"Totally," catcher Yan Gomes said. "Whenever you get your beginning pitcher out there for the 10th it's an immense arrangement. He gave us all that he had." 토토사이트
Said shortstop Nico Hoerner: "100 percent. I needed it terrible for him. Certainly was expecting that twofold play groundball toward the end. I believed that was his last hitter.
"It's astounding. I love watching Kyle pitch," Hoerner said. "Clearly his way of pitching isn't normal the game any longer and only staggering to see a person with a dominance of his art like that against any group, however a truly impressive setup in their ballpark."
The Padres were closed out for the second time in three games. The main inning the Padres have scored in during their last three games was the 10th inning Sunday, when special hitter Jorge Alfaro hit a three-run walkoff homerun in a 3-2 win against the Miami Marlins.
Sway Melvin dealt with the game for the Padres after the group at first said he had a non-COVID gastrointestinal disease. Melvin wasn't feeling alright to do the post-game news meeting so third base mentor Matt Williams dealt with it. The group reported that seat mentor Ryan Christenson, who might have been in-between time director on the off chance that Melvin could never have made due, entered COVID conventions.
Ian Happ drove in two runs for the Cubs, who gave new kid on the block lefty MacKenzie Gore (2-1) his most memorable misfortune. They took a 1-0 lead two hitters in after Willson Contreras singled to right and scored on Suzuki's twofold to left. Suzuki left the game in the 6th with a sensitive right lower leg.
Happ hit a RBI single in the fourth. The Cubs included a run Suzuki's twofold play grounder in the fifth and a tossing mistake on Padres second baseman Jake Cronenworth in the seventh. Happ hit another RBI single in the eighth.
Gore permitted three runs and seven hits in five innings, struck out six and strolled none.
Recalling MR. PADRE
The Padres recalled Hall of Famer Tony Gwynn on what might have been his 62nd birthday. His widow, Alicia, tossed out the stylized first pitch to Tony Gwynn Jr., a previous major leaguer and current Padres telecaster. Anisha Gwynn, girl of Alicia and Tony, sang the public song of devotion. The Padres reported the Tony Gwynn Community All-Star Program to perceive nearby youth who encapsulate Gwynn's devotion to neighborhood causes.