Mookie Betts' late home run lifts Dodgers to series sweep of the Padres

Los Angeles, CA - August 17: Los Angeles Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts (50) celebrates his go-ahead home run in the eighth inning against the San Diego Padres at Dodger Stadium on Sunday, Aug. 17, 2025 in Los Angeles, CA. (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)
Mookie Betts celebrates his go-ahead home run in the eighth inning of a 5-4 win over the San Diego Padres at Dodger Stadium on Sunday. (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

For so much of this year, the Dodgers have been picking Mookie Betts up amid a career-worst season at the plate.

On Sunday afternoon, with a rivalry game and division lead hanging in the balance, he returned the favor with his biggest swing in ages.

After once leading by four, then watching the Padres claw all the way back to tie the score, the Dodgers completed a weekend series sweep on Betts’ go-ahead home run in the bottom of the eighth — his no-doubt, 394-foot, stadium-shaking blast sending the Dodgers to a 5-4 win and two-game lead in the National League West.

As Betts came to the plate in the eighth inning, Dodger Stadium was silent and tense.

In the first inning, the team had ambushed Padres starter Yu Darvish for four runs on long balls from Freddie Freeman and Andy Pages.

From there, a crowd of 49,189 watched the Padres slowly storm back.

Tyler Glasnow fizzled after two electric opening innings, leaving the game at the end of the fifth after giving up two runs.

A patchwork Dodgers bullpen couldn’t hold the Padres off, giving up runs in the top of the sixth and eighth that transformed the score into a 4-4 tie.

At that point, San Diego had the advantage. Their league-leading bullpen was fresh. Their closer, Robert Suarez, was on the mound. And the Dodgers were almost completely out of pitching options, having burned five relievers to get the previous nine outs.

But then, Betts delivered. In a 2-and-0 count against Suarez, he launched a center-cut fastball deep into the left-field stands.

It was the kind of moment that has eluded the former MVP so often this year. The kind of heroic act the Dodgers (71-53) had been waiting for despite his career-worst .241 batting average.

Mookie Betts runs the bases after hitting a solo home run in the eighth inning for the Dodgers against the Padres on Sunday.
Mookie Betts runs the bases after hitting a solo home run in the eighth inning for the Dodgers against the Padres on Sunday. (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

Just like that, the Dodgers completed their sweep against the Padres (69-55). They went from second place at the start of Friday to all alone back in first three days later.

Long before the dramatic ending, Sunday had started like the previous two nights. The Dodgers were getting good pitching, with Glasnow striking out four of his first five batters while pumping increased fastball velocity and generating foolish swings with his slider. The Padres were making mistakes; most notably, Freddy Fermín getting gunned down by Pages from center while trying to leg out a double in the top of the third, turning what could have been a crooked-number inning into only a one-run rally.

Darvish, meanwhile, made a pair of two-strike mistakes, leaving a fastball up to Freeman for a three-run homer before failing to bury a splitter to Pages for a solo shot.

Read more:Dodgers capitalize on Padres' sloppiness to retake sole possession of first place

Things began to shift, however, in the fifth. Ramón Laureano lifted a solo drive just over the wall in right. And though Glasnow got out of a jam later in the inning, his fading command and rising pitch count forced him from the game after 91 throws.

That meant, with the Padres turning to their shutdown (and, after two defeats to start the series, well-rested) bullpen, the Dodgers’ shaky relief corps was asked to protect a narrow lead.

Once again, they couldn’t.

In the sixth, Anthony Banda gave up one run on a pair of doubles (the second one, a floating fly ball into the right field corner from Ryan O’Hearn that slow-footed Teoscar Hernández couldn’t track down).

And though Blake Treinen stranded a runner at third in the seventh — thanks in no small part to a generous strike call against Manny Machado that negated a walk — more trouble arose in the eighth.

Alexis Díaz started the inning by hitting a batter, then gave up a double to Laureano on a line drive to center. Alex Vesia took over from there and retired both batters he faced. But the first one was a ground ball from Jose Iglesias, just enough to get a runner home from third for the tying run.

Dodgers reliever Alex Vesia, right, celebrates with catcher Will Smith after beating the Padres.
Dodgers reliever Alex Vesia, right, celebrates with catcher Will Smith after the Dodgers' 5-4 win over the Padres at Dodger Stadium on Sunday. (Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Times)

For a fleeting moment, all the momentum the Dodgers had built this past week seemed to be fading.

Instead of retaking control of the division lead, they risked finishing this weekend tied atop the standings.

With one swing, Betts changed all that.

In a year of so much frustration, his moment of salvation finally arrived.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Start of Sunday's Mets-Mariners MLB Little League Classic delayed due to rain

The start of Sunday's MLB Little League Classic between the Mets and Mariners in Williamsport, PA., has been delayed due to rain.

The rain began to come down in buckets at around 5:45 p.m., and the tarp was placed over the field at Journey Bank Ballpark at Historic Bowman Field.

The game, the finale of the three-game set which began at Citi Field, will now begin at 7:45 p.m. 

Fortunately, the Mets players had plenty of chances to soak in some of the fun with the Little League World Series players before the rain.

When things get underway, right-hander Clay Holmes will climb the hill for the Mets, serving as the home team in the game, for his 25th start of the year. He has pitched to a 3.71 ERA and 1.349 WHIP over 126 innings with 101 strikeouts and 52 walks.

Holmes has struggled of late; in five starts since the All-Star break, he has pitched to a 5.56 ERA (3.95 FIP) and a 1.765 WHIP in 22.2 innings. He has just 18 strikeouts to 11 walks.

Seattle is sending out righty GeorgeKirby for his 16th start of the year. He has a 3.71 ERA and 1.071 WHIP over 85 innings with 90 strikeouts to 20 walks. After struggling to start the year (6.16 ERA over his first six outings), he has been solid since the break, with a 2.32 ERA (2.21 FIP) and 0.935 WHIP in 31.0 innings over his past five starts with 34 strikeouts to eight walks.

Paul Goldschmidt's three hits, sloppy St. Louis defense lead to Yankees' three-game sweep of Cardinals

The Yankees secured a three-game sweep, defeating the St. Louis Cardinals by a score of 8-4 on Sunday afternoon.

Here are the key takeaways…

-- For the first time in 46 games, Anthony Volpe was not the starting shortstop for the Yankees. Volpe is just 3-for-his-last-26 at the plate, and if you zoom out further, he’s 11-for-his-last-55 with 13 strikeouts.

Jose Caballero got the start at short, and he ended up playing a huge role in the victory. Leading off the top of the ninth in a 4-4 game, Caballero hit a high-chopper to second, and while Thomas Saggese had plenty of time to make the play, he ended up throwing it away, putting Caballero on second.

The Yankees would go on to load the bases, and Cody Bellinger found a hole between first and second, with the ball getting past Saggese for his second error of the inning, scoring two New York runs. The Yankees would add another on a Jazz Chisholm Jr. groundout, going up 7-4. 

Caballero went 1-for-4 with an RBI, but his speed was what put things in motion in the ninth.

-- Welcome back, Paul Goldschmidt!

After playing 836 regular-season games as a Cardinal, including winning an NL MVP in 2022, Goldschmidt got his first start as a visitor in St. Louis.

The crowd gave Goldschmidt a standing ovation in the second inning, and he ended up having a really nice day at the plate, going 3-for-5 with an RBI double in the ninth and a run scored earlier in the game.

--Goldschmidt was part of a three-run fourth inning for the Yankees against Miles Mikolas. After a Chisholmwalk and a Goldschmidt double, the bottom of the Yankees’ order delivered with three-straight RBI hits by Jasson Dominguez, Ryan McMahon, and Caballero, as the Yankees jumped out to a 3-0 lead.

-- It wasn’t a great afternoon for Yankees starter Will Warren, though the defense behind him didn’t give him a ton of help. After three scoreless innings to get things started, Warren ran into trouble in the fourth, allowing a pair of two-out runs after the inning began with a McMahon error.

Warren’s fifth inning started with a Chisholm throwing error, and after the Cardinals scored their third run of the game on an Alec Burleson RBI single, Warren’s afternoon ended shortly thereafter.

Warren went 4.2 innings, allowing one earned run (three runs total) on six hits to go along with three strikeouts and one walk.

-- The Yanks evened the game in the seventh thanks to some small ball. After Trent Grisham walked to get things started, an Aaron Judge soft hit to right moved Grisham to third, and the speedy outfielder came around to score on a Bellinger sac fly to center.

-- Both benches had some problems with home plate umpire Nick Lentz. In the fourth, after Aaron Boone was chirping at Lentz about the strike zone, it was major league field coordinator and director of catching Tanner Swanson who got tossed after the inning was over. Then, in the top of the seventh, Cards skipper Oli Marmol got the hook after being dissatisfied with the strike zone.

-- Camilo Doval allowed a game-tying solo home run to Cards catcher Yohel Pozo in the sixth inning, and has now allowed at least one earned run in four of his eight appearances with the Yankees. Doval owns a 6.43 ERA since being traded to the Yanks from the San Francisco Giants.

Game MVP

Goldschmidt, who had three hits in his first start as a visitor in St. Louis since his days as a Cardinal.

Highlights

Upcoming schedule

The Yankees have a day off on Monday before starting a quick two-game series against the Tampa Bay Rays on Tuesday night at 7:35 p.m.

Carlos Rodon is scheduled to face righty Shane Baz.

Mets' Tylor Megill strikes out nine in second rehab start at Double-A Binghamton

Tylor Megill had another impressive rehab outing as he looks to get back to bolster the Mets' pitching ranks.

In his second start with Double-A Binghamton as he works his way back from an elbow strain, the right-hander allowed one hit over 3.1 innings while striking out nine and walking none on 55 pitches (39 strikes, with 12 whiffs).

Megill had to settle in as he allowed a leadoff single on an 0-2 pitch before needing five pitches to get the next two outs. With two down in the home half of the first, Megill uncorked a pair of wild pitches to allow the runner to reach third before getting a swinging strikeout, his second of the inning, on a 3-2 pitch.

After that, Megill retired the next seven straight batters with six going down on strikes. With one out in the third, the righty recorded his ninth strikeout of the day, but a passed ball saw the batter reach to end his day with a runner on first base.

In his first outing at Double-A earlier this week, Megill allowed three hits and a walk while striking out four over 1.2 innings, throwing 41 pitches (27 strikes).

In 14 starts with the Mets this year, the 30-year-old has pitched to a 3.95 ERA and 1.361 WHIP in 68.1 innings with 89 strikeouts to 33 walks. He made his last appearance on June 14 before landing on the IL.

Red Sox infielder Marcelo Mayer to have season-ending right wrist surgery

BOSTON (AP) — Boston Red Sox infielder Marcelo Mayer said Sunday that he’ll have season-ending surgery on his right wrist.

The 22-year-old Mayer injured the wrist in late July, got an injection to try and come back, but decided to have surgery. He said he has a tear that hadn’t improved with the anti-inflammatory injection.

“I knew definitely that it was going to be on the table,” he said, sitting in the Red Sox dugout at Fenway Park before they faced Miami in the series finale.

“As an athlete and somebody that loves this game so much, all I want to do is play and be out there every single day, especially when you’re in the big leagues and the playoffs are so important,” he said. “The way that my wrist is right now, there’s just no way to come back and play. It made the decision pretty easy to have the surgery.”

Drafted fourth overall in 2021, Mayer was called up in late May. A natural shortstop, he played mostly third base, batting .228 with four homers and 10 RBIs in 44 games.

“The shot wasn’t working. It’s a three-month recovery, He should be fine if everything goes well for spring training,” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said. “He’s a big part of the future of this organization, just get him right, get him ready and see what happens in the future.”

Cora said he knew things weren’t going well after Mayer played catch on Thursday’s day off.

“He didn’t sound too positive about it. ‘My swing is not right,’’’ Cora said Mayer told him.

Mayer also knew that surgery was the best option.

“Yeah, gave it my all. Obviously with options given, I could have had surgery when I first injured it or get the shot,” he said. “I tried everything I could with the slight chance to come back and play.”

He also missed the final two months in the minors last season with a shoulder injury and didn’t play after July 31.

Orioles promote top prospect Samuel Basallo for MLB debut

HOUSTON (AP) — Baltimore’s top prospect Samuel Basallo will make his MLB debut Sunday after the Orioles selected his contract from Triple-A Norfolk.

Basallo, rated Baltimore’s No. 1 prospect and the No. 8 prospect in baseball by MLB.com, is a catcher and first baseman, but was batting sixth and serving as the team’s designated hitter Sunday in the series finale against the Astros.

“This is the first big Latin American signing that we’ve had that shows up and it’s a really good one,” Baltimore interim manager Tony Mansolino said. “So we’re excited about him. We expect him to be competitive and do well.”

His promotion comes a day after the team brought up No. 3 prospect outfielder Dylan Beavers.

Basallo, a 21-year-old from the Dominican Republic, hit .270 with 23 homers and 67 RBIs in 76 games for Norfolk this season. He will be the team’s backup catcher behind star Adley Rutschman and get work at first base.

“Adley will function as our No. 1 catcher because that’s what he is,” Mansolino said. “He’s a really good catcher. Basollo will function as the No. 2 catcher, catch day games, Adley won’t catch four in a row, things like that.”

Mansolino added that Basollo would start at catcher Monday night at Boston and that he’d get him in the lineup at first base during the team’s next homestand.

Also on Sunday, the Orioles reinstated OF Colton Cowser from the 7-day concussion list and optioned OF Daniel Johnson and 1B/OF Ryan Noda to Norfolk. They also transferred right-hander Zach Eflin (low back discomfort) to the 60-day injured list.

Astros' Yordan Alvarez to start rehab assignment at Double-A Corpus Christi on Tuesday

HOUSTON (AP) Houston Astros slugger Yordan Alvarez will begin a rehabilitation assignment at Double-A Corpus Christi on Tuesday, moving him closer to a return after sitting out for more than three months.

“It’s really good news,” manager Joe Espada said. “The fact that he’s feeling better and we’re getting to a point where we can see him back is awesome.”

Alvarez has been out since May 3 with a small fracture in his right hand that was initially diagnosed as a muscle strain.

Alvarez was in Houston on Sunday before the team’s series finale against Baltimore after returning from the Astros’ spring training facility in Florida, giving Espada a chance to talk with him.

“He is feeling better,” Espada said. “Good enough to start a rehabilitation assignment.”

Espada said Alvarez would need “a few games before joining our club” but when pressed about exactly how many games or at-bats the left-hander would need, he declined to give further details.

“We’re going to start with Tuesday and then we’ll go from there,” he said.

Espada said Alvarez would serve as the team’s designated hitter Tuesday.

The return of Alvarez would be a major boost to the Astros as the postseason approaches after he led the team in batting average (.308), home runs (35) and RBIs (86) last season. Houston entered Sunday leading the AL West with a 1 1/2-game lead over the Mariners.

The 28-year-old Alvarez hit .210 with three homers and 18 RBIs in 29 games this season before his injury.

‘Catch of the decade': Watch Giants outfielder make wild play — with his knees

‘Catch of the decade': Watch Giants outfielder make wild play — with his knees originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Star Giants centerfielder Jung Hoo Lee might have made the catch of the 2025 MLB season — and decade — during San Francisco’s 7-1 win against the Tampa Bay Rays on Sunday at Oracle Park.

In the top of the fourth inning, Rays first baseman Yandy Díaz sent an 83-mph sweeper from Giants ace Logan Webb into Triples Alley, and Lee wildly caught the deep fly between his legs.

Yes, you read that right.

The catch kept the fans in San Francisco entertained during the 0-0 tie at the time, and it certainly will be remembered for the rest of the year and for generations to come. 

Lee explained postgame just how he pulled off the grab.

“The wind was pretty heavy and the ball was reaching out a lot, so I went for the slide,” Lee said. “I did catch it, but it felt like it was dropping down, going under my body starting from the chest. It was a funny catch for sure.

“As soon as I felt the ball dropping down my body, I felt like I had to squeeze, and in the end, I squeezed it with my calves.”

All Giants right fielder Drew Gilbert, who was next to Lee as he held up proof of the grab, could do was smile. NBC Sports Bay Area’s Duane Kuiper said it best during the game’s broadcast.

“I don’t care what anybody says,” Kuiper said. “That’s the catch of the decade. Not of the year, not of the day, not of the week, not of the homestand. The decade.”

Kuiper has been around the majors since his rookie 1974 season with Cleveland. He would know what “the catch of the decade” looks like.

As reflected by their 60-64 record, the Giants have historically struggled in recent weeks and entered Sunday’s game with one home win in their last 15 tries. 

But perhaps Lee’s play provided the spark San Francisco needed to beat the Rays, and maybe it can help the Giants eventually survive the dog days of summer and claw back into the MLB playoff race.

Regardless, San Francisco will take the win and the ridiculous highlight. And Bob Melvin, doing his job as a manager, was just glad his center fielder wasn’t hurt.

“I was worried that he may have hurt something, like his ankle,” Melvin said postgame. “I wasn’t really sure because he was down for a while. When the replay took a while, our people were talking about it and realized he caught it between his knees.

“Haven’t seen that one before.”

‘Catch of the decade': Watch Giants outfielder make wild play — with his knees

‘Catch of the decade': Watch Giants outfielder make wild play — with his knees originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Star Giants centerfielder Jung Hoo Lee might have made the catch of the 2025 MLB season — and decade — during San Francisco’s 7-1 win against the Tampa Bay Rays on Sunday at Oracle Park.

In the top of the fourth inning, Rays first baseman Yandy Díaz sent an 83-mph sweeper from Giants ace Logan Webb into Triples Alley, and Lee wildly caught the deep fly between his legs.

Yes, you read that right.

The catch kept the fans in San Francisco entertained during the 0-0 tie at the time, and it certainly will be remembered for the rest of the year and for generations to come. 

Lee explained postgame just how he pulled off the grab.

“The wind was pretty heavy and the ball was reaching out a lot, so I went for the slide,” Lee said. “I did catch it, but it felt like it was dropping down, going under my body starting from the chest. It was a funny catch for sure.

“As soon as I felt the ball dropping down my body, I felt like I had to squeeze, and in the end, I squeezed it with my calves.”

All Giants right fielder Drew Gilbert, who was next to Lee as he held up proof of the grab, could do was smile. NBC Sports Bay Area’s Duane Kuiper said it best during the game’s broadcast.

“I don’t care what anybody says,” Kuiper said. “That’s the catch of the decade. Not of the year, not of the day, not of the week, not of the homestand. The decade.”

Kuiper has been around the majors since his rookie 1974 season with Cleveland. He would know what “the catch of the decade” looks like.

As reflected by their 60-64 record, the Giants have historically struggled in recent weeks and entered Sunday’s game with one home win in their last 15 tries. 

But perhaps Lee’s play provided the spark San Francisco needed to beat the Rays, and maybe it can help the Giants eventually survive the dog days of summer and claw back into the MLB playoff race.

Regardless, San Francisco will take the win and the ridiculous highlight. And Bob Melvin, doing his job as a manager, was just glad his center fielder wasn’t hurt.

“I was worried that he may have hurt something, like his ankle,” Melvin said postgame. “I wasn’t really sure because he was down for a while. When the replay took a while, our people were talking about it and realized he caught it between his knees.

“Haven’t seen that one before.”

Logan Webb's gem vs. Rays provides Giants crucial salvation amid brutal skid

Logan Webb's gem vs. Rays provides Giants crucial salvation amid brutal skid originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – There’s an old saying of any port in a storm, an idiom that basically means even in bad times some peace can be found.

For the Giants, Logan Webb has been and continues to be their port.

San Francisco’s ace was at his best Sunday at Oracle Park, putting up an absolute gem that set the tone as the Orange and Black ended their longest losing streak of the season Sunday with a resounding 7-1 win over the Tampa Bay Rays.

Webb had everything working while spinning seven scoreless innings against the Rays, an outing that was so dominant that only one Tampa Bay player made it beyond first base, and that only happened because of an error.

Otherwise, it was Webb, Webb and more Webb pacing the Giants to what he called their best game in a while.

“Changeup was good, sweeper was good, located the fastball,” catcher Patrick Bailey said while summarizing Webb’s afternoon. “That was one of the better outings of the year for sure. He gives us a chance to win every time he goes out there.”

The Giants needed every single bit of it to blend some positivity into what has otherwise been a trainwreck of a homestand.

Prior to beating the Rays the Giants had lost seven of eight at home and were on the verge of matching their worst homestand since moving West from New York in 1958.

“Honestly, probably the best game we’ve played in a long time,” Webb said. “ Sad to say but it’s kind of the truth. We gotta keep this going.”

The Giants have been pretty much a mess this season but the one constant has been Webb.

The 28-year-old right-hande, who only allowed three hits to the Rays, leads the Giants in wins (11) and ERA (3.19). He leads the National League in innings pitched with 160 2/3 (no shock there) and has 175 strikeouts this season, third most in the NL.

“With Webby on the mound you feel pretty good about your chances,” Giants manager Bob Melvin said.

For obvious reason.

Since 2021 the Giants have won 84 games started by Webb. That’s second-most in the National League behind the Phillies’ Zack Wheeler (87).

Sunday’s win marked the ninth time in 16 games that Webb has pitched his team to a victory following a loss, earning him the title of stopper.

Webb declined to go that far and instead focused on how well he pitched after getting roughed up for four runs in 6 1/3 innings during his previous start last Monday against the San Diego Padres.

“I try to win every game I go out and pitch,” Webb said. “I feel like I really haven’t done a good job lately, putting the team in a bad spot. Just wanted to go out and try to throw up some zeroes today.”

He did just that, and in doing so, Webb cemented himself as a port of calm in any storm.

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Reds designate outfielder Jake Fraley for assignment

CINCINNATI (AP) — Cincinnati Reds outfielder Jake Fraley was designated for assignment on Sunday, with catcher Tyler Stephenson’s thumb injury and a short bench contributing to the decision.

The Reds also recalled right-hander Connor Phillips and outfielder Will Benson from Triple-A Louisville and optioned left-hander Joe La Sorsa to Triple-A.

“We came to the idea of kind of giving Jake a chance to play where maybe he thinks he deserves to play, which I understand, is maybe better than him sitting the bench here,” Reds manager Terry Francona said. “Stephenson is banged up. We were a little concerned about playing short, maybe a two-man bench.”

Fraley, 30, is in his fifth major-league season, his fourth with Cincinnati. He is batting .232 with six home runs and 23 RBIs in 67 games.

He hyperextended his knee after making an error in left field to allow a run to score in the 10th inning of a 6-5, 11-inning loss to the first-place Brewers on Saturday. Francona said neither the miscue nor the injury factored into the DFA move.

Stephenson reaggravated an injury to his left thumb during the Pittsburgh series and is day to day. Jose Trevino, who was behind the plate Saturday night, got the start for Sunday’s day game.

Francona said the decision on Fraley, a popular player among fans and in the clubhouse, wasn’t easy.

“Not that I needed an excuse to lose sleep last night, but you do, because you’re thinking about it,” Francona said. “You’re making decisions that alter their life. The day when I stop thinking about it, I will re-retire.”

Cincinnati, the only team this season that hasn’t been swept in a series, has dropped the first two games of the three-game set against the Brewers, who have won 14 straight games.

SEE IT: Mets arrive in Williamsport for 2025 MLB Little League Classic

The Mets touched down in Williamsport, Penn. on Sunday morning ahead of their matchup with the Seattle Mariners in the 2025 MLB Little League Classic.

The Mets took some time to meet with the players in this year's Little League World Series, taking pictures, signing autographs, and more.

Here's a look at some of the fun...

What we learned as Giants' offense wakes up behind Logan Webb to snap skid

What we learned as Giants' offense wakes up behind Logan Webb to snap skid originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – Of course it was Logan Webb who helped usher the good times back in at Oracle Park. A huge hit from Dominic Smith also was pivotal as the Giants ended their longest losing streak of the season and earned a rare victory at home.

Webb was magnificent the entire afternoon, spinning magic while leading the Giants to a 7-1 win over the Tampa Bay Rays on Sunday and helping San Francisco avoid a three-game sweep.

The unquestioned ace on a staff that has four Cy Young Awards among them, Webb (11-9) allowed three hits over seven scoreless innings. The right-hander had seven strikeouts, didn’t walk anyone and allowed only one runner past first base.

It’s the ninth time this season that Webb has won one day after the Giants lost.

Tristan Beck and Keaton Winn handled mop-up duties, combining to set the final six Rays batters and complete the five-hitter.

The Giants’ offense shone as bright as the afternoon sun hanging over the San Francisco Bay.

Smith provided a big spark when he singled with the bases loaded to break the game open in the sixth.

Smith broke his bat on the swing and carried the handle with him to first base as Heliot Ramos and Rafael Devers scored. When the throw back to the infield went toward second base, Willy Adames scampered home for another run.

According to the team, Smith is the first Giants player to have a three-run single since Kirt Manwaring in 1988.

Christian Koss’ RBI double later in the inning made it 4-0.

Drew Gilbert and Tyler Fitzgerald kept the good vibes going with back-to-back home runs in the seventh.

It all added up to a much-needed win that had the crowd of 38,000 singing Backstreet Boys songs late in the game.

Here are the takeaways from Sunday:

No. 1 And It Feels So Good

As good as the day was for the Giants, Gilbert provided the feel-good moment of the afternoon with his first career home run. 

Already a fan favorite at Oracle Park, Gilbert earned a raucous ovation when he crushed a 1-1 fastball from Mason Englert and sent it flying out of the ballpark at more than 102 mph.

The good times extended to the next batter when Fitzgerald went deep, the first time this season that the Giants have had back-to-back jacks.

Gilbert tacked on with an RBI single in the ninth as the Giants had their highest-scoring game since Aug. 5.

Let’s Get It Started

Giants manager Bob Melvin said before the game that part of the reason behind moving Jung Hoo Lee into the leadoff spot was to shake things up for San Francisco’s offense.

It worked initially when Lee opened the game with leadoff double, but that was as good as it got. Lee struck out swinging and had two fly outs in his final three at-bats.

Lee did make a slick sliding catch on the warning track to rob Yandy Diaz of a hit in the fourth inning. Lee initially caught the ball but after it popped out of his glove, the center fielder trapped the ball between his legs and prevented it from hitting the ground as he rolled over.

Want To Get Away?

The Giants surely do, and at this point it doesn’t really matter where they go.

Oracle Park generally has been a place of comfort for the Orange and Black, but the waterfront ballpark has been home to way too many nightmares this season before Sunday.

Their 2-7 homestand was one loss shy of matching the Giants’ worst during the San Francisco era set in 1993.

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C.J. Stroud's Mariners hat creates a stir for Texans/Astros fans

Once upon a time, my morning routine consisted of: (1) pouring a large bowl of Frosted Flakes; (2) adding milk; (3) opening to the sports page of the Wheeling Intelligencer; and (4) studying the current MLB standings and box scores while wolfing down the cereal before the flakes became un-frosted and saturated with milk.

Back then, the Houston Astros resided in the National League West. The Seattle Mariners didn't exist. Nowadays, the two franchises share membership in the American League West. And they're currently battling for the division title, with (as of Saturday) the Astros leading the Mariners by 0.5 games.

Also on Saturday, the Houston Texans hosted the Carolina Panthers in a preseason game. Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud arrived for the contest with a Mariners hat on his head.

It naturally created a stir for Houstonians who support both the local football and the local baseball team.

Sam Warren of the Houston Chroniclehas the details. Here’s the video of Stroud walking in. The Mariners took notice. Texans/Astros fans did, too.

Stroud, who swapped out the baseball hat for a Texans toque when he took the field, also wore the Mariners cap to his post-game press conference. He laughed off a question about his headgear.

“I mean, I love hats," Stroud said. "Like, I wear hats all the time. I probably have every team. But I support the Astros and the Dodgers because I'm from L.A. It's kind of contradicting but I still love the Astros. But it's all good. I understand. It’s all about the swag, baby. I’m just kidding.”

The Astros/Dodgers thing is definitely "contradicting," given the sign-stealing scandal that put an asterisk on the Astros' 2017 World Series win over the Dodgers, when Stroud was a 16-year-old student at Rancho Cucamonga High School.

While he can wear whatever hat he wants to wear, there's a basic "when in Rome" quality that comes from being the starting quarterback for an NFL team. Local fans of the football team are also fans of the other local sports teams. Right or wrong, they expect the players to act accordingly.

Hat flaps are not unprecedented. Twelve years ago, for example, 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick created a stir by wearing a Miami Dolphins hat.

While Stroud didn't show up wearing a Colts hat or a Titans hat or a Jaguars hat, Houstonians will be naturally sensitive to the sight of a Seattle Mariners hat on the head of the Texans' starting quarterback. After all, fan is short for fanatic.

And players would be wise to at least factor that broader sense of fanaticism into deciding which hat from the collection should be donned to the stadium for a game. Is it worth inviting avoidable venom from fans who are fanatical about both the local baseball team and the local football team?

Our guess is that, moving forward, Stroud's Mariners hat will remain on the shelf, unless and until he's the starting quarterback of the Seahawks.

Watch Jung Hoo Lee make wild ‘catch of the decade' during Giants vs. Rays game

Watch Jung Hoo Lee make wild ‘catch of the decade' during Giants vs. Rays game originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Star Giants center fielder Jung Hoo Lee might have made the catch of the 2025 MLB season — and decade — during San Francisco’s 7-1 win against the Tampa Bay Rays on Sunday at Oracle Park.

In the top of the fourth inning, Rays first baseman Yandy Díaz sent an 83-mph sweeper from Giants ace Logan Webb into Triples Alley, and Lee wildly caught the deep fly between his legs.

Yes, you read that right.

The catch kept the fans in San Francisco entertained during the 0-0 tie at the time, and it certainly will be remembered for the rest of the year and for generations to come. 

Lee explained postgame just how he pulled off the grab.

“The wind was pretty heavy and the ball was reaching out a lot, so I went for the slide,” Lee said. “I did catch it, but it felt like it was dropping down, going under my body starting from the chest. It was a funny catch for sure.

“As soon as I felt the ball dropping down my body, I felt like I had to squeeze, and in the end, I squeezed it with my calves.”

All Giants right fielder Drew Gilbert, who was next to Lee as he held up proof of the grab, could do was smile. NBC Sports Bay Area’s Duane Kuiper said it best during the game’s broadcast.

“I don’t care what anybody says,” Kuiper said. “That’s the catch of the decade. Not of the year, not of the day, not of the week, not of the homestand. The decade.”

Kuiper has been around the majors since his rookie 1974 season with Cleveland. He would know what “the catch of the decade” looks like.

As reflected by their 60-64 record, the Giants have historically struggled in recent weeks and entered Sunday’s game with one home win in their last 15 tries. 

But perhaps Lee’s play provided the spark San Francisco needed to beat the Rays, and maybe it can help the Giants eventually survive the dog days of summer and claw back into the MLB playoff race.

Regardless, San Francisco will take the win and the ridiculous highlight. And Bob Melvin, doing his job as a manager, was just glad his center fielder wasn’t hurt.

“I was worried that he may have hurt something, like his ankle,” Melvin said postgame. “I wasn’t really sure because he was down for a while. When the replay took a while, our people were talking about it and realized he caught it between his knees.

“Haven’t seen that one before.”

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