A Giant has finally splashed down into McCovey Cove. The 109th baseball to be baptized in the icy Bay waters was the first by a San Francisco Giant in 2026, and the first of Bryce Eldridge’s career.

It was a doozy too. Well…a doozy compared to recent Splash Hits. Measured on the Bondsian Scale, Eldridge’s would qualify as roughly a “routine fly.” It didn’t do a fifth or sixth archway flyover, nor burst into flames as it broke through the atmosphere on its descent — but it wasn’t cheap either. The game-tying shot in the 4th took a direct route down the right-field line and cleared the boardwalk railing below by plenty. Considering the pitch he hit, a hung slider off the inside of the plate, didn’t veer off foul is a testament to the quality of Eldridge’s contact. The ball hissed off his bat at 106 MPH, traveling 394 feet before it got soaked.

View Link

Eldridge is the 33rd Giant, and at 21 years of age, the youngest to launch a Splash Hit in their career, and first since Rafael Devers in September of last year. While we’re already on the doorstep of the All-Star Break, this was not the latest fans have had to wait for a ball to go spelunking into the Cove. Stephen Vogt’s off Philly’s Drew Smyly ended the drought in 2019 on August 9th. Brandon Belt hit one on September 25th, 2014, and he hit one again 20 months later, off Boston’s David Price, in June of 2016 — no other ball got wet off a Giants bat in the meantime. 2015 remains the only dry season in the 27 year history of the park at 3rd and King.

The best part of Eldridge’s Splash Hit: it helped the Giants win. The solo homer evened the score and kicked off a string of seven unanswered runs for the San Francisco offense, culminating in a 4-run outburst in the 8th that secured an 8-2 victory over the Rockies.

While this was the two teams’ first meeting at sea-level, the park played like its Rocky Mountain high counterpart. The Giants line-up knocked four doubles and three homers, including Casey Schmitt’s 18th in the 1st inning and Willy Adames’s 15th in the 8th.

Drew Cavanaugh, who is still searching for his first extra base hit, nearly had a fourth home run in the 5th when he smoked a first-pitch fastball to right. At 102 MPH off the bat, it sounded like the ball was destined for the water, but with a wicked topspin, it dove into the bricks, hitting the Splash Hit counter instead before ricocheting back into the field of play, holding the back-up catcher to another single. A tough break that worked out in the end when Heliot Ramos and Luis Arraez singled and doubled to score Cavanaugh and break the 2-2 tie. Devers immediately plated the fourth run with a bases-loaded single.

View Link

In the 8th, they’d stretch their two-run lead to six with two-out thunder from the heart of their line-up. Schmitt and Devers doubled-up on doubles, both collecting their second hit and second RBI of the night, before Adames ended the evening with a 2-run tater to deep left.

View Link

It was the offense’s night, all in support of a serviceable Carson Whisenhunt, making his second start of the year. The southpaw, called up to give Landen Roupp an extended rest through the All Star break, pitched into the 6th and picked up the win. He retired the first 8 batters he faced, but things got more dicey on the second go-round. A 2-out double turned into bases-loaded stress after back-to-back walks, with the third out being recorded 390 feet from home plate. Willi Castro’s 2-run homer in the 4th was the biggest blow landed. Whisenhunt weathered it — considering the fact that he walked four batters over 5.2 innings, he may have gotten a little lucky.

View Link

Luck — and definitely some help from key actors. Arraez, Schmitt, Devers, Adames, and Eldridge — the #2 thru #6 hitters — all punched in at least one runner. Arraez, Devers, Schmitt, Eldridge, and Cavanaugh logged multiple hits. Schmitt worked a walk for the first time since May 24th — the longest span by a Giants player since Hal Lanier in 1964. Schmitt and Victor Bericoto, before he left the game after his at-bat in the 5th, made some excellent defensive plays on the left-side of the field. The bullpen got in on the action too, allowing just 2 hits over 3.1 scoreless innings. J.T. Brubaker and Erik Miller retired seven Rockies in a row while Caleb Kilian closed the door in the 9th .

Read the full article here

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version