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Padres no longer perfect at Petco after loss in extras to Cubs

Kevin Acee, The San Diego Union-Tribune on

Published in Baseball

The Padres got the kind of gift that seemed fitting considering how historically well things have gone for them at the start of this season.

They took advantage, which also seemed right for a team that has done so time and again through the season’s first three weeks.

But on this night, where they would fall a victory short of more history, they could not make that stand up in the end.

The Padres quickly squandered the favor(s) the Cubs did for them and then lost for the first time in a dozen games at Petco Park this season, 2-1 in 10 innings.

The Cubs struck immediately in the 10th when Nico Hoerner hit the third pitch from Yuki Matsui to the gap in right field for a triple that drove in automatic runner Dansby Swanson from second base.

Matsui stranded Hoerner with a pop fly and two strikeouts, but the Padres failed to score against Caleb Thielbar in the bottom half of the inning.

The loss kept the 2025 Padres from holding the distinction alone of having the best 18-game start in franchise history. They entered the game 14-3, same as the 1998 club, which lost its 18th game as well.

The events that made Tuesday’s game square were improbable and came in rapid succession.

The home run that Manny Machado hit 400 feet and eight rows deep in the stands beyond left field to put the Padres up 1-0 in the bottom of the fifth inning almost didn’t happen. Twice.

It shouldn’t have happened. And then, of course it happened.

It was altogether extremely lucky and most hard earned.

With two outs in the bottom of the fifth inning, Machado hit a high fly ball down the right field line that right fielder Kyle Tucker ran in and seemed about to catch when he suddenly became tentative and sort of stabbed at the ball, which went in and out of his glove.

Machado then laid off two splitters well below the zone before hitting another high foul, this one behind the plate. But catcher Miguel Amaya never saw the ball and drifted out into fair territory toward first base. As the ball descended, third baseman Gage Workman sprinted in to try to make the catch but had the ball go off his glove.

 

Four pitches into the at-bat, the Cubs had committed two errors.

Machado fouled off four more pitches before turning around a 92 mph fastball on the inner third of the plate at 105.8 mph.

The lead did not last long.

Swanson, who Padres starter Randy Vásquez had struck out twice, led off the sixth inning with a single lined to right field and went to third on a single grounded up the middle by Hoerner.

That ended Vásquez’s night, as Padres manager Mike Shildt went to left-hander Adrián Morejón, who was able to strand one of the runners but not prevent the game from being tied.

Swanson scored on a sacrifice bunt by Pete Crow-Armstrong, and the Cubs had runners at first and second because first baseman Luis Arraez had the ball slip out of his hand as he went to throw home.

Another sacrifice bunt, by Amaya, moved the runners up but gave Morejón his first out. He got the second out when Arraez sure-handedly fielded a grounder by pinch-hitter Jon Berti and threw home, where Martín Maldonado tagged out Hoerner. A fly ball out to center field by Ian Happ ended the inning.

Tuesday was a starting pitching rematch from April 4 at Wrigley Field in which Imanaga looked a lot like he was going to be every bit as good as he was in his first MLB season and Vásquez looked a lot like the inconsistent time bomb he was in 2024.

The 31-year-old Imanaga, who spent eight seasons in Japan coming to America, held the Padres to one run in 7⅓ innings in that first meeting. Vásquez walked five, surrendered two and was charged with three runs (two earned) in 4⅔ innings.

Tuesday night was different. It looked for five innings like two top-line starters going at it.

Both pitchers retired the first five batters they faced. Both escaped after loading the bases in the third inning, Vásquez with two outs and Imanaga with one out.


©2025 The San Diego Union-Tribune. Visit sandiegouniontribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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