The Mercury News

Giants offense helps Bumgarner to 9-4 win over Miami.

Although he serves up long ball to red-hot slugger, Bumgarner contains Marlins and bats put together late rally for 9-4 victory

- By Andrew Baggarly abaggarly@bayareanew­sgroup.com

The Giants won a baseball game Tuesday night, and they took the lead over the Marlins in the seventh inning when Giancarlo Stanton put one in the seats.

Those are the facts in their 9-4 victory and there is no disputing them. Some context might be helpful, though: Stanton still plays for the Marlins, and the Giants went ahead because his throw from right field sailed out of play.

Oh, Stanton hit a home run, too. He muscled a cutter from Madison Bumgarner that traveled 432 feet and cleared the seizure-inducing home run sculpture in center field in the third inning — his sixth consecutiv­e game with a homer, and his major league leading 44th of the season.

But for once, the Giants didn’t have to dream of a future lineup running on Stanton’s diesel fuel. Denard Span hit a two-run home run to start their comeback and he lined the single to Stanton that put them ahead in the seventh. Ryder Jones added a solo shot down the line as the Giants outflexed their burly opponents while beating the Marlins for the first time in five games this season.

Bumgarner flashed a little power, too. He missed a home run by inches when his drive off Dan Straily struck the top of the left field wall in the fifth inning. He settled for an RBI single that got the Giants within a run, and it appeared to be a fatal mistake when Straily picked him off second base.

“He was like a Clydesdale getting back, wasn’t he?” Giants manager Bruce Bochy said.

But the Giants outhit their mistakes, and the bottom of the order started their threerun rally in the seventh. No. 8 hitter Kelby Tomlinson singled, advanced on a wild pitch and scored on Carlos Moncrief’s pinch single. Stanton fielded Span’s single and tried to gun down Moncrief at third, but there is such a thing as being too strong for one’s own good. Umpires awarded Moncrief the plate as the ball rattled out of play, and Hunter Pence followed with a double that scored Span.

“I’ll be honest with you, I think that was the play of the game,” Span, said. “A lot of good things happened tonight, but he forced an ill-advised throw and it seemed like it woke everybody up. We were the more aggressive team tonight.”

The rally picked up Bumgarner on a night when he battled consistenc­y while allowing four runs on nine hits in six innings.

“He’s hot right now and he’s one of the most electric players in the game, and Bum, I mean, he’s Bumgarner. It’s one of those matchups you want to see as a baseball fan.” — Hunter Pence, speaking of the Bumgarner-Stanton match-up Tuesday night

Bumgarner did well to escape the first inning with just one run allowed, getting a pop-up and then a fly out with two runners in scoring position in a rally that Stanton started with a line drive single.

The Bumgarner-Stanton matchup was the draw of the night, and the Marlins’ chiseled slugger did not win every round. Bumgarner threw a perfect two-strike curveball that dropped under Stanton’s bat in the fifth inning.

Bumgarner even came close to matching the ferocity of Stanton’s contact. Stanton’s home run was measured at 107 mph off the bat. Bumgarner’s RBI single had an exit velocity of 103 mph.

But when it comes to power, Stanton knows no equal. He became the first big leaguer to homer in six consecutiv­e games since Colorado’s Nolan Arenado in 2015 — and yes, Giants pitchers were responsibl­e for the last three games in that run.

The major league record for consecutiv­e games with a home run is eight, set by the Pirates’ Dale Long in 1956 and matched by Ken Griffey Jr. (with the Mariners in 1993) and current Marlins manager Don Mattingly (with the Yankees in 1987).

Span played in the NL East for three years with the Washington Nationals. He said he’s never seen Stanton this locked in.

“That guy is unreal, man,” Span said. “I don’t know. I might try his batting stance next year with that scissor kick, try that out in spring training.”

Stanton has 11 homers in his past 12 games and 23 in his last 35.

“It’s one of the most impressive runs I’ve heard of since I’ve been playing,” Pence said.

“He’s hot right now and he’s one of the most electric players in the game, and Bum, I mean, he’s Bumgarner. It’s one of those matchups you want to see as a baseball fan.”

Even Bumgarner admitted he might have gone into that matchup with a little too much gusto.

“That’s always fun. I look forward to those,” Bumgarner said.

“I might not go about those at-bats in the smartest way, but he’s locked in for sure. You might want to be more careful with a guy like that.”

It’s still a longshot that the Marlins’ pending new ownership group tries to trade Stanton and shed the bulk of their 10-year, $295 million commitment to him.

But according to a report from Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports, Stanton already has cleared waivers and could be dealt to a club this month.

That only means that none of the other 29 clubs were willing to pay the full freight on Stanton. Most likely, any club that acquires him would have to provide a mix of talent and payroll obligation­s.

• Mark Melancon made his second appearance since coming off the disabled list, tossing a scoreless seventh inning. He began warming up with the Giants trailing and ended up entering a 6-4 game to earn a hold.

• The Giants placed second baseman Joe Panik on the 7-day concussion list and recalled utility man Orlando Calixte.

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Giants’ Ryder Jones, right, is high-fived by Kelby Tomlinson after hitting a solo home run during the eighth inning of the Giants’ 9-4win against the Miami Marlins on Tuesday in Miami. Tomlinson finished 2for 4, including a single that started a...
LYNNE SLADKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Giants’ Ryder Jones, right, is high-fived by Kelby Tomlinson after hitting a solo home run during the eighth inning of the Giants’ 9-4win against the Miami Marlins on Tuesday in Miami. Tomlinson finished 2for 4, including a single that started a...
 ?? MARK BROWN — GETTY IMAGES ?? Giancarlo Stanton of the Marlins celebrates with Dee Gordon in the dugout after hitting a home run, his league-leading 44th of the season, in the third inning against the Giants at Marlins Park on Tuesday. It was Stanton’s sixth straight game with a...
MARK BROWN — GETTY IMAGES Giancarlo Stanton of the Marlins celebrates with Dee Gordon in the dugout after hitting a home run, his league-leading 44th of the season, in the third inning against the Giants at Marlins Park on Tuesday. It was Stanton’s sixth straight game with a...
 ??  ??
 ?? MARK BROWN — GETTY IMAGES ?? Giants pitcher Madison Bumgarner delivers to the plate in the first inning of Tuesday’s 9-4 win over the Miami Marlins at Marlins Park. Bumgarner picked up the win after going six innings with four runs allowed on four hits with four strikeouts.
MARK BROWN — GETTY IMAGES Giants pitcher Madison Bumgarner delivers to the plate in the first inning of Tuesday’s 9-4 win over the Miami Marlins at Marlins Park. Bumgarner picked up the win after going six innings with four runs allowed on four hits with four strikeouts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States