News Padres Team Notes

Fernando Tatis Jr. blasts grand slam, Padres eliminate Diamondbacks

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Fernando Tatis Jr. returned to the San Diego Padres lineup after missing the last two games with an illness and he wasted no time in making an impact. Tatis Jr. approached the plate with the bases loaded in the bottom of the fourth inning. On the ninth pitch of the at-bat he crushed a 3-2 pitch off Arizona Diamondbacks starter Zac Gallen deep into the left field bleachers to give the Padres a 5-2 lead. San Diego added two more runs over the final four innings en route to a 7-4 win at Petco Park, Friday.

HE KNEW. WE ALL KNEW. pic.twitter.com/lxjlomSDCK

— San Diego Padres (@Padres) September 27, 2025

Tatis Jr. was the seventh batter to come to the plate in the bottom of the seventh. The inning opened with a lineout by Jackson Merrill, but then Xander Bogaerts, Gavin Sheets and Ryan O’Hearn recorded consecutive base hits. The single by O’Hearn drove in the first run of the game for the Padres and cut the Diamondbacks lead to 2-1.

Ryan O'Hearn gets the Padres on the board with an RBI single in the bottom of the 4th inning#ForTheFaithful pic.twitter.com/Pt8yLsZDCt

— San Diego Strong (@PadresStrong) September 27, 2025

Jake Cronenworth had an opportunity to tie the game with runners at the corners, but he struck out looking on a pitch up and in. Freddy Fermin worked a two-out walk and set the stage for the blast by Tatis Jr. The grand slam was the fourth of Tatis Jr.’s career and was just the second grand slam allowed by Gallen in his career.

San Diego loaded the bases again in the bottom of the fifth inning. Manny Machado walked to start the inning and Merrill flied out to left field. Bogaerts singled to put two runners on and Sheets reached on what was ruled a fielder’s choice and an error when Arizona shortstop Geraldo Perdomo was unable to secure the throw from second baseman Ketel Marte.

Gallen was taken out of the game and was replaced by reliever Philip Abner. O’Hearn was the first batter to face Abner and he struckout for the second out of the inning. Cronenworth worked a five-pitch walk to force home Machado and put the Padres ahead, 6-2.

Yu Darvish started on the mound for San Diego and completed five innings. He allowed two runs, both on solo home runs, and scattered six hits. Darvish walked two and struckout four in his final regular season start.

Bradgley Rodriquez and Wandy Peralta pitched two scoreless innings. Kyle Hart started on the mound in the bottom of the eighth inning and last 1/3 of an inning after allowing two walks. David Morgan followed him and lasted 1/3 of an inning, allowing three walks, two of which resulted in runs for Arizona to make the score, 6-4. Mason Miller was forced into the game and ended the inning and preserved the lead with a strikeout of Jorge Barrosa.

Mason Miller ends the D-backs rally with 102-MPH HEAT 🔥 pic.twitter.com/QtTpBSMHNB

— MLB (@MLB) September 27, 2025

San Diego tacked on a run in the bottom half of the eight inning. Machado, Luis Arraez and Merrill hit three consecutive singles and Machado scored on the Merrill single to give the Padres a 7-4 lead. Bogaerts followed with a lineout to first base to end the inning.

Miller returned to the mound in the top of the ninth inning and recorded three outs to get the four-out save and seal the win for San Diego. The Padres remain two games behind the Chicago Cubs for the fourth seed in the National League Standings. The Diamondbacks were eliminated from playoff contention with the loss.

The Padres play the Diamondbacks, Saturday at 5:40 p.m.

Source: https://www.gaslampball.com/san-die...asts-grand-slam-padres-eliminate-diamondbacks
 
Padres Reacts Survey Results: Padres come up short in quest for homefield in Wild Card Series

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The San Diego Padres clinched a postseason berth with a walk-off extra-innings win over the Milwaukee Brewers at Petco Park, Monday and the Friar Faithful were left to wait and wonder to see how Padres Manager Mike Shildt would address his lineup for the remainder of the regular season.

San Diego ran out a skeleton crew of a roster for the next game with Manny Machado, Jake Cronenworth, Jackson Merrill and Fernando Tatis Jr. (illness) getting the day off. It appeared the Padres were going to begin resting players to prepare for the postseason. With that being said, San Diego still had homefield advantage to play for and the Padres still had a chance to host the Wild Card Series until the Chicago Cubs clinched homefield with a win over the St. Louis Cardinals, Saturday.

The San Diego lineup resembled more of the lineup the Friar Faithful have become accustomed to in the final game of the series with Milwaukee and the first game of the series against the Arizona Diamondbacks. It seemed Shildt was in agreement with Padres fans that they should continue to play their starters in an effort to improve their seeding. With the Cubs clinching prior to the start of the second game against the Diamondbacks, Shildt was able to take the foot off the proverbial gas and allow Machado to get some extra rest.

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San Diego has two games to play and with nothing to gain, it will be interesting to see how soon the stars get off their feet depending on the game situation. Of course, Shildt still has the chance to reach 90 wins for the season, as has been the case each season he’s managed, if San Diego can sweep Arizona, but I don’t think he will chase wins at the cost of resting for the postseason.

Source: https://www.gaslampball.com/san-die...rt-in-quest-for-homefield-in-wild-card-series
 
Padres power past Diamondbacks with three home runs

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The San Diego Padres saw the Chicago Cubs beat the St. Louis Cardinals and clinch homefield advantage for their upcoming Wild Card Series before they ever took the field against the Arizona Diamondbacks.

If anyone thought that meant the Padres were going to take it easy and cruise into the playoff matchup with the Cubs, they were proven wrong by the time the first three hitters had come to the plate for San Diego. The Padres scored three first inning runs and five runs total over the first two innings, and that was all they would need en route to a 5-1 win at Petco Park, Saturday.

Fernando Tatis Jr. led off the bottom of the first inning with a towering solo home run that landed in the top basket of the Western Metal Supply Company building to give the Padres a 1-0 lead.

Nando getting the game started 🔥 pic.twitter.com/r0TOSqwhbZ

— San Diego Padres (@Padres) September 28, 2025

Luis Arraez followed with a single and Xander Bogaerts showed off his power with a two-run home run that landed in the top basket as well to stake San Diego to a 3-0 lead before the first out was recorded in the inning.

BOGEY GOES BOOM!!! pic.twitter.com/iB97ekaFaM

— San Diego Padres (@Padres) September 28, 2025

That was all the scoring the Padres would need because a combination of Michael King, Yuki Matsui, Adrian Morejon, Mason Miller, Jeremiah Estrada and Robert Suarez combined to allow one run on five hits with four walks and 12 strikeouts through nine innings.

The one run allowed by Padres pitching came off Matsui in the top of the fifth inning, but only after Elias Diaz put San Diego up 5-0 with a two-run homer in the bottom of the second inning.

Díaz sends this one deep 💪 pic.twitter.com/wNqhxLNo70

— San Diego Padres (@Padres) September 28, 2025

That Padres will finish regular season play looking to sweep the Diamondbacks, Sunday at 12:10 p.m.

Source: https://www.gaslampball.com/san-die...-power-past-diamondbacks-with-three-home-runs
 
Padres complete sweep of Diamondbacks, reach 90 wins

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San Diego Padres Manager Mike Shildt has been a staunch defender and supporter of his players. He rarely, if ever, criticizes them publicly and sometimes spars with reporters when their lack of production becomes a topic of discussion in postgame interviews. The Padres rewarded Shildt for his loyalty in the final game of the regular season, completing a three-game sweep of the Arizona Diamondbacks with a 12-4 win, which was the team’s 90th win of the season to keep his string of 90-win seasons as a manager intact.

The #padres finish the regular season with a sweep of the Dbacks.

They go 90-72 surpassing the 90 win mark for only the 5th time in franchise history.

They sold out Petco Park 72 times and are now just 9 wins away from the World Series.

Mission October…let’s ride! pic.twitter.com/B0fDMBsnET

— Allison Edmonds (@aedmondstv) September 28, 2025

Manny Machado and Jackson Merrill were instrumental in San Diego’s success in the final regular season contest. Machado drove in the first run of the game for the Padres with an RBI-single through the middle of the infield that tied the game 1-1 in the bottom of the first inning.

The Friars came out swingin' 😮‍💨 pic.twitter.com/WLwYpL09zA

— San Diego Padres (@Padres) September 28, 2025

Merrill followed Machado in the bottom of the first with an RBI-double to right field that scored Ryan O’Hearn and gave the Padres a 2-1 lead. San Diego would add three more runs in the bottom of the first against Arizona starter Brandon Pfaadt and held a 5-1 lead when the inning ended.

Jackson Merrill lines a double down the right-field line, plating Ryan O'Hearn and making it 2-1 Padres in the bottom of the 1st inning#Game162 pic.twitter.com/TqU5EGATwS

— San Diego Strong (@PadresStrong) September 28, 2025

Machado hit a solo home run to lead off the bottom of the third inning that pushed the Padres’ lead to 6-2 and gave him a final line of 2-for-2 with two runs scored and two RBI.

Was surprised he even started this game tbh pic.twitter.com/xNveFBxBEs

— Talking Friars (@TalkingFriars) September 28, 2025

Merrill added a two-run double to right-center filed in the bottom of the fifth inning that landed on the grass just beyond the reach of Diamondbacks centerfielder Alek Thomas. Bryce Johnson and O’Hearn came in to score to give the Padres an 8-2 lead. San Diego added another run in the frame to put the Padres ahead 9-2 after five innings of play.

Jackson's a whole mood 😂 pic.twitter.com/eDGhm2GDwO

— San Diego Padres (@Padres) September 28, 2025

Merrill finished his day at the plate 2-for-3 with two doubles, two walks, two runs scored and three RBI.

San Diego continued to add to its lead with three more runs in the bottom of the seventh inning. Jake Cronenworth chipped in with an RBI-single and Jose Iglesias added a two-run double to left field that made the score 12-2.

Jose Iglesias lines an RBI double to the left-field wall, bringing in two runs and extending the Padres' lead 12-2 in the bottom of the 7th inning#Game162 pic.twitter.com/GIc0eb2cAA

— San Diego Strong (@PadresStrong) September 28, 2025

JP Sears allowed a solo home run to Ketel Marte in the top of the first inning, but enjoyed pitching with the lead after the bottom of the first. Sears provided the length the Padres needed, completing 5 2/3 innings on 113 pitches. He allowed two runs on seven hits with three walks and four strikeouts.

Bradgley Rodriguez got the final out of the sixth inning and pitched a scoreless seventh inning. David Morgan pitched a scoreless eighth inning and Randy Vasquez came in for the ninth. He allowed two runs on three hits and one strikeout.

San Diego travels to Chicago to play the Cubs at Wrigley Field in the first game of the Wild Card Series, Tuesday at 12:08 p.m.

Source: https://www.gaslampball.com/san-die...-complete-sweep-of-diamondbacks-reach-90-wins
 
Game 161: Arizona Diamondbacks at San Diego Padres

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Arizona Diamondbacks at San Diego Padres, September 27, 2025, 5:40 p.m. PST

Watch: Padres TV

Location: Petco Park, San Diego, CA

Listen: 97.3 The Fan



Please remember our Game Day thread guidelines.

  • Don’t troll in your comments; create conversation rather than destroying it
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GB community, this is your thread for today’s game. Enjoy!

Source: https://www.gaslampball.com/san-die...-161-arizona-diamondbacks-at-san-diego-padres
 
Padres’ Ryan O’Hearn needs to become a Wild Card weapon

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San Diego Padres’ Ryan O’Hearn (Photo by Daniel Bartel/Getty Images)

Well, the dust has settled, and the San Diego Padres will meet the Chicago Cubs in the Wild Card round of the Major League Baseball playoffs. Ideally, the Padres would love to field Ramón Laureano, Jackson Merrill, and Fernando Tatis Jr. in the outfield, but a fractured finger has derailed those plans.

Laureano will miss the entire postseason as his fractured finger will be in a splint for three weeks. His absence will offer Ryan O’Hearn an opportunity to become a Wild Card weapon.

2025 started in Baltimore and ended in San Diego​


O’Hearn started the 2025 campaign with the Baltimore Orioles before their fortunes fell apart. The clock was ticking on him remaining with the organization as he was heading into free agency at season’s end. O’Hearn became a hot commodity at the trade deadline because of his productivity from the left side of the plate. Plus, he has no problem putting on a glove, as O’Hearn is an adequate defender at first or in the outfield.

At the start of his tenure with the Friars, he seemed very tentative at the plate. Instead of sinking further into a prolonged slump, O’Hearn trusted his skillset would get him back on track. He sped up his bat through the zone to get on top of the ball. The adjustment allowed O’Hearn to become a dangerous run-producer that creates lineup mismatches late in close games.

Hard work could pay off in October​


Listening to him in clubhouse interviews, you sense O’Hearn understands what it takes to be a major league baseball player. He has been a welcome addition to the locker room. O’Hearn works hard in pregame drills to be ready to start or come off the bench as a pinch-hitter.

O’Hearn has contributed since he arrived in San Diego. He is batting .276 with four home runs and 20 RBI in 50 games. His production has improved after the departure of Laureano from the lineup. Over the last week, O’Hearn is hitting .476 (10-21) with a home run and five RBI.

View Link

Before the injury, the Friar Faithful questioned how the team would utilize O’Hearn in the postseason. The resurgence of Gavin Sheets at the plate over the last month made choosing a left-handed designated hitter a difficult decision for Padres skipper Mike Shildt. But like most roster issues in professional sports, everything seemed to have worked out.

The loss of Laureano is significant, but the Friars have a deep lineup. Now, Sheets becomes the everyday left-fielder, and O’Hearn moves into the DH position. An opportunity has presented itself, and expectations are high for the Padres to put runs on the board in Chicago this week.

The postseason is here, and the Friars-Cubs matchup should be fun to watch. It is never easy to produce when the stakes are this high. But O’Hearn has a chance to become a hero and help San Diego advance into the next round.

Get your popcorn ready!

Source: https://www.gaslampball.com/san-die...yan-ohearn-needs-to-become-a-wild-card-weapon
 
Lack of offense, back-to-back home runs by Cubs sink Padres

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The San Diego Padres were held hitless by four Chicago Cubs relievers over 4 2/3 innings as the Padres dropped Game 1 of the National League Wild Card Series 3-1 at Wrigley Field, Tuesday.

San Diego scored a run in the top of the second inning off Chicago starter Matthew Boyd, who lasted 4 1/3 innings. The Padres recorded four hits against Boyd, but failed to score any additional runs despite having a runner on third base with less than two outs in the second and fourth innings. The Chicago bullpen took over for Boyd and faced the minimum through the remainder of the contest.

Jackson Merrill led off the top of the second inning with a double and was followed by Xander Bogaerts, who doubled to left-center field to put the Padres ahead 1-0. Bogaerts advanced to third on an error and was stranded there, thanks in part to a good sliding defensive play by Cubs shortstop Dansby Swanson on a ball off the bat of Ryan O’Hearn.

Big time, Bogey! pic.twitter.com/stkDXlrqgm

— San Diego Padres (@Padres) September 30, 2025

Swanson prevented a run again in the top of the fourth inning, and again he took an RBI away from O’Hearn. With one out and runners on the corners, O’Hearn hit a flare just beyond the infield in shallow left-center field and Swanson made an over the shoulder catch for the second out of the inning. Gavin Sheets followed with a flyout and again, San Diego stranded a runner at third base.


Nick Pivetta was dominant through four innings, but ran into trouble in the bottom of the fifth inning. Seiya Suzuki led off the inning with a solo home run to left-center field and Carson Kelly followed with another solo home run to left to give the Cubs a 2-1 lead. Pivetta bounced back and struck out the next three batters to end the inning. He finished the day with five complete innings, allowing two runs on three hits with no walks and nine strikeouts.

Carson Kelly – Chicago Cubs (1)*
pic.twitter.com/w6R6YzT5Cr

— MLB HR Videos (@MLBHRVideos) September 30, 2025

Adrian Morejon took the mound in the bottom of the sixth inning and allowed back-to-back singles. He then induced a groundball to Machado at third base, who threw to Jake Cronenworth at second base and he threw to Luis Arraez at first base to complete the double play. Morejon then got Kyle Tucker to pop out to center field to end the frame.

Mason Miller handled the seventh inning and struck out all three batters he faced. Jeremiah Estrada came on for the eighth inning and allowed a run after a leadoff single to Swanson, a sacrifice bunt by Matt Shaw, an intentional walk to Michael Busch and a wild pitch. Chicago had runners at second and third and Nico Hoerner hit a flyball to center field that was caught by Merrill for the second out of the inning, but allowed Swanson to tag and score to take a 3-1 lead. Estrada was replaced by Wandy Peralta, who got Ian Happ to strikeout with a runner on second to end the inning.

San Diego will try to keep its season alive with a win over Chicago in Game 2 of the Wild Card Series, Wednesday at 12:08 p.m.

Source: https://www.gaslampball.com/san-die...se-back-to-back-home-runs-by-cubs-sink-padres
 
Good Morning San Diego: Padres need to win to extend their season

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https://www.gaslampball.com/san-die...se-back-to-back-home-runs-by-cubs-sink-padres (Matt DeWalt – Gaslamp Ball)

https://www.gaslampball.com/san-diego-padres-news/50512/padres-wild-card-roster (Cheri Bell – Gaslamp Ball)

https://www.gaslampball.com/san-die...sive-success-in-wild-card-series-against-cubs (Matt DeWalt – Gaslamp Ball)

https://www.mlb.com/padres/news/padres-edged-by-cubs-nl-wild-card-series-game-1-2025 (AJ Cassavell – Padres.com)

https://www.mlb.com/padres/news/dansby-swanson-defense-lifts-cubs-nl-wild-card-series-game-1 (Scott Merkin – Padres.com)

https://www.mlb.com/padres/news/padres-2025-nl-wild-card-series-roster (AJ Cassavell – Padres.com)

https://www.sandiegouniontribune.co...again-as-cubs-win-game-1-of-wild-card-series/ (Kevin Acee – U-T)

https://www.sandiegouniontribune.co...turns-on-two-pitches-optimism-for-elias-diaz/ (Jeff Sanders – U-T)

https://www.sandiegouniontribune.co...down-season-past-playoff-stumbles-behind-him/ (Jeff Sanders – U-T)

https://www.sandiegouniontribune.co...wrigley-field-eddie-vedder-shows-true-colors/ (Ryan Finley – U-T)

https://www.sandiegouniontribune.co...me-2-of-padres-wild-card-series-on-wednesday/ (Carlos Rico – U-T)

https://www.sandiegouniontribune.co...gun-padres-now-must-hit-themselves-past-cubs/ (Tom Krasovic – U-T)

https://www.sandiegouniontribune.co...iring-with-nick-pivetta-mason-miller-honored/ (Jeff Sanders – U-T)

https://www.sandiegouniontribune.co...az-left-of-padres-nl-wild-card-series-roster/ (Jeff Sanders – U-T)

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6678171/2025/09/30/cubs-padres-heroics-nl-wild-card/ (Jon Greenberg – The Athletic)

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/66...ardians-score-results-takeaways-mlb-playoffs/ (Dennis Lin, Patrick Mooney and More – The Athletic)

Source: https://www.gaslampball.com/san-die...ego-padres-need-to-win-to-extend-their-season
 
Who pitches in Game 3 for the Padres?

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2025 Wild Card

The San Diego Padres won Game 2 of the Wild Card Series against the Chicago Cubs 3-0 with outstanding performances from the pitching staff used in the game. Starter Dylan Cease pitched 3.2 innings, only allowing three hits and no runs with five strikeouts and one walk. He threw 69 pitches and was lifted with two outs in the fourth for lefty Adrian Morejon.

Cease had been dominant, even striking out the first two hitters of the 4th inning but, with only a 1-0 lead, Padres Manager Mike Shildt took him out in favor of Morejon when Cease allowed a double to Seiya Suzuki and Carson Kelly was intentionally walked.

Morejon then pitched 2.1 innings of no-hit ball followed by Mason Miller throwing 1.2 innings of no-hit ball. Morejon threw 33 pitches in his outing and Miller threw 27 pitches in his appearance. Over the first two games, Morejon threw 42 pitches and Miller threw 40 pitches.

David Morgan, Bradgley Rodriguez, Randy Vasquez and Michael King have not pitched in either of the first two games. One of either Vasquez or King has to be held back for a start on Friday if the Padres advance. Wandy Peralta only pitched 0.1 innings with no hits and a strikeout in Game 1, so he will also be available.

Jeremiah Estrada has had a difficult time the last month of the season. He pitched in 12 games and 11 innings in September with 10 hits and seven runs allowed for a 5.73 ERA. His appearance in Tuesday’s game consisted of 0.2 innings with a hit and a run, with a walk.

Yu Darvish leads the charge

Yu Darvish has only made it through five innings maximum in his last three starts. On Sept. 26, his last start, he went five innings and threw 79 pitches. He allowed six hits and two runs. Darvish has not looked quite right since coming back from his elbow issues that kept him out of the rotation until July. But in his last three starts he has minimized the damage, not allowing more than three runs in his five innings.

Darvish will mostly like be followed by Peralta or Morgan, depending on the circumstances. With Morgan and Rodriguez both being rookies, putting either of them in pressure-packed situations could backfire on the team. If you assume King is held back, Vasquez would likely be the last to be put in due to his inconsistent performances over the season. He is capable of dominance (see seven innings pitched, one hit performance versus Milwaukee on 9/23), but can also miss badly with his pitches. Should the offense put up bigger numbers, he could be seen in a short stint to eat an inning or two.

Morejon and Miller

Shildt, in his postgame remarks on Wednesday, said both Morejon and Miller would be consulted on Thursday regarding their availability. Under normal circumstances, neither would be used for tomorrow’s game. But these aren’t normal circumstances and “All hands on deck” were the words out of Shildt’s mouth when asked about their availability.

Morgan, Rodriguez and Vasquez all pitched on Sunday, the last day of the season. It makes sense they will all be asked to extend their appearances, if they are effective, and Morejon/Miller would only be called on in a close and/or crucial situation.

Robert Suarez is the closer, he continues to have Shildt’s confidence to close games. There is no way to switch roles now, so Suarez will be the guy if a closer is needed tomorrow.

In a perfect world, Darvish is good and the bullpen does what it has done all year. The offense was better in Game 2, they need to really shine in Game 3.

Source: https://www.gaslampball.com/san-die...ry/50574/who-pitches-in-game-3-for-the-padres
 
Padres, Cubs set Yu Darvish vs Jameson Taillon in Wild Card Game 3 thriller

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San Diego Padres SP Yu Darvish (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

Welcome to Elimination Thursday, as Major League Baseball will have three Game 3s in the Wild Card round. The one that is closest to our hearts will be taking place at the friendly confines of Wrigley Field.

The game features the San Diego Padres against the Chicago Cubs in a win-or-go-home contest. Unlike the 1984 “David vs Goliath” matchup, both teams expect to be on a flight to Milwaukee after the ballgame.

Darvish needs another October moment​


The Friars named Yu Darvish as the scheduled starter in Game 3. The 39-year-old needs to produce another October moment, where he quiets the Cubs offense for at least five innings. It is hard to imagine him going any further, as Michael King is ready to take the reins out of the bullpen.

Darvish had an up-and-down regular season since coming off the injured list in early July. He recorded a 5-5 record with a 5.38 ERA, as Darvish went past the fifth inning in only four of his 15 starts. However, the competitive nature associated with the postseason does allow a pitcher’s talent to take over. Darvish is ready to have a memorable postseason start.

Cubs going with Taillon in elimination game​


With the Wild Card Series even at a game apiece, the Cubs will send out Jameson Taillon to end the Padres’ hopes and dreams. It should not come as a surprise because Taillon has been outstanding since returning to the rotation after sustaining a left groin injury in late August.

In four late-season starts, he gave up only four earned runs in 23.1 innings pitched and posted a 1.54 ERA for his efforts. For the Friars’ sake, you hope this is not a sign of things to come for the 33-year-old right-hander.

Once considered a power pitcher, Taillon pitches effectively without reaching peak velocity. His four-seam fastball velocity has declined from 93.2 in April to 92.2 at the end of the regular season. Taillon logged a disappointing 18.9% strikeout rate in 2025.

To get outs, he implements all of his pitches (sweeper, cutter, and curveball) during an appearance. But it remains to be seen if his pitching repertoire translates into postseason success.

Friars cannot let scoring opportunities slip away​


It happened once again in Game 2: the Padres got runners in scoring position, only to strand them in place. Thankfully, Manny Machado broke through with a two-run home run in the fifth inning. The Friar Faithful exhaled as it felt like the Padres had an insurmountable lead, especially with how dominant the bullpen had pitched in the series.

However, in an elimination game, the Friars have to hit better than .166 with runners in scoring position. The offense left 11 runners on base in the first two games of the series. To win Game 3, the lineup must be aggressive early in the count. The hitters should not be overwhelmed with Taillon’s four-seam fastball. If not, the offseason starts early.

Darvish is the right pitcher on the mound in an elimination game. He has postseason experience that will set the tone for the Padres in Game 3.

The drama generated in elimination games makes October the best month of the baseball season. As I mentioned earlier, the Friars are planning to spend the weekend in Milwaukee.

Source: https://www.gaslampball.com/san-die...-jameson-taillon-in-wild-card-game-3-thriller
 
Editorial: The result was disappointing, but at least the Padres had a shot

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There is no game like baseball. The season is long and at times arduous and the postseason is short, but painful. As the saying goes, “There can only be one winner.” Only one team, one fanbase, will be happy at the end of the season and that is true in every sport. For fans of the San Diego Padres, you have to wonder when it will be our turn to be the last team standing.

As I write this, a few hours after seeing the season come to an end for the Padres, there is a mix of emotions. At times I am sad that our team could not figure it out at the plate. Some of the best players in the game, Fernando Tatis Jr., Luis Arraez and Manny Machado, combined to go 0-for-11 in a do-or-die, win-or-go-home decisive Game 3 and disappeared. They disappeared on their teammates, the fans and the City of San Diego.

I am sad that Ramon Laureano, the left field, right-handed, trade deadline acquisition who was supposed to balance out the lineup, fractured his finger and was unavailable in the most important series of the season. I, like many of the Friar Faithful, am left to wonder, “What could have been?” Maybe he balances out the lineup. Maybe his competitive nature refuses to let the team perform at the plate as it did throughout the National League Wild Card Series. Or maybe he continues to struggle and slump as we saw at the end of the regular season. We will never know.

I am sad that Yu Darvish, who turned in a dominant seven-inning performance against the Los Angeles Dodgers in a 2024 elimination game, appeared to be overmatched and ineffective in his appearance, Thursday. One-plus inning of work and two earned runs… that’s not the Yu Darvish any of us expected to see. I did not need a repeat of last year against the Dodgers, I expected a Dylan Cease Game 2-type performance. Three-plus innings, no runs allowed and let the best bullpen in baseball take over.

After the sadness, of course, comes the anger and frustration. How many times did Dansby Swanson steal a hit or in the case of Ryan O’Hearn, an RBI? How can an umpire make that call, you know the one, in the top of the ninth Game 3 setting when it was so clearly a ball. Obviously, the missed call was not the reason the Padres lost the game, but man, it really makes you wonder what could have happened if the pressure was ramped up just a bit more with another runner on base via a free pass? I will admit there is also some frustration with the decision making. San Diego skipper Mike Shildt seemed defiant in constructing his lineup. He rolled out the same one three days in a row. It’s your team, they’re your players, but the phrase, “If it ain’t broke don’t fix it,” usually applies to when things are going well.

I eventually come full-circle and get back to the point where I can appreciate the fact that the Padres made the playoffs. At least we aren’t the New York Mets, spent all that money and missed the tournament. At least we have a team that competes year in and year out and we aren’t the Pittsburgh Pirates or the Colorado Rockies. There were a lot of highs this season, of course there were lows, but I enjoyed seeing a Mason Miller Immaculate Inning, a Tatis Jr. home run robbery, a Machado 2,000th hit, and a playoff appearance, no matter how short.

There is hope for next season. Much of the infield returns, with the exception of first base, and all of the outfield returns. The bullpen will largely remain intact, but starting pitching will need to be addressed. If the Padres can find another Nick Pivetta or two, we could easily be watching San Diego in the postseason next year. What’s done is done, and this season is done. Instead of dwelling on the past and what could have been, I will set my sights on the future, and I will await the return of Padres baseball in 2026.

Source: https://www.gaslampball.com/san-die...appointing-but-at-least-the-padres-had-a-shot
 
Padres eliminated by Cubs

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Freddy Fermin stepped to the plate in the top of the ninth inning with two outs and runners at second and third. Fermin had already recorded two hits in the game, which included a double, and was looking to tie the game with a third hit.

Fermin drove the ball to center field, unfortunately Pete Crow-Armstrong was waiting for it to come down, made the catch and ended the San Diego Padres season as the Chicago Cubs secured a 3-1 win and a 2-1 National League Wild Card Series win.

The Padres led off the top of the ninth inning with a solo home run by Jackson Merrill, which was the first run of the game for San Diego. The homer cut the deficit to 3-1 and was the first sign of life from an anemic offense that did not have a leadoff hitter reach base until the seventh inning.

Jackson Merrill leads off the 9th inning with a homer 👀#Postseason pic.twitter.com/K4dKHcOKoO

— MLB (@MLB) October 2, 2025

Xander Bogaerts followed Merrill and was called out on strikes looking at what appeared to be ball four. Ryan O’Hearn and Bryce Johnson both reached on a hit-by-pitch facing Cubs reliever Brad Keller. He was replaced with one out and two on by Game 2 opener Andrew Kittredge.

BRUTAL strike three call on Xander Bogaerts would've been ball four pic.twitter.com/h7aiAqNleN

— Jomboy Media (@JomboyMedia) October 3, 2025

Jake Cronenworth was the first San Diego batter to face Kittredge and hit a ground ball to third base and nearly beat the throw to first, but was out by less than a step for the second out of the inning. O’Hearn and Johnson advanced one base on the play to set up the at-bat for Fermin.

Padres starter Yu Darvish ran into trouble in the bottom of the second inning after working a scoreless bottom of the first. Darvish allowed a single, double and hit a batter to load the bases for the Cubs. He then allowed a single to Crow-Armstrong, which scored the first run for Chicago and gave the Cubs a 1-0 lead.

Jeremiah Estrada came in to replace Darvish and allowed a walk to Dansby Swanson, which forced a runner home and gave Chicago a 2-0 lead.

A gritty performance by the San Diego bullpen held the score at 2-0 until the bottom of the seventh inning. Michael Busch led off against Robert Suarez with a solo home run to left field that put the Cubs ahead 3-0.

Michael Busch got all of that one 🚀#Postseason pic.twitter.com/EoyHX6AW8v

— MLB (@MLB) October 2, 2025

While the start from Darvish was less than ideal, the top of the lineup failed to produce when San Diego needed it most. Fernando Tatis Jr., Luis Arraez and Manny Machado combined to go 0-for-11 in the game. Tatis Jr. was the worst of the trio and finished with three strikeouts from the leadoff spot.

The loss eliminates the Padres from the postseason and sends them into the offseason with plenty of time to make adjustments to the roster and prepare for 2026.

The Cubs advance to play the Milwaukee Brewers in the National League Division Series.

Source: https://www.gaslampball.com/san-diego-padres-news/50607/padres-eliminated-by-cubs
 
Game 165: San Diego Padres at Chicago Cubs – Wild Card Series Game 3

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San Diego Padres at Chicago Cubs, October 2, 2025, 2:08 p.m. PST

Watch: ESPN

Location: Wrigley Field, Chicago, IL

Listen: 97.3 The Fan, ESPN Radio



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Source: https://www.gaslampball.com/san-die...adres-at-chicago-cubs-wild-card-series-game-3
 
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