Preview: Rockies (11-10) at Padres (11-12)
Game: 1
Venue: PETCO Park
Date: May 01, 2015 10:10 PM EDT
The only time the San Diego Padres flexed some offensive muscle during a dreadful eight-game stretch was squandered by Ian Kennedy's worst outing in nearly two years.
Looking to redeem himself and put the Padres back on track after a string of poor showings, Kennedy will take the hill Friday against a Colorado Rockies team that pushed San Diego into its losing ways.
The Padres (11-12) have dropped seven of their last eight games, scoring more than four runs only once in that span with an 11-8 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers on Saturday. Kennedy (0-1, 10.80 ERA) allowed eight earned runs over 4 1-3 innings in his least effective start since surrendering 10 runs on June 6, 2013.
Although San Diego followed that defeat with a 3-1 win against the Dodgers, both the team's pitching and hitting have disappeared in the three games since. The Padres scored 3.0 runs per game while allowing 10.0 in a three-game sweep at home against Houston.
Andrew Cashner surrendered only two earned runs through seven innings Wednesday, but San Diego's bullpen fell apart late in a 7-2 loss.
"It's been a tough month," Cashner said. "We've hit when we haven't pitched, we've pitched when we haven't hit. It's a tough first month, but we're one game under .500. Considering the teams I've been on here, it's a positive start.
"This team's better than we've been playing, definitely. You've yet to see us pitch the way we're capable of pitching."
The opponent that sparked San Diego's poor play was Colorado (11-10), which took the last two of a four-game series April 20-23. The Rockies have treaded water since with two wins in five games after being outscored 21-6 in back-to-back losses to Arizona on Tuesday and Wednesday.
"You know, it's the cycles of a season," Rockies manager Walt Weiss told MLB's official website. "We had a period already where we lost five straight. We bounced back from that. It happens to every club. Nobody is exempt from the rough spots of the season."
Troy Tulowitzki continued his solid hitting in spite of the series loss, going 6 for 17 in his last four games with a 1.036 OPS. Charlie Blackmon is 9 for 24 (.375) over his last five. They combined for six hits - four for extra bases - in four games with San Diego but were outshined by Corey Dickerson, who went 4 for 9 with three home runs.
Eddie Butler (2-1, 3.27), who did not pitch in that series, takes the hill for the Rockies to open this three-game set. The 24-year-old tossed six innings and allowed a season-high in hits (nine) and runs (four) on April 24, yet earned the win in a 6-4 victory against San Francisco.
Colorado's bullpen, which worked three scoreless innings in that win, has been shaky in four games since, allowing 10 earned runs in 16 2-3 innings. The absence of closer Adam Ottavino figures into those struggles and he remains on the DL with right triceps inflammation.
San Diego's Wil Myers went 6 for 18 against the Rockies and is 7 for 22 with two home runs and six runs scored in his last five games overall. Justin Upton has only three hits in his last five contests - all home runs.
Game: 1
Venue: PETCO Park
Date: May 01, 2015 10:10 PM EDT
The only time the San Diego Padres flexed some offensive muscle during a dreadful eight-game stretch was squandered by Ian Kennedy's worst outing in nearly two years.
Looking to redeem himself and put the Padres back on track after a string of poor showings, Kennedy will take the hill Friday against a Colorado Rockies team that pushed San Diego into its losing ways.
The Padres (11-12) have dropped seven of their last eight games, scoring more than four runs only once in that span with an 11-8 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers on Saturday. Kennedy (0-1, 10.80 ERA) allowed eight earned runs over 4 1-3 innings in his least effective start since surrendering 10 runs on June 6, 2013.
Although San Diego followed that defeat with a 3-1 win against the Dodgers, both the team's pitching and hitting have disappeared in the three games since. The Padres scored 3.0 runs per game while allowing 10.0 in a three-game sweep at home against Houston.
Andrew Cashner surrendered only two earned runs through seven innings Wednesday, but San Diego's bullpen fell apart late in a 7-2 loss.
"It's been a tough month," Cashner said. "We've hit when we haven't pitched, we've pitched when we haven't hit. It's a tough first month, but we're one game under .500. Considering the teams I've been on here, it's a positive start.
"This team's better than we've been playing, definitely. You've yet to see us pitch the way we're capable of pitching."
The opponent that sparked San Diego's poor play was Colorado (11-10), which took the last two of a four-game series April 20-23. The Rockies have treaded water since with two wins in five games after being outscored 21-6 in back-to-back losses to Arizona on Tuesday and Wednesday.
"You know, it's the cycles of a season," Rockies manager Walt Weiss told MLB's official website. "We had a period already where we lost five straight. We bounced back from that. It happens to every club. Nobody is exempt from the rough spots of the season."
Troy Tulowitzki continued his solid hitting in spite of the series loss, going 6 for 17 in his last four games with a 1.036 OPS. Charlie Blackmon is 9 for 24 (.375) over his last five. They combined for six hits - four for extra bases - in four games with San Diego but were outshined by Corey Dickerson, who went 4 for 9 with three home runs.
Eddie Butler (2-1, 3.27), who did not pitch in that series, takes the hill for the Rockies to open this three-game set. The 24-year-old tossed six innings and allowed a season-high in hits (nine) and runs (four) on April 24, yet earned the win in a 6-4 victory against San Francisco.
Colorado's bullpen, which worked three scoreless innings in that win, has been shaky in four games since, allowing 10 earned runs in 16 2-3 innings. The absence of closer Adam Ottavino figures into those struggles and he remains on the DL with right triceps inflammation.
San Diego's Wil Myers went 6 for 18 against the Rockies and is 7 for 22 with two home runs and six runs scored in his last five games overall. Justin Upton has only three hits in his last five contests - all home runs.
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