Lodi News-Sentinel

» BLACH GOES 6 2/3 INNINGS FOR WIN — IN RELIEF

- By Kerry Crowley

MIAMI — Fifteen years after Florida Marlins catcher Ivan Rodriguez withstood first baseman J.T. Snow’s attempt to barrel through him at home plate on the final play of the NLDS, Rodriguez’s son Dereck attempted to return the favor on behalf of the San Francisco Giants by rolling through the Marlins on Thursday.

Fifteen years later, the Marlins took a shot and once again hung on as long as they possibly could.

This time, Ty Blach and Pablo Sandoval finished the job for the Giants, combining for extra-inning heroics that helped San Francisco clinch a marathon 6-3, 16-inning victory.

Rookie right-hander Dereck Rodriguez set a new career-high with 6 2/3 innings of two-run ball Thursday, but the Giants needed 6 2/3 more scoreless innings of relief from Blach to salvage the final game of an otherwise miserable series.

“You’re just trying to get zeroes,” Blach said. “That’s the goal every time you go out there. It’s just get a zero and give the offense another chance.”

Blach entered a tie game in the 10th inning and tossed 83 pitches before manager Bruce Bochy called on Sam Dyson to record the final out with the tying run at the plate in the bottom of the 16th.

“He was just determined and focused and what a great effort,” Bochy said of Blach. “He was determined not to lose that game and he gave us more than we thought, really.”

After a miscommuni­cation between Andrew McCutchen and Joe Panik led to a dropped fly ball and eventually a game-tying run in the ninth, the Giants recovered after losing their eighth lead of the series thanks to Blach’s remarkable relief stint.

Though the Giants scored three runs in the first two innings, they didn’t plate another run until Sandoval smashed a two-run single in the top of the 16th to put the team ahead for good. Center fielder Gorkys Hernandez added a sacrifice fly to make it 6-3, and Blach ensured the Giants would escape Miami with at least one win.

“A tough game, a long game,” Sandoval said. “We battled every inning and the bullpen did a great job. Ty Blach, 6 2/3, he went out there and did his job. It’s exciting the way we played.”

Rodriguez was in attendance when Snow came dashing toward home plate in an effort to truck his father Ivan, dislodge the ball and score the tying run, so the 26-yearold knows Thursday’s game wasn’t quite as significan­t as the decisive Game 5 between the Giants and Marlins back in 2003.

But the Giants starter was also on hand for the first three games of his club’s four-game set in Miami, so he understood just how much his team needed a strong outing from him and an even stronger outing from Blach.

“That’s cool, two quality starts in one game,” Rodriguez said. “We’ll take it.”

The finale wasn’t entirely positive for the Giants, as third baseman Evan Longoria fractured his pinky and is out indefinite­ly after taking an 89-mile per hour fastball off of his left hand in the top of the fourth inning.

“I’ll just push as hard as I can to get back as soon as I can,” Longoria said.

For the second straight day, catcher Buster Posey reached base and McCutchen brought him home with another tworun home run that pushed the Giants out in front 2-0 in the first inning. After hitting three home runs over the first two months of the season, McCutchen’s blast to left field Thursday marked his fifth home run in 50 June atbats.

Instead of allowing the Marlins to immediatel­y creep back into Thursday’s contest, the Giants added to their advantage in the second inning as Mac Williamson drilled an 0-2 offering from starter Dan Straily over the left-field fence.

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