Gray, Kazmir Both Exit Early in Highly Anticipated Duel

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

Like many Hollywood Sequels, Gray-Kazmir II failed to live up to its billing. Almost two weeks ago, Oakland Athletics ace Sonny Gray bested former teammate and mentor Scott Kazmir in a 4-0 victory. Saturday night in Houston, neither hurler factored into the decision, a 10-6 win for the desperate Astros (78-71).

Houston took advantage of Cy Young hopeful Gray early for a trio of runs in the bottom of the first, but the Green and Gold used the next three innings to rough up their former teammate. Jake Smolinski blasted a homer with no one on in the bottom of the second, while A’s shortstop Marcus Semien ripped a solo shot of his on in the 4th. Mark Canha chased Kazmir, a mid-season acquisition by Houston from Oakland, with a two-strike, two-out run-scoring single to tie the game.

The Athletics (64-85) handed Gray a significant lead in the top of the 5th, plating three runs off Kazmir’s replacement Vincent Velasquez. Smolinski, Carson Blair and Craig Gentry all plated runs for Oakland in the inning. Gray did his part in the bottom half of the inning, coughing up singles to Jose Altuve and George Springer before bouncing back with a force out and a double play to escape unscathed.

Gray struggled to open the bottom of the 6th, allowing a leadoff double to Colby Rasmus and a one-out RBI single to Luis Valbuena, He left the game with a 6-4 lead after 5 1/3 innings of 8-hit, 2 strikeout ball. Reliever Drew Pomeranz retired pinch-hitter Chris Carter, usually an Athletics menace, but couldn’t retire Matt Duffy who doubled to put Houston within a run at 6-5.

An inning later Evan Gattis provided the crushing blow, launching a first-pitch offering from Fernando Rodriguez (4-2, 4.08 ERA) just over the wall in right. Gattis’ 26th homer of the season came with two men on base, handing Houston a 8-6 lead. Max Stassi would hit his first long ball of the season in the bottom of the 8th inning for a 9-6 lead. Springer’s sacrifice fly with two outs in the inning would account for the final run, also off Otero, in the 8th.

Chad Qualls (3-4, 3.91) picked up the win for Houston after pitching a scoreless 6th. Will Harris, Tony Sipp and Luke Gregerson also had scoreless appearances for the Astros, a club that now finds itself 2.5 games back of Texas for the American League West lead and 1.5 games ahead of the Angels for the final Wild Card.

Houston sends 16 game-winner Collin McHugh and his 4.05 ERA to the mound in Sunday morning’s finale. Bob Melvin’s athletics counter with Aaron Brooks, the centerpiece of the Ben Zobrist trade. The 25-year-old righty is 2-3 on the year.

Felix King Again at O.Co as M’s top A’s 8-3

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

OAKLAND, Calif. – Yogi Berra wasn’t at O.Co Coliseum, but one couldn’t help but think of him following the A’s 7-3 loss to the Seattle Mariners. It was, as the Yankee legend famously said, “déjà vu all over again” following a dominant performance from Seattle starter Felix Hernandez.

Hernandez crafted a 6-hit, three-run masterpiece in his first appearance at O.Co since a July 4th loss that snapped 13 straight starts in Alameda County without a loss. The Phenom of the Pacific Northwest threw 102 pitches, including 72 strikes to handcuff the A’s offense over 8 innings. Where Felix was dominant, A’s starter Jesse Chavez was not.

Chavez (7-14, 4.17 ERA) was tagged early, tagging the righty for 5 runs over the first three innings. Seattle (65-71) chased the Oakland starter with no outs in the third one batter after surrendering the fourth and fifth runs on a Logan Morrison home run to right center. Morrison also plated a run in the first, part of a three-run inning. The M’s collected three hits and two walks in the first frame parade of baserunners.

“It seems like, in games where he doesn’t have his fastball,” said Melvin. “It seems like his cutter, fastball and changeup are pretty close in velocity. He probably only threw 7 or 8 curveballs which means he didn’t have an effective curve.”

Melvin didn’t believe it was an issue of stamina for Chavez, who has spent the majority of the season starting after mostly spot starts and short tenures as a starter in his career.

Arnold Leon, coming on in relief after Chavez’s brief outing, didn’t fare much better. He surrendered a solo home run to Shawn O’Malley, the first of the Mariners left fielder’s major league career, with no outs in the 5th and was tagged for a second run on a run-scoring base-hit by designated hitter Mark Trumbo in the 6th. The Mariners added another run in the 7th on a two-out single off R.J. Alvarez by Kyle Seager.

Hernandez (16-8, 3.65) stifled the Athletics, as he so often has in his career, The King added to his court a 22 career win against the A’s, running his record against the Green and Gold to 22-8 over 39 starts.

Hernandez cruised through the first three innings, allowing only one baserunner, a Stephen Vogt single over the first third of the game while picking up 4 punch-outs.

Oakland finally managed to string together some base hits against the six-time All-Star in the 4th. First baseman Mark Canha launched his 12th homer of the season, reversing Hernandez’ offering to put Oakland on the board. The M’s ace managed to retire the next two batters, but yielded three-straight two-out hits capped by Billy Butlers two-run single to cut the Mariners lead to 6-3 at the time.

Hernandez would rebound from the hiccup, allowing only one hit over the next 4 innings while striking out another 4 batters. He faced the minimum number of batters over the final 5 frames, doubling off Butler after his 7th inning single. Joe Beimel allowed a single in the ninth, but kept the A’s off the board to seal Hernandez’ victory.

The A’s (58-78) have now dropped to a season-worst 20 games below the .500 mark. Oakland currently sits four wins back of the Tigers with the lowest mark in the American League. If they want to stay ahead of the Phillies at 53, they’ll need Sunday’s starter Sean Nolin to avoid the sweep against Hisashi Iwakuma.

“We’re basically down 4 of 6 guys from where we started this season,” said Melvin on his rotation after the trade of Scott Kazmir and injuries to starters like Kendall Graveman, Jesse Hahn. “There’s significance to that. For some of the newer guys it’s an opportunity to make a mark.”

Nolin, a piece in the Josh Donaldson trade with Toronto in the offseason, will be making his major league debut against the international sensation who threw a no-hitter in early August. The labor of winning won’t be any lighter on Labor Day with the A’s welcoming the division-leading Astros to O.Co for a three-game set.

In Battle of the Streaks Quakes Beat LA

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

SAN JOSE, Calif. –  If the San Jose Earthquakes expected to continue their three-game win streak, let alone the run of 270-plus minutes without yielding a goal, to continue Friday night at Avaya Stadium they’d need their A-game. Facing in-state rivals the Los Angeles Galaxy in the third and deciding leg of the California Clasico between the first two California-based MLS Sides, the Quakes needed to find a way to slow one of the MLS’ most potent offenses and red-hot sides down.

“That’s life in MLS,” said Quakes coach Dominic Kinnear. “It’s a league of streaks.”

San Jose did just that, extending its own streak to four-straight triumphs, topping the Western Conference leaders 1-0 to move ahead of Settle into the fifth spot in the table.

“I’m really happy with this group,” said Kinnear. “The last three weeks we’ve been good. We’ve followed those performances up with a good level of consistency. That’s the reason why we’re winning games.”

Shea Salinas scored and David Bingham made 4 saves to pick up a quartet of clean sheets in as many games. The Quakes earned the crown as Clasico victors, beating LA 3-1 at Stanford Stadium June 27th before being thrashed in Carson 5-2 on July 17th.

The Galaxy entered Friday’s match having scored a league-leading 49 goals over 27 games backed by imports like Steven Gerrard and MLS mainstay Robbie Keane. Despite coming into play with the 2nd most saves in the MLS (86) and ranking third in shutouts (9), Bingham and San Jose had their hands full keeping an LA squad off the board and out of the win column for a fifth-straight match.

“If anybody has been awake,” said Kinnear. “If anyone has been alive in the last five years in soccer, you know those players already. You want to show them you belong, that you’re a good player. If you step on the field and you’re just looking at the names, you’re going to be in for a long night. They’re not good players, they’re great players.”

The road-weary Quakes now find themselves with the upper hand in the closing weeks of the MLS season. They finish up the season with 6 of 8 matches at home as they look to lock up a playoff spot for the first time since 2012 when San Jose won the Supporters Shield with a league-best 19 wins.

A dogged effort by midfielder Shea Salinas put the Quakes on top 1-0 in the 19th minute. Forward Quincy Amarikwa headed a shot onto Galaxy keep Donovan Ricketts, but the MLS vet got his gloves on the bid. Amarikwa’s header proved too strong for a clean grab, instead popping the ball into the air. Salinas capitalized, hitting the goal box on a dead sprint, to head the loose ball into the top right corner of the net for a 1-0 lead.

“Marvell made a great cross and Quincy fought it,” said Salinas of his goal. “Ricketts made a great save. God just put me in the right place and I was able to put it in the back of the net.”

“He just looks confident,” said Kinnear of Salinas and his two-game goal streak. “I think he feels that, no matter who the defender is playing against him, he feels he can beat them.”

“The Quakes started the second half holding most of the momentum, but found themselves further in control after the officials sent Leonardo off with a red card. The Galaxy defender hauled Amarikwa down from behind in the 47th minute to put his team down a man for almost half the contest. LA handcuffed itself in the 74th minute Dave Romney was given a yellow card as well. While the Quakes didn’t score with the man-advantage, they ran the Galaxy ragged with the edge.

After building the streak by breaking Eastern Conference Leaders D.C. United and Sporting Kansas City, third best in the West, the Quakes can make it 5 against the scuffling Philadelphia Union next Saturday. The Union currently sits one win ahead of Chicago as the leg of the Eastern Conference table.

“Teams can come here and beat anyone on any given day,” said Bingham. “We have to continue to play well.”

Vikings, Thunderstorm Rain on Raiders Second Preseason Game

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

Very little went right for the Oakland Raiders in their second preseason contest. They dropped a 20-12 decision to the undefeated Minnesota Vikings, with starters barely getting in a quarter and two-thirds of work due to a thunderstorm that suspended the game for over an hour.

The majority of starters exited the contest at the 6:45 mark, the moment that lightning struck near TCF Bank Stadium forcing the officials to evacuate the bowl of the stadium. At that point, the two teams were tied 6-6 after the Raiders cashed in on a Latavius Murray two yard run and Minnesota put six on the board with a 10 yard connection from quarterback Teddy Bridgewater to Charles Johnson. Raiders Quarterback Derek Carr completed 4 of 8 passes, putting up 78 yards.

Christian Ponder, showered by boos from a crowd ungrateful of his four years under center in the Twin Cities, led the second team on a drive to take the lead fresh off the resumption of play. Ponder helped author a 9 play, 54 yard advance that ended in a 26-yard Giorgio Tavecchio field goal and a 9-6 advantage for the Silver and Black with 4:18 left in the half.

The Vikes rallied to take the lead late in the first half, finding the end zone on a four yard pass from Shaun Hill to Chase Ford with 8 seconds left. The Raiders pulled within a point on a 37-yarder from Tavecchio with 5:25 left in the third, but failed to generate any offense beyond that in the second half. Back-up quarterbacks Matt McGloin (5-for-7,  20 yards) and Chris Fajardo (1-for-4, 11 yards) each threw a pick during their sets of snaps. McGloin’s interception came at the Raiders own 12 yard line, putting Minnesota in the red zone for an easy scoring opportunity. They would convert, with Blake Renaud scoring from the 1 yard line for the final score of the game to make it 20-12 with 2:42 left in the third.

The Raiders defense allowed 22 first downs, including allowing Minnesota to move the chains on 9 of 17 third-down situations. On both sides of the ball Oakland reverted back to its old ways. One week after taking two penalties, the Raiders were flagged for 13 penalties totaling 106 yards.

Oakland went straight from the game to the airport to catch a charter back to the Bay Area. The Silver and Black will return to Napa where they’ll resume training camp, wrapping it up before Sunday night’s contest against the Arizona Cardinals.

NOTES:

Christian Ponder saw the first reps with the second team, putting him in line to take on the back-up role from Matt McGloin….Michael Dyer had the majority of carries, collecting 45 yards on 12 carries. Latavius Murray was second with four carries….Trindon Holliday and Trent Richardson each took a kick-off, with Holliday bringing the ball back 23 yards to Richardson’s 11…Amari Cooper had a team-high 40 receiving yards, all coming on a single catch that preceded Murray’s touchdown in the first quarter. Brice Butler had a team-topping 3 catches, but only 26 yards. Michael Crabtree was only targeted once and had no catches…

Goodson Returns, Nets Game-winner for Quakes

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

SAN JOSE, Calif. – On a night when the City of San Jose’s Department of Environmental Services sponsored the match with blurbs regarding littering and pollution, it was the San Jose Earthquakes who properly disposed of the unwanted Friday. In blanking the visiting Colorado Rapids 1-0 at Avaya Stadium, the Quakes (8-10-5) tossed away a six-game unbeaten stretch to pick up their first win since June 20th.

Clarence Goodson, returning from injury, netted the game-winner in the 53rd minute and goalkeeper David Bingham collected the clean sheet to keep San Jose out of the bottom leg of the Western Conference table and pull within three points of Seattle for the final playoff spot. Colorado (5-9-9) meanwhile, falls five points back of San Jose in last place in the conference.

“I’m really happy with the effort,” said Quakes coach Dominic Kinnear. “The guys were good. A real good goal, a lot of second efforts on that part of it. It would have been nice to have gotten a second to kind of ease the pressure on us a little bit, but any time you shut out a team it gives you a chance to win and one goal was enough for us tonight.”

The contest wasn’t without its drawbacks. Defender Jordan Stewart played an integral part in withstanding an early Rapids onslaught, but exited the contest in the 27th minute with an Achilles injury. While the severity of the injury is unknown, it appears he’ll be absent from the San Jose roster for a sizeable period of time.

“He’s a great soccer player and an even greater person,” said Wondolowski. “True professional in every sense of the word. I’m definitely going to miss him, he’s a good friend. He’s been playing great this whole season. Shaun Francis did a great job stepping in there.”

Another Quake was hampered by injury, but isn’t expected to miss any time. Matias Perez Garcia was limited to 50 minutes with a hamstring ailment before being replaced by recent acquisition Marc Pelosi.

“You could tell it was kind of hindering him a little bit,” said Kinnear. “We tried to hopefully get him going a little bit at halftime, and it just wasn’t happening.”

Goodson looked like he put behind his left leg injury in a fantastic effort that included stalwart defense and the winning score. Chris Wondolowski, playing closer to midfield in a new alignment for Kinnear, managed to place the ball at Quincy Amarikwa’s left foot. Amarikwa lofted it to the right post where Goodson could cash it in for the 1-0 lead.

“I’m not going to miss too many of those,” said Goodson on Amarikwa’s perfect feed. “He said get back there so I got back there. That’s such a good ball. It was a slam dunk.”

While Goodson was making his first MLS appearance since July 26, another player for San Jose was making his MLS debut. Midfielder Anibal Godoy made his debut after touching down in the United States just 24 hours earlier.

“He was brilliant tonight,” said Wondolowski. “He covered some serious ground tonight.”

Godoy landed in Los Angeles Thursday night from his native Panama, spent the night in SoCal before flying up to the Bay Area on the morning of the match. There was no hesitation for Kinnear to insert the International into the line-up and allow him to play a full 90 minutes.

“At this time in the season when you bring in a player like him,” said Kinnear.  “Or you bring in somebody new that you think can help the team, he’s not here to blend in and to work his way into the game.

Godoy, contrary to the expected, said he felt very comfortable in his maiden match with the Quakes, in large part due to the cohesion of the group.

“I felt like I had played with this team for 15 games,” said Godoy after the match through a translator. Godoy was familiar with some Quakes players previously and noted that their team communication made it easy to jump in.

On paper it still is only one match for Godoy, but he’ll get another chance to work on team chemistry on Wednesday when the Quakes head to Kansas City followed by a Saturday match in D.C. From there, Godoy and his Quakes mates will return home for a four-game homestand amidst their playoff push.

“This group of guys knows if we can stay hungry and stay united, we can win some matches,” said Godoy. “Today we demonstrated that we are a solid squad and if we continue to play like this we will reach our goal.”

Semien’s Blast Backs Bassitt to First Win With Oakland

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

OAKLAND, Calif. – It had been nearly a year since Oakland Athletics starter Chris Bassitt knew what it was like to see a W next to his name in the Sporting Green the day after one of his starts. It was a feeling he’d only experienced once in his two-year, 16-game major league career. Halfway through his 11th career start, this time coming against the Baltimore Orioles at O.Co Coliseum, it looked like the youngster would be waiting a little longer.

Orioles Hurler Miguel Gonzalez shut out the A’s for four innings Tuesday night, yielding only one hit before the Oakland offense roughed him up for five runs in the 5th and 6th innings combined. Marcus Semien launched a three-run homerun, Brett Lawrie hit a run-scoring triple and Billy Burns picked up an RBI single to support a near-flawless Bassitt (1-4, 2.64 ERA) earn a 5-0 win.

“I don’t really care about ERA, I don’t care about stats,” said Bassitt. “I just care about wins. I don’t care about anything else. I don’t look at any stats. I can tell you what my record is and that’s it. As for runs, I don’t care if it’s one, zero or eight as long as we win.”

Bassitt authored a standout performance, throwing a season high 104 pitches over 7 innings to handcuff the vaunted Orioles (54-52) offense. Bassitt came two pitches shy of matching his career high, 106, set last season in his first start of the year August 20th against the Tigers. The 26-year-old righty struck out seven Birds, besting a career-high most recently set in his previous outing against Cleveland.

“He’s a really intense kid out there,” said A’s manager Bob Melvin. “Since he’s been in the rotation, you see each and every time he goes out there he’s more and more confident.”

Bassitt’s only other win at the major league level also came in a 7-plus inning performance. Before joining the A’s in the Jeff Samardzija trade this offseason, Bassitt helped the Pale Hose to a 2-0 win over the Detroit Tigers, firing 7 2/3 innings of scoreless ball on September 22nd.

When asked how he felt about getting the win, Bassitt had only one word to describe it. “Relief.”

Bassitt scattered only 5 hits, allowing a single Baltimore baserunner to reach third base. Slugger Chris Davis was the only one to get 90 feet from scoring, opening the 2nd inning with a double. Bassitt froze Davis after catcher Matt Wieters roped a liner right into Brett Lawrie’s glove. Davis moved to third on a bounce out by J.J. Hardy but was stranded after Bassitt punched out Jimmy Paredes to escape the jam.

“Thank god for Stephen Vogt,” said Bassitt of his battery mate for the night. “Take all the credit and give it to him. I was really fast tonight and he just knew how to slow me down.”

The Orioles would again put a runner on 2nd base with one out in the next inning, but Manny Machado bounced out to Lawrie. Proving he is no worse for wear in his second game back from a lengthy DL stint, Coco Crisp stole a line drive basehit from Gerardo Parra with a diving catch to save what would have been the go ahead run.

“Coco is back,” said Bassitt emphatically.

“I said all along it’s going to be tough for him not to dive,” said Melvin of his left fielder. “He only plays one way.”

Heading in to the 5th, the A’s had managed only one hit and three baserunners against the stingy Gonzalez. They found an opportune time to piece together a two-hit inning, with Eric Sogard ripping a one-out double down the right field line to start the rally. After Marcus Semien struck out swinging, the rookie leader in hits Billy Burns came up to the plate looking for the clutch hit that proved elusive to the A’s over the previous four innings.

Burns delivered his 98th base knock, flicking a soft liner into shallow center field. O’s outfielder Adam Jones corralled the ball and fired a seed to home plate hoping to cut down Sogard at the plate. The ball took an Oakland bounce off the back side of the mound, allowing Sogard to come around easy for the 1-0 lead.

The next inning, the A’s struck again off Gonzalez after Billy Butler opened the inning with a ground-rule double. After an Ike Davis grounder to third for the first out, Brett Lawrie sat on a Gonzalez fastball, crushing a triple to the wall in left center field to put the A’s up 2-0 and stick Gonzalez (9-8. 4.32) with the loss.

Reliever Chaz Roe kept Lawrie stranded at first by coaxing a strikeout from Mark Canha before brining Sogard to the plate with two down. Showalter elected to issue the free base, presumably Sogard’s first in his major league career, to bring Semien to the plate.

“Both of us were a little surprised,” said Semien of his and his fellow keystoner Sogard’s reaction. “I don’t think he knew till he looked behind him.”

Semien responded to Showalter’s slight, mashing his 10th homerun of the season over the wall in left center. Semien’s dinger handed Bassitt a comfy 5-0 lead heading into the final three innings.

“Sometimes you can get a little too fired up,” said Melvin. “But after you hit a homer it’s nice.”

The Fernandos, Rodriguez and Abad, each tossed a scoreless inning to ensure Bassitt’s scoreless start would stand intact and give the A’s (48-60) their third win in four games.

The A’s could pull off the series win against an Orioles team just one game back of the second Wild Card with a win in Wednesday’s series finale. Kendall Graveman takes the mound in the matinee match-up, squaring off against Wei-Yin Chen.

A’s Don’t “Look Like Idiots”, Wait Out Walk-off Win

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

OAKLAND, Calif. – The Oakland Athletics hosted their 16th annual Root Beer Float day Wednesday night at the O.Co Coliseum, treating fans to a sweet treat before the game before Ike Davis served des the dessert during the game. After raising $34,709 for the Juvenile Diabetes Relief Fund, the A’s topped Felix Doubront and the Toronto Blue Jays 4-3 on a pinch-hit single.

Josh Phegley, Stephen Vogt and Jake Smolinski all knocked in runs as well, and starter Sonny Gray pitched seven innings of two-run ball to help Oakland (44-52) pass the Seattle Mariners to move a half-game out of the American League West cellar. The Blue Jays (48-48) fall back to .500 after winning the first game of the series.

The walk-off came in bizarre fashion in the bottom of the 10th, with the A’s not sure if they in fact were winners. Davis bounced a chopper that Jose Reyes dove for before tossing to first, allowing another late inning sub Josh Reddick to score on what first base umpire Marvin Hudson ruled a base hit in a bang-bang play.

“I didn’t think he was going to catch it,” said Davis. “As soon as I hit it I thought ‘that’s going to be a hit’. He made a good play and it was really close.”

Davis came off the bench to pinch hit against deposed Jays closer Roberto Osuna (1-4, 2.28 ERA) and quickly fell behind 0-2. He managed to fight off a fastball, trickling it to the opposite field for the hit.

“Ike was coming in cold,” said A’s manager Bob Melvin. “That’s a tough assignment. After the first couple pitches he was behind. He fouled some back, wasn’t trying to do too much. He wanted to put it in play on the other side of the diamond.”

“He blew it by me twice,” said Davis. “I knew I had to shorten up. I tried to hit the ball hard the first two times.”

It wasn’t without drama though. Amidst a brief A’s celebration, Toronto manager John Gibbons asked for, and was granted, a replay review. The A’s players gathered on the mound, awaiting their fate.

“It’s a tough position to be in,” said Reddick. “If they turn it over, we’re going to look like idiots.”

After a 2 minutes and 45 seconds of review, home plate ump Hunter Wendelstedt confirmed that the call on the field would stand, with there being inconclusive evidence to overturn the call.

“They stayed with what they were told to do,” said Melvin on the ruling. “If there’s no definitive proof to overturn, you stay with it. It was nerve-wracking waiting on the verdict, but we’ll take it.”

“It felt like the longest replay of the year,” noted Reddick.

The A’s very briefly celebrated before racing into the dugout.

“We had a lot of fun out there planning our exit,” said Davis on the pre-concocted curtain call.

The game could have gone entirely the other way though. With Oakland leading 3-2, Tyler Clippard took over in the ninth inning looking for save number 18. He opened the inning issuing a free pass to Danny Valencia then coughing up a double to Devon Travis. Jose Reyes walked to load the bases with former A’s slugger Josh Donaldson up to the dish.

Clippard managed to down Donaldson on strikes, but brought around the tying run after walking Jose Bautista. He managed to coax an Edwin Encarnacion strikeout and Dionner Navarro fly out to escape the jam tied. Fernando Rodriguez (1-1, 3.21) then pitched a scoreless tenth to pick up the win.

“That’s tough,” said Melvin on Clippard’s outing. “Now you’re in a no-win situation. All you can do is keep it tied. You have the middle of their order up, some tough customers to deal with.”

“To get back into the dugout a tie game allowed us to win that game later,” added Melvin.

For the second night in a row Josh Donaldson managed to sour his warm homecoming by driving in a run, plating the first run of the game on a single up the middle in the top of the third inning. He’d endear himself to A’s fans again an inning later, throwing a tricky grounder in the dirt to give Smolinski a two-base error. Smolinski moved over to third base on a Ben Zobrist single, then came around to score on Phegley’s liner up the middle, knotting the game 1-1.

With starter Sonny Gray not featuring his sharpest stuff the A’s offense supported its ace, tacking on a pair of runs in the fifth. Billy Burns reached on a single, then swiped second before being knocked in on Stephen Vogt’s base hit. Melvin wasn’t able to see the singling, getting ejected after arguing a strike call on a botched pitchout during Burns’ steal.

“There was a bit of a miscommunication,” said Melvin on the situation. “I was asking if it was a pitchout. I think (homeplate umpire Wendelstedt) thought I was continuing to argue.”

Zobrist would also single, forcing Doubront to issue the intentional walk to Billy Butler to create a force out. Smolinski hit a deep fly to center field, but center fielder Kevin Pillar managed to pull in the ball. Vogt scampered home to convert the sacrifice. Brett Lawrie appeared to crack the game open with a scorching liner up the middle, but second baseman Devon Travis was perfectly positioned to field the hot shot.

Gray gave the fans a scare in the sixth, taking an Edwin Encarnacion liner up the middle off his back foot. After a brief visit from the trainer and a smile from Gray, the ace continued on no worse for wear.

“I knew he broke his bat, I just didn’t know how fast it was coming,” said Gray. “I knew it hit me pretty solid.”

“I was telling Vogt and Phegley I was fine,” said Gray on why he was smiling during the trainer’s visit. “They told me to tell the dugout that, but the trainer was already out there.”

The A’s would need both runs after Danny Valencia opened the 7th inning with a first-pitch homer to straight-away center field. Gray would finish out the inning, sandwiching a Donaldson walk between a pair of outs. He’d depart the game after finishing the inning, having struck out three while walking two and allowing 9 hits for two earned runs but wound up with a no-decision.

“They really made him work for a while,” said Melvin. “He was throwing some good pitches and they weren’t trying to do too much with them. They were hitting the ball the other way, fouling some pitches off.”

“There are outings like that where you really have to work hard on it,” stated Melvin. “He ends up leaving with the lead. I thought he pitched really well.”

Edward Mujica relieved Gray in the 8th, opening the inning with a leadoff single to Encarnacion. Mujica would erase the baserunner, fielding a grounder from Chris Colabello to start the 1-4-3 double play. He would cough up a two-out single to Russell Martin, then hand second base to pinch runner Ezequiel Carrera on a wild pitch before mowing down Pillar on a ground out to shortstop Marcus Semien.

Doubront would have been the hardluck loser. The southpaw went just 4 2/3 innings, allowing 7 hits and two earned runs to go with the unearned marker.

Donaldson and the Jays wrap up their first visit to the Coliseum this season with a matinee game Wednesday. Scott Kazmir takes the mound in what may be one of his last starts in the green and gold with the trade deadline approaching. He’ll be opposed by youngster Drew Hutchinson.

On Eve of His Return to Oakland, Revisiting the Josh Donaldson Trade

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

When Toronto Blue Jays third baseman Josh Donaldson steps into the O.Co Coliseum batter’s box for the first time as a visiting player against Kendall Graveman Tuesday night, it will be a moment months in the making.

The earth has long since stopped shaking since a ground shattering trade that saw A’s general manager sned the Oakland A’s most feared slugger in exchange for Graveman, starting third baseman Brett Lawrie and prospects Sean Nolin and Franklin Barreto in the offseason. That doesn’t mean the wound won’t still be fresh for A’s fans.

Donaldson has put up similar stats North of Border to the ones he produced for four seasons in Oakland, which is to say he’s been MVP-caliber for the Jays. Donaldson is fresh off his second-straight All-Star game appearance, hitting second for the American League in its 6-3 victory over the Senior Circuit Squad in Cincinnati.

The 29-year old is hitting .288 for the season after 92 games, is one shy of the AL lead in runs batted in with 62 and sits five homers back of Mike Trout’s 27 for the league lead in long balls. Not bad for a player making only $4.5 million dollars.

On its exterior, the trade looks like a clear win for the Jays, who added a power bat to line-up already loaded with thumpers like Jose Bautista, Edwin Encarnacion and Russell Martin. But the return for Donaldson hasn’t exactly been failing the A’s.

If Cy Young Awards were handed out in Spring Training, Graveman would have been a candidate. The 24-year-old righty owned the desert competition, going 3-1 with a miniscule 0.36 earned run over 25 1/3 innings. If they handed out the awards in April, he’d probably have been last on the list. Graveman compiled an 8.27 ERA, walking 9 while striking out only 7 over 16 1/3 innings. It was clear that Graveman wasn’t ready for the major leagues just yet, so a return to Triple A Nashville was in the cards for the young hurler.

Perhaps not. Graveman returned to the parent club in late May, and has been lights out ever since. In ten starts, he’s gone at least 5 2/3 innings every time. He’s allowed only 16 runs in his second tour of duty, and had managed to shrink his ERA to 3.16 prior to his last outing where he was touched up for 4 runs. He’s ERA since returning is sub-3.00. More importantly, he’s only walked 18 while punching out 44 batters.

While Brett Lawrie, the other main piece of the trade, hasn’t produced like Donaldson did, no one has asked him to. Lawrie, a former first round pick (16th overall in 2008), hasn’t lived up to the hype that followed him before he even played a professional game, but he hasn’t been a slouch either.

The Langley, British Columbia native is on track for career-highs in most offensive categories including homers (current 8, high 12), RBI (37, high 48) and most importantly for the oft-injured Canadian, games played (88, high 125). While he won’t match his rookie season batting average of .293 over 43 games in 2011, he’s on pace to best his full-season high of .273. The right-handed batter enters play Tuesday with a .280 mark. While he hasn’t been outstanding, he’s been better than expected.

Factor in Barreto, named to the MLB.com weekly all-prospect team, and Nolin still being at least a season away and the A’s could wind up being big winners in this trade. They may not feel like it now, but a rotation with Nolin and Graveman at the head and Barreto and Lawrie on the left side of the infield winning an AL West title, and possibly even the pennant, may be on the horizon soon. But first comes Tuesday night, a chance for the A’s to top the Jays and win a little victory.

U.S. Comes up Short Against Samoa, Japan Victorious In Pacific Nations Cup at Avaya Stadium

By Joe Lami & Matthew T.F. Harrington

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Fans at Avaya Stadium were treated to international rugby on Saturday night.  The Pacific Nations’ Cup opener marked the first non-soccer event held at Avaya, as Canada, Japan, United States and America Samoa all took part in the festivities. Over 10,000 fans joined the fun to watch four teams all ranked in the top 20 of the world duke it out.

The night started slow with Japan defeating Canada 20-6.  The only try of the match came early for Japan in the 16th minute, when Yoshikazu Fujita converted to give the Japanese a 8-0 lead.  Canada would stop the bleeding in the 19th minute, as Gordy McRorie converted his first of two penalty kicks.

Ayumu Goromaru was outstanding on the penalties for Japan, as he knocked in five for the match.

Canada is competing in just their third ever Pacific Nations’ Cup and hopes to defend their home turf the next time out, as they host Tonga in Burnaby, British Columbia on July 23rd.

While Japan’s stifling defense and Fujita’s leg ruled the day in the opening contest, the second match of the night proved a much closer affair. In the nightcap, Samoa defeated the United States 21-16, with the U.S. pressing for a final try deep in the Samoa end of the field as time expired.

Samoa’s Patrick Faapale nailed his first two penalty kicks to give the exports a 6-0 lead 15 minutes in to the contest. The Eagles responded with an AJ MacGinty kick in the 21st minute, but just under a minute later Faapale tucked another ball between the post to restore the six-point lead.

In the 29th minute, Manu Samoa collected the first try of the match on a brilliant run by Ah See Tuala. Tuala dipped and darted through four Eagles to cross the U.S. 22 meter line in a stunning showing of lateral quickness and elusiveness. Tuala was ultimately brought down on his back, but he managed to toss the ball off to teammate Alesana Tuilagi. Tuilagi, Samoa’s captained, barreled his way through an American tackle attempt across the tryline for the five points. Faapale converted to put Samoa on top 16-3.

“It was no easy task,” Said MacGinty of Samoa.  “They ran very hard. There were good parts and simple errors. I have to improve on them if we want to start winning a few tests.”

Samoa added another try in the final ten minutes after Tuilagi booted the ball into the American 22 meter box. See Tuala recovered to put Samoa up 21-3 at the end of the first half.

“That put us in a hole,” said United States coach Mike Tolkin . “Defensive lapses and veteran play out of their own end was a big problem in the first half.”

The Eagles rallied back, hitting the first two penalties to cut the Samoa lead to 21-9 but still found themselves trailing the ninth-ranked team in the World with 17 minutes to play.

“In the second half, we turned the tide around,” said Tolkin. “We had a couple subs, a couple guys who came on and made a difference. We had better line speed and better execution in the attack.”

The U.S. connected on its only try of the match in the 71st minute, with reserve Titi Lamositele scoring his first international try of his career. The Eagles were battling on the tryline but it appeared Samoa would not concede the final inch for the score. Ultimately Lamositele found his way across the line by the slimmest of margins under a heap of bodies, sending Eagles supporters in the near end zone into a frenzy. Their celebration was confirmed by the referee’s flag and five American points were put on the board. MacGinty converted to put the U.S. a try away from a tie 21-16.

The Eagles led one final push, getting across the Samoan 22 meter line and just a few steps from the tryline, but they couldn’t finish the drive. The final horn sounded, souring the American’s chances at prevailing on the day.

While the result wasn’t what the Eagles were hoping for, it was still a solid showing for the squad. It was just their first match of the campaign together and the first since November, and for many players it was their first cap on the National side.

“You want to take positives out of the game,” said Tolkin. “The second half was a big advantage for us territorially. Progression wise, we wanted to take some more points out of it. Certainly we were in a position to do it. The second half was a big improvement from the first half. We just have to build off that.”

Japan and the United States will face off in the second match of the PNC on July 24th. While the Cherry Blossoms won’t prove as tough a team as Manu Samoa, they’ll prove a superior tactical opponent and will be riding a decisive victory over Canada. The contest will be decided at Sacramento’s Bonney Field, home to the Earthquakes UFL affiliate, the Republic.

“We do want to play a performance that’s more similar to our second half,” said Tolkin. “We also want to play better than we did in the second half.”

Hahn Sidelined Longer Than Expected As Oakland Opens Second Half

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

The Oakland Athletics might know their fate as buyers or sellers when the trade deadline comes sooner than they’d imagine. According to an interview with the Bay Area News Group’s John Hickey, A’s general manager Billy Beane does not expect Jesse Hahn to return from his flexor tendon injury anytime soon.

With the young righty, acquired from San Diego in the Derek Norris deal in the offseason, shelved for a significant period of time, the A’s rotation is now Sonny Gray, Scott Kazmir, Kendall Graveman, Jesse Chavez and either Drew Pomeranz filling in as a spot starter or another call-up for Chris Bassitt. With the trade deadline looming at the end of the month, it’s almost guaranteed that Kazmir will be out of that equation and pitching for another club come August.

Bassitt, in 8 games (3 starts), has compiled a 2.93 ERA with 17 punchouts over 27.2 innings. The sophomore righty has started in his last three consecutive outings, going 5 innings or more in all three starts. He’s surrendered 5 earned runs over 17 innings as a starter, striking out 9 while walking just a pair batters. The 26-year-old hurler came to the A’s in the offseason deal that shipped Jeff Samardzija to the Chicago White Sox, with Rangel Ravelo also coming to Oakland in the deal.

The absence of Hahn, who has compiled a 6-6 record with a 3.35 earned run average this year, hurts more due to its timing. The Oakland A’s open the second half of the season facing the Minnesota Twins for three games at O.Co Coliseum. The Twins are riding a three-game winning streak and are looking to add to their four-game wild card lead.

Once the resilient Twins leave town, the Toronto Blue Jays potent offense comes to Oakland. The Jays are trying to gain ground on the Yankees in a wide-open American League East. After that, the A’s “travel” across the Bay for the Bay Bridge series before facing the National League West leaders the Los Angeles Dodgers in Southern California.