Rain delays, a roaring Yankee Stadium, and two franchises with enough history to make every inning feel heavier than it should in April. When the San Francisco Giants arrived in the Bronx for a three-game set against the New York Yankees (April 11–13, 2025), it didn’t play like a routine interleague stop. It played like a measuring stick.
And then Jung Hoo Lee turned the weekend into his personal headline machine—power, patience, and poise—while the Yankees counterpunched with an 11-hit outburst in Game 2. By Sunday, the series had everything: an early Yankees lead, a Giants comeback, a late homer, and a ninth-inning finish that had the crowd holding its breath.
Below is a complete, stats-first breakdown of the series—match totals, all listed player lines from ESPN box scores, and quick comparison “charts” you can embed in your article.
Series snapshot (April 11–13, 2025)
Final results
- Game 1 (Apr 11): Giants 9, Yankees 1
- Game 2 (Apr 12): Yankees 8, Giants 4
- Game 3 (Apr 13): Giants 5, Yankees 4
Series team totals (by game lines)
| Team | Runs | Hits | Errors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Giants | 9 + 4 + 5 = 18 | 6 + 6 + 4 = 16 | 0 |
| Yankees | 1 + 8 + 4 = 13 | 2 + 11 + 6 = 19 | 2 |
Quick comparison chart (Runs)
- Giants: ██████████████████ 18
- Yankees: █████████████ 13
Quick comparison chart (Hits)
- Giants: ████████████████ 16
- Yankees: ███████████████████ 19
Game 1 — April 11, 2025: Giants 9, Yankees 1 (the ambush)
The first inning landed like a plot twist you didn’t see coming. The Giants didn’t “settle in.” They stormed in—five runs in the 1st—and forced the Yankees into damage control before the seats even warmed.
And the tone-setter was loud: Jung Hoo Lee launched a 3-run HR as part of that first-inning blitz.
Team line
Giants: 9 runs, 6 hits, 0 errors
Yankees: 1 run, 2 hits, 0 errors
Giants hitting (AB-R-H-RBI-HR-BB-K)
From ESPN’s box score table (players listed as shown):
| Player | Line |
|---|---|
| Mike Yastrzemski | 3-2-1-0-0-1-1 |
| Willy Adames | 2-1-0-0-0-2-1 |
| Jung Hoo Lee | 2-2-1-3-1-2-0 |
| Matt Chapman | 1-2-0-0-0-3-1 |
| Heliot Ramos | 3-1-0-0-0-1-2 |
| LaMonte Wade Jr. | 2-1-1-3-0-2-0 |
| Wilmer Flores | 3-0-0-1-0-0-1 |
| Patrick Bailey | 3-0-1-1-0-0-1 |
| Tyler Fitzgerald | 3-0-2-0-0-0-0 |
| Team | 22-9-6-8-1-11-7 |
Extra notes (from the same box score):
- 2B: Yastrzemski, Wade Jr., Bailey
- HR: Lee
- RBI: Wade Jr. (3), Lee (3), Bailey (1), Flores (1)
Yankees hitting (AB-R-H-RBI-HR-BB-K)
| Player | Line |
|---|---|
| Paul Goldschmidt | 3-0-0-0-0-0-2 |
| Ben Rice | 2-0-0-0-0-1-2 |
| Aaron Judge | 1-0-0-0-0-2-0 |
| Cody Bellinger | 3-0-0-0-0-0-2 |
| Anthony Volpe | 1-1-1-0-0-1-0 |
| Jazz Chisholm Jr. | 2-0-0-0-0-0-1 |
| Austin Wells | 2-0-1-1-0-0-0 |
| Oswald Peraza | 1-0-0-0-0-1-1 |
| Trent Grisham | 2-0-0-0-0-0-1 |
| Team | 17-1-2-1-0-5-9 |
Pitching lines
Giants pitching (IP-H-R-ER-BB-K-HR)
| Pitcher | Line |
|---|---|
| Robbie Ray (W) | 4.0-2-1-1-4-7-0 |
| Sean Bivens | 1.0-0-0-0-1-2-0 |
| Team | 5.0-2-1-1-5-9-0 |
Yankees pitching (IP-H-R-ER-BB-K-HR)
| Pitcher | Line |
|---|---|
| Marcus Stroman (L) | 0.2-4-5-5-3-1-1 |
| Ryan Yarbrough | 2.2-1-0-0-1-3-0 |
| Ian Hamilton | 1.0-0-2-2-2-1-0 |
| Tim Hill | 0.2-1-1-1-1-0-0 |
| Yoendrys Gómez | 0.2-0-1-1-4-2-0 |
| Team | 5.2-6-9-9-11-7-1 |
Game 2 — April 12, 2025: Yankees 8, Giants 4 (the counterpunch)
If Game 1 was a Giants statement, Game 2 was the Yankees reminding everyone what happens when their lineup starts stacking base runners. New York piled up 11 hits, and the game swung hard in the middle innings as the Yankees posted 5 runs in the 5th.
Team line
Giants: 4 runs, 6 hits, 0 errors
Yankees: 8 runs, 11 hits, 1 error
Giants hitting (AB-R-H-RBI-HR-BB-K)
| Player | Line |
|---|---|
| Mike Yastrzemski | 3-0-0-0-0-2-3 |
| Willy Adames | 5-1-2-0-0-0-0 |
| Jung Hoo Lee | 4-1-1-0-0-1-1 |
| Matt Chapman | 4-0-0-0-0-1-2 |
| Heliot Ramos | 4-1-1-0-0-0-0 |
| LaMonte Wade Jr. | 4-0-0-0-0-0-2 |
| Wilmer Flores | 4-1-2-4-1-0-0 |
| Sam Huff | 3-0-0-0-0-1-3 |
| Tyler Fitzgerald | 3-0-0-0-0-1-1 |
| Team | 34-4-6-4-1-6-12 |
Yankees hitting (AB-R-H-RBI-HR-BB-K)
| Player | Line |
|---|---|
| Ben Rice | 4-2-2-1-1-1-0 |
| Aaron Judge | 4-2-2-0-0-1-0 |
| Cody Bellinger | 5-2-2-2-0-0-1 |
| Paul Goldschmidt | 3-1-1-2-0-0-0 |
| Jazz Chisholm Jr. | 3-1-0-0-0-1-1 |
| Anthony Volpe | 2-0-0-1-0-1-2 |
| Austin Wells | 4-0-1-0-0-0-1 |
| Jasson Domínguez | 4-0-2-2-0-0-1 |
| Trent Grisham | 0-0-0-0-0-0-0 |
| Oswaldo Cabrera | 4-0-1-0-0-0-2 |
| Team | 33-8-11-8-1-4-8 |
(Note: ESPN lists Grisham with 0 AB in the shown table ordering.)
Pitching lines
Giants pitching (IP-H-R-ER-BB-K-HR)
| Pitcher | Line |
|---|---|
| Jordan Hicks (L) | 4.0-8-7-7-3-3-0 |
| R. Rodríguez | 1.0-1-0-0-0-2-0 |
| Lou Trivino | 2.0-2-1-1-1-3-1 |
| Camilo Doval | 1.0-0-0-0-0-0-0 |
| Team | 8.0-11-8-8-4-8-1 |
Yankees pitching (IP-H-R-ER-BB-K-HR)
| Pitcher | Line |
|---|---|
| Will Warren (W) | 5.0-2-2-2-2-6-1 |
| Fernando Cruz | 0.2-2-2-0-1-1-0 |
| Luke Weaver (H) | 1.1-1-0-0-1-2-0 |
| Mark Leiter Jr. | 1.0-0-0-0-1-1-0 |
| Devin Williams | 1.0-1-0-0-1-2-0 |
| Team | 9.0-6-4-2-6-12-1 |
Game 3 — April 13, 2025: Giants 5, Yankees 4 (the comeback finish)
Sunday was the “headline game,” and the story arc was classic Bronx drama: Yankees jump ahead, Giants hang around, and then one superstar moment flips everything.
Per the recap, the Giants rallied from a 3-run deficit, and Jung Hoo Lee delivered a two-homer game, including a huge blast that put San Francisco in front.
Team line
Giants: 5 runs, 4 hits, 0 errors
Yankees: 4 runs, 6 hits, 1 error
Giants hitting (AB-R-H-RBI-HR-BB-K)
| Player | Line |
|---|---|
| Heliot Ramos | 5-0-0-0-0-0-3 |
| Willy Adames | 3-1-0-0-0-1-2 |
| Jung Hoo Lee | 3-2-2-4-2-1-0 |
| Wilmer Flores | 4-0-0-0-0-0-2 |
| Matt Chapman | 2-0-0-0-0-2-1 |
| Luis Matos | 2-0-0-0-0-0-0 |
| Mike Yastrzemski (PH-RF) | 2-0-0-0-0-0-0 |
| Casey Schmitt | 4-1-1-0-0-0-1 |
| Patrick Bailey | 3-0-0-0-0-1-3 |
| Christian Koss | 4-1-1-0-0-0-2 |
| Team | 32-5-4-4-2-5-14 |
Yankees hitting (AB-R-H-RBI-HR-BB-K)
| Player | Line |
|---|---|
| Ben Rice | 5-0-1-1-0-0-1 |
| Aaron Judge | 3-1-1-0-0-1-1 |
| Cody Bellinger | 4-0-0-0-0-0-1 |
| Paul Goldschmidt | 3-0-1-1-0-1-1 |
| Jazz Chisholm Jr. | 4-1-1-1-1-0-1 |
| Anthony Volpe | 3-0-0-0-0-1-2 |
| Jasson Domínguez | 3-1-1-0-0-1-1 |
| J.C. Escarra | 4-1-1-1-0-0-1 |
| Oswaldo Cabrera | 3-0-0-0-0-0-0 |
| Austin Wells (PH) | 1-0-0-0-0-0-0 |
| Team | 33-4-6-4-1-4-9 |
Pitching lines
Giants pitching (IP-H-R-ER-BB-K-HR)
| Pitcher | Line |
|---|---|
| Logan Webb (W) | 5.0-5-3-3-4-5-0 |
| Hayden Birdsong (H) | 2.0-0-0-0-0-3-0 |
| Tyler Rogers (H) | 1.0-1-1-1-0-0-1 |
| Ryan Walker (S) | 1.0-0-0-0-0-1-0 |
| Team | 9.0-6-4-4-4-9-1 |
Yankees pitching (IP-H-R-ER-BB-K-HR)
| Pitcher | Line |
|---|---|
| Carlos Rodón (L) | 5.2-3-4-4-3-8-2 |
| Mark Leiter Jr. | 0.2-1-1-0-0-1-0 |
| Ian Hamilton | 1.0-0-0-0-2-2-0 |
| Tim Hill | 1.2-0-0-0-0-3-0 |
| Team | 9.0-4-5-4-5-14-2 |
The series story in one stat: Jung Hoo Lee’s Bronx takeover
Even without calculating every advanced split, the blunt box-score truth is enough: Lee repeatedly delivered the biggest swing of the inning—a 3-run HR in Game 1, then he stayed central to the Giants’ Sunday comeback with two homers and 4 RBIs.
And that’s why this matchup felt like it belonged on a prime-time ticker: star impact, momentum flips, and outcomes shaped by one or two pitches that didn’t come back.
Team comparison “charts” you can embed
Game-by-game runs
| Game | Giants | Yankees |
|---|---|---|
| Apr 11 | 9 | 1 |
| Apr 12 | 4 | 8 |
| Apr 13 | 5 | 4 |
Total bases “feel” chart (using hits as a proxy here)
- Apr 11: Giants ██████ (6) vs Yankees ██ (2)
- Apr 12: Giants ██████ (6) vs yankees ███████████ (11)
- Apr 13: Giants ████ (4) vs yankees ██████ (6)
(If you want, I can convert these into cleaner SVG-style bars for your CMS—still text-only, but more “Sky Sports” looking.)
Closing: what this matchup proved (and why fans won’t forget it)
The Yankees won the punch-you-back game (Game 2). But the Giants won the weekend’s biggest moments—jumping early on Friday, then showing the kind of late resilience on Sunday that usually takes months to build. The 2–1 series win in New York didn’t just pad standings; it gave the Giants a narrative they could carry.
And if your article is built around “san francisco giants vs new york yankees match player stats”, this series is the perfect template: three distinct games, three different “shapes” of baseball, and one player (Lee) who made the numbers feel cinematic.
Thanks for reading on Infoaxis—where we break down the biggest matchups with the stats that actually tell the story.
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