The A’s start the road trip with a win, beat the Yankees 3-2.

by Jerry Feitelberg

AP photo: Oakland A’s hitter Josh Reddick splinters the bat to fly out while New York Yankee catcher Brian McCann is behind the plate

NEW YORK–The Oakland A’s received a terrific performance from lefty Eric Surkamp Wednesday night in New York. Surkamp did not get out of the fifth inning in his first two starts with Oakland. He managed to work into the sixth but did not get the decision. His opponent, Michael Pineda also gave up two runs and did not have a decision, either.The A’s bullpen was terrific as was the Yankee’s. However, the A’s was better as the A’s won 3-2. The Yankees used Chasen Shreve, Dellin Betances, Andrew Miller and Johnny Barbato. Barbato gave up the winning run to the A’s in the eleventh. The A’s bullpen kept the Yanks off the board to secure the win. The A’s improved to 7-7 and the Yankees fell to 5-7.

The Yankees put one on the board in the bottom of the first. Surkamp retired the first two batters he faced. The third hitter, the veteran Carlos Beltran, doubled to left. Surkamp walked Mark Teixeira to put men on at first and second. The designated hitter, Alex Rodriguez hit a single to left to drive in Beltran with the first run of the game. The pitch was right over the middle of the plate, and A-Rod did not miss. Surkamp struck out catcher Brian McCann to end the inning. Surkamp threw twenty-four pitches in the frame.

In the top of the second, the A’s tied the game at one. Jed Lowrie and Yonder Alonso singled to put runners on at first and second. Marcus Semien, swinging on a 3-0 pitch, singled to left to drive in Lowrie with the tying run.

The Yankees regained the lead in their half of the fifth inning. Shortstop Didi Gregorius led off with a single. The A’s got Gregorius in a rundown as he took off on a 3-2 count to avoid a double play. Gregorius appeared to make it back to first safely, but, he was ruled out as he ran out of the basepath. Brett Gardner walked on the next pitch. Starlin Castro doubled to left. Gardner stopped at third and then scored on a sacrifice fly off the bat of Carlos Beltran. Yankees lead 2-1 after five.

The A’s  answered in the top of sixth. Danny Valencia, leading off, tripled into the gap in left-centerfield. Brett Gardner got his glove on the ball but couldn’t make the catch. The Yankees brought the infield in to cut off the run at home. Stephen Vogt struck out. With the infield still drawn in, Jed Lowrie singled to right to drive in Valencia with the A’s second run of the game.

There was no more scoring in regulation, and the game went to extra innings. The A’s broke through in the eleventh to win the game. Jed Lowrie doubled with one out. Khris Davis grounded out, and that allowed Lowrie to advance to third. Mark Canha singled past Yankee shortstop Didi Gregorius to drive in Lowrie with the winning run. The A’s win the first game of the three-game series 3-2.

Game Notes- Eric Surkamp, who did not get a decision, pitched very well Tuesday night. He went five and 2/3rd innings and allowed two runs and seven hits. He threw a career-high ninety-nine pitches. Marc Rzepczynski retired one batter to close out the sixth. The bullpen allowed just one hit in 5 1/3rd innings of work.John Axford retired the side in order in the seventh. Sean Doolittle did the same in the eighth. Fernando Rodriguez pitched the ninth and tenth. He allowed just one hit in the ninth and set the Yanks down in order in the tenth.Ryan Madsen closed out the game for the A’s as he put the Yanks down 1-2-3 in the eleventh. Rodriguez received credit for the win and Madson the save.

Jed Lowrie was the hitting star for Oakland. He had three singles and a double. He scored one run and drove in another.

There was a celebrity sighting at the game Tuesday night. Larry David, creator of “Seinfeld” and “Curb Your Enthusiasm” was in the front row in back of home plate. David played the voice of George Steinbrenner in the Seinfeld series.

Game two will be played in New York Wednesday night at 4:05 pm PT.Kendall Graveman will go for Oakland, and Nathan Eovaldi will be on the hill for New York.

Time of game was three hours and thirty minutes, and 31,952 watched the A’s beat the Yankees.

NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs Podcast with Joe Lami: Catch the rundowns of the current playoff series and toughest of playoff series

On the NHL Stanley Cup Playoff Podcast Joe takes a look at each Playoff series as he talks about the tight series and will the Washington Caps take it all. Take a listen below on each match up for the NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs.

 

NHL series match ups:

San Jose leads Los Angeles 2-1

Dallas lead Minnesota 2-1

St Louis leads Chicago 2-1

Nashville lead Anaheim 2-0

NY Islanders leads Florida 2-1

Tampa Bay leads Detroit 2-1

Washington leads Philadelphia 3-0

Pittsburgh vs NY Rangers series is tied 1-1

Categories NHL

Oakland A’s podcast with Charlie O: A’s expect great pitching performances in tough road trip ahead

photo credit pinrterest.com: Charlie O the Mule A’s former mascot in the 1970s

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Charlie O The A’s are doing alright and it’ the beginning of the season everybody is baseball seems to be doing about the same nobody doing anything really exciting. It looked like one of the first road trips to Seattle folks thought “who are these guys?” the A’s went to Seattle and they swept the Mariners.

That was a good start for Oakland and that’s a lot better than what people expected from the A’s. Then they came home to face the Los Angeles Angels and what did they do? They got swept. So you sweep and then you get swept. It’s not the scenario that you want to have happen. Then after they got swept by the Angels then they had to tough task of facing the World Champion Kansas City Royals.

The Royals came in beat them last Friday night so now the A’s have lost four games in a row and what did the A’s do they turned around and won the final two games in the series with the Royals. So they were 2-4 in the six game homestand that’s not what you want to do.

Charlie O talks more A’s in the podcast below and every week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

That’s Amaury’s Podcast, News and Commentary: A’s begin a very tough road in the Bronx a true test of grit

espn.com photo: Oakland A’s Sonny Gray is Oakland’s number one ace and other teams would like to have him on their staff

On That’s Amaury’s Podcast, News, and Commentary the Oakland A’s start a very rough road trip and it all begins in New York on Tuesday night and the A’s who got swept by the Angels last week at home but when the World Champion Kansas City Royals came to town the A’s got their act together they started hit with men in scoring position taking two out of three from KC. Pitching was solid and it all started with the A’s starter Sonny Gray and in the third game with Chris Bassitt.

The A’s will play the Yankees and they go to Toronto, and finish the trip up in Detroit. These are three teams who can hit the ball you better have good hitting and you better have good pitching with someone who can pitch the ball otherwise this could be a long, long, hard road trip.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez also discusses the future of the Major League Baseball Hispanic Heritage Museum which is planned for construction near AT&T Park in downtown San Francisco. Amaury is the Museum vice president and does News and Commentary each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Diamondbacks make themselves at home in 11-inning, marathon win over the Giants

By Morris Phillips

From the Giants’ perspective,  the visiting Diamondbacks are getting way to comfortable at AT&T Park.

Last season, Arizona won eight of 10 meetings at McCovey Cove, the first time a visiting club had won that many since the park opened in 2000.  On Monday, the D’Backs hung around until just before midnight, beating the Giants 9-7 in 11 innings, after surviving a two-out, two-strike scenario in the ninth courtesy of Jake Lamb’s game-tying home run off Santiago Casilla.

“Like (Arizona GM) Dave Stewart said when he came in, If you’re going to play that long you better win,” manager Chip Hale said.  “It was  exciting.  Guys were into it in the dugout.”

The Giants were hoping a return home would change their fortunes after a disappointing week in Denver and Los Angeles.  Instead, their bullpen imploded and they lost for the fifth time in their last seven games.

“We came back and took the lead, but it’s tough when you’re one pitch away from a win,” manager Bruce Bochy lamented.

From Stewart, Hale and Chief Baseball Officer Tony LaRussa to third base coach Matt Williams, special assistant Randy Johnson and television color man Bob Brenly, the Diamondbacks have plenty of faces familiar to Bay Area baseball fans. On Monday, they appeared to benefit from unusually warm weather just to their liking, and even had a frame of reference when the marathon of a game reached the swooping seagull phase soon after 10:30pm.

“I remember that seagull dropping a chicken finger on the mound last year,” starting pitcher Archie Bradley said of a 12-inning affair won by the Diamondbacks a year ago.

Bradley was recalled from Triple-A Reno after Arizona suffered a 14-inning loss in San Diego on Saturday night, and Monday’s scheduled starter, Rubby De La Rosa was used in that ballgame.  But Monday’s game was so taxing–the two teams combined to use 12 pitchers–De La Rosa appeared anyway, pitching a scoreless 10th inning and getting the win.

The Giants led 2-1, 6-2 and 7-6 in the ninth, but couldn’t put Arizona away.  Instead, the D’Backs pounded out 16 hits and were seemingly impervious to the scoreboard that showed them leading only in the first and last innings.

Joe Panik homered in the fifth to highlight the Giants’ four-run surge.  But Arizona chipped away scoring one or two runs in six of the 11 frames.

Matt Cain gets the start for the Giants on Tuesday, opposite Arizona’s Robbie Ray at 7:15pm.

 

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Sharks Lose Game Three to Kings

By Mary Walsh

AP photo: LA Kings Tanner Pearson (bottom) celebrates his game winning goal in overtime as the Kings take game three 2-1

SAN JOSE- The San Jose Sharks lost the third game of the Western Conference Quarter Finals to the Los Angeles Kings by a score of 2-1 in overtime. The Sharks still lead the series by 2-1. The game followed a peculiar statistic for the NHL playoff games Monday: all three games saw a goal scored in the first minute of the game, by the losing team.

In San Jose, that goal was scored by Joe Thornton. Anze Kopitar scored the tying goal for Los Angeles, and Tanner Pearson scored the overtime winner. Jonathan Quick made 29 saves for Los Angeles, and Martin Jones made 22 saves for San Jose.

Monday’s game was a grueling affair for both teams, with all the regulation scoring coming early in the first period. After that, it was a push-me-pull-you match up and down the ice for more than 40 minutes. The Sharks did a very good job of limiting the Kings’ chances, but they could not take advantage of the chances they had to score. They outshot the Kings 30-24, and in the third period by 9-3.

After the game, Sharks head coach Pete DeBoer said:

Over the second and third, I thought we grabbed it back, did a lot of good stuff tonight. Reality is, they’re a very good team. They’ve got multiple Stanley Cup winners over there.

We knew this wasn’t going to be a sweep. We’re in a good spot, I think we could have won the game tonight too, need to keep rolling out the same kind of game.

Through much of the game, the Sharks played well defensively but were less sharp in the offensive zone. Their power play stood out as being especially ineffective. It went 0-5 while Los Angeles went 1-3. Joe Thornton talked about the fifth power play after the game:

The last one especially, it felt like we were going to get it. The crowd was into it, we were into it, they broke a stick, we got a lot of shots and it felt like it was right there. But unfortunately it just didn’t happen.

Pete DeBoer is not overly concerned about the lack of results on the power play:

We had a lot of good looks, we had a lot of zone time. Because we don’t score doesn’t mean we’re not doing the right thing. That’s how the NHL goes. You’re not going to score on your power play every time. If we weren’t getting in and getting set up and getting looks, I’d be worried.

Did the Kings change their game much after losing two in Los Angeles? Shark goaltender Martin Jones did not think so:

Not really. They have their game plan, it’s crash the net, put pucks to the net. I thought we’ve done a really good job keeping them to the outside. But, yeah, I don’t think too much changed for them.

It took 30 seconds for the Sharks to score their only goal of the game. After pushing the puck out of their own zone, and touching it through the neutral zone with a pass or two, the Sharks’ top line made a couple of moves in the corner and suddenly Joe Thornton was skating behind the net and picking up the puck. He looked for a pass but did not see one so he carried it into the slot and took a shot. The puck went under Jonathan Quick without any fuss. The shot was so subtle that no one reacted for a beat. An assist went to Tomas Hertl.

The Sharks did not convert on their first power play of the game, at 5:33, but the Kings did score on their first, at 7:50. While Tommy Wingels sat in the box for hooking, Anze Kopitar picked up the rebound off of a Milan Lucic shot. A second assist went to Jake Muzzin.

At the half way point of the first period, things were not looking great for the Sharks. The score was tied, the shots were tied, but the Sharks had blocked more shots and the Kings had won 73% of the faceoffs. The Kings were bearing down.

At 11:50, Nick Spaling was called for tripping Rob Scuderi, putting the Sharks on their second penalty kill of the period. The Sharks did kill it off, but Los Angeles managed some good chances during the power play.
By the end of the period, Los Angeles had outshot San Jose by 13-7 but the score was still knotted at 1.

The Sharks started the second period with some energy, and had an early power play when [] went off for []. The Kings’ penalty kill was formidable. They not only prevented the Sharks from taking any shots, they kept most of the play outside their zone.

For the middle half of the period, the Sharks had trouble getting far beyond the Kings’ blue line. Any attempt to dump it in or carry it in was met with fiercely efficient resistance.

The Sharks had another power play at 13:01, after an interference call against Marian Gaborik. This power play was a lot more effective, but still did not score. The Kings still played well in front of their goaltender, blocking shots and crowding any skater that came near the blue paint.

Chris Tierney had a good chance near the 16 minute mark, a point blank shot on Jonathan Quick. Tierney caught a pass as he skated through the slot and tried a reverse shot, but Quick got his body in the way.

In general the second period was a frustrating one, with many missed calls and failed chances. The Sharks gained ground on the shot clock, but saw their power play fall to 0-3. With 2:19 left in the period, the Kings had still only taken two shots to the Sharks’ ten.

With 1:23 left in the period, Chris Tierney was called for playing the puck with his hand. The resulting Kings power play was fairly good, keeping the Sharks on their toes. The Sharks weathered the last seconds of the period and finished the second still tied at 1.

The Kings had six shots during the second period, to the Sharks 11.

The Sharks killed off the last seconds of the Tierney penalty and jumped out to a good start in the third. They put a couple of good shots on net in the first 90 seconds.

The period ground along after that, with neither team making any progress to speak of. At 9:40, Milan Lucic was called for slashing and the Sharks power play had another chance. The first 1:50 of the penalty was all Sharks, with the Kings’ penalty killers unable to change or get control of the puck at all. But the Sharks did not score.

With 5:56 left in regulation, the Kings’ Tanner Pearson put the puck over the glass in the defensive zone. The Sharks had only allowed the Kings one shot in the period to that point, and had taken five. Their power play, however, still could not produce a goal.

Peter DeBoer used his timeout with just under four minutes left, after an icing trapped some tired Sharks on the ice.

With 53.8 left in regulation, Tomas Hertl and Dustin Brown received roughing minors. They went to their respective rooms and the teams finished the period 4-on-4.

Heading into overtime, the shots were 27-22 San Jose.

3:47 into overtime, Tanner Pearson ended it after a miscue on the Sharks blue line by Brenden Dillon. Dustin Brown knocked Joonas Donskoi off the puck and Dillon tried to do the same to Brown. The puck escaped and Pearson picked it up behind Dillon and re-entered the Sharks zone two on one with Vincent LeCavalier. Neither Couture, Wingels, nor Hertl could catch him and Roman Polak could not block his shot. Assists went to Dustin Brown and Vincent LeCavalier.

Game Four will be Wednesday at 7:30 PT at SAP center.

Curry-less Warriors Down Rockets For 2-0 Series Advantage

By Shawn Whelchel

sfgate.com photo: Golden State’s Klay Thompson goes for the high percentage points as Thompson help lead the team without injured Stephen Curry in game two on Monday night

Without the services of their injured MVP-Steph Curry-the Golden State Warriors banded together with a solid team effort that featured a cast of supporters stepping into the spotlight in order to take a commanding 2-0 series lead at Oracle on Monday.

The other half of the Splash Brothers tandem-Klay Thompson picked up the slack for his injured teammate, pouring in a game-leading 34 points in the second game of this playoff series, to secure a  115-109 win for the Golden State Warriors at Oracle Arena.

Showcasing the type of depth that has made Golden State a nightmare for teams all year long, a slew of other Warriors stepped up in Curry’s absence to offer the Rockets no reprieve from their ruthless manner of scoring. Andre Iguodala was just one of many who had done so, coming off the bench to score 18 points while shooting a lights-out 7-of-10 from the field.  Shaun Livingston- who replaced the injured Curry with his 11th career playoff start- did his part by contributing 16 points on an even better 7-of-9 from range.

The Rockets main source of offense came from James Harden, whose knack for getting to the free-throw line helped to contribute to his 28 total points on the night. Harden finished with 15 attempts, knocking in 13 free points. Dwight Howard attempted just seven shots on the night, connecting with five, in an effort that looked-at times- lifeless.

It wasn’t easy for Golden State, however. With just under ten minutes to go, the Rockets’ Jason Terry made it a one possession game on a pair of free-throws. But the Warriors responded with an 11-1 run that would ultimately put the dagger in the heart of any comeback attempts from Houston.

The Rockets looked more lively than they did in their stale game one, but were met with an answer almost every time they made a push against Golden State. The team would bend in the fourth, but would show the resilience that helped to make them NBA Champions last year by not breaking.

It was a resilient effort and a display of depth for Golden State, who finished with four starters in double-digits, and 37 points from the bench. The win also gives Curry extra time to heal his ailing ankle, as the Warriors don’t take to the court until Thursday in Houston. With a commanding 2-0 lead, head coach Steve Kerr could decide to give Curry an even longer break and rest his star again.

San Jose Sharks podcast with Mary Lisa Walsh: Kings fighting for their season; Sharks want to put it to bed soon

AP photo: The Los Angeles Kings Anze Kopitar gets a congratulation from his teammates after scoring a first period goal that tied up game two of the NHL Playoffs with the San Jose Sharks at SAP Center on Monday night

On the San Jose Sharks podcast with Mary Lisa Walsh the LA Kings aren’t the desperate road team they’ve been here before for example two years ago they were on the ropes to the Sharks 3-0 and the Sharks remember well what happen in that series when the Kings came back and won it 4-3.  It’s two years ago and some of the same players are with these teams so the Sharks are very aware what’s at stake.

The Sharks players so far who’ve been doing some of the heavy lifting in this series Joe Pavelski, Tomas Hertl, and goaltender Martin Jones. Pavelski has helped offensively and in the games in LA he was instrumental in finding the back end of the net for the Sharks. The Kings players that could light a fire are Anze Kopitar, Millan Lucic, and Jonathan Quick at goal. Quick for the first two games was out of position but looks more improved in game three in San Jose not allowing goals in.

Listen Mary Lisa on the SJ Sharks podcast below and each week right here at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

 

San Francisco Giants podcast with Morris Phillips: Giants looking to rebound from four game road loss as they start homestand

newsday.co.tt file photo: San Francisco Giant pitcher Madison Bumgarner delivers one his pitches back in the 2014 World Series

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Morris Phillips the Giants who open a four game series with the Arizona Diamondbacks at AT&T Park in San Francisco. The Giants are coming off a somewhat tough road trip in Colorado and Los Angeles going 2-4. The Giants dropped two out of three in Colorado and LA. The Giants had to face a tough nemesis in the Rockies slugger Nolan Arenado who clouted out two home runs against San Francisco in the series. Arenado hit two more home runs just Sunday against the Mighty Chicago Cubs for all the runs in that ball game in the 2-0 win.

Giants starters Madison Bumgarner and Matt Cain have struggled of late. Bumgarner was rocked in LA and Cain got his lumps in Colorado both are looking for some home cooking on this upcoming homestand with Arizona, Milwaukee, and San Diego. Bumgarner has raised his ERA to 4.50 as the Dodgers beat him in game one of the series in LA.  The Giants got help from starter Johnny Cueto who retired the first 13 batters he faced against the Dodgers on Saturday but the relievers caved and the Giants lost that game.

There’s plenty more with Morris Phillips your host on the Giants podcast click below to listen in right here at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg; A’s hoping for another great pitching performance from their starters in NY

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg the A’s are coming off a successful series with the Kansas City Royals after taking two of three at the Oakland Coliseum. The A’s got great pitching help from Sonny Gray on Saturday for his second win of the season. Gray pitched seven innings, gave up two runs, and the A’s won game two of that series 5-3.

On Sunday the A’s needed great pitching and every hit they could muster against baseball World Champs in their 3-2 win against the Royals. Billy Burns came through with a two hopper triple that headed into the Royals bullpen. Burns not noted for his top flight speed wound up at third base after challenging the Royals outfielders who are noted for their rifle arms.

Jerry covers the New York Yankees and their pitching staff as the A’s prepare for a three game series in the Bronx followed by trips to Toronto and Detroit.

Listen to Jerry Feitelberg below and every week for the Oakland A’s podcast at http://www.sportsradioservice.com