Padres Host Cubs, try to move to 12-0 at home to start the season

San Diego Padres took steps until the end of last year.
As a 14-3 start to season shows, San Diego did not wait for a long time to go in 2025. On Monday night via Chicago Cubs, 10-4 wins increased the home record to 11-0 and connected the 1998 team to the best start in the history of the club.
Padres will beat Chicago in the middle match of the teams’ three game series. They are shooting for their sixth plain wins and 16th consecutive victory at Petco Park, which dates back to last year.
And last year, it helps to make a sizzling start, which San Diego has received more than 100 games to find his best version.
“We had to start running starting from our manager,” Right -field Fernando Tatis Jr. said. “We do the job on the field.”
Tatis puts his share of work and then some of them. On Monday night, he detonated two Homer and allowed him to connect seven to MLB leadership. He also made a walk to start the seventh and then scored a wild goal to highlight Padres for good.
“A man who can beat you in many different ways,” San Diego manager Mike Shildt said. He said.
Randy Vasquez (1-1, 1.72) took the fourth beginning of the year. On Wednesday, he wins 2-1 in the face of athletics, just one stroke and running in five strokes with three walks and strikes. He lost his right hand to CUBS on April 4, 3-1 and 4 2/3 walked in inning.
In his career against the offspring, Vasquez is two initially with 3.00 ERA 0-1.
Chicago will try to cool San Diego behind the jug that defeated Vasquez 11 days ago. Left-handed Shota Imanaga (2-1, 2.70) worked on Wednesday and was labeled for five strokes for five strokes and a walk in five Inning and received 6-2 defeat to Texas Rangers. Imanga worked in the eighth shot in the victory he won, and four strokes and four strokes for running.
It turned out that Padres could end the impressive home-winning line when the pups got 3-1 advantage on Monday. However, their Bullpen allowed Jameson Taillon’s sixth place after one removal.
An emphasis on Chicago continued to hit hard by midfielder Pete Crow-Armstrong. In Los Angeles Dodgers, he watched three more Homer and a triple Sunday with a victory of 4-2, three more strokes to make the fourth shot with three strokes on Monday night on Monday night.
“To have a game where you are a man who directs the bus in an aggressive way, so to speak, this is a really good thing.” He said. “And great for your trust.”
Published reports say that the team approached the 23-year-old Crow-Armstrong about a long-term contract extension, but the parties agreed to put the discussions on the table until a future date.
-FELD level media