Seth Brown hits second walk off RBI single on homestand; A’s edge Tigers in 13 innings 7-6 at Coliseum

Oakland A’s Seth Brown shows his excitement after slugging a game winning RBI single in the bottom of the 13th inning against the visiting Detroit Tigers at the Oakland Coliseum on Fri Sep 6, 2024 (AP News photo)

Detroit (71-71). 000 010 100 121 0. 6. 12. 0

Athletics (62-80). 000 011 000 121 1. 7. 15. 0. (13 innings)

Time: 3:45

Attendance: 14,669

Friday, September 6, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–After losing two straight games to Seattle, the wandering minstrels previously known as the Oakland Athletics this Friday evening found themselves facing Tarik Stubal, the ace of the Detroit Tigers staff. With the 16-4, 2.51 Stubal on the mound, a Detroit win looked like a sure thing.

But the Tigers’ hopes tanked when the A’s nearly broke a scoreless tie in the fourth frame and came back to erase a 1-0 Detroit lead in the fifth. After that, the game was up for grabs. When it was over, the battle had lasted an incredible 13 innings and scoreboard showed a 7-6 win for the upstart A’s.

Mitch Spence, starting for the Athletics, didn’t bring Stubal’s eye popping numbers with him. The 26 year old rookie was 0-3, 4.60 over his previous half dozen starts, arriving at the crumbling Coliseum with a 7-9, 4..50 mark for the season.

Nonetheless, with a little help from a nifty diving backhanded grab and throw to first of Kerry Carpenter’s two out, two on shot to end the top of the third, Spence held the Tigers at bay for 4-1/3 innings before the visitors pushed their first run across the plate.

Meanwhile, Skubal was in control until The A’s almost broke through in their half of the fourth. They would have succeeded if some inept baserunning hadn’t thwarted them. Butler led off with his second infield single of the game, making him the only Athletic to have reached base safely until then.

Brent Rooker moved him up 90 feet with a single to right. After Shea Langeliers flew out to center, JJ Bleday hit what looked like an RBI single to right, but Butler, after crossing third, returned to the bag, forcing Rooker to retreat to second, only to find that Bleday was waiting there. Rooker was put out. You don’t give away chances like that to a pitcher like Stubal and get away with it. Nevin went down swinging, and the A’s remained scoreless.

Detroit seized its opportunity to go ahead in the next frame with Riley Greene driving in Parker Meadows, who had singled, with a safety of his own. That left runners on first and second with one down and signaled the end of Spence’s mound tenure.

But, mirabile dictu, the Athletics knotted the score in the fifth. Zack Gelof smacked a one out double to left, and, with two down, rookie Jacob Wison drove him home with a triple to right. Then Butler, the man who had two infield hits in two at bats, nearly knocked the leather off the ball only to have Parker Meadows haul it down on the warning track in left center to end the inning.

Even more surprising was the bottom of the sixth, when the A’s drove Skubal from the box and took the lead on singles by Rooker, Langeliers, and Tyler Nevin.

The green and gold literally threw away that advantage in the top of the seventh. Hogan Harris, who replaced Spence in the sixth, allowed a two out double to Greene. Michel Otáñez came on to get the final out. Except he threw three wild pitches that allowed Detroit to tie the score before he got that out.

The bottom of that frame, featured some more of the twists and turns that by now had become commonplace. With Butler and Jacob Wilson on base, Jason Foley, now pitching for Detroit, Rooker was awarded first base after having been hit by a pitch.

Rooker took the base but then had to return to the plate when the Gabe Morales’ call was overturned on review. Rooker then grounded into a force out at second, and Langliers lined out to center.

The score remained tied after nine innings, and so we went into the extras. Mason Miller had struck out the three Tigers he faced in the top of the ninth, but Colt Keith touched him for a two out single that plated the zombie runner, Greene, to put Detroit up by one.

Nick Allen was inserted as a pinch zombie runner and tied the score on Rooker’s double to left. But the Athletics’ DH made the elementary mistake of trying to run on a ball hit in front of him and was tagged out on Langeliers’ grounder to short. Bleday then grounded out to third, and we went into the 11th frame.

The teams scored two runs apiece in the 11th and one apiece in the 12th. Grant Holman managed to shut the Tigers out in the top of the 13th, setting the stage for the A’s shocking victory. With Beau Brieske on the hill for Detroit and Bleday placed at second, Tristan Gray went down swinging. But Seth Brown came up swinging and smacked Brieske’s first offering, a 94mph four seamer into right field for the game winning double.

In all, each team used eight pitchers.

For the A’s, Spence went 4-1/3 innings and allowed a run, earned, on eight hits. He didn’t issue any walks and struck out half a dozen of the 21 batters he faced. 22 of his 70 deliveries were balls. TJ McFarand retired the two batters he faced in the fifth. Hogan Harris allowed a hit and a run, earned, in his 1-2/3.

Otáñez got a blown save charged to him for his horrendous third of an inning. Miller went two frames and allowed a hit. The run he allowed was unearned, which is the case whenever the ghost runner scores.

He walked one and struck out four of the seven Tigers he faced. Scott Alexander hurled a one hit, two run, one earned, innings, and Holman, who got the win and now is 1-1,4.00, went two frames and allowed a hit and an unearned run.

Skubal was lifted after 5-2/3 frames. He faced 24 batters and gave up nine hits. He struck out seven but didn’t issue a walk. His ERA rose to 2.53. Following him were Will Vest and Jason Foley (2/3 of an inning each), Sean Guenther (an inning), Tyler Holton (1-1/3 innings), Brennan Hannifee and Shelby Miller, each of whom was charged with a blow save), and the losing pitcher, Brieske.

Butler extended his hitting streak to 16 games. He went three for five.Brown, who has been on fire since his return from Las Vegas also had a multi-hit game, going two for two with a home run. His game winning single was his second walk off hit of the week.

This game was a tough act to follow, but Saturday afternoon at 1:07pm PT, the Tigers’ will start LHP Brant Hurter (3-1, 3.25) for the A’s LHP Brady Basso (0-0, 5.40).

Mason Black has up-and-down outing as Giants drop series opener to Padres in San Diego 5-1

San Francisco Giants starter Mason Black delivers against the San Diego Padres in the bottom of the first inning at Petco Park in San Diego on Fri Sep 6, 2024 (AP News photo)

Friday, Sept. 6, 2024

Petco Park

San Diego, California

San Francisco Giants 1 (69-73)

San Diego Padres 5 (81-62)

Win: Michael King (12-8)

Loss: Mason Black (0-3)

Time: 2:33

Attendance: 42,595

By Stephen Ruderman

The Padres scored three runs off Mason Black in the bottom of the first inning and beat the Giants 5-1 in the opener of this three-game series at Petco Park on Friday night.

The last time the Giants were in San Diego, they opened the season with a lot of excitement and high expectations. Now, they are in San Diego as they wrap up their third-straight mediocre season, and as the focus turns to next season.

They were also in San Diego as Southern California got clobbered with a heatwave. Thankfully, San Diego is close to the ocean, and this was a night game, so the temperature was a mostly-cool 79 degrees at game time.

As the Giants look toward the future, they turned to Mason Black to make his fifth start of the season. Black was called back up last Saturday and made a solid start against the Marlins, as he gave up two runs over five innings against the Marlins.

Black would face a test against a powerful San Diego Padres’ offense. The Padres came into Friday night’s game in possession of the first wild card spot in the National League, and barring an historic collapse, they are destined for their third trip to the playoffs over the last five years.

The Padres would strike against Black in the bottom of the first inning. Luis Arraez and Fernando Tatis Jr. singled to start the inning, and the Padres had runners at first and second with nobody out.

Jurickson Profar flew out to right-center field for the first out. Arraez, who was at second, tagged and went to third, and when right-fielder Mike Yastrzemski threw to third, Tatis took off for second. Shortstop Tyler Fitzgerald cut off the throw, but when he tried to nap Tatis at second, his throw sailed into right field, and both runners scored to give the Padres a 2-0 lead.

It was a rough start for Black, but then he had to face the always-dangerous Manny Machado. Machado would only add insult to injury, and hit a home run to left-center to make it 3-0. Things appeared to be getting even worse for Black after he walked Jake Cronenworth, but he got the next two guys he faced to fly out.

On the offensive side, the Giants were unable to do much against Padres’ starter Michael King, who retired the first eight men he faced Friday night. The Giants had the bases loaded with two outs against King in the top of the fourth, but they were unable to come through.

Meanwhile, Black settled down to retire nine-straight after walking Cronenworth. Black pitched around a one-out double by Xander Bogaerts in the bottom of the fourth, and he retired the first two men he faced in the bottom of the fifth. He ended up retiring 13 out of 14 after the walk to Cronenworth.

However, the Padres made some two-out noise to end Black’s night. Tatis and Profar singled to put runners at the corners, and Bob Melvin brought in Sean Hjelle. Machado then singled the other way to right to knock in Machado, and it was now 4-0 San Diego.

Black gave up four runs and six hits. He also walked just one and struck out six. It obviously wasn’t the greatest outing, but he did impress with his stretch in which he retired 13 out of 14 Padres’ hitters.

Michael Conforto finally got the Giants on the board when he led off the top of the sixth with a home run to right-center. Matt Chapman singled the other way to right, but King then retired the side in order. That would do it for King, who gave up just one run; walked just one; and struck out eight over six innings.

Hjelle came back out to pitch a scoreless bottom of the sixth, and Bryan Hoeing threw a one, two, three top of the seventh for San Diego. Austin Warren, who the Giants called back up prior the game, was brought in for the bottom of the seventh, and he threw a one, two, three inning. Hoeing and Adrian Morejon then combined to throw a one, two, three inning in the top of the eighth.

When Warren came back out for the bottom of the eighth, Machado led off the inning with his second home run of the night, an absolute bomb to the second deck in left to make it 5-1. Warren retired the side and retired five of the six men he faced Friday night. Jeremiah Estrada was then brought in for the top of the ninth, and he threw a one, two, three inning to end it.

Michael King got the win, and Mason Black took the loss. The Giants fall to 69-73.

Logan Webb (11-9. 3.43 ERA) for San Francisco will once again have to be the stopper, as he will make the start in the second game of this series Saturday evening. Right-hander Dylan Cease (12-10, 3.62 ERA) will take the ball for San Diego. First pitch will be at 5:40 p.m PT.

Giants News and Notes:

Kyle Harrison was placed on the 15-Day Injured List due to left shoulder inflammation. While there is no timetable for his return, it does appear that Harrison is done for the year.

Harrison, who had gone 7-7 with a 4.56 ERA in a rocky first full season in the big leagues, had been dealing with the shoulder for a while and pitching through it. However, with the Giants now out of contention, they appear content with most likely shutting him down for the season.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah Salmonson: A’s host Detroit Tigers series for last time at Oakland tonight

Oakland A’s Brent Rooker (25) slugs a ninth inning two run homer as the Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh looks on at the Oakland Coliseum on Fri Sep 6, 2024 (AP News photo)

On Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah:

#1 The Oakland A’s (61-80) lost game four in their series with the Seattle Mariners (71-70) 6-4 on Thursday but they did split the series winning two walk offs in games one and two. 

#2 Brent Rooker had a couple of home runs giving him a 35 home run season so far and he is sure to add to that total before it is all said and done. 

#3 The M’s Cal Raleigh hit a two home run which contributed to the split in first inning. Raleigh also hit a fifth inning sacrifice fly in the final visit for the Mariners to Oakland.

#4 Not to mention a number of people during this past homestand became emotional as the A’s will be packing up after the next homestand when they prepare to leave for Sacramento. No exception was Seattle starting pitcher Bryan Woo who was raised near the Oakland Coliseum and grew up watching A’s baseball and started the very last Mariners game in Oakland.

#5 The Detroit Tigers are in Oakland for their last Oakland appearance leaving lots of memories of some great Detroit Tigers from years past such as, Denny McLain, Mickey Lolich, Norm Cash, Al Kaline, Willie Horton, who could forget Mark the Bird Fydrich and of course former Oakland Athletic now Tigers manager AJ Hinch to name a few?

Jeremiah Salmonson does the Oakland A’s podcasts each Friday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

A’s Split Series With Seattle – Losing Game Four 6-4

Seattle Mariners Cal Raleigh (right) connects for a two run homer in front of Oakland A’s catcher Kyle McCann (left) at the Oakland Coliseum on Thu Sep 5, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

The Oakland A’s (61-80) lost game four in their series with the Seattle Mariners (71-70) 6-4 but they did split the series winning two walk offs in games one and two. Seattle took a 3-0 lead into the bottom of the third before Oakland got on the board.

Seattle did just enough to stay a few runs ahead of the A’s and finished with the win. Brent Rooker had a couple of home runs giving him a 35 home run season so far and he is sure to add to that total before it is all said and done. He continues to push that total every time he steps up to the plate.

Game recap: After Wednesday night’s 16-3 beat down, the A’s couldn’t stop Seattle’s early offensive scoring in Thursday’s game. The game plan did not go as planned when the Mariners got on top from the get go.

The M’s scored in the first and third innings taking a 3-0 lead. Cal Raleigh got the party started in the first inning with a two run home run giving Seattle the early 2-0 lead. (He would go on to add a sacrifice in the fifth inning) In the third inning the Mariners Julio Rodriguez had the teams second home run of the game, a solo shot giving Seattle the 3-0 lead.

In the bottom of the third inning, the A’s got up on the board when Seth Brown sacrificed driving Jacob Wilson across home plate. Oakland was on the board but had some work to do trailing 3-1.

Oakland pitcher Joey Estes went four innings in the game. He has been struggling losing three of his last four outings. He allowed four runs on six hits over the four innings. At this point manager Mark Kotsay turned to his bullpen and Estes was relieved by T.J. McFarland who closed out the fifth inning allowing only only one hit and no runs.

In the fifth inning, the Mariners would add to their score when Cal Raleigh hit a sacrifice driving Victor Robles home now leading 4-1. Oakland would also score a run in the fifth inning off a 385 feet home run from Brent Rooker. With this shot Rooker upped his season total to 34 home runs. The way this guy operates; he would be looking for more as this game went into the latter innings.

Neither team would score in the next three innings but in the ninth inning, Seattle hit pay dirt again with a two run home run from first baseman Luke Raley giving the Mariners a 6-2 lead. Oakland really had their work cut out for them in the bottom of the ninth.

With two outs and the game on the line, Brent Rooker hit his second home run of the game with Lawrence Butler on base after walking. JJ Bleday would strike out and that was the ball game 6-4.

The Athletics scored twp runs on the Rooker long ball but just came up short in a valiant effort. The Rooker home run was his 35th of the season.

Oakland had ten hits in this game with all but one player contributing at least a hit. Seattle’s Cal Raleigh was the culprit in this game with his homer and sacrifice pushing the Mariners onto the win splitting the series.

This game would be the Mariners final visit to the Oakland Coliseum. With this win the Mariners are 4 1/2 games behind the division leading Houston Astros.

While it was tough to end up with only a split in the series the way the A’s have been hitting the long ball all season they sure do have a lot to be proud of. They have crushed the ball out of the park 22 times in their last ten games and they have 181 home runs overall with more to come no doubt before this season comes to an end.

Game notes: Thursday afternoon, the A’s split in a series losing to the Mariners in game four of their series. The Mariners evened up this series with an Thursday afternoon win. The A’s starter Joey Estes pitched four innings, allowed six hits, four earned runs, and struck out three. The M’s Bryan Woo is no stranger to the Bay Area growing up in nearby Alameda. He pitched five innings, giving up eight hits, two earned runs, and struck out six.

The A’s will remain at home for their next series with the Detroit Tigers which begins Friday night with first pitch scheduled for 6:40 PM PT. Mitch Spence will take the mound for Oakland with a 7-9 win/loss record and a 4.50 ERA. The A’s offense will be facing a tough one in Tarik Skubal who comes in with a 16-4 win/loss record and a 2.51 ERA.

Snell lasts only one inning, but Patrick Bailey carries Giants to 3-2 win to snap four-game skid

San Francisco Giants starter Blake Snell leaves for the dugout after being removed in the first inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Thu Sep 5, 2024 (AP News photo)

Thursday, Sept. 5, 2024

Oracle Park

San Francisco, California

Arizona Diamondbacks 2 (79-62)

San Francisco Giants 3 (69-72)

Win: Ryan Walker (9-3)

Loss: Kevin Ginkel (7-3)

Time: 2:35

Attendance: 27,871

By Stephen Ruderman

SAN FRANCISCO–Blake Snell only lasted one inning, but the Giants snapped their four-game skid with a 3-2 win over the Diamondbacks on a walk-off double by Patrick Bailey, who knocked in all three runs for the Giants Thursday.

The Diamondbacks beat the Giants again tonight, 6-4, to take the first two games of this series, as Hayden Birdsong had another outing cut short due to his command, and Zac Gallen threw six no-hit innings to hand the Giants their fourth-straight loss.

Prior to the game, the Giants announced the six-year extension of Matt Chapman through 2030. It is a $151-million deal, in which Chapman will make $25 million a year, as well as a $1-million signing bonus. Chapman sang the praises of the Giants’ organization and the City of San Francisco. He also said that players have called him expressing a desire to come to the Giants.

With Chapman’s extension official, the focus turned to the team on the field. The Giants came into Thursday losers of four-straight games after dropping the first two games of this series. Thursday, they looked to avoid the sweep, and they had the right man on the mound for it in Blake Snell.

However, Snell would have to labor through a long top of the first inning. Geraldo Perdomo lined a base-hit to left field to lead off the game, and Corbin Carroll walked to put runners at first and second with nobody out.

Josh Bell then hit a ground ball to Tyler Fitzgerald, who fielded it while going to his right. Fitzgerald’s momentum was taking him towards third base, where he had a sure out, but he instead threw against his momentum to second. The throw sailed past the second-baseman Brett Wisely, which allowed everyone to move up an extra base, and Perdomo scored.

Snell finally got the first two outs, though he got some help from the boys in the Replay Center in New York on the first one. However, he then walked Eugenio Suarez to load the bases for Jake McCarthy.

Snell fell behind McCarthy 3-0, and then Snell came back to make it 3-2. McCarthy swung and missed at the payoff pitch for strike three, a fastball just off the outside corner, but it was dropped by catcher Patrick Bailey. Bailey couldn’t throw it to first in time; everyone was safe; and the Diamondbacks now led it 2-0.

Merrill Kelly, who had missed four months due to a strained right shoulder, took the ball for Arizona, and he threw a scoreless inning in the bottom of the first.

Bob Melvin decided to lift Snell after just one inning, as the latter had thrown 42 pitches. Landen Roupp was brought in, and he threw a pair of one, two, three innings in the second and third, as well as a scoreless inning in the top of the fourth.

Kelly threw two scoreless innings in the second and third, and then the Giants would mount a rally against him in the bottom of the fourth.

Michael Conforto lined a base-hit to right to start the bottom of the fourth, and Chapman doubled to left to put runners at second at third with no one out. However, LaMonte Wade and Tyler Fitzgerald both struck out swinging, and it looked like the Giants were going to waste another golden opportunity.

Patrick Bailey then came up, and he floated a Texas Leaguer to shallow left to knock in a pair and tie the game.

Arizona then rallied against Roupp in the top of the fifth and put runners at second and third with one out, as they looked to get their lead back. Roupp retired the next two men he faced, and he got out of it without any damage.

Roupp saved the Giants’ bullpen just as Spencer Bivens did last night. Roupp gave up just one hit over four shutout innings. He walked two and struck out five.

Kelly threw a four-pitch one, two, three inning in the bottom of the fifth, and the Giants wasted a leadoff double from Conforto in the top of the sixth. Kelly then threw another one, two, three inning in the bottom of the seventh to cap off a strong start. He gave up six hits, but he didn’t walk anybody, and he struck out eight.

Erik Miller threw a one, two, three inning in the top of the sixth for the Giants, and Tyler Rogers followed that up with a scoreless top of the seventh. Camilo Doval then ran into eighth-inning trouble for the second day in a row.

Christian Walker doubled to right-center to start the inning, as center-fielder Grant McCray was unable to come up with a great catch. Jorge Barrosa bunted Walker over to third, and Doval fell behind Eugenio Suarez 3-1. Doval then came back to strike Suarez out looking, and then Melvin went to his closer, Ryan Walker, who struck out Jake McCarthy to end the inning.

The Giants put runners on first and second with one out against Joe Mantiply in the bottom of the eighth. Heliot Ramos doubled, and then he committed a base-running gaffe, which thanks to a bad throw by Mantiply on a comebacker to the mound, allowed Conforto to reach first. Torey Lovullo brought in Kevin Ginkel, and Ginkel got out of the inning without any damage.

The game was still tied 2-2 going to the ninth. Melvin sent Walker back out for the top of the ninth, and Luis Guillorme drew a leadoff walk, the worst possible thing that could happen for Walker and the Giants. However, Walker then retired the side in order to give the Giants a chance to win it in the bottom of the ninth.

Ginkel was back out for Arizona in the bottom of the ninth. Tyler Fizgerald led off the inning with a base-hit to center, and he stole second with Bailey at the plate.

Bailey, who knocked in the first two runs for the Giants with a Texas Leaguer in the bottom of the fourth, came through again, as he hit a ground-rule double to left-center to win it for the Giants. It was the Giants’ league-leading 11th walk-off win of the year.

Ryan Walker was rewarded with the win for his clutch late-inning performance. Kevin Ginkel took the loss for the Diamondbacks.

On Aug. 31, 2018, the Giants shut out the Mets 7-0 to improve to 68-68. The Giants then lost 11-straight games before finally winning their 69th game. It was the beginning of a brutal 5-21 finish to the 2018 Season for the Giants that cost then-General Manager Bobby Evans his job.

Fast forward six years later with Farhan Zaidi facing uncertainty over his future. The Giants beat the Miami Marlins 3-1 on Aug. 30 to improve to 68-68. The Giants then only lost four-straight to get that elusive 69th win.

During Matt Chapman’s press conference, Giants President of Baseball Operations Farhan Zaidi was asked about his future with the team. Zaidi declined to answer the question, and he deferred the topic of conversation back to that of Chapman’s extension.

Despite being signed to a contract extension through 2026, there has been speculation that Zaidi’s job could be in danger. Alex Pavlovic, the Giants Beat Writer for NBC Sports Bay Area, hinted on July 25 that people in the Giants’ front office needed them to make the playoffs this season.

With the fact that this season has not panned out like everyone had hoped, and that the Giants are wrapping up their third-straight season of mediocracy, Zaidi’s fate could come into the spotlight over the final three and a half weeks of the season.

The Giants improve to 69-72, and they will head down the coast to San Diego Friday for a three-game series against another powerful team in the Padres. The pitching matchup has yet to be decided. First pitch will be at 6:40 p.m PT.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Diamondbacks Gallen throws six innings of no hit ball against Giants line up

Arizona Diamondbacks starter Zac Gallen was dealing against the San Francisco Giants here he is pitching to Michael Conforto in the bottom of the sixth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Sep 4, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 Zac Gallen led the way for the Arizona Diamondbacks bringing a no hitter into the seventh inning against the San Francisco Giants and after Gallen was lifted the Giants finally were able to get a hit.

#2 Gallen improved his record to 11-6 after pitching six innings, walking four and striking out eight batters. Michael no doubt about it he had a good mix of pitches working for him?

#3 The Diamondbacks got home run help from Eugenio Suárez and Pavin Smith and cut the lead on the NL West first place Los Angeles Dodgers trailing the Dodgers by five games.

#4 LeMonte Wade carried the load for San Francisco on Wednesday night with a home run and four RBIs but the Giants fell two runs short.

#5 The Giants are dueling with the Diamondbacks as we speak right now Arizona starter RHP Merrill Kelly (4-0, ERA 4.30) is matched up against Giants LHP Blake Snell (2-3, 3.56) first pitch at 12:45pm PT at Oracle Park.

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

Birdsong’s command burns him again, and Gallen shuts Giants down with six no-hit innings in 6-4 win for Arizona

Arizona Diamondbacks starter Zac Gallen shown throwing against the San Francisco Giants in the bottom of the third inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Sep 4, 2024 (AP News photo)

Wednesday, Sept. 4, 2024

Oracle Park

San Francisco, California

Arizona Diamondbacks 6 (79-61)

San Francisco Giants 4 (68-72)

Win: Zac Gallen (11-6)

Loss: Hayden Birdsong (3-5)

Time: 2:42

Attendance: 22,855

By Stephen Ruderman

The Diamondbacks beat the San Francisco Giants again Wednesday night, 6-4, to take the first two games of this series, as Hayden Birdsong had another outing cut short due to his command, and Zac Gallen threw six no-hit innings to hand the Giants their fourth-straight loss.

After losing two of three to the Marlins of all teams at home, the Giants dropped their third-straight game in a wild and somewhat-emotional 8-7 loss to the Diamondbacks in the series opener Tuesday night. The Giants would look for Hayden Birdsong to turn the page on a brutal August.

Birdsong got off to a great start for the Giants after getting called up at the end of June, and his strong July earned him a spot on MLB.com’s top 100 prospect list. However, things were completely different for the young right-hander August.

Birdsong was lit up by the Washington Nationals for seven runs over just two innings in our nation’s capital on Aug. 6, and he got hammered for five more runs by the Detroit Tigers in his next start on Aug. 11. Birdsong went 0-4 with an 8.68 ERA in his five starts in August. What magnified his problems was that he struggled with his control as well.

Unfortunately, Birdsong’s control problems followed him into his first inning of September, as he walked the first two hitters of this game. Former Giant and D-Backs outfielder Joc Pederson struck out swinging for the first out, but Josh Bell grounded a base-hit into right-center field to knock in Geraldo Perdomo for the first run of the game.

Birdsong struggled again in the top of the second. Eugenio Suarez led off the inning with a home run to left field to make it 2-0. Birdsong then walked two more as the inning progressed, but he was able to escape without any further damage.

Diamondbacks’ starter Zac Gallen started his night with a one, two, three inning in the bottom of the first, but he ran into some trouble after he issued three-straight two-out walks to load the bases in the bottom of the second. However, with the Giants being the Giants, Curt Casali struck out after a lengthy eight-pitch at-bat to end the inning.

Birdsong pitched his first and only scoreless inning of the night in the top of the third, but it didn’t come without its drama. He was done after just three innings, as he walked five and threw 77 pitches.

Spencer Bivens picked up the fort and gave the Giants four innings. Pavin Smith hit a home run in the top of the fifth to make it, and The Diamondbacks manufactured a run in the top of the seventh to make it 4-0.

Meanwhile, Gallen retired ten straight, starting with his strikeout of Casali to end the bottom of the second. Mike Yastrzemski drew a leadoff walk in the bottom of the sixth to snap that streak, but Heliot Ramos grounded into a double play, and Michael Conforto struck out to end the inning.

Gallen also had a no-hitter going through six innings, and he had struck out eight. However, he threw 100 pitches, so Diamondbacks Manager Torey Lovullo opted to bring in Kevin Ginkel in the bottom of the seventh.

Earlier Wednesday night, Shota Imanaga, Nate Pearson and Porter Hodge combined to no-hit the Pittsburgh Pirates for the Cubs at Wrigley Field. The Diamondbacks were now nine outs away from throwing the second combined no-hitter of the night as this game went to the bottom of the seventh.

However, it would not come to be, as Tyler Fitzgerald grounded a base-hit up the middle for the Giants’ first hit to lead off the bottom of the seventh. LaMonte Wade then hit a home run to the water in right for splash hit number 104, and it was now 4-2.

The Giants were making a late comeback just as they did Tuesday night. The only question was whether they could complete it this time.

Unfortunately, the Diamondbacks got both runs back against Camilo Doval in the top of the eighth, and it was now 6-2. A.J. Puk then came in and threw a one, two three shutout inning in the bottom of the eighth.

Taylor Rogers, who finished the top of the eighth, came out to throw a scoreless inning in the top of the ninth. Luvollo then brought in Justin Martinez, who converted a four-out save Tuesday night, in a non-save situation in the bottom of the ninth.

Like Tuesday night, the Giants made a charge in the bottom of the ninth. Michael Conforto walked to lead off the inning, and Fitzgerald doubled to put runners at second and third with nobody out. Wade then grounded a base-hit to knock in a pair, and it was now 6-4. The tying run was now coming up to the plate in Luis Matos, but Martinez retired the side in order to close it out.

Zac Gallen got the win after his six no-hit innings, and Kyle Harrison took his fifth loss in his last six starts. Harrison’s last five decisions have all been loses.

The Giants fall to 68-72, and if anyone still cares, they are now eight and a half games back of the Braves for the third wild card with 22 games to go. Their tragic number is now 14.

The Giants can salvage a game in this series with a win on getaway day Thursday. The National League Pitcher of the Month for August, Blake Snell (2-3, 3.56 ERA), will make the start for the Giants. Merrill Kelly (4-0, 4.30 ERA), who recently came back after being out for four months, will take the ball for Arizona. First pitch will be at 12:45 p.m. PT.

After the game ended, the Giants and Matt Chapman agreed to a six-year $151-million extension. Chapman was scratched from the lineup Wednesday night, but his leadership and defense have been a big boost for the Giants this season.

Seven run seventh buries A’s; Mariners have no mercy in 16-3 win at Coliseum

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.

Harrison struggles, as Giants’ comeback falls short in wild series opener 8-7 loss to Diamondbacks at Oracle

San Francisco Giants starter Kyle Harrison leaves for the dugout after being lifted by Giants manager Bob Melvin in the top of the third inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue Sep 3, 2024 (AP News photo)

Tuesday, Sept. 3, 2024

Oracle Park

San Francisco, California

Arizona Diamondbacks 8 (78-61)

San Francisco Giants 7 (68-71)

Win: Ryne Nelson (10-6)

Loss: Kyle Harrison (7-7)

Save: Justin Martinez (8)

Time: 2:47

Attendance: 23,545

By Stephen Ruderman

The Diamondbacks torched Kyle Harrison for six runs in just two and two thirds innings and jumped out to a 7-1 lead, and even though the Giants made a late spirited comeback, Arizona ultimately held on to win a wild 8-7 series opener at Oracle Park on Tuesday night.

President of Baseball Operations Farhan Zaidi had himself a solid off-season in which he signed Jung-hoo Lee, Matt Chapman, Jorge Soler and Blake Snell. As a result, there was a lot of excitement surrounding the Giants at the beginning of the season. Expectations were high, and fans were showing up.

The Giants went through the usual ups and downs of the long 162-game grind. At three separate times this season, they looked like they were done only to get hot and play the kind of winning baseball we all have known they’re capable of.

However, things were never able to truly materialize. Now with the Giants now wrapping up their third-straight season of mediocrity, there was a very different vibe on the shores of McCovey Cove Tuesday night.

23,545 fans, the lowest crowd of the season, filled into Oracle Park to watch a Giants’ team six and a half games out of the third wild card spot with 24 games to go. There was a real sense that the patience of this fanbase had run out with the meritocracy of the last three years, and that feeling carried right into the game.

While the Giants were still barely hanging by a thread onto contention, everyone knew the reality that with the Diamondbacks in town, the Giants were really playing spoilers. They called up Marco Luciano and Luis Matos prior to the game, and it appears that the Giants have begun their transition to play-for-next-year mode.

Luciano would be at second base tonight. It was a new position for the Giants’ young phenom, who committed five errors in five games in his brief stint with the team in late May.

The Diamondbacks got to work right away against Giants’ starter Kyle Harrison in the top of the first inning. Geraldo Perdomo singled on a ground ball up the middle to start the game, and Corbin Carroll roped a double down the left field line.

I told ya the lack of vibes had carried over into the game. The Diamondbacks had runners at second and third with nobody out and had a chance for a crooked number right off the bat.

Josh Bell grounded out to short, which knocked in Perdomo to put Arizona on the board, but it was a big first out for Harrison. Harrison struck Christian Walker out for the second out, and he had a chance to limit the damage to just a run.

Harrison then got ahead of Randal Grichuk 1-2, but Grichuk fouled off four pitches with two strikes to work the count to 2-2. He then hit a home run to right-center field to give the Diamondbacks their crooked number.

Ryne Nelson took the ball for Arizona in the bottom of the first with an early 3-0 lead, but the Giants would have a response. Mike Yastrzemski drew a leadoff walk, and Tyler Fitzerald slashed a double off the end of his bat down the right field line to put runners at second and third with no one out. Sound familiar?

Like the Diamondbacks, the Giants got on the board via an out, as Heliot Ramos knocked in Yaz with a sacrifice fly to right. However, the Giants would not be able to add on.

Harrison hoped to settle down after his offense got him a run, but the Diamondbacks got that run right back in the top of the second. Nelson then threw a one, two, three inning in the bottom of the second, but Harrison wouldn’t be able to stay out of trouble.

Harrison set down the first men he faced, but the Diamondbacks were relentless, and they loaded the bases with two outs. That ended Harrison’s night after just two and two thirds innings.

Bob Melvin brought in Tristan Beck, and I’ll get the bad news out of the way. Kevin Newman came up, and he lined a base-hit up the middle to knick in a pair. The Diamondbacks had a 6-1 lead, and this was turning into an ugly night for the Giants.

The one shiny spot on the ugly start Tuesday night was the appearance of Beck. Beck was pitching just six months after having an aneurysm in his right arm that required surgery.

Beck was acquired from the Braves in the Mark Melancon Trade in 2019, and he had a solid rookie season when he finally made it to the big leagues last year. Beck was unable to pitch for most of this season, but he put in the hard work to find his way back to the Giants.

Beck threw three and a third innings, and he gave up a run in the top of the fifth. It was a big day for him, and he made clear after the game how thankful he was for the support following everything he went through this year.

Matt Chapman hit a line drive home run to left-center in the bottom of sixth to make it 7-2, but Nelson was dominant Tuesday night over six and two thirds. He gave up just two runs and four hits, and he struck out nine.

Despite the lows the Giants have suffered this season, they have never phoned it in. They have been a group of true fighters who have grinded out every out all season. Even at their lowest points, they never gave up. Tuesday night was no different.

Diamondbacks Manager Torrey Lovullo brought in Ryan Thompson for what was expected to be a quiet bottom of the eighth inning. However, the Giants had other plans with the top of the order up.

Yastrzemski led off the inning with a home run to left-center to make it 7-3, and the Giants put runners at first and second with two outs. Jerar Encarnacion and Patrick Bailey then knocked in runs with base-hits to cut the deficit to 7-5.

Lovullo brought in Justin Martinez to face Luciano. Luciano committed another error in his return to the big leagues tonight, but he had a chance for a big hit in the bottom of the eighth. On the first pitch, he took a slider right on the inside corner and fisted it the other way to right for a base-hit, and it was now 7-6 with the tying run just 90 feet away at third.

The Giants and the 23,545 fans at the ballpark tonight were making noise. Luis Matos came up, but he struck out on three pitches, and the Diamondbacks kept their lead going to the ninth.

Arizona would get a run back against Erik Miller in the top of the ninth to make it 8-6, but the Giants still kept it going against Martinez in the bottom of the ninth. Yastrzemski lined a base-hit to right to start the inning, and after Fitzgerald struck out for the first out, Heliot Ramos lined a double down the line in left to make it 8-7.

It was a one-run game again, and the Giants had the tying run in scoring position with one out. The Giants had a chance to once again pull off a big win and give themselves and their fans a faint glimmer of hope with their season all but done.

However, it was not meant to be. Chapman grounded out back to the mound, and after Lovullo elected to walk LaMonte Wade, Encarnacion struck out swinging to end the game.

Ryne Nelson picked up the win; Kyle Harrison took the loss; and Justin Martinez got his eighth save of the year. The Giants have now lost three-straight and fall to 68-71. They are now seven and a half games back of the Braves with 23 games to go, and their tragic number to be eliminated is 16.

Hayden Birdsong (3-4, 5.14 ERA) will try and bounce back after a rough August, and he will take the ball for the Giants in the second game of this series Wednesday night. Zac Gallen (10-6, 3.87 ERA) will make the start for the Diamondbacks. First pitch will be at 6:45 p.m PT.

A’s win second straight walk off game; Seth Brown sends Oakland home with RBI single in 3-2 win over Seattle

Oakland A’s Seth Brown slugs a ninth inning RBI single that scored the winning run against the Seattle Mariners at the Oakland Coliseum on Tue Sep 3, 2024 (AP News photo)

Seattle (69-70). 200 000 000 2 5 0

Athletics (61-78). 100 100 001. 3.6 0

Time: 2:15

Attendance: 3,924

Tuesday, September 3, 2024

Oakland CA

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–The 80 degree game time temperature before Tuesday night’s encounter between the Seattle Mariners and the betwixt and between Athletics this balmy Tuesday evening was an invitation to a slug fest.

For one brief inning it looked like the teams had accepted the invitation, but then their pitchers stepped up and showed that, Tuesday night at least, good pitching could beat good hitting. The result was a 3-2 walk off win by the Athletics on Seth Brown’s full count single to right center in the bottom of the ninth.

The Mariners started the scoring with their first two batters. JP Crawford led off with a single to right center and advanced to third on a double to left by Julio Rodríguez. Both of them scored on Cal Raleigh’s two bagger to right center. A’s starter JT Ginn settled down after that and didn’t give up another tally until he was relieved by Hogan Harris to face the M’s in the top of the seventh.

Ginn left with the score tied at two after his labor of six innings and, so, had to settle for a no decision. His work was superb. He allowed only two hits in the five frames that followed the Mariners’ three hit first. The 25 year old rookie righthander struck out seven M’s and walked only one.

Ginn threw a total of 88 pitches, of which 23 were balls. Both of the runs he gave up were earned, and his ERA went down to 4.30. He has yet to be credited with a win or charged with a loss.

Harris matched his predecessor’s performance, allowing the visitors from the Puget Sound only two baserunners, both of whom walked. He earned the win to improve his record to 3-3, 2.73. The 37th and last pitch he threw was clutch pitching at its best.

With Randy Arozarena on first and one out, Justin Turner, pinch hitting for Luke Raley, worked a full count. Arozarena broke for second. Harris zipped a 92mph four seamer past Turner, umpire Manny Rodríguez called the third strike, and Shea Langeliers threw Arozarena out at second.

Ginn’s opposite number for Seattle, the veteran Luis Castillo was almost impermeable after Lawrence Butler led off for the A’s in the bottom of the first with a 408 foot home run to right center, his 21st round tripper of the year.

The shot came off an 87 mph changeup that left Butler’s bat 108 mph. Castillo allowed only one more run. It came on Brown’s 13th homer of the season, a 410 foot blast to center off a 94mph four seamer. Brown had a three hit night and drove in two of the Athletics’ three runs.

Butler and Brown provided the only four hits off Castillo in his seven innings of work. He struck out five and walked on, throwing 99 pitches, 29 of which were balls. Like Ginn, he got a no decision. His record now stands at 11-12, 3.60.

Troy Taylor pitched a perfect eighth for the Mariners, and Trent Thornton, who struck out Brent Rooker, walked JJ Bleday, who scored the winning run, and yielded back to back singles to Langeliers and Brown, took the loss. He’s now 3-3, 4,19.

Butler’s blast extended his hitting streak to 13 games and validated his status as the most recent AL Player of the Week. He now has tied the franchise record of eight consecutive games.

Wednesday, evening at 6:40pm PT, both two teams will go at each other again. George Kirby (10-10, 3.63) will take the mound for the Mariners; JP Sears (11-9, 4.21) for the Athletics.