Chapman, Soler each get 3 hits as Giants beat Rockies 5-4 to complete 4-game sweep
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Matt Chapman and Jorge Soler each had three hits, and the San Francisco Giants finished off a four-game sweep of the Colorado Rockies with a 5-4 victory Sunday.
It was San Francisco's first four-game sweep since 2022. The Giants have beaten Colorado 12 straight times at home, tying a Rockies record for most consecutive losses at an opposing ballpark.
The Giants improved to two games under .500 as they look to make a playoff push, with their next 13 games coming against teams with losing records.
“If we’re going to move forward, we have to get to .500," manager Bob Melvin said. "But it was nice to be able to string a few wins together and get that feeling when you take the field — like we took the field today — we felt like we were going to win the game.”
With the trade deadline looming Tuesday, the series sweep generated confidence inside the Giants' clubhouse.
“Everybody here in this room, we believe in each other,” Chapman said. “We believe that our best baseball is ahead of us.”
Trailing 5-3 heading into the ninth inning, the Rockies scored once and had the potential tying run at second base with one out against closer Camilo Doval. But then Sam Hilliard struck out and Ezequiel Tovar — who had three hits — grounded out to give Doval his 20th save.
Casey Schmitt hit a solo homer in the first to put the Giants ahead. In the second, Derek Hill had an RBI triple and Soler drove him in with a double to make it 3-0.
Chapman’s two-run single with two outs and the bases loaded in the sixth gave the Giants a 5-2 lead.
San Francisco used six pitchers in a bullpen game, including Jordan Hicks, who transitioned to the 'pen on Sunday after spending the first half of the season in the starting rotation. Hicks entered in the sixth and allowed two runs in two innings. Randy Rodríguez (3-1) permitted one run in three innings for the win.
Colorado loaded the bases in the eighth with two outs but Spencer Bivens got Brendan Rodgers to ground out.
Michael Toglia homered, and Charlie Blackmon and Hunter Goodman each had an RBI single for the Rockies. Tovar extended his hitting streak to 15 games, tying a career high.
After scoring 20 runs against Boston on Wednesday, the Rockies totaled just nine during the four-game series. They struck out 53 times, the most by Giants pitchers in a four-game series.
“Our offense took a little bit of a downturn here, which was so surprising and frustrating at the same time coming off the homestand — especially 20-run game on Wednesday — with a lot of confidence coming in here,” manager Bud Black said. “We just didn’t hit enough.”
Austin Gomber (2-7) pitched into the fourth inning, allowing three runs.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Rockies: CF Brenton Doyle exited before the third inning with a bruised fingertip on his throwing hand. Black said Doyle, after striking out in the first, accidentally hit the training kit in the dugout while taking “a little swing with the towel” out of frustration. Doyle, the Rockies’ third-place hitter on Sunday, is batting .274 with 17 home runs and 53 RBIs. “It’s going to eventually impact his throwing and impact maybe his ability to grip the bat, so out of precaution I took him out,” Black said. ... OF Jordan Beck (broken left hand) went 2 for 3 and scored a run in his first rehab game with Triple-A Albuquerque on Saturday.
Giants: RHP Alex Cobb, who has been recovering from offseason hip surgery, developed a blister in his most recent rehab start, delaying his scheduled return this week. … All-Star OF Heliot Ramos was out of the lineup with a right thumb injury, which is not believed to be serious. … RHP Sean Hjelle was placed on the bereavement list.
UP NEXT
Rockies: Continue a 10-game West Coast trip Tuesday with the opener of a three-game series at the Los Angeles Angels. RHP Cal Quantrill (7-7, 4.09 ERA) pitches for Colorado.
Giants: Will host Oakland in the Bay Bridge Series for two games beginning Tuesday. The team had not yet announced a scheduled starter.
With Randy Gradishar's induction at age 72, the 'Orange Crush' finally gets into Canton
DENVER (AP) — About the only time Randy Gradishar ever disappointed his teammates was when he first arrived in Denver as the Broncos' first-round draft pick in 1974.
Eagerly awaiting the arrival of the man Ohio State coach Woody Hayes called “the best linebacker I ever coached,” were members of the budding “Orange Crush” ensemble that would soon join Minnesota's “Purple People Eaters," Dallas' “Doomsday" and Pittsburgh's “Steel Curtain” as one of the predominant defenses in the NFL.
Gradishar and nose tackle Rubin Carter, drafted a year later, would become the twin pillars of the “Orange Crush” defense that served as the Broncos’ backbone in the late 1970s and early 1980s and the driving force in their first Super Bowl appearance after the 1977 season, where they lost to Dallas 27-10.
Aside from what he'd bring to the field, his teammates wondered what kind of muscle car he might have spent his signing bonus on and if the rumbling V-8 engine or thumping subwoofers would announce his arrival from blocks away.
Gradishar instead rolled up in his father's creaky station wagon, the kind with the wooden side panels that were ferrying families across the country in the 1970s.
“We were like, ‘Who is this guy?’” recalled Tom Jackson with a hearty laugh.
Jackson — who bought a gold Monte Carlo as a fourth-round pick one year earlier — was a fellow Ohioan and former Louisville linebacker who would become Gradishar's roommate, lifelong friend and, come Saturday, his Pro Football Hall of Fame presenter.
“Then, of course, he started to play,” Jackson said, "and from that point on, we were like, ‘Oh, OK, we’ll follow this guy anywhere.’”
Gradishar wasn't a snarling linebacker in the mold of Jack Lambert, Dick Butkus or Lawrence Taylor. He was a tactician, deciphering offensive intentions with amazing accuracy and a superb athlete with an uncanny ability to stay on his feet and blow up plays.
A textbook tackler. Nothing fancy, nothing ferocious.
“Randy wasn’t the fastest, he wasn’t the quickest, he wasn’t the strongest, he’s just the most amazing tackling machine I had ever seen," Jackson said.
Joe Collier, Denver's longtime defensive coordinator and architect of the “Orange Crush” defense, told The Associated Press in an interview two weeks before his death in May at age 91 that the secret to Gradishar's greatness was his astonishing ability to stay on his feet when opponents tried to take out his legs.
“He had a sense of balance that always amazed me, how he would ward off blockers,” recounted Collier, who found in Gradishar the ideal captain for his 3-4 defense that was just gaining a foothold in the league in the mid-1970s.
“Guys would go after his legs and he would just skirt over these guys and stay on his feet. So, he was a guy that would be available for tackling 100% of the time," Collier said. "He was always around the ball. He wouldn’t get knocked down. He wasn’t a get-knocked-down type of guy.”
Like his choice of transportation, Gradishar's play was simply dependable and trustworthy, traits he learned growing up in Champion Township, Ohio — a mere 40-minute drive from Canton — where he began working at his father's grocery store at age 11.
That work ethic helped make him a high school star on the hardwood and the gridiron but he planned to focus on the family business after graduation until the school called him one afternoon while he was sweeping the store.
“They told me Woody Hayes was there to see me. I said, ’OK, I’ll be right there,” Gradishar recounted. “Then, I hung up and I said, ‘Who’s Woody Hayes?‘”
Gardishar might have been the only kid in Ohio who didn't know that. But he hustled to Champion High School in Warren to meet Hayes before driving him back to the grocery store. When Jim Gradishar finished slicing bologna, he sat down with Hayes and the two of them talked for an hour, mostly about having both served in World War II.
After Hayes left, the elder Gradishar told his son he'd be attending Ohio State. So, off he went to Columbus to hone the skills that would make him an All-Pro in Denver, the AP Defensive Player of the Year in 1978 — and after a 35-year wait, a Pro Football Hall of Famer at age 72.
“I’m just glad it finally happened, whether it was me or someone else, because I think we all know that the ‘Orange Crush’ has not been recognized and so finally the ‘Orange Crush’ is being recognized,” Gradishar said.
Proud to be first, he prays he's not the last.
Although the “Orange Crush” tormented offenses for several seasons, laying the foundation for the success the franchise would enjoy under John Elway, a return to the Super Bowl proved out of reach.
That was one reason often cited for the Hall of Fame snubs of the “Orange Crush.” Another was the widely held notion that the gaudy tackling statistics of that era — such as Gradishar’s 2,049 career stops over 10 seasons —must have been embellished by the Broncos.
“You know what? I don’t blame them for not believing the numbers because Randy’s statistics were, in fact, unbelievable,” Jackson said. “But they were real. I saw them."