San Francisco 8, Colorado 2
When: 10:15 PM ET, Friday, April 14, 2017
Where: AT&T Park, San Francisco, California
Temperature:
56°
Umpires:
Home -
Mike Everitt, 1B -
Bill Welke, 2B -
Bruce Dreckman, 3B -
Jordan Baker
Attendance:
42738
By The Sports Xchange
SAN FRANCISCO -- San Francisco Giants left fielder Chris Marrero never realized how difficult it can be catching a routine fly ball.
That's because he'd never had to do it after hitting a major-league home run.
Johnny Cueto benefited from an 11-hit attack, including Marrero's first big-league homer, to post his third straight win Friday night, helping the Giants square their series with the Colorado Rockies with an 8-2 victory.
Marrero and Brandon Crawford belted home runs for the Giants (5-7), who had been handcuffed by five Rockies pitchers in a 3-1 loss in the series opener on Thursday.
"This is more the man we saw in spring training," Giants manager Bruce Bochy said of Marrero, who hadn't played in the majors since the second of two stints with the Washington Nationals in 2013. "This is a game that should do so much for his confidence. He can hit."
Marrero's memorable night also featured a franchise-record-tying two balks on Rockies left-hander Tyler Anderson and the ejection of Rockies manager Bud Black in the top of the fifth inning.
"When I talk about umpires, I don't publicly comment. I'm not going to change that," Black said afterward. "From my vantage point, they looked like really good (pickoff) moves (by Anderson). Tyler has a good one. That's one of the reasons he's able to control the running game."
Cueto opened 3-0 in his first three starts for a second consecutive season by limiting the Rockies to six hits and two runs in seven innings. He walked one and struck out six.
The veteran right-hander pitched with a lead from the time Marrero cracked his first home run, a two-run shot in the second inning off Anderson (1-2).
The 400-foot blast came in the 144th big-league at-bat for Marrero, who had previously played 39 games for Washington.
"You think about this moment from the time you start playing baseball," Marrero said of the homer. "I've had ups and downs in my career. It's been a battle. But I never lost confidence in myself."
The magnitude of the moment didn't hit him until he took his place in left field to start the top of the third inning. And wouldn't you know it, the next batter, Tony Wolters, hit him a fly ball.
Marrero admitted being misty-eyed at the time.
"I was thinking about my fans, all the people who helped me get to this point," he explained. "My first one. You think about everything."
Ahead just 4-2, the Giants broke the game open with a four-run seventh that featured consecutive singles by Brandon Belt, Hunter Pence, Nick Hundley, Crawford and Eduardo Nunez off two Rockies relievers.
Pence had three hits for the Giants, who improved to 3-2 on their seven-game homestand.
Pence, Marrero and Crawford collected two RBIs apiece, Marrero and Crawford had two hits each, and Denard Span scored twice for San Francisco.
DJ LeMahieu had two hits for the Rockies (7-5), who were playing for the second time on a six-game trip.
"Keeping guys off balance, that's his game," Rockies slugger Carlos Gonzalez said of Cueto. "With a guy like him, you can't just go out there and try to go deep. You've got to take tough at-bats and create a situation with some runners on, that's the only way we could score some runs off him."
Colorado totaled six hits off three Giants pitchers.
A wild first five innings featured an ejection, two balks and a two-base error on a tag play at second base.
Anderson was pulled for a pinch hitter after four innings, having allowed four runs, three on the homers by Marrero and Crawford. He gave up five hits, walked one and struck out one.
He'd also been called for two balks, both for stepping too much toward home plate on pickoff throws to first, which led to Black's ejection.
"I didn't get an explanation," Anderson said of the balk calls. "I'm definitely frustrated."
Actually, Black didn't come onto the field to protest either balk on Anderson, who ranked tied for third in all of baseball last year with three.
Rather, Black vented his frustration on home plate umpire Mike Everitt and first base ump Bill Welke for not taking a similar, letter-of-the-law approach to Cueto's quirky pitching delivery.
Down 4-0, the Rockies got back in the game in the fifth when Stephen Cardullo, pinch-hitting for Anderson, hit a potential double play grounder to Giants second baseman Joe Panik with the bases loaded and one out.
Instead of flipping the ball to Crawford at short for a forceout at second base, Panik took matters into his own hands and tagged the burly Tony Wolters in the chest as he ran by. The contact knocked the ball from Panik's glove, allowing both Mark Reynolds and Trevor Story to score.
NOTES: A re-examination of RHP Jon Gray's injured left foot revealed a stress fracture and he was placed on the 10-day disabled list. The Rockies' Opening Day starter is expected to miss a month. ... Rockies LF Gerardo Parra left the team to attend the expected birth of his daughter in Miami. He was placed on the three-day paternity list. ... The Rockies filled the roster openings with RHP Shane Carle, who pitched a scoreless ninth inning, and OF Raimel Tapia, who started in left field and went 0-for-3. ... Giants manager Bruce Bochy disclosed before the game at C Buster Posey (hit in the head by a pitch) is expected to be reinstated from the seven-day concussion disabled list and return to the lineup as a designated hitter when the Giants open a two-game series at Kansas City on Tuesday. ... Rockies LHP Tyler Anderson's two balks equaled a franchise record in a game held by four others, most recently by Jorge De La Rosa in 2015. ... LF Chris Marrero's home run was the first hit by the Giants at home this season.
Top Game Performances
Team Stats Summary
Team |
Hits |
HR |
TB |
Avg |
LOB |
K |
RBI |
BB |
SB |
Errors |
Colorado
|
6 |
0 |
6 |
.188 |
12 |
6 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
San Francisco
|
11 |
2 |
17 |
.306 |
9 |
6 |
7 |
2 |
0 |
1 |