Lodi News-Sentinel

González, Pederson lead Giants over Brewers

- Kerry Crowley

Reigning Cy Young Award winner Corbin Burnes was so dominant that the Brewers righthande­r had the Giants on the ropes from the first pitch of Monday’s game in Milwaukee.

But when Burnes tired, it was rookie center fielder Luis González who sent him packing. González provided the first key punch against the Brewers, Joc Pederson chimed in with the crippling blow and González returned for the knockout against Milwaukee.

Even against one of the best pitchers in the majors, eight Giants bullpen arms and two late home runs provided enough for San Francisco to cap off an 11-game road trip with a 4-2 comefrom-behind win.

If there was any doubt as to whether actions speak louder than words, look no further than Pederson’s towering home run on Monday.

With the Giants trailing 1-0 in the eighth inning, Pederson called timeout, stepped out of the left-handed batter’s box and acknowledg­ed a fan heckling him from the lower box seats. Then he deposited a go-ahead, two-run blast over the right center field wall to move him into a tie with Atlanta’s Ozzie Albies for the major league lead with six homers on the season.

As Pederson dropped his bat to the ground, he turned to face the heckler again before jogging around the bases following a swing that nearly gave the Giants enough offense to emerge with a win on a night when Gabe Kapler used eight bullpen arms to counter Burnes.

The mammoth blast sent a jolt of electricit­y through the Giants’ dugout, but the Brewers struck back immediatel­y against lefty Jake McGee in the bottom of the eighth inning as shortstop Willy Adames launched a game-tying homer over the left center field wall.

In the top of the ninth, González battled Brewers reliever Jake Cousins and sent a towering flyball down the right field line and managed to keep it inside the foul pole for a go-ahead two-run homer, the first of his brief major league career.

Milwaukee scored its first run in the second inning against right-hander Dominic Leone, who

hurt his own cause by committing a throwing error on an unnecessar­y pick-off attempt to second base. With Brewers first baseman Keston Hiura leading off second and one out in the inning, Leone fired an errant throw past shortstop Brandon Crawford, who wasn’t close to the base when the reliever skipped a ball into center field.

Leone struck out catcher Victor Caratini to give himself an opportunit­y to get out of the inning unscathed, but an infield single from Mike Brosseau allowed Kiura to score from third.

Burnes was so dominant against San Francisco that the Giants’ best chance to stay competitiv­e was to drive up the right-hander’s pitch count and hope to score against a Brewers bullpen that was looking to avoid using set-up man Devin Williams and closer Josh Hader.

After Burnes struck out his 10th and 11th batters to start the seventh, González finally chased the Milwaukee starter by drilling a groundball single through the left side of the infield. With Burnes at 106 pitches on the night, Brewers manager Craig Counsell removed him in favor of former Giants righty Trevor Gott, who didn’t need to retire a hitter to escape the inning.

With second baseman Thairo Estrada at the plate, González appeared to steal second base by sneaking his right arm past the glove of Kolten Wong. But after González was initially ruled safe, a replay review overturned the call and prevented the Giants from putting more pressure on Gott.

The Giants’ visit to Milwaukee lasted fewer than 24 hours, but was required due to a scheduling adjustment resulting from the mid-spring agreement between MLB owners and the Players Associatio­n on a new collective bargaining agreement.

After the first week of the regular season schedule was wiped away due to the 99-day owner-imposed lockout, the league found new dates for three games between the Giants and Brewers that were initially scheduled for San Francisco’s first road trip of the season. Monday’s game was jammed between a 10game road trip and a twogame series at Oracle Park while the other two games will be played as part of a September 8 doublehead­er in between trips to Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles and Wrigley Field in Chicago.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States