Bonds blasts 758th homer, but Pirates capture win
Pittsburgh rallied with six runs in the eighth inning on Friday.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Barry Bonds is adding to his home run record in a hurry. Rookie Rajai Davis got everything but a homer against his old team.
Bonds connected for career homer No. 758 and his third clout of the week and Davis singled, doubled, tripled and scored a career-best four runs Friday night in the San Francisco Giants’ 8-7 loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Adam LaRoche hit a solo homer in the fourth for Pittsburgh, which rallied with six runs in the eighth.
The Pirates got four straight singles to start the inning, then later a sacrifice fly by Jack Wilson off loser Vinnie Chulk (4-4), Nate McLouth’s tying RBI double and a go-ahead, two-run single by Freddy Sanchez.
“I have to give our guys an awful lot of credit to come back in the manner they did,” Pirates manager Jim Tracy said. “That’s been an Achilles’ heel for us. We turned it around with a huge inning.”
Bonds homer
Bonds sent a 3-2 pitch from former teammate Matt Morris into the right-field arcade for a two-run shot, giving the Giants a 3-1 lead. The fan who retrieved the ball was quickly whisked away so the ball could be authenticated.
Fans jumped to their feet as Bonds made his third home-run trot this week in the club’s waterfront ballpark — and in the first of five straight games between the teams, including a makeup doubleheader Monday in Pittsburgh.
Bonds broke Hank Aaron’s record with No. 756 on Tuesday, then had a splash-hit homer into McCovey Cove for his 757th the very next night.
“He’s swinging well,” manager Bruce Bochy said. “The fresher we keep him, the better player we’re going to get.”
Bonds hit his first career homer off Morris, who became the 448th different pitcher to give up a longball to Bonds.
The right-hander was dealt by San Francisco to the Pirates at the trading deadline for Davis, a speedy outfielder who contributed plenty against his old club.
“I had so much Adrenalin and emotion built up for this game it affected my stuff,” Morris said. “I felt the curve. I’m sure Barry felt it, too. And now I’m in the book.”
Standing O
The 43-year-old Bonds received a standing ovation when he came out to play left field in the top of the fourth and he tipped and waved his cap with his left hand.
He was replaced before the top of the eighth by Kevin Frandsen.
Davis singled, doubled and tripled in order to get a chance for a natural cycle but walked in the seventh before scoring his fourth run on Bonds’ sacrifice fly. He reached on a fielder’s choice in the eighth and also stole a base.
“I did realize it after my third at-bat,” Davis said of his opportunity for the cycle, something he’s never done. “My fourth at-bat I was thinking about it.”
Ray Durham, who received some hitting advice in the indoor cage earlier in the day from Hall of Famer Willie Mays, added an RBI single and Pedro Feliz had a sacrifice fly in the sixth to score Bonds.
In his return to San Francisco, Morris received some boos and cheers when he batted leading off the third. He acknowledged the trade caught him by surprise because it wasn’t to a contending team. He allowed five runs and seven hits in six innings, walked five and didn’t have a strikeout.