Oakland A’s Max Schuemann hangs his head after striking out in the bottom of the fifth inning against the Seattle Mariners at the Oakland Coliseum on Wed Sep 4, 2024 (AP News photo)
Seattle (70-70). 020 300 740. 16 16 0
Athletics (61-79). 100 001 100. 3. 7 0
Time: 2:47
Attendance: 4,390
Wednesday, September 4, 2024
Oakland, CA
By Lewis Rubman
OAKLAND–It was a warm Wednesday evening when play began at Coliseum at 6:40 this evening, and the current occupants of that crumbling stately edifice still were feeling the warmth of their walk off triumph over the visiting Seattle Mariners the night before. The Mariners show no mercy clobbering the A’s 16-3 in the third game of this four game series.
Although the temperature and the A’s performance swifty cooled down after the green and gold had jumped off to a one run lead in their first turn at bat, the result was a massacre, with the departing A’s on the short end of a pestiferous 16- stick. .
Lawrence Butler got things going for the Athletics with a lead off double. It was his ninth straight game with at least one extra base hit, a franchise record. It also extended his hitting streak to 14.Brent Rooker drove Butler in with a single, giving the A’s a 1-0 lead, and, after JJ Bleday and Sean Langeiers struck out, got thrown out trying to steal second.
It was all downhill for the Athletics after that. Seattle’s starter, George Kirby, their first round draft choice in 2019, followed his back to back strikeouts by retiring the next nine batters he faced, five by the strikeout route, before Seth Brown and Zack Gelf touched him for a single and double, respectively, to open the bottom of the fifth.
They died on base. Brent Rooker beat out a grounder to short with one down in the sixth and scored on JJ Bleday’s scorching line drive double to right to give the A’s their second run. The third and final tally for the green and gold came in the seventh on a walk to Zack Gelof, a double by Tristan Grey, his first hit of the year, and an RBI groundout. by Max Schuermann.
Kirby stayed in the game for six innings and got the win, improving his record 11-10, 3.61. The two runs he allowed were earned and came on six hits. Kirby’s nine Ks came unaccompanied by any walks. 58 of his 85 offerings were counted as strikes. JT Chargois allowed a run, earned, in his 2/3 of an inning, Tayler Saucedo struck out the only batter he faced, and Eduard Bazardo and Jhonathan Díaz eached pitched a scoreless frame.
The M’s got to JP Sears, who came to work at 11-9, 4.21,, for a couple of runs in the second on a hit batter, a walk, and a two RBI double by Mitch Garver. They roughed him up in the fourth, plating three more tallies on a two out down the left field line double by Victor Robles, an RBI single to center by Mitch Garver, an RBI double to center off the bat of Luis Urías, and Dylan Moore’s single to right.
In the six innings Sears lasted he gave up five runs, all earned, on as many. hits, and a walk. He also hit one batter and struck out five. He threw 94 pitches to the 26 Mariners he faced, took the loss, and went home 11-10. 4.34.
Sears didn’t come out for the seventh, lifted in favor of Jason Junk, who was making his Athletics debut. The unfortunately surnamed right hander pitched an ugly seventh frame that included a leadoff home run by Luis Urías, a couple of doubles, three singles, and three walks, without an out having been recorded.
I’m not enough of a sadist to inflict a description of what the Mariners did to Junk in his painful stint on the hill; the numbers speak for themselves. four Ross Stripling finally got the required three outs, although his performance in the continuing debacle did nothing to aussage the ignominy of the Athletics’ annihilation.
Two of the runs charged to Junk were inherited by Stripling, who ended up with three innings to his credit, in which he was charged with four earned runs on five hits and a walk.
Maybe the game scheduled to start at 12:37 Thursday afternoon, will restore some of the A’s tattered dignity. Seattle will send Bryan Woo (6-2, 2.30) against them. Mark Kotsay hasn’t yet announced who will take the mound for the Athletics.

