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Anthony Arroyo
Apr 15, 2026
Updated at Apr 15, 2026, 01:42
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Robbie Ray battled through five innings, but San Francisco Giants’ quiet bats proved costly in a 2-1 loss to the Reds.

For the San Francisco Giants, Robbie Ray took the mound on Tuesday night and delivered a gritty, if imperfect, outing in a narrow 2-1 loss to the Cincinnati Reds. While Ray didn’t have his sharpest command, he still managed to keep the Giants within striking distance.

Across five innings, Ray allowed just two hits — but both left the yard as solo home runs at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati. He finished with two earned runs, four walks, and six strikeouts. Despite limiting hard contact overall, his inability to consistently find the strike zone proved to be the difference in his outing.

Ray threw 94 pitches, with only 52 landing for strikes, and the four walks inflated his pitch count early. That lack of efficiency ultimately prevented him from pitching deeper into the game. While the stat line reflects a competitive start, the command issues tightened his leash and forced an earlier call to the bullpen.

Singer Silences Giants Lineup

Opposing Ray, Brady Singer turned in an effective performance for Cincinnati. Though not overpowering, Singer navigated six innings while allowing six hits and limiting the Giants to just one run.

That lone run came in the fifth inning when Willy Adames launched a leadoff solo home run. Batting atop the order, Adames continued to show signs of heating up after a slow start to the season, finishing 2-for-4 on the night.

Aside from Adames, the Giants struggled to generate consistent offense. Luis Arraez and Jung Hoo Lee found some success at the plate, but scoring opportunities remained scarce against Singer, who effectively worked around traffic and avoided big innings.

Bullpen Keeps Game Within Reach

Following Ray’s departure, the Giants' bullpen did its job to keep the deficit at one. Caleb Kilian delivered a scoreless sixth inning, followed by a clean frame from Keaton Winn in the seventh, where he recorded two strikeouts. Ryan Walker added another scoreless inning in the eighth to give the offense a chance late.

Offensive Inconsistency Continues

Ultimately, the story of the night was the Giants’ continued offensive inconsistency. Despite solid pitching efforts, the lineup failed to capitalize on limited chances, a trend that has surfaced repeatedly early in the season.

At 6-11, the Giants sit near the bottom of the National League overall standings and fifth in the NL West. While flashes of production have emerged, the lack of sustained offense remains a growing concern as the team searches for stability moving forward.

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