Giants stifled by Willis, Fish
06/07/2006 8:00 PM ET
Giants stifled by Willis, Fish
Wright hit hard on three days' rest; lineup lethargic in loss
By Rich Draper / MLB.com
Steve Finley tumbles after making a diving grab on Wednesday against Florida.
(Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP)
SAN FRANCISCO -- Ever have one of those days when you'd rather sleep in than
go to work, and feel desultory and less than 100 percent with a nice warm sun
in your face?
Of course.
And the Giants are no different. They had one of those times Wednesday in a
listless 12:35 p.m. contest vs. the Florida Marlins, falling 8-1 to left-
hander Dontrelle Willis and what manager Felipe Alou called a typical mid-week
malaise at AT&T Park.
Asked what the results of a teamwide MRI would show this day, he quipped, "
Nothing ... empty."
San Francisco is now 0-3 on Wednesday afternoon affairs, and while there was
speculation the team finally was coming down from a natural high after a great
weekend in New York and three consecutive victories -- including a super
-psych fireballing show by Jason Schmidt -- Alou said it wasn't so.
"This is a time of day that we don't play well," said the skipper. "We don't
have our better games at this time of the day -- the 12:35 p.m. games for
whatever reason. I'm only saying what I see."
Still, the Giants seemed wide awake in the first inning on Wednesday, grabbing
a 1-0 lead on a Moises Alou RBI single, but unfortunately leaving two runners
on. It might have set the tone for the rest of the snoozy day, as San
Francisco would not score again.
"I've seen that happen a lot," said Felipe of aborted early inning rallies.
"We score one, two, sometimes three or four runs in the first inning and
that's the end of the day.
"A lot of stuff came out today -- no offense," he said. "You could see Pedro
Feliz was really tired with the bat ... [Steve] Finley, even though he got a
day off ... Ray [Durham] ... Vizquel."
Those players went a combined 0-for-13 against the Marlins, but another
problem on Wednesday was veteran right-hander Jamey Wright -- taking one for
the team on three days' rest -- throwing well for three scoreless innings
before running out of fuel.
Wright (5-5) would yield five hits and six runs over a mere 4 1/3 innings, but
didn't blame his weariness on less rest.
For the Giants and Wright, the game was essentially over when Joe Borchard hit
a two-run homer in the fourth and Dan Uggla's five-RBI contest began with a
three-run shot an inning later. He added a two-run blast in the ninth.
"I felt good -- I didn't feel strong, but a couple times my velocity was good
and the ball came out of my hand good," said Wright. "The pitch to Borchard
was a changeup up, and he hits it out, and same thing to Uggla, a sinker up
and he crushed it."
Wright also blamed a walk to Willis in the fifth as a big mistake. That kept
the inning going, to the Giants' detriment.
"I was definitely trying to be too fine," he said. "I had it in the back of my
head he would pull [the bat] back and try to hit, and on 3-0 to him I was
just trying to make a pitch, knowing he's trying to bunt it. At 3-2 I just
missed with a sinker for ball four."
Alou did say Wright was "starting to lose it," yet the pitcher would not give
himself an excuse, or even a reason for a less-than-stellar outing.
"I felt strong, even when I came out of the game," he said. "I felt I had a
lot left. I was disappointed -- I felt I had the stuff to go deep in the game,
but the most frustrating part was not giving us a chance to win the game."
Not competing in the game was Giants titan Barry Bonds, who has suffered an
injury to his left side. Trainer Stan Conte said Bonds is "day-to-day," but
referred any other medical updates to come from the outfielder.
In other news, starting catcher Mike Matheny, on the disabled list for a week
due to a concussion sustained on a foul-tip in Florida, had an MRI of his head
on Wednesday, which proved negative.
But Matheny, who still feels "off" with slightly impaired vision and speech,
is likely to be out the full 15 days. Conte is taking no chances.
"All the tests have been negative, and that's good news," he said. "He's about
the same, which we expected. This is going to be a slow process early on, and
it's more of a wait-and-see [mode]. There's no timetable."
Rich Draper is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the
approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
--
問我為何住西子灣頭
只因滄海是我的鄰居
余光中 作
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