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Giants, Rockies have little turnaround time for next contest

Jul 5, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Tyler Mahle (54) pitches in the first inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn ImagesJul 5, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Tyler Mahle (54) pitches in the first inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

Two teams with just 14 hours to digest a crazy finish the night before will take the field for an afternoon game Saturday when the Colorado Rockies and San Francisco Giants continue their four-game series in California.

In a marathon ninth inning that lasted almost an hour, began with the bases loaded, ended with the bases loaded and featured an unusual ruling following a call reversal, the Rockies rallied, survived a scare, then staggered back to their hotel rooms with a 4-3 victory that evened the series at a game apiece.

The play that had both players and coaches scratching their heads began as a line drive to center field after the Giants, trailing 4-2, had put the potential tying runs aboard with one out in the bottom of the ninth.

Cole Carrigg made a diving attempt at the liner and was ruled to have caught the ball by first base umpire Lance Barksdale, sending the runners scampering back to their original bases.

Knowing the ball had been trapped, the Rockies tagged both base runners, which could have ended the game. And when, upon review, the ball had indeed not been caught, it appeared their forward thinking might be rewarded.

But Barksdale, the crew chief, ruled that his mistake had prevented the runners from advancing and moved them up 90 feet, loading the bases.

The Giants wound up scoring once and reloading the bases with two outs, setting the stage for rookie Bryce Eldridge, who launched a walk-off grand slam exactly one month earlier against Washington. But before the remaining fans could get their phone cameras pointed, Eldridge grounded Juan Mejia’s first pitch to second base, sending both teams to a much-needed shower.

“Death by a thousand cuts, unfortunately,” Giants manager Tony Vitello insisted to reporters afterward. “Plenty of drama. Plenty of ups and downs.”

It was fitting that Carrigg was in the middle of the late action in San Francisco, after having had to answer to a similar game — albeit a loss — in Los Angeles earlier in the week.

He promised failure wouldn’t prompt him to back down. And sure enough, he put the game on the line with his diving attempt, because if the ball had gotten past him, almost surely Schmitt would have rounded the bases for a walk-off, inside-the-park home run.

“The edge to win … I will never lose — it will never leave,” he assured reporters in LA. “That’s just how I’m wired.”

In a game that featured 23 position players and 12 pitchers, two of the best rested of the Rockies and Giants are slated to form the pitching matchup in the encore.

Colorado left-hander Kyle Freeland (2-7, 7.46 ERA) will be making his 29th career start against the Giants, his most against any opponent. Despite not facing San Francisco in either of its earlier visits to Colorado, he’s gone 8-9 with a 4.35 ERA against them.

He is scheduled to be opposed by fellow veteran Tyler Mahle (1-8, 5.70), who didn’t get a decision in a 7-6 loss in Colorado last Sunday in which he allowed four runs (three earned) in 4 1/3 innings. The no-decision extended his winless streak to nine starts dating back to April 22.

The right-hander has gone 2-1 with a 5.21 ERA in seven lifetime starts against the Rockies.

–Field Level Media

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Jimmy Crooks homer lifts Cards to rain-delayed win over Braves

Jul 10, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; St. Louis Cardinals third baseman Blaze Jordan (33) hits a double against the Atlanta Braves during the third inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn ImagesJul 10, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; St. Louis Cardinals third baseman Blaze Jordan (33) hits a double against the Atlanta Braves during the third inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

Jimmy Crooks hit a go-ahead solo home run in the eighth inning on Friday to lift the St. Louis Cardinals to a 2-1 victory over the visiting Atlanta Braves.

After a rain delay of nearly three hours in the top of the fourth derailed the game, Crooks hit his second home run of the season off Atlanta’s Danny Young (0-1) to help the Cardinals claim the series opener. Kyle Leahy threw three scoreless frames, surrendering a single and striking out two for St. Louis before being replaced by George Soriano after the delay.

JoJo Romero (1-2) tossed a perfect eighth inning to earn the win, and first-time All-Star Riley O’Brien posted his 23rd save in 27 tries for the Cardinals, who had dropped five of six entering the game.

Chris Sale started for Atlanta, allowing two hits in three scoreless innings, striking out five and walking one before the delay. Victor Mederos threw a pair of impressive innings in relief for Atlanta, which mustered just three hits. Austin Riley’s fifth-inning RBI single accounted for the Braves’ only run, as the visitors lost their fourth game in six tries.

In the bottom of the third, Blaze Jordan ripped a one-out double for the game’s first extra-base hit. After Sale issued a two-out walk to JJ Wetherholt, Ivan Herrera’s flyout ended the threat.

With Ozzie Albies leading off in the fourth, the game was halted by rain. After the delay, Soriano struck out Albies before retiring Matt Olson and Drake Baldwin.

Atlanta struck first in the fifth, though, as Mike Yasztremski doubled and scored on Riley’s RBI single. Justin Bruihl then relieved Soriano and threw 1 2/3 scoreless frames.

Didier Fuentes took over in the sixth for the Braves, allowing a one-out walk to Wetherholt and consecutive singles to Herrera and Jordan Walker, tying the score at one apiece.

The St. Louis bullpen retired the final seven Atlanta batters in order, with two of them flying out to the warning track.

–Field Level Media

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Rockies awaken in 9th, rally past Giants

Jul 10, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; Colorado Rockies outfielder Jake McCarthy (31) runs after bunting a pitch thrown by San Francisco Giants pitcher Caleb Kilian (not pictured) during the ninth inning at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Robert Edwards-Imagn ImagesJul 10, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; Colorado Rockies outfielder Jake McCarthy (31) runs after bunting a pitch thrown by San Francisco Giants pitcher Caleb Kilian (not pictured) during the ninth inning at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Robert Edwards-Imagn Images

Kyle Karros flipped a deficit into a lead with a two-run single, Cole Carrigg padded the advantage with a sacrifice fly and the visiting Colorado Rockies rallied for three runs in the ninth inning to stun the San Francisco Giants 4-3 on Friday night.

After Rafael Devers’ third hit in the seventh inning gave the Giants a 2-1 lead they took into the ninth, closer Caleb Kilian (2-5) didn’t retire any of the four batters he faced, allowing a single to Mickey Moniak, a walk to pinch hitter Troy Johnson and a bunt single to Jake McCarthy, setting up Karros’ hit through a drawn-in infield.

Carrigg followed with his run-scoring flyball to left field off Kilian’s replacement, Erik Miller, giving Jordan Romano a two-run cushion for the bottom of the ninth.

The Rockies needed both runs after Romano served up a bases-loaded sacrifice fly to Devers before walking Willy Adames to again load the bases with two outs. Juan Mejia then came on and got Bryce Eldridge to ground out to second base on his first pitch, securing his fourth save.

Antonio Senzatela (9-1), who pitched a scoreless eighth, was credited with the win.

After the Rockies tied the contest in the fifth, neither team scored again until Luis Arraez stroked a two-out single in the seventh, stole second, advanced to third on a passed ball and jogged home when Devers grounded a single into right field.

Neither starting pitcher got a decision after carrying a 1-1 tie into the sixth inning.

Rockies starter Tanner Gordon worked around eight hits and a walk to limit the Giants to a single run in five innings. He struck out one.

San Francisco’s only run against him was the game’s first, when Devers lofted his 19th home run of the season into the right field bleachers to lead off the second inning.

Giants starter Robbie Ray took a shutout in the fifth, when the Rockies got even on back-to-back two-out doubles by Ezequiel Tovar and McCarthy.

The left-hander left three batters into the sixth, having walked each of them. Thanks to Dylan Smith retiring the next three batters to get out of the jam unscathed, Ray allowed only the one run on four hits and six walks. He struck out four.

Karros finished with three hits, while McCarthy and TJ Rumfield had two hits apiece for the Rockies, who have beaten their National League West rivals five times in eight meetings this season.

Devers totaled three RBIs, while Arraez joined his teammate with three hits for the Giants, who fell to 2-3 on their week-long homestand.

– Field Level Media

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Jimmy Crooks' homer lifts Cardinals to rain-delayed win over Braves

Jul 10, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; St. Louis Cardinals third baseman Blaze Jordan (33) hits a double against the Atlanta Braves during the third inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn ImagesJul 10, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; St. Louis Cardinals third baseman Blaze Jordan (33) hits a double against the Atlanta Braves during the third inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

Jimmy Crooks hit a go-ahead solo home run in the eighth inning on Friday to lift the St. Louis Cardinals to a 2-1 victory over the visiting Atlanta Braves.

After a rain delay of nearly three hours in the top of the fourth derailed the game, Crooks hit his second home run of the season off Atlanta’s Danny Young (0-1) to help the Cardinals claim the series opener. Kyle Leahy threw three scoreless frames, surrendering a single and striking out two for St. Louis before being replaced by George Soriano after the delay.

JoJo Romero (1-2) tossed a perfect eighth inning to earn the win, and first-time All-Star Riley O’Brien posted his 23rd save in 27 tries for the Cardinals, who had dropped five of six entering the game.

Chris Sale started for Atlanta, allowing two hits in three scoreless innings, striking out five and walking one before the delay. Victor Mederos threw a pair of impressive innings in relief for Atlanta, which mustered just three hits. Austin Riley’s fifth-inning RBI single accounted for the Braves’ only run, as the visitors lost their fourth game in six tries.

In the bottom of the third, Blaze Jordan ripped a one-out double for the game’s first extra-base hit. After Sale issued a two-out walk to JJ Wetherholt, Ivan Herrera’s flyout ended the threat.

With Ozzie Albies leading off in the fourth, the game was halted by rain. After the delay, Soriano struck out Albies before retiring Matt Olson and Drake Baldwin.

Atlanta struck first in the fifth, though, as Mike Yasztremski doubled and scored on Riley’s RBI single. Justin Bruihl then relieved Soriano and threw 1 2/3 scoreless frames.

Didier Fuentes took over in the sixth for the Braves, allowing a one-out walk to Wetherholt and consecutive singles to Herrera and Jordan Walker, tying the score at one apiece.

The St. Louis bullpen retired the final seven Atlanta batters in order, with two of them flying out to the warning track.

–Field Level Media

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