San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Giants pay watch party tribute to Willie Mays at Oracle Park

Rickwood Field in Birmingham the site of the Negro Leagues Tribute game on Thu Jun 20, 2024 featuring the St Louis Cardinals and San Francisco Giants (AP News photo)

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 The San Francisco Giants paid tribute to the late great Willie Mays showing the St Louis Cardinals and San Francisco Giants at the Rickwood game in Birmingham on the Oracle Park scoreboard at a live Watch Party what was that like?

#2 Michael, this was not any ordinary watch party, this game was originally was to pay tribute to not only the Negro League players but by very sad coincidence Willie Mays passed away two days before this tribute game on Tuesday.

#3 Willie’s career was something everybody had gone over this week, the 660 career home runs, 3293 hits, 1909 RBIs, a 23 years career, and a lifetime batting average of .301. Talk about those numbers and what stands out for you.

#4 Michael just wanted to ask you something that Bob Costas said after learning about Willie’s passing Costas said that if they shrunk the Hall of Fame down to ten people Willie Mays would there amongst the ten.

#5 Lastly, your best Willie Mays experience, you had a chance to rub elbows with him many times of those times what most stands out of those times that you got to talk to him.

Michael Duca does the San Francisco Giants podcasts Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

#5

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: A’s just miss sweeping Royals; Oakland opens three game series with Twins Friday

Kansas City Royals Freddy Fermin slugs a top of the fourth inning home run one of his two home runs against the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Thu Jun 20, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg:

#1 The Kansas City Royals (42-34) jumped to a 2-0 lead in Thursday afternoon’s game at the Oakland Coliseum scoring a run in the top of the second and another in the top of the fourth and got Freddy Fermin hit two home runs in each of those innings.

#2 The Royals Bobby Witt Jr hit the go ahead home run in the top of the eighth a solo shot that broke the tie.

#3 The Oakland A’s (28-49) mustered two runs in the bottom of the seventh inning which tied the game Zack Gelof’s home run contributed to the two run seventh but the A’s fell a run short.

#4 Gelof has now hit a home run in three straight games Thursday’s home run was a two run blast.

#5 The A’s will open up a three game series against the Minnesota Twins on Friday night. Starting pitcher for the Twins RHP Chris Paddock (5-3, ERA 2.25) for the A’s RHP Joey Estes (2-2, ERA 5.97) first pitch 6:40pm PT at the Coliseum. The last time the two teams met earlier this month the Twins swept the A’s in four straight games.

Jerry Feitelberg does the A’s podcasts each Thursday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Rodriguez’s late goal lifts Timbers in 2-1 win over Earthquakes

Portland Timbers striker Jonathan Rodridguez scores the go-ahead goal against the San Jose Earthquakes goalie Jacob Jackson and Paul Marie at Pay Pal Park on Wednesday JUN 19, 2024. (Portland Timbers)

by Marko Ukalovic

SAN JOSE — The San Jose Earthquakes took on the Portland Timbers on Wednesday evening at Pay Pal Park.

San Jose is winless in its past six matches/with the win/tie snapped its five-match winless streak. Portland extended its points streak to five matches/had its four-match point streak snapped.

Portland (6-7-6-24 points) drew first blood in the 22nd minute thanks to a big blunder by ‘Quakes goalkeeper Jacob Jackson, who made his first career MLS start. A back pass from to Tanner Beason to Jackson wasn’t controlled by the young goalkeeper. Evander came storming in and deflected the ball off of the former New England Revolution keeper before depositing it into an open net with a left footed volley for his co-leading eighth goal of the season.

San Jose’s (3-13-2-14 points) Vitor Costa was guilty of offsides twice that derailed two scoring chances first in the 13th minute that wiped out a potential goal and the other in the 30th minute where his shot attempt sailed high and wide over the net.

The Earthquakes didn’t generate a shot on goal in the opening 45. The closest the came to scoring the equalizer was in the 39th minute. A centering pass into the middle of the box from Cristian Espinoza was deflected away from Jeremy Ebobisse by Dario Zuparic who would have had an easy tap in into an open net.

San Jose opened up the second half with the equalizer goal five minutes in off of a set piece. Espinoza’s corner kick was deflected out of the box onto the foot of Paul Marie, who came in off the bench for the injured Carlos Akapo in the 18th minute, and the French fullback blasted a laser of a shot from 23 yards out into the upper corner of the net beyond the outstretched reach of Timber’s goalkeeper James Pantemis for his second goal of the season.

“It’s like this theme that continues to haunt us in terms of a good 60 or 70 minutes. Right there we could be winning, because of how we are imposing. We actually are defending well, we lose in a moment, we lose organization,” ‘Quakes head coach Luchi Gonzalez said.

The ‘Quakes has a glorious chance to gain its first lead of the match three minutes later. Hernan Lopez found Amahl Pellegrino all alone in the middle of the pitch. Pellegrino dribbled in one-on-one with Pantemis, made a move around the goalkeeper to the left side before missing wide left and over the net with his shot attempt.

Portland regained the lead in the 72nd minute. Evander chipped in a ball from just outside the box and Jonathan Rodriguez got behind Marie near the left post and headed the ball past Jackson for his seventh goal of the season.

“I don’t know maybe you and I share the same feelings,” said Marie when asked if the lack of communication has led to his team conceding goals late in the match. “I feel like we start to be over positive on one side and getting stretched out with nobody in the middle. I feel like that’s what happened in New York, last game and this game.”

Pantemis made one save on two shots on goal to earn the victory. Jackson made two shots on four shots on goal in the losing cause.

GAME NOTES: San Jose finished with eight corner kicks. Portland had two.

San Jose is 6-22-10 against Portland in the all-time series.

UP NEXT: San Jose travels down south in a battle of California as the take on LAFC on Saturday 6/22 at 7:30pm at BMO Stadium.

Medina picks up first victory after 11 months of waiting A’s defeat Royals 5-1 at Coliseum

Luis Media Oakland A’s starter delivers to the Kansas City Royals in the top of the first inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Wed Jun 19, 2024 (AP News photo)

Kansas City (41-34). 000 010 000. 1. 8. 1

Athletics (28-48). 002 000 21x. 5. 8. 0

Time: 2:35

Attendance: 4,557

Wednesday, June 19

Oakland, CA

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–The temperature cooled off for this Wednesday evening’s game between the Kansas City Royals and the barn storming Athletics, but the green and gold didn’t. They defeated KC for the second time in a row, this time by four runs, 5-1.

Luis Medina, the Athletics’ starting pitcher, came to the organization at the 2022 trading deadline, when he, along with Cooper Bowman, JP Sears, and Ken Waldichuk in exchange for Frankie Montás and Lou Trivino.

He made it to the majors last year, when he went 3-10, 5.42. He’s had his troubles this season. He was on the injured list until June 2 and had gone 0-2, 5.87 before his 6:42 game opening pitch. His first start after rejoining the team had been his best; he hurled 5-2/3 frames of two hit ball, allowing one run, which was unearned, in a no-decision against the Braves in Atlanta.

Wednesday night’s win was first career appearance against the Royals and left him with a season record of 1-2, 4.71. He lasted 5-2/3 innings, leaving after throwing 88 pitches, 54 for strikes, with a 2-1 lead and a runner on first. He’d allowed six hits and two walks, and the run he was charged with was earned. He struck out three Royals.

Medina was followed by TJ McFarland, who closed out the sixth, Dany Jímenez took care of the Royals, allowing a single before an around the horn double play closed the books on KC for the inning. Austin Adams yielded a double, and that was it for them in the eighth. Mason Miller earned his eighth save and second in two days. Tonight he gave up a walk while striking out two and inducing an infield popup.

The starting pitcher for Kansas City, southpaw Cole Ragans, has had a checkered career. He’s undergone two Tommy John surgeries and lost the 2020 season to the COVID pandemic. He came to the Royals a little less than a year ago in the trade that sent Aroldis Chapman to the Texas Rangers. Ragans went a combined 7-5, 3.47 last year and was the AL Pitcher of the Month in August.

This season, he was 4-4, 3.14 when he toed the rubber in the bottom of the first. When he left the field for the clubhouse showers after six innings, the 26 year old had yielded a pair of runs, both of them earned, on four hits, four walks, and two wild pitches. His total pitch count was 102, 65 of which met the scoring definition of a strike, i.e. they were called strikes by the umpire, the batter swung on them and missed, or there was contact with the bat. With the loss, his record dimmed to 4-5, 3.13.

John Schrieber, Dan Altavilla, and Chris Stratten also pitched for the visitors.

The Athletics took advantage of Ragans’ wildness in the bottom of the third to go ahead, 2-0. Max Scheumann led off with a four pitch walk and advanced to second on a wild pitch. JJ Bleday filled the void at first by drawing another walk.

Then Miguel Andújar delayed his swing to send an opposite field single to right that drove in Schuemann and sent Bleday to third. Brent Rooker’s single to left brought in Bleday with the second tally. Andújar further burnished his credentials by throwing Salvador Pérez at second when the KC catcher tried to stretch his lead off single to left. It was an excellent night for Andújar, who went three for five, boosting his batting average to .330.

Wildness cost Medina as well. He walked Nelson Velásquez to begin the visitors’ fifth. A wild pitch to Kyle Isbel, the next batter, gave Velásquez second base as a gift, and he scored on Bobby Witt, Jr.’s down the line double to left. Witt got halfway to the plate on another wild pitch, but Medina got Vinny Pasquantino to fly out to center, allowing the A’s to escape the episode still leading, but now by a thread, 2-1.

The green and gold tacked on. another two runs with Schreiber on the mound in the seventh. He walked Schuemann with one down. Bleday forced him at second but beat the throw to first. Kansas City claimed that Schuemann had committed a baseline violation, but the review crew in New York disagreed. Back to back singles by Andújar and Nevuins brought them home.

It looked as though Zack Gelof hadn’t completely broken out of his slump when he faced Altavilla in the bottom of the eighth. The A’s second sacker had whiffed twice and grounded out in three at bats, he took a 2-1 offering 434 feet deep to center for his second home run in two days and seventh for the season, making it a 5-2 lead for the A’s and ending Altavilla’s night.

Who’d have thought it? The A’s will go for the sweep Thursday, at 12:37 sending Mitch Spence (4-3, 3.95) against Seth Lugo (10-2, 2.40).

Aces Celebrate Return of Chelsea Gray With Win Over Storm 94-83

Las Vegas Aces guard Chelsea Gray (12) returned against the Seattle Storm at Michelob ULTRA Arena in Las Vegas on Wed Jun 19, 2024 (AP News file photo)

By Barbara Mason

The Las Vegas Aces (7-6) got back on the winning track beating the Seattle Storm (9-6) Wednesday night 94-83. The Storm had a lot of trouble handling the Las Vegas defense. Jackie Young had a monster game finishing with 32 points.

It was a great win for the team but the highlight of the evening was the long awaited return of Chelsea Gray. She did play limited minutes as expected but did finish with four rebounds and seven assists making an instant impact. As she works back into the system, she will continue to lift up her team.

Gray was very obviously working out for some time, as much as her injury would allow anyway and the Vegas fans showed their appreciation blowing up the sound meter. Her return has been so anticipated and now it has finally materialized.

Game recap: The Aces went right to work winning the opening quarter 29-16. Unlike their first matchup with the Storm, Las Vegas had solid control of this game in the first 12 minutes of play.

The Storm battled back but lost the second quarter by a basket 18-16. At the half the Aces had a 47-32 lead. Jackie Young had a terrific first half scoring 19 points. The Aces needed A’ja Wilson and Kelsey Plum to get going with both of them having a quiet couple of quarters. As expected Chelsea Gray had played limited minutes in the first half.

The Storm rallied to open the third quarter scoring the first four points of the quarter cutting the Aces lead but that would be all that the Aces would allow. Las Vegas turned it back on taking a 17 point lead 57-40 with 5:25 left on the clock.

The Aces were on a roll and refused to back down. When it looked like the Aces had it all going, the Storm mounted a comeback. After trailing by as much as 19 points they won the third quarter 22-19.

After three quarters, the Aces continued to lead but it had been cut to 66-54, a 12 point lead. The Storm had struggled against the Aces defense all game and with under four minute left in the game Seattle was running out of time if they wanted to turn this game.

The Aces had pushed their lead back out to a 20 point lead 84-64. The Storm continued to battle cutting the Aces lead from 20 points to thirteen 86-73 prompting Head Coach Becky Hammon to take their third timeout in the quarter. Seattle made it a little uncomfortable for the Aces at times but Las Vegas held fast to win the game 94-83.

Jackie Young had a terrific game finishing with 32 points. A’ja Wilson really turned it on in the second half shooting for 27 points and nine rebounds. Tiffany Hayes who started this game finished with 11 points and five rebounds. Kelsey Plum had double digits with 11 points after only having three at the half. She had eight assists. The Aces had outscored the Storm in the paint and from downtown. Both teams had 15 turnovers.

Game notes: The Las Vegas crowd went nuts erupting into cheers with a standing ovation celebrating the return of Chelsea Gray. The thunderous shrieks bounced off the walls of Michelob ULTRA Arena and the game had not even begun. This was Chelsea Gray’s first appearance this season. The Aces had been missing her all season and they have struggled in her absence.

Gray completes this team as she got four rebounds and seven assists. The Aces beat the Seattle Storm by 11 in Vegas and with Gray on the squad they begin their climb back into dominance. Her leadership and impeccable passing and timing was spot on from the get go.

Friday night, the Aces will be back in action in Vegas taking on the 13-1 Connecticut Sun. Tipoff for that game is scheduled for 7:00 PM.

Giants fall just short 6-5 and lose emotional series to Cubs at Wrigley

Chicago Cubs Ian Happ (right) is congratulated by third base coach Willie Harris (left) after Happ’s solo home run in the bottom of the fourth against the San Francisco Giants Wed Jun 19, 2024 (AP News photo)

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Wrigley Field

Chicago, Illinois

San Francisco Giants 5 (36-39)

Chicago Cubs 6 (36-39)

Win: Kyle Hendricks (1-4)

Loss: Spencer Bivens (1-1)

Save: Colten Brewer (1)

Time: 2:45

Attendance: 37,673

By Stephen Ruderman

The wind once again blew out on another hot day at Wrigley Field, and the Giants’ offense made Kyle Hendricks look like the Hendricks of old, as the Cubs scored six runs off the Giants’ bullpen to take the series with a 6-5 win.

After a rough and surreal night last night at historic Wrigley Field, in which the great Willie Mays passed away and the Giants lost the second game of this series, the Giants would be right back at it Wednesday afternoon in the rubber match of this three-game series. Willie would be with the Giants in spirit Wednesday afternoon.

The Giants added a back memorial patch for Willie to the left chest of their jersey that should be assumed will be worn by the team the rest of the season. The circular black patch, surrounded by an orange outline, has Mays’ number 24 in orange, as well as “Mays” name in orange.

The Giants also had a jersey with Mays’ number 24 on the back in their dugout this afternoon. Oh, and the wind was still blowing out to center field at the historic ballpark where Willie played as a visiting player throughout his career.

As the Giants looked to take the series today, they had everything in their favor. It was 91 degrees at Wrigley Field; the wind was blowing straight out to center field; and they were facing the veteran, Kyle Hendricks, who came into Wednesday’s game 0-4 with an 8.20 ERA. The stars were aligned for the Giants’ home-run happy offense to explode.

Hendricks, the long remaining Cub from their 2016 world championship team that ended 108 years of suffering for the Cubs in their fans, took the mound for the top of the first inning. Hendricks walked Heliot Ramos with one out, but he struck out the other three hitters he faced.

For the Giants, this would be another one of those bullpen games. The flame-throwing lefty, Erik Miller, was the Giants’ opener Wednesday afternoon, and he walked one and struck out two over a scoreless and hitless bottom of the first.

Speaking of hitless, that’s exactly what the Giants were against Hendricks for the first half of this game. Hendricks, the 34-year-old veteran pitching in his 11th year in the big leagues, may have come into this game with an 8.20 ERA, but today, the Giants’ offense made him look like the Hendricks of old.

The Giants were hitless through five innings, and Hendricks retired 14-straight after his one-out walk to Ramos in the top of the first.

As for the Giants’ pitching front, Spencer Bivens, coming off his day for the ages on Sunday in which he got the win in his major league debut after a long and arduous journey to the big leagues, came in to pitch for San Francisco in the bottom of the second.

Ian Happ greeted Bivens with a ground-rule double to center to lead off the bottom of the second, but Bivens retired the side in order immediately afterwards. In the bottom of the third, Bivens again had to deal with a runner in scoring position with nobody out. This time, he had the bases loaded with nobody out.

Cody Bellinger was the man Bivens had to face with the bases juiced. Bivens got Bellinger to hit a chopper back to the mound that Bivens threw home to get Pete Crow-Armstrong for the first out of the inning, but Bellinger was called safe at first by First Base Umpire Cory Blaser on the back end of the potential double play.

It was a bang-bang play at first, which prompted Bob Melvin to challenge it. The play was overturned, and indeed it was a double play. Christopher then hit a shot back to the mound that glanced off Bivens’ right pitching hand, and went to shortstop Brett Wisely, who retired Morel to end the inning.

Somehow, Bivens got out of the bottom of the third unscathed, and his pitching hand was good enough for him to come back out for the bottom of the fourth. However, Ian Happ and Dansby Swanson hit back-to-back home runs to start the bottom of the fourth. Bivens then walked Michael Busch, and Melvin pulled Bivens for Sean Hjelle.

Unlike his major league debut Sunday, Bivens faced a far-superior offense and team in the Cubs. In two-plus innings, Bivens gave up two runs and counting, five hits and two walks. However, Bivens was able to work out of a pair of jams before the long ball finally got him in the bottom of the fourth.

Hjelle was now in the game with a runner on first and still nobody out in the bottom of the fourth. Miguel Amaya singled Busch over to second, and that brought up Pete Crow-Armstrong.

Counsell had Crow-Armstrong lay down a sacrifice bunt to move the runners over to second and third, but when third-baseman Matt Chapman came in to field the bunt, he bobbled it and then ended up throwing it away. Busch scored; Amaya went to third; and Crow-Armstong went to second.

The Cubs now led 3-0, and they had a chance to blow this thing open. Somehow, Hjelle got out of the inning without any more damage. Hjelle ended up retiring six-straight, as he threw a 1-2-3 bottom of the fifth.

The Giants finally got their first pitch off Cy Hendricks when Thairo Estrada led off the sixth inning with a double to left. Trenton Brooks flew out to left, and Wisely reached on a bunt single that moved Estrada over to third. The white-hot Heliot Ramos came up, and he beat out the back end of a near double play to knock in Estrada and put the Giants on the board.

Counsell pulled Hendricks, who was certainly on his game Wednesday. In five and two thirds innings pitched, Hendricks gave up just a run and two hits, while walking just one and striking out eight.

Hendricks was replaced by the now-longtime veteran left-hander, Drew Smyly. Smyly pitched for the Giants in 2020, but he’s been around so long that he pitched against the Giants as a member of the Detroit Tigers way back in the 2012 World Series.

Anyway, the Giants looked to tie the game against Smyly, as Patrick Bailey singled Ramos over to second. However, Smyly struck Chapman out swinging to end the inning. Left-hander Taylor Rogers pitched a scoreless bottom of the sixth for the Giants, and Smyly was back out on the mound for the Cubs in the top of the seventh.

Austin Slater pinch-hit for Michael Conforto and drew a walk to start the inning. Jorge Soler struck out swinging, and then Mike Yastrzemski singled Slater over to second. Thairo Estrada was now at the plate with runners at first and second with one out.

Smyly fell behind in the count 3-0, but Home Plate Umpire Nestor Ceja called the next two pitches, which were both a bit off the outside corner, strikes to fill the count up to 3-2. Then, two pitches later, Smyly threw a beautiful knuckle curve on the outside corners at the top of the zone for strike three.

Wilmer Flores flew out to center, and this ended up being yet another wasted opportunity by the Giants’ offense. The Cubs kept their 3-1 lead, as Spencer Howard came in for San Francisco in the bottom of the seventh.

Nico Hoerner led off the inning with a ground-rule double to right. Seiya Suzuki struck out on a foul tip. Cody Bellinger got Hoerner to third on an infield single, and Christopher Morel walked to load the bases. Ian Happ struck out swinging, and Howard now had a chance to get out of the inning unscathed.

Dansby Swanson came up and lined a base-hit to left that scored a pair to extend the Cubs’ lead to 5-1. Swanson then tried to steal second and was caught in a rundown, but when shortstop Brett Wisely threw to first-baseman Wilmer Flores as Swanson tried to return to first, Flores dropped the ball, and Morel scored to make it 6-1.

Swanson was at second, as the Cubs looked to make this baby a laugher. Michael Busch lined a base-hit to left that spat out of Austin Slater’s glove, and at this point, this inning was turning into a blooper reel. Mercifully for the Giants, the deficit stayed 6-1 going to the eighth.

The wind was still blowing out to center field as the game went to the eighth. Mark Leiter Jr. was the new pitcher for Chicago. Brett Wisely singled to lead off the inning, and after Ramos and Bailey grounded into force outs, Chapman and Slater walked to load the bases for Jorge Soler.

After struggling with runners on base all season long, Soler finally started finding success with runners on last week. Now, here he was with the bases loaded, and if he could run into one, it would suddenly be a brand-new ballgame.

Counsell brought in Tyson Miller, and Soler hit an absolute bomb to left field that was headed for Waveland Avenue, but hit off the “nUTRL” sign above the bleachers out in left. It would’ve been cool had the ball made it all the way to Waveland, but it ultimately didn’t matter where the ball landed; it was now a 6-5 game, and the Giants were right back in it.

Ryan Walker threw a 1-2-3 shutdown inning in the bottom of the eighth, and the Giants would try to create some ninth inning magic against Colten Brewer, the man who Craig Counsell brought in to try and convert the save this afternoon.

Estrada grounded out to third to start the inning, but Flores walked and was pinch-run for by Nick Ahmed. Brett Wisely also walked, and the Giants had the man they wanted at the plate in Heliot Ramos. Ramos hit a slow shopper up the middle, but shortstop Dansby Swanson made a nice play to barely get Ramos at first for the second out.

Ramos did move the runners over to second and third, and if Patrick Bailey could come through, there was a good chance the Giants would have the lead. Unfortunately, Bailey grounded out to second to end the game, and the Cubs held on to win it 6-5.

Kyle Harrison very fittingly got his first win of the season against the Giants. Spencer Bivens got the win in his major league debut on Sunday, but here today in his second big league outing, he took the loss. Colten Brewer, meanwhile, got his first save of the year.

The Giants fall back to three games under .500 at 36-39, and they will now head to Birmingham, Alabama for a special game against the St. Louis Cardinals at Rickwood Field on Thursday, the first major league park that Willie Mays called home.

The Giants will be the road team, and the Cardinals will be the home team. Keaton Winn (3-7, 6.66 ERA) will be the Thursday lucky man, who will have the honor of being the starting pitcher for the Giants in this game . Opposing Winn for the Cardinals will be Andre Pallante (2-3, 4.61 ERA).

First pitch will be at 7:15 p.m. in Birmingham, and 4:15 p.m. back home in San Francisco on Thursday night. The game will be nationally televised on FOX, and the Giants announced just Wednesday that Oracle Park will open at noon Thursday for fans to come pay tribute to Willie and watch the game on the scoreboard.

NHL Stanley Cup Finals podcast with Len Shapiro: McDavid’s two goals lead Oilers in game 5 win; Edmonton closes the gap on Panthers by one game

The Edmonton Oilers Connor McDavid takes a shot at the net as the Florida Panthers Matthew Tkachuk tries reach out and stop the puck in third period action of the NHL Stanley Cup Finals in game 5 on Tue Jun 18, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the NHL Stanley Cup Finals podcast with Len:

#1 The Florida Panthers got into trouble from the start in game 5 surrendering two power play goals and a short handed goal and tried rallying later in the game but fell short to the Edmonton Oilers in a 5-3 loss. The Series is now 3-2 with the Panthers up by one game.

#2 The Panthers after taking the first three games of the series were stunned when they lost game 4 on Saturday in a 8-1 seven goal loss. Is it possible that game had an effect on the Panthers going into game 5?

#3 Panthers head coach Paul Maurice said after Tuesday night’s game that the club is not feeling deflated that they’re not pumping tires, and they just have to go out prepare for game 6 in Edmonton on Friday night.

#4 Len, do you feel this series has just had a new breath of life after the Oilers who were down 0-3 are now a game away from tying this series and there is no doubt both teams battling in game 6. For the Oilers they have home ice and will battle to stay in it. For the Panthers their angry they lost their last two games in a row.

#5 Len lastly Connor McDavid came through for the Oilers scoring twice with two assists and McDavid becomes the first player in NHL Stanley Cup Finals history to have four points in back to back games. He’s going to be crucial for the Oilers in game 6 Friday.

Len Shapiro is an NHL analyst at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Mays in Mount Rushmore of Baseball

Willie Mays who passed away Tue Jun 18, 2024 has his statue in front of Oracle Park in San Francisco (photo from Facebook)

Mays in Mount Rushmore of Baseball

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

On the afternoon of June 18, 2024, Willie Mays passed at 93 at a hospice in Palo Alto, California, surrounded by his family with dignity, like his great career for decades in baseball. There was nobody like Willie Mays, past or present. His baseball numbers and accomplishments have been well documented through the years, and his Cooperstown plaque shines as brightly as ever today. There are no controversies when it comes to his life in the diamond.

As history will have it, Mays left us just 48 hours before a historical moment in which Major League Baseball would be honoring the Negro Leagues and their pioneers with a game at Rickwood Field (America’s Oldest Baseball Park) 1137 2nd Avenue W. Birmingham, Alabama, just 9 miles away from Westfield, where Willie Mays was born.

During the 1990s, when this reporter was the Spanish radio play-by-play announcer for the San Francisco Giants, we could see Willie at any given game inside the Giants dressing room, talking baseball, or in Spring Training in Arizona, there he was. It was a pleasure and privilege to have met this man, synonymous with baseball.

In the late 1960s, I attended the first game in the Bay Area at Candlestick Park. And Mays was in center, Bobby Bonds in right, and Ken Henderson in left, and pitching as I remember, was Mike McCormick, my brother Joaquin and I enjoyed that game in July at windy Candlestick Park, we have seen Willie Mays play.

Many things have been and will be written about this humble and talented man who graces us with his presence on and off the field. Three personalities were impossible to ignore in the game we call the National Pastime. Babe Ruth, Jackie Robinson, and Willie Mays. Ruth was the most famous American in the 1920s when the NBA and NFL were not on the radar of the American sports scene, Jackie Robinson was a historical lesson in America, and Mays for excellence and dignity in baseball.

‘The Catch” at the Polo Ground, New York, the great play by Mays on a deep fly ball of Cleveland’s Vic Wertz in the first game of the 1954 World Series, is one of the most watched pieces of film in baseball history.

Willie Mays was for baseball, Muhammad Ali was for boxing, and Pelé for Fútbol (Soccer) . Class, Dignity, Excellence—that was Willie Mays. Like his Statue at the main entrance of Oracle Park, we will never forget him. May he Rest in Peace.

Tiger’s Treasure Trove: Topps 1972 Willie Mays

1972 Topps Willie Mays card (Topps Baseball Chewing Gum Company photo)

By Tony The Tiger Hayes

May 11, 1972 began as a vintage spring day in San Francisco 63 degrees clear skies reaching far above the just recently topped out Trans American Pyramid Building. But by early afternoon the mood in the City by the Bay had become decidedly gloomy.

Cable Car bell ringers had lost their rhythm. The Sea Lions at Fisherman Wharf stopped barking for handouts. Even the hippies in the Haight contemplated haircuts and giving up the whacky tobacco. Yes all hope had seemingly been lost as the bad news slowly crept across town like a foreboding wall of fog.

Number 24, Willie Mays the first ever big league superstar to represent a San Francisco big league team was traded by the Giants.

Though the aging long-time Giants captain, 41, had struggled at the plate to begin the ‘72 season, the trade was completed primarily to cut costs for the financially flailing Orange & Black.

An embarrassed Giants organization sent the pricy Mays, arguably the greatest player of all-time, to the New York Mets for a barely lukewarm right-handed pitching prospect named Charlie Williams and a suitcase full of rumpled $100 bills.

The previous night, in his last game as a Giant, at Park Jarre of Montreal of all places, Mays blistered a pinch-hit single off the Expos’ Mike Torrez in a 7-1 San Francisco defeat.

Suddenly, in the middle of his 22nd season as a Giant – including 15 in Bay City – Mays would no longer be representing the Orange & Black.

Though the distressing trade had been rumored for days, it still came as a gut punch to San Francisco fans and players.

“Damnit. Oh. No,” said Giants star outfielder Bobby Bonds, when informed the trade was official – no doubt speaking collectively for San Francisco players and fans alike.

The avuncular San Francisco Mayor Joe Alioto was a bit more pointedly in his comments. Alioto – a proud City native- directly blamed the Giants embattled team owner Horace Stoneham.

“There is no joy in Frisco,” Hizz Honor proclaimed with dramatic flair. “The Great Stoneham has struck out.”

Since 1958, Mays had been a San Francisco Giant when the franchise relocated from New York’s Polo Grounds.

As a west coast Giant, the Basket Catch devotee would hammer his 3,000th base hit – a baseball gold standard – and join the exclusive 500 and 600 home run clubs. He also led San Francisco to their first California National League Championship (1962) and western division crown (1971).

Mays was named 1965 NL MVP and presented with 10 consecutive Gold Glove Awards over that span (1958-68) and appeared in 14 consecutive All-Star Games for San Francisco.

The 1972 swap sent Mays back to his old stomping grounds of New York where in 1951 he was the unanimous Rookie of the Year for the New York Giants and made baseball’s signature outfield catch in the Giants World Series sweep of Cleveland in 1954 – among his other Big Apple highlights.

“I expect to play out my career in New York,” said Mays, 41, who at the time trailed only Yankees legend Babe Ruth on baseball’s all-time home run list by 68 round trippers.

The deal was announced in a joint press conference held in New York City that afternoon.

While expressing regret that Mays was leaving the club, an awkward Stoneham somberly intoned the trade was done with Mays’ best intentions in mind. The perennial All-Star was in the second-year of a $320,000 two-year contract and the Giants could no longer afford him.

“I’m sure Willie will be in good financial shape (going forward),” a forlorn Stoneham explained. “The basis on all this is on Willie’s future after he retires. I think this way is much better for Willie.”

The financially struggling Giants were at the time living a hand-to-mouth existence. Depressing Candlestick Park – just 12 years old at that point – was officially a colossal white elephant. With attendance at the chilly concrete bowl virtually nonexistent, the Giants were having trouble paying their current payroll, let alone concerning themselves with Willie’s post-playing financial interests.

The downsizing Giants – all-star pitcher Gaylord Perry and his significant contract had been shed months earlier – also had viable center field options in long-time Mays caddie Ken Henderson and promising rookie Garry Maddox.

New York – where Mays’ popularity had never waned – not only had a spot in the lineup for the aging icon, but had reserved a place for Mr. “24” as a coach and in team advertising and public relations operations when his playing days concluded.

“I think (Mays) will be very helpful this year and, years to come.” said New York executive M. Donald Grant, who assumed the balance of Mays $150,000 1972 salary. “We would like him to be out there on the field after his career is over.”

At that point in their relatively brief history, the Mets had made it a habit of adopting other New York teams former stars and stalwarts and presenting them as their own.

The 1962 expansion club’s first three managers: Casey Stengell (Yankees) Gil Hodges (Dodgers) and their current skipper Yogi Berra (Yankees) all had deep New York roots – now Mays was poised to be recycled into a Met by the Blue & Orange, who naturally nicked their color scheme from the Dodgers and Giants.

The difference was, in Mays, the Amazins’ had a legitimate on-field gate attraction or at least they prayed he was.

Following their astonishing 1969 World Series Championship three seasons earlier, the Mets had drifted into a sea of mediocrity. After two straight mid-division finishes, the 1972 Mets were more than ready to get back back in the good graces of New York’s unforgiving sports fans.

At the time of

the Mays transaction, the 1950s inspired musical “Grease” was getting boffo reviews and packing out the Broadhurst Theater on Broadway, the Mets figured if ‘50s nostalgia sold on the Great White Way it would for baseball as well.

In the charming Mays, New York would have a living and breathing- though occasionally limping – reminder of New York’s – albeit semi-mythical – Golden Age of baseball when New York ballplayers would return to their humble Brooklyn or Harlem apartments after games at the Polo Grounds or Ebbets Field and play stickball in the streets until after the street lights came on.

But the 41-year-old version of Mays the Mets were receiving would likely be more inclined to a sunset supper at the Russian Tea Room and an early turndown at his Essex House suite than breaking out a sawed off broom stick and a pink Spaldeen uptown with the kids.

After a solid – if unspectacular- season (.271, 18, 61) for upstart 1971 NL West champion Giants, the bat looked heavy in Mays hands to begin the 1972 season with San Francisco.

After a good spring camp in ‘72, Mays sat cold for two weeks before regular season games started as baseball endured it’s first ever player’s strike.

“I gained about five pounds during the strike,” Willie explained in his

final extensive press briefing as a Giant, held about a week before the trade. “I feel good in the field and on the bases, but not at the plate.”

Mays acknowledged, age was catching up with him, but he wasn’t quite ready to ride off into the sunset.

“I’ve adjusted to the fact that I’m not going to hit many home runs now. But there are

plenty of things I can do. When we have someone who is capable of going out there and doing better than I can, I’ll be the first to admit it,” Mays said, following a 2-for-3 day, in an 8-3 Candlestick Park loss, coincidentally, to the Mets (5/3/72).

The good day at the plate marked Willie’s first multi-hit game of the ‘72 campaign.

Though no one knew it at the time, the contest, played before only 4,123 fans on a wind-swept sunny Wednesday afternoon, also signaled Mays’ final home game in San Francisco.

“I think I had a pretty fair season last year,’ Mays said after the contest. “Let’s wait until this one is over before

before we evaluate. I haven’t thought about retirement yet. All I know is that will be one of the toughest decisions of my life to go into that locker and put that uniform in mothballs.”

Within days, that uniform, and the one Mays wore in Montreal were indeed put in “mothballs” and shipped to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y. by Giants assistant equipment manager Mike Murphy.

Willie didn’t have to wait long for a reunion with the Giants. Three days after the trade, Mays made his Mets debut- against, naturally, the Giants in New York.

Despite inclement weather, the Sunday afternoon Mothers Day crowd at Shea Stadium swelled to 35,505 – most there to lay out a Willie Welcome Matt for Mays.

Curiously Mets manager Berra positioned Mays at first base and placed him atop the New York lineup against Giants starter Sam McDowell.

Mays walked in his first at-bat (scoring on a Rusty Staub grand slam); he struck out in his second at-bat.

With the score knotted at 4-4, Mays led off the 5th vs. reliever Don Carrithers and drilled a screaming line drive over the Shea Stadium left field fence to give the Mets a 5-4 lead. The homer was the difference in the tilt.

The form wasn’t perfect – he practically stepped in bucket during the swing – but it was a no doubter. And as Willie ambled towards second base he looked up to see Giants infielder Tito Fuentes giving him a greeting.

Mays admitted after the 5-4 Mets win, that the momentous occasion left him conflicted.

“I didn’t know what the Giants were thinking. They traded me away, you know. Maybe they thought I couldn’t play anymore. (But) there was a little sentiment in my heart.

I wanted to win the ball game and yet in a way well, I had feeling for both sides, It was a strange feeling to bat against a team I played for 21 years,” Willie said. “You see the name Giants on their uniforms and you feel you should be out there with them. Look, you’ve gotta have some kinda feeling after being with one club that long.”

When Mays returned to San Francisco with the Mets in July for a Friday night contest, he was met with one of the Giants largest crowds of 1972.

Mays did not disappoint. He bopped a home run in that game as well.

Mays didn’t come close to reaching Ruth on the all-time home run list as a Met – falling 54 homers short. But he enjoyed two decent individual seasons with New York in 1972-73 and helped the Mets to the 1973 NL Championship. That club would lose the World Series in seven games to Oakland. Mays did not play particularly well in his fourth career Fall Classic – and retired as an active player after it’s conclusion at age 42.

Immediately, Willie joined the Mets coaching staff, serving under several Mets skippers through 1979.

His relationship with the Giants organization chilled during that time, but a detente’ was reached in 1983 when the Orange & Black held a day in his honor to officially retire Mays famous uniform No. 24.

By 1986, Mays was officially a Giant again when he signed a long-term personal services contract with his original team. He’s actively served in that role ever since.

This February, San Francisco officially honored the “Say Hey Kid” on 2/24/24.

Willie who lives about a 45 minute drive from the Giants current home at 24 Willie Mays Plaza will celebrate his 93rd birthday next month.

Where do you start with Mays baseball accomplishments? They are almost too unbelievable to, well, believe.

Mays, a native of Alabama, was a childhood prodigy, playing alongside his father in a men’s hardball league at age 13. By 16, Willie was an All-Star in the Negro Leagues. At age 20, in 1951, Mays made his big league debut with the Giants. After a slow start, Mays knocked a home run off the great Warren Spahn for his first hit. He finished with a .274 average, 20 long balls and ROY honors. The “Say Hey Kid”

was on deck when Bobby Thomson whacked his game-winning home run off the Dodgers Ralph Branca to send the Cinderella Giants to the ‘51 World Series.

After missing most of the next two seasons to a U.S. Army hitch, Mays returned for the 1954 season and dominated- stroking

41 home runs and 110 RBI and earning Most Valuable Player honors. The Giants swept the Indians in the ‘54 World Series and Mays made his signature over the shoulder catch of

Vic Wertz’ long drive into center field at the Polo Grounds in Game One.

The Great Giant was the first major leaguer to hit 50 home runs ind steal 20 or more bases in one season when he hit 5l homers and stole 21 bases in 1955.

The Wonderful Willie tied a major league record in 1961

when he hit four home runs in a single game at Milwaukee and on two other occasions belted three in a game.

In 1962, Mays won the NL home run crown (49) and led the Giants to their first west coast pennant, as the Orange & Black took the Yankees to a Game 7 before a heart breaking loss.

The future Hall of Famer also topped the senior circuit in long balls in 1964 (47) and 1965 (52) – winning his second MVP in the latter campaign.

He surpassed the 20-homer mark in 17 seasons -a major league mark – and at the time of the trade to New York he held records for lifetime NL home runs.

Mays’ All-Star accomplishments are fabled. He appeared 21 Mid-Summer Classics, compiling a .329 batting average in 70 at bats, winning MVP honors twice.

Mays also been a god send for sports memorabilia collectors. Some of the awesome mementos produced in his honor include signature fielder mitts, numerous bobblehead dolls and a unique statute produced by the Hartland Company in the 1950s that reproduced Willie making his signature “Basket Catch.”

Of course, there were bushels of Willie Mays baseball cards issued during and after his playing career.

Our favorite Mays related memorabilia piece happens to be the 1972 player card Topps issued for Willie.

It’s the last bubble gum card featuring Willie as an active Giants team member.

That season, Topps designed the colorful bubble gum card set in a memorable Peter Maxx inspired modern art motif with splashes of color and trippy three-dimensional fonts.

Willie’s card – no. 49 in a set of 787 – features a close-up portrait photo of Willie smiling as he stands in front of the Giants dugout at Candlestick with a bat resting on his right shoulder.

Most likely shot during the 1971 campaign when Willie would have been 40 years old – the intimate photo shows Mays’ resolve as a tried and true star ballplayer and team leader. But there is also a vulnerability etched on mature face as if he’s saying ‘hey, this isn’t as easy as it looks.”

But if anyone made it look easy … it was Willie Mays.

Geloff’s three run homer crucial as A’s end 9 game skid against Royals 7-5 at Coliseum

Oakland A’s Zack Geloff connects for a three run home run in the bottom of the fourth inning against the Kansas City Royals at the Oakland Coliseum on Tue Jun 18, 2024 (AP News photo)

Kansas City (41-23). 020 010 020. 5. 7. 2

Athletics (27-48). 202 300 00x 7 11. 1

Time: 2:16

Attendance: 7,013

Tuesday, June 18, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Before the game began on this warm and breezy Tuesday evening, the Coliseum observed a moment of silence to reflect on the death this afternoon at the age of 93 of baseball inmortal Willie Mays.

The barnstorming Athletics had returned to their temporary base camp in Oakland after a disastrous tour of San Diego and Minneapolis-St. Paul in which they extended their two game losing streak to a season high nine, just in time to put a halt that free fall, defeating the Kansas City Royals, 7-5, in a game that almost slipped away from them at the end.

The Athletics had engaged in a flurry of transactions earlier in the day. They recalled outfielder Lawrence Butler, who started tonight’s contest in right field, batting eighth, from Las Vegas. He went one for three, with a double and a run scored. They also promoted Tyler Nevin from the Aviators. He, too, was in today’s lineup, playing third and batting in the seventh position. He, too, went one for three with a two bagger. Those additions had their counterpoint in JD Davis’s designation for assignment and outright release of the perennial prospect Seth Brown.

Southpaw Hogan Harris (0-0 2.49 at game time) had gone five innings in his most recent start, six days earlier in Petco Park, where he left with a no decision after allowing three runs, only one of which was earned, in a 5-4 loss to the Padres. He lasted five innings and gave up three runs, two of them unearned, again this evening. He allowed four hits, one for the distance, and two free passes. 62 or his 100 pitches were considered strikes. Harris got the win, his first of the year, and now is 1-0. 2.37. Vinny Nittalli replaced him to start the sixth and set the side down in order before yielding to Austin Adams for the seventh, who benefited from The Curse of the Leadoff Double, stranding pinch hitter Adam Frazier on second by retiring his next three batters in order. Lucas Erceg, who returned from the IL last Wednesday, took over in the eighth. He was less successful, getting touched for two runs in two thirds an inning. Scott Alexander and Mason Millere kept the Royals at bay for the rest of the game.

Kansas City sent Alec Marsh, their second round choice in the 2019 draft, to the mound. His first big league appearance was last June 30, and he finished that season at 3-9,5.69. He had a decent 5-3, 3.63 record this year when he threw the first of his 76 pitches. He left, trailing 7-2. All seven runs were earned; they came on seven hits, one of them a home run, and two walks. He logged four strikeouts.He was the losing pitcher; his won-lost record fell to 5-4 while his ERA ballooned to 4.37.

The A’s jumped out ahead in their half of the opening frame. JJ Bleday followed Max Schuemann’s leadoff walk with a double to center that drove the Athletics’ shortstop home. Miguel Andújar’s fly to right allowed Bleday to advance to third, whence he scored on Brent Rooker’s sacrifice fly to left.

Schuemann, whose base on balls had opened the gates for the A’s two tallies, opened them for KC’s two tying runs in the top of the second. He let a two out grounder by Freddy Fermín past him for an error. On the next pitch, Nick Lofton took a 92mph four seamer 394 feet deep that just got past Bleday’s glove and into the alley behind the NBC Sports California sign in center to tie the score at two. They went ahead in their next turn at bat. Zacl Gelof led off with a single to left, stole second, and moved on to third on Schuemann’s infield single. Bleday then banged his second consecutive two bagger, this one too rith, plating Gelof and advancing Schuemann to third. He came home on Andújar’s single to the left side of the infield. Marsh proceeded to fan the next three Athletics he faced. Bobby Witt, Jr. made nice plays on the two infield hits, but who ever said baseball was fair?

There was nothing tainted in the three runs the Athletics scored in the fourth and what drove Marsh to the showers. KC’s starter walked Nevin. Butler smacked a double to left center that put two runners in scoring position. Gelof, who seems to be emerging from his slump, then deposited a three run four bagger into the second level seats in left field for his sixth home run of the year. That’s when Sam Long relieved Marsh and, in spite of a single by Andújar and a double by Rooker, ended the inning without further scoring.

Dan Altavilla worked a scoreless bottom of the fifth, in which Nevin celebrated his return to the show with a double to right.

The Royals managed a pair of runs off Erceg in the top of the eighth, loading the bases on singles by Vinnie Pasquantino and Salvador Pérez and a walk to pinch hitter MJ Meléndez followed by an RBI groundout by Fermín and another by Lofton. That brought in Scott Alexander to put out the fire.

After Alexander put the Royals down 1,2,3 in the top of the ninth, it was Miller time. Mason Miller, who had blown a save in his last appearance, earned his 13th save with a perfect frame.

We’ll see Wednesday, if the A’s have mended their ways or if this was just a momentary halt in their collapse. Luis Medina (0-2,5.87) is scheduled to throw the first pitch at 6:40. The Royals’ Cole Ragans (4-4, 3.14) will take the mound for Kansas City.