What we learned as disastrous fifth inning dooms Giants in brutal loss to Padres originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
SAN DIEGO — Tim Lincecum was well onto the back nine of his career when he threw a no-hitter at Petco Park. Justin Verlander might be approaching his 18th green, but for about an hour on Thursday, he too was mowing down the San Diego Padres.
Then it all spun out of control, thanks in part to some sloppy Giants defense.
After a strong start, Verlander got knocked out in the fifth inning, which included three consecutive successful bunts by the Padres. He fell to 1-10 in an 8-4 loss, the 24th in 33 games for the Giants since July 12.
They dropped the final three games of the series and lost six of seven to the Padres over the last two weeks, getting outscored 44-13 in those seven games. Overall, the Giants went 3-10 against the Padres, who are neck-and-neck with the Los Angeles Dodgers atop the NL West standings.
Well, Poppie Is A Little Sloppy
Verlander retired the first nine batters he faced, striking out three. But the Padres scored two runs in the fourth and then piled on in the fifth as the wheels came off.
With two runners on, the Padres put down three consecutive bunts. Freddy Fermin’s was generously ruled an infield single after Casey Schmitt whipped the ball down the right field line, and when Luis Matos tried to pick it up, he dropped it. Two runs scored.
Fernando Tatis Jr. followed with a bunt single and Luis Arraez bunted both runners into scoring position. When Manny Machado lined an elevated fastball into the gap, the Padres had a 6-2 lead. Verlander’s day was done.
Schmitt is a natural third baseman, but he struggled this week while filling in for Matt Chapman in his hometown. He made four errors in the four games at Petco Park.
Devers Demolition
The two early runs for the Giants came after a series of misplays on the other side. Tatis and center fielder Ramon Laureano got crossed up on a high fly ball and it bounced off Tatis’ glove, allowing Matos to reach third. Andrew Knizner followed with a liner to right that skipped past Tatis for an RBI double, and he scored later in the inning, which included a bobble at second base.
Andrew Knizner puts the Giants in front 🙌 pic.twitter.com/RQTQdlcPgq
— SF Giants on NBCS (@NBCSGiants) August 21, 2025
There was only one error on the Padres during the sequence (Tatis is going to win the Gold Glove anyway, he probably does not need the extra help).
The Giants got on the board in a more traditional way in the sixth when Rafael Devers crushed a Dylan Cease fastball well over the right field wall. It left the bat at 108 mph and went 435 feet, making it the fifth-longest homer of the year by a Giant.
Rafael Devers gets one back 💪 pic.twitter.com/5r7UTGxHDB
— SF Giants on NBCS (@NBCSGiants) August 21, 2025
Join The Club
Willy Adames followed the Devers blast with a homer of his own, which ended Cease’s day. It was the third time the Giants have gone back-to-back this year, and oddly, all have come in the last five games.
Willy Adames crushes his 20th dinger of the season 🙌 pic.twitter.com/D1b0ZuiFOo
— SF Giants on NBCS (@NBCSGiants) August 21, 2025
Adames’ homer gave him 20 on the year, the most of any Giant who has been here all season (Devers has 25). He’s the third San Francisco Giants shortstop to hit 20 homers while playing the position, joining Rich Aurilia and Brandon Crawford. Aurilia holds the SF-era record with 36 homers as a shortstop in 2001.