Robbie Ray hopes to suspend the form that has a large contract for free agent from the Seattle Mariners when he faces his former team as San Francisco-Riese in the continuation of a series with three games on Saturday evening.
Ray (1-0, 5.06 ERA) and Mariners right-handed Bryce Miller (0-1, 4.76) have the non-envied task of being tied up by worn bullpens handcuffs after the hosts seven helpers for 8 2/3 innings and the Mariners Eighth for 7 2/3 Innings in San Francisco’s 10-9, 11-in-Triumph in the series Open in San Franciscos 10-9, 11-in-line triumph in the series Opener Afterday, in the Friday Afterday series.
Ray was an award-winning CY Young-coated season for the Toronto Blue Jays in 2021 when he signed a five-year contract of $ 115 million with the Mariners.
He went with an ERA of 3.71 ERA in 32 starts in his first season in Seattle 12-12 with 12-12 and then suffered a season-end flexor tribe, which was operated on in his debut against Cleveland Guardians 2023.
The Mariners then pulled the plug to the player they had hoped for that they would be the ASS of their employees and exchanged him in January 2024 against the Giants against Pitcher Anthony Desclafani and the Outfield Mitch Haniger.
Ray still earn a lot of money and rehab from the operation. He only started his first Giants last season on July 24th. He took seven starts over 33 days and went 3-2 with an ERA of 4.70 before San Francisco Management called it a season.
Now 33, the left-hander had an encouraging season debut in Cincinnati last Sunday and limited the red to three runs and three goals in 5 1/3 Inning in a 6: 3 victory.
All three Runs from Ray came in the sixth inning after being perfect by five. For a first start, the veteran was proud of his performance.
“The fastball command was really good,” said Ray. “My slider was good. The change felt good. But I think it was mostly the fastball command. I was able to go inside and out.
The Giants have not lost since Ray’s last excursion and achieved three games in Houston before winning a winning streak with five games on Friday with the walk against the Mariners.
Ray will start his seventh career against the Mariners, including one last August, which turned out to be his last season excursion, even though he only allowed one run into three innerings. He went 1-1 with an ERA of 3.55 in the six starts against Seattle.
The Giants will compete a day later than expected. He was supposed to start the serial opener, but when the Mariners had decided to add Luis F. Castillo to the back of their rotation, they started on Friday and pushed Miller a day.
In his three-year-old Major League career, the right-hander never imagined the Giants. Last Saturday he took the loss in his season debut at home against athletics and allowed three runs and six goals in 5 2/3 innings in Seattle’s 4-2 defeat.
On Friday, the Mariners and Giants wasted numerous opportunities to win the series start and combined 9: 44 with runners in the goal position while cheating 32 Baserunner.
In the end, the Mariners felt worse than the Giants and prompted managers Dan Wilson to turn the defeat in a different direction.
“We don’t like to lose at all. And today was a down-to-the-wire game, and these are the harder that you can swallow,” he said. “But we had to lose some positive aspects of it. And today’s positive were offensive that we did a lot of great things. Many great bats.”
-Media on the Level field