Giants sweep Rockies with 5-3 win

Ty Blach gave up three runs in six-plus innings and the bullpen held the lead for SF.|

SAN FRANCISCO - Jae-Gyun Hwang stepped out of his comfort zone and into a beer shower.

The native South Korean left behind lucrative contract offers to pursue a lifelong dream of playing baseball in the majors.

Hwang homered in his major league debut, a tiebreaking drive in the sixth inning that led the San Francisco Giants against Colorado 5-3 on Wednesday and extended the Rockies’ losing streak to a season-high eight games.

And then after the game, he got soaked.

A 29-year-old who starred in South Korea, Hwang was brought up from Triple-A Sacramento before the game and inserted into the starting lineup at third base, batting fifth.

He grounded out in the second inning, hit a run-scoring grounder in the fourth that cut Colorado’s lead to 2-1, then broke a 3-3 tie when he homered against Kyle Freeland?(8-6). Hwang was given a standing ovation from fans as he rounded the bases and was then mobbed by teammates.

He took a called third strike in the eighth, completing a 1-for-4 day.

“He plays with a lot of emotion, he’s got a lot of fire in him and that’s what you love about him,” Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. “He’s a clutch hitter; you look at what he’s done as far as his body of work in Korea and he’s been a big RBI guy, so those guys do have a way of stepping up in the moment.”

Ty Blach (5-5) gave up three runs - one earned - seven hits and three walks in 6? innings. George Kontos, Steven Okert and Hunter Stickland combined for one-hit relief. Strickland retired Ian Desmond on a flyout for his first save this season.

San Francisco’s bullpen pitched 13? scoreless innings during the three-game sweep. The Giants entered the series on a five-game skid and with 12 losses in 13 games.

Freeland gave up four runs and seven hits in six innings.

“There are games where you go six innings and give up four runs and you’re credited with the win,” Rockies manager Bud Black said. “We would say that, hey, he pitched well enough to win. This game, he just got out-pitched a little bit by their guy. That was the key.”

Nolan Arenado’s two-run single put Colorado ahead in the first, but San Francisco took a 3-2 lead in the fourth on Hwang’s grounder and Nick Hundley’s two-run homer.

With the bases loaded in the eighth, Brandon Belt hit a one-out, bases-loaded grounder that shortstop Trevor Story stopped with a dive. Story threw to second for a forceout, and second baseman Pat Valaika’s throw sailed over first as Gorkys Hernandez scored.

The Rockies argued that Austin Slater’s slide interfered with Valaika’s throw, but umpires upheld the clean slide after a video review, and Belt went to second on the throwing error.

UPDATED: Please read and follow our commenting policy:
  • This is a family newspaper, please use a kind and respectful tone.
  • No profanity, hate speech or personal attacks. No off-topic remarks.
  • No disinformation about current events.
  • We will remove any comments — or commenters — that do not follow this commenting policy.