San Francisco, CA
Minnesota Twins top San Francisco Giants 4-2 as Carlos Santana delivers tiebreaking homer
SAN FRANCISCO — Maybe there’s something about the sea air in the bayside sky, or the light reflecting off the water. Whatever the reason, umpires needed video replay three times Saturday to determine whether fly balls passed the Oracle Park foul poles on the fair side or foul.
The result: Matt Chapman’s blast off Simeon Woods Richardson was foul. So was Max Kepler’s, off former teammate Taylor Rogers.
But much to the irritation of the San Francisco Giants fans in the announced crowd of 32,582, Carlos Santana’s sixth-inning, third-deck-high fly ball came down, umpires eventually ruled, just inside the pole — the tiebreaking blow in the Twins’ 4-2 victory.
“So I said to Jayce [Tingler, his bench coach], because I’m an optimistic person, especially when we need to score some runs, I said, ‘He did it! He did it!” Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said. “Pretty amazing to keep that ball fair with a swing like that.”
The home run was significant for a couple of baseball-trivia reasons, too. It completed the veteran slugger’s collection of at least one home run in all 30 major league parks, though the fan who caught it wanted Giants season tickets in trade, which the Twins declined. And it was his second against Rogers, matching the 10th-inning grand slam Santana hit in Target Field that drew Cleveland into an AL Central tie in August 2019.
“I’m excited. I was trying to [hit] a home run in all the ballparks,” Santana said. “Great game for me and my teammates. Big win.”
It was especially big considering the injury-riddled state their roster is in as the first half concludes. Carlos Correa sat out because of a bruised right heel and Byron Buxton because of elbow soreness from his collision with the center-field wall Friday; Royce Lewis is on the injured list; and the stretched-thin Twins were forced to give catcher Christian Vázquez his first career start at third base.
But pitchers carried the Twins to victory anyway. Woods Richardson, for instance, battled through some long at-bats and gave up seven hits over 4⅔ innings, but the Giants scored only twice, on a two-out single by Mike Yastrzemski in the fourth inning, and a tying RBI single by Heliot Ramos in the fifth.
“They’re a good bat-to-ball team. They drag out [at-bats], spoiling pitches, making contact,” Woods Richardson said. “I just tried to manage that while giving my team the best chance to win.”
He did, and the Twins bullpen was nearly spotless behind him. Cole Sands faced four batters and recorded five outs. Jorge Alcala got three quick outs in the seventh, and despite giving up a two-out triple to Patrick Bailey that would have been a tying home run in any other major league park, Griffin Jax preserved the lead in the eighth.
An error by Yastrzemski on Matt Wallner’s RBI double and a passed ball by Bailey enabled the Twins to score twice in the fourth inning. San Francisco tied it up, setting up Santana’s big blast.
BOXSCORE: Twins 4, San Francisco 2
Sign up for our Twins Update newsletter
The Twins managed to add an insurance run in the ninth, at the expense of Mahtomedi native Sean Hjelle, a Giants righthander. Hjelle, making his first career appearance against his home state’s team, opened the inning with three straight singles, loading the bases. With the infield pulled in, Jeffers hit a ground ball toward second baseman Thairo Estrada, who chose not to throw to the plate to prevent a run from scoring, but to turn a double play by throwing to second instead.
San Francisco was successful, but Vázquez scored to widen the lead to two, which Jhoan Duran protected with a 1-2-3 ninth, notching his 15th save in 16 chances while also hitting a season-best 103.9 mph with his fastball.
“It’s the Alcatraz effect,” Baldelli said. “We had a group go to Alcatraz [on the off day Thursday]. He came back throwing 103.9, that’s normal stuff. You go to Alcatraz, you come back throwing heat.”
San Francisco, CA
Where to watch Athletics vs San Francisco Giants: TV channel, start time, streaming for June 23
What to know about MLB’s ABS robot umpire strike zone system
MLB launches ABS challenge system as players test robot umpire calls in a groundbreaking season.
The 2026 MLB season has surpassed the quarter mark, and after each team’s first 40 games, there’s plenty of reasons to tune in all summer long.
Chicago White Sox slugger Munetaka Murakami has already proven doubters wrong by launching 17 home runs, Pittsburgh’s Paul Skenes consistently looks like the best version of himself on the mound and Milwaukee ace Jacob Misiorowski is throwing harder than any starter in the majors.
The MLB action continues on Tuesday as the Athletics visit the San Francisco Giants.
Here’s everything you need to know to tune in for the first pitch.
See USA TODAY’s sortable MLB schedule to filter by team or division.
What time is Athletics vs San Francisco Giants?
First pitch between the San Francisco Giants and Athletics is scheduled for 9:45 p.m. (ET) on Tuesday, June 23.
How to watch Athletics vs San Francisco Giants on Tuesday
All times Eastern and accurate as of Tuesday, June 23, 2026, at 6:33 a.m.
Watch MLB all season long with Fubo
MLB regional blackout restrictions apply
MLB scores, results
MLB scores for June 23 games are available on usatoday.com . Here’s how to access today’s results:
See scores, results for all of today’s games.
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco home with a history of squatters hits the market for $1.3 million
An abandoned house near San Francisco’s Castro neighborhood that has been popular with squatters for years is now for sale.
On Yukon Street at the edge of Kite Hill in the Eureka Valley neighborhood, the house with arched windows over the garage, including one that’s broken, is listed for $1.3 million.
Listing agent Zara Rowbotham and her brother, James, put together a promotional video highlighting the home’s fixer-upper potential.
There is no running water or power at the house. Neighbors have reported to the city that squatters relieve themselves at the top floor atrium.
“They needed a place to do it, so they had the nice manners to do it in one basket,” Rowbotham said. “Unfortunately it was an outside basket right in front of one of the neighbors’ houses.”
With the nature of San Francisco’s red-hot housing market, Rowbothom said they already have a potential buyer.
Rowbothom added the city is swirling with money right now and there are few places to buy, so properties like the one on Yukon Street – even with a history of squatters – are being snapped up quickly. Rowbothom said they’re going for millions of dollars, with people paying cash a lot of the time.
San Francisco, CA
The U.S. Government Secretly Tested Biological Weapons. The Citizens of San Francisco Paid the Price.
Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story:
- During the early decades of the Cold War, the U.S. government conducted 239 open-air germ warfare tests around the country to assess to dangers of a possible chemical attack on civilian populations.
- One of the most infamous, known as Operation Sea-Spray, purposefully pumped aerosols of the bacteria Serratia marcescens and Bacillus globigii—both believed to be harmless to humans—over the San Francisco Bay Area.
- While the operation itself was a success, it’s likely that the test resulted in the death of one man and the sickening of at least 10 others.
San Francisco is known for its fog. Sitting at the intersection of warm air flowing from California’s interior and cool air moving in from the Pacific, low-lying fog and clouds are a common sight. But in 1950, from September 20 until September 27, a different kind of cloud descended on the city of some 800,000 people—a cloud that had been purposefully released by the U.S. government as a secret bioweapons test.
No, this wasn’t some dastardly plan by the government to conduct a macabre experiment on its own citizens. Rather, it was a measure intended to safeguard against other rival nations trying to poison an American city. The government selected San Francisco for its ideal dispersal conditions, tall buildings, and large population, and to pull this off safely, the government relied on the bacteria Serratia marcescens and Bacillus globigii—both believed to be harmless to humans.
“They needed something that was, first of all, thought to be harmless,” Matthew Meselson, a molecular biologist from Harvard, told KQED last year, “because they certainly didn’t want to kill everybody in San Francisco or Oakland. And [they also needed something] that could easily be detected by simple methods.”
Since the Second Battle of Ypres during World War I, when the German army killed thousands of French Algerian colonial troops by unleashing chlorine gas on April 22, 1915, followed by a second gas attack on Canadian troops two days later, nations had been grappling with the threat of unconventional weapons. With its illusion of geographic imperviousness shattered by the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, the United States moved to address its own vulnerabilities. In 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt authorized the creation of the first U.S. biological weapons program. Part of the mission of this program was to determine just how vulnerable U.S. cities could be to a biological attack.
In 1948, the Committee on Biological Warfare—led by University of Wisconsin bacteriologist Ida Balwin—suggested simulating chemical attacks through air, water, and infrastructure (such as subway systems) with non-harmful organisms to understand the threat under real environmental conditions. So, two years later, the stage was set for Operation Sea-Spray, and the entire operation almost went without a hitch. Almost.
Serratia marcescens is found naturally in water and soils, and it’s known to be harmless to humans. But it isn’t typically sprayed in the air in large quantities, and unfortunately, one of those bacteria-filled clouds descended on Stanford University Hospital on Clay Street in San Francisco. There, eleven patients developed inexplicable Serratia marcescens infections. In the case of a 75-year-old Irish American named Edward Nevin, who was recovering from prostate surgery, the bacteria found its way to his heart, killing him. Doctors at the hospital were so puzzled that they even published a scientific paper regarding the infections in October of the following year.
President Richard Nixon ended U.S. research into bioweapons in 1969, and a treasure trove of information about that research was declassified in the 1970s. It revealed that the U.S. had performed 239 open-air germ warfare tests around the country, including in the subway in New York City, on the Pennsylvania turnpike, and in the national airport in Washington D.C. According to KQED, Edward Nevin III—the grandson of the man who died during the faux attack—read these reports and decided to sue the U.S. government, even though he accurately foresaw that he’d eventually lose.
“But we still had to tell the story,” he told KQED. “To have a citizen submitted to that kind of risk is awful.”
Darren lives in Portland, has a cat, and writes/edits about sci-fi and how our world works. You can find his previous stuff at Gizmodo and Paste if you look hard enough.
-
Lifestyle35 minutes agoNPR staffers share their favorite fiction reads of 2026 so far
-
Education43 minutes agoThe Itinerant Preacher Who Helped Secure the Separation of Church and State
-
Technology50 minutes agoHoto’s 25-bit electric screwdriver is 40 percent off during Prime Day
-
World53 minutes agoTrump gets major win against China in African rare earth minerals race
-
Politics58 minutes agoSocial media erupts over Mamdani’s silence after Brooklyn coffee shop bans Jewish congressman
-
Health1 hour agoWant to age better? Researchers say 4-minute routine may help prevent dangerous falls
-
Sports1 hour agoWyndham Clark pens emotional message after winning second US Open in hostile territory
-
Business1 hour ago
The other anti-data center movement: California’s sky-high electricity prices