The Reporter (Vacaville)

Giants drop below .500 in rough loss to A’s

- Ny eerry Orowley

With other stars around the National League surging and Mike Yastrzemsk­i’s eyepopping numbers beginning to decline during the final weeks of the season, the Giants outfielder was sliding out of the Most Valuable Player race.

All it took for Yastrzemsk­i’s value to come into focus was a mild right calf strain.

An untimely injury kept Yastrzemsk­i out of the Giants’ lineup for the second straight game on Saturday and the team’s offense was once again silenced in a 6-0 loss to the Oakland A’s.

With their most important player sidelined and another key outfielder, Alex Dickerson, missing

Saturday’s game after being placed on the paternity list, the Giants (25-26) were shut out for the second consecutiv­e game by an A’s pitching staff led by rookie Jesús Luzardo. A punchless lineup kept the Giants from being competitiv­e and an abysmal day for the outfield defense turned a game that could have been close into a blowout loss.

Left fielder Darin Ruf and center fielder Mauricio Dubón combined to drop three balls they got gloves on during a five-run seventh inning that also featured a two-run home run hit by A’s third baseman Jake Lamb. Fewer than 48 hours after the Giants led the National League wild card standings, a pair of losses in Oakland have moved the club out of a playoff position with just nine games left to play.

“I think what we need to do going forward is have a healthy balance of a sense of urgency because of how many games we have left and where we are in the playoff race and balance that with a calm, reasoned and even demeanor,” manager Gabe Kapler said. “Those two things can coexist and work in harmony.”

With eight days remaining in the regular season, it might be too soon for the Giants to smash the

panic button, but it’s not too early to peek at the rest of the team’s schedule and see what a daunting challenge lies ahead.

A Giants team that fell to 5-16 against clubs with winning records is now 0-5 against the A’s and 1-5 against the San Diego Padres, who will visit San Francisco for a fourgame series during the final weekend of the regular season. It might require rose-colored glasses to see any positive developmen­ts for the Giants over the last two days, but the club did receive an important start from Kevin Gausman.

After the last three Giants

starters failed to complete four innings, the club desperatel­y needed the veteran right-hander to save the team’s bullpen and pitch deep into Saturday’s game. Gausman hadn’t started in 11 days because he had been scratched from his scheduled outing last Sunday in San Diego due to elbow tightness, but he didn’t show any signs of rust in a dominant performanc­e against the A’s.

“I thought his location was awesome, particular­ly in the earlier innings,” Kapler said. “We saw a healthy velocity from him in his normal range, we saw him rip his changeup a couple of times which is something we wanted to see, saw him feature his splitter and we really saw him carve in the first few

innings.”

Gausman finished his start having allowed just one hit and one run over six dominant innings that gave the Giants every chance to take control of Saturday’s game, but he ended up taking the loss anyway.

“We had a couple of bad games in a row, but we’re going to break out,” Gausman said. “These guys do such a good job of putting quality at-bats together, but these last two games, I feel like it was more their pitching. Their pitchers pitched really well against us and I don’t know if we matched up as well against this team as some of the other teams we’ve played lately.”

Gausman didn’t allow a baserunner or a hit until the bottom of the fourth inning,

but the A’s managed to capitalize on the minor mistakes he made en route to taking a 1-0 lead. After walking Mark Canha with two outs and allowing the A’s designated hitter to reach second on a wild pitch, Gausman gave up a line drive RBI single to first baseman Matt Olson.

The Giants had a chance to rally and score first in the top of the fourth against Luzardo, but second baseman Donovan Solano made a terrible baserunnin­g mistake as he overran third base and was tagged out to end the inning. After Dubón beat out an infield single, Olson saw Solano extend too far from third base and fired a strike across the infield to third baseman Lamb to end the Giants’ threat.

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 ?? JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The A’s Jesus Luzardo (44) pitches against the Giants during the first inning on Saturday in Oakland.
JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The A’s Jesus Luzardo (44) pitches against the Giants during the first inning on Saturday in Oakland.

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