Things were very different in 2013. Barry Zito was completing a wildly successful eight-year contract with the San Francisco Giants. America was falling in love with a prehistoric family called The Croods and an up-and-coming rapper from the Pacific Northwest named Macklemore. Anthony Weiner was running for mayor and Toronto mayor Rob Ford (R.I.P.) was smoking crack. It was also the last year the Philadelphia Phillies won a series in San Francisco.
That streak continued Wednesday as the Giants shut
out the Phillies for the second game in a row. Tyler Mahle and four relievers combined on a four-hit shutout, with Matt Gage getting the first win of his career after Rafael Devers got the Giants on the board with a three-run home run in the 6th inning.
The 411-foot blast was Devers’ second of the season and delighted all the fans perusing the organic garden in center field. Devers finished the day with four RBI when he singled in Luis Arraez in the 8th. Arraez scored two runs, as did Willy Adames, who celebrated his teammate’s big day, by, what else, throwing a big bucket of Gatorade on him.
Adames scored on the Devers bomb and scored from first when Phillies reliever Jose Alvarado threw away Arraez’s sacrifice bunt in the 8th inning. He and Adames each went 2-for-4, with Adames adding a double and Arraez tripling in the first, though he was stranded after two strikeouts. Arraez is now hitting .320 and clearly heading for another batting title.
The 31-year-old Mahle had his best start as a Giant, yielding three hits — one on the infield — and four walks in 5.2 innings, striking out six. He retired eight straight Phillies after Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper got hits in the first, then pitched his way out of a third-inning jam after walking those same two Phillies and throwing a wild pitch, by getting Alec Bohm to ground out to third baseman/baseball vacuum Matt Chapman.
Mahle couldn’t retire Schwarber, who hat a hit and two walks, but the other Phillies went 2-for-18 with two walks against him. Gage replaced Mahle with two outs in the 6th and 94 pitches on Mahle’s count after Adolis Garcia singled and retired Brandon Marsh.
Gage gave up a pinch-hit to Otto Kemp and Caleb Killian relieved him, walking Trae Turner on four pitches. But he finally retired Schwarber, striking him out with his knuckle curve, and getting Harper to ground out. Daywalker Blade Tidwell and Erik Miller pitched perfect innings for a Giants bullpen that struggled to hold leads recently. Gage, Killian, and Tidwell still have spotless ERAs for the season.
Phillies starter Aaron Nola pitched well into the 6th, escaping trouble with strikeouts in the first and getting Devers to ground into a double play with two runners on in the 4th. But he couldn’t escape Devers and dropped to 1-1.
Jose Avila got his first hit as a Giant with a pinch-hit single in the 8th. Center fielder Harrison Bader couldn’t stick it to his old team, going 0-for-4 in the game and 1-for-10 in the series.
The Giants are now 5-8 and are 2-2 in their series, which isn’t actually a stat that counts in the standings but still feels good after some miserable games against the city of New York to start the season. They’re making what Boyz II Men would call an East Coast swing for the next week and a half, heading to Baltimore for a three-game series Friday, then hitting Cincinnati and our nation’s capital. Get ready for some crabs, spaghetti covered in chili, and some serious legislative gridlock, fellas!











