The SF Giants got a win on Wednesday night, but the final result didn’t cover up how messy it all looked against the Arizona Diamondbacks.
The game started to unravel in the eighth inning, when Ryan Walker took the mound and the Giants nearly turned a manageable situation into a full-blown disaster. Walker was part of the mess, including a wild pitch, but the inning went sideways because the defense behind him fell apart too. Christian Koss couldn’t cleanly handle a ball for an easy out at second, then compounded it with a pair of throws that only made things worse.
On one play, Koss fired to third trying to get a runner who was going to be safe anyway. The throw deflected off him and allowed a run to score.
Then he went after a runner at first who had drifted a little too far off the bag, and that throw also caromed off him and into the dugout. Luckily for the Giants, that one didn’t lead to another run.
Koss was not just part of the late-game chaos. Earlier, after singling, he found himself on first with two outs on a fly ball to center field and started to retreat once the ball was caught because he didn’t know how many outs there were. The play didn’t end up costing the Giants, but it fit the broader theme of a team making basic mistakes far too often.
That’s the frustrating part with this club: it keeps bungling the little things. The questions pile up quickly.
Does first base coach Shane Robinson know how many outs there are? Does anyone in the dugout?
Koss can at least point to some context. He had just been called up from the minors after Matt Chapman was placed on the IL, and he hasn’t played much since injuring his wrist in Triple-A. He also only had a few rehab games in rookie ball before rejoining the big league team, so there’s room to say he may simply be rusty.
But the larger issue is hard to ignore. The Giants keep looking shaky on the most basic parts of the game, and that leaves them looking incompetent even when they win.
How can big league players not be aware of the count or how many outs there are? How can a pitcher not know he’s on a pitch count?
How can Ketel Marte steal second and third in the same inning when he entered the game with only one steal all year?
It all adds up to a team that feels deeply unsteady. Buster Posey said he wanted a manager obsessed with the details, but the Giants are still putting together a roster and coaching setup that seem far too loose with them.
The Giants will keep going, but for now the wins don’t do much to quiet the doubts.
In Other News...
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For a Giants club still trying to sort through pitching depth, the decision is another reminder of how quickly bullpen plans can change. Ramos was promoted to the big leagues in June for the first time, and the organization is now hoping the reset in Sacramento can help him regain form while keeping him available if the need arises again. [Read more 🡒]
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Giants Need Answers On Which Relievers Can Actually Be Trusted
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Dylan Smith has at least given them a competent look in a limited sample since coming over from the Tigers, and the search for usable depth continues to matter because the left side remains especially murky. Erik Miller may be the closest thing to a steady option there, but the Giants are still sorting through how much they can trust him, Matt Gage, and Sam Hentges, while Caleb Kilian and Keaton Winn look like the main names with a chance to fit into the longer-term solution. For a club that needs more than stopgaps, the next move may have to come from outside the obvious pool. [Read more 🡒]
