SF Giants give Pirates taste of their own medicine in comeback win

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PITTSBURGH — Consider them even.

If the Giants lost a game they should have won to open their series with the Pirates, well, they had a reversal of fortune Wednesday evening.

This time, it was the Pirates who built a five-run lead against Blake Snell and watched it slip away as their relievers provided little relief and their fielders forgot how to field. In a game they had little business winning, the Giants prevailed, 9-5, for their ninth come-from-behind win of the season.

Down to their final out in the ninth inning, LaMonte Wade Jr. drove home Luis Matos with his fourth hit of the game to tie the score at 5, and after failing to score their automatic runner in extra innings the previous night they piled on with four runs in the top of the 10th.

Matos was able to score on Wade’s line drive to right field thanks to Bryan Reynolds’ error in left field, bobbling his base hit and allowing him to hustle to second.

It was Reynolds, the former Giants farmhand, who had been set up to play the hero for Pittsburgh before his defensive misplay.

After Snell loaded the bases in the fourth inning and was forced from the game, Reynolds unloaded them with one swing of the bat off Sean Hjelle, who was called on to relieve Snell with one out and one run already in. Prevailing in a seven-pitch battle, Reynolds’ grand slam halfway up the right field grandstands opened a 5-0 Pittsburgh lead.

Four of the runs were charged to Snell, whose previous three starts were so poor that the performance lowered his ERA, to 11.40 from 11.57.

Once Hjelle escaped the nightmare fourth inning, though, he and four other Giants relievers combined to hold the Pirates scoreless for the next six frames.

From the final out of the fourth inning on, the Giants’ bullpen retired 18 Pirates in a row with contributions from Randy Rodriguez (2 IP, 4 K), Tyler Rogers (1 IP, 1K), Ryan Walker (1 IP, 1 K) and Camilo Doval (1 IP, 1 K), who broke the streak with an inconsequential two-out walk in the 10th.

The grand slam allowed by Hjelle was the first home run served up by the 6-foot-11 reliever since April 24, a span of nine appearances and 12⅓ innings over which he had a 1.46 ERA.

The relief effort kept the Giants in the game, scratching two runs back on Matt Chapman’s seventh home run of the season — his third in the past 10 games — and another on an RBI single from Jorge Soler. Driving home Patrick Bailey from second, Soler’s fifth-inning line drive into left field was only his sixth hit of the season in 32 at-bats with runners in scoring position and he added a second to pad their advantage in extra innings.

The comeback was made possible by Aroldis Chapman, who faced three batters after relieving Pirates starter Jared Jones to start the eighth inning and walked them all. Cutting the deficit to a single run heading into the ninth, Wade, the recipient of the first free pass, came around to score when Joey Bart, the Pirates’ catcher, opted to go for the easy out at first base on a dribbler from Soler in front of the plate.

The win also made it easier to forget Snell’s suboptimal return to the starting rotation, a departure from the dominance displayed in two rehab outings against minor-league hitters and more of the same from the three starts he made against major-league competition before a monthlong stint on the injured list with an adductor strain.

After striking out 17 and issuing only one walk over nine hitless rehab innings, Snell walked four Pirates, hit a batter and unleashed a wild pitch that put a runner in scoring position. He faced 20 batters and fell behind in the count against half of them, running three-ball counts to nine hitters, including the four he walked.

His start began by firing three straight fastballs outside the strike zone to the Pirates’ leadoff man, Andrew McCutchen, eventually recovering to record the first of his five strikeouts, and came to an end when he spiked a curveball into McCutchen’s back foot.

The hit batter forced in the Pirates’ first run of the game after Snell loaded the bases with a pair of walks and an infield single that he opted not to field, giving way to a barehanded attempt from third baseman Matt Chapman that arrived late to first base. A batter later, Reynolds cleared the bases.

The lead ultimately couldn’t withstand one, final base hit from Wade, who reached base in all six of his trips to the plate a night after his 19-game on-base streak was snapped by a pinch-hit appearance. The last player reach safely six times in a game? Wade, last June, in Colorado.

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