Padres Bats Go Cold In 3-1 Loss To Diamondbacks

· Yahoo Sports

The San Diego Padres saw their two-game winning streak come to an end in frustrating fashion on Thursday against the Arizona Diamondbacks. 

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The Padres were shutout, 8-0, in the first game of the series, but San Diego took the next two games, including a 10-4 blowout win on Wednesday night. 

On Thursday, however, the offense was nowhere to be found once again. 

In total, San Diego had three hits: Manny Machado had two, including a solo home run, and Fernando Tatis Jr. had the other. 

The last hit of the game for the Padres was a single by Manny Machado in the fourth inning, and the only other baserunner since that inning was Luis Campusano, who drew a walk. 

The Padres did jump out to a lead in the second inning on Machado's solo home run. 

 

The Diamondbacks tied the game in the fourth as Max Kepler scored on a wild pitch, and Geraldo Perdomo gave them the lead with an RBI single in the fifth. 

Nolan Arenado, the former Colorado Rockies star, hit a solo home run in the sixth to make the score 3-1.

Griffin Canning got the start for the Padres, and he went 4.2 innings, allowing two runs on seven hits with five strikeouts. However, he was the pitcher of record, and he is now 1-7 with a 6.47 ERA in a frustrating season for Canning. 

Yuki Matsui allowed the other run, and Bradgley Rodriguez, Wandy Peralta and Adrian Morejon combined to throw 3.1 innings without allowing a walk or a hit and striking out five batters. 

Still, none of that matters if the offense only records three hits. 

The Padres have won three of the last five games since starting July off with four straight losses. 

However, the Diamondbacks series saw San Diego combine for just one run in the two games that were losses, so the offense continues to be a concern. 

The August 3 trade deadline is approaching, and there are a lot of holes this team has to fill on the roster. 

For now, San Diego will begin a three-game series against the Toronto Blue Jays on Friday before beginning a nine-game roadtrip against the Kansas City Royals, Atlanta Braves and Miami Marlins. 

If the Padres don't string together a series of wins, it figures to be a lost season, and A.J. Preller might have no choice but to trade away some players. 

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