Yadier Molina’s late arrival to spring training left him little time to fine tune his swing. He wasn’t seeing the ball, often going after every pitch. So when Molina homered for his first RBI of the season, things felt right again. The veteran catcher connected on a slider leading off the third inning, Tommy Edman hit a two-run single and another RBI single, and the St. Louis Cardinals beat the stumbling San Francisco Giants 7-1 Thursday night. “Lately, the last week, I feel back to normal,” Molina said. “I started seeing the ball pretty good, I started making better at-bats. That’s what I can do. Hopefully I can keep doing what I’m doing right now, just having great at-bats and the results will come.” Edman singled in the fifth to back right-hander Miles Mikolas (2-1) and again in the Cardinals’ four-run seventh. Tyler O’Neill added a two-run single that inning, and Juan Yepez also singled home a run. San Francisco loaded the bases with two out in the sixth to chase Mikolas, but Andre Pallante relieved and retired Jason Vosler on a groundout. Mikolas allowed one run on seven hits, struck out three and walked three over 5 2/3 innings. The right-hander received run support for the first time in four starts. Zack Littell (0-1) relieved opener Mauricio Llovera and surrendered Molina’s first home run of the year. It was the St. Louis star’s 999th career RBI and snapped a career-long stretch of 15 games to start a season without driving in a run — his previous being 10 games. Molina’s 172nd career home run also tied Hall of Famer Ted Simmons for ninth on the Cardinals’ career list. “The more at-bats he’s getting the more comfortable he’s getting,” manager Oliver Marmol said. The reigning NL West champion, 107-win Giants lost their fourth straight and sixth of seven while opening a seven-game homestand. San Francisco was outscored 12-2 in losing a two-game road series to the rival Dodgers and now 30-8 during the losing streak that started with Sunday’s 11-5 defeat to the Nationals. The Giants went through nine pitchers.
“I love them using that many guys in the first game of a four-game set, no doubt about it,” Marmol said.