Lodi News-Sentinel

Giants get homers from Yastrzemsk­i, Casali in 11th straight win vs. Rockies

- Evan Webeck

DENVER — One traveled 438 feet. The other landed 416 feet from home plate.

Together, they made for the third multi-homer game of Curt Casali s career and, with 854 feet and four RBIs between them, were the driving force in the Giants 7-6 win over the Rockies in their series opener Monday night inside the highflying confines of Coors Field.

But it was the ball off Mike Yastrzemsk­i s bat that traveled 420 feet against Rockies closer Daniel Bard in the ninth inning that broke a 6-6 tie and allowed the Giants to escape a back-andforth battle with their 11th straight win over Colorado, a streak dating back to last season that is the franchise s longest against a single opponent since 1965.

With two outs, facing the prospect of extra innings, Yastrzemsk­i turned on a first-pitch slider that Bard left down and in and clubbed it an ever-so-appropriat­e distance to decide the meeting between Colorado and San Francisco.

It was the final blow in a battle of bullpen performanc­es, after Giants starter Alex Wood matched his shortest start of the season, allowing three runs on six hits over 4 1/2 innings, and Rockies starter Antonio Senzatela exited after the second inning with a lower back strain.

Casali s first homer came on a hanging curveball and tied the game at 1 in the third. His second shot gave the Giants a 4-1 lead. And he scored one of the Giants two runs after singling as part of a seventh-inning rally that made it 6-4.

But C.J. Cron and Ryan McMahon ensured the Rockies wouldn’t go silently against San Francisco s bullpen.

Colorado chased Wood with two outs in the fifth, after three straight base hits produced the Rockies second run of the game. His replacemen­t, Dominic Leone, immediatel­y surrendere­d the first of two RBI singles by Cron, then delivered a first-pitch fastball leading off the sixth inning that McMahon put in the left-field seats, tying the game at 4.

Cron and McMahon each delivered RBI singles off Tyler Rogers that tied the game at 6 in the seventh inning, the first time this season the submarinin­g right-hander has allowed more than one run in his teamleadin­g 16 relief appearance­s.

Camilo Doval had to navigate both batters again in the ninth inning to protect the one-run lead and record his sixth save, walking Cron but stranding his pinch-runner on first base by getting McMahon to ground out to end the game.

The Giants entered Monday night getting more production from the bottom three hitters in their lineup than all but one team (so happens, the one on the other side of this one), and

the quartet of Thairo Estrada, Tommy La Stella, Darin Ruf (who pinch-hit for La Stella) and Casali combined to score or drive in the first six of San Francisco s runs, before Yastrzemsk­i s deciding shot in the ninth.

La Stella, in his first game of the season, was pulled for a platoon advantage after Rockies starter Antonio Senzatela exited with a lower back strain and was replaced with lefthander (and former Giant) Ty Blach. He worked a full count but grounded out to the pitcher in his only atbat.

Estrada flashed his leather at second base, ranging to his right and laying out to take a hit away from McMahon, and also reached base three times, scoring on Casali s second home run.

Casali, of course, had the two bombs and finished 3for-3 after adding a single in the seventh inning.

The 438-foot shot was the second-longest by a Giants player this season (trailing only Joc Pederson s 441-foot blast), pulling the Giants even at 1.

And his second, which traveled 416 feet, was such a no-doubter that Jon Miller s call on the television broadcast was instantane­ous, before the ball even left the yard: That ball s gone!

 ?? MATTHEW STOCKMAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Curt Casali of the San Francisco Giants hits a two-run home run against the Rockies on Monday in Denver, Colo.
MATTHEW STOCKMAN/GETTY IMAGES Curt Casali of the San Francisco Giants hits a two-run home run against the Rockies on Monday in Denver, Colo.

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