
Giants, winless Justin Verlander chase series victory vs. Braves
Atlanta won the opener of the three-game series 9-5 on Monday before San Francisco prevailed 9-0 on Tuesday. The latest result ended the Giants' six-game losing streak and gave San Francisco a 4-1 advantage over the Braves in the season series.
Verlander (0-8, 4.99 ERA) will be matched up against Atlanta's Spencer Strider (4-7, 3.59) on Wednesday.
Verlander is coming off an abbreviated start on Friday. The 42-year-old veteran pitched 2 2/3 innings -- only the ninth time in his career he failed to pitch at least three innings -- and allowed four runs on nine hits and two walks against the host Toronto Blue Jays. He failed to record a strikeout for the first time this season.
Verlander was ejected from the dugout on Sunday after complaining about perceived missed pitches by plate umpire Chad Whitson, who was caught on a live television microphone saying, "How about you worry about getting out of the third inning, huh?"
The right-hander did not face the Braves when the teams met in San Francisco in June. Verlander has made four career starts against Atlanta, going 2-1 with a 3.75 ERA.
"Stuff-wise, I'm still fairly optimistic," Verlander said. "I had a tough one (against Toronto). They found a way to put a lot of balls in play and found a lot of holes. The ones they did hit hard found corners. I think about how the mechanical adjustments have helped my stuff. The velo is better. I think the breaking balls are sharper, all in all."
Strider was outstanding in his first post-All-Star-break start on Friday against the New York Yankees, leading the Braves to a 7-3 win. He threw six scoreless innings, allowed three hits and three walks and struck out eight to log a seventh quality start in his past eight appearances. He is 4-3 with a 2.77 ERA in that span.
"We've got to show up every day and our job the rest of the season is to try to win the game we're playing today," Strider said. "Once the game starts, that can be the only focus, and I think that's going to give us the best chance."
Strider faced the Giants on June 8 and took the loss, pitching six innings and allowing four runs, three earned. In five career starts against San Francisco, the 26-year-old right-hander is 2-2 with a 3.77 ERA.
The Giants made a couple of moves to bolster their bullpen on Tuesday. Right-handers Hayden Birdsong and Tristan Beck were both optioned to Triple-A Sacramento, with right-handers Carson Seymour and Sean Hjelle recalled as replacements.
Both new faces got into the Tuesday night game and delivered solid outings.
Hjelle pitched a scoreless inning but was hit on the right hamstring by a 107 mph liner off the bat of Michael Harris II. Hjelle remained in the game after a visit from the trainer.
Seymour closed the contest with two strong innings, striking out four.
--Field Level Media

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
37 minutes ago
- Reuters
Nick Lodolo dominates Nats; Reds still haven't been swept in 3-game series
July 23 - Nick Lodolo tossed a four-hit shutout and the visiting Cincinnati Reds averted a series sweep when they beat the Washington Nationals 5-0 on Wednesday. Jake Fraley and Santiago Espinal had two hits each for the Reds, who had lost three straight. Lodolo (8-6) stuck out eight without a walk. He threw 105 pitches in his first career shutout. The Nationals didn't put a runner in scoring position until the eighth inning when Luis Garcia Jr. doubled. Cincinnati was on the verge of being swept in a three-game series for the first time this season and the Nationals were looking to sweep a series for the first time since May 16-18 versus the Baltimore Orioles. Nationals starter Michael Soroka (3-8) allowed a run on two hits over 5 2/3 innings. He struck out six and walked three. Leading 1-0, the Reds added two insurance runs in the eighth. Austin Hays singled with one out and went to third on Fraley's single. Noelvi Marte then doubled, scoring Hays, and Fraley came home on Jose Trevino's flyout. Will Benson nearly made it 5-0, but Washington's Jacob Young climbed the center field fence to rob Benson of a home run. With runners on first and second in the ninth, Cincinnati's Matt McLain bunted and when third baseman Brady House's throw to first was wild, Espinal scored. TJ Friedl came home on a double play to make it 5-0. Washington's James Wood singled with one out in the bottom of the first but was caught stealing. Two Reds reached with two outs in the third, but Soroka retired Gavin Lux, who went 4-for-4 on Tuesday night. Elly De La Cruz walked to lead off the fourth, stole second with one out and scored on a single by Fraley for the game's first run. The Reds had runners on first and second with two outs in the sixth, but Cole Henry relieved Soroka and got Trevino to fly out. Espinal singled with one out in the Cincinnati seventh, but Konnor Pilkington came on and got the next two outs. --Field Level Media


Reuters
37 minutes ago
- Reuters
Twins place RHP David Festa (shoulder) on 15-day IL
July 23 - The Minnesota Twins placed starting pitcher David Festa on the 15-day injured list on Wednesday because of right shoulder inflammation. The move is retroactive to Tuesday. In a corresponding move, the Twins recalled rookie right-hander Travis Adams from Triple-A St. Paul. Festa, 25, last pitched on Monday, allowing four runs on four hits -- including three home runs -- with one walk and five strikeouts in 5 1/3 innings in a 5-2 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers. The right-hander is 3-4 this season with a 5.40 ERA and 53 strikeouts in 53 1/3 innings over 11 games (10 starts). Festa has a career record of 5-10 with a 5.12 ERA over 25 games (23 starts) since his rookie season of 2024. Minnesota selected Festa in the 13th round of the 2021 draft out of Seton Hall. Adams, 25, is 1-0 with a 6.00 ERA over three relief appearances this season. --Field Level Media


Reuters
37 minutes ago
- Reuters
Spencer Horwitz's slam powers Pirates' sweep of Tigers, 6-1
July 23 - Spencer Horwitz's grand slam backed up a quality start from Bailey Falter and helped the host Pittsburgh Pirates finish off a three-game sweep of the frontrunning Detroit Tigers with a 6-1 victory on Wednesday afternoon. Horwitz belted his third home run of the season and first career grand slam in the second inning off Detroit prospect Troy Melton (0-1), who made his major league debut. The 416-foot blast, which came with two outs, gave Pittsburgh a 5-0 lead and put the Pirates on course for their fourth series sweep of the season and 10th win in their past 13 home games. Horwitz finished 7-for-12 with seven RBIs in the series. The Tigers lost their third in a row and for the ninth time in their past 10 games. They were swept for the third time this season and second time in their past three series. Melton's rough day ended after five innings in which he allowed six runs on seven hits, including two home runs, walking two and striking out seven. Andrew McCutchen had the other home run in the bottom of the first -- his ninth of the season -- to put Pittsburgh ahead 1-0. Oneil Cruz had two hits and an RBI and stole two bases, bringing his season total to 33. Bryan Reynolds also continued his torrid hitting with two hits, including his 21st double of the season. Detroit produced its lone run in the top of the seventh when Falter (7-5) allowed a double to Spencer Torkelson and a single to Matt Vierling with one out. But Falter was sharp beyond that, delivering a bounce-back performance in which he struck out eight with no walks, and allowed the lone run on four hits in seven innings. Zach McKinstry, Wenceel Perez and Colt Keith each had a hit for the Tigers, who have scored only nine runs in six games since the All-Star break, with five of those coming in Tuesday's 8-5 loss. To make room for Melton on the active and 40-man rosters, the Tigers placed ace Tarik Skubal on the paternity list and designated center fielder Brewer Hicklen for assignment. --Field Level Media