The Tigers pounce on the A’s again.

by Jerry Feitelberg

AP photo: Detroit Tigers pitcher Francisco Rodriguez 57 congratulated Anthony Gose right after defeating the Oakland A’s 7-3 on Thursday at Comerica Park

The Tigers beat the A’s again Thursday afternoon in Detroit by a score of 7-3. The A’s were hoping to get a win so that they would return home with a record of 6-4 on the ten-game road trip. They ended up 5-5 which is not bad considering the teams the had to play. They started off well beating the Yankees four straight. They took the first game from Toronto but lost the last two games as the Toronto’s hitters came to life. Then the four-game series with Detroit. The A’s split the first two games, but the starting pitchers could not hold down the big boys in the Detroit Lineup. J.D.Martinez, Miguel Cabrera, Victor Martinez, Justin Upton and Anthony Gose punished Sonny Gray, Chris Bassitt, and Kendall Graveman. Bassitt went three and 2/3rds inning giving up ten hits, seven earned runs, one home run. His ERA zoomed up to 6.11.

Josh Reddick drove in the first run of the game in the top of the third. The Tigers scored four times in the bottom of the third. Anthony Gose doubled to start the rally. Ian Kinsler doubled to drive in Gose. J.D.Martinez, batting second in front of Miguel Cabrera, walked. Cabrera singled to drive in Kinsler. Martinez scored when Cabrera tagged up and tried to reach second on the play. The throw to second was cut off. Martinez took off for home and beat the throw to the catcher.  Justin Upton flew out, and Cabrera took third after tagging up. Nick Castellanos doubled to drive in Cabrera with the fourth run of the inning.

Stephen Vogt homered leading off the fourth to cut the deficit to two. However, the Tigers scored three more runs in the bottom of the fourth to put the game out of reach. The big blow was a two-run homer off the bat of Anthony Gose. The A’s scored a run in the ninth, but it was not enough as they lose 7-3.

Game Notes- The A’s fall to one game under .500 with a record of 11-12.  Chris Bassitt took the loss. Anibal Sanchez recorded his third win of the year for Detroit. Sanchez went five and two-thirds innings. He gave up two runs on three hits, walked seven and struck out nine. The A’s won the first four games of the road trip but lost five of the last six. A’s manager Bob Melvin may be making some additional changes to the starting rotation. The first change will occur Friday night when the big lefty, Sean Manaea, makes his Major League debut against the Houston Astros. Jesse Hahn’s recall was delayed due to a blister on his pitching hand, and Henderson Alvarez should be ready to return to the Big Leagues in mid-May.

 

Sharks v. Predators: NHL Playoffs 2nd Round Preview

By Mary Walsh

SB Nation photo: Nashville Predators come calling at SAP Center in San Jose against hosts the Sharks in game one of second round

“Sharks versus Predators” sounds a little bit like a made for tv monster movie, but the San Jose Sharks will face the Nashville Predators to start the second round of the NHL Playoffs on Friday.

The Predators came out of the Central Division as a wild card, so the Sharks did not see as much of them in the regular season as they saw of their first round Pacific Division opponent, the Los Angeles Kings. Nashville’s wild card status also gives San Jose home ice. The Sharks will have to do without their road advantage to win this series.

Probably the most important information to glean from the first round is the most obvious: the Predators played seven games, while the Sharks played only five. The Predators spent more travel time going between Nashville and Anaheim, while the Sharks traveled back and forth to Los Angeles. Round One put more mileage on the Predators than the Sharks by a big margin.

Another question would be about goaltending. Pekka Rinne has long been considered one of the league’s top goaltenders, despite his team’s conspicuous lack of playoff success. Martin Jones has performed admirably so far, despite this being his first time as a playoff starter. Neither goalie has been perfect but they have both been crucial to their team’s success.

Pekka Rinne gave up 17 goals through seven games, with a save percentage of .915. Martin Jones gave up 11 goals through five games, with a save percentage of .912. Martin Jones’ 2.18 GAA ranks fifth among playoff goalies, while Rinne’s 2.85 ranks ninth. Their save percentages are seventh and eighth in the same field.

Noteworthy in the rankings of 2016 playoff goaltenders is that two of the top three goalies in save statistics played for teams that have been eliminated. Maybe goaltending statistics do not tell you much about how a series will go.

Both Rinne and Jones finished all of their first round games, so the quality of their backups has not been an issue. If it were, I would give the edge to the Sharks’ James Reimer over the Predators’ Carter Hutton.

On paper, the Sharks have a better record in most categories than the Predators, in both the regular season and the first round. The Sharks scored more against a Pacific Division team than the Predators. But the Predators have not been and still are not an offense-first team. Much of their success comes from stingy defense. The Predators are a completely different kind of opponent than the Kings were.

In the few meetings between San Jose and Nashville this season, the Sharks lost the series 2-1. Their one win was in a shootout, and they lost one game 6-2. The Sharks have not fared well against the Predators. There is a glimmer of hope in that record, that the shootout win was the most recent game, played just 26 days ago. It caught the Sharks on the upswing, which is where they started these playoffs. It is reasonable to put more stock in the April 4th game than in the February 6th game, but those six goals have to be in the back of the Sharks’ minds. While the Kings are generally considered a more offensively loaded team than the Predators, the Kings that the Sharks played were not as they were a couple of seasons ago.

Colin Wilson and Shea Weber led the Preds in the first round with five points each. Goal scoring was pretty spread out, with Wilson, Weber, James Neal and Mattias Ekholm each scoring two goals. Six other skaters, including Filip Forsberg and Ryan Johansen scored goals against the Ducks. Forsberg and Johansen were both scoring at a good clip during the regular season so they bear watching. Defenseman Roman Josi was second in points during the regular season and he had three against the Ducks.

Craig Smith also scored a goal for the Predators, but missed two games and most of a third with an injury. The Predators did not win the games he missed. He was third on the team in goals scored with 21 in the regular season. He played the last two games in the Ducks series without much of a drop in minutes, so the Sharks can probably expect to see him on Friday.

The Sharks had more points as a group, though they played two fewer games than Nashville did. Brent Burns had eight points in the first round, with Joe Pavelski and Logan Couture collecting six apiece. Patrick Marleau and Joel Ward each had four and Joonas Donskoi and Joe Thornton each had three. That last one is a surprise, and Nashville will probably pay as much attention to Thornton as the Kings did to keep his numbers low.

Donskoi could also be considered a surprise, but a happy one for Sharks fans. His playoff performance might be attributed to a couple of things.Donskoi was a consistent points producer all season, and his time in the Finnish league cannot be overlooked. It could not have been assumed that his MVP performance in the Finnish playoffs would translate to success in the NHL playoffs, but it was a strong possibility.

Another factor that benefitted Donskoi is the fact that the Kings did not have the depth to match the Sharks. Do the Predators? Can they keep Joe Thornton in check and also stay on top of Donskoi, and for that matter, the likes of Chris Tierney, Melker Karlsson and Matt Nieto? Those three scored goals against the Kings. I don’t believe the Predators will have an easy time of it keeping all of the Sharks shooters off the board.

How successful will they be against the Sharks defense? The Sharks gave up almost as many goals as they scored in the first round. In total, they scored 16 and gave up 11, which does not seem that close unless you look at it in goals per game, where there is a difference of just one: 3.2 goals for and 2.2 goals against. One goal is enough to win the game but it leaves little margin for error.

The Sharks’ power play was pretty good against the Kings, at 23.8%. Their penalty kill was nothing special, with a 78.6% success rate. Nashville’s power play success was tiny, at 3.8%, but their penalty kill chugged along at 84% against the Ducks’ formidable power play.

The Predators scored a miniscule 0.13 more goals than they gave up in the regular season. In the first round, their numbers dipped into the negative as they scored 14 goals but gave up 18.

This is the challenge for the Sharks, to ignore what happened in the first round. The team with the most goals wins, but somehow the Predators turned that rule on its head. Obviously, the numbers are explained by a couple of bad losses that skewed the averages. That would be the second and third games where they lost by three goals both times. They also won one by 3-0, and then, like the Sharks, usually won by a single goal.

I think the Sharks’ offensive depth will again be their best asset. That is always a safe bet, but with a stifling defensive opponent like the Predators, nothing is certain.

Golden State Warriors podcast with David Zizmor: Curry or no Curry the Warriors were going to take out Houston in the first round

nbcsports.com photo: Former Houston Rockets general manager Kevin McHale

The Golden State Warriors podcast with David Zizmor you might remember last season the Houston Rockets were paying the Warriors last season for the Western Conference title and the Rockets gave the Warriors a real battle. Last year the Rockets won over 50 games this year the Rockets finished at 41-41. Their head coach last year Kevin McHale was fired and was replaced. The story of their season.

The real story is dysfunction this season, the Rockets were awful and the Warriors were really able to take advantage of them. The Rockets coming into this last round were not going to be a challenge to the Warriors. Whether Stephen Curry was in the line up or not there was no way the Rockets were going to win this first round.

David Zizmor does the Warriors podcast each week for http://www.sportsradioservice.com click below to hear more

 

 

 

Warriors send Rockets packing in dominating fashion

by Michael Martinez

picture credit CBS 46 Atlanta

Well, Steph Curry did not play and yet the Warriors showed why they made history for the best record in NBA history. Normally, a team without their star player has a lot to worry about. The Warriors showed no problems minus the reigning MVP and proved why they are the team to beat besides the fact their last year’s champs. Golden State annihilated the Houston Rockets in a 114-81 victory at Oracle Arena.

Let’s be honest, there’s not much to say about this game. The game went exactly as most would have figured given that the Warriors routed Houston in game four and not to mention they’re the Golden State Warriors.

The Warriors played great, the Rockets played atrociously, which is a recipe for disaster. The Warriors played with great togetherness and to nobody’s surprise, they shot out of this world. Golden State made it look easy as they finished with a 54.9 shooting percentage while Houston could not find a way to score with a 32.6 shooting percentage. Golden State played solid defense as they forced 18 turnovers for 25 points.

James Harden was the only Rockets’ player to show any offensive life finishing with 35 points. Besides Harden, Michael Beasley was the only other Houston player to finish the game in double figures.

Klay Thompson did his best to fill Curry’s shoes and finished with 27 points. Thompson knocked down seven buckets from behind the arc on 11 shots and finished 10 of 14 from the field overall. Draymond Green was tremendous overall as usual and totaled 15 points, grabbed nine boards and dropped eight dimes.

Shaun Livingston had a good game on offense as well and scored 16 points on seven of eight shooting. The Warriors looked just as good as they always are and bounced the Rockets out of the playoffs.

Throughout the game, Curry showed incredible excitement from the bench and supported his teammates like no other. And this is why the Warriors are so dangerous, they have some of the greatest team chemistry I have witnessed in my lifetime.

The Warriors won the series and only allowed the Rockets to win one game, which came down to the wire.

Golden State will either face the Los Angeles Clippers who are without Chris Paul and Blake Griffin or the Portland Trailblazers. Portland won game five in their series to go up 3-2 and it appears like they will be Golden State’s semifinal opponent.

Whoever the Warriors play, fans are hopeful that Curry can make his way back into the playoffs. But, with the way Golden State played tonight, let Curry take as much time as he needs to get ready for the Western Conference Finals. I am knocking on wood though, so the whole Bay Area doesn’t freak out on me and say I jinxed them.

 

The Tigers use the long ball to beat the A’s.

by Jerry Feitelberg

AP photo: Detroit Tigers designated hitter Vic Martinez goes yard for a three run shot in the Detroit half of the sixth against the Oakland A’s on Wednesday night at CoAmerica

The A’s sent their ace, Sonny Gray, to the hill Wednesday night in Detroit hoping to send the Tigers down to defeat. The Tigers’ Justin Verlander, who beat Gray in Game Five of the ALDS in 2013, was very effective as he and the Tigers drubbed the A’s 9-4.

Gray left the game after just two innings of work.He gave up four runs in the bottom of the second. The big hit was J.D.Martinez’s three-run homer to put the Tigers in the lead 4-0. For Gray, it was the quickest exit of his career and left A’s manager Bob Melvin having to go to the bullpen early. The A’s Khris Davis made it a 4-1 game in the top of the fourth when he hit a monster home run to deep center field that almost hit the statue of Tiger legend Al Kaline. The Tigers scored in the bottom of the fourth when the A’s made two errors that allowed an unearned run. Tigers in the lead 5-1 after four.

The Tigers put the game away in the bottom of the sixth when the other Martinez(Victor) hit a three-run dinger off Liam Hendricks to make it 8-1. The A’s scored two in the eighth and one in the ninth. It was not enough as Detroit won 9-4.

Game Notes- Sonny Gray’s record dropped to 3-2 while Verlander’s improved to 2-2.  The pitching line for Gray was two innings pitched, two hits, four runs, four walks, one home run and sixty-four pitches. The A’s are now 11-11 for the year and are 5-4 on the ten-game road trip. The Series finale will be at 10 am PT Thursday morning. Chris Bassitt will go for Oakland, and he will be opposed by Anibal Sanchez. The A’s return to Oakland to face the Houston Astros Friday night. Lefty Sean Manaea was recalled from Nashville and may make his MLB debut in that game.

 

 

 

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Johnny Baseball has 26 ways to put away opponents

AP photo: San Francisco Giants pitcher Johnny Cueto exults after pitching a shutout against the San Diego Padres on Tuesday night

On the Giants podcast with Michael Duca Giants pitcher Johnny Cueto can throw with 26 different pitches and has as many angles to accomplish retiring many a batter. He has a change up that’s devastating for a strike out pitch. Which would explain the latest success in shutting out the San Diego Padres on Tuesday 1-0.

Had it not been for replay Giants manager Bruce Bochy would have seen a different kind of ball game on Tuesday night as Bochy wanted the MLB official in New York to take a look at a bang bang double play that was turned over in favor of the Giants. Had that not been appealed the Pads would have been on the scoreboard.

With Giants outfielder Angel Pagan batting in the ninth hole it’s made a big difference for him. Pagan who moved to hitting ninth after being in the lead off role was pressing at the plate. He was under pressure to get on board and his average was suffering for it. With Denard Span and Joe Panik hitting one and two this relieves Pagan of hitting at the top of the order and can bat behind guys like pitchers Madison Bumgarner, Jake Peavy, Matt Cain or Cueto. Pagan went into Wednesday afternoon’s game against the Padres hitting .342.

Join Michael Duca for more Giants on the podcast below and each week right here at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giant Bounce Back: Belt, Samardzjia lead Giants to sweep of the Padres

by Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–Amid the hustle and bustle that pervades the budding metropolis of San Francisco, this day replete with blustery winds, ping pong weather, the persistent news cycle, and of course, traffic, even the Giants could be rendered an afterthought.

But not today.

The Giants rung up a season-high 13 runs, on 16 hits, to sweep the Padres, putting a nice conclusion on a rough home stand while compressing the early standings in the NL West. Brandon Belt had three hits and five RBI to back Jeff Samardzjia and five relievers. The 13-9 win marked the Giants’ eighth win in a row over San Diego at AT&T Park.

Andrew Cashner started for the Padres, but lasted just 2 2/3 innings, and remains winless in his six career starts at San Francisco.

“In all reality we had every opportunity to win the first two games of the series, and then putting nine runs on the board today. Very competitive games for us. Just not getting over the hump right now,” Padres’ manager Andy Green said.

The Giants didn’t hit a home run, but had five extra-base hits that had the crowd of 41,357 buzzing, including three triples, just the fourth time they’ve accomplished that feat in 17 seasons at McCovey Cove.

“Someone mentioned that we didn’t have a home run. That’s OK, we can hit a team to death,” Matt Duffy stated.

The Giants begin a stretch of 17 games in 17 days in New York on Friday with Jake Peavy facing Steven Matz at 4:10pm.

San Francisco Giants commentary by Tony the Tiger Hayes; Always be Closing! Always be closing!

Always Be Closing! Always be Closing!

Santiago Casilla Reaches the Century Mark

By Tony “The Tiger” Hayes

USA Today photo: San Francisco Giants pitcher Santiago Casilla is congratulated by Giants catch Buster Posey

SAN FRANCISCO–In the film version of David Mamet’s “Glen Gary, Glen Ross”   a hopped-up on caffine Alec Baldwin voraciously bellows  to his cowering real estate underlings “Always Be Closing! Alwayyys Be Closing!!!!!”

Easy for him to say. Just ask Robb Nen, Tim Worrell, Brian Wilson, Sergio Romo and current San Francisco “closer” Santiago Casilla how easy the  “ABC” theory is.

And those are the the successful closers of the Third and King era. Better text former Giants gas can Armando Benitez on the topic.

Less  than a week after Casilla watched with horror as what looked like his 100th career save keepsake fly unabated into seagull airspace, he finally reached the century mark vs. the Padres.

Casilla  now ranks sixth on
San Francisco’s all-time savelist, 27 behind 1980s icon Greg Minton.

Nen is no. 1 with 206.

Closing takes more than good stuff, but of course having a shutdown fastball and beguiling second pitch is a must. Having a good scowl, a gigantic beard or  fastidious  gardened facial foliage (hello Dustin Hermanson) or a weird back story doesn’t hurt.

The clean-cut Casilla makes up with his sleek looks with a fantastic biographical quirk. He borrowed the identity of another person to break into pro ball at a younger age and played them first five seasons of his pro career including a handful of games with the A’s as “Jairo Garcia.”

Classic closer material.

While news of Casilla’s 100 save accomplishment was generally pushed to the back to the notes section of most game stories it shouldn’t have been treated as an after thought.

One major league save or a 100 is not easy to achieve.  While it’s true most closers only work one inning and typically come in with a clean slate, most pitching experts will tell you the last outs of a game are the toughest to get.

While Casilla  hasn’t held the closer job in a locked-jawed Nen like strangle-hold in his seven Giants seasons, when he has been given the ball in crunch time he has generally been reliable.

His fastball is still a steady 94-95 with movement and his arm has been maintained its structural health though his 15 year career.

In addition Casilla has been nails on the big stage and has not allowed a run in post-season action dating back 19 games.

Casilla  – tied with Seattle’s Steve Cishek – now ranks 16th on baseball active save list and while that may not seem particularly high, keep in kmind that of the 14 pitchers ahead of him, five are currently pitching in other roles or are disabled.

Casilla  has had his share of hiccups along the way, and shared closer duties with Romo in 2013-14, but he has not had the career altering injuries and flameouts like so many other closers.

Casilla truly blossomed after joining the Giants as a minor league free agent in 2010, so the Giants coaching staff should receive some credit for Casilla’s blossoming – but in the end it’s Santiago how’s making the pitches and turning 9th inning uncertainty into big league wins.

Cueto goes eight in win Giants blank Pads 1-0

By Jeremy Kahn

AP photo: Johnny Cueto and catcher Buster Posey are all smiles after Cueto shutouts the San Diego Padres 1-0 Tuesday night

SAN FRANCISCO-It looked like for the first four innings of the game that this was going to be the night for history for the San Diego Padres.

Unfortunately, the Padres and their fans will have to wait another night to see the teams’ first no-hitter since the team was founded in 1969.

Denard Span doubled off of James Shields in the bottom of the fifth inning to score Brandon Crawford from second base, as the San Francisco Giants defeated the Padres 1-0 before a crowd of 41,413, the 421st consecutive sellout at AT&T Park.

Crawford broke up Shields’ no-hitter with a single to leadoff the bottom of the fifth inning, then advanced to second on a perfect sacrifice bunt by Johnny Cueto, and then Span’s double brought in Crawford.

Cueto pitched a complete game allowing zero runs on seven hits, walking one and striking out 11 on his way to his fourth win of the season. It was the 100th career win for Cueto.

Shields was the hard luck losing pitcher on the night, as he went seven innings, allowing just one run on three hits, walking four and striking out two, as he saw his record fall to 0-4 on the season.

It looked like the Padres would score the first run of the game in the top of the fifth inning, when Jon Jay beat out the throw from Joe Panik at first base to allow Alexei Ramirez to score from third base; however Bruce Bochy challenged the call saying Brandon Belt caught the ball prior to Jay touching the base. After a 96 second review, the umpires overturned the call and the inning ended on the dazzling double play from Crawford to Panik to Belt.

Ramirez led off the inning with a double, went to third on a flyball by Jemile Weeks, then Adam Rosales walked and then Shields reached on an infield single to load the bases.

Brett Wallace led the top of the eighth inning with a pinch-hit single, then was pre placed on the bases in favor of Travis Jankowski, Cueto then struck out Jay for the second time on the night, the right-hander then struck out Wil Myers and Buster Posey threw out Jankowski to complete the inning-ending double play.

Jankowski was the second base runner thrown out by Posey on the evening, as he threw out Melvin Upton, Jr., for the second out of the fourth inning.

Rich Hill tames the Tigers, A’s snap 3-game losing streak

by Jerry Feitelberg

AP photo: Rich Hill Oakland starter on Tuesday night

The Oakland A’s, behind a terrific performance by lefty Rich Hill, defeated the Detroit Tigers 5-1 Tuesday night in Detroit. Hill, without doubt, had his best game of the young season. He went seven innings allowed just four hits, no runs and struck out eight. The veteran lefty gave up two singles in the first inning and then retired eighteen of the last twenty hitters he faced. His record is now 3-2 for 2016.

The A’s scored three times in the top of the fourth. Mike Pelfrey was trying to win his first of the year for the Tigers, but the A’s took advantage of a couple of defensive lapses in the inning to go ahead 3-0. Josh Reddick started the rally with a single. Reddick stole second. The Tiger second baseman couldn’t hang on to the throw from the catcher. Jed Lowrie continued his clutch hitting. Lowrie singled to drive in Reddick. Stephen Vogt doubled to put men on at second and third with no out. Lowrie scored on a sac fly off Coco Crisp’s bat to put the A’s up 2-0. Kris Davis singled to drive in Vogt. A’s lead 3-0.

There was no more scoring until the top of the seventh. With two out and a man on first, Marcus Semien hit his fifth dinger of the season and finished the night for Pelfrey. Rich Hill pitched the seventh and Bob Melvin brought in Sean Doolittle for the eighth. Doolittle did his job, and John Axford closed out the game for the win. Axford gave up his first run of the year, but it was too little, too late for Detroit. The A’s improve to 11-10 and are tied with the Texas Rangers for second place in the AL west just two percentage points behind the Seattle Mariners.

Game Notes- Rich Hill’s ERA dropped to 2.42 after his magnificent outing Tuesday night. Game three of the series will feature an outstanding matchup between the A’s ace Sonny Gray and the former Cy Young winner and MVP, Justin Verlander.

Here is some news regarding Tyler Collins  The report is from the Detroit Free Press regarding Collins’ possible suspension for the improper gesture. The report is as follows:

” The Detroit Free Press is reporting that MLB has concluded review of Tyler Collins incident. He will not be suspended, 

Major League Baseball is reviewing Collins’ improper gesture to fans during Monday night’s win over the Athletics. Collins lost a fly ball in the lights Monday Night and did not react well when he was booed by the fans.

A league spokesperson told the Free Press today the league has opened an investigation regarding the incident, in which the Tigers centerfielder flashed his middle finger to fans.

“If anything needs to be done, we’ll handle it internally,” Tigers manager Brad Ausmus said. “And if Major League Baseball has a reaction, then we’ll see what their reaction is.”

“Nobody wants that ball to get lost less than me,” Collins said. “That hurts. And to be at home and to hear boos after that play, it hit a trigger inside of me, and I lashed out, completely inappropriately.

“I’m embarrassed that happened and I’m very sorry to everybody in Detroit. I just want you guys to understand that I love this team, and I want to win so when we come home and get booed, it’s tough to swallow. But like I said, I apologize completely, and I’m embarrassed at myself, and I know my family is embarrassed at me and I’m sure these guys are, too, so I’m sorry that happened.”

MLB previously suspended right-handed reliever Jonathan Papelbon for seven games while with the Phillies in 2014 after making an inappropriate gesture to fans while getting booed after blowing a save.

The Tigers’ Joe Nathan wasn’t disciplined by the league in 2014 after giving a chin flick to fans following a win.

If Collins is suspended while on the 25-man roster, the Tigers would not be able to fill that spot, having to play one man short. If he is optioned to Triple-A Toledo – which could be on the horizon, given Cameron Maybin’s recovery from a shoulder injury – any potential suspension would take place if he returns to the big leagues. He can appeal any suspension.

Time of game was two hours and thirty-six minutes and 22,256 people watch Rich Hill make magic with his curve ball in the win for Oakland.