June 30, 2024
The Giants erased a four-run deficit for the second consecutive game, something the club hadn't done since 1998.

PITTSBURGH — The Giants faced Paul Skenes and lived to see another inning.

Held mostly in check by the Pirates’ 21-year-old flame-throwing sensation for six frames Thursday afternoon, the Giants mounted a furious comeback against Pittsburgh’s beleaguered bullpen for the second consecutive game to eke out a series win, 7-6

A grand slam from Joey Bart put the Giants in a four-run hole when they saw the last of Skenes’ triple-digit heaters after the sixth inning. It looked like the ultimate revenge for the forsaken former No. 2 overall pick, who was designated for assignment and shipped to Pittsburgh a week into the season, but the Giants would get the last laugh.

The only thing as consistent as blown leads this series has been Matt Chapman’s power swing, and both came through again.

A three-run blast from Chapman into the shrubbery beyond center field ignited an eighth-inning rally that resulted in five runs, with the knockout blow coming from Brett Wisely, who delivered a two-out single from the No. 9 hole to drive home the go-ahead run.

The home run was the third in as many games for Chapman, who went 5-for-14 over the course of the three-game series to raise his OPS to .757. That figure was below .600 as recently as last Wednesday, but Chapman has notched nine extra-base hits in the six games since while driving in eight runs and scoring 12.

The Giants had not come back to win after trailing by four or more runs in consecutive games since April 26 and 27, 1998.

Before the past two days, the Giants had not won a game they were trailing by five or more runs since June 15, 2021, when they erased a 9-0 deficit against the Diamondbacks. And on Tuesday, to begin the series, they blew a four-run lead in the ninth inning for the first time since Aug. 14, 2020, against the A’s.

Somehow, it ended in the Giants’ third road series win of the season, and they will have another chance to improve their record to .500 for the first time since the fourth game of the season Friday night at Citi Field, when they begin the second leg of the their road trip against the Mets.

The undeniable draw Thursday was Skenes, the Pirates’ 21-year-old flame-throwing sensation. An additional 10,000 fans showed up for the weekday matinee than had been on hand for either of the first two games of the series.

Right off the bat, the Giants did more damage against Skenes than the last team that faced the former No. 1 overall pick in last summer’s amateur draft.

Leading off, Luis Matos saw three pitches and poked the fourth — a 100.1 mph fastball — past first baseman Rowdy Tellez and, upon reaching first, slapped his hands together in celebration.

The one hit was more than the Cubs managed against Skenes over six innings at Wrigley Field five days earlier, and San Francisco even put another six men on base and pushed one across before activity began to stir in the Pittsburgh bullpen. They struck out only three times against Skenes’ electric arsenal that had produced 18 strikeouts over his first 10 major-league innings.

Up next

The Giants head to Queens to finish their brief two-city trip with three games against the Mets at Citi Field.

Related Articles

San Francisco Giants |


SF Giants surrender Joey Bart’s first career grand slam in Pittsburgh finale

San Francisco Giants |


SF Giants give Pirates taste of their own medicine in dramatic comeback win

San Francisco Giants |


How SF Giants are preparing to face Paul Skenes, Pirates’ flame-throwing rookie sensation

San Francisco Giants |


SF Giants’ win streak comes to an end as they blow 4-run lead in 9th inning to Pirates

San Francisco Giants |


SF Giants activate Patrick Bailey from concussion protocol as they begin to get healthier

LHP Kyle Harrison (4-1, 3.60) will be opposed by RHP Christian Scott (0-2, 4.32) Friday in the series opener (3:40 p.m. PT), followed by RHP Jordan Hicks (4-1, 2.38) vs. RHP Luis Severino (2-2, 3.48) on Saturday (10:40 a.m. PT) before RHP Logan Webb (4-4, 3.03) faces old friend LHP Sean Manaea (3-1, 3.11) to close the road trip.

OF Michael Conforto (hamstring) is likely to be inactive for his second consecutive return trip to the ballpark he called home for the first seven years of his career.

“There’s always next year,” said the outfielder sidelined since he strained his left hamstring running to first base May 11.

While Conforto has progressed to participating in full baseball activities, the Giants don’t want to him to re-injure the hamstring.

“The hard part is simulating getting out of the batter’s box, so he’s going to have to run some bases hard before we’re comfortable putting him back out there,” Melvin said. “That kind of was his goal, to get in one of those games. … I know he’s digging for it. But that might be tough.”

>