San Diego Union-Tribune

She said on phone from Colombia that he would hit homer

- BY KEVIN ACEE

They had gone 20 innings without a run and trailed by two. Jurickson Profar had somewhat improbably run into the ninth inning’s second out. They were down to their last chance.

No one watching could have had much confidence the Padres would win Sunday.

Except Consuelo Buelvas, almost certainly viewing from some 3,000 miles away in Colombia.

She watches every Padres game she can and in a pregame conversati­on Sunday morning told her son to be ready, that even though he was not starting he would hit a home run.

A mother’s faith on Mother’s Day evidently is all it took for the Padres to score.

Pinch-hitter Jorge Alfaro launched the first pitch he saw from the Marlins’ Cole Sulser all the way to the visitors’ bullpen beyond the left-field wall to give the Padres a 3-2 victory at Petco Park.

“It was like dreaming,” Alfaro said of recalling what his mother said as he ran around the bases. “How (does) she know that?”

Even as they won three of the four games against the Marlins, Alfaro’s three-run homer provided the Padres’ first runs since the fifth inning of Friday’s game.

They lost 8-0 on Saturday and before Alfaro’s blast had scored just five runs in the three games since returning home from a road trip in

which they scored at least five runs in all eight games.

An offense that has only occasional­ly produced at a high level this season and has skidded into a deep freeze came close to losing for the first time in Joe Musgrove’s six starts.

Musgrove, who allowed five hits and struck out eight while going seven innings for the second straight start, did not get the win since the Padres trailed 2-0 when he departed. Robert Suarez was the winner after pitching two perfect innings in relief of Musgrove.

The third hit Musgrove allowed was a solo homer by Jazz Chisholm leading off the sixth that gave the Marlins a 2-0 lead.

Musgrove yielded his first two hits in the fourth inning, and the Marlins took a 1-0 lead when Jose Aguilar scored on Garrett Cooper’s sacrifice fly. Aguilar had doubled to the gap in leftcenter on a fading liner that caromed off Trent Grisham’s glove after he ran 77 feet and dove.

The Padres got no such breaks until they finally broke through.

Profar’s one-out single in the ninth was the Padres’ sixth hit. He also made the inning’s second out. On a grounder by Grisham, Marlins third baseman Joey Wendle, playing on the right side in a shift, dove to make the stop but threw wide of second trying to force Profar. As the ball rolled away from shortstop Miguel Rojas, and with no one covering third, Profar kept going and was tagged out by Sulser, who alertly sprinted from his spot on the mound.

“Over and over and over and over,” Profar said when asked if he would try taking the extra base in that situation again.

He then held up both arms, flexed and said, “Our team is great.”

The Padres, who improved to 19-10, are arguably a lot more hits away from actually being great. But what they did in the ninth inning did have them feeling like they could accomplish anything.

They certainly did battle to the end, despite not showing much for much of the afternoon in front of a crowd of 37,937 that had been waiting for a reason to get loud.

Rookie shortstop CJ Abrams, one of four players in the starting lineup still batting under .200, followed the Profar out with a single that moved Grisham to third.

“CJ has had his struggles,” manager Bob Melvin said. “... He knew his job is somehow find a way to get on base; didn’t try to do too much, didn’t try to hit a homer. There was a hole open over between short and third, and he just lined the ball over there. That was one of his better at-bats in a while, under more pressure than normal.”

Alfaro was sent to the plate in place of José Azocar.

“I’m looking for some power in that spot,” Melvin said. “One pitch with with a guy like Georgie can can win a game.”

Sometimes a manager’s move works out just like he imagines. Alfaro quickly made this one seem prescient, sending the ball an estimated 449 feet at 113.4 mph.

“When I felt that and I saw the ball I was like, ‘That should go,’ ” said Alfaro, who immediatel­y turned and looked at the dugout before beginning a jog around the bases that ended with him being mobbed at the plate. “I can’t explain the feeling right now, but it’s just unbelievab­le. She called it earlier. ... It’s a lot of emotions.”

Afterward, during the celebratio­n in the dugout, the Swagg Chain made its 2022 debut. The celebrator­y talisman that was such a big part of the Padres’ vibe early last season, had been hidden away. Some Padres veterans said the chain’s reemergenc­e required the right big moment.

Of the moment Alfaro provided, chain originator and keeper Manny Machado said, “Couldn’t have been bigger.”

 ?? ??
 ?? MIKE MCGINNIS AP ?? Manny Machado goes 2-for-4 Sunday to raise his Padres-leading average to .385.
MIKE MCGINNIS AP Manny Machado goes 2-for-4 Sunday to raise his Padres-leading average to .385.

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