The San Francisco Giants finally snapped their rough road swing with a tight 3-2 victory over the San Diego Padres. Lefty Trevor McDonald made his season debut and just dominated—seven innings, one run, eight strikeouts.
McDonald didn’t just show up—he set the tone. The Giants got some timely power and just enough late-inning drama to stop a six-game skid. After a winless six-game road trip, they finally got their first win at Oracle Park.
Trevor McDonald anchors Giants’ win with a standout opener
Trevor McDonald looked calm in his season debut. He carved through seven innings on just two hits and racked up eight strikeouts.
He had a scary moment when a 102.9 mph line drive from Miguel Andújar clipped near his right hip. Somehow, he shook it off and stayed in control long enough for San Francisco to grab the win.
Pitching line and resilience
McDonald went seven, gave up one run, and allowed just two hits. That line drive didn’t rattle him—he just kept pitching.
His outing gave the bullpen a boost, and Caleb Killian closed it out after a tense ninth inning. Sometimes, a start like that can change how a rotation feels about itself.
Late drama and the closing sequence
The Padres tried to rally late, loading the ninth. Keaton Winn got one out, then Ramon Laureano smacked a homer off Killian to make it 3-2.
Killian buckled down and retired the last three batters. He picked up his first save and locked down a home win the Giants badly needed.
Offensive spark: Schmitt leads the early charge and sets the tone
Casey Schmitt sparked the Giants’ offense early. He broke the team’s road-trip power drought with a first-inning homer off a 3-2 fastball from Randy Vásquez.
The blast gave San Francisco a quick jolt. It forced the Padres to play catch-up right away.
Schmitt’s fifth homer and a momentum shift
Schmitt’s fifth home run of the season came in that first inning. That swing really shifted the momentum back toward the Giants.
It felt like the team found some early belief in their power again. That set up the rest of the night’s story.
Padres’ offense balanced by Arraez and Devers; pairing for San Diego
San Diego’s offense took a different approach. Luis Arraez doubled twice and scored both times.
Rafael Devers added two RBIs, including a sac fly in the sixth that kept the Padres within striking distance.
Arraez and Devers: multi-hit, multi-run impact
Arraez’s two doubles and two runs gave the Padres’ lineup some life. Devers did his part, cashing in with two RBIs.
The Padres had chances and a clear plan for a comeback, even as McDonald kept them mostly quiet.
Turning points and game management
This one had a bit of everything—early offense, a dominant start, and some late stress. Jackson Merrill got the Padres on the board first with a solo homer in the top of the first.
That answered Schmitt’s blast and set up a tight finish. San Francisco’s bullpen held after McDonald left. Killian’s save made sure the Giants finally got a win.
Impact: Giants end skid, return to Oracle Park with momentum
The win snapped a six-game losing streak. It also marked the Giants’ first home victory back at Oracle Park after a rough 0-6 road trip.
McDonald threw seven strong innings. Schmitt’s early power and a late bullpen surge helped San Francisco find a way to climb back into the standings.
Here is the source article for this story: Schmitt homers, McDonald sharp as Giants edge Padres 3-2 to end 6-game skid
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