Headline Sports podcast with Jessica Kwong: Ohtani could go for $600 million with Dodgers; Braves Fried on 15 day IL with hamstring injury; plus more

Los Angeles Angels’ Shohei Ohtani watches his solo home run during the third inning of a baseball game against the Milwaukee Brewers, Sunday, April 30, 2023, in Milwaukee. (AP News photo)

On Headline Sports with Jessica Kwong:

#1 Jessica, lots of talk about the possible free agency of Los Angeles star Shohei Ohtani. Ohtani is expected to enter free agency and amongst some of the top teams that will seek him out are the Los Angeles Dodgers who could offer Ohtani up to $600 million. Ohtani a two way star shows on signs of slowing down as he enters the last year of his deal with the Angels.

#2 The Atlanta Braves Max Fried has entered the 15 day IL with a strained left forearm. In April Fried was on the IL for with a hamstring injury missing two weeks which included opening day.

#3 New York Mets pitcher Max Scherzer continues to battle injuries. Scherzer was unable to start on Tuesday night because he was suffering from neck spasms. Scherzer will continue to rehab as the Mets have now lost four of their last five games and recalled David Peterson to make a start.

#4 The Milwaukee Bucks Giannis Ankeotokounmpo said that he is forever grateful for former Bucks head coach Mike Budenholzer. The Bucks who were a favored first place team lost to eighth place Miami Heat. The Bucks became the sixth NBA team to lose to an eighth place team in post season play.

#5 Jessica, the New York Knicks did stave being eliminated and picked up a crucial win defeating the Miami Heat 112-103 on Wednesday night to cut the Heat’s series lead 3-2. The Knicks got scoring help from Jalen Brunson who led with 38 points and RJ Barrett who followed up with 26 points.

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

Manaea’s 2nd Inning Collapse Too Much For Giants To Comeback From in 11-6 loss to Nats

San Francisco Giants starter Sean Manaea (52) surrenders a three run homer in the top of the second to the Washington Nationals Riley Adams (left) at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed May 10, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Troy Ewers

SAN FRANCISCO–Day game here in San Francisco and it’s the final game of this three game series with the San Francisco Giants (16-20) and Washington Nationals (16-21), series at 1-1. Tuesday night Logan Webb got the W and the debut of Casey Schmitt was the topic of conversation. Wednesday though, was a different conversation as the Nationals came away in an 11-6 laugher at Oracle Park.

On the mound was Sean Manaea and a quick 1-2-3 inning provided some hope from Giants fans, but that would change the very next inning. A four run inning, three of those runs came off a Riley Adams home run and the wheels would fall off for Manaea from there.

The third inning was an avalanche, two walks, an error, two hits would force a pitching change and Tristan Beck would replace Sean Manaea, but at that point the damage was already felt, 8-0 in the third inning. Tristan Beck’s outing would hold it down for the next five innings, even though he allowed another two runs, but was still the bandage to lessen the bleeding.

On the offensive side for the Giants, the ball just wasn’t finding any gaps, in the beginning, but they weren’t being struck out. The final two innings seemed like the canteen in the middle of the desert with Conforto and Lamonte getting big late game home runs making the game 11-6, but the canteen was a mirage and the hole they dug themselves was too deep to climb out of.

Nationals take the game and the series and the Giants see the Diamondbacks next series.The starters Josiah Gray and Sean Manaea leave here with a different confidence level and some changes on the stat sheet. Josaiah Gray leaves with a 3-5 record and Manaea leaves with a 1-2 record.

As for Casey Schmitt, his debut has two games in the bag were the positives you want to see as a manager and it creates a “good” problem when Crawford comes back and hopefully once Mike Yastrzemski comes back this lineup catches his stride.

The Giants open a four game series at Chase Field in Arizona starting Thu May 11 starting pitcher for the Giants not announced and for the Arizona Diamondbacks lefthander Tommy Henry (1-0 ERA 5.17) first pitch at 6:40 pm PT.

Yanks sweeps A’s in laugher 11-3; Volpe rips first career grand slam for NY

New York Yankees’ Anthony Volpe runs home after hitting a grand slam in the fifth inning against Oakland Athletics at Yankee Stadium in New York on Wed May 10, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Jessica Kwong

NEW YORK.—The Oakland Athletics (8-30) fell 11-3 at Yankee Stadium in a Wednesday matinee as the New York Yankees (21-17) completed their first sweep of the season.

A’s left-hander Kyle Mueller got off to a rough start in the first inning, with Gleyber Torres hitting a sacrifice fly allowing Aaron Judge to score. Then Harrison Bader hit a home run and Anthony Rizzo and DJ LeMahieu scored, bringing the Yankees up 4-0. The ball passed the video board and A’s right fielder JJ Bleday tried to make a leaping catch, while a fan in the front row appeared to try to reach and make the catch. After review, the homer stood.

“There wasn’t interference in terms of the play with our defender but it did look as if the glove reached over the wall but really hard to tell,” said Oakland manager Mark Kotsay. “So, I understand why the call stood.”

In the second, Carlos Perez hit a home run to left field and Jace Peterson hit a homer to right field, cutting the Yankees’ lead to 4-2.

But the Yankees had an explosive fifth. Rizzo singled on a line drive and Judge scored. LeMahieu hit a homer and Rizzo scored. Then star rookie Anthony Volpe hit his first career grand slam, allowing Torres, Kyle Higashioka and Oswaldo Cabrera to score, and putting the Yankees up 11-2.

In the seventh, Bleday hit a home run on a line drive to right field, but the A’s failed to make any runs after that.

Muller allowed six runs and five hits in four innings pitched.

“When you give up four runs in the first it’s kind of easy to relax because it can’t get much worse, you know what I mean, so you just take a deep breath, get back to just focusing on the execution,” said Mueller. “And I thought it was pretty good from there on out.”

The A’s lost 7-2 on Monday night and 10-5 on Tuesday night, and finished 2-4 on their six-game road trip.

The A’s return to Oakland Coliseum to host the Texas Rangers Nathan Eovaldi (4-2 ERA 4.22) the A’s have not announced a starter pitcher on Thursday, with first pitch at 6:40 p.m. PT.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Webb pitching lights out; Manaea tough outing; Schmitt can hit

San Francisco Giants third base coach Mark Hallberg (91) congratulates Casey Schmitt (6) on his solo home run off Washington Nationals starting pitcher Patrick Corbin during the fourth inning of a baseball game Tuesday, May 9, 2023, in San Francisco.

On the Giants podcast with Michael:

On Tuesday night the San Francisco Giant starter Logan Webb delivered giving up only one Washington National run in a 4-1 victory. Going seven plus, nine hits, one run and striking out seven hitters. Webb has great control and good mix to keep the National hitters off balance.

Webb had help from rookie shortstop Giants Casey Schmitt whose been all the rage the last two games of the series on Tuesday hitting his first career home run and a single and belting a single on Wednesday afternoon and later scoring a run which happened to be the Giant first run of the game after going down 8-1 by the third inning.

San Francisco starter Sean Manaea was rocked on Wednesday at Oracle by the Nat’s bats going 2.2 innings, five hits and four earned runs. Manaea dropped his win-loss record to 1-2.

Join Michael for the Giant podcasts Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giant’s Casey at the Bat rips first career home run defeat Nats 4-1 at Oracle

The San Francisco Giants Casey Schmitt waits to take his place at shortstop in the Giants dugout against the Washington Nationals at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue May 9, 2023 (@SFGiants photo)

Washington (15-21). 000 001 000. – 1 10 1

San Francisco (16-19). 200 100 10x. – 4 10.1

Time: 2:22

Attendance: 22,028

Tuesday, May 9, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–It’s tempting to blame last night’s disappointing Giants loss to Washington to the poor quality of the home plate umpire, MiLB call up Emil Jiménez. After all, Ump Scorecard gave him an overall accuracy rating of 84%. Breaking down those figures, 8% of the balls he called should have been called strikes, and a whopping 30% of his called strikes really were balls.

Perhaps even more troubling was his overall consistency rating of 87%. (The average is 94%). One measurement, however, undercuts that unkind temptation. Jiménez’s errors had the overall effect of — and this figure also comes from Ump Scorecards— favoring the Giants by 1.56 runs.

San Francisco turned to Logan Webb, who, at 2-5,3.80, had not been living up to expectations so far this season. He lived up to them tonight, holding the Nats to one run, earned, in seven innings in spite of allowing nine hitsl and a walk. 82 of his 105 offerings were strikes in the Giants 4-1 victory over Washington.

What the expectations for his opponent, left hander Patrick Corbin, are is an interesting question. Here’s what the Washington Posts’ Barry Syrluge had to say about them in that paper on April 29:

When the Washington Nationals took the field under cloudy skies Saturday afternoon, Patrick Corbin led them onto the grass at Nationals Park, cranked his left arm like a windmill and climbed the mound for his 112th regular season start wearing a Nats uniform.

He pitched brilliantly and won a World Series in that uniform. He has stunk to high heaven in that uniform. And fairly or not, each of his starts has become something of a referendum on the six-year, $140 million contract that put him in that uniform in the first place.

(By the way, Washington lost the game Syrluge was writing about, 6-3. Corbin surrendered three runs, all earned, on seven hits, and was charged with the loss).

In tonight’s encounter, we had a chance to test a few more expectations. Casey Schmitt, heralded as San Francisco’s possible shortstop of the future, made his big league debut. It was a successful one (keep reading to see why), and it came in a hard fought game that San Francisco won, 4-1.

This evening’s first inning was in stark contrast to last night’s debacle. Logan wiggled out of trouble in the top half, and San Francisco put two men across the plate in their half. Slater reached first on shortstop CJ Abrams’ errant throw to first. Thairo Estrada’s single to right sent him to third, and both of them scored on Mitch Haniger’s double to right center.

Schmitt showed his big league mettle in the field in the top of the third by starting an inning ending double play and confirmed it at the plate in the bottom of the fourth, by luaunching a 420 foot, 103.8 mph blast three or four rows into the center field bleachers for his first home run and RBI in the show. That put San Francisco up, 3-0.

Haniger provided a bit of unwanted excitement in the home fifth when his line drive bounced off Corbin (it looked like his shoulder took the hit). After a few minutes’ delay, Corbin pronounced himself ready to resume pitching, which he did, successfully and scorelessly.

Joey Menenses opened the visitors’ sixth with a liner down the third bae line, to hot for Davis t0 handle. It went past him for a leadoff double. The Curse wasn’t in effect that frame, and Menenses scored on Dominic Smith’s single to left to close the gap to 3-1. The Nats managed to put runners on second and third with two down before a gutsy Logan fanned Jake Alu to close the door on the threat.

Corbin’s night was over after six frames over with the Giants scored three runs, two of which were earned. He yielded eight hits, one of which went out of the park. He struck out three and threw 96 pitches, 66 for strikes. Mason Thompson relieved him and allowed San Francisco to add a run to its lead on. a single by Davis that drove Estrada in from third.

Tyler Rogers brought his submarine into the game, launching its torpedoes in the visitors’ eighth, in which he surrendered a hit and a walk but no runs.

Hobie Harris did the same in. the Giants’ half of the eighth.

Camilo Duval came on in the ninth to join Joey Bart in a game of Beat The Clock. (If you noticed how close the Giants’ closer gets to clock rule violations you’ll know what I mean). He fanned Alu. He fanned Thomas. He got two strikes on Luis García. The count went to 1-2. García gr0unded out to second. And that was it.

Webb got win. He’s now 3-5, 1.46. Corbin (1-5, 4.87) took the loss. Duval earned his eighth save.

Tomorrow, Wednesday, at 12:45, the Giants’ Sean Manaea (1-1,7.33) will face Josiah Gray (2-5, 3.03) in the rubber game of this series

Yanks Diaz puts on the Babe Ruth act clouts 3 homers defeating A’s 10-5 at Yankee Stadium

New York Yankees’ Aaron Judge bats during the third inning against the Oakland Athletics on Tuesday, May 9, 2023, in New York. Judge reached first base on a fielding error by Jace Peterson, and Jose Trevino scored. (AP News photo)

By Jessica Kwong

NEW YORK.—Rookie Jordan Diaz hit three homers at Yankee Stadium, but the Oakland Athletics still lost 10-5 on Tuesday night to the New York Yankees who welcomed their Captain Aaron Judge back off the injured list.

Diaz, a 22-year-old second baseman from Colombia, hit a solo shot in the fourth inning. He then had a leadoff drive in the seventh, as well as a two-run homer in the eighth.

“That was a pretty special night for Jordan, coming into Yankee Stadium,” said A’s manager Mark Kotsay. “Pretty sure it’s his first time here, to have the game he had tonight says something about the young man. He’s got a special tool and he can hit and he showed it tonight.”

In the second inning, Jace Peterson singled on a fly ball to right field and allowed JJ Bleday to score, putting the A’s up 1-0.

Judge, who had two RBI in his return from a strained right hip injury, reached on a fielder’s choice in the third and allowed Jose Trevino to score and tie the game. Anthony Rizzo singled on a line drive to right field and Aaron Hicks scored. Gleyber Torres singled to center field and Judge scored.

Harrison Bader singled on a line drive to center field and Rizzo scored, then Jake Bauers hit a sacrifice fly and Bader scored, boosting the Yankees to a 5-1 lead.

In the fifth, Torres hit a homer and Rizzo scored, expanding New York’s lead to 7-2. After Diaz’s second homer, Bauers hit a home run in the seventh and Bader scored, making it 9-3.

Judge hit a sacrifice fly and allowed Anthony Volpe to score in the eighth, bringing the Yankees to 10-5 over the A’s.

A’s right-hander Drew Rucinski in his third start of the season allowed seven runs and six hits in five innings.

“It’s baseball, just got to keep grinding, you know,” said Rucinski, adding that pitching a “minimum five innings is always the goal, it would be nice to get six”.

Kotsay said Oakland’s at-bat’s were “great” and they had 10 hits, the same number as the Yankees.

“We actually out-homered them tonight with Jordan’s three,” Kotsay said. “Yeah we’re on the losing end of it, so again it really comes down to the three bases and the extra outs, in this game we ended up on the wrong end of it.”

The A’s are 2-3 in their six-game road trip. The three-game series at Yankee Stadium wraps up on Wednesday. First pitch is at 9:35 a.m. PT. The A’s will start Kyle Muller (1-2 ERA 6.62) and for the Yankees Jhony Brito (2-3 ERA 6.08).

He Was A Giant? Orel Hershiser By Tony the Tiger Hayes

Former San Francisco Giants pitcher Orel Hershiser is the subject of Tony the Tiger in “He was a Giant?” article feature (San Francisco Chronicle file photo)

Orel Hershiser – RHP – 1998 – # 53

He Was A Giant?

By Tony the Tiger Hayes

In 1998, the Orange & Black shocked their fans when they acquired a player who was about as popular at Candlestick Park as attending mid-summer night games in shorts and flip flops.

When it comes to Despised Dodgers, Orel Leonard Hershiser, IV is an all-time great.

We have the former Los Angeles goody two-shoes ranked as a Top 5 all-time Dodgers heel, trailing only Tommy Lasorda and Steve Garvey (you had to be there) and preceding Mike Piazza and Yasiel Puig.

Hershiser, who pitched for the Dodgers from 1983-94 and again in 2000, was a turn off to the Giants and their supporters on multiple fronts.

Not only did Hershiser pitch his best ball against San Francisco, he also epitomized the holier than thou attitude that permeated Los Angeles baseball during the nauseating “Big Dodger in the Sky” Lasorda era.

Hershiser came across as a baseball version of the sycophantic Eddie Haskell character from “Leave it to Beaver. ”

Like the fictional clean-cut teenager, Hershiser presented himself to the world with a gee whiz benevolence. But when no one was watching, all his supposed moral virtue flew out the window as he morphed into a mischievous wiseacre.

One night Hershiser could appear on the Tonight Show singing gospel hymns. The next, he was defiantly drilling Giants hitters and blaming his misfires on a poorly raked pitching mound.

Hershiser had the unique ability to get under the Giants skin like very few players.

Giants closer Rod Beck labeled the Buffalo, N.Y. native a “punk” after Hershiser spent the final game of the 1993 season verbally denigrating the Giants after L.A. took an insurmountable early lead in the crucial contest (10/3/93).

A Giants win that day would have forced a one game playoff with Atlanta, but the Dodgers 12-1 spanking sent the G-Men directly into the off-season, despite 103 regular season wins.

“Hershiser ragged on me the whole game from the top step of the dugout,” said a steamed Giants third baseman Matt Williams, implying the bench jockeying took on a personal tone. “If I face him again there will be line drives right back up the middle. You can bet on that.”

Hershiser was so loathed at Candlestick Park that he regularly required a full-blown San Francisco police escort when he entered and exited the field.

Yes, San Francisco fans cursed Hershiser’s very existence and the feeling was mutual.

“I don’t ever play relaxed in this ballpark,” Hershiser once said of the ‘Stick. “I don’t think they ‘re Giants fans as much as Dodgers haters.”

This was the player the Giants risked on promoting as the stabilizing component of their 1998 pitching staff.

The results could have been disastrous.

Why Was He A Giant?

In 1997, the Giants won their first division title in eight seasons. But they did so with a starting rotation that was middle-of-road at best. Left-hander Shawn Estes was a breakout 19-game winner. Fellow southpaw Kirk Rueter was steady and jouneyman right-hander Mark Gardner was adequate. But after that, there was a precipitous drop off.

To repeat their success in ‘98, Giants pitching would need an injection of professionalism and poise. A veteran arm, preferably one with postseason experience was at the top of San Francisco’s wish list. Shortly before Christmas, the perfect gift fell into the Giants lap.

The free-agent pick-up more than capably checked all the boxes. He was a record setting former Cy Young Award winner and World Series MVP with a truck load of big stage experience.

“He fits in our rotation near the top or right in the middle,” said Ned Colletti, the Giants assistant general manager. “He’ll be a great guy to have around Estes and Rueter and great for a few young guys who might be a year or two away.”

If Colletti was hesitant to mention Hershiser by name, it was with good reason. The club’s prospective new ace was roundly abhorred by Giants fans.

But after spending the previous three seasons in far flung Cleveland, Hershiser and the Giants brass were hopeful that the Orange & Black fanbase’s molten lava hot contempt for their new player had cooled sufficiently.

Hershiser allowed: “If Giants fans compiled a hate list, Tom Lasorda would be at the top… and I’d be next.”

But the long time blue blood announced he was willing to let bygones be bygones and hoped the feeling was mutual.

Orel then let everyone in on a little secret. Despite his long running animus with the Giants, he held a special kinship with Tony Bennett.

Yes, Orel Hershiser announced he had left his heart in San Francisco.

“San Francisco is my favorite part of the country,” he unabashedly pronounced, laying it thicker than the frosting on Lasorda’s birthday cake. “I’m a big fan of sweater weather. My family and I come here every year for vacation. We love the wine country and The City and everything it has to offer.”

Before & After

With a wholesome Donny & Marie veneer, Hershiser was one of the last guys you’re expect to be cast as a villain.

But early on, Giants fans had Orel pegged as part of the Dodgers weasel act.

In one of his first big league appearances, Hershiser pitched in relief against the Giants at Chavez Ravine on the night the Dodgers clinched the 1983 NL west (9/30/83).

The division title was finalized in mid-game when second place Atlanta lost at San Diego. As the Giants Darrell Evans stepped to the plate to face Fernando Valenzuela to lead off the 6th, the scoreboard announced the final from San Diego.

The game with the Giants was paused as a boisterous hullabaloo erupted in the Dodgers dugout.

With the outcome of the game vs. the Giants moot, Lasorda swiftly began swapping out key Dodgers from the lineup.

By the 7th inning Tommy had even removed himself from the game, hightailing it to the Dodgers clubhouse for a bulky wedge of sausage pizza and a full-blown celebratory shindig.

Rookie Hershiser who had been subbed in for Valenzuela, pitched the final two innings, earning a save in the 4-3 L.A. victory.

After the game, Giants manager Frank Robinson termed Lasorda, “the fat man” and ripped his opposite number’s contemptuous mid – game disappearing act.

“You see things and remember them,” said Robinson. “I don’t appreciate it. And I won’t forget it either.”

While Hershiser’s personal participation in that bit of arrogant theater was rather benign, he had officially been introduced into the long simmering rivalry. Without even knowing it, Orel was off and running as a long-term insufferable Dodgers bore.

Despite throwing a no-hitter in college and being named Pitcher of the Year in the Mid-American Conference, Hershiser was just a 17th round draft pick out of Ohio’s Bowling Green University by the Dodgers in 1979.

Though other clubs soon regretted not drafting him sooner, Hershiser was far from a finished project upon reaching L.A.

Lasorda fretted that Hershiser lacked a killer instinct and together with organizational pitching coach Dave Wallace worked diligently on his mound makeup. Lasorda in particular urged Hershiser to shelve his Mr. Rogers persona during games.

For emphasis, Lasorda rebranded the milquetoast right-hander, the “Bulldog.”

Hershiser received his first ever SFPD protective detail in 1985 after he drilled the Giants Mike Krukow (hand) and Dan Gladden (back) on successive pitches.

“They were great,” Hershiser drolly said of his armed guides on the the long hike from the visitors dugout to the Candlestick showers (8/18/85). “We’re walking out there and the (cop) says ‘watch out for the bottles.’”

For the next decade Orel would be a thorn in the Giants side, and not just for just for his unbearable personality.

Hershiser consistently pitched his best against San Francisco.

The two time All-Star recorded more career wins (22) and strikeouts (194) vs. the Giants than he did against any other single club.

In 1988, Hershiser fired-up baseball’s hottest pitching streak ever when he threw 59.1 consecutive scoreless innings – setting a new record.

Hershiser was everything and a Dodger Dog in ‘88. He led the NL in wins (23), complete games (15), and shutouts (8), to go with a 2.26 ERA. He was the obvious choice for the NL Cy Young Award. He also bagged MLB Major League Player of the Year and NL Pitcher of the Year by The Sporting News. For good measure he also took home a Gold Glove for the trophy case and was selected as Sports Illustrated’s Sportsman of the Year.

His spellbinding shutout streak was Hershiser’s career tour de force, but it was not without controversy.

Naturally, the dissension occurred in a contest vs. San Francisco.

Hershiser took the mound on a Friday night at Candlestick Park (9/24/88) with 40 consecutive shutout innings in his rear view mirror and 18.1 innings shy of fellow Dodger Don Drysdale’s all-time record.

After the Giants went down routinely in the first two innings, S.F. got something brewing in the 3rd. With one out, Jose Uribe stood on third and Brett Butler at first. Ernest Riles shot a grounder to second baseman Steve Sax who shoveled to shortstop Alfredo Griffin to force Butler. Griffin pivoted awkwardly however, and his relay sailed out of the reach of first baseman Tracy Woodson. Uribe scored on the play. The scoreless streak was snapped.

Or was it?

Second base umpire Paul Runge said, ‘not so fast.’ He ruled Butler veered from the base path, forcing Griffin’s wayward toss. The ump declared Riles out at first. Inning over. Scoreless streak still intact.

Hershiser pitched near perfect ball the rest of the game, allowing no runner past second and winning 3-0. It was Orel’s fifth straight shutout.

Afterwards, Hershiser conceded the umpire let him off the hook.

“The governor visited me in the third,” Hershiser quipped. “I got off the electric chair. I ran off that mound. I wanted to get off that field as soon as possible before they changed their minds.”

Giants manager Roger Craig meanwhile groused: “I wonder if Runge would have called it like that if Hershiser didn’t have the record going.”

In his next start, Hershiser would bypass Drysdale with an astonishing 10 innings of shutout ball. He still holds the all-time record with 59.1 blank frames.

The Dodgers would go on to win the ‘88 NL NLCS (New York Mets) and World Series (Oakland). A phenomenally dominant Hershiser was named MVP of both series, combining to post a 3-0 record and 1.06 ERA in five overall postseason games.

Hershiser’s pitching preeminence began to wane at the dawn of the 1990s, but he was still usually on his game when facing the the Orange & Black.

In the Giants 103-win ‘93 season, Hershiser handed S.F. its worst defeat of the campaign and the club’s most lopsided loss since 1975, as “Bulldog” led the Dodgers to a 15-1 mashing at Candlestick, with a complete game, five hitter (7/27/93).

After a middling performance in the strike-shortened 1994 season, Hershiser would leave the Dodgers and put his rivalry with the Giants on the back burner to sign with Cleveland of all teams.

It was a genius move. For the next three seasons, Hershiser rebuilt his game and helped turn the historically dismal “Mistake by the Lake” Indians into a winning outfit. The Tribe would capture the AL Central in each of Orel’s three seasons in Cleveland, reaching the World Series twice in 1995 and 1997, before bowing to Atlanta and Florida respectively.

After going a very impressive 45-21, 4.21 in his three-year C-Town residency, Hershiser, now 39, expressed a desire to return to the NL West and specifically to a California based club.

Hershiser rejected San Diego’s advances and cut-short talks of a Dodgers reboot. Just like the mysterious fog that would shroud his new apartment building for the upcoming baseball season, Hershiser curiously choose the “City by the Bay.”

He Never Had a (Giants) Bobblehead Day. But…

Though he heard some jeers and boos during his home opening day start (bold move by manager Dusty Baker), Hershiser’s early decision to proclaim his love for San Francisco seemed to do wonders for his reception in the City.

Orel and his family choose to live within the boundaries of San Francisco, setting up household on Nob Hill. Toe-headed 10-year-old Jordan Hershiser, even got into the act, regularly joining his pops as Giants batboy at the ‘Stick.

“Gosh, the response by the Giants fans has been so wonderful. The controversy seems more hype than reality” Orel insisted. “When I sign autographs or meet people on the street, it’s like ‘so glad to have you. This is great.’”

Pitching-wise, Hershiser took a little time to get rolling as he dropped his first three S.F. decisions.

Hershiser finally hit paydirt in his ninth Giants starting assignment when he tossed two-hit ball over eight shut-out innings at Chicago’s Wrigley Field.

“I’m done pledging,” a relieved Hershiser said after securing his first Giants “W” in the 3-0 victory. “It was time for me to become a Giant. Losing was eating at me.”

A confident Hershiser had his sea legs (one Orange, one Black) and reeled off six consecutive wins. The pitcher’s move to the rival Giants became a national feel-good story when Hershiser was named May’s NL pitcher of the month after going 5-0, with a 0.86 ERA.

But the day everyone was waiting for had yet to come. It finally arrived on Friday night, July 3. Before a Candlestick Park crowd of nearly 60,000, Hershiser found himself facing the Dodgers for the first time ever.

It also marked the first time that Hershiser would pitch in a game at the ‘Stick that involved the Dodgers in which he was not the subject ridicule and derision.

Talk about flipping the script.

On that night, for the first and the last time ever, a guy named Orel was the most popular Giant in the house.

Hershiser spread four hits over seven innings as the Giants squeezed past Los Angeles 6-3.

After the game Hershiser initially down played any emotional entanglement that came with facing his former team.

“Victories are fun period, it doesn’t matter who it’s against,” he claimed in a jubilant Giants dressing room. “The fact it was the Dodgers made it nicer, but not to the point of rubbing it in.”

But Stan Javier who had three hits in the win, let out a guffaw upon catching wind of Hershiser’s humbleness.

“He’s lying,” said the Giants outfielder, himself a former Dodger, told the Sacramento Bee. “(Orel) was crying after the game.”

Hershiser finally copped.

“It was emotionally interesting to go through,” he admitted. “I wouldn’t look into their dugout. I didn’t want to get into an emotional journey. The crowd was awesome, they helped me get through it.

“I’ve been away from L.A. for three years now. There have been so many changes, it’s not the same team anymore. I’m a Giant now and I’d like to be for a long time.”

Giant Footprint

Hershiser’s would face the Dodgers twice more as a Giant, both times at Dodger Stadium. He split two decisions.

Overall as a Giant, Hershiser performed as advertised, going 11-10, 4.41 in a team high 34 starts. After 162 games the Giants and Cubs were tied for the NL’s lone wild card slot. But, the Giants dropped a special one game tie breaker at the Windy City.

Both Hershiser and the Giants expressed a desire for the now 40-year-old pitcher to return in 1999, but they could not agree on a deal in the limited window of time they were allowed to negotiate.

Hershiser went on to play for the Mets in 1999 before closing the curtain on his celebrated career, back with the Dodgers in 2000. The plan was for Hershiser to go out triumphantly as a Dodger at age 41.

How would Giants fans respond to Hershiser this time around in Dodger Blue?

While he had proven his loyalty to the Orange & Black in his one season in San Francisco, Hershiser once again was transplanted into Dodgers colors.

But on the other hand, Candlestick Park was now humanely shuttered for baseball.

With Giants games now being played at beautiful new Pac Bell Park. Would a more genteel Giants clientele go easier on Orel?

Alas, we never found out.

Hershiser did not match up with the Giants in an abbreviated Dodgers reunion. The plug was pulled early on his ‘00 homecoming after Hershiser went 1-5, with a ghastly 13.14 ERA.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Athletics shift to Tropicana

The Oakland A’s plan to build their new park at the Tropicana hotel location in Las Vegas as announced on Tue May 9, 2023 (photo from KSNV TV)

Athletics shift to Tropicana

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

The Oakland Athletics have shifted their Las Vegas stadium plans and have entered into an agreement with Bally’s Corp. to build a $1.5 billion, 35,000-seat ballpark where the Tropicana now sits. The news broke on Tuesday March 9. The Tropicana site was one of many that the Athletics executives have been scouting for years.

This location for the $1.5 billion stadium is on a portion of the Tropicana hotel site of 34 acres. near the southern end of the Las Vegas Strip, as reported by various media outlets, including Howart Stutz of The Nevada Independent, as well as Sports Illustrated and FOX 5 San Diego.

The plan, as it stands now, is to demolish the Tropicana in order to build the 35,000 seat stadium. This move is expected to reduce the funding for the project from the $500 million before, to $395 million for the project today. The proposed stadium with a retractable roof will take up nine acres of the 34 total for that lot of land.

This was a drastic shift from the previous 49 acres of land, where they were planning to build the new stadium at Dean Martin Drive. This shift is mainly because it reduces the amount of money needed by some $100 million-plus/ The two things Las Vegas has in abundance are, land and Casino money, which still is expected to replace or alleviate the use public money for this whole operation. And that’s the way the ball is bouncing.

Join Amaury Pi Gonzalez for all the play by play of Oakland A’s baseball on the A’s Spanish radio Network at 1010 KIQI San Francisco and 990 KATD Pittsburg and News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Golden State Warriors podcast with David Zizmor: Can Poole come through in game 5; Has scored only 11 points in 3 games

The look says it all as the Golden State Warriors and guard Stephen Curry (30) heads to the dressing room after being defeated by the Los Angeles Lakers on Mon May 9, 2023 at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles (AP News photo)

On the Golden State Warriors podcast with David:

#1 Golden State Warriors Jordan Poole has scored only 11 points over the last three games and is 5-19 in shooting and was scoreless for 11 minutes in game 4. Jordan was not too enthusiastic about doing the post game scrum after Monday’s game said that his work ethic or routine hasn’t changed and that you can control what you can control.

#2 Warriors star Stephen Curry said that everybody is asking about Poole but the effort in this series is a collective one and that the team has to make adjustments and play better considering their 3-1.

#3 David backs to the wall down 3-1 game 5 is at Chase Center on Wednesday night. They regrouped when they were down two games in the first round against the Sacramento Kings and now they are once again down two games again. How do you see the environment going into game 5?

Join David Zizmor for the Warriors podcasts each Wednesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Royals Yarbrough out on 15 day IL for facial fractures; Yankees clobber A’s to open 3 game series; plus more

Kansas City Royals Ryan Yarbrough gets assistance from Royals trainer after taking a line drive in the face off the bat of Oakland A’s Ryan Noda at Kaufman Stadium on Sun May 7, 2023 (photo by USA Today)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Amaury, Kansas City Royals pitcher Ryan Yarbrough who took that shot off Oakland A’s hitter Ryan Noda’s comebacker during Sunday’s game at Kaufman Stadium. The shot hit Yarbrough in the face and laid him out. The Royals on Monday said that Yarbrough has been placed on the 15 day IL for facial fractures.

#2 The Oakland A’s opened up their three game road trip in New York with a 7-2 loss at Yankee Stadium on Monday night. The A’s pitching got clobbered in the middle innings with New York runs with two in the fifth, three in the sixth, and two more to close out the scoring in the seventh.

#3 Amaury, You knew Vida Blue for decades when he first broke into the Major Leagues and when he was a three time World Series Champion in 1972-74, an All Star, and Hall of Fame pitcher who passed on Sun May 7th at 73. Talk about Vida the pitcher but most important the person.

#4 Amaury, We didn’t get a chance to speak to you about the indefinite suspension of Oakland A’s TV play by play announcer Glen Kuiper. Kuiper suspended for using a racial slur on live TV Friday night before the A’s and Kansas City Royals game. You knew Glen since he started doing A’s TV in 1992.

#5 Turning to NBA basketball playoffs the Los Angeles Lakers go up 3-1 in game 4 defeating the Golden State Warriors for the second straight game 104-101. Stephen Curry led Golden State in scoring with 31 but it wasn’t enough. The Lakers defense shutdown the Warriors key scorers to get away with a three point win. Game 5 is at Chase Center in San Francisco on Wednesday a 7:00pm tip off.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play announcer on the Oakland A’s Spanish radio network on 1010 KIQI San Francisco and 990 KATD Pittsburg and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com