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Padres Daily: Manny’s Padre strength; King keeps going strong; Tatis’ running

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Padres Daily: Manny’s Padre strength; King keeps going strong; Tatis’ running


Good morning,

Manny Machado got his dad strength, eventually.

“It took me a little bit,” he said. “I thought it was supposed to be right away. It took me a few months. Guys say it’s instantly, but I guess mine was put on the back burner.”

Well, that did have a lot to do with his working through the effects of offseason elbow surgery before (and for a while after) his son was born in late April.

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Machado is lifting the Padres pretty well now. He has been for some time.

He hit two homers and drove in three of the Padres’ runs in a 5-1 victory over the Giants last night.

The Padres improved to 24-0 this season when he has multiple RBIs.

And here is an update of how they have fared since Machado started hitting like the back of his baseball card says he should:

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The beauty of the Padres this season, as I wrote about earlier this week in a piece (here) that was ostensibly about the culture change within the club, is that they are not just Machado’s team anymore.

The Padres were just 37-40 on June 18, when Machado was batting .245 with a .662 OPS. But in past years (last year), it is a safe bet that record would have been worse with Machado being all but a nonfactor.

To that point, it was Jurickson Profar (47 RBIs, 10 homers, .904 OPS), Jake Cronenworth (46 RBIs, 10 homers, .748 OPS) and Fernando Tatis Jr. (35 RBIs, 13 homers, .806 OPS) carrying the team (with the occasional lift from Jackson Merrill and Donovan Solano and others).

Even then, as frustrated as he was, Machado said he was having fun. He would repeatedly praise the overall play of the team.

“Even when you’re struggling,” he said this past weekend as he pondered this season and what has made it special for him, “everyone is pulling for you and everyone wants you to get out of it.”

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Now, remember, he is (bleeping) Manny Machado. He knew he wouldn’t struggle forever.

He mostly knew.

“I knew it was gonna be there,” he said last Saturday as he sat in the visitors clubhouse at Tropicana Field. “I mean, that confidence is always there. That’s who I am. But we’re human. We go through our slumps and, you know, you’re like, ‘(Expletive)! I’m never gonna get a hit again. Do I suck?’ Like, yeah, it crosses everyone’s mind. If someone didn’t say that, then they might be lying.

“But it’s a long season, so you know where you’re going to be at the end of the year. And I think it makes it easier when your team is winning and you have guys having career years, you have rookies coming up and doing tremendous things. It makes baseball a little bit easier to come to a ballpark every single day. You don’t have to put that extra weight on your shoulders. Because it’s still there no matter what. But it’s just a little bit less pressure you put on yourself to try to come out of it.”

In the above-mentioned story, Machado does acknowledge, “For us to win, I gotta play at my caliber.”

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It’s just what it is. For all those other players have done — and the collective contributions are the real story of this season — the Padres are not in playoff position without Machado.

As Machado goes, so go the Padres. That is something that has been true since his second season here, in  2020, when the talent around him was sufficient enough that his contributions actually mattered.

In the two seasons they have gone to the playoffs, he has finished third (2020) and second (2022) in National League MVP voting.

And, almost unfathomably after the worst first 2½ months of a season in his career, Machado could again finish top five in voting should he continue to produce as he has for nearly half the season.

You can read in my game story (here) about how Machado’s 42nd career multi-homer game — most in MLB since the start of the 2012 season — supported another fine effort by Michael King and lessened the sting of Merrill leaving the game after fouling a ball off his knee.

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Merrill was diagnosed with a left patella bruise and X-rays were negative, meaning there was no bone fracture. It is likely he will miss some time, though how long is something the Padres will likely be better able to assess in the coming days.

Merrill continued his at-bat in the sixth inning and played center field in the seventh before being replaced there in the eighth inning by Tyler Wade.

The Padres could call up an outfielder, which would likely be Brandon Lockridge, who they got from the Yankees in exchange for Enyel De Los Santos at the trade deadline.

The Padres' Jackson Merrill reacts after hitting a foul ball off his knee in the sixth inning of Friday's game against the Giants. (K.C. Alfred / The San Diego Union-Tribune)
The Padres’ Jackson Merrill reacts after hitting a foul ball off his knee in the sixth inning of Friday’s game against the Giants. (K.C. Alfred / The San Diego Union-Tribune)

The King

King passed his career high in innings nine starts ago. His 28 starts this season are more than three times as many as he made last year, when he primarily worked out of the bullpen for the Yankees.

Yet he threw 100 pitches last night for the second start in a row, allowed one run in six innings and has now gone 11 starts without allowing more than three earned runs in a game. His 2.14 ERA (over 63 innings) during that stretch ranks fourth in the major leagues.

King (12-8, 3.10) is tied with Dylan Cease and five others for third in the National League in wins behind Zack Wheeler (14) and Chris Sale (16).

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He did not allow a run last night until Michael Conforto homered on a sinker left a little too high and a little too in the middle of the plate leading off the sixth inning.

After a single by Matt Chapman followed, King got a visit from pitching coach Ruben Niebla.

“Ruben basically said empty the tank when he came out,” King recalled. “And so I think knowing that it was my last inning gave me, like, some extra energy or whatever I could put out there, and I was happy to get through it.”

With his 13th quality start, he reached 156⅔ innings on the season. That is 42 more than last season and just 4⅔ shy of the total he threw between three levels of the minor leagues in 2018.

The Padres and King insist he is going strong, and the results and accompanying metrics back up that contention. His velocity and the spin and movement on his pitches remain at (or better than) season norms.

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The Padres did give King a few extra days between starts this turn through the rotation.

Consistent with his mindset all season, he shrugged at the mention of his reaching the 100-pitch mark in consecutive games for the first time in his career.

“I thought I was more efficient than that,” he said. “… I had eight days off. I felt good.”

Forcing the action

Maybe Machado’s first home run would have scored both runners anyway. Or maybe Giants rookie pitcher Mason Black was a little rattled and didn’t make the same quality and/or type of pitches he otherwise would have. We’ll never know, and it doesn’t matter.

Regardless, what Luis Arraez and Tatis did immediately before Machado’s first-inning homer was the latest example of the Padres forcing action on the bases.

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On Profar’s fly ball to right-center field, Arraez tagged up from second and Tatis did so from first. Tatis briefly slowed about a third of the way to second to see where right fielder Mike Yastrzemski’s throw would go, and he immediately continued when he saw it would bounce wide of second.

Giants shortstop Tyler Fitzgerald judged erroneously that he could get Tatis, so the rookie moved to cut off the throw and fire to second base. His late throw got past second baseman Marco Luciano and rolled into right field and all the way past the foul line as both runners scored easily.

The play gave manager Mike Shildt cause to use one of his favorite expressions.

“It was aggressive with intelligence,” Shildt said. “The combinations — what we’re seeking and we get. I love the aggression. It was just a good baseball play. Luis sees it, takes off. And Tati did a nice job, because that’s a tough one, because you’ve got to read the throw. So he was in a good position to go, read it and then turned it on again to be able to force a play at second. So just another good baseball play.”

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Getting there

The play showed something else as well.

“It is a sign I’m feeling good,” Tatis said with a smile.

Tatis estimated he is at about 95 percent in his return from a stress reaction in his right femur (thigh bone).

Where his not being at full strength/speed manifests most is when he is decelerating, be that in the field or on the bases. It clearly takes him more steps to stop.

“It’s a little bit of discomfort,” he said of the act of slowing down. “But it’s also more like muscle memory. But I feel good. I feel confident. I’m not afraid of running.”

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That is apparent.

Tatis was 2-for-4 last night and has multiple hits in two of the four games since he returned from a 72-day absence.

Stepping up

Adrián Morejón and Jeremiah Estrada were for a night back in roles similar to those they were holding down before the Padres acquired Jason Adam and Tanner Scott at the trade deadline.

Morejón relieved Bryan Hoeing with one out in the eighth inning last night and retired the next two batters, and Estrada worked a 1-2-3 ninth.

The two young relievers (both 25) have been primarily working earlier innings the past five weeks. But they were needed to work late in last night’s game, because closer Robert Suarez was unavailable and Adam and Scott likely reserved only for emergency if the game had gone deep into extra innings due to recent workload.

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“Really good bullpens have guys that bring it home, which we do (and) guys that, when we’re down, can hold it there and not have to use the same guys,” Shildt said. “And then the guys that typically bring it home that can be down, when you get into stretches where you’ve got a lot of close games, and they’re down, you have other guys that … step up and get it done. Sign of a really good team.”

Last night was the fifth consecutive game in which the Padres had a lead of three or fewer runs as late as the eighth inning. Saurez, Scott and Adam had all worked the previous four, which did have an off day in the middle.

Tidbits

  • This is a preposterous disparity that really only a hitter who knows how to work a plate appearence could perpetrate: Profar is batting .167 3-for-18) with a .448 on-base percentage during a six-game on-base streak. He has walked 10 times in that span.
  • Wade played his sixth position for the Padres last night, adding center field to the other two outfield spots plus shortstop, second and third. Said Wade: “I’m an athlete.” While he was standing ready as their emergency catcher, we will probably never get to see Wade there now that Elías Díaz has joined the team as the third catcher.
  • Hoeing, who took over for King at the start of the seventh and got four outs, was pitching for the first time in eight days. Hoeing, who has a 1.04 ERA in 12 games (17⅓ innings) for the Padres, had pitched in seven games (8⅓ innings) from Aug. 18 to 29 and was deemed to need a rest.
  • Xander Bogaerts was 1-for-4 with a double and has an extra-base hit in each of the past two games. He had one extra-base hit in his previous 14 games.
  • As detailed in my game story, Machado’s two home runs last night tied him with Nate Colbert for most in Padres history with 163. You can read a story Jeff Sanders wrote (here) in 2020, in which Colbert talked about the record and who he thought would break it.
  • The Padres’ 60-7 (.895) record when scoring at least five runs is best in the major leagues.
  • The Padres’ three-run first inning was their 89th time scoring at least that many runs in an inning. That is four more times than they did so last season.
  • Early in the season, the Padres were among the league leaders in scoring in the first inning. That ability waned over the summer. But they have scored 13 first-inning runs in the past 11 games. They had scored 13 first-inning runs in the 33 games before that.
  • The Padres announced they will be providing sunscreen and a free bottle of water for all fans for tomorrow’s game. The forecast calls for temperatures in the 90s at game time.
  • Machado revealed last night he has been playing most of the season with a finger injury. He did not specify what the injury is. He did chide me and MLB.com’s A.J. Cassavell for not reporting it while adding, “But I’m not going to tell you about it.” (Let me reiterate here that I enjoy the heck out of covering Machado. He can certainly be salty. But he makes me laugh a lot, and he has made the team I watch every day a lot better and a lot more relevant.)

All right, that’s it for me.

Talk to you tomorrow. Maybe. I have not seen my wife in two weeks, and I believe that after tonight our schedules do not have us both home again for another two weeks. So, yeah, we’ll see. Maybe the next newsletter will be Monday.

Either way, I will cover tonight’s game, and we will have our usual coverage on our Padres page.

P.S. If you are reading this online, please know there is an easier way to get the Padres Daily. And it is free! Sign up here to have it emailed to your inbox the morning after every game. Well, every game except when Mrs. Acee insists I spend time with her.

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Local bestselling author Jim Dutton to speak at DMCC in-person meeting in Del Mar

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Local bestselling author Jim Dutton to speak at DMCC in-person meeting in Del Mar


Jim Dutton, local bestselling author, will discuss his legal thriller Path to Revenge at an in-person meeting at 2 p.m. on Thursday, July 23. hosted by Del Mar Community Connections Page Turners. The meeting will be held at St. Peter’s Parish Hall, 334 14th St. in Del Mar. The discussion occurs in partnership with the Del Mar branch library. Registration is required. DMCC has reserved a limited number of complimentary copies of the novel for 92014 residents who want to get in on the discussion.

Revenge is a dish best served cold, and in this explosive sequel, it’s lethal. Path to Revenge is a gripping psychological legal thriller that dives into government corruption, internal affairs investigations, and grand jury drama. Haunted by his past and driven by a relentless need for justice, Nick Drummond finds himself torn apart by an organized crime vendetta and his actions to bury the truth. If you love unreliable heroes, hard-boiled detectives, and high-stakes litigation, this is your next binge-worthy read, a news release states.

Dutton was a career prosecutor in California. National television shows 48 Hours, Cold Case, and Forensic Files have featured his murder trials. He prosecuted numerous child molestation and rape cases. He was the chief of the California Attorney General’s Money Laundering Program for 20 years and testified before the U.S. Congress several times on that subject. Dutton was the representative for human trafficking for the San Diego-based California Attorney General’s Office and incorporated a human trafficking analysis in his Money Laundering Manual for law enforcement, the news release stated.

Dutton is an avid outdoorsman, photographer, and traveler. He has written numerous travel and legal articles over the years. He lives with his wife, two sons, and their incorrigible, skunk-seeking dog, Wylie Coyote, in Del Mar.

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Del Mar Community Connections (DMCC) is an independent 501c3 nonprofit organization with a mission to support and serve the older adults of Del Mar so that they may age independently at home. DMCC helps seniors live active, vibrant lives by providing transportation, education, and social activities, including cultural discussions like Page Turners. Those interested in attending the discussion will find the registration link at www.dmcc.cc/PageTurnersRegistration, or call the DMCC office at (858) 792-7565 to receive assistance.



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Padres lose lead late, drop below .500 with loss to Dodgers

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Padres lose lead late, drop below .500 with loss to Dodgers


LOS ANGELES — Adrian Morejón made the pitch he was supposed to and got the result he was supposed to.

But that pitch might have begun the Padres’ final minute of relevance in 2026.

Because 58 seconds later, as Teoscar Hernández’s grand slam cleared the wall in left-center field, Dodger Stadium was literally rocking and the Padres were clearly shaken.

“Games like this, games like the last six nights, it’s not great,” second baseman Jake Cronenworth said late Friday night. “We’ve got to somehow turn it around, and me not making that play doesn’t help.”

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He referred to a 4-3 loss to the Dodgers that ran the Padres’ losing streak to seven games, and he referred to his booting a double-play grounder in the seventh inning that immediately preceded Hernández’s homer.

“I lost this game,” Cronenworth said. “Simple as that.”

It was a bitter ending to a night that showed the potential of the Padres’  No.1 starter and their  offense to keep the team contending.

Michael King worked six scoreless innings in the most economical way, and the Padres built a 3-0 lead by scoring in the first, fourth and sixth innings against Shohei Ohtani.

Then King’s command faltered at the start of the seventh inning, and the Padres’ season continued to slip away with it.

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Two innings later, they were officially a sub-.500 team.

The Padres did not reach base against Edgardo Henriquez in the eighth or Tanner Scott in the ninth, meekly finishing off their 26th loss in the 40 games since they beat the Dodgers on May 18 to move into first place in the National League West.

The Padres were 29-18 at that point. They are now 43-44 and sit four games out of the final NL wild-card spot.

Their five losses on this road trip included a 23-3 drubbing Wednesday in Chicago and a 12-7 loss Thursday in a game they led 6-0 after two innings.

“They’re testing how we can handle the failures of the season and if we can come back,” manager Craig Stammen said of the recent results. “And I like the attitude of this team. I think we will come back. Right now, it stinks. It feels very awful. It’s a gut punch, but we’ve got to bounce back tomorrow and play our best game.”

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That was what especially stung Friday. They played well.

King’s outing was the first in seven games by a Padres starting pitcher that lasted longer than 4⅔ innings. It was the first time in 10 games that a Padres starter made it through six innings.

But he began the seventh by walking Mookie Betts and yielding a soft single to Max Muncy.

Morejón was brought in to face Kyle Tucker and got him to hit what seemed to be a double-play grounder directly at Cronenworth, who hurried a bit too much and had the ball come out of his glove as he went to transfer it to his hand.

“Morejón coming into the game, I know a groundball is coming to me,” Cronenworth said. “I was anticipating it the whole time he walking in from the bullpen and I didn’t make the play and lost the game for us.”

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That and the slider Morejón left thigh high and over the middle of the plate.

“Obviously, it’s frustrating,” Morejón said through interpreter Jorge Merlos. “You’re talking about a bullpen that everybody relies on, and unfortunately today it was my day that it hit me. We’re going through a rough spot. And it just feels even more difficult, not just for myself but especially the outing that Michael had out there and the way he was throwing. They call on me for those situations that I’ll be able to get out of it, and unfortunately it didn’t happen tonight.”

The normally loquacious and candid King was in no mood to discuss the outing in depth. For the first time in his three seasons with the Padres, his postgame answers were clipped and terse.

His pitches were doing what he wanted and going where he wanted for six innings, perhaps on par with his best outings of the season.

“Fine,” he said of his outing. “Didn’t win the game.”

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While King frequently is of the opinion he should be left in a game, it seemed readily apparent he did not think he should have been taken out after 75 pitches.

“I wanted the next batter,” he said.

Stammen had other plans. He decided to try to ride Morejón and closer Mason Miller for the fional nine outs.

“Dominated,” Stammen said of King. “Great outing by him. One of his best. He had a tough one the last one, and he bounced back with one of his better ones. He knew we needed it, and he gave it to us. We just weren’t able to finish it off for him.

“It always makes it tougher when you have a lead late in the game and aren’t able to hold it and finish the game. He was very efficient with his pitch count and probably had more in the tank, but at that point we felt really good about going to our bullpen and using one of our best guys to get some of their left-handed hitters.”

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Instead, after Morejón got through the seventh, Bradgley Rodriguez worked the seventh.

Where the Padres’ offense failed at the end, getting runners on first and second with one out in the seventh before making the final eighth outs in succession, it started well against Ohtani, who shut them out over five innings last month and entered the game with a 1.58 ERA.

The Padres scored the first run Ohtani surrendered in the first inning this season when Fernando Tatis Jr. and Cronenworth walked to start the game and Gavin Sheets drove in Tatis with a one-out single.

That hit also got Cronenworth to third, where he was stranded when Ty France and Jackson Merrill struck out.

All three pitches to Merrill were fastballs — the first and last at 100 mph, the middle one at 101.

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Ohtani threw 29 pitches in the first and then retired the next eight batters on 34 pitches before Merrill came up with two outs in the fourth and homered to center field on a 100 mph fastball — on a 2-0 pitch that immediately followed Merrill winning an ABS challenge.

The Padres scored in the sixth on a two-out single by Merrill and Xander Bogaerts’ double.

King got through MLB’s most dangerous lineup in 30 pitches and without anyone reaching base before allowing his first hit — a two-out single by Freddie Freeman — in an eight-pitch fourth inning.

Against the Dodgers five days earlier at Petco Park, King navigated four innings having allowed a run on two hits and thrown strikes on nearly three-quarters of his 61 pitches. Then, in his words, he “fully lost it.”

He retired one of the six batters he faced, walked three, hit one and allowed a single as the Dodgers scored three runs and ran him from the game.

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On Friday, King struck out two and added just 12 pitches in a 1-2-3 fifth inning and was at 68 pitches after stranding runners at first and second in the sixth.

Then came the end, with the Padres’ best starter unable to get an out and one of their best fielders making an error and one of their best relievers making a bad pitch.

“It’s a tough game and good opponent,” Stammen said. “Sometimes, things you think should always happen — it’s a game of failure and bouncing back, and tonight that kind of hurt us there in just that one inning, but we played eight other good innings. … It adds to the frustration of this last week of baseball for us. Those guys are very dependable players.”



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California to institute Bruce Lee Day, a first for a Chinese American in the state’s history

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California to institute Bruce Lee Day, a first for a Chinese American in the state’s history


Martial arts icon Bruce Lee, who was born in San Francisco, will become the first Chinese American in California history with an annual namesake day.

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law Tuesday afternoon officially designating May 17 as Bruce Lee Day, according to the office of state Assemblymember Matt Haney, who represents San Francisco.

An 18-year-old Lee returned to San Francisco on May 17, 1959, after spending his childhood in Hong Kong.

Lee’s daughter, Shannon, who is CEO of the Bruce Lee Foundation, said the honor is a testament to her father’s enduring legacy as a bridge between cultures.

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“From young people who found confidence and possibility in his philosophy, to families who finally saw themselves represented on screen, to athletes who still draw on his teachings of discipline and inner strength, his reach is profound,” Shannon Lee said in a statement.

Haney called Lee the epitome of the best of California.

“At a time when Asian Americans were too often absent from or stereotyped on screen, Bruce Lee helped generations see themselves represented with strength and dignity,” he said in a statement.

The foundation and various Asian American organizations hope Lee will be celebrated every year with voluntary commemorative activities around the state such as cultural exhibits, public events and classroom lessons.

Born in 1940 to Chinese parents who were touring with an opera, Lee was allowed to have birthright citizenship. A few months later, the family returned to Hong Kong where Lee became a child actor and began learning Chinese kung fu. He moved back to the U.S. in 1959 and enrolled in the University of Washington in Seattle two years later. He dropped out and threw himself into practicing and teaching martial arts.

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In the ‘60s, Lee found work in Hollywood, most notably as Kato in the TV series “The Green Hornet,” but studios wanted him to play racist stereotypes and paid him less than his white counterparts.

He pivoted back to Hong Kong and soon became a megastar of martial arts flicks, including “The Big Boss” and “Fist of Fury.” Lee died in 1973 at 32 after an allergic reaction to pain medication.

Lee’s name and likeness remain popular. Fans gather on his birthday. A treatment for a proposed TV action series he wrote inspired the HBO Max show “Warrior.”



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