Oroville Mercury-Register

Same old Giants? Padres series a huge opportunit­y

- Dieter Kurtenbach

It was all enough to make you say “same old Giants”.

Yes, it only three games, but San Francisco’s season-opening series loss to the Seattle Mariners was a refrain of several themes of the 2020 season.

The bullpen imploded, helped by some bad defense, to drop game No. 1. Then, a Saturday evening rubber match, the offense couldn’t plate a run against three righthande­d pitchers.

You can’t win or lose a division in the first series of the season, but you can undercut a good deal of a fan base’s optimism heading into a season where things were supposed to improve.

The good news for the Giants is that they have a chance to get a lot of those good vibes back starting Monday.

The San Diego Padres are a juggernaut — one of two in the National League West this season, alongside the Dodgers — and the Giants going to Southern California and winning a three-game series against their upstart rivals would go a long way to restoring some of that lost optimism.

Yes, do that, and Giants fans might be thinking that this year might, indeed, be different.

A strong start from newcomer Anthony DeSclafani on Monday night could set that tone.

After strong starts from Kevin Gausman and Johnny Cueto (now in his sixth year with the Giants!), Logan Webb followed his dominant Spring Training performanc­e with a rollercoas­ter of a start.

In some innings, he was dominant. In others, the Mariners knew exactly what he was going to throw — they laced him for three doubles in a row in their game-winning fourth inning. It’s just one game, and Webb deserves credit for working through the first adversity he faced this season — Giants manager Gabe Kapler called Webb’s performanc­e “profession­al” — but the breakout so many expected from the 24-year- old righty this season didn’t look as if it was upon us.

But what if DeSclafani was the breakout starter that the Giants need this season?

Last year, DeSclafani was one of the worst starters in baseball for the Reds, posting a 7.22 ERA that was in no way a fraudulent byproduct of a shortened season

(his fielding independen­t pitching ERA was 6.10 and he allowed 1.7 baserunner­s per inning).

He signed with the Giants because the organizati­on has quickly establishe­d a reputation as a home for wayward pitchers with a coaching staff that can eliminate a hurler’s negatives and accentuate their positives.

The work the Giants did with DeSclafani in Arizona seemed to back up that reputation. In just shy of 10 innings pitched, DeSclafani had an ERA of 2.79.

Of course, that was against exhibition-game lineups. The Padres are something entirely different, boasting one of the best players in the game, Fernando Tatis Jr., and seven others that posted a .940 OPS in their first three games of the season.

If DeSclafani can find a way to slow down the Brown Go-Rounds, it would raise eyebrows not just here in the Bay Area, but also around baseball.

Tuesday’s showdown in San Diego could be a huge game for the Giants. They’ll go up against one of the best pitchers in baseball — Yu Darvish — who, oh yeah, is a righty.

The Giants weren’t bad against right-handed pitchers last year.

 ?? TED S. WARREN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? San Francisco Giants left fielder Alex Dickerson, right, catches a fly ball hit by the Seattle Mariners’ Jake Fraley, while center fielder Austin Slater, left, watches during the second inning Saturday in Seattle.
TED S. WARREN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS San Francisco Giants left fielder Alex Dickerson, right, catches a fly ball hit by the Seattle Mariners’ Jake Fraley, while center fielder Austin Slater, left, watches during the second inning Saturday in Seattle.
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