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SUNDAY'S GAME

Bullpen, defense fail for SF

Chulk yields tying homer, Velez's error costs game; all 4 runs off Lincecum unearned

Published: Monday, May 5, 2008 at 4:30 a.m.
Last Modified: Monday, May 5, 2008 at 5:56 a.m.
PHILADELPHIA -- With the Giants expecting to see nothing but left-handed starters for a week, right-handed hitters like Rich Aurilia and Jose Castillo are going to have to carry a large load of the offense.

Tom Mihalek / AP
Philadelphia Phillies' Geoff Jenkins, rear, jumps in the air near Adam Eaton, left, and Jason Werth, right, after the Phillies defeated the San Francisco Giants' 6-5, Sunday, May 4, 2008 in Philadelphia.

Sunday afternoon, both veteran infielders were up to the challenge. The Giants' bullpen and defense was not.

Aurilia had three extra-base hits for the first time in his 14-year career, including a tying two-out, two-run home run, and Castillo contributed two run-scoring hits, the second a go-ahead RBI triple in the eighth inning.

But Vinnie Chulk, after working out of a one-out, first-and-second jam in the seventh, allowed a tying home run to Carlos Ruiz in the eighth inning, and then second baseman Eugenio Velez's error on Geoff Jenkins' grounder with two out in the ninth allowed Ryan Howard to score from second as the Phillies came away with a 6-5 win.

"I was thinking, 'just score all the way,' " Howard said.

The Phillies took two of three from the Giants, thanks to the error.

"The ball can't get by him there," Giants manager Bruce Bochy said of Velez.

Brad Lidge pitched a scoreless ninth for the win.

Tim Lincecum, pitching two days shy of the first anniversary of his big-league debut and against the same team against which he broke into the majors, pitched six good innings, but, as in his debut, did not factor in the decision. Lincecum allowed four runs, but none were earned as they resulted from two Giants' errors. Lincecum entered the game with a 1.73 ERA, third-best in the NL, as well as a league-leading 0.52 road ERA. He actually lowered his overall ERA to 1.49.

Lincecum pitched six innings and allowed six hits to go along with five strikeouts and two wild pitches.

"We fought hard the whole series. We were a few outs from getting a sweep," Bochy said.

Instead, the Giants fell to 14-18.

Phillies starter Cole Hamels was the first of six consecutive left-handed starters the Giants are expected to face.

Aurilia had been 1-for-13 against left-handers this season, but he was locked in against Hamels. Entering the game, Hamels was ninth in the league with a 2.70 ERA and had pitched into at least the seventh inning in all six of his starts.

Hamels lasted six innings against the Giants and probably would have gone deeper if Aurilia had not lined two-run shot over the left-field wall in the sixth inning that tied the score at 4-4.

Castillo, who had been 2 for 16 against lefties, hit the tying triple off right-handed reliever Chad Durbin. But he went 1 for 3 against Hamels and sparked the Giants in the fourth inning with a two-out, RBI single to cut the deficit to 2-1. He scored from first base one batter later on Aurilia's double to center that tied the score at 2-2.


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