Latest news with #KaiWeiTeng
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Bob Melvin praises Kai-Wei Teng's outing in Giants' shutout win vs. Nationals
San Francisco manager Bob Melvin speaks with the media after the Giants' 5-0 win over the Washington Nationals on Friday at Oracle Park. Bob Melvin praises Kai-Wei Teng's outing in Giants' shutout win vs. Nationals originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Giants' Kai-Wei Teng discusses shutdown outing for first MLB win vs. Nationals
San Francisco pitcher Kai-Wei Teng speaks with the media after the Giants' 5-0 win over the Washington Nationals on Friday at Oracle Park. Giants' Kai-Wei Teng discusses shutdown outing for first MLB win vs. Nationals originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Giants' Kai-Wei Teng dazzles with five shutout innings to earn first MLB win
The "Giants Postgame Live" crew discusses Kai-Wei Teng's outing in San Francisco's 5-0 win over the Washington Nationals on Friday at Oracle Park. Giants' Kai-Wei Teng dazzles with five shutout innings to earn first MLB win originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area


CBS News
2 days ago
- Sport
- CBS News
Devers homers early, Giants blank Nationals 5-0
Rafael Devers and Casey Schmitt homered, and the San Francisco Giants beat the Washington Nationals 5-0 on Friday night to snap their longest home losing streak in more than a decade. Matt Chapman had two hits and an RBI for the Giants. Dominic Smith added two singles to extend his hitting streak to 12 games. Kai-Wei Teng (1-1) pitched five smooth innings in relief for his first major league win. The 26-year-old from Taiwan followed opener Matt Gage and allowed three hits with one walk with four strikeouts. Joey Lucchesi, José Buttó and Tristan Beck each retired three batters to complete the four-hitter. The Giants had lost eight straight at Oracle Park — one shy of their longest home skid of the San Francisco era — before beating the Nationals for the third time in four meetings this season. Devers, acquired from Boston in June, launched his 21st home run of the season off Jake Irvin (8-7) in the first. Chapman's RBI single later in the inning made it 2-0. Schmitt's homer, a two-run drive in the sixth, was his second in six days. San Francisco added a run in the eighth on Patrick Bailey's infield single. Irvin allowed eight hits and four runs (three earned) in 5 1/3 innings. After the Nationals loaded the bases with no outs in the fifth, Devers fielded a grounder to first base and threw out Josh Bell at home plate before the next batter, Jacob Young, grounded into a double play. Teng threw 64 pitches in five innings and allowed only two runners past second base. Giants top pitching prospect Carson Whisenhunt (1-0, 4.35 ERA) faces Nationals right-hander Brad Lord (2-6, 3.42) on Saturday.


Washington Post
2 days ago
- Sport
- Washington Post
3,000 miles from home, Nationals' offense continues to flail in loss to Giants
SAN FRANCISCO — In the fifth inning Friday night, the Washington Nationals had the San Francisco Giants and reliever Kai-Wei Teng on the ropes. The bases were loaded, no outs. What followed in the Nationals' 5-o loss to the Giants was a microcosm of the Nationals season. Jose Tena swung at the first pitch — a sinker below the strike zone — and grounded into a fielder's choice with a force out at home. Just like that Teng was no longer on the ropes. Jacob Young watched a sweeper for a strike in the ensuing at-bat, then hit a curveball into an inning-ending double play. 'You have to be aggressive in the strike zone, but if you're not aggressive in the strike zone, they're not going to throw you strikes," interim manager Miguel Cairo said. 'That means they're going to throw out of the strike zone. You cannot allow the pitcher to dictate what you're going to do. ... He [has] got to come to you, not you to him.' The Nationals (45-70) went 1 for 6 with runners in scoring position and left three runners on base as they were shut out for the second game in a row. They only had four hits. And Teng, a reliever who entered after the Giants (59-57) employed an opener, threw five scoreless innings, allowed three hits, one walk and struck out four. And it took him just 64 pitches to do so. For most of the season, Washington has struggled with patience at the plate. Its 329 walks rank 27th in MLB. The average major league walk rate is 8.4 percent. Only James Wood, Nathaniel Lowe and Josh Bell, who walked to open the fifth, are above that figure. The Nationals drew two walks Friday, their first free passes since Tuesday. Walks alone don't result in success. But walks show an advanced approach, something Washington's young hitters rarely show in situations that matter. 'Jake [Irvin] kept us in the game there,' Young said. 'We get a couple runs there [in the fifth], it's probably a different game. It's little at-bats here and there like that, they go the other way and we're looking at a completely different game.' Well before the fifth inning, Jake Irvin struggled to complete the first. Irvin allowed a solo homer to Rafael Devers, then three straight singles, including Matt Chapman's RBI knock, to extend San Francisco's lead to 2-0. Irvin's first-inning ERA is 9.75. The Giants were selectively aggressive against Irvin and used it to their advantage. Six of their eight hits came with less than two strikes. But Irvin navigated damage until the sixth. Jung Hoo Lee hit a routine grounder to Nathaniel Lowe that went under his glove. Casey Schmitt, who recorded outs on Irvin's curveball in his first two at-bats, waited for a breaking ball in the sixth. He saw it on the first pitch and deposited it into the seats for a two-run homer. That ended Irvin's night. The Giants scored an insurance run in the eighth. The Nationals' offense never responded. 'We just need to have better at-bats,' Cairo said. 'With men on base, we got to do the little things. We got bases loaded, no outs. Groundball, groundball. That's at least two or three runs right there. We got to do the little things. Jake pitched his butt off today.' Note: Nationals second baseman Luis García Jr. was scratched from Friday's game with back tightness and was replaced by Jose Tena, who batted eighth. Cairo said García injured himself in batting practice and won't play Saturday with a quick turnaround.