Giants just get by Astros in extras 3-2 in series opener; SF scores 3 runs in 10th for walk off win

San Francisco Giants Jorge Soler (2) is congratulated by Thairo Estrada (right) on scoring on a triple hit by Mike Yastrzemski in the bottom of the sixth inning against the Houston Astros on Mon Jun 10, 2024 at Oracle Park in San Francisco (AP News photo)

Houston (30-37). 000 000 100 2. 3 9. 1

San Francisco (33-34) 000 001 000 3. 4. 9 1. 10 (10 innings)

Time: 2:46

Attendance: 32,820

Monday, June 10, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–The orange and black returned to Oracle Park Monday evening after completing a week long trip in which they split six games, leaving them at 32-34, still stuck two games under .500. Monday night’s exciting come from behind win brought them a giant step closer in their quest for a winning season, which, as things stand now, could qualify them for the playoffs.

Southpaw Kyle Harrison, a member of what currently is the Giants’ three man rotation, started Monday night after having lost his last two starts and saddled with a record of 4-3, 4.18. Although highly promising, the sophomore southpaw is no Spahn or Sain, and the weather service doesn’t predict three days of rain.

Nevertheless, Harrison was excellent in his 6-1/3 inning tenure on the mound. He allowed one run, earned, on four hits, half of which came in the seventh frame. He struck out three ‘stros and didn’t walk any. He had to settle for a no decision that shank his ERA to 3.96.

The Astros’ media guide, published during spring training, started off its thumbnail biography of right hander Spencer Arrighetti by calling him the team’s “top pitching prospect.” This evening they called on him to start against the Giants. He was Houston’s sixth round draft choice in the 2021 draft and rose quickly through their farm system from the rookie level Florida Complex League that summer to the AAA Sugarland Space Cowboys last year.

Over his three year minor league apprenticeship he went 19-15, 4. 44 with an opponents’ batting average of .229. About two thirds of his appearances were as a starter. In the bigs, he was 3-5, 5.79 when he came to work Monday evening.

That’s a small sample, and not an impressive one. It might have been better if he hadn’t been forced to leave his last start after three innings when a line drive bruised his left calf. That was on June 4, so the injury wasn’t serious enough to make him miss a start.

Monday evening, he pitched up to his hype, not down to his record. The youngster went 5-2/3 frames and, like Harrison, allowed but one run, also earned, and four hits. He walked three and struck out a half a dozen of his opponents. 61 of his 99 offerings went in the strike column, and he lowered his earned run average to a still elevated 5.33.

Harrison started out strong. Only nine Astros came to bat in the first three innings. The only one who reached base was the pesky José Altuve, who did so by leading off with a grounder to third that Casey Schmitt, subbing for the ailing Matt Chapman, couldn’t handle. Schmitt was charged with an error, and Altuve was erased when Alex Bergman bounced into an around the horn double play two pitches later. Schmitt looked good on that and subsequent plays.

Arrighetti held the Giants at bay until the sixth, yielding only three hits and an equal number of walks until Mike Yastrzemsky drove Jorge Soler, who had walked, blasted a triple off the 415 foot marker in right center field to break up what had been a scoreless tie. That was the end of the line for Arrighetti. Seth Martínez replaced him on the mound and got the third out, a grounder to third by Thairo Estrada.

Houston retied the score in a similar fashion in their next turn at bat. Their triple to right was a leadoff blow by Yordán Alvarez, who scored when the next batter, Jeremy Peña, lifted a sacrifice fly to deep center field. Jake Meyers smacked a double down the left field line that sent Harrison to the showers. Sean Hjelle replaced him and got consecutive ground outs to short to limit the damage.

Tayler Scott set San Francisco down in order in the home seventh and allowed just a walk in the eighth.

Ryan Walker took over for Hjelle in the top of the eighth. Pinch hitter Jon Singleton greeted him with a hard hoit sinking liner to right, where Yastrzemki made a spectacular somersaulting catch to rob Singleton of extra bases. Walker allowed a single to Victor Caratrini, but back to back ground outs to third by Altuve and Bregman ended the threat.

The top of the ninth brought out the light and sound show of a Camilo Doval performance. Thanks to a walk to Peña and an infield single by Mauricio Dubón, followed by a two out wild pitch, Doval almost threw the game away. But he got his third strikeout of the frame, fanning Abreu and taking us into the bottom of the ninth with the score still knotted at one all.

Now it was up to Josh Hader to keep Houston’s hopes alive. He did, allowing only a two out pinch hit single to Wilmer Flores.

The tenth frame began with Erik Miller on the mound for the Giants and Joey Loperfido, running for Abreu, placed on second for the Astros. Cabbage laid down a bunt, Miller fielded it and threw to Flores at first.Umpire John Libka called him out.

Houston challenged the call. New York overturned it, giving the ‘stros runners on the corners with none down. Caratini hit a sacrifice fly that brought in Loperfido with the leading run. Cabbage stole second and went to third on Altuve’s bunt single. Bregman’s single to center made it 3-1 when Cabbage crossed the plate. Randy Rodríguez took over for Miller and got the final out, a grounder to third.

But the Giants weren’t dead yet. Rafael Montero came in to pitch for Houston. Schmitt was placed on second. He scored on Brett Wisely’s single to right center.Héliot Ramos drove a hard shot towards short that Peña let get by him for an error that scored Wisely and drew the Giants to within a run of tying things up.

Patrick Bailey shot a single to center, putting Ramos on second representing the potential winning run. Montero’s failure to handle Conforto’s comebacker loaded the bases, bringing up Soler. He hit a fly to deep left that would have been an extra base hit if Bailey’s crossing the plate with the winning run didn’t end the game, which made Soler’s RBI shot a count as a single.

The win went to Rodriguez, who threw three pitches. He’s now 2-1, 3.05. Montero was charged with his third blown save and his second loss against one win,

The three game series will resume Tuesday, evening at 6:45. Ronel Blanco (5-2, 2.78) will start for Houston, and Jordan Hicks (4-2, ERA 2.82) will be throwing for San Francisco, Monday night’s thrilling roller coaster ride will be a hard act to follow.

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