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SAN DIEGO — After a day off to deal with oblique tightness, Willy Adames was back at shortstop on Wednesday night. The Giants also expect to get Matt Chapman back from the IL this weekend. 

For the most part, this second-half skid has not been about poor health, but they potentially took a big hit in that department in Wednesday’s 8-1 loss to the San Diego Padres. 

Young right-hander Landen Roupp was carted off in the third inning after injuring his left knee while fielding a liner that hit his right leg. The Giants did not have an update during the game, but the injury appeared to be serious.

Roupp has been a huge success story in a season that is short on positives. He has a 3.80 ERA and had established himself as a strong No. 3 starter before elbow discomfort put him on the IL in late July. 

The Giants trailed when Roupp was helped onto a cart and it never got any better. They have scored just two runs in 26 innings since homering three times in the first inning Monday night.

Brutal Break

Ramon Laureano’s liner back to the mound left the bat at 95 mph, but if you’re going to take a comebacker, the back of your leg is just about the best spot. Roupp probably would have been okay if that’s all that happened, but as he tried to get to the ball and make a play, his left knee appeared to give out. He went down awkwardly and a few minutes later was carted off his field.

It was the latest bit of bad luck for a young right-hander who dealt with injuries in the minors but has established himself in the big leagues over the last two seasons. Roupp was throwing better than anyone in the rotation when his elbow started barking last month, but an MRI came back clean. 

The Giants were cautious with the rehab but felt good about Roupp’s health when he returned to the rotation last Friday. They hoped to get his innings count up a bit more and then let up on the gas so he could be ready to take on 33 starts in 2026.

Ugly in General

At the time of the injury, the Giants already trailed 3-0. Gavin Sheets and Manny Machado hit early homers, and once Roupp departed, Sheets hit another bomb to make it a six-run game. Right after Roupp was carted off, there was an error on second baseman Christian Koss and a balk by reliever Joey Lucchesi. 

The most disappointing play, though, might have come in the second inning. After back-to-back two-out singles by Jung Hoo Lee and Koss, lefty JP Sears walked Tyler Fitzgerald. The Padres held a mound meeting and then Patrick Bailey popped up a first-pitch slider, ending the threat. 

Hometown Homer

San Diego native Casey Schmitt finally got the Giants on the board in the fourth with a solo shot to left. Schmitt jumped on an outside fastball from Sears and yanked it into the seats.

The homer was Schmitt’s eighth of the year and gave him 15 RBI since July 4, the second-most on the team to Willy Adames (24). It was his first career homer at Petco Park, which is 20 minutes from his high school and 15 minutes from San Diego State, where he played college ball. 

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