KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Jason Vargas has a new ligament holding together his crucial left elbow.
He’s getting the same spectacular results.
The veteran dazzled for the third straight start, the Royals finally scored off Giants ace Madison Bumgarner and Kansas City beat San Francisco 2-0 on Wednesday night to split their two-game set.
It was the 12th straight start Vargas (3-0) had allowed two runs or fewer, extending his own franchise record for a left-hander. And it’s a streak that began prior to Tommy John surgery that kept him on the sideline until the tail-end of last season, when he returned as if nothing was amiss.
“I think he’s even better now,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “I think his command is better. I think the action is as sharp as can be. I think he’s pitching fantastic.”
Vargas scattered four hits over seven innings with nine strikeouts and no walks before turning it over to Joakim Soria, who pitched a perfect eighth. Kelvin Herrera worked around a leadoff walk in the ninth to earn his third save and wrap up a 5-3 homestand for the Royals.
“It’s definitely nice to see some results for the work that’s been put in,” said Vargas, who is also unbeaten in his last eight home starts. “My command has been really good thus far.”
Bumgarner (0-3) matched Vargas pitch for pitch until the fifth, when Paulo Orlando managed a one-out single. He stole second, took third on a groundout and went home when Mike Moustakas hustled down the line to beat out an infield hit, his first with runners in scoring position this season.
That ended Bumgarner’s streak of 18 scoreless innings against the Royals, dating to the 2014 World Series opener. That run of dominance included a brilliant start later in the Series and five innings of scoreless relief in Game 7, when Bumgarner earned the save that finished the championship.
“I felt like I made pretty good pitches. I just missed here and there,” he said. “I had a lot of traffic I had to work through. It was just one of those days where I had to grind it out.”
Bumgarner allowed one run, seven hits and a walk while striking out four but was done in by another poor night by San Francisco’s offense. The lanky left-hander has only received five total runs of support in his first four starts, including one run or none in three of them.
Salvador Perez added an RBI single in the eighth, the third run surrendered by Giants relievers in the past nine games, and one that gave Herrera some breathing room in the ninth.
“We just couldn’t score a run,” Giants bench coach Ron Wotus said. “We couldn’t get a key hit tonight and they did.”
STATS AND STREAKS
Vargas is 3-0 for the first time since his 2005 rookie season with the Marlins. … Herrera has pitched 19 2/3 scoreless innings in interleague play dating to June 18, 2015. … Human attendance was 24,402 and canine attendance was 382 for “Bark at the Park.” … Eight of the Giants’ 10 losses this season have been by two runs or fewer.
NICE SOUVENIR
Giants DH Buster Posey gave a fan a nice keepsake when he whiffed on a pitch in the seventh and his bat flew from his hands. It wound up finding a hole in the netting behind the plate and struck a fan, and Posey motioned to him to keep it. Posey proceeded to strike out.
GIANTS LOOK AHEAD
Wotus said manager Bruce Bochy is still on track to rejoin the team Friday night in Chicago. Bochy missed the series after a minor heart procedure. Wotus also said Posey would likely return to catching Friday after coming off the concussion list and spending two games as the DH.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Giants OF Mac Williamson (quad) began a rehab assignment at Class A San Jose on Wednesday, while OF/1B Michael Morse (hamstring) was batting cleanup as the DH.
UP NEXT
San Francisco gets a day off Thursday before RHP Johnny Cueto takes the mound to begin a three-game series at Colorado. Cueto has won his first three starts this season.
Kansas City LHP Danny Duffy tries to improve to 3-0 in the opener of a four-game series at Texas on Thursday night. Duffy has 17 strikeouts through 20 innings this season.
Photo credit – Charlie Riedel / Associated Press / Kansas City, MO