Oh, what a difference a day makes.
Before yesterday’s game it felt like the San Diego Padres were on the brink of collapse.
Heading into their first rubber match of the season against the Boston Red Sox, there wasn’t a whole lot of hope they could deliver after losing the first two series of the season.
But the Friars delivered, and then some.
They got off to a rough start, with starter Walker Buehler allowing four runs and only going 2 2/3 innings.
But then, they pounced. A three-run fourth inning and another in the fifth gave the Padres a two-run lead. Wandy Peralta came in to get the final out of the seventh and stumbled, allowing the Sox to tie it up.
But Jackson Merrill left no doubt.
He took Boston reliever Tyler Uberstine deep to give San Diego a lead before Fernando Tatis Jr. brought Gavin Sheets home on an ninth-inning sacrifice fly to make the score 8-6.
Mason Miller came in to close it out and continued his scoreless streak, striking out all three batters and giving the Padres their first series win of 2026.
(A fun note: Miller has now struck out nine straight batters. The record is 13, held by fellow Padres reliever Jeremiah Estrada.)
Now they’ll turn to a dominant Pittsburgh Pirates rotation and a reunion with former Padres first baseman Ryan O’Hearn.
Taking the mound
Bubba Chandler (PIT) v. Germán Márquez (SD)
Chandler had a fantastic first outing for the Pirates, going 4 1/3 scoreless innings for the club with six strikeouts.
Pittsburgh is nothing without their young, dominant rotation (highlighted by their ace Paul Skenes) but Chandler represents a fascinating rookie who could be just as much of a threat.
The Padres have been solid batting against righties, hopefully they can chase him from the game early and get to the relievers.
Márquez, on the other hand, had an uninspiring debut in a Padres uniform. He gave up four runs in only three innings in what ended up being a loss for the Friars to the division-rival San Francisco Giants.
If he can turn it around in this outing against Pittsburgh, it’ll go a long way to quelling the doubts about his ability to hold a back-end spot in the rotation.
But it’s a difficult lineup, with sluggers like Oneil Cruz, O’Hearn and Marcell Ozuna stacking up. If Márquez can make it through relatively unscathed, it’ll be a success.
Batter up!
With the 12-hit performance San Diego had against Boston yesterday, the Padres’ bats seem to have woken up (at least a little).
Chief of those is Manny Machado who went 2-for-4 with a three-run shot over the Green Monster in left field.
The Friars have continued to preach that their at-bats are good and they’ll get the results they want eventually, and they finally seem to have.
Hopefully that will remain the same as they face a difficult starting rotation in Pittsburgh. First they’ll face the rookie Chandler.
They haven’t faced a righty since Sonny Gray so their lineup will look similar to that. But Ramón Laureano has continued to rake so he’ll probably remain second in the batting order:
- Fernando Tatis Jr., RF
- Ramón Laureano, LF
- Jackson Merrill, CF
- Manny Machado, 3B
- Xander Bogaerts, SS
- Gavin Sheets, 1B
- Nick Castellanos, DH
- Jake Cronenworth, 2B
- Luis Campusano, C
Sheets went 4-for-6 through Wednesday and Friday’s games before not starting in both of the Friars’ wins. His bat was hot but he only got one at-bat (he doubled) in the last two games against Boston.
He’ll figure to start at first base for the Padres given his red-hot bat and solid defense.
Relief corps
The difficult thing with yesterday’s game was Buehler’s start.
After only lasting 2 2/3 innings, the Friars were forced to turn to their bullpen depth (who held it down). But the problem is that they used Kyle Hart, Bradgley Rodriguez, Peralta, Estrada and Miller.
Márquez has not yet proven he can go more than a few innings for San Diego after only lasting three in his start against the Giants last Tuesday.
If he falters, the ‘pen may have a difficult time recovering for the rest of the series without a gem from Nick Pivetta tomorrow.
Those who will be readily available are Ron Marinaccio, David Morgan, and Adrian Morejon. Morejon threw 29 pitches and has been a little shaky thus far this year, so Marinaccio and Morgan will likely be turned to first if Márquez falters.