Lodi News-Sentinel

Giants’ Rogers expects his luck to change

- Jerry McDonald

SAN FRANCISCO — Almost lost in the Giants’ 4-2 win over the Kansas City Royals Tuesday night was another outing where relief pitcher Tyler Rogers had Oracle Park fans at the edge of their seats.

And not in a good way. Taking over for Logan Webb to begin the eighth inning with a 3-0 lead, Rogers gave up three hits and two runs (one earned), putting the Giants in a precarious position in a game that appeared in the bag.

Rogers turned in one of the best seasons by a reliever in the National League in 2021, pitching in a league-high 80 games and going 7-1 with 13 saves and a 2.22 earned run average. Currently, Rogers stands at 0-2 with no saves and an ERA at 5.40.

“You’ve just got to tell yourself to keep sticking with your strengths,” Rogers said Wednesday before the Giants closed out a nine-game homestand with a getaway day game against the Royals. “It’s a round ball, round bat.”

While Rogers hasn’t gotten nearly the same results, there are statistica­l indicators that he’s pitched in some tough luck. That was never more evident than pitching one-third of an inning against the New York Mets on May 24 and giving up seven hits and seven earned runs in a game the Giants won 13-12.

The Mets didn’t exactly wear the ball out, with all manner of bloop hits and seeing-eye ground balls finding open spaces rather than Giants’ gloves.

Such is the life of a pitch-tocontact reliever. Rogers relies on soft contact, and sometimes soft contact isn’t enough to prevent base hits. Rogers would love to tell you he has the same outlook and concentrat­ion on every pitch whether things are going well or going poorly, although it’s not necessaril­y the whole truth.

“I’d like to stand here and say it’s the same thing but it probably isn’t,” Rogers said. “You have to have that mindset that the ones that roll through are going to even out and there will be a rocket hit right at somebody or something. You’ve got to play those odds.”

Asked if things have begun to even out this year, Rogers said flatly, “No.”

There are numbers that back up the theory that Rogers for the most part has simply had bad luck. His hard-hit rate of 27 percent is in the top three of major league baseball. Opponents are hitting .307 against him but the “expected” average based on contact is .255. His .5.40 ERA is accompanie­d by an “expected” ERA of .297.

The solution for manager Gabe Kapler is a simple one. Keep sending Rogers out there.

“I think for Tyler, it’s all a mindset,” Kapler said. “Tyler is going to be at his best when his wins are smaller. `I deliver a sinker or slider in the location I wanted, I got the weak contact I wanted on the ground.’ That’s the win. The win is not us converting it into an out. The win is not avoiding an earned run.

“It’s the process of every pitch, so the frustratio­n of the ball going through the hole — again — doesn’t start to creep in.”

There was evidence of some frustratio­n Tuesday night against the Royals when Rogers didn’t properly back up the plate after a base hit and wasn’t in position to field an overthrow from centerfiel­der Austin Slater.

“We’re working with Rodge to keep that mindset even in a time of turmoil where things haven’t gone his way so far this season,” Kapler said. “I’m very confident that if we keep giving him opportunit­ies — and we will — he’s going to capitlize on those. He’s going to buzz through the toughest part of lineups and we’re going to go, `How did he just do that against the nastiest part of the other team’s lineup?’ ”

 ?? NHAT V. MEYER/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? The Giants' Tyler Rogers (71) throws against the Royals in San Francisco on Tuesday.
NHAT V. MEYER/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP The Giants' Tyler Rogers (71) throws against the Royals in San Francisco on Tuesday.

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