Oroville Mercury-Register

GIANTS’ SWEEP CUBS, WIN STREAK HITS 7

- By Kerry Crowley

CHICAGO >> After winning the first five games of their road trip, the Giants showed up for Sunday’s series finale against the Cubs and practicall­y looked like a different team.

Their offense missed out on several early scoring opportunit­ies, their budding ace gave up five runs and their outfield defense was sloppy and unsettling.

Great teams still find ways to win games they should probably lose and the 2021 Giants are a great team. With an outstandin­g offensive effort from infielder Wilmer Flores and a solid showing from the team’s bullpen, the Giants beat the Cubs 6-5 to complete a perfect 6-0 road trip and extend their longest win streak of the season to seven games.

The Cubs had the tying run at third base with two outs in the ninth inning, but Giants closer Jake McGee was able to retire Chicago slugger Ian Happ on a groundout to cap off the win.

By improving to 93-50, the Giants inched closer to snapping their four-year playoff drought as their magic number to clinch a postseason berth dropped to one following the Reds’ 2-0 loss to the Cardinals. The Giants’ primary focus for the remainder of the regular season is to hold off the Dodgers and win the National League West, but the club can pop champagne bottles as soon as Monday if it beats the Padres at Oracle Park.

“If we do end up clinching a playoff spot sometime here soon, we’re not going to take our foot off the gas,” said reliever Tyler Rogers, who escaped a bases loaded jam in the seventh on Sunday. “Win the division is our mindset.”

Flores was the offensive catalyst Sunday for a Giants team that has now scored at least six runs in all seven wins during their streak as the infielder returned from a 10-day stint on the injured list to go 3-for-4 with a home run and a walk.

The Giants could have left Flores in San Francisco for an additional day and activated him at the beginning of their seven-game homestand, but the club chose to have the infielder fly to Chicago on Saturday so he could be in the lineup against Cubs lefty Justin Steele.

“That wasn’t a tough decision at all,” manager Gabe Kapler said. “You have one of your best bats period against a lefthanded pitcher, has historical­ly

been excellent against lefties and he’s well-rested, so it wasn’t much of a question there. He was a perfect fit in the middle of our lineup.”

Flores made the most of his day at Wrigley Field as the right-handed hitter drove in the Giants’ first run of the game with a RBI single in the second inning before providing starter Logan Webb with valuable insurance runs with his tworun home run in the fifth.

Flores was also at the plate in the seventh inning when the Giants added to their lead against Cubs reliever Codi Heuer, but he did not receive credit for a RBI after Kris Bryant raced from third base to the plate following a wild pitch in a 3-2 count that helped Flores reach base for the fourth time.

“We’re on a run here,” Flores said. “Any little thing counts, every game counts, so I always want to play and if I have to fly for one game, I’d do it again.”

Webb didn’t pitch poorly, but the five earned runs he allowed over six-plus innings were the most the right-hander has allowed in a start since May 5 when he surrendere­d six runs to the Rockies at Coors Field.

“I wasn’t too pleased with how I threw today,” Webb said. “I’m really not happy about the two walks I had, but the guys all picked me up and it was cool.”

Webb’s final line would have looked even better if not for a few outfield miscues involving center fielder Austin Slater.

After Webb retired the first nine batters he faced Sunday, Rafael Ortega hit a flyball to center field that Slater lost in the sun a day in the exact same fashion that Mike Yastrzemsk­i failed to catch a ball in Saturday’s game. The miscue allowed Ortega to reach third base with a triple which allowed him to score with ease on Frank Schwindel’s RBI groundout.

The Cubs tacked on another run in the fifth inning shortly after Slater and Kris Bryant collided in right center field on a flyball that either outfielder could have caught. Bryant was charged with an error as David Bote advanced all the way to third on the play before scoring on Nick Martini’s RBI groundout.

“He had a beat on it, KB had a beat on it, KB was physically communicat­ing, (Slater) thought he made eye contact with KB and that KB would know that he had a beat on it,” Kapler said. “But what (Slater) mentioned, and I was really glad that he owned it, was that he failed to call the ball.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY MARK BLACK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The San Francisco Giants’ Wilmer Flores rounds second during his two-run home run against the Chicago Cubs during the fifth inning Sunday in Chicago.
PHOTOS BY MARK BLACK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The San Francisco Giants’ Wilmer Flores rounds second during his two-run home run against the Chicago Cubs during the fifth inning Sunday in Chicago.
 ?? MARK BLACK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Logan Webb throws against the Chicago Cubs during the second inning Sunday in Chicago.
MARK BLACK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Logan Webb throws against the Chicago Cubs during the second inning Sunday in Chicago.
 ?? MARK BLACK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? San Francisco Giants center fielder Austin Slater (13) drops a ball hit by the Chicago Cubs’ Rafael Ortega during the fourth inning Sunday in Chicago.
MARK BLACK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS San Francisco Giants center fielder Austin Slater (13) drops a ball hit by the Chicago Cubs’ Rafael Ortega during the fourth inning Sunday in Chicago.

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