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Six-run first powers Giants to rout of Mets
SAN FRANCISCO 10, NY METS 2
 

By Ryan Leong
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

SAN FRANCISCO (Ticker) -- Randy Winn and Brian Horwitz each
homered during a six-run first inning Monday, sending the San
Francisco Giants to a 10-2 victory over the New York Mets.

Giants starter Jonathan Sanchez (4-3) overcame a rocky first
inning and yielded two runs and six hits over seven innings,
striking out eight.

Ray Durham went 3-for-4 with three RBI and Bengie Molina added
three hits, including the 1,000 of his career.

"It means a lot for me, believe it," Molina said. "I'm not a
superstar. I'm not a Hall of Famer, but for a guy that signed
for only $1,000 dollars - $750 after taxes - it's an honor for
me. No scout from Puerto Rico gave me a chance. I just wanted
a shot. So to have 1,000 hits, it means a lot to me."

The Giants began the rout with Winn's first leadoff home run of
the season.

Aaron Rowand, who has the fourth-best average in the National
League at .344, followed with a one-out double to left and
scored on a single to left-center by Molina - his 1,000th career
hit.

That was only the start. After Rich Aurilia drew a walk to put
runners on first and second, Durham drove a ball to left-center
for a two-run double.

Horwitz, who recorded his first major league hit Sunday, added
to his resume with his first career home run and RBI on a
two-run shot over the fence in left-center, giving the Giants a
6-0 lead.

"I just put my head down and ran because I know this is not a
home run park and I don't have the biggest power of anybody and,
luckily, it went out," said Horwitz, who traded an autographed
bat in exchange for the home run ball.

"(The ball) is going home in the vault with my first hit.
Unbelievable, it's extraordinary, surreal; it's an out-of-body
experience. I'm really enjoying being here, how could you
complain? It's great that we're winning as well."

Mets starter Oliver Perez (4-4) then walked Emmanuel Burriss,
prompting Mets manager Willie Randolph to summon Claudio Vargas
from the bullpen.

"Oliver had a horrible night, didn't throw the ball well and
couldn't get out of the inning," Randolph said. "He needs to
make adjustments in that situation and just minimize the damage
and he's had a couple of those starts where it seems like he
just gets frustrated with himself, but you cannot allow that to
happen.

"You've got to keep us in the ballgame and, tonight, he didn't
do a good job of that. It was a terrible, terrible outing."

The lefthander suffered the worst outing of his career, lasting
only one-third of an inning, allowing six runs and five hits
while watching his ERA balloon from 4.83 to 5.70.

"It's just one of those days, you want to forget it," Perez
said. "You don't want to get frustrated and I'm trying to
forget about this game. That's the worst game of my career and
you can't do anything about it. I'm just trying to focus for
the next game because that's important and it was just a tough
loss."

The offensive support was more than enough for Sanchez, who
escaped a bases-loaded jam in the first inning in winning his
second straight decision.

"I'm throwing my sinker for a strike and fastballs," Sanchez
said. "I just focus on throwing strikes. If I throw strikes
early, they're going to swing at it and I get quick outs. ... I
want to go seven or eight innings but I had already thrown 110
pitches, so I knew I was going to come out after the seventh."

Despite their dismal effort on Monday, the Mets made some
positive history. Following a double by Carlos Delgado to lead
off the second inning, Jose Reyes drove him in with an RBI
double and, in doing so, he tied Darryl Strawberry's franchise
record by reaching base for the 33rd consecutive game.

In the fourth inning, the Mets scored their only other run. Juan
Castro walked, was sacrificed to second and scored on a single
to center by Luis Castillo.

However, Sanchez contributed to his own cause in the sixth
inning with a two-run double that gave the Giants an 8-2 cushion
en route to their second straight win at home after ending a
seven-game skid at AT&T Park.

"We have had our struggles at home, so it's good to win two in a
row, I'll say that," Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. "That's
great for a ballclub and something you can build on. And they
came out tonight and scored six. Now tomorrow, we've got to go
out and do the same thing."

San Francisco concluded the scoring binge in the seventh as
Durham drew a bases-loaded walk and Horwitz plated a run on a
sacrifice fly.

 
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