Monterey Herald

Giants pitching staff set up for success

- By Shayna Rubin

LOS ANGELES >> With Anthony DeSclafani lasting all of 1 2/3 innings, the San Francisco Giants cycled through seven relievers as they spiraled into a 7-2 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 4 of the NLDS on Tuesday.

Though the manager Gabe Kapler kicked up a trail to the mound and back to his dugout post, tapping through nearly all his weapons to get through this game, his pitching staff should be set up well for Game 5 at Oracle Park on Thursday.

Why? Because Logan Webb will start the do-ordie game. A rested Kevin

Gausman and even Alex Wood should be available, too, with a dominant Camilo Doval refreshed after pitching a six-out save in the Giants’ Game 3 1-0 win on Monday.

“Yeah, that’s nice,” Kapler said. “Webb with a full slate. Gausman with a full slate. Alex Wood at some point in the game isn’t completely out of the question. We’ve got all our relievers up and ready to pitch.”

Strong pitching performanc­es have fueled the Giants’ two wins this series so far — both shutouts, one behind Webb in game one of the series. In Game 1, Webb’s confidence shined as he hurled more changeups than usual to keep the

Dodgers’ potent lineup hacking through air. He drew 21 swings and misses that day and didn’t walk a single batter to a team known to work at-bats. He struck out 10 batters, gave up five hits on 92 pitches through 7 2/3 innings.

At 24, Webb will be the youngest pitcher in Giants franchise history to start a winner-take-all game. Not only is Webb their last hope, but their best one, too.

“You can lean on the track record of the last four months,” Kapler said. “It’s a long time, it’s a lot of starts and it starts and he’s had starts in huge games. It’s totally rested and prepared, confident pitcher.”

Catcher Buster Posey has caught his fair share of pitches in postseason door-die moments — Madison Bumgarner’s five scoreless in Game 7 of the 2014 World Series chief among them. He knows poise under pressure, and has seen it with Webb dating back to spring training to his Game 162 and Game 1 NLDS performanc­es.

“I think his confidence has continued to grow,” Posey said. “I think the stuff has gotten better because he believes that he has elite pitches and he can compete with anyone. And I think it’s a matter of — and he’s shown in the last game of the season and first game this series that he can keep his poise and that bodes well for him.”

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