San Fran note....

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As Tsuyoshi Shinjo broke his stride and tumbled more than slid into second base in the second inning Thursday afternoon, the mind reeled at the possible outfield combinations the Giants might use to complete the game, an eventual 4-3 loss to the Cardinals.

Would manager Dusty Baker, boasting plenty of experience and already outfitted with a uniform and sweat bands, pick up a glove and head out to his old post in left field?

Would starter Ryan Jensen, who played some outfield while in college at Southern Utah, be shifted from the mound to plug the hole?

Or how about fellow pitcher Livan Hernandez, whom Baker had mentioned a couple of days before as a desperate-measure fill-in?

Sure those options are ridiculous, but no more so than having an entire outfield wiped away in less than a week with the same injury.

The delicious possibility of watching the portly Hernandez running down drives in the gap was just one muscle pull away after Shinjo had to leave the game with a hamstring strain, joining Barry Bonds and Reggie Sanders on the bench.

Alas, the Giants' three remaining outfielders -- well, two and infielder Ramon Martinez pressed into emergency duty -- remained hale and hearty.

So fans had to settle for watching Hernandez pinch-hit in the seventh. Cardinals manager Tony La Russa, fully aware right-handed hitters were clobbering starter Travis Smith to the tune of a .356 average, promptly summoned Mike Timlin from the bullpen. Hernandez bunted, anyway, paving the way for the Giants' third run on Shawon Dunston's RBI single.

But with a lineup that included only two remaining regulars, that wasn't enough. And unless Bonds and Sanders come around quickly, the Giants don't figure to be in much better shape as they open a three-game series tonight against the visiting Dodgers. The teams are tied for second place in the NL West, four games behind Arizona.


"I've never seen anything like this," head trainer Stan Conte said amid a pack of reporters. "I don't ever want to see this again."

Not many would be clamoring to see Martinez in left instead of Bonds, though the Giants' utilityman acquitted himself well, handling all three chances he got in his major-league debut in the outfield.

Martinez frequently joins Shinjo in shagging flies during batting practice, so he wasn't completely lost out there. Still, batting practice doesn't compare with game action in front of a sellout crowd of 41,503. When Baker gave him the nod, Martinez had an immediate course of action in mind:

"Try not to make a fool of myself -- that was my first thought," Martinez said. "But after I caught my first flyball, everything went back to normal."

The same can't be said of the team's hitting attack. The patchwork lineup mustered only two extra-base hits -- Shinjo's double and Damon Minor's solo home run in the fourth -- against a rookie pitcher who was making only his ninth career start and lugged a 9.85 road ERA into the game.

The Giants scratched together single runs in the second, fourth and seventh, and even led 2-1 going into the sixth. That's when J.D. Drew, who had driven in the game's first run with a single, ripped a flat Jensen sinker over the fence in center for a three-run home run.

"Like I always say, that three-run homer, that's the kiss of death," said Baker, praising Jensen's otherwise fine outing. "It can either get you in games or put you out of reach of games."

With so little firepower, games can get out of reach at the snap of a hamstring.
 

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Shinjo was placed on the 15-day disabled list after the game and the Giants recalled outfielder Tony Torcato from Triple-A Fresno. Torcato, 22, was the team's first-round draft pick in 1998 and is expected to make his major league debut Friday when the Giants open a three-game home series against the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Torcato, from nearby Woodland, Calif., was hitting .291 in 102 games this season for Fresno, with 11 home runs and 18 doubles. The left-handed batter is hitting .342 (26-for-76) in July.

"We just don't have enough bodies," San Francisco manager Dusty Baker said. "It makes it tough for us to maneuver and manage. I've never seen this happen in such a short period of time -- the whole outfield going down in one week."


Shinjo's hamstring has bothered him for a week, but he felt he had to play while Barry Bonds and Reggie Sanders were out with hamstring injuries.

"I tried to do the best I could to help the team and not get hurt, but it happened today," Shinjo said. "If everybody were healthy, I could have used the day off, but there really was no choice."

Damon Minor homered for the Giants, who have lost four of six. Shawon Dunston had a run-scoring single among his three hits for San Francisco, which played its sixth straight game without Bonds in the starting lineup.

When Shinjo left the game in the third inning, Tom Goodwin moved over to center field and Ramon Martinez made his first major league appearance in the outfield.

In addition, All-Star catcher Benito Santiago sat out his second straight game with an eye infection.
 
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