After a heated series with rival, Padres resets at home against the Royals
June 19, 2025; Los Angeles, California, United States; San Diego Padres bench coach Brian Esposito (82) is retained by referee Ryan Blakney (36) while manager Mike Shildt (8) looks after the broken benches during the eighth round against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium. Compulsory credit: Jayne Kamin-Ocea-Imagn images

The Padres de San Diego jumped on Interstate 5 Thursday evening and headed south to the house, happy to escape Los Angeles with a 5-3 victory against the Dodgers who avoided a scan of the series.

Whether they have their head striker and their right field player in the programming, or their manager in the canoe, Friday evening against the Kansas City on a visit is the assumption of anyone.

Fernando Tatis Jr. left the final of the series against the Dodgers after being drilled in the hand in the ninth round by a quick bullet of 93 MPH of the recruit of Los Angeles Jack Little, the third time that he was affected during the seven teams of the teams in the last 11 days.

It was enough for the manager Mike Shildt, who worked highly on the ground and shouted towards the Dodgers manager, Dave Roberts. The skippers met near the marble, and Roberts seemed to drop Shildt. Players have emptied the canoes and enclosures to defend their managers.

The two were ejected and a suspension is likely for Shildt, in particular after the San Diego lift, Robert Suarez, Shohei Ohtani at the bottom of the ninth. Suarez was expelled because the teams had been warned by the head of the crew Marvin Hudson.

Shildt did not drop his actions afterwards, but said he was tired of dodgers hitting Tatis. It also counts.

“You can say it as you wish, but it has been struck five times [over two seasons] By this group, “said Shildt.” He played a lot of dodgeball. Enough it is enough. “”

The X -rays after the Tatis match were negative, but there will be other tests on Friday. With the central field player Jackson Merrill on the 7 -day brain concussion list until the least on Sunday, the last thing the paadres need is another hole in a range that has trouble producing races.

But they have at least their best starter on the mound Friday evening in Nick Pivetta (7-2, 3.40). He won a victory of 8-2 on Sunday at Arizona, where he only granted two strokes and two points in seven rounds with a walk and nine sticks to the stick. Pivetta is 2-1 with an average deserved race of 5.93 in six career outings against Kansas City.

The Royals will counter with Michael Lorenzen (4-7, 4.91), who launched Saturday evening for the last time, losing 4-0 at home against athletics. Lorenzen authorized four strokes and three points in six rounds with three balls on bullets and four stick withdrawals. It is 1-3 with an MPM of 6.12 in 15 games, three of which start against San Diego.

Kansas City comes out of a three-game scan of the Texas Rangers, ending Thursday with a 4-1 victory that featured the first two circuits of the career of the recruit Jac Caglianone. Before the series, the Royals had dropped six games in a row and eight of the nine.

Caglianone, the choice of the first round of the team in the 2024 MLB draft, looked equal relieved and delighted that his first MLB circuits in what was his 14th career match.

“This is something I tried not to think,” he said, “but as the days continued to climb, I had conscious more and more. I just received a nice little relief there.”

The Royals have the fifth best era of MLB at 3.36 but are less than 0,500 (37-38) because they rank at the end of the races (253) and equally for the end of the circuits (53). They are also in the last five in basic percentage (0.301) and slugging (.371).

– field level media

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