San Francisco Chronicle

Moronta impresses as he becomes big bullpen key

- By Henry Schulman Henry Schulman is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer.

Fifteen thousand dollars. That was the bonus pitcher Reyes Moronta got at 17 when the Giants signed him as an internatio­nal free agent. Look at him now, one of the club’s top relievers nearly a month into the season.

Moronta, 25, earned his first big-league win Tuesday night, has an 0.64 ERA, can pitch multiple innings and has a repertoire diverse enough to retire right-handed and lefthanded hitters just the same.

He has allowed one hit to a left-hander in 19 at-bats. Righties are 3-for-25.

Moronta is not an overnight success. The Giants protected him with a valuable 40-man roster spot before the 2017 season. He reached the majors for seven games last year and struck out 11 in 62⁄3 innings. He was one of the last cuts out of

spring training this year.

When Moronta pitched for the Triple-A team in an exhibition against the Giants on the way home from Arizona, team officials got one more reminder why Moronta needed to come up posthaste.

“The game he had against us in Sacramento was pretty impressive,” manager Bruce Bochy said. “He’s got no fear.”

Moronta saved a 6-5 victory by allowing two singles, then striking out Alen Hansen, Gorkys Hernandez and Chase D’Arnaud.

Moronta demonstrat­es the confidence that he can beat any hitter, but he said after Tuesday’s win, with Manolo Hernåndez Douen translatin­g, “I

wouldn’t say I’m confident I can get everyone out, but the I have the pitches I need to do my job.”

Paternity leave: Starter Chris Stratton was placed on the paternity list and was flying to Mississipp­i to join his wife, Martha Kate, for the birth of the couple’s second child. Stratton is expected back in time to start the day half of Saturday’s doublehead­er against the Dodgers. Johnny Cueto will pitch the night game.

Roberto Gomez was recalled from Sacramento to replace Stratton and could be the 26th man the Giants will be allowed to add for the doublehead­er. The Giants then would have to demote Gomez, or another player, on Sunday.

Twitter skipper: Bochy opened a Twitter account (@brucebochy­1) Tuesday. Former third-base coach Tim Flannery, who is outspoken on Twitter on politics, baseball and everything else predicted Bochy would not last a month, but Bochy does not plan to be an active tweeter.

“If they tweet bad things, I’m going to tweet back, ‘Love harder,’ ” Bochy said, a reference to Flannery’s anti-violence campaign.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States