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Giants Find Truly Disgusting Way to Celebrate Blade Tidwell's First MLB Save

Baseball players know how to mark an occasion.
Blade Tidwell added a new accomplishment to his MLB career on Thursday night and paid deeply for it.
Blade Tidwell added a new accomplishment to his MLB career on Thursday night and paid deeply for it. | Robert Edwards-Imagn Images

The Giants have rebounded from their sluggish opening series against the Yankees to win three of their last four games and the vibes are high. Their offense, which has been held to one run or fewer in four of seven contests, is showing signs of breaking out a bit, evidenced by a nine-run outburst on Tuesday. On Thursday San Francisco flexed some extra-base power in a 7-2 victory over the Mets.

Blade Tidwell made his first appearance of the year on the mound and navigated his way to his first MLB save by posting three scoreless innings against his former team. His teammates then discovered a completely reasonable and not-at-all stomach-turning way to fete the accomplishment.

Tidwell went into details with the media after the win.

"Yeah, I almost threw up," he said of the beer shower he received while freshening up postgame. "A lot of condiments."

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Boys will be boys. All the money in the world cannot change the desire to throw a bunch of stuff on a dude when he's in the shower. It's nice to know that some things are universal.

Bidwell also told the media that he didn't even know what he did qualified as a save because he entered with a five-run lead. So it appears even the lowest brow point of entry—a ketchup and mustard attack—can provide an opportunity to learn.

What is a save?

Per MLB:

A save is awarded to the relief pitcher who finishes a game for the winning team, under certain circumstances. A pitcher cannot receive a save and a win in the same game.

A relief pitcher recording a save must preserve his team's lead while doing one of the following:

  • Enter the game with a lead of no more than three runs and pitch at least one inning.
  • Enter the game with the tying run in the on-deck circle, at the plate or on the bases.
  • Pitch at least three innings.

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Kyle Koster
KYLE KOSTER

Kyle Koster is an assistant managing editor at Sports Illustrated covering the intersection of sports and media. He was formerly the editor in chief of The Big Lead, where he worked from 2011 to '24. Koster also did turns at the Chicago Sun-Times, where he created the Sports Pros(e) blog, and at Woven Digital.

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