improve his record to 0-3, 7.35. This afternoon, in his first appearance since then, he came as close to perfection as you can get in seven innings.

Facing the minimum possible 21 batters, he retired the first 18 before Manuel Margot touched him for a leadoff single to left. Snell recovered to induce Will Castro to hit into a 6-4-3 double play and fan Brooks Lee. The fans responded with thunderous applause. Castro and Lee eventually would make the two final outs in the top of the ninth that prevented what would have been a demoralizing loss.

Snell threw 80 pitches, 55 for strikes, and gave up just that one hit in his seven inning stint on the mound. He struck out eight. His won-lost record remained 0-3, and his ERA dropped to a still ugly 6.31, but this was the Snell the Giants thought they had acquired this spring.

The Giants went to their bullpen three times; the first, for Tyler Rogers, who hurled a perfect eighth, and and then for Camilo Doval, who faced four batters and blew the save on a walk and doubles to right by Trevor Larnach, pinch hitting for Christian Vásquez, and Margot.

Ryan Walker replaced Doval and got Castro to ground out to second, which allowed Margot to score the tying run, which was charged to Doval; that’s how he came to be charged with his fourth blown save of 2024. . Even this masks how poorly Doval pitched; if Margot hadn’t tripped trying to advance on his double, he would have made it to third easily, and Castro’s slow grounder might have put the Twinkies ahead).

Although this was the first time Chris Paddack, Minnesota’s starting pitcher, faced the Giants this season, Bay Area fans had a chance to see him at work on June 21, when he put in a subpar performance against the current occupants of the Oakland Coliseum.

This was his first career start for Minnesota against San Francisco; his previous seven against them was as a Padre. Paddack, too, has spent some time on the injured list this season, although not as much as Snell. The Twin Cities’ righty was out from June 25 to July 8. He pitched well this afternoon, although, again, not as well as SF’s lefty.

Paddack lasted five innings and gave up two runs, one of them unearned. He, too, faced 21 batters; they got five hits and a walk off him, and he struck out a half a dozen of them. While Snell had to settle for a no decision, Paddack escaped with his and now has a record of 5-3, 4.99.

Minnesota used five relief pitchers. They were Steven Okert (two-thirds of an inning, a hit and a walk with two Ks); Jorge Alcalá (a third of an inning); Caleb Thielbar (two-thirds of an inning, a hit and a strike out); Josh Staumont (struck out the one batter he faced); Griffin Jax (a perfect inning with one strike out); and the losing pitcher, Johoan Durán (one hit and an unearned run after facing one batter).

The Giants took an early lead in the second inning, when they took advantage of Carlos Santana’s failure to hold on to Lee’s relay for what would have been an inning-ending double play to go ahead 1-0. A walk to Yastrzemski and Thairo Estrada’s single to left drove in Matt Chapman, who had hustled down the line in the aborted DP attempt, scored the go ahead tally.

SF doubled its lead with back to back doubles in the third. LaMonte Wade hit the first, a one out shot that bounced over the Visa advertisement in right center field, followed by Patrick Bailey’s fly in the same direction that stayed in play.

Once Walker saved Doval’s bacon, the Giants responded in stunning fashion. Yastrzemski smacked Jhoan Durán’s 96mph splitter to right center field. The ball got past Max Kepler in right and was retrieved by Margot in center.

He threw to Lee at second who relayed the ball in the direction of third base in an attempt to prevent Yastrzemski from turning his hit into a leadoff triple. The ball went past Diego Castillo, and Yastrzemski romped home with the winning run. Lee was charged with the error and Durán, now 5-4, 2.93, with the loss.

This was the first time the Giants had won a series since taking two out of three from the Braves in Atlanta on July 2-4. It was a good way to go into the all-star break. Their next scheduled game will be on Friday, July 19 in Denver.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman: At 38 Twins Santana still provides offense; Minnesota-SF battle today at Oracle

Minnesota Twins Carlos Santana (30) celebrates with third base coach Tommy Watkins (40) after hitting a solo home run in the top of the sixth inning against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sat Jul 13, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman:

#1 Minnesota Twins Carlos Santana provided the extra power and go ahead home run in the top of the sixth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Saturday night in the Twins win over the Giants 4-2.

#2 The Santana home run was under review as it played the left field foul line and was ruled fair it also gave Santana his 30th home run in all current Major League parks.

#3 At 38 years old Santana hit his 13th of the 2024 season and his 314th of his career. In addition to his home run he got a base hit and walked twice.

#4 Hayden Birdsong who started for San Francisco allowed one earned run in five innings and surrendered just two hits. Birdsong has had some good outings filling in for Alex Cobb and Robbie Ray. Birdsong can earn a spot in the rotation as long as he can be consistent with winning ball games.

#5 Twins and Giants match up for the rubber game today at Oracle. Starting pitcher for the Twins RHP Chris Paddack (5-3, ERA 5.18) for the Giants RHP Blake Snell (0-3, ERA 7.85) first pitch 1:05pm PT.

Stephen Ruderman is a MLB podcast contributor at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Weekend Notes: The Core Four and the Twins Lineup Shuffle

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–In the voluminous history of Major League Baseball, you don’t wander upon the story of Sergio Romo, Santiago Casilla, Jeremy Affeldt, and Javier Lopez first.

Or second. Or third.

But fourth? Ok, you’re warming up. The Core Four relievers that were readily available to manager Bruce Bochy in the 2014 playoffs and leading to a third World Series title in five years that season have history… together. Real history.

How much history, and how profound is that history?

This from President and CEO of the Giants, Larry Baer, during Saturday’s pre-game ceremony that honored the Core Four:

In the 2010, 2012, and 2014 postseasons, Romo, Casilla, Affeldt, and Lopez combined to allow nine runs in 79 innings pitched for a collective ERA of 1.10.

“We were a band of misfits, and I was just doing my part,” Lopez recalled during the ceremony.

“We’re getting old,” Affeldt said. “But in my mind, we’re always going to be putting on the orange and black.”

For 30 minutes, with Ryan Vogelsong narrating, and Buster Posey providing critical testimony, a ceremony as unlikely as those it honored was all the rage. Why? Because Romo, Affeldt and Lopez are exceptional talkers, all part of NBC Sports Bay Area this season in one capacity or another.

“He came in silky smooth like the night train,” Romo said of Lopez.

Affeldt was asked how he was somehow ready and confident when Bochy summoned him in Game 7 against the Royals… in the second inning with starter Tim Hudson running on empty before his baseball water could even develop a boil.

“‘Tim Hudson is old. He’s going to run out of steam.'” Affeldt said in recalling what Bochy told him prior to that decisive game. Bochy’s words worked; Affeldt recorded seven outs while allowing one hit and one hit batter, and was immediately locked in the second inning. In a decision left to that night’s official scorer, Affeldt was awarded the win in the biggest game of his career. Some dude named Madison Bumgarner would follow Affeldt with a pretty good, five inning stint as well, but Affeldt’s run was the one that caught the attention of the history books.

Posey, armed with numbers he said he culled just minutes before taking the podium, provided the timeline for the Core Four.

Romo arrived first in 2008 and had the longest tenure. His 722 innings pitched for the Giants, included a win in each of the three magical postseasons and microscopic ERA’s in 2012 and 2014. On Saturday, he was in full character, wearing his leather jacket and one of his many t-shirts adorned with his signature phrase, “I just look illegal.”

Casilla, the only one of the four with a profile as a closer, pitched 645 innings for the Giants. He was well-known for his stop-and-go pitch delivery and his meticulous nature on the mound. Posey recalled the occasion on which Casilla shook his catcher seven times before settling for the pitch Posey offered first in the sequence.

Affeldt was the lefty specialist summoned by Boch to get one lefty hitter on numerous occasions. Posey recalled that Affeldt was particularly locked in during an appearance in which his first pitch hit the dirt and then bounced off Posey’s throat.

“He inevitably gets out of the inning, but I had a ruptured Adams Apple,” Posey said, not wanting to be entranced like Affeldt.

Lopez had 451 regular season appearances in his seven seasons with the Giants after he was acquired via trade with the Pirates in 2010. He racked up 533 innings pitched, many of those with Posey catching. Posey said Lopez was always easy and smart with his intellect and wit, a product of his education at the University of Virginia, where he gained a degree in psychology.

“We all competed with each other, we battled with each other, and we also picked each other up. And I think those are the moments that made us great teammates,” Lopez said.

THE TWINS TURN TO VAZQUEZ AND LEE IN AN EMERGENCY INFIELD MAKEOVER

Manager Rocco Baldelli is always pushing. And his team, the Twins, doesn’t mind being pushed.

They finished the first half with a grueling stretch, 16 road contests in a 22-game span. The last two stops–at the White Sox, with four games in three days, then at the Giants for three, after an off-day, but a three-hour plus flight away.

Accordingly, the scheduling gods granted the Twins the longest All-Star break imaginable with five full days off, and a Saturday night resumption to play at home in Minneapolis.

And Baldelli blurted, “We don’t want five days off.”

And Baldelli didn’t want his makeshift infield with catcher Christian Vazquez playing third base for the first time ever, and Brooks Lee in his 10th Major League game at second base, feeling like they were anything less than comfortable.

The manager raved about both saying Vazquez was “not lacking in self-belief to play this game,” and that Brooks was “mesmerzing.” Baldelli didn’t stop there, pointing out that both guys played all nine innings defensively, and Vazquez fielded a bunt.

GM Thad Levine and crew are unlikely to leave the Twins without some options for Sunday’s first half finale, so Vazquez doesn’t have to create magic in back-to-back games. Baldelli hinted at a move, and that turned out to be 26-year old Diego Castillo, who went nine innings in the 3-2 Twins series-defining loss. Castillo played in 96 games for the Pirates in 2022, but only one game for the Diamondbacks in 2023.

Carlos Santana really made Minnesota’s lineup work on Saturday. The 33-year old veteran slugger hit his 314th home run, and completed a nice, tidy set of home runs in all 30 current ballparks. But he wasn’t excited; he’s been doing this stuff for way too long.

“Up and down,” he said. “It’s a long season.”

Carlos Correia–Giants’ fans hyper-focused on high-profile free agent acquisitions remember him–couldn’t go due to a heel contusion. Correia could have signed with the Giants, seemed like he was going to sign, but instead stayed with the Twins, who crafted a massive deal.

Correia wasn’t quite worth the money last season. He hit 18 home runs in 135 games, but struck out 131 times and hit just .230. This season he has been worth the money with a .308 batting average, 13 home runs and just 53 strikeouts in 75 of the Twins 95 games.

NOTES

On April 15, the Giants were 7-10. On May 1, they were 14-17. On May 21, they 23-26, and on June 15, they were 34-37.

And now, with the first half concluded, the Giants are 47-50, and they need a break, and so does everyone else watching this. This team is 40-40 in its last 80 games, and 22-21 in day games after they won on Sunday afternoon.

It’s a lot, and it’s not a lot at all. But the Giants have to figure out what it’s going to be in a really short period of time after the All-Star break. They open with a trip to Colorado for three, to the Los Angeles Dodgers for four, followed by four home games against the Rockies.

Twins Santana homers; Larnach scores insurance run in 4-2 win over Giants at Oracle

Minnesota Twins’ Carlos Santana (30) runs the bases after hitting a solo home run against the San Francisco Giants during the sixth inning of a baseball game Saturday, July 13, 2024, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez)

By William Espy

SAN FRANCISCO–The San Francisco Giants continued their three-game series against the Minnesota Twins on Saturday evening in front of a crowd of 32,518 fans. The Giants defeated the Twins in the first game of the series on Friday, with a final score of 7-1. Saturday the Giants just couldn’t get enough hitting and lost in a two run game to the Twins 4-2 at Oracle Park.

Entering the night, the Giants found themselves three games out of a wild-card spot, while the Twins were looking to hold onto theirs as the Boston Red Sox and Kansas City Royals looked to chase them down. Byron Buxton, who is in the middle of an eight-game hitting streak, was notably out of the lineup for the Twins.

Carlos Correa was scratched last minute as well, meaning the visitors were without two of their key players to start the night. Ryan Jeffers entered the lineup, and the rest of the infield was shifted around for Minnesota to accommodate the change.

Prior to the game, the Giants had a Wall of Fame ceremony for the “Core Four”: Jeremy Affeldt, Javier Lopez, Santiago Casilla, and Sergio Romo. The four relief pitchers were an important part of the Giants’ bullpen when the team won the World Series in 2010, 2012, and 2014.

It’s rare to see a group of players given an honor like the Wall of Fame at the same time, but under these circumstances, it seemed clear that the organization had an opportunity to do something special this time and they were ultimately rewarded with a plaque on King Street. In a symbolic passing of the torch, the inductees threw out the ceremonial first pitch to current members of the Giants’ bullpen.

With quite a few franchise legends at the ballpark for this game, there was certainly pressure on the Giants to perform at a high level and given the state of the Twins’ lineup, they had no excuses not to. They have historically been successful against the Twins at Oracle Park, as they had won seven of their last nine home games against them.

It was a battle of young pitchers, as both starters had a combined total of 21 career MLB starts. The Giants’ #4 prospect, Hayden Birdsong made his fourth career MLB start for the home team. Meanwhile, the Twins went with Simeon Woods Richardson who was making his 17th career start, and first appearance against the Giants.

Game recap: Things got off to a rough start for Birdsong, as he hit the Twins’ leadoff hitter Willi Castro to start the night. After two fly-outs to Michael Conforto and a weak ground ball which was handled by Patrick Bailey, Birdsong was able to get through the first inning with no further consequences.

Brett Wisely got the first hit of the night in the bottom of the first, and a two-out single by Bailey put runners on the corners. Oracle Park erupted moments later as fans thought Matt Chapman gave the Giants the lead with a three-run home run, but the ball was just outside of the foul pole and it remained a 0-0 ballgame for the time being. After multiple long foul balls, eventually, Chapman flew out to Castro to end the inning.

Both pitchers were struggling early despite not giving up a run in the first inning. Birdsong’s control was leaving much to be desired, which led to him walking Carlos Santana in the second inning. Meanwhile, Woods Richardson had thrown 22 pitches after just a single inning.

A fantastic diving catch by Mike Yastrzemski in the top of the third inning robbed the Twins of their first hit of the night. After three innings, neither team had registered a run but both had stranded a few batters. Birdsong’s control continued to be an issue as the game progressed though, as in the fourth inning he hit his second batter of the night, this time it was Jeffers.

This ultimately led to the Twins getting on the scoreboard, as a one-out double by Matt Wallner drove Jeffers in. There was also an error on the play by Yastrzemski which allowed Wallner to advance to third, keeping the pressure on Birdsong.

He walked Santana for the second time but seemed to be on the right track after striking out Max Kepler. Unfortunately for the Giants though, that wasn’t the case as a passed ball would allow Wallner to score and make it 2-0 in favor of the visitors. A ground ball to Chapman by Manuel Margot would allow the Giants to get out of trouble.

Heading into the bottom of the fourth inning, Woods Richardson’s pitch count was under control and the Giants were struggling to make solid contact against him. The first two batters in the inning struck out before Conforto drew a walk. Then, the Giants got their spark as a ground-rule double from Wilmer Flores put them both in scoring position for Yastrzemski.

He hit a slow dribbler to the shortstop, who was unable to make a play. As a result, Conforto scored and the Giants reduced the lead to a single run with runners on the corners. They’d be left stranded though, as Thairo Estrada would fly out to left field and end the inning.

The Twins tried to get a rally going in the fifth inning, but they ended up leaving two runners stranded. By the midway point of the inning, there was movement in the Giants bullpen, and rightfully so, as it seemed like Birdsong was running on empty.

Moments later, the Twins followed suit and started warming up some relief pitchers of their own. Soler put pressure on Woods Richardson immediately with a lead-off double. That pressure resulted in a wild pitch during the very next at-bat which allowed Soler to easily advance to third base and now the tying run was just 90 feet away.

Wisely struck out after a lengthy at-bat, but Heliot Ramos brought Soler home with a slow groundball single up the middle. With one out and a runner on, Rocco Baldelli made a call to the bullpen. Cole Sands entered the game in the bottom of the fifth, ending Woods Richardson’s night fairly early. Sands would quickly get out of the inning as Bailey grounded into a double play.

Both starters would receive no decision on the night, as Taylor Rogers would come out to start the sixth inning for the Giants. Rogers struck out the first batter he faced, but the veteran Santana restored Minnesota’s lead with a solo shot to make it 3-2.

The play was put under review and after a lengthy second look, the call was confirmed to the dismay of the fans in attendance. Kepler nearly added a tally of his own with a hard-hit ball that ended up bouncing into McCovey Cove, but this one was called a foul ball which was confirmed after review. Kepler did end up getting on base with a single though.

Rogers wouldn’t last a full inning, as he was pulled for Randy Rodriguez after 31 pitches and only one out. Rodriguez gave up a single to the first batter he faced, Margot, but Vazquez grounded into a double play to end the inning.

After a scoreless top of the seventh inning, the Twins made a pitching change once again to start the bottom of the inning as Jorge Alcala entered the game. The Giants started the eighth inning well with Erik Miller taking over on the mound and getting the first two batters out.

Santana continued to be a spark plug for the Twins though, as he got a single to swing momentum in Minnesota’s favor. Kepler followed suit, getting a single into right field which advanced the runner to third. Margot who was 1-for-3 on the night at this point stepped up with a chance to either extend his team’s lead or he could get his opposition out of trouble. He struck out looking, and the Giants kept the deficit at a single run.

Griffin Jax entered the game for the Twins to start the bottom of the eighth. He struck out Wisely to start the inning and Ramos flew out to right field, giving the Giants two outs very quickly. The next batter, Bailey hit a ball hard into into the gap.

It was nearly a home run but was just short. It ended up being the next best thing though, as his triple put the tying run 90 feet away once again. They’d be unable to capitalize though, as Chapman flew out to right field.

Sean Hjelle entered the game in the top of the ninth to try to keep the Giants deficit at one before their final chance to tie things up. Vazquez got his first hit of the night to start the inning, and Castro followed it up with a single of his own.

Larnach stepped up to the plate with no outs and runners on first and second and got his first hit of the night as well. As fans started prematurely heading for the exit, things had the ability to get disastrous for the home team.

The Twins scored a run on Jeffers’ groundball, but the Giants got a double play as well, which was likely the best-case scenario for them. Brooks Lee walked then leisurely jogged to second base with no opposition. Ultimately, the Giants escaped with minimal damage though as Wallner would strike out to leave two runners stranded in scoring position.

As the Giants looked to pull off a comeback at the 11th hour, the Twins had Jhoan Duran take over on the mound for the bottom of the ninth. Conforto struck out to begin the inning, then LaMonte Wade Jr stepped up to the plate as a pinch hitter for Wilmer Flores. He grounded out to second base, and Yastrzemski stepped up to the plate as the Giants’ final hope. He’d ground out as well, and the Giants would fall 4-2. Cole Sands would be credited with the win, while Taylor Rogers got the loss.

Twins and Giants duel once again Sunday at Oracle Park in the rubber game match starting pitcher for Minnesota RHP Chris Paddock (5-3, ERA 5.18) for San Francisco Blake Snell (0-3, ERA 7.85) first pitch 1:05pm

San Francisco Giants podcast with Morris Phillips: Birdsong starts for Giants tonight against Twins at Oracle

San Francisco Giants Sat Jul 13, 2024 starting pitcher Hayden Birdsong will duel against Minnesota Twins starting pitcher Simeon Woods Richardson at Oracle Park in San Francisco (Getty file photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Morris:

#1 Morris, the San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Kyle Harrison pitched into the sixth inning on Friday night against one of the toughest line ups in baseball the Minnesota Twins pitching shutout ball talk about a quality start.

#2 Brett Wisely was key with three hits and two RBIs in the Giants 7-1 win. Run production and good pitching won this series opener for San Francisco.

#3 With the Giants having lost four of their last five games Friday’s win was crucial and Harrison delivered with a quality start.

#4 Harrison also got defensive support from Wisely and Heliot Ramos behind him on the diamond to stop some balls from getting through.

#5 Tonight (Saturday) a game that your covering the Twins will start RHP Simeon Woods Richardson (3-1, ERA 3.48) and for the Giants RHP Hayden Birdsong (1-0, ERA 4.40) first pitch slated at 4:05pm PT

Morris Phillips is a podcast contributor at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Harrison pitches 5 strong innings, Wisely 3 hits key in Giants 7-1 win over Twins

San Francisco Giants pitcher Kyle Harrison (right) hands over the ball to manager Bob Melvin in the sixth inning sixth inning against the Minnesota Twins at Oracle Park in San Francisco (AP News photo)

Minnesota (53-41). 000 001 000. 1. 10. 0

San Francisco (46-49). 120 011 20x. 7. 9. 0

Time: 2:24

Attendance: 34,106

Friday, July 12, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Friday night the Giants bounced back from the defeat they had suffered at the hands of Toronto Wednesday afternoon, a defeat that could have demoralized them. The team they beat Friday night was far superior to the one that beat them Thursday, but the Giants scored a resounding 7-1 triumph over the Minneapolis Twins.

The enigmatic Kyle Harrison, who started for the home town nine, had lost his previous start six days ago in Cleveland, going 3-1/3 innings and surrendering five runs, four earned, in a 5-4 defeat. That was his first start since sitting out 20 games with a sprained right ankle.

His most effective pitch is the four seam fastball, a delivery that the Twins thrive upon. His record entering the fray was 4-4, 4.24 (hence the adjective “enigmatic”). He held the visitors scoreless for the 5-1/3 innings he was on the mound, but one posthumous run, earned, was charged against him when Rylan Walker, who relieved Harrison after he had allowed a leadoff single to Carlos Correa and a double to Carlos Santana, retired Will Castro on a grounder to first that drove in the former from third, ending the shutout but leaving the orange and black ahead, 3-1.

Harrison allowed five hits and a base on balls during his tenure, striking out three to earn the win that made him 5-4, 4.08 for the season. He threw 83 pitches, 50 qualifying as strikes. Melvin and Co. used three relievers, Ryan Walker (1-2/3 IP, two hits); Tyler Rogers (an inning, a hit, a strikeout); and Camilo Duval (one inning, two hits, and a strikeout).

Harrison’s opposite number was Joe Ryan, born San Francisco and residing in San Anselmo. The Giants made him their 39th round draft choice in 2014, out of Sir Francis Drake High, but he chose to attend Cal State Stanislaus, from which Tampa Bay selected him in the seventh round of the 2018 draft.

The Twin Cities acquired his services in ’21, when he was the centerpiece of the trade that sent Nelson Cruz to St. Pete. He went 11-10, 4.51 for the Twinkies last year and had a record of 6-5, 3.29 when he threw his first pitch of the evening.

He, too, lasted 5-1/3 frames, but there the similarity ends. Ryan allowed five runs all of them earned, on six hits. He walked three and struck out six and had a pitch count of 98 (62 strikes). He took the loss and now has a record of 6-6, 3.53.

The team from Minneapolis-St. Paul, like SF, sent three other pitchers to the mound. Caleb Thhielbar worked two thirds of an inning; Josh Staumont and Kody Funderburk toiled an inning apiece. Staumont was charged with two runs. on two hits and a walk; Funderburk, with a walk. Staumont logged a K.

San Francisco took an early lead with a run in the first inning on a lead off triple to right by Jorge Soler followed by LaMonte Wade, Jr.’s, sacrifice fly to left. They tacked on an additional two tallies in the second on Mike Yastrzemski’s double to left that plated Thairo Estrada, who had reached base after forcing Conforto out at second, and Brett Wisely’s RBI pop fly single to center.

Wisely’s made more resounding contact in his next at bat, in the sixth. He smacked a one out triple off the Visa advertisement on the right center field fence. He trotted home with the Giants’. third run when Soler followed up with a single to left.

Wisely continued his offensive rampage with another shot to right center. This one bounced over the same Visa ad for an automatic double that brought Chapman home from third with Giants’ fourth run. The blow came off Caleb Thielbar, who had relieved Ryan with runners on first and second and one down.

When it rains, it pours, and San Francisco poured it on in the home seventh against Josh Staumont, the Twin Cities’ third pitcher. Michael Concerto’s two bagger with Ramos, who had singled, and Chapman, who had walked, on base increased the Giants’ advantage to 7-1.

All star Héliot Ramos, who went two for four, made a beautiful diving catch of Carlos Santana’s dying quail in the top of the fourth. Jorge Soler also went two for four with an RBI . But it was Wisely whose star shone the brightest.

He made a nifty leaping grab at short of Byron Buxton’s soft liner with two on and no outs that for the moment prevented a run from scoring. More noteworthy was his work at the plate. He went three for three with a single, a double, and triple, driving in a pair of runs.

The Giants may yet be contender. They’ll face the Twins again Saturday, in the second of this three game series. Righty Hayden Birdsong (1-0, 4.40) will face the Twins’ Simeon Woods Richardson (3-1, 3.48) at 4:15 in the afternoon.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Tough luck Giants lose grip to Jays in six run sixth; SF looking for a bounce back today at Oracle

San Francisco Giants shortstop Brett Wisely (left) can’t hang onto the baseball as the Toronto Blue Jays Ernie Clement (28) makes into second base safely at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Jul 10, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 All Star selected Giants pitcher Logan Webb got lit up in the top of the sixth inning by the Toronto Blue Jays at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wednesday night was it a matter of losing command or the Jays had a good read on his pitches.

#2 Webb had a line of eight hits, seven runs all earned and four strikeouts. It’s line you don’t see too often from one of his performances.

#3 Blue Jays lead off hitter George Springer was seeing the ball well going two for five, two hits and three RBIs. The Blue Jays say his value in the lead off spot has paid off a game or two.

#4 One hitter that Blue Jays starting pitcher Chris Bassitt had keyed in on was Heliot Ramos one of the Giants most dangerous hitter. Bassitt was able to silence him most of the way as Ramos was one for four with one RBI.

#5 Giants go back to the drawing board as they host the Jays in game three of the series for today’s matinee. Starters for the Blue Jays former Giant RHP Kevin Gausman (6-8, ERA 4.64) and for the Giants RHP Jordan Hicks (4-5, 3.47) first pitch 12:45pm PT at Oracle Park.

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

SF Giants Thursday game wrap: Early offense for Blue Jays spells series loss for Giants 5-3

Photo courtesy of Toronto Blue Jays.

By Titus Wilkinson (@TitusWisme)

SAN FRANCISCO- The Giants closed out their three-game series against the Toronto Blue Jays on Thursday.

So far, this series had gone both ways with the Giants winning the first game in walk-off fashion while losing the second game 10-6, meaning today’s game decided who would win the series.

Getting the start on the mound for the Giants was right-hander and former Blue Jay Jordan Hicks. Heading into this game Hicks had a 4-5 record with a 3.79 ERA.

For the Blue Jays it was former Giant Kevin Gausman starting who had a 6-8 record and 4.60 ERA before playing in today’s game.

Hicks found himself in some trouble right off the hop in this one when after giving up two hits Vlad Guerrero Jr. grounded out bringing home a run getting the Blue Jays an early lead. Then Giants villain Justin Turner got an RBI on a sac fly, followed up by a homer from Danny Jansen who snuck one over the left field wall putting Toronto up 3-0 in the first inning.

The Giants did quickly respond in the bottom of the first when all-star Heliot Ramos smoked a two-run homer over the center field wall getting his 14th HR of the season making it a 3-2 ballgame.

Problems wouldn’t arise again for Hicks until the fourth inning when Leo Jiménez smacked an RBI single to center field. Then in the fifth Spencer Horwitz lead off the inning with a bomb to right field as the solo shot was his fourth of the season. After hitting Justin Turner, the Giants would make a pitching change bringing in right-hander Randy Rodríguez.

The Giants relief pitching did their job in this one as they gave up no runs and only one walk.

Hicks finished his day pitching 4.1 innings giving up five earned runs, eight hits, and only managing to strike out one batter.

While Hicks had a rough day Gausman had a great outing pithing a solid seven innings only giving up two earned runs and striking out three.

Toronto would turn to Chad Green to close this game out who has been fantastic so far this season sporting a 1.57 ERA and 2-1 record.

That terrific play from Green continued in the ninth as he retired the Giants first two batters easily.

Down to their final out Mike Yastrzemski made things interesting with a solo home run over the right field wall making it a 5-3 game.

That’s as close as the Giants got as Wilmer Flores struck out swinging securing Toronto’s 43rd win of the season.

For the Blue Jays they had a combined 10 hits and got them from all over their lineup with Horwitz, Jansen, and Kevin Kiermaier tying for the lead with two hits each.

The only real standout batter in the Giants lineup was unsurprisingly Heliot Ramos with his two-run homer with Yaz picking up the other lone RBI on his solo shot in the ninth.

With the loss the Giants fall to 45-49 but will look to bounce back when they open up a three-game homestand against the tough Minnesota Twins tomorrow at 7:15 p.m.