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Jackson sparks late rally as Diamondbacks top Giants
ARIZONA 5, SAN FRANCISCO 3
 


By Ryan McCrary
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

SAN FRANCISCO (Ticker) -- A marquee matchup between two of the
top pitchers in the National League did not disappoint, but the
San Francisco Giants' shaky bullpen faltered again as the
Arizona Diamondbacks took a 5-3 victory on Saturday.

Tim Lincecum and Brandon Webb each tossed seven strong innings,
combining for 21 strikeouts and just two walks. Lincecum left
with the Giants leading, 3-2, but the Diamondbacks rallied for
three runs in the eighth against Tyler Walker.

Walker (3-6) surrendered a sacrifice fly to Chris Young to tie
the score and Conor Jackson followed with the decisive RBI
single.

"It's frustrating after we battled back on probably one of the
best pitchers in the league," Walker said. "I just feel I let
everybody in this clubhouse down."

Chad Tracy added a sacrifice fly to secure the win for Webb
(14-4).

Newly acquired Jon Rauch pitched a perfect eighth and Brandon
Lyon worked around a base hit in the ninth to notch his 21st
save.

"That's no question a tough one," San Francisco manager Bruce
Bochy said. "(Lincecum) did such a great job. He pitched
terrific. We got a big hit there to get a lead off a tough
pitcher and couldn't hold it. Against a club that's in front of
us, no question this is a tough one."

San Francisco reclaimed the lead in the sixth on a two-out,
two-run single to shallow center by Aaron Rowand to go up, 3-2.

Webb, who is tied for the major league lead in wins, allowed a
sacrifice fly to Randy Winn in the first and a two-run single by
Rowand in the sixth. The 2006 Cy Young Award winner gave up
three runs and four hits while striking out eight.

"One of the reasons (Webb has) the record he does is because
he's pretty economical with his pitches and we can leave him out
there in close games like that," Arizona manager Bob Melvin
said. "If you can get another inning and the team comes back
with a couple runs, you can get him the win."

Webb wobbled early and his defense did not help in the first,
either. After issuing a leadoff walk to Dave Roberts, who
promptly stole second, Eugenio Velez reached on a fielding error
to give the Giants runners at the corners. After a sacrifice fly
from Randy Winn, Webb bounced back to strike out Bengie Molina
and Rowand to end the threat.

"I got some big strikeouts there when I had to and made some
good pitches there," Webb said. "I tried to stay in there as
long as I could. I threw a few more pitches than I usually do,
so I tried to be more aggressive in the strike zone and tried to
get my pitch count under control."

Lincecum, who recorded a career-high 13 strikeouts, got some
help from the shadows but continued to dazzle with an
electrifying fastball. Unfortunately for the Giants, his 111
pitches prevented him from throwing into the eighth.

"With as many strikeouts as he threw tonight, his pitch count
was bound to get up, so that was our plan to go up there and
strike out as many times as possible to get his pitch count up
there," Young said. "You couldn't really see the ball well the
first five innings (because of shadows). When we finally
started to see the ball in the sixth or seventh inning, you're
just trying to find a way to grind it out."

It was the third loss in the last four starts for Lincecum, who
has received three runs or less from the offense in 11 starts
this season.

"I haven't been here that long, but I've seen enough games to
where I know things aren't always going to go your way,"
Lincecum said. "I just try to stay as even keel as possible.
The game was exciting; you're going to run into those games
where it's just going to slip away from you. You just try not
to get too down about it and just take positives from each
outing you can."

Arizona seized the lead in the fifth inning as Jackson and Tracy
laced back-to-back singles and Chris Snyder slapped a two-run
double down the right field line for a 2-1 lead.

 
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