Trevor McDonald’s night unraveled fast Tuesday at Oracle Park, and the Toronto Blue Jays never let him breathe.
By the time the Giants turned to the bullpen, McDonald had already been tagged for eight runs - the most he’s allowed in a game in his young career - along with 11 hits, another career high. He didn’t record a strikeout and was gone after just seven outs, a short outing that helped send San Francisco to a 9-3 loss.
“There wasn’t a lot of hard contact, but there also was really comfortable swings,” said manager Tony Vitello. “They were kind of sitting on that deal there.
Sinker was middle a lot, if you were going to criticize anything there. Kind of piled up on him a little too quick.”
Vitello had little choice but to lean on Adrian Houser early, and the right-hander gave the Giants exactly the kind of rescue job they needed. Houser worked 5 2/3 no-hit innings, struck out five and walked one, then left with Toronto still off the board.
That outing put Houser in rare company. He became the first Giants pitcher to throw at least 5 2/3 no-hit innings in relief since Jim Barr on Sept.
11, 1971. Asked whether Houser might be an option to return to the rotation, Vitello said “any conversation is open” while Houser, who has a 1.29 ERA out of the bullpen, made his own case.
“Saving the bullpen is obviously a huge key,” Houser said. “I think a confidence builder for him.
He’s been throwing with some attitude. The changeup has been really good.
Had guys beating the ball into the ground. He was outstanding.
The contrast with McDonald’s last start could hardly have been sharper. A week earlier, he had held the Arizona Diamondbacks to one hit over six shutout innings. Toronto, though, jumped on him immediately after a scoreless first.
Jonatan Clase, who came in with a career .309 slugging percentage, launched a three-run homer in the second. Then came the third inning, when the Blue Jays kept poking and prodding until the Giants cracked.
McDonald faced seven batters in the frame, got only one out and gave up six singles. Four of those hits came off the bat at under 90 mph, and two were under 80 mph.
After the sixth and final single, Vitello pulled him.
“I was taking some peeks up at the scoreboard on some of the exit velos, and I felt like I was getting the soft contact, trying to force the early outs,” said McDonald, who owns a 6.53 ERA over his last seven starts. “They’re a team that likes to swing and be on the attack.
They found the holes and just kind of spiraled into them and gaining the momentum and stringing a bunch together. It’s unfortunate, but onto the next.”
The Blue Jays’ starter, rookie right-hander Spencer Miles, also had a notable night against his former organization. The Giants left him unprotected ahead of last year’s Rule 5 Draft, and Toronto later acquired him from San Francisco last winter after injuries limited him to 14 2/3 minor league innings. Miles, 25, allowed two runs over four innings and now owns a 2.95 ERA over 58 innings.
With the Giants’ pitching situation where it is, it’s easy to see why Miles might have had a path here if San Francisco had protected him.
At the plate, Heliot Ramos kept rolling. After Monday’s two-homer performance, he added two more hits from the leadoff spot. Since coming off the injured list, Ramos has hit in eight of his last nine games, batting .333 with four home runs and eight RBIs.
Logan Webb (5-6, 3.66 ERA) will face Dylan Cease (5-4, 2.79 ERA) as the Giants try to win the rubber match.
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