SAN FRANCISCO — This time, there was no late drama. Just a familiar result. For the seventh time in 32 games, the Giants got shut out. This time it was in Florida, with the Tampa Bay Rays winning 3-0 to hand them a fourth straight loss on this road trip.The seven shutouts aren’t just the most in the majors — they put this team in uncomfortable territory. It’s the second-most in franchise history through 32 games to start a season, trailing only the 1976 team that lost 88 games. The seven shutouts for the Giants are their most through 32 games in 50 years. They also failed to draw a walk for the fourth time this season, another area where you have to go back decades to find a comp: https://t.co/LHP7AlSG5K — Alex Pavlovic (@PavlovicNBCS) May 2, 2026 This group is on pace for considerably more losses, and there haven’t been many signs lately that an offensive surge is coming. The Rays got two early solo blasts against Robbie Ray, and on the other side, the Giants continued to make mistakes. A pair of double plays killed early rallies, and another ended when Luis Arraez was thrown out at third while trying to stretch...
What we learned as Giants’ offense shows little life in shutout loss to Rays
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