Down 8-0, SD reliever's slam sets up walk-off
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SAN DIEGO -- In a matchup of aces Thursday night, Padres rookie reliever Daniel Camarena stole the show.
With one of the most unlikely at-bats you could think of, the 28-year-old left-hander joined the Slam Diego ranks in incredible fashion. His fourth-inning grand slam off of Max Scherzer spurred the Padres to a 9-8 walk-off victory over the Nationals at Petco Park.
The Padres trailed, 8-0, at one point in the fourth inning, and the Nats had a 98% win probability. That number was still at 94% when Camarena stepped to the plate with the Padres down by six runs.
¡°I still don't have a word for it,¡± Camarena said. ¡°I'm still trying to find a word for my debut, and then this took it to a whole other level. In that AB, just trying to put the ball in play in that situation. Especially against Max, that's hard to do. I was just trying with everything that I had just to put a ball in play."
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Camarena came into the game to pitch the top of the fourth inning after Padres ace Yu Darvish gave up a season-high six runs in three innings. After the Padres loaded the bases in the bottom half of the frame, Camarena connected on a 96.5 mph fastball from Scherzer that he sent 416 feet to right field for the two-out grand slam, pulling the Padres within two runs, at 8-6.
A native of the San Diego suburb of Bonita, Calif., Camarena was recalled from Triple-A El Paso earlier Thursday. Like fellow San Diegan and Padres' teammate Joe Musgrove, who threw the Padres first no-hitter in franchise history, Camarena made some history.
Camarena became the second pitcher in Padres history with a grand slam, joining Mike Corkins (Sept. 4, 1970). Camarena is also the first relief pitcher from any team to hit a grand slam since Don Robinson on Sept. 12, 1985, for the Pirates against the Cubs.
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Camarena said having his family in the stands at Petco Park made the moment even more special.
¡°Family is everything to me,¡± he said. ¡°We've been so tight-knit. I mean my older brother, we probably spent more time in the batting cage at home than we did practicing pitching. I still haven't even gotten the chance to see him, so I can't wait to give him a big hug and just share this moment.¡±
Collecting his first hit via a grand slam also made Camarena just the second pitcher to do so. The only other pitcher in National League or American League history to record his first hit via a grand slam was Bill Duggleby who went deep on April 21, 1898 with the Phillies, according to STATS.
It also was the first time Scherzer allowed a home run with a pitcher at the plate, much less a grand slam.
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Camarena¡¯s slam highlighted a comeback win for the Padres, which ended on Trent Grisham¡¯s walk-off single in the ninth that brought home Tommy Pham.
The eight-run comeback tied the biggest comeback win in Padres history. On only two other occasions have the Padres fought back from eight-run deficits -- on June 10, 1974 against the Pirates and May 2, 1970 against the Giants.
¡°You can go all across the lineup card tonight, and everybody got in and is contributing,¡± Padres manager Jayce Tingler said. ¡°¡ We're going to enjoy it, but we quickly got to turn the page.¡±
Fernando Tatis Jr. led off the bottom of the fourth inning with a 433-foot solo home run that led to a seven-run inning and broke the scoreless drought against Scherzer.
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The Padres¡¯ bats followed that up by loading the bases after Manny Machado and Eric Hosmer were hit by pitches and Grisham singled. Wil Myers drew a bases-loaded walk two batters before Camarena cleared the bases.
¡°I know a lot of attention¡¯s going to be made to the grand slam, and rightfully so,¡± Scherzer said. ¡°But for me, the way I process that inning is, I had two strikes on some other batters there. Specifically, I wasn¡¯t able to get Machado out. I wasn¡¯t able to get Hosmer out. I wasn¡¯t able to get Wil Myers out. Those are the at-bats that extend the inning that provide that opportunity.¡±
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