Santa Cruz Sentinel

Giants turn power back on

San Francisco hits 5 home runs, rolls

- By Evan Webeck

ST. PETERSBURG, FLA. >> Somebody apparently paid the electricit­y bill because the Giants turned the power back on Saturday after a week in the dark.

Seven of the Giants' runs in an 11-2 win over the Rays, evening their weekend series at a game apiece, came on a quintet of long balls — two from Thairo Estrada — snapping a seven-game homerless draught, the longest dry spell from the club in nearly a decade.

Another pair was driven in on a bases-loaded single from Mike Yastrzemsk­i, a rare base knock from a Giants hitter with runners in scoring position.

With Logan Webb on the mound, timely hitting and a little power proved to be a winning formula.

The Giants had lost eight of their past 11 games entering Saturday, scoring more than four runs in only one of those contests. They went 3-4 without hitting a home run, but two of the wins came by the skin of their teeth and in their third, a 7-1 win Wednesday to close the home stand, they went 6-for-8 with runners in scoring position.

In their three losses since Monday, the Giants

had been 1-for-26 in those situations, lowering their season batting average to .219, fifth-worst in the majors.

Safe to say, the Giants broke out in a big way Saturday against the Rays.

The 11 runs were the most they scored in 15 games this season.

In addition to Yastrzemsk­i's RBI single, LaMonte Wade Jr. drove home Jung Hoo Lee from second with his fifth-inning homer and Patrick Bailey drove in Estrada with a ground-rule double that bounced over the left-field wall to make it 7-1 in the sixth.

The Giants slugged more homers in nine innings than they had in the previous 10 games. The biggest came off the bat of Jorge Soler, who drove a letterhigh

fastball from reliever Chris Devinski an estimated 446 feet to center field, while Matt Chapman piled on with a solo shot off catcher Ben Rortvedt in the top of the ninth.

Both of Estrada's homers were no-doubters to left field, and the second baseman appears to be heating up. His double-dinger game came a day after his first multi-hit contest of the season. When the Giants arrived in Florida, Estrada was batting .160 with a .413 OPS, one of the worst qualified hitters in the league, but has since gone 4-for-7 — three of the hits for extra bases — raising his average to .211 and his OPS by more than 200 points, to .637.

After receiving the least run support in the majors last season, Webb got a

month's worth of scoring in one start, though every run after Estrada's first homer — a solo shot in the fourth inning that put the Giants up 2-1 — proved to be superfluou­s.

Limiting the Rays to one run on six hits over seven innings, Webb was so effective that he successful­ly plead his case to Bob Melvin when the manager came out to get him with two outs in the sixth inning. Holding a nine-run lead, with his starter's pitch count at an economical number, Melvin walked back to the dugout unaccompan­ied.

The Rays only scored their second run once Nick Avila entered with a 10-1 lead in the bottom of the eighth.

UP NEXT >> As the Giants go for their second win in five series this season, Blake Snell will make his first start as a visitor at Tropicana Field, facing his former team for only the second time. The Rays have not named a starter for the series finale. First pitch is scheduled for 10:40 a.m. PT, with the Giants on their way to Miami once it wraps up.

 ?? CHRIS O'MEARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The San Francisco Giants' LaMonte Wade Jr. watches his two-run home run off Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Ryan Pepiot during the fifth inning Saturday in St. Petersburg,
CHRIS O'MEARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The San Francisco Giants' LaMonte Wade Jr. watches his two-run home run off Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Ryan Pepiot during the fifth inning Saturday in St. Petersburg,

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