Giants fire Gabe Kapler after four seasons

San Francisco Giants manager Gabe Kapler walks to the dugout after making a pitching change during the seventh inning against the San Diego Padres at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Thu Sep 29, 2023. Which turned out to Kapler’s last game as a Giants manager. (AP News photo)

By Mary Anne

The San Francisco Giants fired their manager Gabe Kapler, also known as Kap, after four seasons with the team from 2020-23. Kapler led the Giants to one postseason trip in 2021 when they lost to their biggest rival, the Los Angeles Dodgers, in five games in the 2021 National League Division Series (NLDS). The Giants finished 107-55 in 162 regular-season games with a .660% win percentage in ’21.

Kapler previously served as manager of the Philadelphia Phillies from 2018-19. As an MLB shortstop, Kapler played for the Detroit Tigers (1998-99), Texas Rangers (2000-02), Colorado Rockies (2002-03), Boston Red Sox (2003-04, 2005-06), Yomiuri Giants (2005), Milwaukee Brewers (2008), and Tampa Bay Rays (2009-2010). And, as a NCAA baseball player, Kapler played for Cal State Fullerton before transferring to Moorpark College. Kapler was inducted into the Moorpark College Athletic Hall of Fame in 2008.

The Giants’ firing of Kapler, a 48-year-old Reseda, Los Angeles, California, native, came with just three regular-season games in 2023. The Giants’ record is 78-81, pending the final score of tonight’s home game against the Dodgers, who are 98-61 at present.

In a statement released to ESPN, Giants president of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi said he made the “recommendation to ownership” to fire Kapler and then did so after “receiving their approval.”

Kai Correa will serve as interim manager for the Giants’ last three games. Correa, an infield and baserunning coach, has been with the Giants since 2020. The 35-year-old is a Hilo, Hawaii, native of Native Hawaiian, Portuguese, and Japanese descent. Correa’s alma mater is the University of Puget Sound, where he played NCAA baseball and graduated with a degree in U.S. history.

Correa previously served as an infield coach and a defensive coordinator for the Cleveland Indians, a volunteer assistant and assistant coach for the University of Northern Colorado, and head assistant coach, recruiting coordinator, infield coach, and third-base coach for the University of Puget Sound.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Adiós Kapler!~ -Kai Correa named SF interim manager; Giants dismiss Kapler as manager with three games left in the season

The San Francisco Giants named Kai Correa as interim manager after firing Gabe Kapler on Thu Sep 29, 2023 (file photo USA Today)

Adiós Kapler!~ -Giants dismiss manager with three games left in the season

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

SAN FRANCISCO–Gabe Kapler was never that popular when the Giants first signed him in 2020 and today became the first Giants manager to be fired since in September of 1995 when Jim Davenport was fired and replaced by Roger Craig.

In 2021 the Giants overachieved and won 107 games, and Gabe Kapler won the NL Manager of the Year. After two years as skipper of the Philadelphia Phillies, 2023 was the fourth season for Kapler.

Soon after noon on September 29, the San Francisco Giants released this statement: “He has been dedicated and passionate in his efforts to improve the on-field performance of the San Francisco Giants and I have tremendous respect for him as a colleague and friend” said team president Farhan Zaidi. Kapler’s first season with San Francisco was the pandemic-shortened 2020 campaign”

Names already rumored to be possible candidates for Giants manager in 2024, Menlo Park native and three-time Manager of the Year Bob Melvin, ending his first season as manager of the San Diego Padres, also Oakland A’s manager Mark Kotsay. But it is “too early” to tell.

Meanwhile, Giants veteran shortstop and three-time World Champion Brandon Crawford 36, said he likes to retire as a Giant, but he still contemplating his future and was not ready to commit to anything just yet. Crawford made the statement just a few days ago, on September 21. About the speculation if he is going to play his last game as a Giant and retire this next Sunday when the team closes the season against the LA Dodgers, he said: “I don’t have an answer, but there’s been plenty of thoughts”.

San Francisco closes the season at home this weekend with a three-game series against the Western Division champion Los Angeles Dodgers.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah Salmonson: A’s end 3 game series with Twins with 2-1 win; Oakland opens 3 game series tonight against Angels

Oakland A’s starter Luis Medina throws to the Minnesota Twins line up in the bottom of the first inning at Target Field in Minneapolis on Thu Sep 28, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jeremiah:

#1 The Oakland A’s, behind Luis Medina’s best performance of the year and timely hitting by the A’s offense, gave the A’s a 2-1 win over the Central Division champions, the Minnesota Twins.

#2 It was Medina’s last start in 2023, and he made it a good one. The young man from the Dominican Republic can go home knowing how well he pitched Thursday afternoon.

#3 The Twins did score a run off Medina in the bottom of the sixth. However, relievers Lucas Erceg, Dany Jimenez, and Trevor May pitched a scoreless seventh, eighth, and ninth inning to secure the win for the Green and Gold.

#4 The A’s were facing their former teammate Sonny Gray in the final game of the three-game series. Gray had been a first-round pick of the A’s in the 2011 Amateur Draft. Gray had been a standout pitcher at Vanderbilt University.

#5 The A’s will close out the season with their final series against the Los Angeles Angels tonight in Anaheim. Starting pitchers for the A’s Ken Waldichuk (4-8 ERA 5.29) for the Angels Chase Silseth (4-1 ERA 4.10) first pitch 6:38pm PT.

Jeremiah did the Oakland A’s podcasts Fridays during the 2023 season at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Lawsuit filed against Nevada Schools Over Stadiums; A’s lobbyists say educators leave out crucial information on petition measure

Laborers Union Local 872 retired political director of Laborers Thomas Morely is one of the plaintiffs who filed a challenge in First District Court of Carson City challenging Schools over Stadiums from putting an initiative on the Nevada ballot to stop public funding of the Tropicana Hotel Ballpark for the Oakland A’s. If Schools over Stadiums get enough signatures in four Nevada districts the measure would go on the ballot Nov 2025. A no vote against funding the ballpark with public money would stop the ballpark funding unless the A’s can raise the money privately. (photo from Laborers International Union 872)

Lawsuit filed against Nevada School Over Stadium

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

ByAmaury Pi-González

A Lawsuit by two labor leaders in Nevada challenges the Nevada teacher union-led PAC “School Over Stadium.” A petition to repeal public funding for the new proposed stadium for the Oakland A’s in Las Vegas. Who filed it? Once the head of the Nevada AFL-CIO, Danny Thompson was joined by Thomas Morley, a retired political director of Laborers Local 872.

Morley is currently a private consultant. The filing took place in the 1st District Court in Carson City, the capital of the State of Nevada, where all legal challenges are filed. Oakland A’s representatives deferred comment to the attorney working on the case.

According to The Independent of Nevada, Bradley Schrager represented a broad, emerging coalition of business and labor interests. The Oakland A’s are part of that coalition, according to Mr.Schrager, who said, “SB1 passed with majorities in both houses,” referring to the bill that authorized public financing to help the A’s construct a 33,000-seat ballpark on the Las Vegas Strip. “The governor approved it, so it’s no surprise that support exists.”

The lawsuit argues that the School Over Stadiums petition “doesn’t include the full text of the proposal as required by Nevada State Constitution and alleges the referendum is “inaccurate, misleading and argumentative, and therefore is legally inadequate and does not meet the requirement of Nevada State law.”

This is a battle between the educators in Nevada (not all but the School Over Stadium group) vs. Labor and Business interests in Nevada. Organized labor backed the A’s when the bill was before the Legislature. The Southern Nevada Building Trades has a project labor agreement with A’s for the ballpark construction.

Culinary Workers Local 226 has an agreement with the team to organize workers at the stadium once it opens. The A’s were also the main sponsors of the Nevada AFL-CIO Convention in August at the Grand Sierra Resort in Reno.

The Culinary Workers Union Local 226 is the largest labor union in Nevada and alongside the Bartenders Union Local 165, represents 60,000 guest room attendants, cocktail and food servers, porters, bellmen, cooks, bartenders, laundry and kitchen workers statewide in Nevada.

This is very interesting, schools are very important any place in the country, but Nevada is the one place in the US where the hospitality business has ruled since Las Vegas was founded from the days of the first hotel resort, El Rancho Vegas, on the Las Vegas Strip in 1941, to this day.

Could the Schools over Stadiums group have been late to the party? The PAC behind the ballot measure was launched in June by the Nevada State Education Association following the approval of SB1. The Legislature approved the funding bill, and the A’s are waiting for Major League Baseball to vote for the team’s relocation request, which the Commissioner expects to take place this November, with the beginning of the construction of the new Las Vegas ballpark in early 2024.

In 2024, the American League schedule calls for the Oakland A’s to play their 81 home games at the Oakland Coliseum, where they have been playing since 1968. So what happens now? Who is going to win this? Only God knows when lawyers decide this type of stuff; if you do not understand it, you are not alone. Q:What do you get when you cross the Godfather with a lawyer? A: An offer you can’t understand.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play voice on the Oakland A’s Spanish radio network at 1010 KIQI San Francisco and 990 KATD Pittsburg and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Loss in Giants clubhouse and post season could spell Zaidi and Kapler’s demise; Could Wotus be next in line for manager’s job?

San Francisco Giants special assistant and former third base coach Ron Wotus could possibly be in line for the Giants manager job. (AP file photo)

By Barbara Mason

San Francisco Giants team president Farhan Zaidi was asked by the Giants flagship station KNBR on Thursday did he see manager Gabe Kapler returning next season. Zaidi gave a non answer saying he appreciated that Giants owner Greg Johnson gave assurances that both Kapler and Zaidi would be returning for the 2024 season.

Zaidi talked about Kapler losing the clubhouse saying culturally when things are going right this group loves being together, they’re having fun. “But when you’re not doing well those things can be seen in a negative light,” he said.

On Monday night the Giants returned to Oracle Park taking on the San Diego Padres in a three game series. San Francisco pitcher Logan Webb had a sound outing winning 2-1. Instead of patting himself on the back for a fine outing when it was mentioned that he could be a NL Cy Young Award winner Webb gave credit to his opposing pitcher the Padres Blake Snell. He said that Snell should be the Cy Young Award winner and that he pitched a fine game.

Webb added that it’s not fun anymore. He said that the joy and fun just isn’t there right now. The Giants on Wednesday night lost after going into the top of the tenth inning with a 2-2 tie but saw three runs score for San Diego on a throwing error allowing a run and a two RBI base hit. There seems to be some malcontent in the locker room.

It was the quickest exit by the fans after the Padres scored the last two runs that had been seen at Oracle Park in a long time. The culture that Zaidi was talking about is just about all but gone. The Giants at one time had a shot at getting a Wild Card spot but went 2-8 on the previous road trip losing two out of three in Colorado, swept in two games in Arizona, and losing three out of four in Los Angeles.

The Giants really needed those wins on that road trip but it got away from them. The clubhouse after that road trip was strained at best. Kapler was stoic when answering questions at his post game meeting with the press after Wednesday night’s loss to the Padres.

When the Giants bombed on that last road trip Webb spoke up about the clubhouse mood. Then they lost two out of three to the Padres at Oracle and that mood was even more strained than on this last road trip. Johnson who seemed to be assured that Zaidi and Kapler would be back next season puts that statement in doubt.

Ironically special assistant coach Ron Wotus whose been with the Giants through four managers, Dusty Baker, Felipe Alou, Bruce Bochy and now Kapler could be a successor as manager if Kapler were to be fired. It was reported when Wotus spoke to the clubhouse all the players gave him their attention.

Webb questioned, “Why would you get to this position and not give it your best? Give it your all. I think it’s a great message, right. Because no matter what happens at the end of the year, we’re just going to go right back to the offseason and show up in spring training,” he said. He also believes that the team will do their best to try to get back into a possible post-season scenario much like the one they just blew in 2023.

Barbara Mason covers Giants baseball on the road for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Finish the 2023 Season, Hobbling Across the Finish Line Amid Season Disappointment

San Francisco Giants’ Brandon Crawford (35) celebrates in the dugout after scoring off of a single hit by Joc Pederson during the third inning on Tue Aug 8, 2023 against the Los Angeles Angels at the Big A in Anaheim. Crawford could be playing his last game of his career or with the Giants after Sun Oct 1, 2023 at Oracle Park vs. the Los Angeles Dodgers. (AP file photo)

By Barbara Mason

The 2023 MLB season is coming to an end with three games left for the San Francisco Giants (78-81). It has sure been a roller coaster ride for the team. The Giants that trailed the Dodgers by a single game at one time not too long ago is now three games below .500.

There was a time after the all-star break that this team was playing great baseball. They were winning so many different way and had a real knack for coming from behind and winning. That all came to a screeching halt in the past several months with the Giants getting really inconsistent.

When it looked like they were getting back on track, they would simply implode. It just seemed to fall to pieces. Some of the errors that came out of this dugout were crazy, errors that you just do not see everyday. The Giants have to be feeling a real sense of disappointment; coming so close and falling just short.

Thursday the Giants had their last day off before they take on the Los Angeles Dodgers in the final three-game series of the regular season at Oracle Park. The Dodgers will be off to the playoffs and the Giants will be off to parts unknown.

It will surely be a long off-season for San Francisco suffering yet another disappointing season. The Giants has quite a list of pending free agents which include Brandon Crawford who has not yet indicated if he will retire. There will for certain be some big changes considering how this season went. A younger and faster roster would be a good place to start. 22 players are over the age of 25 and 14 of them are 30 and older.

Friday night the Dodger series will get underway with first pitch scheduled for 7:15 PM. Keaton Winn will take the mound for the Giants with a 0-0, 3.89 ERA. For the Dodgers it will be Lance Lynn that the San Francisco offense will be facing. Lynn has a 12-11 win/loss record and a 5.83 ERA.

Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman will be leading the offensive charge for Los Angles. San Francisco will be leaning on Wilmer Flores, Thairo Estrada and J.D. Davis in this final series. These final three games mean little to either team.

The Dodgers have locked in the No. 2 seed in the National League after having a tremendous 2023 regular season. They will open the division series at Dodger Stadium next Saturday. This season really went down to the wire for many of these teams and unfortunately San Francisco could not seal the deal.

It will likely be a quiet series this weekend although this is an age-old rivalry that may bring out fans rooting for both sides. It will be a farewell to the 2023 season for the San Francisco Giants missing yet another post season.

It will be an interesting and important off-season for the Giants as they make some roster changes that may be significant. Only time will tell what this team will look like as they head into the 2024 season.

Barbara Mason is an Oakland A’s podcast and beat writer at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Good pitching, Timely hitting, give A’s 2-1 win over Twins at Target Field

Oakland A’s starter Ken Waldichuk will duel against the Los Angeles Angels on Fri Sep 29, 2023 at the Big A in Anaheim. This will be the last series of the 2023 season for Oakland. (photo from White Cleat Beat)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s, behind Luis Medina’s best performance of the year and timely hitting by the A’s offense, gave the A’s a 2-1 win over the Central Division champions, the Minnesota Twins. It was Medina’s last start in 2023, and he made it a good one. The young man from the Dominican Republic can go home knowing how well he pitched Thursday afternoon.

The Twins did score a run off Medina in the bottom of the sixth. However, relievers Lucas Erceg, Dany Jimenez, and Trevor May pitched a scoreless seventh, eighth, and ninth inning to secure the win for the Green and Gold.

The A’s were facing their former teammate Sonny Gray in the final game of the three-game series. Gray had been a first-round pick of the A’s in the 2011 Amateur Draft. Gray had been a standout pitcher at Vanderbilt University. The Twins’ manager, Rocco Baldelli, planned to have Gray pitch four innings as he will pitch the second game of the AL Wildcard series slated to start next Tuesday.

The A’s scored the game’s first run in the top of the second inning. With one out, JJ Bleday, recently activated from the IL, singled. Bleday went to second base on Aledmys Diaz’s ground out. A’s shortstop Nick Allen singled to drive in Bleday.

The Twins tied the game in the bottom of the sixth. Willie Castro, playing third base for the Twins, laid down a perfect drag bunt to reach safely. Former San Francisco Giant Donovan Solano singled, sending Castro to second.

Medina hit Alex Kiriloff with a pitch to load the bases with no out. The next hitter, Matt Wallner, who hit a grand slam Tuesday night, hit into a 4-6-3 double play. Castro scored to tie the game. Medina retired Ryan Jeffers for the final out.

The Twins threatened to break the game open in the bottom of the seventh. A’s reliever Lucas Erceg walked Trevor Larnach to start the inning. Erceg retired the next two hitters. Erceg suddenly could not find the strike zone. He walked Edouard Julien and Willie Castro to load the bases.

The next hitter was the ever-dangerous hit machine, Donovan Solano. It was quite a battle. It took 12 pitches as Erceg struck out Solano with a 99-mile-per-hour fastball that ended the inning.

The Twins brought Kenta Maeda to relieve Sonny Gray in the fifth inning. Maeda held the A’s hitless for three innings. The game-winning hit came in the top of the eighth. A’s rookie first baseman Ryan Noda blasted his 16th home run of the year into the right field seats to give the A’s a 2-1 advantage.

Dany Jimenez gave up a one-out double to Matt Wallner. The Twins needed a hit to tie the game. Jimenez retired Ryan Jeffers on a fly ball to left and Trevor Larnach on a ground out to first baseman Ryan Noda. Trevor May, a former member of the Minnesota Twins, retired his former 1-2-3 in the ninth. The A’s win 2-1.

Game Notes- With the win, the A’s are 49-110. It was the A’s third win in their 14 games. The winning pitcher was Lucas Erceg. The Twins dropped to 85-74. The losing pitcher was Kenta Maeda.

The line for Oakland was two runs, four hits, and no errors.
The line for the Twins was one run, four hits, and no errors.

The line for Luis Medina was six innings pitched, allowing one run, four hits, walking three, and striking out four. Medina threw 93 pitches, 55 for strikes. It was his best performance of the year.

The A’s play the season’s final three games with the Los Angeles Angels. Both teams have had a dismal season. The A’s set an Oakland record with 110 losses. The Angels lost their two All-Stars to injury. Mike Trout broke his hamate bone last July and did not fully recover.

Shohei Ohtani had UCL surgery and is out until next year. The big question in Anaheim is whether the players will wear an Angel uniform next year. Ohtani is a free agent and will be a hot property on the market. The big-money teams like the Yankees, Dodgers, or Mets will be trying to sign Ohtani.

The A’s will send lefty Ken Waldichuk to the hill Friday night to face the Angels. Waldichuk will be trying to win his fifth game of the year. Chase Silseth will pitch for LA.

For this writer, this will be my final A’s game summary for 2023. It has been difficult to watch the A’s lose so many games. However, as dismal as it has been, there are some bright spots. First, I would like to commend A’s manager, Mark Kotsay, for the job he did in such unfortunate circumstances.

Kotsay made sure his players gave 100% every day. They may not have produced better results, but it was not for lack of effort. The guys were all grinders. They did not lay down. The A’s have some young talent that may change their fortunes. Second baseman Zack Geldof has shown he is a big-league talent.

In the coming seasons, Ryan Noda, Esteury Ruiz, and Shea Langeliers will all be building blocks. The A’s need to improve the starting rotation. The only pitcher with five wins was Shintaro Fujinami. The A’s traded Fuji to Baltimore, and the young pitcher from Japan will be in the playoffs.

Starting pitcher for Oakland to open the three game series in Anaheim Friday night for the A’s Ken Waldichuk (4-8 ERA 5.29) for the Los Angeles Angels Chase Silseth (4-1 ERA 4.10) a 6:38pm PT first pitch.

Let me finish by saying adios to the Green and Gold. Let’s hope next year will be better.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: Manfred hopes for owners vote to relocate A’s on Nov 14th in Texas

Artist’s renderings of a Las Vegas A’s ballpark at the Tropicana Hotel and Resort which is expected to open in 2028 if approved at the MLB owners relocation vote in Arlington Nov 14-16, 2023 (renderings image furnished by the Oakland A’s)

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 Jerry, On Wednesday Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred said he hopes MLB owners will hold the vote to relocate the Oakland A’s to Las Vegas.

#2 Jerry, Manfred said he hopes the relocation vote will take place in Arlington between Nov 14-16th.

#3 Las Vegas will be the A’s fourth city since the franchise started in Philadelphia in 1901-54, then to Kanas City from 1954-67, and to Oakland from 1968 to the present.

#4 The only thing that can stop the A’s from relocating is the owners vote no on the move. Manfred appears to be very confident to a point that he’s looking past the vote but when the A’s will pull up stakes and move out of Oakland.

#5 The other move that could stop the A’s moving to Vegas is the Schools over Stadiums group who aim to put a ballot measure that says the state should not be using public funds to subsidize building a ballpark at the Tropicana location but the funds should be going to schools. If there are a enough signatures from four different districts on the Nevada petitions the vote would take place Nov 2025.

Jerry Feitelberg did the Oakland A’s podcasts during the 2023 season at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Flood gates open defense coughs up 3 runs in 10th as Pads defeat Giants 5-2

San Diego Padres’ Trent Grisham, left, runs toward Fernando Tatis Jr. (23) after scoring against the San Francisco Giants during the 10th inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Sep 27, 2023 (AP News photo)

San Diego (79-80). 000 010 100 3. – 5. 10. 0

San Francisco (78-81). 010 100 000 0. – 2. 5. 3. 10 innings

Time: 2:52

Attendance: 32,151

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO—For Sean Manaea, the past may be the future. The veteran of eight years in the show, Manaea once was a mainstay of the A’s starting rotation; he no hit the powerful Red Sox in 20018, arguably his best season with Oakland, when he went 12-9, 3.59.

Traded to the Padres for the ’22 season, he was pretty much of a bust, going 7-8, 4.96. The Giants signed him as a free agent this year, and he was relegated to the bullpen and didn’t return to the rotation until September 12.

Manaea shut the Dodgers out on three over seven innings in his last outing and came to work tonight with an ERA of 2.00 in his three starts, which is in stark contrast to his overall mark of 7-6, 4.51. His fine performance didn’t prevent the Giants from falling apart in the tenth inning and losing, 5-2, to Manaea’s previous employers, the San Diego Padres.

Manaea completed his 1,000th inning as a big leaguer when he got Matthew Batten to pop out to first to end the fourth frame. In all, he hurled 6 + frames tonight, allowing only one run in the six but another in the plus. Both runs were earned, one coming on a home run.

Manaea faced 24 batters and threw them exactly 100 pitches, 67 for strike. He allowed seven hits and didn’t issue any walks. It was a satisfying performance, but Manaea had to settle for a no decision that reduced his ERA to 4.44.

The left handed veteran Manaea was opposed by the right handed rookie Matt Waldron, making his sixth major league start out of eight appearances. He was 1-3, 4.58. His ERA as a starter was 4.91; it’s 3.72 pitching out of the pen. Waldron also produced a credible performance. Over six innings he held the Giants to two runs on five hits and two walks. One of the hits was a four bagger.

Manaea threw 82 pitches, 54 for strikes. He, too, had to settle for a no decision and reduced his earned run average, which now stands at 4.35. Seth Barlow replaced him on the mound after the crowd of 32,151 had finished singing “Take Me Out to the Ball Game.”

Thairo Estrada’s solo home run in the home second, his 14th round tripper of the season, put San Francisco ahead, 1-0. The 418 foot blast to left center came on a 73.9 mph knuckle ball that sailed off the Giants’ second baseman’s bat at 102 mph. The knuckler is Waldron’s favorite pitch; he throws it 27.2% of the time.

The Friars tied the score in the top of the fifth with a leadoff double by José Azocar, followed by a nubber in front of the plate that went as a single to Brett Sullivan and sent Azocar to third, from which he came home on Bogaerts’ sac fly to center.

The Giants came charging back in the bottom of the third with Michael Conforto’s leadoff double against the National Car Rental advertisement in left center field. With two outs, they foiled The Cure on Tyler Fitzgerald’s pop single to shallow right, and the orange and black was (were?) back in the lead, 2-1.

But not for long.Garrett Cooper ended Manaea’s night’s work with his 17th home run of the year, a leadoff blast that cleared the same National Car Rental ad against which Conforto had hit his two bagger. Ryan Walker entered the game as Manaea left to warm applause. Walker lived up to his name and allowed a walk and hit a batter, but that was all.

The submariner Tyler Rogers. set his ex teammates down in order in the eighth helped by Flores’s wonderful backhand stop and off balance throw to first on Machado’s bouncing ball down the third base line to end the inning.

Roberto Suárez kept it tied with a scoreless eighth.

The top of the ninth brought Camilo Doval to the mound for the home team. Kim, the first Padre he faced, lifted a foul fly to right on which Yastrzemski made a beautiful tumbling rollover catch for the first out. Cooper lined a double down the third base line.

Jurickson Profar pinch hit for Batten, and Eddie Roario was inserted as a pinch runner for Cooper. Doval fanned Profar, bringing Trent Grisham to the plate as a pinch hitter for Azocar. Doval got him out on a tricky bouncer to Estrada.

Josh Harder, who had earned the save in last night’s battle, walked Marco Luciano on four pitches to start the Giants’ ninth. Bailey, batting right handed — his strong side — for the first time tonight, struck out swinging, also went down swinging. Austin Slater pinch hit for Wade and forced Luciano out at second, 6-5, sending us into extra innings.

John Brebbia, yesterday’s unexpected opener, replaced Doval on the bump for the top of the 20th. He retired Bret Sullivan on a grounder to short, but zombie runner Grisham advanced to the third on the play and scored on Bogaerts’ sac fly to right. Tatís reached first on Luciano’s throwing error, and the Giants conceded a walk to Soto that put Tatís on second.

With Machado at bat, Bailey tried to pick Tatís off and threw the ball into center field, allowing both runners to advance a base. Both of them scored when the Manny you love to hate dumped a Texas League single into center.

Tom Cosgrove was chosen to protect the friars’ 5-2 lead in the bottom of the frame. Luis Matos pinch hit for Yaz and grounded out to short. Slater had to hold on at second, where he again had to remain when Flores bounced out to third. Héliot Ramos pinch hit for Pederson and grounded out to short to end the misery.

Brebbia, now 3-4, 3.55, was charged with the loss, even though a less porous defence might have resulted in him getting the win. Hader, the pitcher of record when the Padres forged ahead, got the win, making him 2-3, 1.16. Cosgrove got the save, his first.

The Giants will have a day off tomorrow to lick their wounds. They’ll play host to the Dodgers on Friday. No pitchers have been announced.

A’s lose No.110, Twins break 8th inning tie in 6-4 win

Oakland Athletics left fielder Seth Brown lies on the ground after trying to catch an RBI double by Minnesota Twins’ Kyle Farmer during the second inning at Target Field in Minneapolis on Wed Sep 27, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

It was another tough night for the Oakland A’s as they were beaten for the second night in a row by the Minnesota Twins. The A’s played a more competitive game on Wednesday, but the result was the same: another loss by a score of 6-4.

The Twins starter, Pablo Lopez, worked just four and 1/3rd innings. Twins’ skipper Rocco Baldelli wanted Lopez to get some work in before the playoffs start next Tuesday. Lopez will get the start in that game. The A’s pitcher, 21-year-old Joey Estes, made his second big league start.

Estes, acquired in the trade that sent Matt Olson to Atlanta last year, pitched well. Estes went five and 1/3 innings and allowed six hits and three runs. He threw 75 pitches and did not get a decision.

The Twins drew first blood in the bottom of the first inning. Estes’ first pitch to Edouard Julien flew out of the park. One pitch, one run. The Twins led 1-0. The Twins added another run in the second inning to go ahead 2-0.

With one out, Estes hit Twins’ centerfielder Willi Castro with a pitch. Castro stole second and scored on Kyle Farmer’s double to right field. The A’s right fielder, Seth Brown, almost made the play of the night on Farmer’s ball. Seth dived for the ball, but his glove hit the ground and squirted out of the glove. 

The A’s scored their first run of the night in the top of the third. Lawrence Butler led off the inning with a double. Butler went to third on Ryan Noda’s ground out. Lopez struck out Zack Gelof for the second out. Seth Brown singled to drive in Butler with the run. The A’s trailed 2-1 midway through the third.

The A’s scored three times in the fifth. With one out, Butler doubled for the second time in the game. Ryan Noda singled, sending Butler to third. Rocco Baldelli replaced Lopez with reliever Caleb Thielbar. Geldof struck out for the second out.

Aledmys Diaz, pinch-hitting for Seth Brown, doubled to drive in Butler, and Noda went to third. Brent Rooker’s bloop single to shallow right plated Noda and Diaz. The A’s led 4-2 . 

Joey Estes kept the Twins off the board after the second inning. A’s manager Mark Kotsy had Estes start the sixth inning. With one out, the Twins’ Max Kepler singled.

It was Kepler’s third single of the game. Kotsay brought in Kyle Muller to pitch. Muller struck out Jordan Luplow for the second out. The next hitter, Ryan Jeffers, homered to tie the game. It was 4-4 after six complete.

The Twins put the winning runs on the board in the bottom of the eighth. Dany Jimenez was on the hill for Oakland. Max Kepler singled for the fourth time. Andrew Stevenson was sent in to run for Kepler. Trevor Larnach pinch hit for Jordan Luplow. Larnach doubled high off the wall in right field. Stevenson scored on the play. Larnach went to third on a wild pitch and scored on Jeffers’ sacrifice fly to make it a 6-4 advantage.

The Twins had lefty Dallas Keuchel on the mound to start a second inning of relief. With one out, Keuchel walked Nick Allen. Carlos Perez, pinch-hitting for Lawrence Butler, was hit by a pitch. The A’s had two men on and one out. Baldelli brought in Griffin Jax to end the game. Jax struck out Ryan Noda and Zack Gelof to preserve the Twins’ win. The Twins win 6-4.

Game notes: With the loss, the A’s, after 158 games, are a woeful 48-110. They have the worst record of any Oakland Athletics team. The only A’s team with the worst record was the 1916 Philadelphia A’s team. That team lost 117 games.

The Twins improved to 85-73. The Twins hit two more home runs to bring their season total to 225 for the year, third best in the American League.

The line score for Oakland was four runs, nine hits, and no errors.

Minnesota’s line was six runs, thirteen hits, and no errors.

The A’s will try to salvage a win on Thursday. Luis Medina (3-10 ERA 5.64) will go for Oakland, and his opponent will be Sonny Gray (8-8 ERA 2.80), who broke in with the A’s in 2013. The game will start at 10:10 a.m. Following Thursday’s game, the A’s will finish the season with the Los Angeles Angels.