Padres beat Giants, could move into first-place tie
Published in Baseball
SAN FRANCISCO — The Padres played just eight games against National League West opponents over the season’s first two months.
They did not face the Dodgers until June 8, the furthest into a season the two team met for the first time in 25 years.
That was part of a run of 14 division games in 18 days, including seven against the Dodgers.
The Padres have not seen them again since, and before beginning a series against the Giants here Monday had played just seven intradivision games in nearly two months.
The wait has given way to some exciting late-season matchups.
The Padres were playing the Giants on Tuesday night with a chance to get into first place in the NL West, if they could win and the Dodgers lost to the Angels in Anaheim.
They headed to the clubhouse at Oracle Park after beating the Giants 5-1 not knowing whether they would be in first place, as the Angels had just tied the Dodgers 6-6 in the ninth inning.
The Padres have not been atop the division since they were a half-game up on the Giants on Sept. 25, 2010. The last time they were even within a game of first place later than June was on the second-to-last day of the 2010 season.
That season ended with the Padres having won 90 games but two games back in the division and a game out of the only wild-card spot.
There are three wild-card spots available now, and the Padres hold the second of those, 3½ games ahead of their nearest pursuer.
Tuesday’s game was the Padres’ 120th of the season, leaving 42 to play. The standings are far from set.
But it doesn’t get much more immediate in mid-August that the two-week stretch the Padres are in.
Tuesday was the second of 13 consecutive games against only the Giants and Dodgers.
The Padres will finish the series here Wednesday afternoon before heading to Los Angeles. After a day off, they will play three games at Dodger Stadium.
The Giants and Dodgers will visit Petco Park next week, the Giants for four and the Dodgers for another three.
The Padres led almost continuously from the start on Tuesday after a wind single helped them extend the first inning and score a run, and they kept making Giants starter Robbie Ray throw extra pitches after that.
Ray ended up lasting longer than Padres starter Nestor Cortes.
That was because Padres manager Mike Shildt has what is widely considered the major leagues’ deepest and best bullpen, and he is not going to waste it.
With Cortes at just 79 pitches, Shildt went to rookie David Morgan to face Giants cleanup hitter Willy Adames with runners at the corners and two down in the fifth inning.
Morgan struck out Adames on four pitches.
After Ray finished the sixth inning on his 113th pitch, Morgan went back out.
A single and a walk at the start and another single with one out loaded the bases and ended Morgan’s night.
This time, Jason Adam came in and finished off the inning on four pitches.
Adam also worked a scoreless seventh before Adrian Morejón did the same in the eighth and Robert Suarez followed suit in the ninth.
The Padres did most of their damage against Ray, who got unlucky in the first inning before the game got away from him in the second.
Ray appeared to have ended the first inning without incident when Manny Machado popped a ball just beyond the right side of the infield. But the circularly swirling wind on the San Francisco Bay blew the ball about three feet to the left of charging right fielder Tyler Fitzerald, who had called off the two infielders giving chase, and the ball fell to the grass.
Xander Bogaerts hit the next pitch off the base of the left field wall to move Machado to third base, and the Padres scored without another pitch being thrown when Ray’s spike got stuck in the dirt as he went into his windup and the balk moved both runners up.
The Giants reset the game at 1-1 on a double and two singles, though only Casey Schmitt’s drive off the wall with one out was straightforward.
The first single was a line drive by Rafael Devers that was right to Machado at third base. However, Machado flinched as the ball approached and then zipped past his glove. And after Cortes struck out Willy Adames, Wilmer Flores sent a dribbler up the third base line that stopped on the edge of the grass as Machado and Cortes watched it and Devers ran home.
The game was tied only as long as it took Ramón Laureano to single on the ninth pitch he saw from Ray and Jose Iglesias to hit his first home run of the season on the first pitch Ray threw him.
A lead-off double by Laureano led to the Padres extending their lead to 4-1 in the fourth inning when Jake Cronenworth singled up the middle.
Jackson Merrill’s home run in the eighth concluded the scoring.
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