MINNEAPOLIS — Chris Paddack wasn’t quite perfect. But he was close enough.
Paddack flirted with a perfect game as the Giants lost to the Minnesota Twins, 3-1, on Friday night at Target Field, outdueling Jordan Hicks by limiting San Francisco’s offense to one run over 7 1/3 innings with six strikeouts.
Hicks worked around seven hits to deliver his first quality start since his season debut on March 31, allowing three earned runs over six innings with six strikeouts to no walks. Hicks’ ERA now sits at 5.82, but his 3.17 FIP (fielding independent pitching) suggests that he’s pitching better than the results indicate.
Matt Chapman accounted for the Giants’ only run against Paddack, lining a solo shot into the left-field bleachers in the seventh inning for his eighth home run of the season.
The Giants didn’t get their first baserunner of the evening until Christian Koss lined a single into right-center field with two outs in the top of the sixth inning. The Friday night crowd at Target Field groaned once Koss’ line drive found grass, then showered Paddack with applause for his efforts. Unfazed by the single, Paddack responded by getting Mike Yastrzemski to fly out and end the sixth inning.
San Francisco nearly broke into the hit — and run — column much earlier.
On Paddack’s eighth pitch of the night, Willy Adames pulled a four-seam fastball down the left-field line. It cleared the wall by plenty of feet, and third base umpire Ramon De Jesus signaled that the ball was fair. Adames began jogging around the bases, but his trot soon slowed into a brisk walk. The call was overturned and Adames stepped back into the box, striking out two pitches later.
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For most of the night, Adames’ loud foul ball was the closest that the Giants got to putting a runner on base.
Paddack made quick work of San Francisco, filling up the strike zone and generating quick outs. He needed five pitches to retire the side in the second inning, and eight pitches to do so in the fifth inning. It should come as no surprise, then, that Paddack needed two pitches or fewer to record nine outs. Only one Giant — LaMonte Wade Jr., appropriately enough — worked a three-ball count against Paddckk.