Preview: Oakland opens up three game set with Houston Friday night at Minute Maid Field

Oakland A’s starter Cole Irvin delivering here against the Los Angeles Angels on Mon Aug 8, 2022 at the Oakland Coliseum will be starting on this current road trip for the A’s (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s are in Houston to start a three-game series with the Astros this weekend. The A’s have lost five in a row and will not have an easy task facing the AL West leader. The Astros are tied with the New York Yankees for the best record in the American League.

Each team has won 71 and lost 41. The A’s record is the opposite, with 41 wins and 71 losses. The A’s are on pace to lose 103 games. The A’s and Astros have met 12 times this season. Surprisingly, the A’s and the Astros have each won six games. The A’s swept the Astros in Oakland the last time the teams met.

The Astros made a couple of deals at the trading deadline to strengthen an already potent lineup. They made a deal with the Baltimore Orioles for Trey Mancini. Mancini is hitting .267 with 13 homers and 48 RBIs.

The Astros needed help in their catching department. They acquired Christian Vasquez from the Boston Red Sox. Vasquez is hitting. 278 with eight homers and 42 RBIs. Mancini can fill in at first base in place of Yuli Guriel when needed. Mancini can play in the outfield and be used in the DH slot.

The Astros have a solid infield with perennial All-Star Jose Altuve at second base. Rookie Jeremy Pena has been solid at shortstop, and Alex Bregman handles the hot corner. The Astro outfield is patrolled by Chas McCormick in left,

Jake Meters in center, and Kyle Tucker in right. Tucker loves to hit against the A’s pitching. Oakland pitchers will have to find a way to limit the damage that Tucker can provide. Astros’ big bopper, Yordan Alvarez, is another dangerous hitter. Alvarez is hitting a robust .295. The big (six-foot, five inches tall slugger) has blasted 31 dingers and knocked in 74.

The A’s will send Adam Oller (1-5, 7.63 ERA) to the mound Friday night. The Astros will counter with Luis Garcia (8-8, 3.93 ERA). The A’s have not announced their starter for Saturday’s game. Lance McCullers, Jr. will make his first start of the year for Houston.

McCullers is coming off the 60-day IL. Lefty Cole Irvin (6-9, 2.92 ERA) has been pitching well for Oakland. In his last start against the Angels, Irvin went eight innings and allowed one run and five hits. He lost the game 1-0 as the A’s offense failed to give him any run support. Christian Javier (6-8, 3.14 ERA) goes for Houston.

The A’s made a couple of roster moves on Wednesday. The A’s brought up outfielder CAl Stevenson from the Triple-A Las Vegas Aviators. The A’s designated Jed Lowrie for assignment. Lowrie was in his third stint as an Athletic.

Oakland has seven days to either trade or release him. Lowrie believes he still has some gas left in his tank and hopes he can continue his career with another team.

The A’s, as mentioned above, have lost five straight and eight of the last nine. Oakland is 9-10 since the All-Star break, including the three-game sweep of the Astros. They are 15-16 in their last 31. The A’s offense went to sleep in the last five games.

They are hoping to get back on track against the Astros this weekend. The A’s have 50 games left to play. They will be looking at the performances of young players such as Nick Allen, Jonah Bride, Vimael Machin, Cal Stevenson, and Skye Bolt.

Their veterans Stephen Vogt, Elvis Andrus, Stephen Piscotty, Chad Pinder, and Tony Kemp may see limited playing time in the last 50 games.

It’s been a tough season for the A’s fans. The team is definitely in transition. The last 50 games will be a showcase for the young players.

Some of the veterans will not be back next year. Let’s hope the A’s can play well and hope they can bounce back in 2023. Taking two out of three from Houston would be a step in the right direction.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: Can A’s put three game sweep by Angels in review mirror; Oakland heads for Houston on Friday night

Steven Duggar heads home to score for the Los Angeles Angels in the top of the 12th inning to break a 4-4 tie and eventually get the Angels a 5-4 win at the Oakland Coliseum against the Oakland A’s as A’s pitcher Austin Pruitt (29) watches on Wed Aug 10, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 Jerry another tough loss for the Oakland A’s on Wednesday afternoon as they lose it to the Los Angeles Angels as Magneuris Sierra played hero hitting a tenth inning single to tie the game in the top of the tenth inning 4-4 and Sierra did it again with an RBI double in the top of the 12th that turned out to be the game winning hit Angels win 5-4 at the Oakland Coliseum.

#2 This was the second time the last place A’s have lost an entire homestand this time with five straight loses, two to the San Francisco Giants and three to the Angels.

#3 The A’s just couldn’t do anything Angels closer Jaime Barria who pitched three innings who gave up just one hit and one strike out. Halos manager Phil Nevin said that “nothing fazes him.”

#4 For the Angels and A’s both teams battled right down to the end as the Angels got help from Sierra in the tenth and 12th and the A’s Ramon Luareano got RBI singles.

#5 The A’s who are coming off a complete sweep of their last homestand will try to get back on the winning side again starting a with a seven game road trip on Friday night in Houston. For the A’s Adam Oller (1-5, 7.63) will get the start and for the Astros Luis Garcia (8-8, 3.93) a 5:10 pm PDT first pitch at Minute Maid Field.

Join Jerry Feitelberg for the A’s podcasts Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Headline Sports podcast with Jessica Kwong: After 50 years in baseball Eck hangs it up; Padres finally score a run after 26 innings; plus more

Dennis Eckersley pictured during a pre game ceremony before the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox on Aug 19, 2017 at Fenway Park. Eckersley announced his retirement from broadcasting on Aug 8, 2022 (AP News file photo)

On Headline Sports podcast with Jessica:

#1 Jessica, Boston Red Sox broadcaster Dennis Eckersley is calling it quits after 50 years in Major League Baseball. Eckersley started doing color on the Red Sox TV network NESN in 2003, Eck 67 is excited to spend time with his wife Jennifer, his children and grandchildren.

#2 Jessica the San Diego Padres were on a huge slide they were on a six game losing streak and had not scored a run in 26 innings, they have some big boppers in their line up with Fernando Tatis Jr, Manny Machado, and Juan Soto but the bats had been deafening.

#3 After losing five straight games New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone called a team meeting to clear the air. Boone said that the Yankees have a lot on the line and what their playing for is a championship. The Yankees do have a good lead in the AL East with a 10.5 game lead over second place Toronto.

#4 Jessica, Jason Heyward started his Major League career with the Atlanta Braves in 2010 and then went to the Chicago Cubs in 2016 and after eight seasons. Heyward and the Cubs have agreed to part ways. Heyward is will not finish his eighth year at $184 million deal with the Cubs.

#5 Jessica, the New York Mets have been almost unstoppable winning eight of their last ten games and are some seven games on top of the Atlanta Braves. There is a buzz in New York about another subway series the last won being in 2000 between the Mets and Yankees.

Join Jessica for Headline Sports podcast every other Wednesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Bullpen Blues: Giants can’t get off the field twice in rough 13-7 loss to the Padres

By Morris Phillips

Twice on Wednesday afternoon, the Giants needed “shut down” innings. Instead they got beat down by the potent Padres’ lineup. The result was a 13-7 loss that once again has the team confronting its reality on the outside of the postseason chase.

And the even-more troubling aside? The beefed-up Padres, who figure to be a menace within the NL West for years to come, are gaining their stride as witnessed by newly-acquired Juan Soto’s swagger-filled summation of the afternoon.

“We showed it today,” Juan Soto said. “We’re coming back from everything.”

Soto’s overanxious path to Austin Slater’s single in the third inning allowed the ball to get by him, resulting in Slater taking third base and two runs scoring. That was the highlight of the Giants’ four-run inning that, briefly, had them in control.

But in the bottom of the inning, the first seven Padres reached base in a six-run answer that chased Giants’ starter Jakob Junis and gave San Diego a 6-4 lead. Soto singled as the inning’s third batter to load the bases. That would set the stage for a gaudy, four-hit afternoon for the hosts with the bases loaded.

Junis’ line for the afternoon was six runs allowed with only seven outs recorded. Since returning from his hamstring injury in June, he hasn’t regained his stride. That’s especially frustrating since he outgrew expectations that he would be a short-stint opener, and instead blossomed into a full-fledged starter. Now he’s saddled with a five-game stretch of appearances that haven’t gone as many as five innings.

“I just wanted to go out there and try to give the team a chance to win and I didn’t do that,” Junis said. “The offense came back and took the lead. Just as a pitching staff we couldn’t do it today.”

After recording the first out of the inning, Junis gave way to Alex Young, who gave up an RBI single and a RBI groundout to Austin Nola that scored Chris Drury.

After Young stabilized things in the fourth and fifth innings, the Giants answered in the sixth with three runs. Austin Wynns and Joc Pederson came up with RBI hits in that frame that allowed the Giants to regain the lead, 7-6.

But for the second time, the Giants couldn’t back their offense and the Padres came up with a second, massive rally. First, Yunior Marte allowed a three-run homer to Drury, and the Padres regained the lead, 9-7. But Marte remained in the game, and two batters later, he also allowed an RBI double to Ha-Seong Kim. Brandon Belt’s throwing error stained Jarlin Garcia’s entrance, then Garcia became his own worst enemy by allowing Nola’s two-run homer to cap a seven-run rally.

“You don’t see too many six spots and seven spots in the same game,” manager Bob Melvin said of his Padres.

The Giants have Thursday off, and they open a three-game set against the Pirates on Friday night. With 51 games remaining, they’re 7 1/2 games behind the Brewers, the prerequisite hurdle to attempting to catch the Padres for a wild-card spot.

Angels win 5-4 in 12 innings sweep A’s in three-game series

Magneuris Sierra swings for an RBI double in the top of the 12th inning at the Oakland Coliseum for the Los Angeles Angels against the Oakland A’s on Wed Aug 10, 2022 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s lost their fifth straight game on Wednesday afternoon at the Oakland Coliseum. It took the Los Angeles Angels twelve innings to down the A’s. The Green and Gold fought hard, but they still came up short. The Angels won the game 5-4.

The A’s had a couple of new faces in the lineup. Lefty J.P.Sears, acquired in the trade with the Yankees for Frankie Montas, made his first start as an Athletic. Sears was impressive as he went five and 1/3rd innings and allowed three hits and two runs.

The other new face was rookie Cal Stevenson. Stevenson was in center field, and he made his family and the A’s fans when he collected his first Major League in the sixth inning.

The Angels put three on the board in the top of the sixth. With one out shortstop, Andrew Velasquez reached on an infield single. Second baseman David Fletcher, a longtime A’s irritant, singled to put men on at first and second.

A’s manager Mark Kotsay brought in lefty Sam Moll to face the Angels’ superstar slugger, Shohei Ohtani. Moll struck him out. The next hitter, Luis Rengifo, sent Moll’s pitch over the wall in left field to put the Angels ahead 3-0.

The A’s scored three runs in their half of the seventh. Lefty Aaron Loup was now pitching for LA. A’s catcher Stephen Vogt walked to start the inning. Loup retired Elvis Andrus and Chad Pinder on fly balls to center.

The Angels brought in righty Andrew Wantz to pitch. Wantz walked Nick Allen and Cal Stevenson to load the bases. Tony Kemp doubled to clear the bases. Kemp was out trying to make it to third. The A’s and Angels are tied at three apiece.

There was no scoring by either team in the eighth or ninth innings. Dany Jimenez was on the mound for Oakland in the tenth. Former SF Giant, Steven Duggar, was the ghost runner. Jimenez retired Max Stassi for the first out.

Angels’ centerfielder Magneuris Sierra singled to drive in Duggar to put the Angels ahead 4-3. The A’s tied the game in their half of the inning. Skye Bolt was the ghost runner. Cal Stevenson’s sacrifice bunt sent Bolt to third.

Jaime Barria retired Kemp for the second out. Ramon Laureano singled to drive in Bolt to make it 4-4. Neither team scored in the 11th. 

In the 12th, Duggar was the ghost runner again. Sierra doubled to drive him in with the Angels’ fifth run. Jaime Barria got the last three outs of the game to earn his first career save. The Angels win 5-4.

Game Notes: With the loss, the A’s are now 41-71. They lost all five games on the homestand. The Angels improved to 49-63.

The A’s used seven pitchers Wednesday afternoon. Austin Pruitt was the losing pitcher. Barria earned a win and a save.

The line score for Oakland was four runs, seven hits, and one error. The Angels’ line was five runs, six hits, and no errors.

The hitting stars for Oakland were Tony Kemp and Ramon Laureano. Kemp had two doubles and three RBIs. Laureano had two singles, a double, and one RBI.

The A’s were four-for 44, with runners in scoring position for the five-game homestand. The A’s set a new record in baseball by going 71 games without a triple.

The A’s are off on Thursday. They are off to Texas for three games with the Houston Astros and four with the Texas Rangers. On Friday the A’s will be starting Adam Oller (1-5, 7.63) the Astros will be starting Luis Garcia (8-8, 3.93) a 5:10 pm PDT first pitch at Minute Maid Field.

The time of the game was 3:45. 8,286 fans were on hand to see the A’s lose their fifth straight game.

Machado, Soto power Padres past Giants 7-4

San Diego Padre Manny Machado flips the bat away after cracking a three run home run in the bottom of the ninth inning against the San Francisco Giants at Petco Park in San Diego on Tue Aug 8, 2022 (AP News photo)

By Daniel Dullum

Tuesday, August 9, 2022

Manny Machado’s tie-breaking three-run home run in the bottom of the ninth inning lifted San Diego to a 7-4 victory Tuesday over the San Francisco Giants at Petco Park.

The win snapped a five-game losing streak for the Padres that included a 26-inning scoreless skid. San Diego is 1-5 since acquiring Juan Soto and Josh Bell from Washington at the trade deadline.

Tim Hill (3-0) struck out Joc Pederson to end the Giants’ ninth and pick up the win in relief. The Padres still remain 16 games behind NL West-leading Los Angeles and hold a one-game lead over Milwaukee for the third NL Wild Card berth. San Francisco trails the Dodgers by 22 ½ games.

After Tyler Rogers (2-4) took the mound for the Giants in the bottom of the ninth, Jurickson Profar singled with one out and Soto reached on catcher’s interference. Machado followed with a 403-foot homer to left to end the game.

San Francisco tied the game at 4-4 in the top of the ninth. Padres reliever Josh Hader walked Mike Yastrzemski, pinch-hitter Wilmer Flores singled and pinch-hitter Austin Slater was hit by a pitch, loading the bases.

Austin Wynns drew an RBI walk, with Yastrzemski scoring and the bases remaining loaded. After J.D. Davis struck out, Brandon Belt was issued an RBI walk, driving in Flores. Evan Longoria’s sacrifice fly to left plated Slater with the tying run.

In the bottom of the eighth, Ha-Seong Kim hit a ground-rule double to center, driving in Josh Bell, who doubled to right two batters earlier, building the Padres’ lead to 4-1.

San Francisco took a 1-0 lead in the top of the first on LaMonte Wade Jr.’s solo one-out home run to right. The Padres tied the game at 1-1 in the bottom of the fourth on Soto’s solo home run to right.

Padres starter Joe Musgrave held San Francisco to one run on six hits over seven innings. He struck out four and didn’t walk a batter, Alex Cobb, the Giants’ starter, gave up three runs on six hits in five-plus innings, striking out seven and issuing two walks.

In Wednesday afternoon’s series finale, the Giants will start right-hander Jakob Junis (4-3, 3.05) against San Diego left-hander Sean Manaea (6-6, 4.74) a 6:45 pm PDT first pitch at Petco Park. 

Aces win second straight, beat Dream, 97-90

Las Vega Aces guard Kelsey Plum (10) runs for a layup while Atlanta Dream forward Cheyenne Parker, left, guard Tiffany Hayes, second from left, and guard Maya Caldwell, right, run to guard her during the second half of a WNBA basketball game at Michelob Ultra Arena on Tuesday, August 9, 2022, in Las Vegas. (Ellen Schmidt/Las Vegas Review Journal)

By Shawn McCullough

Four Aces players scored 20 or more points in a 97-90 win over the Atlanta Dream at Michelob Ultra Arena.

A’ja Wilson led the Aces with 24 points and 14 rebounds, while Kelsey Plum and Chelsea Gray added 22.

Forward Jackie Young dropped 20.

Las Vegas was deadly from three-point range, going 14 for 27 from long distance.

The Aces led at halftime, 47-44, but the Dream rallied in the third quarter to take a 65-62 lead going into the fourth quarter.

With a strong fourth quarter, the Aces put the game away, outscoring Atlanta 35-25 in the final quarter.

With the win, the Aces improved to 24-10 on the season and pulled to within one game of the WNBA leading Chicago Sky.

The Aces will play their final two games of the regular season at home, starting with a huge battle on Thursday against the Sky and then the finale on Sunday against the Seattle Storm.

Las Vegas Aces – http://aces.wnba.com

Game Notes:

The Aces shot 47.8% from the field.
Las Vegas out-rebounded the Dream, 32-29.
The Aces got just nine points off the bench.

Game Starters:

C – 22 A’ja Wilson
F – 5 Dearica Hamby
F – 0 Jackie Young
G – 10 Kelsey Plum
G – 12 Chelsea Gray

Aces Injury Report:

None

Get that cowboy hat on it’s Shotime; Ohtani belts out 25th homer to defeat A’s 5-1

The Los Angeles Angels Shohei Ohtani clobbered his 118th career home run and his 25th of the season Tue Aug 9, 2022 against the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Tue Aug 9, 2022 (@Angels photo)

Los Angeles (48-63). 5. 10. 1

Oakland (41-70). 1. 6. 1

Tuesday, August 9, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Shoehei Ohtani, tonight’s starting pitcher for the Los Angeles Angels stands out from all current baseball players. He came into the Coliseum with a pitching record of 9-7, 2.83, 152 strikeouts and only 24 walks in 195 innings pitched, during which he held opposing hitters to a batting average of .215. The Angels came away with a 5-1 victory over the Oakland A’s , the Angels Shohei Ohtani hit his 25th home run of the season his 118th career.

But that’s not all. Although his own batting average at game time was a middling .253, he had an impressive OPS of .836 that included 24 home runs in 396 at bats. No wonder people talk of him as the second coming of The Bambino.

I think that is a mistake. Ruth was an excellent pitcher and a great hitter, but not simultaneously. Once he had established himself as a slugger, he was converted from a pitcher to an outfield and would take the mound only rarely and then with little at stake. After being traded to the Yankees for the 1920 season, he pitched in only five games until his retirement in 1935.

Rick Ankiel also was a successful pitcher who remade himself as an outfielder. In his case, a bad case of the yips turned a good pitcher into a mediocre center field.

Ohtani isn’t in the same category of either of those successively twin way players. He belongs to a tradition that was, if not common, frequent in the Negro Leagues and Latin American baseball, that of the pitcher-position player who regularly combined both roles. The precarious economic situation of those organizations put a premium on player versatility.

The example that first jumps into my mind is Martín Dihigo, who was elected to the Hall of Fame in Cuba, Mexico, Venezuela, the United States, and probably a few more other places. He had a long career in the countries I’ve just listed as well as in the North American Negro Leagues that now are considered major leaglues.

In the 1938 Mexican League season he went 18-2, 0.90 and led the league in batting average at .387. He played every position, not as a stunt like Campy Campanaris’s nine position last day of the season exhibition, but as a regular. He went on to become a manager.

Ted “Double Duty” Radcliffe didn’t play as many positions as Dihigo, but he did both pitch and catch. A one battery, he was ever ready to promote the game. He lived over 100 years and was active well into his 90s, having thrown one pitch for the Northern League Schaumburg Flyers when he was 96.

Bob Thurman was 30 years old when Jackie Robinson played his first game for the Brooklyn Dodgers, so his age and baseball’s slowness in integrating limited his time in what was then considered the majors.

He did, however, play outfield and pitch for the San Francisco Seals and was part of one of the most impressive outfields in history, the 1954-55 Santurce Crabbers of the Puerto Rican Winter League.

In right was Roberto Clemente. Willie Mays was the center fielder, and Thurman, on the nights he wasn’t pitching, patrolled left field. (When Thurman was pitching, Luis Rodríguez Olmos, the first Puerto Rican to hit a home run in the World Series, was his replacement.

Every day, manager Herman Franks and Olmos would work on improving Clemente’s throwing technique. They’d hit him fungoes, which he would throw back to the mound, where a local teenager would catch them. That adolescent’s name was Orlando Cepeda.

Tuesday game recap: It’s no knock on the A’s starter, James Kaprielian, to say that he’s not a member of that exalted fraternity, but he isn’t. He’s a 28 year old who’d never gone deeper than seven innings. He made his 39th career start tonight, bringing a record of 3-5, 4.32 for the season with him.

Tonight he lasted only five frames, in which he surrendered four runs, three of them earned, on six hits and three walks. Of his 97 deliveries, were counted as strikes. He left the game with an ERA of 4.38, took the loss, making his W-L numbers 3-6.

One-time Giant Steven Duggar opened the top of the third with his first American League hit, a resounding triple to right center off a 95 mph four seamer. He scored moments later on David Fletcher’s pop single to center, putting the Angels ahead 1-0.

The Angels and Ohtani survived a scare in the bottom of that frame when Ramón Laureano’s inning ending line drive bounced off the pitcher’s toe before he recovered the ball and threw to first for the out. But Ohtani came back to the mound for the fourth.

A combination of luck, Oakland’s defensive deficiency, and Los Angeles power put the Halos ahead by four in the fifth. Ohtani led off with a scratch single to second. Luis Rengifo sent what might have been a double play ball just to the left of first base. Brown fielded it, looked at second and decided instead to pivot and throw, awkwardly, to Kaprielian covering at first.

The throw went wild, and both Rengifo and Ohtani were safely on base. Taylor Ward took a 94 mph four seamer deep to left, 393 feet to be exact, for a three run homer, his 15th round tripper and 39th, 40th, and 41st runs batted in.

That and Kaprielien’s pitch count of 97 brought Sam Selman out to pitch the sixth. He set the visitors down in order, the first time in the game that they’d gone down quietly.

Ohtani gave himself another run to work with when, leading off the seventh, he sent Selman’s slow slider soaring into the seats, 378 feet from home for his 25th dinger of ’22. Selman stuck around to retire the next two batters and then gave way to Domingo Tapia.

Jo Adell wrapped a double into the left field corner but fanned Jared Walsh to limit the damage. Oakland now was looking at a 5-0 shortfall.

Ohtani moved from the mound to the DH slot as a placeholder for the home seventh. The Halos’ new hurler was Jim Herget, who retired the side in order.

Ohtani had gone six innings as a pitcher, holding Oakland scoreless on four hits and three walks. He had five strikeouts to his credit, throwing 91 pitches, 55 going for strikes. He earned the win and now stands at 10-7, 2.68.

The crew from Anaheim was not a band of angels of mercy. Max Stassi led off the eighth with a line single back at Tapia. Andrew Velázquez, who had replaced José Rojas, followed with a two bagger to right that sent Stassi to third. Duggar walked to load the bases. But Tapia blocked the Angels´relentless attack.

Fletcher flew out to shallow right. Phil Gosselin pinch hit for Ohtani, and Allen made a nifty backhand grab of his grounder to short and made an accurate off-balance throw home to force Stassi at the plate. Rengifo grounded out to second, so the score stayed 5-0 in favor of the visitors.

Herget left with two on and two down in the Oakland eighth, replaced by José Quijada, the first lefty the A’s had faced tonight. In response, manager Kotsay called on Elvis Andrus to hit for Brown. He struck out.

Chad Pinder provided a bit of balm to the Athletics´wounded pride biy launching a 415 foot lead off home run to dead center field. It was his 10th home run of the season. But that’s as far as it went

Paul Blackburn (7-6, 4.28) will start for the Athletics in tomorrow’s 12:37 matchup against the Angels, who haven’t yet announced who will toe the rubber for them.

Headline Sports podcast with Michael Roberson: WNBA players need to travel by charter; Discussion gets serious after Sparks are stranded at DC Airport

Nneka Ogwumike of the Los Angeles Sparks said after being stranded overnight at the DC Airport that it was the first time in her 11 year career that she had to stay the night in an airport. Ogwumike who is president of the WNBA union is pushing for charter flights for WNBA teams (CNN file photo)

On Headline Sports podcast with Michael Roberson:

#1 Nneka Ogwumike of the Los Angeles Sparks and who just so happens to be the president of the WNBA players association got the experience of sleeping at the airport. The Sparks plan was stuck in Washington DC after the flight that was scheduled was canceled at 1 AM was rescheduled to 9AM. This is one example of what the WNBA players versus the NBA players what they have to go through.

#2 In retrospect what the WNBA players go through is almost like these players are like pioneers in the modern age of professional sports.

#3 What’s worse in spite of the desperate need for chartering teams the New York Liberty were fined $500,000 for taking chartered flights in the second half of last year.

#4 Also to add insult upon injury Liberty owner Joe Tsai actually found an easier way for WNBA teams to travel by charter and get compensated but the WNBA denied any idea like that existed.

#5 The Washington Mystic’s Natasha Cloud said that their still flying in comfort even with the mask mandate lifted on commercial flights while being surrounded by people not wearing masks.

Join Michael for Headline Sports Wednesdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco 49ers podcast with David Zizmor: How Deebo and Lance are the NFL’s top one two punch

San Francisco 49ers quarterback Trey Lance (5) on a pass to teammate wide receiver Deebo Samuel (19) are considered the best quarterback-wide out combo in football (San Francisco Chronicle file photo)

On the 49ers podcast with David:

#1 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan had Trey Lance throwing decoy practice throws some wildly and some intercepted deliberately to keep any scouts or spies from dissecting Lance’s real throws from his deliberate throw into traffic throws. Leaving them to wonder what’s real and what isn’t the real Lance pass.

#2 It’s been said that the 49ers are a team that isn’t depending heavily on Lance to win games and that having a dominating quarterback isn’t something that will get the 49ers deep in the playoffs. Wasn’t that much of the style in past seasons for Jimmy Garoppolo when he got them in post season?

#3 How much would you go along with the fact that wide receiver Deebo Samuel and Lance are one of the best one two punches in the NFL.

Please join David Zizmor for 49ers podcasts Wednesdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com