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Post by Zig on Jun 2, 2014 5:52:59 GMT -5
ST. LOUIS (AP) -- Tim Hudson still refuses to take credit for his quick start to the season. ''There comes a lot of luck with it,'' he said. ''I'm just throwing the ball and missing (bat) barrels.'' The San Francisco right-hander threw seven shutout innings and Joaquin Arias keyed a four-run first inning with a two-run single to lead the Giants to an 8-0 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Sunday. The Giants have won five of six and have the best record in the NL at 37-20. St. Louis has lost four of five. The Cardinals managed just four hits. Hudson (6-2) gave up three hits, struck out six, and walked two in improving to 4-4 against St. Louis. Hudson's previous win against the Cardinals came on July 19, 2007, as a member of the Atlanta Braves. He retired the last 11 batters he faced on Sunday. The 38-year-old has a 1.75 ERA, second in the NL, and has gone at least seven innings in nine of 11 starts. Hudson missed the final two months of last season with a fractured ankle, but has rebounded with one of the best starts of his 14-year career. Hudson took control early after his teammates gave him four early runs. ''Great job,'' San Francisco manager Bruce Bochy said. ''You go seven innings and no runs against this club, you're doing something.'' Catcher Buster Posey said Hudson simply keeps rolling along. ''Nothing fancy, he just goes out there and pitches to contact, like he always does,'' Posey said. ''He's smart and he knows how to attack the hitters. Hudson said he was able to relax after the early run support. ''I just went out there and tried to pound the strike zone,'' he said. ''A starting pitcher always welcomes early runs. It makes our job a whole lot easier.'' Arias came through with a key hit. He got the start after Michael Morse fouled a ball off his left foot in batting practice. In his second start in the past 24 games, Arias went 3 for 4 with three RBIs. He broke out of a 0-for-14 skid with a bases-loaded single in the first. ''He stays ready and he's got a lot of poise,'' Bochy said. ''He really needed a game like this.'' Morse is expected back in the lineup on Tuesday when the Giants play at Cincinnati, according to Bochy. Posey had three hits in returning to the lineup after missing three games with tightness in his lower back. ''I feel pretty good,'' Posey said. ''Hopefully, it is something I can manage.'' Lance Lynn (6-3) gave up seven runs, four earned, and eight hits in 3 1-3 innings after posting his first career shutout on Tuesday against the York Yankees. ''One of those days where that will happen,'' Lynn said. ''A tough one.'' Angel Pagan, Hunter Pence and Posey singled to start the four-run first. Posey's RBI hit came on Lynn's 10th pitch. Gregor Blanco reached on an error by Kolten Wong and Pence scored on a groundout by Brandon Crawford. Brandon Hicks walked to set the stage for Arias' bases-loaded single. The error, on a potential double play ball, led to three unearned runs. ''If an out is made there,'' Lynn said. ''We are out of the inning with one run.'' Arias pushed the lead to 5-0 with a run-scoring single in the third. Crawford added an RBI double in the fourth. Blanco brought in the final run with a triple in the sixth. ''You're just going to have those days,'' St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. ''We just couldn't get anything going.'' St. Louis third baseman Matt Carpenter extended his hitting streak to 14 games with a first-inning single. It is the longest current streak in the NL. sports.yahoo.com/news/giants-blank-cardinals-8-0-213938915--mlb.html
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Jun 4, 2014 9:40:01 GMT -5
Awwwwww
Brandon Belt thought Hunter Pence would never get his stolen scooter back.
“I mean it’s just a nice piece of equipment,” Belt said before a recent game in St. Louis. “It’s not something you just get back. It was pretty crazy when it showed up. I think the people who took it felt a little pressure, everybody [in the city] is looking for it. You couldn’t get away from it.”
After Pence tweeted on May 29 that his scooter was stolen, fan support came pouring in and everyone wanted to help find the stolen scooter.
“I was definitely curious because I had a scooter myself last year when I lived in the city,” Belt, the Giants first baseman who is on the 15-day DL with a broken left thumb, said. “Those things, it’s not like you can just go to Walmart and buy those, they’re not really that cheap. We were all kind of curious where it went. For us, we were kind of wondering who would just see it, first of all, and then grab it and then run off and nobody would see him do it.”
Belt said players who ride scooters park them in the clubhouse, then plug them into an outlet to charge them up during the game.
“Usually, the battery last quite a while. Sometimes you’ll take it to a restaurant or something and they’ll let you park it into a little closet or something like that; that’s what happened to [Pence],” said Belt. “So I guess somebody saw him do that and took it and went with it.”
For anyone who isn’t familiar with San Francisco, Belt offers context as to why riding a scooter in the city is really helpful, and why the team hoped Pence would find his.
“I had my big truck in the city last year, and it’s just tough to ride around,” said Belt. “First of all, the streets are narrow and small, and they’re all one-way. If you need to park, you’ve got to do it in the garage. There’s no parking lots. Parking garages are not that big, so it’s just easier to ride a scooter, and there’s just tons of traffic all the time. I mean, it’s not a big peninsula, land-wise. There’s just tons of people stuffed in this small little area and it’s tough to drive around there, so you get on your scooter and you go flying around the sidewalk and it’s easy.”
Pence said he never anticipated so much support from fans when he tweeted his scooter was stolen.
“I really didn’t think that when I sent the tweet that it was going to be anywhere close to what it became, but it was a lot of fun, to be honest with you,” Pence said. “It was funny to read a lot of the comment, even though some people got mad at me for some reason, I forgive them, too. I didn’t mean to offend anybody by my scooter getting stolen.”
Anyone who knows Pence sees his desire for excellence, his contagious energy and his leadership on the team. He’s always trying to encourage his teammates, so when the tables turned and everyone helped him he was overwhelmed.
“There was so much support and so much backing from the fans that it really was uplifting, to be honest with you,” he said. “It was wild that they brought the scooter back.”
Pence said a scooter has been his transportation since he’s been in San Francisco, and he enjoys riding in the fresh air. More than anything, you can tell his scooter suits his personality and the way he plays the game.
“Yeah, I really enjoy the ride,” Pence said.
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Mr mastodon farm
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Post by Mr mastodon farm on Jun 4, 2014 9:47:10 GMT -5
Awwwwww Brandon Belt thought Hunter Pence would never get his stolen scooter back. “I mean it’s just a nice piece of equipment,” Belt said before a recent game in St. Louis. “It’s not something you just get back. It was pretty crazy when it showed up. I think the people who took it felt a little pressure, everybody [in the city] is looking for it. You couldn’t get away from it.” After Pence tweeted on May 29 that his scooter was stolen, fan support came pouring in and everyone wanted to help find the stolen scooter. “I was definitely curious because I had a scooter myself last year when I lived in the city,” Belt, the Giants first baseman who is on the 15-day DL with a broken left thumb, said. “Those things, it’s not like you can just go to Walmart and buy those, they’re not really that cheap. We were all kind of curious where it went. For us, we were kind of wondering who would just see it, first of all, and then grab it and then run off and nobody would see him do it.” Belt said players who ride scooters park them in the clubhouse, then plug them into an outlet to charge them up during the game. “Usually, the battery last quite a while. Sometimes you’ll take it to a restaurant or something and they’ll let you park it into a little closet or something like that; that’s what happened to [Pence],” said Belt. “So I guess somebody saw him do that and took it and went with it.” For anyone who isn’t familiar with San Francisco, Belt offers context as to why riding a scooter in the city is really helpful, and why the team hoped Pence would find his. “I had my big truck in the city last year, and it’s just tough to ride around,” said Belt. “First of all, the streets are narrow and small, and they’re all one-way. If you need to park, you’ve got to do it in the garage. There’s no parking lots. Parking garages are not that big, so it’s just easier to ride a scooter, and there’s just tons of traffic all the time. I mean, it’s not a big peninsula, land-wise. There’s just tons of people stuffed in this small little area and it’s tough to drive around there, so you get on your scooter and you go flying around the sidewalk and it’s easy.” Pence said he never anticipated so much support from fans when he tweeted his scooter was stolen. “I really didn’t think that when I sent the tweet that it was going to be anywhere close to what it became, but it was a lot of fun, to be honest with you,” Pence said. “It was funny to read a lot of the comment, even though some people got mad at me for some reason, I forgive them, too. I didn’t mean to offend anybody by my scooter getting stolen.” Anyone who knows Pence sees his desire for excellence, his contagious energy and his leadership on the team. He’s always trying to encourage his teammates, so when the tables turned and everyone helped him he was overwhelmed. “There was so much support and so much backing from the fans that it really was uplifting, to be honest with you,” he said. “It was wild that they brought the scooter back.” Pence said a scooter has been his transportation since he’s been in San Francisco, and he enjoys riding in the fresh air. More than anything, you can tell his scooter suits his personality and the way he plays the game. “Yeah, I really enjoy the ride,” Pence said. hunter pence is pretty funny extramustard.si.com/2013/09/26/hunter-pence-infomercial-weird-mechanics-kids-youth-baseball-camp-hunters-hitters/
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 4, 2014 22:52:01 GMT -5
Is first place good?
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Post by Zig on Jun 5, 2014 4:40:13 GMT -5
from what I remember, yes...yes it is
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Post by Deleted on Jun 5, 2014 10:25:58 GMT -5
8 game lead bishes. Unfortunately, I think we'll need every last game of it.
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Post by NEW YORK on Jun 5, 2014 13:52:36 GMT -5
Bumgardner on one of those just unbelievable runs
Quickly entering the Cy Young race
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Post by Deleted on Jun 5, 2014 21:02:47 GMT -5
Giants draft Marshall Beede from Vanderbilt.
From Calsnoskier on the Giants hoopla board:
"He's awesome. Great makeup. Leader. 2 major league ready pitches and when he gets his change up consistently, it'll be a plus pitch as well"
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moxie
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Post by moxie on Jun 6, 2014 18:27:55 GMT -5
I think I've started wishin' & hopin' that Samardzija ends up in SF after Timmy is relegated back to the bullpen for the season. Will Bochy and the Giants brass do that though? $ 17 mil would be a lot to pay a closer, and Timmy would probably only end up as the long man. These type of "bang for buck" problems tend to pop up and ruin what would be an otherwise good plan. It's probably a long shot, but you can't just keep running Timmy out there if he's not doing his job. He's getting paid either way so he might as well do something rather than nothing. Or are you saying Jeff would be a $17 mil closer? (I just can't keep typing that insane last name) Remember- talk to me like I'm 5 so I understand, D!
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Jun 6, 2014 18:36:17 GMT -5
Will Bochy and the Giants brass do that though? $ 17 mil would be a lot to pay a closer, and Timmy would probably only end up as the long man. These type of "bang for buck" problems tend to pop up and ruin what would be an otherwise good plan. It's probably a long shot, but you can't just keep running Timmy out there if he's not doing his job. He's getting paid either way so he might as well do something rather than nothing. Or are you saying Jeff would be a $17 mil closer? (I just can't keep typing that insane last name) Remember- talk to me like I'm 5 so I understand, D! Sorry Moxie, It is Lincecum that is getting $ 17 mil this year. And, though he deserves to be demoted or benched, I am thinking the only reason it would not happen would be financial. So, your idea is solid, to me at least. However, these decisions are not always made using logic is all I was going for.
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moxie
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Post by moxie on Jun 6, 2014 18:45:38 GMT -5
Sorry Moxie, It is Lincecum that is getting $ 17 mil this year. And, though he deserves to be demoted or benched, I am thinking the only reason it would not happen would be financial. So, your idea is solid, to me at least. However, these decisions are not always made using logic is all I was going for. Oh, okay. Yeah, Timmy got paid for what he did, not for who he IS. I get that, but at what point do the dollars spent have to take a back seat? I mean... we don't have Dodger money, but it's not like the Giants are broke. This team has a special feel about it and if it wants to make a legit run at it, you gotta pull out all the stops.
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bigddude
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Post by bigddude on Jun 6, 2014 18:53:06 GMT -5
Sorry Moxie, It is Lincecum that is getting $ 17 mil this year. And, though he deserves to be demoted or benched, I am thinking the only reason it would not happen would be financial. So, your idea is solid, to me at least. However, these decisions are not always made using logic is all I was going for. Oh, okay. Yeah, Timmy got paid for what he did, not for who he IS. I get that, but at what point do the dollars spent have to take a back seat? I mean... we don't have Dodger money, but it's not like the Giants are broke. This team has a special feel about it and if it wants to make a legit run at it, you gotta pull out all the stops. There is the million dollar question. Also a factor, how do you deal with Timmy's bruised ego? You know it would kill him inside. And, an unhappy player is not the most productive player usually. That, and you will have a certain percentage of the fan population that will take the tact "How can you do that to him, after all he has done for you?" Last, remember Barry Zito. The kept him in the rotation for years.
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moxie
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Post by moxie on Jun 6, 2014 19:07:11 GMT -5
There is the million dollar question. Also a factor, how do you deal with Timmy's bruised ego? You know it would kill him inside. And, an unhappy player is not the most productive player usually. That, and you will have a certain percentage of the fan population that will take the tact "How can you do that to him, after all he has done for you?" Last, remember Barry Zito. The kept him in the rotation for years. It probably would totally kill him inside, but he's a professional. He can handle it. Just like he did when they put him in the 'pen in 2012. Nothing but "team first". Whether that was an act or not- we bought it, hook, line & sinker. Of course we love him. He's our Freak. But we loved Will. And we loved Barry (both). We'll get over it. Championships have a way of soothing what ails. Can't disagree with you on Zito though. Oy.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 6, 2014 22:10:12 GMT -5
Oh, okay. Yeah, Timmy got paid for what he did, not for who he IS. I get that, but at what point do the dollars spent have to take a back seat? I mean... we don't have Dodger money, but it's not like the Giants are broke. This team has a special feel about it and if it wants to make a legit run at it, you gotta pull out all the stops. There is the million dollar question. Also a factor, how do you deal with Timmy's bruised ego? You know it would kill him inside. And, an unhappy player is not the most productive player usually. That, and you will have a certain percentage of the fan population that will take the tact "How can you do that to him, after all he has done for you?" Last, remember Barry Zito. The kept him in the rotation for years. Honestly, if Timmay hasn't righted himself by the time the trade deadline is over, he can cry himself to sleep on his money pillow. He'll be fine, he'd still be the spot starter or back in the rotation should an injury occur. Also, he'd be back in the rotation next year assuming Vogey isn't re-signed. Timmy handled the bullpen demotion in the playoffs like a champ (when the lights/scrutiny/media focus were the highest), no reason to believe he couldn't take it like a good teammate in the regular season.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 6, 2014 23:05:44 GMT -5
Brandon fecking Crawford beches! Yeeyuh!!!
2-2
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Post by Deleted on Jun 6, 2014 23:21:08 GMT -5
Posey goes yard, 4-2 good guys!
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moxie
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Post by moxie on Jun 6, 2014 23:23:14 GMT -5
Posey goes yard, 4-2 good guys! These guys with their two out hits are unreal!
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Post by Deleted on Jun 6, 2014 23:24:18 GMT -5
Posey goes yard, 4-2 good guys! These guys with their two out hits are unreal! It's gotta be unsustainable, but it's been a great ride so far..... i think last years Cardinals were stupid good with 2 out hits w/risp too.
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moxie
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Post by moxie on Jun 6, 2014 23:37:37 GMT -5
These guys with their two out hits are unreal! It's gotta be unsustainable, but it's been a great ride so far..... i think last years Cardinals were stupid good with 2 out hits w/risp too. They're on pace to crack 100, right? I know there's a slump in there somewhere (everyone talking "June Swoon" and I'm trying not to freak out! lol), but I am really enjoying what I'm seeing right now. I feel unusually under-stressed. I probably shouldn't put that out there. Sorry, baseball gods.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 6, 2014 23:51:06 GMT -5
It's gotta be unsustainable, but it's been a great ride so far..... i think last years Cardinals were stupid good with 2 out hits w/risp too. They're on pace to crack 100, right? I know there's a slump in there somewhere (everyone talking "June Swoon" and I'm trying not to freak out! lol), but I am really enjoying what I'm seeing right now. I feel unusually under-stressed. I probably shouldn't put that out there. Sorry, baseball gods. Oh yeah, they're close to playing .666 ball which would be 108 wins. I don't think they'll end up with 100 or more, but they could realistically hit 97 wins. Unfortunately, realistically, so are injuries and prolonged losing streaks. I love the G's, but they're playing synergistic ball right now.....their roster doesn't seem to mesh with their record. Like I said though, I'll take it, lol. If they can make the playoffs, they've shown recently that anything can happen.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 7, 2014 0:12:21 GMT -5
How is Timmy looking this year??
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moxie
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Post by moxie on Jun 7, 2014 0:26:01 GMT -5
They're on pace to crack 100, right? I know there's a slump in there somewhere (everyone talking "June Swoon" and I'm trying not to freak out! lol), but I am really enjoying what I'm seeing right now. I feel unusually under-stressed. I probably shouldn't put that out there. Sorry, baseball gods. Oh yeah, they're close to playing .666 ball which would be 108 wins. I don't think they'll end up with 100 or more, but they could realistically hit 97 wins. Unfortunately, realistically, so are injuries and prolonged losing streaks. I love the G's, but they're playing synergistic ball right now.....their roster doesn't seem to mesh with their record. Like I said though, I'll take it, lol. If they can make the playoffs, they've shown recently that anything can happen. Yeah, it's pretty crazy how they're just getting it done. Kinda like Buster said postgame about being down 2, "we knew we were gonna come up with something" or someshit like that. Lots of quiet confidence.
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moxie
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Post by moxie on Jun 7, 2014 0:29:16 GMT -5
How is Timmy looking this year?? Up, down and all over the place. Never know which Timmy is gonna show up.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 7, 2014 10:26:48 GMT -5
m.espn.go.com/general/blogs/blogpost?blogname=sweetspot&id=48164&src=desktop&rand=ref~%7B%22ref%22%3A%22http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportshoopla.com%2Fforums%2Fsan-francisco-giants%2F151862-espn-article.html%22%7D&ex_cid=espnapi_public
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Post by Deleted on Jun 7, 2014 10:28:17 GMT -5
Bumgardner on one of those just unbelievable runs Quickly entering the Cy Young race Not gonna lie, this post made me a little hard and a little wet.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 7, 2014 11:12:47 GMT -5
''There comes a lot of luck with it,'' he said. ''I'm just throwing the ball and missing (bat) barrels.''
That's hilarious. It's also true but I do think there is quite a bit of talent involved in missing those bat barrels. LOL
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Post by Zig on Jun 8, 2014 8:22:59 GMT -5
Morse, Giants dash Mets' hopes with walk-off winSAN FRANCISCO -- The Giants have achieved a state of nirvana in which they believe they can win every game, regardless of the deficit they face. Such was the case on Saturday night, when hustling baserunning by Angel Pagan and Hunter Pence led to Michael Morse's walk-off RBI single, which completed a two-run rally in the ninth inning and lifted baseball's winningest team to a 5-4 triumph over the Mets. The Giants (41-21), who have a 9 ½-game lead over the Dodgers in the National League West, recorded their eighth victory when trailing after six innings and their fifth when trailing after seven. Both are NL highs. "That just tells you about what kind of team we have," Morse said. "We find a way. We've been doing it all year. We've been fighting to the last out. ... We don't give up. We truly think that no matter what the score is, we're going to find a way to win." Trailing, 4-3, the Giants began their ninth-inning surge in unlikely fashion. Pagan, whose two-run single in the sixth inning eroded most of New York's three-run lead, struck out on a 1-2 pitch from Mets closer Jenrry Mejia (4-3). But the third strike skipped in the dirt and eluded catcher Anthony Recker. Pagan sped to first base and was safe as Recker's wide throw pulled Lucas Duda off the bag, though the Mets unsuccessfully contested the call. "You have to take advantage of those kind of mistakes," Pagan said. "Sometimes you don't need a hit to win. [Mejia] threw a very nasty pitch. It got away. As they say, speed kills." Manager Bruce Bochy praised Pagan's effort. "You strike out, sometimes you have a tendency to get frustrated and not get down the line, but he busted his tail down the line to beat the throw," Bochy said. "That's where it all started. ... It's how you play the game. You play it right, good things happen. Hustling down the line, you can't take for granted that the throw is going to be right there, and Angel did a great job of that." Morse admitted that he might have sulked instead of sprinting. "I strike out like that, I'm upset with myself," he said. "But [Pagan] hustled right out of the box and got on base, which was the big turning point in the game." Pagan scored on Pence's third hit of the night, a double into the left-field corner that increased the volume of the AT&T Park crowd to postseason level. Buster Posey's deep fly advanced Pence to third -- another example of successfully aggressive baserunning -- and prompted an intentional walk to Pablo Sandoval, which set up a potential inning-ending double play. The Mets didn't get it. Morse lashed Mejia's first pitch to the edge of the warning track in right-center, far beyond the Mets' outfielders, who were playing shallow in case they had to try to throw out Pence at home plate. It was Morse's fourth career walk-off hit and his first since May 27, 2011, when he homered off San Diego's Mike Adams as a member of the Nationals. The ecstatic Giants engulfed Morse between first and second. The Giants were fortunate to have kept the score close, as starter Tim Hudson endured his least-effective outing in a San Francisco uniform, working five innings. He surrendered three runs and seven hits in the first three innings, exceeding the number of earned runs he allowed in all but one of his previous 11 starts and topping the hit total he surrendered in eight games. This was Hudson's briefest performance of the season, other than his three-inning stint in the suspended game at Colorado on May 22. Considering the nine hits and three walks the Mets amassed off him, he did well to limit them to three runs. The Mets probably should have scored more than twice in the third inning, but Ruben Tejada was tagged out between second and third on Recker's bases-loaded single off the right-field wall. Pence played the carom perfectly and quickly relayed the ball to second baseman Brandon Hicks, which likely led to the traffic jam of baserunners. The Mets ultimately stranded 12 and went 3-for-18 with men in scoring position. Earlier, the Giants squandered several scoring chances. Trailing, 3-0, they staged a promising rally in the fifth inning by loading the bases with nobody out against Mets starter Bartolo Colon. But Posey, who delivered Friday night's tiebreaking two-run homer, grounded into a double play to dampen the rally. Posey received another bases-loaded opportunity with two outs in the sixth. This time, Posey struck out, flailing at a 96-mph fastball from reliever Jeurys Familia. Chris Haft is a reporter for MLB.com. Read his blog, Haft-Baked Ideas, and follow him on Twitter at @sfgiantsbeat. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs. mlb.mlb.com/mlb/gameday/index.jsp?gid=2014_06_07_nynmlb_sfnmlb_1&mode=recap_home&c_id=sf&partnerId=ed-8290614-711870763
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moxie
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Post by moxie on Jun 8, 2014 11:19:14 GMT -5
I don't know how this team is doing this, but I love it. It's still so early, but this is a fun ride so far.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 14, 2014 16:44:51 GMT -5
Gmen look like they're in a little bit of a rough patch. Hopefully they can come back today.
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moxie
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Post by moxie on Jun 28, 2014 16:57:32 GMT -5
Yeah, this ride is not so fun right now. UGH!
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