New Jersey Newspapers - June 22, 1980
Camden Courier-Post
Giants bomb Phils
By Hal Bodley, Gannett News Service
SAN FRANCISCO – The Randy Lerch melodrama lingers on – just when the Phillies were encouraged that Lerch had found himself, the dark side of his pitching personality came forward again. And it is that side of the lefthander which is driving Manager Dallas Green batty.
Lerch, after a superb 10-inning, no-decision performance in Dodger Stadium on Monday night, reverted to his 1980 form in windy Candlestick Park yesterday and was the loser as the Phillies got bombed by SanFransisco,9-3.
Lerch, after getting two quick outs in a 2-2 struggle in the bottom of the fifth, gave up four consecutive hits and the Giants stalked off the field with a 5-2 lead for Ed Whitson that was never to be threatened.
Jim Wohlford's single to right scored the torrid-hitting Jack Clark from third to snap the tie, then Joe Strain ripped a double to right that brought home two more runs.
The Giants, who have won four straight and four of five from the Phillies, added four more runs in the eighth off over-worked reliever Ron Reed – again with two out.
The setback was the third in a row for the Phillies, who send 12-game winner Steve Carlton against Vida Blue (9-3) today in the wrapup of this seven-game trek through California.
Whitson, who has won three games in a row including two from the Phils, went the distance, improving his record to 5-7 with a seven-hitter.
Green sat in the visiting manager's office in the catacombs of Candlestick Park for a good five minutes before speaking. And before he uttered his first word to reporters, he shook his head several times.
"When there's two men out and a club scores three runs against you, you're not thinking about pitching," said Green. "I sure would like Randy to get straightened out, to get it going. We really need help in that area (pitching)."
Lerch has a 2-9 record with a 4.81 ERA.
Green has been openly critical of Lerch's pitching, or better yet his approach to each game. Against the Dodgers, the manager said he thought Randy was more aggressive, that he challenged the batters better than he has all season.
Yesterday, the first two runs were put on base via walks and then in the fifth, Lerch appeared to lose concentration.
The last time when he got in a jam it looked like he had more umph and enthusiasm to go after hitters. That's the thing that good pitchers are able to maintain. You don't just do it once because in this game you are going to be in a lot of jams and you better be able to pitch out of some of them. It has to happen between the white lines."
Lerch, although he admitted he was unhappy with his performance, claimed that not that many balls were hit hard off him.
"Even Strain's double was not that hard of a hit," said Lerch. "It got up in the wind and took off. But when you walk or give up hits to the seventh-, eighth-, and ninth-place batters, you should expect to get in trouble."
Green benched Garry Maddox and Greg Luzinski in favor Of Del Unser and Greg Gross and in the early innings it looked like a smart move.
Unser and Gross both singled in the second, with Manny Trillo giving the Phils a 1-0 lead with a single to left with two down.
The Giants, who have a 19-10 record at Candlestick, retaliated in the third. Lerch walked Mike Sadek and the catcher went to second on Whitson's sacrifice. After Bill North grounded out, Sadek raced to third on a Bob Boone passed ball and scored on Darrell Evans' suicide squeeze that caught the Phils napping.
Strain who had two doubles and a single walked with one out in the fourth and raced to third on John LeMaster's single. Sadek's sacrifice fly gave the Giants a 2-1 edge.
A walk to Trillo, an infield out, and a wild pitch that bounced all the way to the left of the dugout gave the Phils their second run.
But Lerch buried his teammates in the fifth. He got two quick outs, but Clark's second double of the day, Rich Murray's high chopper and Wohlford's single out of the reach of Pete Rose made it 3-2. Strain then blasted a double to left and the Giants were ahead to stay.
"We've tried everything we know to wake Randy up," Green said. "Sometimes I think he goes out there and tries to be too cool."
The Press of Atlantic City
Giants, Clark And McCovey Ready for Carlton
San Fran. 9, Philadelphia 2
SAN RANCISCO (AP) — The San Francisco Giants, especially the hot-hitting Jack Clark, are probably as ready for Steve Carlton as they’ll ever be.
“We know ahead of time he’ll be tough but we’ve faced him once this year and I think maybe we’ve zeroed in on how he’s pitching,” said Clark after the Giants 9-3 victory Saturday over the Philadelphia Phillies.
The Giants are on a winning streak and Clark is one of the hottest hitters in baseball. Today they run into Carlton, the left-hander with a 12-2 record and 1.74 earned-run average.
It will be a big day at Candlestick Park, with Carlton facing Vida Blue, 9-3.
And it may be a historic day, too There has been speculation that Willie McCovey, the Giants’ 42-year-old first baseman, will retire, ending a career which included 521 home runs but only one this season.
“I’m not going to comment,” said Manager Dave Bristol, and no comment was the rule all around.
Clark said, “Against Carlton, if you get him on the ropes, you’ve got to score when you have the chance. That’s what we’ve been doing lately. We’re not leaving many runners on base.”
Sizing up the Carlton-Blue matchup Clark said, “It should be an exciting game, probably a short one, too.
Clark doubled Saturday to trigger a three-run rally in the fifth inning ana Darrell Evans drove in three runs in the victory.
The Giants stroked four consecutive hits off Randy Lerch, 2-9, as they broke a 2-2 tie in the fifth. Clark's hit was his second double of the game and his 11th hit in four games.
Ed Whitson, 5-7, who had an RBI single in San Francisco's four-run eighth inning, allowed seven hits, three by Greg Gross, as the Giants won their fourth straight game and their ninth in the last 12. Evans doubled for two runs in the eighth
In the fifth inning, Clark moved to third on Rich Murray's infield single and scored on Jim Wohlford’s single to right. Joe Strain then doubled to left, scoring two runs. Strain was 3-for-3 with a pair of doubles in the game.
The Phillies scored a run in the second on singles by Del Unser, Gross and Manny Trillo, and scored again in the fifth when Trillo came home from second on a wild pitch that bounded 50 feet away from home plate.
Evans drove in the Giants’ first run with a bunt single in the third and Mike Sadek gave San Francisco a 2-1 lead in fourth with a sacrifice-fly. Pete Rose had an RBI double for the Phils in the ninth.