GIANTS' OFFENSE STALLS OUT AGAINST CARDINALS
ST. LOUIS » Misplays, miscues and missed opportunities wasted another strong outing from the newest member of the San Francisco Giants' starting rotation and put a halt to their season-best six-game win streak.
After his last start, Giants manager Gabe Kapler declared Jakob Junis a member of San Francisco's rotation. On a warm Saturday afternoon, he pitched like someone deserving of a spot but didn't get the backing to extend San Francisco's win streak to seven.
Junis limited the Cardinals to two runs over 5 2/3 innings, but St. Louis tacked on two more in the seventh when Austin Slater battled the sun and lost, allowing a routine fly ball — what would have been the third out of the inning — to drop. That was four too many runs for a listless Giants lineup to overcome in a 4-0 loss.
San Francisco had been averaging more than eight runs per game during its six-game win streak but couldn't push a single run across the plate Saturday, despite putting runners on base in all but one inning and in scoring position four times. San Francisco stranded 10 runners on base and was shut out for the second time this season.
“I think it was just that one. You get on base and then there's the one hit that goes into the gaps or goes into the seats and changes the entire energy of the game,” manager Gabe Kapler said. “We weren't able to come up with that one.”
Junis, a free-agent acquisition who broke camp with Triple-A Sacramento, has been a revelation in four lengthy appearances since joining the big club. He reworked his repertoire to prioritize his slider, which was on display again Saturday against the Cardinals. Junis threw 52 sliders, 32 sinkers and only seven changeups, essentially working with a two-pitch arsenal because, he said, “I had
no feel for (the changeup) today.”
“That's why I'm pretty happy, especially facing the same team twice,” said Junis, who limited the Cardinals to two runs over five innings last Sunday. “It would've been really nice to have that other offering, but you've got to roll with what you've got, and that's what I did. … I'll take
5.2 and two runs any day.”
With two earned runs on six hits over 5 2/3 innings on Saturday, Junis' ERA in four appearances (two starts) stands at 1.74, the lowest mark of anyone on staff who has pitched as many innings as Junis (20 1/3).
“He gave us a chance to win the game,” Kapler said.
Between Brendan Donovan's RBI double that got St. Louis on the board in the second inning and Tommy Edman's home run into the Cardinals' bullpen
that made it 2-0, Junis retired nine straight batters. It wasn't until St. Louis strung together back-to-back base hits with two outs in the sixth that Kapler turned to his bullpen, bringing in former Cardinal John Brebbia to retire the final out of the inning.
It was Brebbia on the mound in the seventh when Slater allowed Paul Goldschmidt's two-out fly ball to fall to the grass. Nolan Arenado followed with a double to left field
that brought home Goldschmidt and made it 4-0.
The Giants had no shortage of scoring opportunities but couldn't capitalize on any of them.
Donovan Walton, who was acquired in a trade this week with Seattle, acted as the end of two innings but also kickstarted another rally. He watched three strikes go by after Luis Gonzalez's twoout double in the second, then grounded out to end the fourth after Gonzalez reached on a walk.