Good Morning San Diego: Padres fall short in comeback bid, cannot overcome five-run inning allowed by Matt Waldron

2 min read
Good Morning San Diego: Padres fall short in comeback bid, cannot overcome five-run inning allowed by Matt Waldron

Good Morning San Diego: Padres fall short in comeback bid, cannot overcome five-run inning allowed by Matt Waldron

News to know about your San Diego Padres and MLB for May 13, 2026.

Good Morning San Diego: Padres fall short in comeback bid, cannot overcome five-run inning allowed by Matt Waldron

News to know about your San Diego Padres and MLB for May 13, 2026.

Good morning, Padres fans! It was a tough night in Milwaukee as San Diego's comeback fell just short, dropping the series opener 6-4 at American Family Field. The story of the night? A five-run fourth inning that proved too much to overcome.

Let's talk about the elephant in the room: the Padres' suddenly crowded rotation. With Lucas Giolito expected to join the big-league club by the weekend and Griffin Canning locking down a spot after two solid starts, manager Craig Stammen and GM A.J. Preller have some tough decisions ahead. Michael King and Randy Vasquez are also in the mix, leaving just one open spot for three hungry arms: Walker Buehler, German Marquez, and Matt Waldron.

Buehler looked sharp in his last outing against St. Louis, and Marquez showed flashes before landing on the injured list. Waldron, meanwhile, was electric against the Giants his last time out, tossing five innings of one-run ball with seven strikeouts while working behind opener Bradgley Rodriguez.

The Padres tried the same opener strategy Tuesday night, and Rodriguez delivered a perfect first inning with a strikeout. Waldron took over in the second and kept things clean until a solo homer in the third put Milwaukee up 1-0. San Diego answered back in the top of the fourth when Nick Castellanos ripped a two-run single, giving the Padres a 2-1 lead.

But baseball can be cruel. Waldron's fourth inning unraveled quickly, as the Brewers tagged him for five runs, ballooning his season ERA to 9.28 and putting San Diego in a 6-2 hole. Credit to the Padres for not packing it in—Miguel Andujar launched a solo shot in the sixth, and they added another run in the eighth—but the comeback bid fell two runs short.

It's early, but these rotation battles and late-inning drama are exactly what make this season worth watching. Stick with us for all the Padres action, and don't forget to gear up in your favorite Friars threads for the next one.

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