Robbie Ray initially looks at the veterans to stay unbeaten

San Francisco veterans have every reason for smiling when the left -handed Robi Re does trots on the ground.
Eventually, he has won all seven of Ray this season.
The veterans hopes that the trend continues on Wednesday afternoon when they play a rubber match of their three-market series against hosts Chicago cubs.
Ray (4–0, 3.05 ERA) enters the closing of its team’s series, which is far from its best beginning in the season. He allowed only two hits in a season of seven scorer in San Francisco’s 4–0 win over Colorado Rockies last Friday and hit eight batsmen of high-level high-level batsmen.
“This is something that everyone now knows,” manager Bob Melvin said about the unbeaten line of his pitcher. “We feel good when he takes the mound.”
Ray admitted that he feels good with his role in his team’s success.
“We are playing a good ball,” said Ray. “This happened just like this. I think we are really playing really good baseball. Every time, I am trying to go out of there and put zero and give my team a chance to win and just keep us in the ballgem. It is nice to do so.”
Ray, 33, 2–1, six career against the cub is 2–1 with 2.31 ERA in encounters.
He would certainly not object to his team to be displayed during the 11th innings on Tuesday to aggressive fireworks, as the veterans released Reliever Ryan in a 14–5 victory in the rear field.
Heliat Ramos doubled the RBI in the 11th innings to highlight his four-hit performance.
Jung Hu Lee gave a belt to the two -run homer in the third innings and an RBI single added to the 11th.
Matt Chapman added two runs in the 11th to join Single with a three-in performance.
Late Power Serge sent San Francisco to their fifth win in their last six matches.
As anyone can expect, Cubes Manager Craig Counsel was not interested in piling on Pressley after the competition.
“He could not essentially finish the hitter,” Counsell said about Pressley. “It was that, and it was a little snowball.
“Look, the score it does not look like a good baseball game. It was a good baseball game. 11th was not a good innings for us. We made a good comeback, made some good things, then we had shots to win it.”
Chicago’s right-handed Ben Brown (3-2, 4.88) will be tasked to keep the veterans under investigation on Wednesday.
Brown on Friday scattered four hits in six scorer innings in Romap 10–0 on Milwauki Brucers.
The demonstration came on 26 April on a heels of a devastating attempt against Philadelphia Philis. After that competition, Counsel did not sugar-kotting his comment, told reporters that “we need better, clearly.”
The 25 -year -old Brown has so far faced San Francisco in his young career.
Chicago’s Dansbi Swanson is during the 14-for-30, three homeers, five RBI and 10 runs with 10 runs during the Hitting Streak.
Seya Suzuki hit five at-bats on Tuesday to fall in his last four matches to fall to 1-for-18.
-Bield level media