Giants finish brutal road trip with late 6-4 loss to Dodgers, as season hangs in balance

San Francisco Giants Jorge Soler swings for a single in the top of the eighth inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on Thu Jul 25, 2024 (AP News photo)

Thursday, July 25, 2024

Dodger Stadium

Los Angeles, California

San Francisco Giants 4 (49-55)

Los Angeles Dodgers 6 (62-42)

Win: Blake Treinen (5-2)

Loss: Tyler Rogers (1-4)

Save: Brent Honeywell (1)

Time: 2:38

Attendance: 52,291

By Stephen Ruderman

The Giants dropped the finale to the Dodgers at Dodger Stadium 6-4 to end this brutal road trip on Thursday afternoon, as back-to-back home runs by Nick Ahmed and Shohei Ohtani did the Giants in in the bottom of the eighth inning, and things are starting to become grim for the 2024 San Francisco Giants.

The Giants picked up a much-needed win Wednesday night, and they were hoping to salvage not just a split in this series, but a decent end to what has been a rough road trip to open the second half. Incredibly, here on July 25, this would be the final game between the Giants and the Dodgers this season.

This would also be a massive game for the Giants, who came into Thursday 49-54, and four and a half games back of the Cardinals for the third wild card spot. With the Trade Deadline coming up in five days, this would be a game that could potentially seal what Farhan Zaidi decides to do at the Trade Deadline next Tuesday.

The two rivals played a rare afternoon day game at Dodger Stadium, and Clayton Kershaw, one of the greatest left-handed pitchers in Dodgers History, would make his season debut. Kershaw and the Giants have had a lot of history since he first came up in 2008, and the Giants would once again be up against him in a big game.

Kershaw retired the first two men he faced to begin the game. Heliot Ramos doubled to center field, and Matt Chapman walked, but like the Giants have done throughout this road trip, they wasted this opportunity when Patrick Bailey struck out swinging to end the inning.

Giants’ ace Logan Webb took the ball in the bottom of the third. Webb gave up three runs in the bottom of the third inning at the All-Star Game in Arlington, Texas last Tuesday, and he labored through a rough outing in Denver on Saturday.

Thursday, Webb made his biggest start of the season in a rivalry game that could very well determine the fate of the team. He got off to a good start, as he walked Shohei Ohtani to start the bottom of the first, but retired the side in order afterwards.

Kershaw pitched a scoreless top of the second, and the Dodgers struck first in the bottom of the second. Gavin Lux walked to lead off the inning and advanced to second base on a ground out by Jason Heyward. With one out, Kiké Hernandez singled the other way to right to knock in Lux.

The Dodgers were preparing to do more, as Austin Barnes singled to right to put runners at first and second with one out. However, Webb settled down and retired the next two hitters to end the inning.

The Giants would then strike in the top of the third. Jorge Soler lined a base-hit to left to lead off the inning, and the suddenly-red-hot Tyler Fitzgerland lined a triple into the corner down the left field line to tie the game. Ramos hit a bullet off Kershaw, which reflected over to second base for a base-hit, and Fitzgerald scored to give the Giants the lead.

Matt Chapman lined a base-hit to center to move Ramos over to second. The Giants were looking to do more, but that was of course too much to ask from them, and Kershaw retired the next three to end the inning.

Webb pitched a 1-2-3 bottom of the third, and Kershaw threw a scoreless top of the fourth. The Dodgers retook the lead with a pair of runs in the bottom of the fourth. Kiké Hernandez doubled in Gavin Lux, who walked to start the inning, and Austin Barnes singled in Hernandez.

Shohei Ohtani doubled Hernandez over to third, and Teoscar Hernandez walked, but Freddie Freeman popped out to third to end the inning. Being unable to add on had become an interesting theme in this game.

Joe Kelly came in for Kershaw in the top of the fifth, because Dave Roberts—or whatever nerd is managing the game in the Dodgers’ front office—obviously wasn’t going to stretch Kershaw in his first start back. Kershaw threw 72 pitches in his four innings Thursday.

The Giants wasted a shot against Kelly in the top of the fifth, and the Dodgers made them pay for it in the bottom of the inning. Andy Pages and Gavin Lux each singled to put runners at the corners with one out, and Pages scored when Jason Heyward grounded into a double play to make it 4-2.

Of course, Heyward did not get an RBI, as a player cannot get credited with an RBI if they ground into a double play. As for Webb, he was done after five, and it was another rough outing for him, as he gave up four runs and nine hits.

Daniel Hudson came in for Los Angeles and threw a scoreless top of the sixth. The Dodgers threatened to blow it open when they loaded the bases against Sean Hjelle with one out in the bottom of the sixth. For Hjelle, he was able to get Andy Pages to ground into a double play, and it remained 4-2 going to the late innings.

Evan Phillips threw a 1-2-3 top of the seventh inning, and Luke Jackson struck out the side in a 1-2-3 bottom of the seventh.

The Giants showed that they still had some fight in them in the top of the eighth. David Villar doubled off left-hander Alex Vesia to start the inning, but Brett Wisely and Mike Yastrzemski both struck out. Michael Conforto hit a double off the bottom of the wall out in right-center to make it 4-3, and Roberts brought in Blake Treinen.

Jorge Soler came up, and he lined a base-hit to left to knock in Conforto and tie the game. The Giants indeed still had some fight in them, and they even had a chance to retake the league after Soler stole second. Though the Giants scored two runs to tie it, it was still too much of an ask for even the red-hot Fitzgerald to give them the lead, as he struck out to end the inning.

Submariner Tyler Rogers came in for the bottom of the eighth, and with one out, former Giant Nick Ahmed came to the plate. Ahmed and Ohtani may have put the dagger in the heart of the Giants’ season with back-to-back home runs to put the Dodgers back ahead 6-4. Brent Honeywell then threw a scoreless top of the ninth.

Blake Treinen got the win; Tyler Rogers took the loss; and Brent Honeywell picked up his first-career save.

The Giants end up going 2-5 on the road trip, as they fall back down to six games under .500 at 49-55, and they are now five and a half games back of the San Diego Padres for that third wild card spot in the National League.

The Giants end up going 4-9 against the Dodgers this season, and 1-6 at Dodger Stadium.

The Giants have the talent, and they’ve shown their potential at various times throughout the season. However, with the 2-5 start to the second half; the fact that they are now five and a half games back of the nearest playoff spot; and the frustration clearly mounting with the team, it is very possible that Farhan Zaidi could decide to sell at the Trade Deadline next Tuesday.

The one thing the Giants have going for them is that they are going to have the easiest schedule in Baseball over the next month. That will start when the Giants return home to face the Colorado Rockies in the first game of a four-game series Friday night.

Friday’s game will be a matchup of two left-handed Kyles. Kyle Harrison (5-4, 3.86 ERA) will make the start for the Giants, and Kyle Freeland (2-3, 5.63 ERA) will take the ball for Colorado. First pitch will be at 7:15 p.m.

Giants News and Notes:

The Giants signed Derek Hill, who was activated Wednesday. He got the start in left-field today and went 0-for-2.

Some interesting facts about Hill, who comes from a baseball family. His father, Orsinom, was a scout for the Dodgers, the Rockies and the Arizona Diamondbacks. His cousin is Darryl Strawberry, and he was teammates with J.D. Davis and Rowdy Tellez at Elk Grove High School.

With Hill and Robbie Ray’s addition to the roster Wednesday, Luis Matos and Randy Rodriguez were sent back to Triple-A Sacramento.

According to Alex Pavlovic, the Giants’ beat writer for NBC Sports Bay Area, Jordan Hicks, who got off to a great start in April and May, after he was brought over by Farhan Zaidi and converted from a reliever into a starter but has struggled as of late, could be heading back to the bullpen.

Hicks was originally expected to start Sunday, but after saying his body felt “worn down,” he could be moved to the bullpen as early as this weekend.

Oakland A’s report: Miller fractures hand while trying to exercise

Oakland A’s closer Mason Miller is on the 15 day IL with a fracture on his left hand, reportedly his left pinkie is fractured. The fracture happened on Mon Jul 22, 2024 at the Oakland Coliseum. (photo from MLB)

By Jerry Feitelberg

As opposed to first reports that Oakland A’s pitcher Mason Miller fractured his pinky finger on his left hand on Monday while pounding a padded training table in the training room after Monday’s win against the Houston Astros in Oakland. An updated report says that Miller fractured his hand while trying to get up to do exercises.

Miller’s injury triggered the A’s to take pitcher Ross Stripling off the 15 day IL. The loss of Miller no doubt sets the A’s back. Miller the ace of the A’s pitching staff as a closer has thrown over 100 MPH pitches, led the American League in saves, and has been reliable in save situations.

The injury is unusual but nonetheless the A’s who had won seven of their last 11 games and won their last 3 three game series from the Philadelphia Phillies, Los Angeles Angels, and Houston Astros heavily rely on Miller’s ability to be a game closer and will now have to figure on how to persevere in closing out games.

Miller was the subject of lots of trade interest before the trade deadline with the heat he brings in save situations and the success he’s had not only at the All Star Game but all season long. With his fractured hand and no telling when he’ll be healthy enough to come back he most likely will stay A’s property for the rest of the season.

Jerry Feitelberg is an Oakland A’s reporter at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Headline Sports with Michael Roberson: Cora-Red Sox working on contract extension; Brew Crew’s Yelich on 10 day IL plus more news

Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora and the Red Sox are looking to work out a contract extension for the next three seasons. (AP News file)

On Headline Sports with Michael Roberson:

#1 Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora and the Red Sox are in negotiations for a contract extension that would give him an extra three years at $21.75 million. The Sox as of Tuesday are 54-46 and are one game back of the Kansas City Royals for the final wild card spot.

#2 Michael you cover the Milwaukee Brewers pretty closely and the Brewers have place Christian Yelich on the ten day IL due back inflammation. Yelich is schedule to see a specialist Thursday to figure out what to do next. Yelich’s back had been bothering him in recent weeks. You saw him at the All Star game but after the break is now on the IL.

#3 It’s been said that the New York Yankees Juan Soto and Aaron Judge are the best one two punch since Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig. That said the Yankees have struggled and are 10-21 since the start of the season when the Yanks were 50-22.

#4 Turning to the NCAA you probably aren’t surprised that after realignment some schools would not be all too please. In the ACC, Commissioner Jim Phillips said he would fight lawsuits filed by Clemson and Florida State University. The lawsuits are over the schools withdrawal penalty and grant of rights and gets uglier as the NCAA has filed a countersuit. Phillips said the NCAA is fighting for the protection of league and it’s members and that both Clemson and FSU both signed off for the grant of rights.

#5 Tuesday the Cal Bears and Stanford Cardinal made their ACC Media Day appearances. Stanford football head coach Troy Taylor said that the Cardinal need to adapt quickly or they will not be relevant this upcoming season. Taylor as well as the ACC schools are trying to make the adjustment to the realignment and division switches that Taylor said was at first shocking to see such a traditional conference like the Pac 10 just suddenly go away.

Michael Roberson is a podcast contributor at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Headline Sports podcast with Jessica Kwong: Yankees say ex-teammate Severino was afraid to play them in June; Team USA bounces back after loss to WNBA All Stars; plus more news

New York Mets Luis Severino responded to his old New York Yankee teammates group text saying he was afraid to face them last month in June. Severino replied he wasn’t afraid and that the Yankees only have two good hitters. (AP News file photo)

On Headline Sports podcast with Jessica:

#1 New York Mets Luis Severino said that the New York Yankees have only two good hitters and did not face his former team in June when the Mets faced the Yankees in a two game series at Citi Field in Queens. In a group text with Yankee players that said that Severino was afraid of them. Severino came back and said, “I’m not afraid of you. You guys only have two good hitters .

#2 After taking a loss to the WNBA All Star team at the WNBA All Star break last week Team USA came back and defeated Germany quite handedly 84-57 in US women’s Olympic basketball in London. Germany and Team USA will face off again on Aug 4th in Paris.

#3 The San Francisco 49ers fully intend to sign wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk. 49ers general manager John Lynch said he intends to keep Aiyuk. Aiyuk formally requested a trade from the 49ers last week the 49ers are steadfast as Aiyuk is under contract for one more season and hope to get him an extension soon or at least the first pre season game.

#4 LeBron James helped Team USA with a win over Germany 92-88 on Monday night at age 39. He finished with 20 points, six rebounds, and four assists. LeBron said that they have a group of guys, Joel Embiid, Stephen Curry, and when Kevin Durant returns.

#5 Team USA Women’s gets the win over Germany but still does their loss to the WNBA All Stars say they prove that leaving out Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark could have been a bad decision by the coaching staff or was there pressure from the veterans to keep them off because of their rookie status?

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

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Ray takes no hitter into fifth in Giants 8-3 win over Dodgers

San Francisco Giants starter Robbie Ray makes first season appearance on Wed Jul 23, 2024 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 San Francisco Giants starter Robbie Ray looked like he never missed a step throwing five innings of no hit ball against the Mighty Los Angeles Dodgers at Chavez Ravine for a 8-3 win. Ray had been recovering from Tommy John surgery and this was his first appearance of the season.

#2 The Giants Matt Chapman slugged his 14th home run of season helping the Giants in getting a five run win over the Dodgers in the third game of this four game series.

#3 Ray coming back from surgery after rehabbing was in the Giants plans to make his first appearance of the season in July but no one expected him to out baffle, keep the hitters off balance and help keep the Dodgers run count down.

#4 Ray after loading the bases in the first inning allowed just one bases loaded walk and no hit the Dodgers for his first five innings.

#5 The Giants will start RHP Logan Webb (7-8, ERA 3.59) and the Dodgers will start LHP Clayton Kershaw (0-0, ERA 0.00) Kershaw is making his first appearance of the 2024 season after having shoulder surgery. This game will conclude the four game series.

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

Robbie Ray throws five no-hit innings in long-awaited Giants’ debut, and offense explodes late for much needed 8-3 win at Dodger Stadium

second from left San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Robbie Ray talks with Giants pitching coach Brian Price second from right in the bottom of the fifth inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Wed Jul 24, 2024 (AP News photo)

Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Dodger Stadium

Los Angeles, California

San Francisco Giants 8 (49-54)

Los Angeles Dodgers 3 (61-42)

Win: Robbie Ray (1-0)

Loss: Tyler Glasnow (8-6)

Time: 2:51

Attendance: 54,070

By Stephen Ruderman

Robbie Ray pitched five no-hit innings in his long-awaited Giants’ debut, and the Giants’ offense finally came to life and exploded in six-run top of the eighth inning enroute to a desperately-needed 8-3 over the Dodgers Wednesday night at Chavez Ravine.

There’s no sugar coating any of this. The Giants have been off to a horrendous start here in the second half. The offense has gone dead again, and they have dropped four of their first five.

The Giants were in need of a spark, and perhaps with left-hander Robbie Ray making his long-awaited Giants’ debut after signing with the team over the off-season, Wednesday night was the night they would get it.

The Dodgers also started a man tonight who was coming off the Injured List in Tyler Glasnow. Granted, he last pitched on July 5, and he’s been having himself a solid season, as he came into Wednesday night 8-5 with a 3.47 ERA. What his injury did was prevent him from pitching in his first all-star game.

Jorge Soler walked to lead off the game, and Matt Chapman drew a two-out walk three batters later. However, the Giants were unable to come though off Glasnow in the top of the first inning, as Michael Conforto struck out on a curveball in the dirt to end the inning.

We finally got to see Robbie Ray in the bottom of the first. Ray first came up with the Detroit Tigers in 2014, and then was traded over to the Arizona Diamondbacks, where he spent the next five and a half years.

Ray was traded from the Diamondbacks to the Toronto Blue Jays in the middle of the 60-game COVID-shortened sprint season of 2020. Ray had his best season with the Blue Jays in 2021, when he went 13-7 with a 2.84 ERA and struck out 248. Ray had another solid season with the Seattle Mariners in 2022, going 12-12 with a 3.71 ERA and 212 strikeouts.

Ray made his first start of last season on March 31, when he allowed five runs, three of them earned, to the Cleveland Guardians in three and a third innings. Ray ended up injuring himself, and had to have Tommy John surgery, which ended his season.

When the Giants signed him over the off-season, it was with the explicit understanding that he would not pitch until the middle of the season. The Giants had hoped to have him back sooner, but now was better than never.

Ray’s first inning back would be a long one. Shohei Ohtani flew out to deep left to begin the bottom of the first, but Ray hit Will Smith and then threw a wild pitch to Freddie Freeman, which moved Smith over to second base.

Freeman walked, and both runners advanced to second and third on another wild pitch by Ray. Just like Tuesday night, the Giants’ starting pitcher threw wild pitchers in the bottom of the first inning. Teoscar Hernandez was hit to load the bases, and Andy Pages walked to knock in a run. Ray then settled down and minimized the damage to one run.

Glasnow pitched a scoreless top of the second, and Ray a 1-2-3 bottom of the second. Brett Wisely singled and stole second to start the third, and Soler walked, but Heliot Ramos grounded into an inning-ending double play, as the Giants’ offense wasted another opportunity. Ray pitched another 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the third, as he had settled down to retire eight-straight.

Matt Chapman led off the fourth with a home run just to the right of straight away center field to tie the game. Later in the inning, Tyler Fitzgerald, who had homered in five-straight games coming in, doubled. Mike Yastrzemski then grounded a base-hit up the middle into right-center to knock in Fitzgerald to give the Giants the lead. It was a much-needed RBI hit with runners in scoring position for the Giants.

Ray pitched two more 1-2-3 innings in the bottom of the fourth and fifth, and that would do it for him after five no-hit innings. His control was all over the place, when he gave up a run after walking two and hitting two, but he settled down to retire the final 14 men he faced, and he ended up striking out eight. With his pitch count at 86 in his first start in a year and a half, there was no way he was going any longer, but it was still a much-needed spark for the team.

Glasnow, meanwhile, threw a 1-2-3 top of the fifth to end his night. Anthony Banda came in for Los Angeles in the top of the sixth, and after striking out Chapman and Michael Conforto, he walked Fitzgerald and hit Yastrzemski. However, Curt Casali struck out swinging to end the inning.

Ryan Walker came in for the Giants and threw a 1-2-3 inning in the bottom of the sixth, and Banda and Yohan Ramirez combined for a scoreless top of the seventh. Submariner Tyler Rogers came in and allowed a two-out double to Chris Taylor, who injured himself and had to leave the game. Rogers then got Kiké Hernández to fly out to end the inning, so no problem.

Ramirez was back out for the top of the eighth, and the Giants finally exploded. Chapman walked to start the inning; Conforto singled to right to put runners at the corners; and Fitzgerald walked to load the bases. Yastrzemski fisted a base-hit to right to score Chapman to make it 3-1, and Patrick Bailey pinch-hit for Casali and made it 4-1 with a base-hit to right.

The Giants were keeping the line moving, as Dave Roberts lifted Ramirez for veteran right-hander Joe Kelly. Brett Wisely flew out to left for the first out of the inning, and Soler knocked in Fitzgerald on a ground out to short to make it 5-1.

Kelly intentionally walked LaMonte Wade, which loaded the bases for Ramos. Ramos singled the other way to right to knock in a pair and open it up to 7-1. Matt Chapman knocked in Wade with a base-hit up the middle to make it 8-1, and the Giants’ offense had finally shown what they were capable of with a six-run top of the eighth.

Freddie Freeman doubled in Nick Ahmed—yes, that Nick Ahmed, who started the season with the Giants; was released; signed this very morning with the Dodgers; and made the start Wednesday night—off Erik Miller in the bottom of the eighth to make it 8-2.

Ryan Yarbrough pitched a 1-2-3 top of the ninth, and the Dodgers got to left-hander Taylor Rogers in the bottom of the ninth, but it was for moot, as the Giants won it 8-3.

Robbie Ray got the win in his first big league start in a year and a half, and Tyler Glasnow took the loss. The Giants improve to 49-54, and they are now four and a half games back of the St. Louis Cardinals, who have slipped into the third wild card spot. The Giants are also now 5-0 when they are a season-high six games under .500.

Anyway, the Giants can salvage a split on getaway day Wednesday. Giants’ ace Logan Webb (7-8, 3.59 ERA) will try to bounce back from his rough all-star game appearance and rocky start in Denver Saturday. Clayton Kershaw of all people will come off the IL Thursday to make his 2024 debut for the Dodgers. First pitch will be at 1:10 p.m.

Wrexham Continues Wrex Coast Tour 2024; Match ends up in 2-2 draw

The Wrexham Red Dragons and the Chelsea Blues battled to a 2-2 draw at Levi Stadium in Santa Clara (photo by @CarolRadull)

By Tony Renteria

SANTA CLARA–The Hulu Documentary darlings the Wrexham Red Dragons played their second match of the teams 2024 United States tour playing Chelsea Blues at Levi Stadium. Wrexham which has been riding a wave of interest since the Docu series “Welcome to Wrexham” premiered in August of 2022 arrived in Santa Clara coming off One to One a tie against F.C. Bournemouth last Saturday evening in Santa Barbara.

The first half was pretty uneventful until the 35th minute with Christopher Nkunku put the ball in the back of the net to give Chelsea a 1-0 lead into the break. Nkunku a French Born player came over to Chelsea in 2023 on a six year deal that is whopping 52 million pounds.

The second half started out quickly as Wrexham’s Luke Bolton scored at the the 58th Minute to tie the score to One to One. Bolton’s teammate Jack Marriot was able to get ahead of a defender and take shot on the goal at the 71st minute that put the underdog Red Dragons ahead 2-1.

Wrexham turned up the aggressiveness as the ball seemed to stay on the Chelsea side of the pitch. Chelsea was able to exploit that over aggressiveness and get a game tying goal at the 81st minute by Lesley Ugochukwu.

After this goal both Wrexham Manager Phil Parkinson and Chelsea’s Enzo Maresca started to replace all the starters with sub. A Friendly Match translated is an exhibition match. Parkinson must has memories of losing the amazing striker Paul Mullin last season in a friendly that hurt the start of Wrexham’s 2024 campaign in League Two. Both Managers played it safe in the last moments that lead to a 2-2.

Wrexham which was just promoted to League One has the uneasily task of taking on a top notch Premier league team. In context it would as an AA baseball team was taking on the Los Angels Dodgers. This marks the second time these two clubs have played in a friendly as Chelsea handed the Red Dragons a five to to nil lost last year in Chapel Hill N.C.

Chelsea is an established power house in the Premier league and commands fans from all over the world and Wednesday night was no different as the flood of Blue Jerseys in the stands stood out against the red that encompasses Levi Stadium.

Wednesday night’s Friendly actually marks the first match for Chelsea under the guidance of new head manager Enzo Maresca. Maresca comes over from Leicester City Football Club where he was there for two season coaching in the Championship League. Chelsea will open their season against Manchester City on August 18.

Sears solid and then implodes lead, as A’s are unable to complete sweep in 8-1 loss to Astros

Oakland A’s starter JP Sears pitches in the top of the sixth to the Houston Astros at the Oakland Coliseum on Wed Jul 24, 2024 (AP News photo)

Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum

Oakland, California

Houston Astros 8 (53-49)

Oakland Athletics 1 (41-63)

Win: Hunter Brown (9-6)

Loss: JP Sears (7-8)

Time: 2:30

Attendance: 14,978

By Stephen Ruderman

The A’s were unable to complete the sweep, as JP Sears imploded late, and the Astros won it 8-1 in what was most likely their final game at the Oakland Coliseum.

The A’s have been playing better baseball as of late. They took two of three from the Phillies, only the best team in Baseball, in Philadelphia to close out the first half. They also took the two of three from the Angels over the weekend at the Coliseum, but were unable to complete the sweep Sunday.

This week, the A’s have had the chance to play spoilers with the Houston Astros in town. The Astros, who got off to a 7-19 start, perhaps showing wear and tear in their aging core, have since played like the Astros of old, and have bolted themselves into dogfight atop a weak American League West with the Seattle Mariners.

The Astros went into this series in a virtual tie for first place with the Mariners, leading by mere percentage points. The A’s won the first two games of this series, but the Mariners have lost the first two games of their current three-game series with the Angels, which meant the two teams were still in a virtual tie coming into play Wednesday.

This was also most likely going to be the final game for the Astros at the Oakland Coliseum. The Astros came over from the National League to the American League in 2013, so they don’t have as much of a history at the Coliseum as the rest of the American League. Still, they’ve had their fair share of epic moments at the Coliseum over these last 12 years.

The A’s had a chance to complete the sweep today, which they were not able to do against the Angels, and they had the perfect guy on the mound for that in JP Sears. Sears hasn’t had the best season, as he came into Tuesday’s game with a 4.49 ERA, but he’s been a consistent game, who has chomped at the bit to take the ball throughout his year and a half in the big leagues.

Jose Altuve and Alex Bregman both singled to left field to start the game, and Yordan Alvarez grounded into a fielder’s choice to put runners at the corners with one out. Yandy Diaz then knocked in Altuve with a sacrifice fly to right.

The A’s struck right back against Astros’ starter Hunter Brown in the bottom of the first inning on back-to-back doubles. Lawrence Butler doubled to center to lead off the inning, and Miguel Andujar immediately followed that up with a double to right to tie the game. Despite the go-ahead run now being at second with nobody out, the A’s were unable to take the lead.

Mauricio Dubon struck out swinging to start the top of the second, but Jon Singleton reached on an error by first-baseman Seth Brown, which allowed Singleton to reach second base. Chas McCormick grounded out to third for an unproductive second out, but Altuve lined the first pitch for the longest single of the year off the bottom of the wall down the left field line to put Houston back ahead.

The A’s had runners at first and second with two outs after base-hits by Brown and Max Schuemann, but the A’s were unable to come through, and Brown got out of the inning without any damage.

Sears pitched a pair of 1-2-3 innings in the third and fourth. I would have said he settled down, but if it wasn’t for Brown’s error in the second, it would have most likely been three-straight 1-2-3 innings. Brown, meanwhile, pitched scoreless innings in both the third and fourth.

The Astros led 2-1 going to the fifth, with one out, McCormick hit a home run just barely to the left of straight away center to make it 3-1. Altuve reached on a throwing error by third-baseman Abraham Toro, but Sears kept his composure and got out of it without any further damage.

Brown pitched a scoreless bottom of the fifth, and then Sears hit another rough patch in the top of the sixth. Yainer Diaz doubled to lead off the inning, and Jeremy Pena followed up with a single to left to score Diaz and extend Houston’s lead to 4-1. Like the fifth, Sears settled down, and he ended up picking off Pena, who was trying to steal second, to end the inning.

Brown threw another scoreless inning in the bottom of the sixth, and Sears went back out for the top of the seventh. Even though he got a bad break on Brown’s error in the second, Sear was solid after a bumpy top of the first.

Sears showed some signs of vulnerability in the fifth and sixth, as he allowed a run in each inning, but he was able to minimize the damage both times. Since he had only thrown 74 pitches through his six innings, he was back out for the seventh.

However, as the Astros prepared to go through the fourth time in their order, Sears collapsed. Singleton lined a lead-off base-hit to right, and McCormick was hit by a pitch. Altuve and Bregman then hit back-to-back doubles, and just four batters and eight pitches in, the Astros had scored three runs to open up their lead to 7-1.

Sears was also done, and Kyle Muller was brought into the game. Yordan Alvarez moved Bregman over to third on a fly out to center, and Yainer Diaz got Bregman in with a sacrifice fly to center to make it a laugher at 8-1.

It was quite an unfortunate end to Sears’ day. Sears had given up three unearned runs through six innings, but after giving up four runs in the seventh, his final totals didn’t necessarily reflect his entire outing. He was able to keep the dam from bursting at times, but it finally came unglued in the seventh.

As for his final totals, Sears gave up nine hits and eight runs, seven of them, earned over six innings. He did not walk anybody, and he struck out three.

The A’s wasted an opportunity against Bryan Abreu in the bottom of the seventh, and Muller came back out to throw a 1-2-3 top of the eighth. Muller Worked out of a jam for a scoreless top of the ninth, and he did a great job in three innings out of the bullpen.

Muller also made it so Mark Kotsay did not have to blow through his bullpen. In fact, despite the Astros’ scoring eight runs today, Kotsay only had to use two pitchers.

Taylor Scott pitched a scoreless bottom of the eighth for Houston, and Bryan King did the same in the bottom of the ninth, as the Astros ended up winning it 8-1.

Hunter Brown got the win, and JP Sears got the loss. Just like in their series against the Angels, the A’s were unable to complete the sweep, as they fall to 41-63.

The Angels complete their sweep of the Mariners up in Seattle with a 2-1 win at T-Mobile Park, and as a result, the Astros now move a full game ahead of the Mariners atop the American League West.

The A’s will now head to Anaheim for a four-game set against those very Los Angeles Angels starting Thursday night. The veteran, Ross Stripling (1-9, 5.82 ERA), will be on the mound for Oakland, and he will be opposed by left-hander Kenny Rosenberg (0-0, 6.30 ERA), who will make his first start of the season. First pitch will be at 6:38 p.m.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: 2024 The Final Season of the A’s at the Coliseum (Part IX)

1989 World Series logo (image from baseball.wikia.com)

2024 The Final Season of the A’s at the Coliseum (Part IX)

A’s vs. Giants rivalry

By Amaury Pi-González

OAKLAND–The Giants arrived in San Francisco from New York in 1958; ten years later, the A’s arrived from Kansas City in Oakland. The Bay Area rivalry between Oakland and San Francisco has grown, drawing huge crowds at the stadiums on both sides of the Bay.

The rivalry became more intense (but still friendly) after the 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake on October 17, 1989, a few minutes past five in the afternoon, when the ground shook at Candlestick Park.

It all began at Oakland. The first two games of the World Series took place at the Oakland Coliseum; the Athletics won 5-0 and 5-1. We moved to San Francisco’s Candlestick Park for games three and four, but on Game three, a surprise, when the earth moved violently with a 7.1 intensity earthquake (later downgraded to a 6.9), still enough for interim Baseball Commissioner Fay Vincent to postpone the World Series for some 11 days until both teams resumed the action in early October for games three and four, which the A’s also won 13-7 and 6-5.

For us, broadcasting that classic was an experience we will never forget for the rest of our lives. This is the first and only time a World Series has been stopped and postponed because of an Earthquake. Note: The Giants returned to the World Series in 2002 (13 years later) and lost to the Anaheim Angels 4 games to 3.

The famous and historic 1989 World Series, which began at the Oakland Coliseum, was the first held there since the team won the last of three consecutive World Series in 1974. Fifteen years later, the Oakland A’s were the talk of baseball, and the Oakland Coliseum was “the place to be.” Coliseum attendance in the 1989 regular season was 2,667,225.

The Good Old Days at the Oakland Coliseum, as we remember this 2024, a historic year and the last season they will play at this huge facility,

Schedule: The Oakland A’s will face the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park on July 30-31. The last time these Bay Area rivals will face each other is next August 17-18 at the Oakland Coliseum. All these games will air live in Spanish on KIQI 1010AM Bay Area/990AM Sacramento, on the Oakland A’s Spanish Radio Network.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the vice president of the Major League Baseball Hispanic Heritage Hall of Fame Museum and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco 49ers podcast with David Zizmor: Aiyuk reports to 49ers camp despite contract dispute

San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk is in a contract extension with the 49ers and had held out from appearing at training camp but has reported this week while negotiations continue. (Sports Illustrated file photo)

On the San Francisco 49ers podcast with David Zizmor:

#1 David, San Francisco 49ers general manager John Lynch said that negotiations won’t cease as the 49ers are doing everything they can to get a contract extension with 49ers wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk. Aiyuk says he wants to be paid amongst some of the top NFL receivers.

#2 Inspite of wanting a trade from the 49ers Aiyuk has report. Many NFL analysts were surprised that Aiyuk would show up during a contract dispute with the team. Aiyuk wants to stay with the 49ers but wants a huge payday. Does his reporting mean he’s honoring the last year of contract or he wants to be season ready and negotiate through training camp and pre season if necessary.

#3 Former legendary New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick was offered a job as an assistant to 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan. Belichick declined the offer and is used to being the one in charge and could be looking for another offer but as a head coach. Belichick could have been considered as a defensive coordinator to replace Steve Wilks after he was fired but the Niners replaced him with Nick Sorenson. Belichick has been helping his son who is Steve who is a defensive coordinator at the Washington Huskies. In the off season Belichick has been making appearances on the Pat McAfee show and Inside the NFL.

Join David Zizmor for the San Francisco 49ers podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com