Korach pleased with fans’ response to ‘labor of love’

By DANIEL DULLUM
Sports Radio Service
Saturday, March 22, 2014

PHOENIX, Ariz. – After many years of describing Oakland Athletics baseball on radio, Ken Korach will tell you “spring training means nothing.” At least as far as exhibition game results apply to the bigger picture.

“It doesn’t mean a thing a week from Monday,” Korach explained. “The big thing is health with the injuries to Jarrod Parker and A.J. Griffin, so you do get concerned with those issues. The A’s feel they have the depth to withstand those kinds of things. But I learned a long time ago that you can’t make much out of what happens in spring training.”

The veteran A’s play-by-play man didn’t say if that was one of the lessons he learned from his old broadcast partner, the late Bill King, but the book he penned about King has resonated in a positive way with everyone who has read “Holy Toledo – Lessons from Bill King: Renaissance Man of the Mic” (Wellstone, 2013).

“It’s been a labor of love and the response has been great,” Korach said

King, who excelled in play-by-play for the Athletics, Raiders and Warriors, died in 2005. Korach, who grew up in Los Angeles listening to King, had the idea of writing the book for a while, but didn’t start in earnest until October 2012.

“Then, it was sitting down with the publisher, then it was about a 10-month process before it was published last September,” Korach said. “I knew it would be a lot of work. The reason I hadn’t written a book before that was 1) I didn’t really have a subject to write about, and 2) I never thought I could do it.

“I never thought I’d have the discipline to sit down and write a book because it’s a daily thing. You have to have a stick-to-itness so I knew what was ahead when I started the project,” he continued. “There was no actual deadline, but we thought it would be nice to get it out before the end of the (2013) season.

I think it really worked out well to do that, with the A’s in the pennant race and going to the postseason. With the book being published on the 6th of September, I think that was good timing.”

From a national standpoint, few heard King’s unique and enthusiastic, yet scholarly, way to describe a ballgame, a factor that has prevented posthumous recognition from the baseball, football and basketball halls of fame. Thus, as Korach points out, King may have been underrated on a national level, but never in the Bay Area.

“On a national level, Bill just wasn’t that well known, but that was his choice,” Korach said. “I’m sure he could have worked nationally, but he was very happy and satisfied to stay in the Bay Area, which was a great fit for him.

“Bill was going to do things his way, and I think the Bay Area allowed him to be himself,” he added. “But as John Madden said in the book, ‘Bill King would have been a star anywhere because he was that good. He was so brilliant that he could have been a big star in any market.’”

It doesn’t happen very often that an aspiring sportscaster gets to work with their hero, but that’s exactly what happened with Korach, the 2013 California Sportscaster of the Year, when he joined the A’s broadcast crew in 1996 after a stint with the Chicago White Sox.

“Bill was great to me, he was gracious to me, and there were so many ‘Holy Toledo’ moments that I would hear from Bill sitting next to him, that would take me back to my youth listening to him.

“I think it’s exceeded expectations and it just speaks to Bill and what he meant to people in the Bay Area,” Korach continued. “He was a man who impacted lives for so many years and I think that maybe, in a small way, the way he touched so many people, that’s come through from the book.”

As Korach sent the day’s game notes and scorecard to the circular file, he acknowledged the fact that the Athletics, regardless of who is on the roster, seem to find a way to win games

“No question,” Korach said. “It starts in the clubhouse where they believe they can win. The new players get indoctrinated into that attitude. Nick Punto, for one, has talked a lot about the opportunity of being with a team that’s hungry and going for the postseason again.

“They’ve gotten a taste of it. Now, they want to go deeper.”

A’s EDGE MARINERS: An enthusiastic gathering of 7,260 watched the A’s edge Seattle’s split squad 6-5, giving Oakland a 6-3-1 record over its last 10 Cactus League games.

Stephen Vogt hit a pair of home runs for Oakland, driving in four runs. Eric Sogard and Daric Barton had the other RBIs.

Starting pitcher Scott Kazmir worked 4 1/3 innings, giving up three earned runs on four hits and three walks while striking out five. Kazmir’s spring ERA went up to 2.38. Dan Otero (1-0) blew a save opportunity, but got the win. Joe Savery earned his third hold with a scoreless sixth, and Arnold Leon worked the final three innings to get his first save.

Mariners starter Scott Baker took the loss, giving up all six earned runs in four innings with no strikeouts and six walks. Baker, who was 46-28 from 2008 to 2011 with Minnesota, appeared in three games last season for the Chicago Cubs after undergoing “Tommy John” surgery in April 2012.

CACTUS NEEDLES: Oakland OF Billy Burns stole his 10th base of the spring on Saturday, giving him the Major League spring training lead. Burns is one of two non-roster invitees still in camp. … A’s OF Sam Fuld, the other non-roster invitee on the Oakland roster, is tied for second in the Cactus League in runs (13) and tied for fourth in triples (three). … A’s 1B Daric Barton is hitting .308 (4 for 13) in four games after coming back from left hamstring injury. … Seattle 2B Robinson Cano seems to be enjoying his first spring in Arizona, fashioning a .563 CL batting average through Friday. Because the Mariners cutoff for the team record is 50 at-bats, Cano (18-for-32) won’t be credited with the M’s all-time spring mark. That belongs to Michael Morse, who hit .492 (32-for-65) in 2008. … Cano has recorded a hit in 11 of the 12 CL games he’s appeared in.

(TAGS: Oakland Athletics,spring training,Cactus League,Ken Korach,Bill King)

Sharks denied playoff clinching win

By: Phillip Torres

SAN JOSE-The San Jose Sharks (48-18-8) hosted the Washington Capitals (34-27-11) on Saturday night at the SAP Center in San Jose. Washington rallied from behind to beat the Sharks 3-2 in a shootout and keep San Jose from clinching a playoff spot on the night.

It looked as if the Sharks were going to clinch their playoff birth on Saturday as they were playing the Washington Capitals, a team that hasn’t beaten the Sharks in San Jose since October of 1993, over 20 years ago. The victory for Washington was also just it’s second against San Jose in their past 19 meetings. But, Evgeny Kuznetsov and Nicklas Backstrom scored the two goals in the shootout that took hone the victory for the Capitals.

The Sharks lead 2-1 going into the third period but were denied the win after a goal from Chris Brown at 12:30. The score was Brown’s first career goal and it sent the game into overtime. San Jose had a chance to take the lead and win the game as they were on the power play with a little over two minutes remaining in regulation. But, despite having the puck in Washington territory throughout, the Sharks could not put the puck in the net.

Despite the loss San Jose was able to earn it’s 100th point on the season Because the game reached the overtime posted. They also sit atop the Pacific Division, three points ahead of the Anaheim Ducks. The Sharks will be back on the ice on Monday as they will be hosted by the Calgary Flames.

Warriors fall to Spurs, 99-90

By George Devine, Sr.

In a low-scoring and generally lackluster contest at Oracle Arena, the San Antonio Spurs prevailed over the home team, 99-90. The visitors, winning their 13th straight game, came into the game with a 52-16 record and bettered it as the Warriors approached the court with a 44-28 skein and could hardly afford to lose if they intend to go forward as postseason play approaches, especially with a winless record against San Antonio.

The Spurs dominated in all periods excepting the second, when the W’s led 25-18. In the final analysis, an 11-0 run at the top of the fourth quarter sealed the deal for San Antonio. Neither team was impressive from beyond the 3-point line, but what made the difference was the height and speed of the Spurs who scored better than the Warriors did up close, and who prevented Golden State from hitting 2-pointers.

Tony Parker led the Spurs with 20 points and 5 assists. Danny Green was next with 18 points and 6 boards. Tiago Splitter was especially valuable with 14 rebounds, and might have scored more than his 17 points had he not gotten into foul trouble with 4. Kawhi Leonard contributed 16 points and 7 rebounds, and Mario Belinelli had 15 points, 3 rebounds and 3 assists. In short, the Spurs provided a well-balanced “spread the wealth” team effort that was hard to stop, on both offense and defense. They did this while resting Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili.

The Warriors had only two scorers in double digits: Stephen Curry had 20 points, 6 assists and 6 rebounds. Klay Thompson had 16 points, with only 2 rebounds and 3 assists. Draymond Green had 8 points and 6 rebounds, and Marreese Speight had 6 points. Although Andrew Bogut had only 2 points, he made a significant contribution with 17 rebounds.

On Wednesday, April 2, the Warriors face the Spurs again, at San Antonio. Tipoff will be at 5:30 p.m. PDT.

Quakes victim of another penalty kick

Photo credit: sjearthquakes.com/mlssoccer.com

By Pearl Allison Lo

Jon Busch found himself in a familiar situation after Dom Dwyer scored the game’s lone goal, as Sporting Kansas City found victory at home again over the San Jose Earthquakes Saturday.

In the 56th minute, off a corner kick, former quake Ike Opara had another close shot but Busch knocked it high. Upon second chance, with a multitude of people battling for the ball in front of Busch, Steven Lenhart was called for a handball. Dwyer, who took the penalty kick, picked the correct side as he scored to make it 1-0.

San Jose lost their 12-game unbeaten streak in regulation and has now not won at Kansas City in eight games since 2004.

KC had the majority of chances at net, reflected in the 11-3 shot total in the first half.

After a clearance, Sal Zizzo kicked it to the corner post away from Busch right in front of Opara. However, it bounced off the post again and then Opara kicked the ball left.

Dwyer had a breakaway but  kicked the ball wide in the 28th minute.

Ike Opara lost one of his contacts.

In the second half, the Quakes had opportune chances.

Chris Wondolowski just missed wide in the 71st minute.

He had another attempt in the 83rd minute on a free kick straightaway just beyond the box, but was high.

Benny Feilhaber was named Man of the Match by Sporting Kansas City announcers.

Game notes: San Jose next plays the New England Revolution for the teams’ final March match, the 29th at 7:30pm.

One Down, Five to Go, Stanford Defeats South Dakota in the Opening Round of the NCAA Tournament

By: Joe Lami

The Stanford Cardinal started what they are hoping to be a long NCAA Tournament run on Saturday afternoon with a win.  They defeated the South Dakota Coyotes by the final score of 81-62.  The Cardinal were given a number two seed after they were defeated by USC in the semi-finals of the Pac-12 tournament.  Their opponent, South Dakota, earned the 15-seed after they won the Summit Conference Tournament.  The Coyotes also had a record of 19-14 coming into the contest.

South Dakota held the game close for the first seven minutes of the game, and actually held a two point lead at the 17:56 mark, but at the 13-minute the Cardinal gained the lead and they kept it for the rest of the game.  The Cardinal led the game 42-27 going into the halftime break.  They then outscored the Coyotes 39-35 in the second half to earn the 81-62 victory.

It was a huge day for Senior star Chiney Ogwumike, as she became the all-time Pac-12 leading scorer in the contest.  She only need one-point to gain the feat, as she finished the last contest tied with Candice Wiggins.  Ogwumike finished the game with 22 points, and eight rebounds in the 35 minutes played.  She led all scorers in the effort.

Bonnie Samuelson came off of the bench to tie her career high, as the Junior Guard sunk six of ten shots from beyond the arc to net 18 points.  Lili Thompson scored 11 points and brought down six rebounds in her first NCAA Tournament contest.  She also went 50% from three-point land, as she went three of six from beyond the arc.  Amber Orrange was the other Stanford player to get into double digits in scoring, as she finished the game with ten points.

South Dakota had a bright spot in the loss, as Nicole Seekamp finished the game with 22 points, shooting 9 of 13 from the field.  She also finished the game with five rebounds.

Stanford only has one more team in front of them before they can return to their home court, Maples Pavilion, as part of Regionals.  The tenth seed Florida State Seminoles will be the Cardinal’s next opponent, as they defeated Iowa State on their home floor earlier Saturday 55-44.  The Round of 32 contest is set for Monday at 3:30 PST.

Larry Leavitt on the SJ Sharks: The best way to defend Overchikin is planning, practicing plays, and some hitting

by Larry Leavitt

SAN JOSE–The Sharks are holding their own losing only one of their last five games where all five games were all one goal decisions. The Sharks are playing at the level of the teams that their going against and their ramping up their game and their having a strong physical game and they really have their head in the games all 60 minutes.

The post season is coming very soon and this team does not lack motivation and they believe they can win and they do. The night they got beat by the Florida Panthers on Tuesday March 18th they ran into a hot goalie Roberto Luongo who did fantastic job and saved a great many pucks and helped the Sharks lose the game. Luongo had a good game against the Sharks and you have to give him some credit.

The Sharks put a lot of pucks on Luongo in the last period of the game but unfortunately for the Sharks that night Luongo stopped them all and the Panthers won it 4-3.

Patrick Marleau’s teammates called Marleau the “Big Player” the team leaders, the Joe Thorntons and the Patrick Marleaus they both showed up for the Anaheim game and they were the best skaters on ice. The Ducks are really lucky because the score didn’t really show how well the Sharks dominated over Anaheim in the 3-2 win.

There were a few times during that game where some of the skaters missed assignments and Anaheim is a good hard htting team and they can capitalize on those little mistakes. For the most part the Sharks dominated that game and the big players really showed up and did their jobs and this will make for a long playoff run for San Jose.

The Sharks played the Washington Capitals on Saturday night and they like the Pittsburgh Penguins and Syd Crosby held Alex Ovechkin the Caps star in check. The Sharks held Crosby scoreless in his appearence at SAP Center on March 6th in the 5-3 win.

Like most NHL clubs the Sharks have to be a little apprehensive on the power play and that’s where Ovechikin gets most of his goals. The Sharks coaches and scouts have really followed Ovechikin’s game coming in Saturday night and they had a game plan ready to get him covered.

In the past to defend Ovechikin they would throw a lot of body on him and they had a handful against as expected and Marc Edouard Vlasic did trying to defend Overchikin. In past meetings with the Capitals. Vlasic has to be the most dependable defenseman for the Sharks and he’s had a good one on one with Overchikin in the past and they ran drills for a Overchikin defense at the Sharks skate on Saturday morning.

Larry Leavitt does commentary on the San Jose Sharks for Sportstalk radio each week

Warriors commentary: Warriors hot enough to do some damage this post season

by David Zizmor

OAKLAND–The Warriors had a blip on the radar screen when they lost a really bad game to the Cleveland Cavaliers but since then they’ve righted the ship with a couple of good wins. One was a nail biter up in Portland and then a big blow out win against Orlando and then another closer than expected win over Milwaukee.

Some people are concerned after that Cleveland win it was kind of a return to the pattern that we had already seen back in January and February where the Warriors played down to the level of their competition and Cleveland is not a good team and at this moment their not expected to make the playoffs.

So the Warriors losing to the Cavs in Oakland was a real eye opener and was a real puzzler because the Warriors are such a good team and they’ve been playing such good basketball and to see them falter against such a lousy team like Cleveland on their home court was really bothersome.

So after losing to Cleveland it was up to Portland on the road and it was a real tight game against a very good team that their battling with. They beat Portland by a point and that really calmed some nerves around the Bay Area, for the Warriors that was a tough game 113-112 victory. Portland is never an easy place to play especially when they have a good team.

You don’t want to say Orlando was a test the W’s next game on Tuesday the 18th because the Magic are one of the worse teams in the league, the Magic have one of the worst road records in the NBA. So beating the Magic isn’t necessarily an accomplishment but at the same time because the Warriors had struggled against Western teams at home it was good to see the Warriors blow them out 102-89.

The game with the Magic was one of those games where the starters were pretty much on the bench for most of the fourth quarter as the Warriors had this game in hand. It was’nt a close one for the Warriors who did a great job.

The next game against Milwaukee it was a little tiring than you would expect with a 115-110 win at home, but you have to keep in mind that Andre Iguodala has been out for the last couple of games, Andrew Bogut is a little gimpy he’s been playing the last game or two and he’s not a 100 percent yet.

With Milwaukee it’s weird their the worse team in the league by record but they actually put forth an effort they have a nice antidote to the Philadelphia 76ers who lost 21 games in a row. The Sixers are clearly trying to put a bad team on the floor and lose as many games as possible their now four game short of the all time NBA record for a loss streak at 26.

Daivd Zizmor covers the NBA for Sportstalk radio

Kings fall to Spurs 99-79

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Photo credit: NBAE/Getty Images

By Charlie O. Mallonee

The San Antonio Spurs won their 12th consecutive game on Friday night as they beat the Sacramento Kings 99-79. It was a game that featured ferocious defense, very physical play and at times just plain ugly basketball.

Kings head coach Michael Malone was happy with his teams’ effort in the game. He also had praise for the play of San Antonio. Malone made it known he was happy to be done with the Spurs for the 2013-14 season.

The Kings were led by Isaiah Thomas’ 18 points. DeMarcus Cousins recorded a double-double with 15 points and 13 rebounds. Rudy Gay scored 14 points while playing through a stomach virus. Travis Outlaw had a strong night scoring 13 for the Kings.

The Kings big three – Cousins, Gay and Thomas – scored just 47 total points on a night when they needed to score 65-70 points combined to win the game. The Spurs played really tough defense against the Kings on Friday.

The Spurs had six players in double figures led by Marco Belinelli’s 17 points. Kawhi Leonard put up 15 points. Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili scored 14 points each. Tim Duncan was held to just 10 points.

The Kings came out slow in the first quarter and the Spurs quickly doubled up the score 16-8. The Sacramento shooting improved and the Kings closed the scoring gap in short order. The Kings shot 47.8-percent for the quarter while the Spurs shot just 36.4-percent from the field. Cousins put up eight points while Thomas added six to go with five points from Ben McLemore and Rudy Gay’s four. The Spurs were led by Kawhi Leonard and Tiago Splitter with seven points each.

The Kings managed to put up just 14 points in the second quarter as their shooting fell off to 28.6-percent. The second unit led by Ray McCallum was unable to put together a run. Things went from bad to worse as Ben McLemore picked up two personals in under 30-seconds and had to go to the bench with four fouls. While the Kings could not score, the Spurs kept the ball moving and took any shot that became available. San Antonio scored 23 points in the period by keeping the ball moving and going to the basket. The Spurs scored 18 points in the paint to just two points in the paint for the Kings. The Spurs were just 1 for 13 from beyond the 3-point line in the first half. At halftime, the Spurs led the Kings 47-37.

The Kings came out in the third quarter with burst of energy and quickly cut the Spurs lead to just five points. Rudy Gay looked like his was going to take charge of the game despite being under the weather. The rally was short lived as the Spurs scored five quick points and increased the lead back to 10 points. Tim Duncan picked up a technical foul for protesting the calls of the referees in the midst of some very physical play. Kings Coach Michael Malone also was assessed a technical for protesting the calls of the officials. The Kings committed six personal fouls and turned the ball over seven times. At the end of three quarters San Antonio led Sacramento 69-57.

The Spurs started off the fourth quarter with two quick baskets which forced the Kings to call an early timeout. San Antonio started hitting their outside shots and began to take full control of the game. Sacramento had several defensive breakdowns that allowed the Spurs to score easy baskets. The Spurs were paced by guard Marco Belinelli who scored 13 points in the final quarter. Rudy Gay was able to play just three minutes due to illness. San Antonio scored 30 points in the fourth while Sacramento put up just 22 points. The Spurs won the game 99-79.

The Kings will go from playing the best to playing the worst in NBA as the Milwaukee Bucks come to Sacramento on Sunday afternoon. Sacramento will need to guard against letting down against a team they should beat.

Michael Duca on Spring Training: Chapman gets metal plate; good news he’ll be pitching to the plate after recovery

by Michael Duca

SCOTTSDALE AZ–26 year old Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher Aroldis Chapman who had surgery for a ball hitting him above the left eye and nose by Royals catcher Salvador Perez, was declared by doctors as a very lucky young man. This is a very hard thing for me to talk about because I was there in that ball park when it happened that night.

What was about to happen some how was so crystal clear to me that I screamed out “Oh my God” in the pressbox just before Chapman went down which was before he was hit by the ball. Pitchers today tend to throw a little bit sideways and fall off to the side, they don’t land in the kneeling position or finish the throw with the glove in front of their faces.

To look at the old baseball cards from the 50s and 60s and the pitchers posed the way that they threw and you actually saw the pitcher winding up with the glove actually in front of their face there was a reason for that. The sound that was made in the stadium was unbelievable and the fact that was the last sound heard in that stadium until the ambulance drove up 12 minutes later was even more amazing.

There were 7,000 in the park and there was dead silence the entire time, Chapman is a very lucky guy and if the ball had struck him maybe as little as a quarter of an inch to one side to the other instead of hitting the heavy bone above his left eye and hit directly over the bone that supports your nose and gripped into his sinuses which could be fatal.

This is a terrible thing and this is a risk that players take and this is more than they take out on the field, personally I would like to see pitchers grilled in youth baseball on their mechanics and you finish up square and you give yourself a fighting chance to deflect something like that with a glove.

You also have to feel for Perez this is a young 23 year old rising star catcher a solid defensive player a great hitter for an up and comning Kansas City team and the first thing you have to do is work on how this and how this is going to effect him and tell him he was just doing his job. Chapman was all over the place in that inning he had already walked four hitters in that inning.

Chapman had loaded the bases and then reloaded the bases again and I haven’t heard of anyone talking to Perez, the press or the players. I didn’t get a chance to talk to Kansas City PR Director Mike Swanson about how Perez was taking it. It’s a hard, hard thing for him to know that he caused a career threatening or life threatening injury to someone else.

The news was good about Chapman on Friday they were able to insert the titanium plate to help stablize his eye socket and he could be able to throw as little as 14 days and he could be back on the mound as little as two months.

Michael Duca is covering the Cactus League in Arizona for Sportstalk radio

Cardinal outlast New Mexico in first round of Big Dance

By Daniel Dullum
Sports Radio Service
Friday, March 21, 2014

It’s been six years since Stanford last qualified for the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, and, at least for the first round, the Cardinal are making the most of the opportunity.

No. 10 Stanford, led by Chasson Randle, held off No. 7-seed New Mexico 58-53 in the South regional at St. Louis. The Cardinal (22-12) will face No. 2-seed Kansas Sunday in the third round.

As for New Mexico, it was another quick exit from the Big Dance. The Lobos (27-7) lost in the opening round last year to Harvard under former coach Steve Alford.

Randle scored 23 points for Stanford, which had the hot hand out of the gate, building a 16-point cushion. The Cardinal hit eight of its first 10 shots, scoring 17 unanswered points while building a 20-4 lead 6 ½ minutes into the game.

The Lobos battled through scoreless stretches and began to fight back, tying the game at 45-45 with an 8-0 run midway through the second half.

Robbie Lemons, a reserve walk-on, and Randle each sank a pair of free throws in the final 30 seconds after UNM cut its deficit to two points.

Anthony Brown scored 10 points and pulled down seven rebounds for Stanford, while Stefan Nastic added 10 points and five boards. Dwight Powell, who averages 14.2 points per game, had a rare off-day, scoring three points, missing all eight of his field goal attempts and fouling out.

Cameron Bairstow led the Lobos with 24 points and eight rebounds, but suffered through off-days form Kendall Williams and Alex Kirk, who combined for six points. Williams and Kirk average 30 points together.

Another key was Stanford hitting 8-of-15 3-pointers, while UNM connected on 4-of-21.

(TAGS: Stanford,New Mexico,NCAA men’s basketball tournament)