Randy Rodriguez, Dominic Smith lift still-fighting Giants past Mets in extras originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
The final week of July was tough for the Giants.
Six straight home losses to dip below .500 for the first time all season, followed by the departure of three of the team’s longest-tenured players at the MLB trade deadline.
However, August started much differently for the Giants, who showed they haven’t given up on 2025 with a gritty 4-3 win over the New York Mets in 10 innings at Citi Field on Friday night.
“We talked before the game — what happened, happened. We got ourselves into this situation, but we still have the big pieces that we brought in,” starter Robbie Ray told reporters postgame. “The core group of guys are here still. We didn’t do a major overhaul, so this team is still good enough to win.
“To be able to come out after the rough homestand and win the first one here is big.”
It certainly wasn’t pretty, as San Francisco relinquished a 3-0 lead entering the bottom of the seventh. Ray didn’t earn a decision despite a commanding seven innings, only surrendering an impressive opposite-field homer to Mets slugger Pete Alonso.
In the eighth inning, Juan Soto grounded what was likely a would-be inning-ending double-play ball up the middle at shortstop Willy Adames. Instead, the ball kicked off pitcher Joey Lucchesi’s toe, over Adames’ head and into left field. The Mets tied it one batter later, and it felt like the Giants might never escape their summer slide.
But unlike the previous week, the Giants still grinded out a win. After going 0-for-23 with runners in scoring position during last weekend’s series against the same Mets team, pinch hitter Dominic Smith came through when his team badly needed it. With a runner on third and one out, the former Met knocked a line-drive single in the 10th inning for the eventual game-winning RBI.
“We’ve been losing a lot of games because we haven’t been playing clean baseball,” Adames said postgame. “We know that we have to be better and play more games like that and try to execute. I feel like for us, today was a big game to start getting in a different mood, because it’s been tough. The boys are feeling it, and they knew that tonight we had to make an adjustment and go out there and try to win that game, no matter how. And it went our way. I mean, it almost didn’t — it was crazy. But we found a way to end up on top.”
One more hurdle remained, though. San Francisco had traded their typical eighth- and ninth-inning relievers, Tyler Rogers and Camilo Doval, to the Big Apple in the prior two days.
Hours after being named the Giants’ closer, Randy Rodriguez showed he’s ready for the big-city lights in New York. The 2025 MLB All-Star stranded the bases loaded in the bottom of the 10th, pumping 100 mph past Ronny Mauricio to earn the save.
Perhaps symbolically, within the hour, Doval blew the save in his first appearance for the Yankees down in Miami.
Back in Queens, Rodriguez’s effort in an unfamiliar spot didn’t go unnoticed by his teammates.
“Obviously, Randy coming in, in that situation, and shutting the door, that was amazing,” Adames stated. “That showed the courage that he has and the kind of pitcher he is.”
“For [Rodriguez] to be named the closer, and coming in the first game after being named the closer in a pressure situation — extra innings, up one — and being able to lock it down was huge,” Ray added.
Now, the Giants, who currently sit six games out of a playoff spot, hope this emphatic win can kickstart a timely resurgence. The team was vocal about still having their core pieces in place — Adames, Matt Chapman and still-new addition Rafael Devers, among others — and the belief they can salvage the season.
“I’ll tell you right now, you saw the fight in these boys,” Smith told NBC Sports Bay Area’s Laura Britt and Shawn Estes on “Giants Postgame Live.” “We don’t give up. We don’t quit. We still believe in this group. We still know we’ve got two months left, and we’re going to finish strong no matter where we’re at. So I just look forward to capitalizing and having fun with this win, but we’re not done.
“We’ve still got our core group of guys here, so just beware — that’s all I’m saying.”
If the Giants can keep winning games like they did Friday, Smith’s assertive words might be proven correct.