That’s Amaury Sports and Commentary: Baseball All Star Decision — Tolerating Politics in Sports

2021 All Star Game in Atlanta logo the game is being moved from Atlanta because MLB is opposed to the voter suppression law voted in by the State of Georgia (image from mlb.com)

Baseball All Star Decision — Tolerating Politics in Sports

That’s Amaury Sports and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Major League Baseball has taken action to remove the All Star Game this year in Atlanta, because a decision in that State Legislation about voting ID. Yet, if I leave a couple of complimentary tickets to a friend of mine at a baseball game, they must show and ID in order to get the free tickets. Coca Cola, with headquarters in Atlanta, supports the boycott by baseball and the move to play the ASG someplace else besides Atlanta.

Yet, Coca Cola (a giant in the beverage industry) sell their products in China, a country which today is still one of the world’s biggest human rights violators. Coca Cola is one of the most well-know international brands in China with 150 million servings in that country every single day.

As of 2019, it is well documented that China and the CCP is a top worst offender in civil rights in China. They have murdered, jailed, and detained millions of people who won’t agree with the government of China. A simple web search will confirm this. This fact doesn’t seem to bother Coca Cola or any other big American corporation doing business in/with that country.

How much politics can we tolerate in sports? Baseball just started a season with limited fans in the stands, still some players are getting covid-19, ‘right off the bat’ Thursday night’s Opening Day game between the New York Mets and the Washington Nationals has been postponed because some players were infected with covid-19.

Even as millions are vaccinating, there is still contamination and variants to deal with and we are postponing an All Star Game because of a legal political decision in one single State? Debating this is fine, but should not have sports in the mix, because baseball does better with Home Runs than Legislation.

MLB still has big contractual problems looming, after this season the CBA, (Collective Bargaining Agreement) will be “debated” by owners and union officials. That is where baseball should be debated, not in national politics. The 10th Amendment is left to individual States to make those decisions.

Baseball fans want to talk about baseball, watch baseball, attend games at their baseball parks in their cities; they do not want to talk about this stuff and be fed all this stuff. Atlanta should host the ASG; they worked for years to bring the Midsummer Classic to their great city.

And now the game is taken away from them? Hank Aaron passed on January 22, 2021 in Atlanta, Georgia. He was/is an African-American icon in American sports, a great American and in my opinion the “dignified” Home-run champion of Major League Baseball.

Aaron would have been honored in the city where he was buried, but that will not be possible. The relocation of the All Star Game will cost Georgia $100 million in tourism to that State and officials in Atlanta, Georgia said it would have been a big boost to their economy and would help with recovery after the pandemic.

The best alternative site for this July 13, 2021 ASG I heard was by the Mayor of Milwaukee, Tom Barrett. He told MLB his city wants to host the classic at Milwaukee’s Miller Park. The Mayor said Milwaukee is the city where Hank Aaron began and ended his career, which is absolutely correct, with the Milwaukee Braves and retired with the Milwaukee Brewers. I obviously do not live in Georgia, but as a baseball person this stuff worries me. Like baseball doesn’t have enough problems?

Stay well and stay tuned.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the Oakland A’s lead play by play Spanish radio talent on flagship station 1010 KIQI LeGrande San Francisco and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Sacramento Kings game wrap: Kings can’t hold off Holiday and Bucks 129-128

Milwaukee Bucks guard Jrue Holiday (21) and forward Thanasis Antetokounmpo (43) put the pressure on Sacramento Kings guard Terrence Davis on Sat Apr 3, 2021 at the Golden One Center in Sacramento (AP News photo)

The Sacramento Kings were back in action on Saturday night welcoming in the Milwaukee Bucks to Golden One Center in Sacramento. For the Kings, it was the second night of the back-to-back after playing the Los Angeles Lakers on Friday night. Unfortunately for Kings fans, the Kings weren’t able to beat the Bucks. The Kings fell to the Bucks 129-128 on Saturday night.

Flashback Friday: The Kings welcomed in the Lakers on Friday night. The Lakers were down significant personnel as Lebron James and Anthony Davis were out due to injuries. However, the Kings weren’t able to take advantage of the injured group. The Kings defensive effort lacked as the Lakers blew out the Kings 115-94 in Sacramento.

Saturday game reacp: The Kings were set to take on the Milwaukee Bucks on Saturday night at 7 PM PST in Sacramento.

In the first half, The Kings played hard and kept the game the game close. The Bucks outscored the Kings 31-28 in the first quarter as it was shaping up to be a track meet in Sacramento. In the second quarter, the Kings defense continued to struggle.

The Bucks again outscored the Kings in the second quarter as they managed 30 points compared to the Kings 29. Neither team had a defense that shined in the first half as both teams were pushing the pace on offense. The Kings would head into the second half down 61-57. If the Kings hoped to win the game they would need to limit the Bucks on offense.

In the second half, the Kings came to play. However, the third quarter didn’t go as planned for the Kings. Looking to jumpstart a comeback in the second half, the Kings failed to do so in the third quarter. The Kings allowed the Bucks to score 34 points in the third quarter compared to the Kings 30 points.

That would expand the Bucks lead to 98-91 heading into the final quarter of the game. In the fourth quarter, the Kings weren’t able to complete a comeback. The Kings did outscore the Bucks 37-30 but fell just short as the Bucks defeated the Kings 129-128.

It was a hard-fought battle for the Kings but they weren’t able to put together all four quarters. Leading the way for the Bucks was Jrue Holiday who scored 33 points in the victory. In defeat, De’Aaron Fox and Terence Davis scored 27 points apiece. The Kings will turn to their next game on Monday to get back on track as they have lost three in a row.

Up Next: The Kings will travel to Minnesota to take on the Timberwolves on Monday at 4 PM PST.

Gulls beat down Barracuda 7-3

The San Jose Barracuda and San Diego Gulls battled it out on the ice at FivePoint Arena in Irvine and it wasn’t even close as the Barracuda lose it 7-3 on Sat Apr 3, 2021 (@ sjbarracuda photo)

by Marko Ukalovic

IRVINE, Calif—The San Diego Gulls scored four goals in the third period to break open a tight game in a 7-3 victory over the San Jose Barracuda on Saturday evening at FivePoint Arena.

The win was the first one in regulation for the Gulls over the Barracuda this season. They have won six games in a row and went undefeated on its four-game homestand. The ‘Cuda have lost four of its past five games.

San Jose (7-7-4-1) drew first blood halfway through the first period. Brinson Pasichnuk’s shot from the left point was initially saved by Gulls goaile Olle Eriksson-Ek but the puck leaked out to the right and Maxim Letunov cleaned up the rebound for his third goal of the season at the 9:26 mark.

It was Pasichnuk’s first assist in his last 11 games.

San Diego (15-10-0-0) tied it at 1-1 late in the opening 20 minutes. ‘Cuda goalie Josef Korenar made a stop on a point blank shot from Matt Lorito. The rebound found its way behind the net where Hunter Drew centered the puck back out front to Lorito, who made good on his second attempt with a wrist shot into an empty net for his third goal of the season at the 17:29 mark.

San Jose regained the lead in the second period while short-handed. Alex True created a two-on-one odd man rush when he stripped the puck off of Kodie Curran at the Gulls blue line. True gave it up to Lean Bergmann who skated in all alone on Eriksson before backhanding a cross ice pass back to True for an easy tap in into the back of the net. True’s seventh goal of the season came at the 7:49 mark.

Bergmann, who has yet to score a goal for San Jose this season, finished with a two-point game.

The Gulls scored the equalizer after a miscue by three ‘Cuda players in its own zone. The puck leaked out to a wide open Sam Carrick who quickly made a deke before sliding the puck underneath Korenar for his 12th goal of the season at the 12:15 mark.

San Diego gained its first lead of the game late in the middle frame on the power play. Vinni Lettieri sent a cross ice pass over to Chase De Leo who buried a one-timer from close range past Korenar for his ninth goal of the season at the 19:38 mark.

The Gulls scored an insurance goal early to start the third period. Benoit-Oliver Groulx sent a pass back up to the point where Keegan Lowe fired a slapshot off the glove of Korenar for his second goal of the season at the 1:39 mark.

San Diego put the game away with two power play goals in under four minutes as San Jose was called for three minor penalties in a six minute span.

Curran redeemed himself when he snapped home a wrist shot top-shelf past Korenar for his fouth goal of the season and second power play goal for San Diego at the 11:54 mark.

Then Jacob Perreault found Andrew Agozzino camped out all alone along the right post with a backdoor pass and Agozzino tapped it home for San Diego’s third power play goal of the game and his seventh of the season at the 15:38 mark.

Perreault finished off the scoring for the Gulls when his backhander from a tough angle hit off the post past Korenar for his second goal of the season at the 18:35 mark.

San Jose scored the game’s final goal with 24 seconds left when Sasha Chmelevski found Joel Kellman backdoor at the left post for an easy tap in goal, Kellman’s third goal of the season.

Eriksson-Ek finished the game with 31 saves on 34 shots to earn the vicotry. Korenar made 21 saves on 28 shots in suffering his first regulation loss of the season.

GAME NOTES: San Jose went 0-for-4 on the power play. San Diego was 3-for-6.

San Diego have scored seven goals in back-to-back games.

De Leo and Andrew Poturalski each had two assists on the night.

The Three Stars of the Game were: 1) De Leo 2) Perreault 3) Lowe

UP NEXT: The Barracuda return home to host the Henderson Silver Knights for a two-games series on Tuesday 4/6 at 5:00pm at Solar4America Ice.

Sharks Beat L.A. 3-2; SJ on four game winning streak

The Los Angeles Kings defenceman Mikey Anderson (left) tries to disrupt the San Jose Sharks left winger Evander Kane’s puck control (right) at Staples Center in Los Angeles on Sat Apr 3, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Mary Walsh

The San Jose Sharks won 3-2 against the Kings in Los Angeles Saturday for their fourth win in a row. Sharks goals came from Kevin Labanc, Evander Kane and Dylan Gambrell. Martin Jones made 35 saves for the win. Dustin Brown and Trevor Moore scored for the Kings and Jonathan Quick made 20 saves in the loss.

This four game win streak has brought the Sharks within one point of a playoff position. After the game, Sharks Captain Logan Couture said:

“Definitely happy with how we’ve played this last stretch. I could be wrong, but I think we won six of eight. So, playing pretty good hockey, playing our brand of hockey that the coaching staff wanted us to play. Took us a little while to get here, but with new systems it does take a while sometimes. So, happy with where we’re at right now.”

He is not wrong. The Sharks have won six of their last eight. Their goaltender, Martin Jones, has won seven of his last ten starts.

The Sharks scored early again, with a goal at 4:37 of the first period. Kevin Labanc took a shot into a mass of bodies in front of the net. The puck bounced around in the traffic before going in off of a defender. Assists went to Nikolai Knyzhov and Evander Kane.

Dustin Brown tied the game at 6:55. Anze Kopitar sent the puck to the net from the boards and Brown tipped it in before jumping over Jones. Assists went to Kopitar and Alex Iafallo.

Marc-Edouard Vlasic sustained an upper body injury during the first period and he did not return for the second or third. The injury may have occurred early in the first and Vlasic only played about six minutes. Bob Boughner said that the defenseman would be reassessed in the morning.

The Kings outshot the Sharks 18-5 in the first. They got a little help there from one power play but that was only worth two shots to them. The Sharks were good in the face-off circle, winning 53% of them.

Evander Kane gave the Sharks their second lead of the night at 15:04 of the second period. Couture’s backhand feed from below the goal line found Kane going to the net. Kane held onto the puck with defenders closing in him. He waited until the last moment, with the puck almost out of reach ahead of him, them swept it in at a bad angle with Quick at the top of the blue paint. Assists went to Couture and Labanc.

Trevor Moore tied it back up for the Kings with a short-handed goal. With under a minute left in the period, Moore battled for the puck in the neutral zone and won the battle. He slowed by the net and managed to poke it in after his first shot rebounded back to him.

The shots were near even at 11-10 Sharks in the second. The teams each had a power play in the second but neither penalty kill allowed a shot. the Kings won the face-off battle 60%-40% in the period.

Dylan Gambrell scored the game winning goal at 15:23 of the third. John Leonard sent the puck deep into the o-zone and Jonathan Quick went behind the net to collect it. He found himself under more pressure than anticipated and wound up turning the puck over to Leonard, who sent it right up to Gambrell who had an open net. That was Gambrell’s third goal of the season.

There was just one penalty in the third period, and it went to Los Angeles. The Sharks power play got two shots on the net but were still out-shot by the Kings 9-7 in the period. The Sharks finished the game with a 53% face-off win percentage.

The Sharks next play on Tuesday against the Anaheim Ducks back in San Jose at 7:30 PM PT.

Giants shutout in series finale 4-0; M’s Flexen blanks Giants for five innings

Seattle Mariners starter Chris Flexen pauses between pitches during the third inning at T Mobile Park in Seattle against the San Francisco Giants on Sat Apr 3, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

After picking up their first win of the season, the San Francisco Giants wanted to leave Seattle with a victory.

Unfortunately, Mitch Hanigar and Ty France thought otherwise, as the two of them each hit solo home runs and the Seattle Mariners defeated the Giants 4-0 in the series finale at T-Mobile Park,

Chris Flexen went the minimum five innings to pick up the win for the Mariners, as he scattered just four hits, walking two and striking out six.

France gave Flexen the only run that he would he need, when he hit his first home run of the season off of Logan Webb in the bottom of the third inning.

Webb went 5.1 innings in his season debut, as he allowed three runs on seven hits, walking three and striking out seven.

Taylor Trammell gave the Mariners their second run of the game in the bottom of the fourth inning, as he doubled to right field to score Evan White.

Dylan Moore made it 3-0 in the bottom of the fifth inning, as he doubled to left field to score Trammell.

Hanigar drove in the final run of the game, as he launched his first home run of the season into the seats off of Reyes Moronta in the bottom of the seventh inning.

Donovan Solano went 2-for-4 on the evening, as he is hitting .500 thru the first three games of the season.

Mike Yastrzemski picked up his first hit of the season, as he went 1-for-4 and is now hitting .077 on the season.

Tommy La Stella also picked up his first hit of the season, as he went 1-for-2 as the designated hitter.

Curt Casali made his Giants debut behind the plate, as he went 1-for-3 in giving Buster Posey the night off after Posey started the first two games of the season.

On the evening, the Giants went 0-for-5 with runners in scoring position and left eight runners on base.

NOTES: According to Stats, Inc., the Giants Opening Day roster had an average age of 30 years, 317 days (second-oldest in the Majors), while the Mariners, conversely, had the third youngest (27 years, 285 days).

After opening the season in Seattle, the Giants will take Sunday off before returning to the State of California and will face the San Diego Padres on Monday at Petco Park.

UP NEXT: Anthony DeSclafani makes his Giants debut on Monday night, as the right-hander will face Adrian Morejon.

A’s Irvin can’t fool Astro hitting in 9-1 offensive barrage

Hit high the Houston Astros Yordan Alvarez says “good bye baseball” with a three run fourth inning home run against the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Sat Apr 3, 2021 (AP News photo)

Houston. 9. 13. 1

Oakland. 1. 3. 0

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–The A’s came into this afternoon’s game still looking for their first win of the season. Slow starts are nothing new for this team; in eight of the last ten seasons, they have been 1-2 after three games. They tried today to join that not particularly prestigious club. (Spoiler alert: they didn’t) in a 9-1 shellacking to the Houston Astros on Saturday.

Last night’s contest threatened to become a prelude to disaster when Ramón Laureano had to leave the game after injuring his hand. It turned out to be merely a contusion, and the A’s centerfielder is listed as day to day.

Cole Irvin, Oakland’s starting pitcher, is a 27 year old lefty with a lifetime won-loss record of 2-2 and an equally unimpressive ERA of 6.75 for the Philadelphia Phillies, but his numbers for the A’s this spring were impressive: 1-1, ERA 1.00 over five games, three of which he started. He gave up ten hits in eighteen innings, surrendered only one home run, and struck out 18 opponents against three walks.

Irvin’s counterpart on the mound was the veteran right hander Lance McCullers, Jr. He brought with him a career record of 32-25, 3.70 against all comers and 5-2, 4.04 against the A’s. For 2020, those figures were 3-3, 3.93 and 5-2, 4.04, respectively.

It didn’t take long for Houston to get to Irvin. A hit batter, Michael Brantley, with one out, followed by Aledmys Díaz’s double off the left center field wall, and an RBI base knock by Kyle Tucker, and Oakland was trailing by a tally with runners at the corners. But Carlos Correa hit into an around the horn double play, and, just like that, Irvin had limited the damage.

McCullers got himsef in trouble in the bottom of the first and then, with a little help frome home plate umpire Dan Bellino, also escaped with minimal damage. Lead off walks to Mark Canha and Matt Olson, followed by a Matt Chapman strike out on a pair of wicked cutters after the count had reached 1-1, and Mitch Moreland´s RBI single to center evened the score with two on and none out. But Chad Pinder went down swinging, and Stephen Piscotty was called out on a 3-2 knuckle curve that seemed too many, including. me, to have missed the plate.

The Astros took the lead back in the second when Jose Altluve’s bases loaded two out single to left brought home Yordán Alvarez, who had opened the frame with a single to center. But, in spite of a walk to Yuri Gurriel and singles by Myles Straw and Altuve, Irvin wriggled out of the jam, striking out Martín Maldonado and Chas McCormiock, pinch hitting for Brantley, who left the game due to right wrist discomfort.

Irvin held the Astros in check until the fifth. He hit McCormick with a pitch and surrendered a single when Díaz´s line drive just barely eluded Chapman’s glove and landed in left for a single. Irvin got the left handed Tucker to pop out to short. This brought Correa to the plate, the righty-lefty match up, calling for a right handed hurler to face Houston’s shortstop.

Bob Melvin brouht in Lou Trevino to relieve his young starter. The tactic worked; Correa struck out. But last year’s rule change meant that Trevino had to pitch to the left handed hitting Alvarez, who blasted the second pitch he saw over the center field fence, just to the right of the 388 foot sign.

This gave Houston a 5-1 lead and Irvin a line of 4-1/3 innings pitched, 7 hits, one walk and 4 runs , all earned allowed, two strike outs. His pitch count was 82, with 55 strikes. Trevino retired all seven of the other batters he faced before being lifted for Burch Smith who took over mound duties to start the eighth.

Ryne Stanek replaced Lance McCullers to open the Oakland sixth. He left with a line of five innings pitched, one run, earned, two hits, and three walks charged to him. He struck out seven. 54 of his 95 pitches counted as strikes

Enoli Paredes, in turn, relieved McCullers at the start of the home eighth. getting Aramis García out on a grounder back to the mound. Then, hope rose eternal, and Oakland loaded the bases on a single Olson, sandwiched between walks to Canha and Chapman. But Brooks Raley came to Houston´s rescue and struck out Jed Lowrie, pinch hitting for Moreland, swinging. Hope rose again when Chad Pinder clouted one out to deep right center, only to die on the warning track in the glove of Myles Straw.

Reymin Guduan couldn´t hold the Astros within what they had, just a few minutes earlier, seemed like striking distance. Maldonado opened the visitors´ninth with a single to right. Altuve walked. McCormick doubled, sending Maldonado home and Altuve to third. He scored and McCormick replaced him on third when Díaz singled to left. McCormick then scored on a wild pitch to Tucker, while Díaz moved up to second. Another wild pitch sent Díaz to third. Correa broke the monotony with a single to center. He went to second on yet another wild pitch. Finally, Guduan got out of the inning by retiring Alvarez and Gurriel.

The As went down 1,2,3 in their half of the ninth.

McCullers got the win; Raley, the save. The loss went to Irvin.

Oh, well, tomorrow is another day, and Sean Manaea will try to save one game of the series before the Dodgers come to town on Monday. José Urquidy will try to extend Houston’s winning streak to four. Game time is 1:07 at the Oakland Coliseum.

San Jose Barracuda podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Barracuda take on Gulls tonight in San Diego

The San Jose Barracuda forward Zach Gallant (60) takes a shot against the Bakersfield Condors on Tue Mar 30, 2021 in Bakersfield (@sjbarracuda photo)

#1 Marko, how did the Barracuda (7-6-4-1) come from two goals down to defeat the Bakersfield Condors (11-9-0-1) with four unanswered goals for a 4-3 win?

#2 Barracuda goaltender Josef Korenar saved 30 shots and picked up his fourth win of the season

#3 It’s not often you see the Condors goaltender Stuart Skinner give up four goals for a loss after stopping 31 shots

#4 The Barracuda’s Joachim Blichfeld got two assists it was his first assists in ten games

#5 The Barracuda are in San Diego tonight at 7:00pm to face the Gulls. San Diego has always been a tough place for the Barracuda talk about how you see the match up tonight.

Marko does the Barracuda podcasts each Saturday night at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Jose Sharks podcast with Matt Harrington: Jones delivers shutting out Kings 3-0

San Jose Sharks goaltender Martin Jones (31) stopped 30 shots against the Los Angeles Kings on Fri Apr 2, 2021 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles (AP News photo)

#1 The San Jose Sharks (16-`6-4) goaltender Martin Jones stopped all 30 Los Angeles Kings (14-15-6) shots in a 3-0 shutout at Staples Center to open up the two game series.

#2 Matt it was a game where the Kings just couldn’t get any offense going and they were throwing at the net all night but just couldn’t light the lamp.

#3 Sharks got goals in each of the three periods from Rudolf Balcers, Tomas Hertl, and Timo Meier.

#4 The win got the Sharks closer to a playoff spot in the NHL Western Conference and it’s the Sharks third straight win in a row.

#5 The Sharks and Kings battle again tonight at Staples Center tell us how you see this match and will Jones get the call between the pipes again?

Join Matt for the Sharks podcasts each Saturday night at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

A’s Luzardo coughs up 2 homers and 5 earned runs in 9-5 loss to Astros

Houston Astros baserunner Jose Altuve (27) reaches down to touch home plate behind Oakland A’s catcher Aramis Garcia (37) on a Michael Brantley double in the top of the fourth inning (AP News photo)

Houston. 9. 14. 0

Oakland. 5. 8. 1

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Ever since they traded Sean Doolittle and Ryan Madson to Washington for Blake Treinen, Sheldon Neuse and Jesús Luzardo July of 2017, the A’s have had high expectations for the Peruvian born, Venezuelan and state-side educated left hander Luzardo.

While he hasn’t yet fulfilled the team’s hopes, it hasn’t been for lack of talent or motivation but because of nagging problems with the shoulder of his pitching arm. Indeed, he underwent Tommy John surgery at 18, while still in high school. That was in 2016. He began last season in the bullpen and ended up starting in game 3 of the division series. In between he threw his first 100 pitch game. His record for the season was 3-2, 4.12.

Today, he left the game trailing 5-2 after five innings, in which he sent 92 balls to the plate, 56 of which were strikes. All five runs were earned, and Luzardo gave up eight hits, two of which were round trippers. He walked one and struck out eight Astros. Burch Smith relieved him to open the sixth. The A’s ended up losing their second straight game to the Astros 9-5 at the Oakland Coliseum.

Luzardo’s opposite number for the visitors was their promising right hander, Cristián Javier, who had finished third in last year´s rookie of the year balloting.

Houston drew first blood in the third, capitalizing on José Altuve’s short stature and the long ball prowess of Michael Brantey and Alex Bregman. The Astros’ second sacker opened the frame by taking a four pitch walk. Brantley followed with a double off the right-center field wall.

He looked out at second, and the A’s shortstop Elvis Andrus thought he was. Second base umpire Sean Barber did not. Alex Bregman then blasted a three and two 96 mph four seam fast ball over both the glove of a leaping Mark Canha and the left field wall, Luzardo settled down to retire the next three batters in order.

But the Astros added a couple of runs to their 3-0 lead in the very next inning. Yuli Gurriel led off with a homer to left. Two outs later, Altuve beat out a grounder to Chapman. He scored on Brantley’s resounding double to center.

Oakland finally got on the board in their half of the fourth. Canha led off with a single to third and scored on Laureano’s powerful triple. Olson was hit by a pitch, and, after Chapman fanned, Laureano came home on Mitch Moreland’s sacrifice fly to medium right field.

You can chalk that run up to Laureano’speed. After Lowrie lined a single to center, Astro manager Dusty Baker decided that Javier had pitched enough for the day and replaced him on the mound with Bryan Abreu, who closed out the inning by getting Andrus to hit into a force out at second.

Houston’s young starter left with no decision, having yielded two runs, both earned, on three hits over three and two-thirds innings. He gave up three hits and got four strike outs while hitting one batter. 46 of his 73 offerings were strikes.

With Smith on the mound for Oakland in the top of the seventh, Houston managed to tack on another to their lead when Altuve walked and advanced to third on single by Bregman. The speedy Altuve then managed to score on Kyle Tucker’s sacrifice pop up to Andrus in shallow right field.

The Athletics came roaring back in the bottom half of that inning, Chad Pinder, pinch hitting for Ka’ai Tom with Jed Lowrie, who had walked, on first, blasted a Brooks Raley 90 mph cut fast ball into the left center field seats to cut the Astros’ advantage to 6-4. They narrowed their deficit to a single tally on Olson’s two base hit, a productive ground out to second by Chapman, and a pinch hit ground out to short by a pinch hitting Stephen Piscotty off of Blake Taylor.

The deficit increased, however, in the Astros’ ninth. Jake Diekman made an inauspcious season debut by giving up a single to right by the pesky Altuve, who stopped at third on Brantley’s subsequent double to right. Diekman then loaded the bases with an intentional pass to Bregman.

Left handed hitter Kyle Tucker, with the shift on and the infield drawn in, slapped a hard bounder to Andrus, playing to the right of second base. The ball bounced off the shortstop’s glove and into center field for a two run single and an 8-4 Houston lead.

Althogh Diekman struck out the next two batters, the wheels continued to fall off Oakland’s wagon, JB Windelkin walked Gurriel, moving Bregman and Tucker up a base each. Myles Straw hit what looked like an inning ending grounder to Olson. But the Gold Glove winning first baseman bobbled the ball, and Straw beat his throw to Windelken at first. That was the final score, Houston winning 9-5.

Ryan Pressly closed out the game for the ‘stros with a scoreless ninth. Abreu got the win for his two and a third innings of one hit ball.

The A’s used five pitchers, Luzardo, Smith, Romo, Diekman, and Wendelken, in a losing cause.

The teams will go at it again tomorrow at 1:07. Lance McCullers, Jr. will take the mound for Houston. Col Irvin will make his debut for Oakland.

The A’s are now two games down with, let us hope, 160 to go.

Giant Veterans come through in 6-3 win

San Francisco Giants hitter Buster Posey goes deep with a third inning home run against the Seattle Mariners at T Mobile Field on Fri Apr 2, 2021

By Jeremy Kahn

After a tough loss on Opening Night, the San Francisco Giants turned to their veteran right-hander in the second game of the season.

Johnny Cueto went 5.2 innings, allowing three runs on six hits, while walking three and striking out seven; however, it was another veteran who came up big.

Evan Longoria went 2-for-3 with three runs batted in, as the Giants defeated the Seattle Mariners 6-3 at T-Mobile Park.

It was the second big game in a row for the veteran, as Longoria went 2-for-4 with a home run and a run batted in and is now hitting .571 on the season.

Another Giants veteran continues to have a hot start, and this one is surprise to anyone who is a part of the Giants organization.

Buster Posey, who opted out of last season to help his wife Kristen raise the twins that they adopted during the pandemic is also off to a hot start.

Posey went 1-for-4 in the opener, and that one hit was Poseys third career Opening Day home run.

Once again, Posey went 1-for-4 and like in the opener, that one hit was a home run, his second on the season.

Following seeing his bullpen blow a lead and lose in extra innings, Gabe Kapler turned to them after he pulled Cueto with two outs in the sixth inning and throwing 105 pitches.

The trio of Wandy Peralta, Tyler Rogers and Jake McGee pitched the final 3.1 innings, allowing one walk and striking out five on their way to evening their record on the season.

McGee, the new closer in 2021, pitched a perfect ninth inning with two strikeouts to pick up his first save of the season.

Yusei Kikuchi went 6.0 innings, allowing three runs on six hits, walking one and striking out 10 in his season debut.

Kikuchi turned the ball to Drew Steckenrider, but the left-hander gave up three runs on two hits in just 0.2 innings of work and lost for the first time in the early season.

Donovan Solano went three-for-five with two runs scored and drove in two runs, and is hitting .500 in the first two games of the season.

NOTES: Brandon Belt, Brandon Crawford and Buster Posey each started their 10th Opener for the Giants on Thursday night, and tied Juan Marichal for the fifth-most Opening Day starts since the Giants moved to California in 1958.

The four home runs by the Giants in the Opener marked the fourth time that they hit four home runs, tying the second most in team history. Longoria, Posey, Austin Slater and Alex Dickerson. The Giants also hit four home runs on Opening Day in 1963, 1983 and 2016, just one shy of the team record of five, when they turned the trick in 1964, when Willie Mays (2), Orlando Cepeda, Jim Ray Hart and Tom Haller all hit home runs.

This is the 12th year in a row that the Giants have opened their season on the road that dates back to 2010, and is the third longest streak in the major leagues since 1961.

UP NEXT: Logan Webb will make his season debut, while the Mariners will send right-hander Chris Flexen to the mound.