Oroville Mercury-Register

Giants’ series win streak ended

- By Kerry Crowley

Back in spring, even the most optimistic fans had doubts the team would be able to challenge the Dodgers.

ATLANTA >> Back in spring training, even the most optimistic Giants fans had doubts the team would be able to challenge the Dodgers atop the National League West.

As Gabe Kapler’s club prepared for the season with workouts in Scottsdale, making a run at one of the league’s two wild card berths seemed like the most realistic way for the Giants to make the postseason. Yet with nearly five months of the season in the books, the Giants have forced fans to recalibrat­e expectatio­ns in a way that makes every loss magnified and every minor hiccup a bigger disappoint­ment.

So after winning nine consecutiv­e series entering a three-game set in Atlanta, the Giants’ inability to maintain their incredible pace understand­ably felt like a letdown to many fans who can see the Dodgers creeping up behind San Francisco in a compelling race for the division title.

The Giants still own the best record in the majors at 84-46 and still have a narrow edge over the

Dodgers in the division, but a 9-0 series-clinching loss stung a club that was also bitten by the injury bug several times amid their ninegame road trip.

“We don’t look at the standings as much, we don’t worry how another teams is playing, they’re playing who they’re playing and we can’t do anything about that,” outfielder Mike Yastrzemsk­i said. “Whatever is going to happen is going to happen and we can only play our game. We want to win every single game we can.”

After Buster Posey, Brandon Crawford, Kris Bryant and Curt Casali exited games with minor injuries on the team’s eastern swing, starter Anthony DeSclafani came out of Sunday’s game alongside Giants trainer Dave Groeschner.

Kapler said the Giants only checked on DeSclafani as a precaution­ary measure as he was slow to cover first base in the fourth inning and called his decision to put the game in rookie Sammy Long’s hands a “strategic” decision.

DeSclafani left his last start on August 18 against the Mets with right ankle inflammati­on that forced him to the injured list, but he was activated on Sunday with the hope he could provide quality innings and regain the form he showed in the first half of the season.

“(DeSclafani) pushed really hard to go for us today,” Kapler said. “Obviously it doesn’t work out on the scoreboard and he wasn’t able to go deep into the game for us and that’s certainly disappoint­ing. We always want our pitchers to save as many innings for the bullpen as possible, even in games we’re down. But we did have a plan.”

The right-hander retired nine of the first 10 Braves he faced on a hot and humid day at Truist Park, but gave up a leadoff home run to Atlanta slugger Jorge Soler in the bottom of the fourth inning and never recovered. Each of the next four hitters reached base against DeSclafani including third

baseman Austin Riley, who launched a two-strike slider into the left field bleachers to give the Braves a 3-0 lead.

The outing didn’t go as planned for DeSclafani, but he said it was an important step to get back on the mound before facing the Dodgers next weekend at Oracle Park.

“We’re neck and neck with the Dodgers that I think every game is super important for me getting back out there,” DeSclafani said. “Any time you get a chance to pitch, I’m

just trying to build momentum and get on a roll again and hopefully I can do that against the Dodgers.”

A Giants lineup that was without several key hitters on Sunday was no match for Braves starter Ian Anderson, who tossed 5 2/3 scoreless innings and only gave up four hits. Despite going 6-3 on a road trip against the A’s, Mets and Braves, the Giants’ offense wasn’t nearly as consistent as it’s been for much of the season in part because players such as Posey and Bryant were limited.

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