Marysville Appeal-Democrat

SF Giants back to their home-run-hitting, winning ways

- Tribune News Service The Mercury News

SAN FRANCISCO — All of a sudden, the

Giants are back on a winning streak. It happened in flash — er, a splash.

The Giants used a pair of home runs — including a tie-breaking shot into Mccovey Cove from Mike Yastrzemsk­i — to back up a solid spot start from Jakob Junis and win their second straight game over the St. Louis Cardinals, 4-3, enough to earn a split in the four-game series with a team expected to contend for the NL Central.

Following a five-game losing skid during which the Giants scored 10 total runs, they have responded with 17 runs — and two wins — the past two days. Their fourth and final run Sunday came in the sixth inning off the bat of Yastrzemsk­i, who drove in two, and splashed down beyond the right field wall to give the Giants a 4-3 lead.

“It sort of seems like the last couple of days,

we’ve been more like ourselves,” manager Gabe Kapler said.

Making his first start with the Giants, Junis limited the Cardinals to two runs on three hits and struck out five over five innings.

Juan Yepez’s two-run home run in the second inning amounted to the only damage St. Louis did off Junis and were the first runs he has allowed all season, snapping an 11-inning scoreless streak.

Junis, a free-agent acquisitio­n this offseason who previously pitched two five-inning outings of relief without allowing a run, has a 1.20 ERA in 15 innings, the lowest mark of anybody on staff with at least 10 innings.

“His slider’s nasty,” Kapler said. “Right now we’re not seeing Jake as a spot starter. We see him as a member of our rotation.”

St. Louis plated its third run in the sixth off reliever Dominic Leone, briefly tying the game at 3, after Luis Gonzalez misplayed a fly ball in left field that turned into a ground-rule double, allowing Juan Yepez to reach third, then score on a groundball out the next play.

But Yastrzemsk­i responded in the bottom half of the inning with a splash hit that would prove decisive.

With seven hits and seven walks — four issued by erratic St. Louis starter Dakota Hudson — the Giants put runners in scoring position with fewer than two outs four times but failed to score in any inning that didn’t feature a home run. Until Joc Pederson whiffed in the Giants’ final at-bat of the game, they were on their way to becoming the first MLB team since 2017 to finish a game without striking out once.

“The at-bat quality was excellent up and down the lineup,” Kapler said. “Obviously Yaz and Lamonte Wade had the big hits, but there was plenty of grindy at-bats around them, supporting them.”

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