San Diego, CA
Diamondbacks Prevail Over Padres in Electric Atmosphere in San Diego
In a playoff-like atmosphere at Petco Park, the Padres had the tying run on second base with two outs in the 9th. The 2-2 pitch from Paul Sewald to Jake Cronenworth appeared to be off the plate, but home plate umpire Charlie Ramos called it a strike to end the game.
With that the D-backs had pulled off a tense 4-3 victory in the first of four games at Petco Park against the Padres
The bullpen was terrific, throwing 4.2 scoreless innings. Joe Mantiply, Kevin Ginkel, and Ryan Thompson passed the relay baton before ultimately handing it off to Sewald for the 9th inning save.
Ginkel ended up getting the win by recording four outs. His record in relief is now 5-1 and after a rough start to his season he’s lowered his ERA to 3.65. Sewald is now a perfect seven for seven in save chances and has a 0.87 ERA.
Thompson had an adventurous eighth inning, that culminated in a pivotal moment. He gave up a leadoff hit and a two out walk. Torey Lovullo anticipated the injured Manny Machado might pinch hit, and sure enough, he came out of the dugout to face Thompson. The submariner got the third baseman to tap back to the mound to get out of it.
Corbin Carroll had three hits, all of them smoked. He scored the go ahead and winning run in the 7th inning after ripping a double off the foul pole in right. Ketel Marte’s second hit of the night drove him home. Carroll did something tonight he hasn’t been able to do all year, and he was straightforward about it after the game.
“I hit some balls up and in, so that was fun. I’ve been working real hard there… I need to do it a lot more, so lets keep rolling.” With the three hits, Carroll raised his average to .201 and OPS to .575.
The D-backs got out to an early lead in the first. Carroll singled, stole second, and advanced to third on a throwing error by the catcher on the play. Two outs later Christian Walker doubled him home. Eugenio Suarez and Gabriel Moreno hit back to back homers off Padres starter Randy Vasquez in the second to stretch the lead to 3-0
Staked to that lead, Slade Cecconi played with fire through the first four innings. He had two on in the first, a runner on third in the second, a runner on second in the third, and two runners on in the fourth. Each time he wriggled off the hook.
He entered the 5th inning with 72 pitches and as we’ve seen so many times, his early inning 97 MPH fastball became 92-93. He gave up a leadoff homer to Kyle Higashioka on a 92 MPH fastball up and int that the Padres catcher yanked down the line just inside the foul pole.
Singles by Luis Aaraez and Fernando Tatis Jr. followed, and after a sacrifice bunt by Jurickson profar moved them up. D-backs killer Jake Cronenworth stepped up to the plate and Joe Mantiply came on in relief. It was a bloop double that scored two runs and tied the ballgame.
Cecconi’s final line was 4.1 IP, 7 H, 3 ER, 1 BB, 3 K, 1 HR, 1 HBP. He threw 81 pitches, 54 for strikes. He gave up nine baserunners while recording nine outs. Of the 38 swings against him, he had just three WHIFFS. His max velocity was 97 and his minimum was 91.1
The season ERA by inning table for the young right-hander tells most of the story. If the D-backs ever get fully healthy in the rotation Cecconi could easily excel as a dominant short reliever. Whether he will ever be able to maintain his velocity and stuff beyond the third inning is a legitimate thing to question.
After the game Lovullo said of Cecconi’s outing “He was really good early, and then he hits that little stage of the game where it starts to move a little quick for him, in my opinion. We’re trying to help him slow it down… he makes pitches early and needs to be consistent throughout the entire outing.”
With the win, the D-backs improve to 30-33 and are a half game behind the Padres who drop to 32-34 and have now lost five straight games. Game two of the series is Friday night at 6:40 P.M. Brandon Pfaadt will face off against Michael King.
San Diego, CA
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San Diego, CA
Dining Out — series Part 1: A look at the evolution of La Jolla’s restaurant scene
This is the first installment in a series of stories on the history of dining out in La Jolla, how it’s changed and how it continues to evolve.
It’s hard to imagine La Jolla without its restaurants, from the lines stretching down the block at The Taco Stand to the iconic views at George’s at the Cove.
But the way La Jollans eat and where has changed dramatically since the area’s founding in the 1800s.
In this first part of the new month-long series “Dining Out,” the La Jolla Light looks at local restaurants from the 1880s (when La Jolla was first developed and settled) to the early 1920s.
“La Jolla had very few people at that time,” according to local historian Carol Olten. “There weren’t a lot of restaurants, as far as we know.”
Olten said she gets information about La Jolla’s earliest days from the diaries of local pioneer Anson Mills.
“He kept track of where he went and what he did … but he did a lot of home cooking,” she said. “So when they went to a restaurant for dinner, it was a big occasion. It was something people mainly did on holidays or … a social occasion.”
One restaurant Mills would go to — believed to be one of the first in La Jolla — was Montezuma Cottage. Olten said it is believed to have opened in 1895 near the intersection of Prospect and Jenner streets.
Mills described the restaurant as a popular eating and gathering spot for locals and tourists, Olten said. He wrote an entry about a Thanksgiving dinner there with about 60 people.
Montezuma Cottage later became known as the Seaside Inn and Ocean View restaurant. It was torn down in 1931.
Culturally, eating at a restaurant was a more formal occasion at the time, Olten said.
“You didn’t go to a restaurant just to hang out with friends like you would today. It was purposeful then,” she said.
Around 1900, a restaurant known as the White Rabbit opened near the corner of Girard Avenue and Prospect Street. In addition to a rooftop garden, it featured a tea room, joining a national trend.
“Tea rooms went with the suffragette movement because in those days, [women] didn’t have a place to gather without an escort, so tea rooms started opening in hotels and women could go there and sit down and have a social tea or lunch,” Olten said. “La Jolla got in on the tail end of that thanks to [Green Dragon Colony founder] Anna Held and [La Jolla philanthropist] Ellen Browning Scripps.”
One of them, called The Cricket, opened in the early 1900s with white tablecloths. Olten said it was near what it is now Eddie V’s restaurant.
“It was originally part of the Green Dragon Colony … and was sold to a British woman named Daisy Mitchell,” she said. “It stayed a tea room for many years, and she kept a guest book that was decorated with reds and greens and had a medieval theme. So it was very British.”
Joining a trend toward more upscale dining, one of La Jolla’s “most well-established and well-known restaurants” opened in 1912 at 1227 Prospect St. The Brown Bear had “stylish, fashionable service and a menu to please the gods,” Olten said.
A house specialty was Welsh rabbit served in a silver chafing dish. The restaurant was in operation until 1941.
Several restaurants opened around 1915, about the same time as the Panama-California Exposition, a world’s fair-type event held in 1915-16 that brought 3.7 million people to San Diego.
One of La Jolla’s new restaurants, the Spindrift Inn, opened in 1916 and was considered a “last stop” out of town.
“Most restaurants at that time were located in the immediate Village area,” Olten said. “The one that was astray would have been the Spindrift Inn [in La Jolla Shores]. This was in the very early days of automobiles, so not very many people had cars, but those that did would … drive their cars and the last stop before you got out of town was Spindrift Inn.”
The Spindrift Inn later became The Marine Room, which still stands.
Olten said the restaurant was operated by the Hannay family for about 20 years. Their “rambunctious” fox terrier, Jiggs, would roam the dining room.
Another Expo-era restaurant was the Dining Car, which operated in an old trolley car parked near Goldfish Point. Dinner was $2 per person. It burned down on Halloween night in 1923.
Next installment: With new hotels being built in La Jolla in the 1920s came new hotel restaurants. But later, World War II would have an impact on La Jollans and San Diegans in general and on where and how they ate. ♦
San Diego, CA
Stammen ejected for 1st time in career — as manager AND player
Stammen challenged a safe call at second base — one that led to the Washington Nationals tying the game. Fernando Tatis Jr. threw
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