Rockies’ offense a no-show while Padres hit 5 homers en route to 13–2 shellacking

After two innings, the Rock­ies trailed San Diego 5–0. It felt like 50–0.

And while the Padres’ dynam­ic offense con­tin­ued to apply pres­sure, Colorado’s hit­ters bare­ly reg­is­tered a pulse.

The end result was a 13–2 San Diego vic­to­ry Sun­day after­noon at Coors Field that dropped the Rock­ies back to .500, at 17–17. They are 8–10 at home, where they have lost eight of their past 11.

The Padres — who pound­ed out 17 hits, includ­ing five home runs — improved to 21–15 and are firm­ly entrenched in sec­ond place in the Nation­al League West behind the uncatch­able Los Ange­les Dodgers (26–10).

With Monday’s 2 p.m. (MDT) trade dead­line loom­ing, the Rock­ies made a deal Sun­day for right-hand­ed reliev­er Mychal Givens to prop up their increas­ing­ly sus­pect bullpen, but it remains to be seen if they will make a deal for a bat to spark their incon­sis­tent offense.

“It’s tough to say right now,” gen­er­al man­ag­er Jeff Bridich said when asked if the Rock­ies could improve their line­up with a pow­er bat or pos­si­bly with a more impact­ful catch­er. “I think that offen­sive­ly, there are some bet­ter days ahead. We’ve scored a decent amount of runs — if you com­pare us across the league. But I think every­body knows, inter­nal­ly in par­tic­u­lar, that there are, col­lec­tive­ly, bet­ter days ahead, mov­ing for­ward with this group.”

Padres right-han­der Chris Pad­dack entered the game 2–3 with a 5.15 ERA but held the Rock­ies to two runs (none earned) on five hits over six innings while strik­ing out eight.

“Guys real­ize that we’re scuf­fling a lit­tle bit with the bats, and a lot of times play­ers will try to do a lit­tle too much, come out of their approach, and it works against them,” man­ag­er Bud Black said. “I thought Pad­dack today pitched pret­ty well.”

Mean­while, Rock­ies rook­ie right-han­der Ryan Castel­lani, com­ing off the first win of his big-league career, was blis­tered for five runs on six hits over two innings. The most hurt­ful blow was Eric Hosmer’s three-run blast in the first. Hos­mer drove Castellani’s 3–2 slid­er 435 feet to right-center.

“I think the change­up played a big fac­tor that today — it wasn’t great,” said Castel­lani, now 1–2 with a 5.24 ERA. “I didn’t throw too many of them and that’s been a huge pitch for me, in all my starts. I’ve thrown it ear­ly in the count, behind in the count. Not hav­ing that today hurt me and made me a two-pitch pitcher.”

By the end of the hot, breezy day in LoDo, the Padres launched four more home runs against Colorado’s bullpen: a two-run shot by Jake Cro­nen­worth off the strug­gling Jairo Diaz in the sev­enth; solo blasts by Jurick­son Pro­far and Trent Grisham off left-han­der James Pazos in the eighth; and a 444-foot, two-run rock­et by Josh Nay­lor off Phillip Diehl in the ninth.

The Rock­ies had only sev­en hits and their only extra-base hit was a dou­ble by Nolan Are­na­do in the fourth.

Col­orado might have been shut out had it not been for Hosmer’s two-out throw­ing error in the sixth that scored Raimel Tapia and opened the door for Ryan McMahon’s RBI single.

The two teams close out their four-game series Mon­day night at Coors Field.



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