Logan Webb Guides Padres - Giants Into Low-Scoring Tuesday
Logan Webb took the ball for the Giants in padres - giants on Tuesday, May 5, as San Francisco and San Diego kept their three-game set moving in a game expected to stay tight. The matchup came in with both lineups searching for consistency, and the Padres carrying just 3.1 runs per game into the night.
Webb Against San Diego
Webb has handled the Padres well, and he entered this start with a win in his last outing against them. That gave San Francisco a clear edge on the mound, especially in a series where run production had been hard to come by.
Walker Buehler was part of the matchup, but the attention stayed on Webb because he was the arm San Francisco chose to open the game. For a Giants team trying to keep pressure off its offense, that choice fit the way this series had been framed.
Padres Offense In A Slump
The Padres had scored four runs in five May games and sat dead last in home runs. They were also averaging 3.1 runs per game, a number that matched the low-scoring expectation attached to this meeting.
That scoring profile left little room for mistakes. When a club is producing that little, every inning starts to feel important, and San Diego had not been stringing together quality at-bats in a way that suggested a quick breakout.
Giants Under Run Trend
San Francisco was in a similar lane from a betting perspective, having gone under in six of its last seven games. That run lined up with the broader read on the series: a pitching-driven game rather than a night built around offense.
Chris Vasile put the prediction plainly: "Giants keep home winning streak going." For readers following the game plan rather than the box score alone, the practical read was simple — Webb on the mound made San Francisco the side with the cleaner path in a contest shaped by limited scoring.