San Francisco: The components of the duel of a pitcher were in place. The headlines were Logan Webb and Hunter Greene, a couple of stars that the opening day. The place was Oracle Park, a paradise of pitchers. The weather was crispy, cold.
Webb was excellent; Greene was masterful.
Webb launched seven laundering innings with 10 strikeouts and without walks, but Greene responded by launching 8 2/3 laundering inputs with seven strikeouts, a masterful performance that broke the Strak the winning of seven Gigantes Games (8-2).
“I think Hunter is one of the best baseball pitchers,” Webb said. “Speaking of last year, if you stay healthy, you have a good opportunity to win the Cy Young. You see her things. He is launching 101 (MPH) in Pitch 100. He is one of the best baseball pitchers.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qqxm9ea738
Webb is one of the best baseball pitchers in its own right, one who has just recorded his third race game where he struck at least 10 batters and did not walk. But once webb came out, the Reds capitalized the unstable command of Camilo Doval.
One day eliminated from blowing a rescue, Doval endured another brutal exit. Manager Bob Melvin asked Doval because Tyler Rogers was not necessary, and Doval began his departure giving the reds (4-7) two free base runners through Walk and Hit by Pitch. These runners advanced a base in a touch of sacrifice and Doval was removed from the game, with a matter of the shirts.
Erik Miller was called with one outside and runners in second and third, but after walking the first batter he faced, Miller allowed a double of two races to Blake Dunn that gave Cincinnati a 2-0 advantage. Doval opened its season with three perfect tickets, but since then it has allowed six races (three won) on its last three exits with three bases per ball in a punch.
“We all have faith and confidence in Camilo. He is an All-Star. He is one of the best relief in baseball,” Webb said. “Every time we go out, we have faith that it will do well. Today is just a hypo. It’s baseball. It’s nothing we worry about.”
For Greene, those two races seemed to be enough. The best change of the Night of the Gians of Greene was Jung Hoo Lee, whose flying 384 feet at the bottom of the sixth would have been a homer in 19 or 30 stages. In the ninth, San Francisco finally planned the seeds of a rally.
Greene withdrew the first two batters she faced and flirted with a Maddux, but the giants chased Green from the game when Jung Hoo Lee connected a single and Matt Chapman threw a walk. The Reds asked Tony Santillan to close the door, but unlike the opening day, there will be no other dramatic three -run homer, Wemer Wemer. Heliot Ramos sent a low -line trip to the left field, one that registered 106.7 MPH, but Jacob Hurtubise of the Reds tracked him and divered awkwardly to corner the ball and finish the game.
“More than anything, I think it was the sliding control today was better today the last time we saw it,” Melvin said about Greene. “It was more a strike ball last time. Now, it was suddenly to the ball. When you are throwing so strong, it is difficult to leave that launch too. He has had good things before in the past. I think it was as good as things as it is.”
Like Greene, Webb was also cooking with good things. Webb is more effective when its change is to dance, and the lack of offensive certifications of the reds that Webb’s exclusive tone was in its maximum form.
Half or 12 Webb smells were with change. Half or 10 Webb strikeouts were also with change. Webb change was the elite in ’23, but simply averaged in ’24, and after adjusting the field before the season, it is happy with the way the launch is currently playing. It will take that effectiveness of 1.89 through three games that also come with it.
“It is probably the most excited that I am for my change in a long time,” Webb said.
Lee helped the cause of Webb with a pair of slippery and sliding captures in the first and fifth entry, his early defense was invaluable for the applicants of a team that ended up in the last place in saved defensive races (-24) last year. Lee’s efforts delighted the “Hoo Lee Gans”, a group of fans at the upper level with caps that seemed fire. The deep fly ball of the central fluder in the sixth entrance can fall to a few feet, but the single from Lee’s ninth entrance extended her batting streak to eight games.
As for Hoo Lee Goose? He will be attentive to them in the future.
“I can feel that the love of fans is incredible at this time,” Lee said through the interpreter of the Justin Han team.
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