Sacramento A’s Jacob Wilson (right) dives in ahead of the Pittsburgh Pirates second baseman Brandon Lowe’s tag at home plate scoring in the bottom of the first inning at Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento on Tue Jun 16, 2026 (Golden Bay Times photo)
Reynolds Canon Blasts Sink the A’s
By Mauricio Segura
WEST SACRAMENTO–It seemed like the Sacramento A’s had the Pittsburgh Pirates by the throat and were headed toward a second straight win. Instead, Pittsburgh raised the black flag, fired a few cannon blasts, and stole the night. Bryan Reynolds turned the ballpark into his own personal batting cage, Brandon Lowe saved his best swing for the ninth, and the Pirates edged the Sacramento Athletics 6-5 after spending the early innings trying to crawl out of a ditch.
The Green and Gold did not wait around in the first inning. Nick Kurtz opened the bottom half with a free pass, Tyler Soderstrom followed with another, and Jacob Wilson loaded the bases with the third. Carlos Cortes went down swinging, but Zack Gelof made the inning matter.
He slapped a grounder toward first baseman Spencer Horwitz, and when the play turned messy, Kurtz, Soderstrom and Wilson all scored. Gelof ended up at second on Horwitz’s throwing error, and Lawrence Butler followed with a run-scoring double to left. Just like that, the Athletics had a 4-0 lead and Mitch Keller looked like a man trying to solve a Rubik’s Cube with sliding gloves.
Jack Perkins protected that early cushion nicely through three innings. He gave up a Bryan Reynolds single in the first but stranded him, then settled in with a smooth second and third. Perkins struck out Endy Rodríguez and Tyler Callihan in the second, then got Jake Mangum, Jared Triolo and Horwitz in order in the third. For a pitcher making only his third start of the season after spending most of the year in relief, his performance is exactly what manager Mark Kotsay hoped for.
Pittsburgh finally broke through in the fourth. Reynolds singled to center, Ryan O’Hearn followed with a base hit to right, and Nick Gonzales got the Pirates on the board with a groundout that scored Reynolds. The Athletics still led 4-1, but the Pirates were no longer stuck at the curb waiting for the bus.
The game tightened in the sixth. Reynolds lifted a homer to center to make it 4-2, and O’Hearn doubled moments later. Perkins was replaced by Justin Sterner, but Rodríguez greeted the new arm with a single to center that scored O’Hearn and cut the A’s lead to 4-3. The inning nearly grew worse, but Jacob Wilson helped end it with a wild-looking relay that erased Rodríguez at third after Mangum singled.
Gelof answered in the bottom of the sixth with a swing that has become part of his month-long success story. TED Talk pending! He sent a solo homer to left, pushing the Athletics back ahead 5-3 and extending what had been a career-best 19-game hitting streak entering the contest. It also continued a strong run for an A’s offense that came in swinging with a franchise-record 23 homers over its previous seven games. For a moment, the Green and Gold had reclaimed their dominant status.
Reynolds took it right back in the seventh. After Hogan Harris replaced Sterner, Horwitz drew a free pass and Lowe struck out, bringing Reynolds up with two outs. He launched his second homer of the game, this one to right, tying it 5-5. Reynolds finished 4-for-5 with two homers, three RBIs and three runs, a one-man problem the Athletics never solved.
The A’s had chances late. Alika Williams doubled to open the bottom of the seventh and moved to third on a wild pitch, but he was stranded after Kurtz struck out, Shea Langeliers grounded out and Wilson hit into a force play. In the eighth, Gelof drew a free pass and stole second, but Colby Thomas and Henry Bolte both struck out to end another opportunity.
Then Lowe delivered the swing Pittsburgh had been waiting for. Elvis Alvarado took over in the ninth, got Horwitz on a fly ball, then watched Lowe drive a line-drive homer to right for a 6-5 Pirates lead. Alvarado recovered to retire Reynolds and O’Hearn, but the damage had already been done.
The Athletics made one last push against Gregory Soto in the ninth. Kurtz singled to left, and Langeliers followed with a single to center, putting the tying run at second with one out. Soderstrom then struck out after an ABS challenge changed ball four into strike two, a brutal turn under the circumstance. Wilson lined out to right field to end the game, leaving the A’s with a loss that stung after they had played well through the first six innings.
Game 3 tomorrow closes out the series setting up a right-handed chess match, with Aaron Civale (5-2, 4.20 ERA, 39 K) scheduled for the Sacramento Athletics against Pittsburgh’s Braxton Ashcraft (5-3, 3.30 ERA, 90 K), with first pitch set for 6:40 p.m. Pacific.
Costa Rican-born Mauricio Segura has been covering sports in the Bay Area since 2001 for a variety of magazines and newspapers, as well as his own publication, Golden Bay Times.

