That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Acuna 5th player to join 40-40 club; Marlins Alcantara suffering from forearm tightness; plus more news

Atlanta Braves’ Ronald Acuna Jr. watches his solo home run in the first inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Truist Park in Cumberland, Cobb County, GA on Tue Sep 19, 2023. Acuna Jr becomes the fifth MLB player to join the 40-40 club on Fri Sep 22, 2023. (AP News photo)

#1 Amaury, the Atlanta Braves Ronald Acuna became the fifth player in MLB history to become a 40-40 player, Aucna joined the club after hitting his 40th home run of the year against the Washington Nationals on Friday night.

#2 In triple A baseball the Miami Marlins Sandy Alcantara who is on a rehab assignment suffered forearm tightness on Thursday night the Marlins announced on Friday night. Alcantara who won two Cy Young Awards struck out four hitters in four innings is headed back to Miami and will be evaluated by team doctors. Alcantara has not pitched since Sep 6th.

#3 MLB announced they will be selecting 12 of the top clock operators for the post season as the time clock rule will be in place for the post season. The league upon selection will use the same time clock operator for that specific series. The rule remain the same with the exception of the ghost runner in extra innings which will not be used.

#4 Amaury, Pittsburgh Pirates manager Derek Shelton finds Chicago Cubs manager David Ross’ comment that the Pirates “are not a very good team” comment unfortunate. The Cubs are the third team in the NL Wild Card and the Pirates are two games behind them. Will Ross’ comments fire up the Bucs and make it an interesting run for the Wild Card in this last week of the season?

#5 The Oakland A’s conclude their final homestand of the 2023 season on Sun Sep 24th against the Detroit Tigers. The A’s have a lease with the Oakland Coliseum through the 2024 season is there any chance that the A’s could break the lease and choose to play somewhere else maybe Las Vegas Ballpark for next season or will they honor the lease and play here in 2024?

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play voice for the Oakland A’s on the A’s Spanish radio network and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Daniel Dullum: A’s still have not submitted a design for Tropicana ballpark in Vegas

The Tropicana Hotel and Resort the future home of the Las Vegas Athletics. The A’s have not submitted a design, have not addressed the retractable roof or dome, or submitted where the team will play between 2025-27 (photo by Nevada Independent Journal)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Daniel:

#1 Oakland City officials have indicated that they are not impressed with the job the Oakland A’s, or the Tropicana at Bally’s in Las Vegas is doing. The A’s have not submitted a design for the ballpark, the A’s have not said whether the park will be domed or have a retractable roof.

#2 The cost of the ballpark is $1.5 billion on a 35 acre lot and the A’s need to present a design by the beginning of January. The MLB owners will be taking a vote in mid November to approve the A’s relocation but must have the renderings in hand before that time.

#3 The issue of where the A’s intend to play between 2025-2027 still has not been decided. They have a lease with the Oakland Coliseum through the 2024 season. The A’s need to submit where they plan to play before submitting the relocation application to the MLB three man committee.

#4 With the lease expiring in 2024 and needing to submit the relocation application by mid November the A’s are still seeking locations where they will play for the remaining three years while the Tropicana is being built. Suggestions have been three minor league parks, Sutter Health Park in Sacramento, Greater Nevada Field in Reno, Las Vegas Park home of the Las Vegas Aviators, and Oracle Park home of the San Francisco Giants. Many think staying at the Oakland Coliseum is the most practical place for the A’s until their new park is built.

#5 A’s team president David Kaval said that the Tropicana location is quintessential, it’s right on the strip, i has people, cars, and eyeballs. Kaval added in many ways the Tropicana has the best location because it’s one of the busiest intersections in the world.

Join Daniel Dullum for the Oakland A’s podcasts each Friday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Hit Three Home Runs Get Past Dodgers 5-1; SF now 3 games back of NL Wild Card

Top of the fourth inning San Francisco Giants hitter Mike Yastrzemski slugs a home run in front of Los Angeles Dodgers catcher Will Smith at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Fri Sep 22, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

San Francisco Giants (77-77) sluggers Mike Yastrzemski, Thairo Estrada and Tyler Fitzgerald all hit home runs in game two of this series on Friday night. They held the Los Angeles Dodgers (94-59) to five hits and a single run winning the game 5-1.

This game was scoreless through three innings but it was San Francisco that put two runs up on the board in the fourth inning. Mike Yastrzemski knocked a two-run homer with Joc Pederson on base for the 2-0 lead. San Francisco would add to their lead in the sixth inning with a second home run, this one off the bat of Thairo Estrada for a 3-0 lead.

The Giants defense held the Dodgers until the bottom of the eighth when Los Angeles attempted a rally that came up way short. Freddie Freeman singled James Outman home but that would be all that the Dodgers could manage.

San Francisco would belt another home run in the ninth inning. Tyler Fitzgerald had a two-run homer with Marco Luciano on base and the Giants had taken a 5-1 lead and that would be the final. The Fitzgerald home run was his first career long ball giving the Giants the insurance they needed to nail down this win.

The Giants had eight hits in this game and San Francisco pitcher Sean Manaea went seven innings allowing three hits, no runs and two strikeouts. This was Manaea’s first win over the Dodgers. Manaea has the only two wins on the Giants current road trip. He gave up a hit to Miguel Rojas in the third inning but then retired 11 batters in a row in a terrific appearance on the mound.

This win brought the team back to .500 ending their three game skid. The Giants had not been below .500 since June 5th. This was a badly needed win for San Francisco in the crowded NL wild-card race.

Post game notes: Thursday night the Giants lost to the Dodgers amid a host of crazy errors. The Giants were able to tie the game in the top of the sixth inning but that was about it for San Francisco. Wild pitches along with an unbelievable error by right fielder Mike Yastrzemski and another from Wilmer Flores gave the Dodgers a real leg up.

After losing the series to the Arizona Diamondbacks, the Giants find themselves in a precarious situation. Hopes of a wild card berth are quickly fleeting, they won Friday night but they must continue stringing wins. The Reds, Marlins, and Diamondbacks all lost Friday but San Francisco still remains in the sixth spot three games back in the wild card race with the San Diego Padres hot on the Giants trail.

This rivalry will continue on into the weekend with games three and four. Clayton Kershaw will take the mound for the Dodgers on Saturday. The Los Angeles Ace has a 12-4 win/loss record and a 2.52 ERA. A starter for the Giants is still undecided at the time of this post. First pitch for game three is scheduled for 6:10 PM in another must win for San Francisco.

A’s snap eight-game skid against Tigers 8-2

Oakland Athletics’ Shea Langeliers hits a three-run home run against the Detroit Tigers during the sixth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Fri Sep 22, 2023 (AP News photo)

Photo courtesy of Oakland A’s Twitter.

By Titus Wilkinson (@TitusWisme)

OAKLAND- After losing yesterday to the Tigers the A’s bounced back winning by a final of 8-2.

Getting the start for Oakland was Ken Waldichuk who coming in had a 3-8 record with a 5.25 era. While Detroit had Sawyer Gipson-Long on the mound who had a 1-0 record with a 2.70 era.

Scoring got going quickly for the A’s as in the first inning Ryan Noda singled and Zack Gelof doubled getting in a run.

Things quieted down until the fifth inning when after Javier Baiz got a double Carson Kelly homered on a 1-1 pitch giving the Lions the lead 2-1.

Once again both offensives slowed down until the bottom of the six when Detroit brought on Will Vest in relief of Gipson-Long. That first pitch would be launched right back out into the stands by Brent Rooker who got his 29th home run of the season tying the game up at two.

The fun didn’t stop for the A’s though as Tony Kemp reached on an error and then Lawrence Butler singled. On the play though unfortunately for Oakland Kemp rolled his ankle meaning he was only able to hobble to first on a ball that could’ve been double. Thankfully for the green-and-white Kemp ended up being alright and stayed in the game.

With the pressure mounting Tyler Holton came in to replace Vest and the A’s made a change as well bringing in Shea Langeliers to pinch hit. That move ended up paying off for Oakland as on a 2-0 pitch Langeliers launched one to left field making it 5-2. That home run was Langelier’s 21st of the season.

The A’s found some insurance in the seventh when with the bases loaded Esteury Ruiz poked one to right field scoring two. Ruiz would not be done there as he then stole second and third which brought his total stolen bases up to 63. One more run was brought home by the A’s as Lawrence Butler got a run home on a sac fly making it 8-2.

That score ended up being the final as Waldichuk got the victory and Vest took the loss.

The third game of this home series for the A’s will be played Saturday at 1:07 p.m. Starting pitchers for the Tigers TBA and for the Oakland A’s Joe Boyle (0-0 ERA 0.00) at the Oakland Coliseum.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah Salmonson: A’s hope to snap eight game skid against Tigers tonight

Detroit Tigers designated hitter Miguel Cabrera (24) makes a face that could only scare the Oakland A’s and it must’ve worked as the A’s got crushed by the Tigers 7-3 on Thu Sep 21, 2023 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah Salmonson:

#1 Detroit Tigers pitcher Tarik Skubal set a season high of ten strikeouts in seven innings pitched on Thursday night and won his fourth straight game against the Oakland A’s.

#2 The loss for the A’s was their eighth straight. The Tigers went up by scores of 2-0, 5-0 and 7-0 up until the bottom of the ninth inning. The fact of the matter is through these eight straight loses the A’s offense have been absent.

#3 The Tigers Kerry Carpenter picked up his ninth multi hit game for September and it’s Detroit’s 34th multi hit game for the season.

#4 Jeremiah, the two hitters in the A’s line up that’s been seeing the ball well has been Brent Rooker and Zack Gelof but it’s not enough they whole line up needs to hit and score runs to keep up with the opposing offense?

#5 Sawyer-Gipson Long (1-0 2.70) is starting for the Tigers in game two of this series for Oakland Ken Waldichuk (3-8 ERA 5.40) first pitch at 6:40pm PT.

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

Tigers Skubal keeps A’s off balance for his fourth straight win 7-3 in Oakland

Oakland Athletics starting pitcher Luis Medina jumps over Detroit Tigers’ Zach McKinstry (39), who slides into third base after hitting a double and advancing on an error during the fifth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Thu Sep 21, 2023 (AP News photo)

Detroit (72-81).          200 030 020.  –    7.  9.  0

Oakland (46-107).     000 000 003.  –    3.  5.  3

Time: 2:33  

Attendance: 6,160

Thursday, September 21, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND—The significant news from the Oakland Coliseum tonight wasn’t the first of the four game series  between the Detroit Tigers and your for now Oakland Athletics. Both teams had already been eliminated from wild card competition.

Indeed, Detroit would have had to win tonight and go onto be undefeated in their nine subsequent encounters to reach .500 by the season’s end. I don’t have to tell you that Oakland’s chance of getting into the postseason crap shoot had been shot to hell some time ago.

So tonight’s decisive 7-3 win by the visiting Tigers paled in importance in the face of the stark climatological reality of a game time air quality index of 104 with no significant improvement expected before Saturday. 

It almost goes without saying that the PA announced before the game that it was a perfect day for baseball. (After each game, the PA blares its thanks to the spectators “for being the best fans in baseball.” We heard the same message tonight as well).

Luis Medina, one of the four players the A’s got from the Yankees in exchange for Frankie Montás and Lou Trivino last August, sent his first offering into the smoke filled air at 6:41. The young lefty was 3-9, 5.56 in this, his rookie season and went home after the game at 3-10, 5.73.

He lasted five innings, and pitched  acceptably in the first four of them. The two runs he surrendered in the initial frame were earned but not deserved. Two of the three he gave up in the fifth were well and truly earned.  He faced 23 batters in all and threw  80 pitches, 58  of them considered strikes. He allowed six hits and a walk while striking out five. He also committed a run producing balk. It was no surprise that he didn’t come out for the sixth.

Tarik Skubal, a Hayward native, was 6-3, 3.25 for the less than mediocre Bengals when he went to work in the bottom of the first. That’s pretty good, but when you consider that he had gone 4-2, 2.98 in his seven previous starts, you realized that the weak hitting Athletics and their game time team batting average of .224,were up against a formidable opponent, at least as far as pitching was concerned. Although still poor, Detroit’s team BA of .234 before today left little doubt about which team was least bad  in that department.

Skubal’s performance tonight was excellent. He shut the Athletics out on two hits over seven frames, striking out ten and issuing but a single base on balls. He faced 22 hitters, one over the minimum, helped out by two double plays, and threw 87 pitches, 61 for strikes. He earned his seventh victory against three defeats and lowered his ERA to 2.95. Brenan Hanifee relieved him and went the rest of the way.

The Tigers lost no time in taking the lead. Matt Vierling’s leadoff pop fly to short right fell in for a Texas League double. He scored on Spencer Torkelson’s grounder to short that Nick Alllen threw away in an attempt to get Vierling out at home, Torkelson taking second on Allen’s error and then scoring when Andy Ibáñez smacked a triple to right center.

The Tigers tacked on a trio  of talleys in their half of the fifth. Parker Meadows started things with a single to center and moved up 90 feet on a wild pitch to Jake Rogers, who then flew out to the right field warning track, advancing Meadows to third.

Verling’s single to center drove in Meadows. Zach McKinstry smacked his 20th two bagger of the year,  a line drive to right that plated Vierling, and kept on running to third on Brent Rooker’s errant throw. After Torkelson went down swinging, Medina ceded an international pass to Kerry Carpenter. Both runners moved up 90 feet, with McKinstry scoring, on a balk.  That made it 5-0, in favor of the men from Mo’ Town. 

Mason Miller relieved Medina for the sixth. He pitched a scoreless inning that ended when the A’s challenged second base umpire  Brian Walsh’s safe call on an attempted stolen base by Parker Meadows, who had received a two out walk. The A’s won the challenge, and Miller went on to retire the Tigers in order in the seventh.

That ended Miller’s effectiveness. Torkelson and Carpenter hit back to back singles to kick start the visitors’ eighth, and Ibáñez smacked a single to left through a drawn in infield to make it 6-0- Miller was yanked in favor of Easton Lucas, which, in turn, brought  about a pinch hitter for Miguel Cabrera (how the mighty have fallen!), André Lipcius.

With him at the plate, Lucas unleashed a wild pitch that moved both runners up a notch. After Lucas walked LIpcius, Zack Short pinch hit for Akkil Baddoo. He hit a weak grounder to first that Jordan Díaz fumbled,  bringing in Carpenter and leaving the bases loaded. Then Lucas settled down and retired the side with Detroit ahead, 7-0. Trevor May hurled a 1-2-3 top of the ninth.

Oakland finally ended their string. of goose eggs in their last turn at bat. Kevin Smith advanced to third on a ground out to second by Allen after leading off with a double to left and scored on a wild pitch to Gelof, who reached first on a two out infield single.  Oakannd’s last hurrah came on Rooker’s 28th home run of his rookie season, a blast that cleared the 388 foot marker at the State Farm advertisement in right center.

The series will resume Friday, evening at 6:40pm PT with Ken Wldichuk (3-8, 5.40), another acquisition in the Montás, Trivino trade, facing off against Sawyer Gipson-Long (2-0, 2,70) at the Swinging Coliseum,.

Fitzgerald gets first MLB RBI in Giants’ 7-2 loss to Dodgers

Photo credit: Los Angeles Dodgers’ J.D. Martinez, second from right, heads to first for a solo home run as San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Kyle Harrison, left, watches along with catcher Blake Sabol, second from left, and home plate umpire Erich Bacchus during the fourth inning of a baseball game Thursday, Sept. 21, 2023, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

By: Mary Anne

The San Francisco Giants began a four-game series with their biggest rival, the Los Angeles Dodgers, on Thursday night. The Giants lost a 7-2 heartbreaker to the Dodgers at Dodger Stadium.

John Brebbia (3-1, 3.41 ERA) took the loss for the Giants. San Francisco fell to 76-77, while Los Angeles improved to 94-58.

The Giants’ starting lineup featured LaMonte Wade Jr., Wilmer Flores, Joc Pederson, Michael Conforto, Thairo Estrada, Mike Yastrzemski, Marco Luciano, Blake Sabol, Tyler Fitzgerald, and Kyle Harrison. Harrison pitched for 5 1/3 innings and gave up three hits, two earned runs, one walk, two strikeouts, and one home run.

After two scoreless innings, Los Angeles got on the board first. Enrique Hernandez was out on a sacrifice fly to Mike Yastrzemski. Chris Taylor scored for a 1-0 Dodgers lead in the bottom of the third inning with two outs.

The Dodgers doubled their lead in the bottom of the fourth inning. J.D. Martinez homered on a fly ball to right field for a 2-0 lead.

The Giants finally got on the board in the top of the fifth inning. Tyler Fitzgerald walked, and Mike Yastrzemski scored to cut the Dodgers’ lead to 2-1. Marco Luciano went to third base, while Blake Sabol went to second base.

The Giants tied the ballgame in the top of the sixth inning. Joc Pederson homered on a fly ball to center field to even the score 2-2.

The Dodgers regained their lead in the bottom of the sixth inning. J.D. Martinez was out on a sacrifice fly to Mike Yastrzemski. Will Smith scored for a 3-2 lead with two outs.

Fast forward to the bottom of the seventh inning as the Dodgers extended their lead, thanks to a wild pitch by Luke Jackson. Chris Taylor scored first for a 4-2 lead. James Outman went to third base. Outman later scored to make it 5-2.

The Dodgers expanded their lead in the bottom of the eighth inning. J.D. Martinez singled on a sharp line drive to Tyler Fitzgerald. Freddie Freeman scored for a 6-2 lead. Chris Taylor singled on a ground ball to Michael Conforto. Max Muncy scored to make it 7-2. Miguel Rojas went to second base.

Notes
Tyler Fitzgerald made his MLB debut with the Giants on Thursday. Fitzgerald’s family cheered after he walked to record his first MLB RBI.

The Giants recalled Tristan Beck and Marco Luciano from Triple-A Sacramento while selecting Tyler Fitzgerald after optioning Sean Hjelle to yesterday’s Triple-A Sacramento postgame, placing Brandon Crawford on the ten-day injured list with a right hamstring strain, and placing Paul DeJong on unconditional release waivers.

Up Next
The Giants and Dodgers will meet again Friday night at 7:10 p.m. Pacific. The Giants will start Sean Manaea (6-6, 4.82 ERA). The Dodgers haven’t announced tomorrow’s starter yet.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruder: Three games out of NL Wild Card, four games with Dodgers in the Southland starts tonight

The Arizona Diamondbacks shortstop Geraldo Perdomo (left) gets the force out on the San Francisco Giants Mike Yastrzemski (right) in the bottom of the first inning at Chase Field in Phoenix (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman:

#1 The trip to Arizona is not all that it was cracked up to be. The Giants got swept in two games and fell back three games in the NL Wild Card.

#2 There was problem in the name of Corbin Carroll who hit his 25th home run and stole his 50th base for the Diamondbacks and just made things more difficult for the Giants.

#3 Carroll also used his glove against the Giants tracking down a left field line drive that helped wrap up the Diamondbacks six run win 7-1.

#4 Talk about Giants pitcher Logan Webb who gave up three runs on nine hits and just lost command of the D-Backs line up on Wednesday.

#5 The Giants will try again in Los Angeles as they take on the Dodgers for four games starting Thursday night. Starting pitcher for the Giants Kyle Harrison (1-5 ERA 5.18) for the Dodgers Emmett Sheehan (3-1 ERA 5.44) first pitch 7:10pm PT.

Stephen Ruderman filled in for Michael Duca who does the Giants podcasts Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Four run 7th does in Giants in 7-1 loss to D-Backs in Arizona; SF drops further back in NL Wild Card by 3.5 games

Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2023

Chase Field

Phoenix, Arizona

San Francisco Giants 1 (76-76)

Arizona Diamondbacks 7 (81-72)

Win: Merrill Kelly (12-7)

Loss: Logan Webb (10-13)

Time: 2:30

Attendance: 16,848

By Stephen Ruderman

Photo courtesy of Rob Schumacher of the Arizona Republic

PHEONIX–The Diamondbacks completed a short two-game sweep of the Giants, further dashing the Giants’ already-dwindling playoff hopes. Arizona took game two on Wednesday 7-1 at Chase Field.

After dropping Tuesday night’s series opener, the Giants needed a win to stay afloat in the wild card race. They came into Wednesday’s game three games back of the Chicago Cubs for the third wild card, and three and a half games back of the Diamondbacks for the second wild card.

Giants Manager Gabe Kapler turned to his ace, Logan Webb, and Webb would be opposed by Merrill Kelly. LaMonte Wade stepped in, and led off the game with a home run in the first inning and just like the first inning Tuesday night, the Giants scored and struck first. 

However, the Diamondbacks struck back in the first off Webb, Corbin Carroll led off the bottom of the first inning with a base-hit; stole second; and got to third on a ground ball. With two outs, Christian Walker stepped in and hit a chopper to third that Giants’ third-baseman J.D. Davis charged, but couldn’t get Walker in time, which tied the game at 1-1.

Kelly set the Giants down 1-2-3 in the top of the second, and Webb pitched a quick and quiet bottom of the second. The Giants wasted an opportunity in the top of the third, and then the Diamondbacks pounced in the bottom of the third.

Geraldo Perdomo grounded out to start the inning, but Corbin Carroll then singled; stole second; and advanced to third when Patrick Bailey’s throw sailed into center field. Katel Marte walked, and Tommy Pham just beat out the back end of a 6-4 fielder’s choice, which allowed Carroll to score and the Diamondbacks to take the lead. Christian Walker singled, and Alek Thomas doubled in Pham to give the Diamondbacks a 3-1 lead.

From there, Merrill Kelly was on cruise control, as he pitched 1-2-3 innings in the fourth, fifth and sixth, and set down 11-straight batters he faced. As for Webb, he escaped trouble in the bottom of the fourth, and pitched quick and scoreless fifth and sixth innings. Webb ended up giving up just three runs over six innings, but like much of the season, the run support was not there.

“We’re all disappointed that we haven’t been able to support Webb with run support,” said Kapler. “It doesn’t take away from the excellent season that he’s had. [With] the innings that he’s been able to pile up, [as well as the] games he’s been able to keep in, he’s just been one of the best pitchers in baseball, and I don’t think that’s disputable.”

Michael Conforto laced a double down the right-field line to start the top of the seventh and give the Giants a chance. However, Luis Matos flew out to center, and Patrick Bailey moved Conforto to third on a ground out to second.

Wilmer Flores pinch-hit, and drew a walk, and that did it for Kelly, as Diamondbacks Manager Torey Lovullo brought in Ryan Thompson to face Thairo Estrada. Estrada proceeded to strike out, as he lunged at a pitch in the dirt to end the inning, and it was another opportunity wasted for the Giants.

Ryan Walker came in for Webb in the bottom of the seventh, and the Diamondbacks made the Giants pay. Carroll and Marte led off the inning with back-to-back home runs, as for Carroll, it was his fourth hit of the day, and that would not be all for Arizona. 

Pham struck out swinging, but Christian Walker doubled to get another rally going. Alek Thomas struck out looking, and after Lourdes Guriel walked, Sean Hjelle, who was brought up this morning from Triple-A Sacramento, was brought in to replace Walker. Gabriel Moreno and Emmanuel Rivera each knocked in a run with back-to-back singles. That capped off a four-run inning for Arizona, as they opened their lead to 7-1.

Mike Yastrzemski drew his third walk of the game in the top of the eighth, but the Giants were unable to do anything with it. Hjelle pitched a 1-2-3 bottom of the eighth, and then Kyle Nelson came in to set the Giants down 1-2-3 in the top of the ninth.

The Giants fall back to .500 at 76-76, as they have lost five of their last six to start this road trip. They have also gone 5-25 in their last 30 road games dating back to July 19. The Giants’ also fall to four and a half games behind the Diamondbacks, who won the season series, and thus hold any potential tiebreaker. The Giants are three and a half games back of the third wild card, the Cubs and the Marlins lost their games Wednesday night.

“The math is not on our side,” said Kapler. “Every game [left] is one that we have to win.”

The Giants’ season is now on life support, as they are three and four games back of the final wild card spot with 10 games to go. Things won’t get any easier, as they will be heading to Los Angeles for a four-game series, which will also be the final road series of the year for the Giants.

Notes:

  • The Giants have placed Alex Cobb on the 10-Day Injured List, and he will be out for the remainder of the season. Cobb has been pitching with an injured right hip over his last several starts. However, Cobb Left Tuesday Night’s game in Phoenix against the Arizona Diamondbacks after throwing two balls to start the bottom of the third inning. It was his first first start in eight days. Cobb made the All-Star Game for the first time in his career, but he has struggled since August, going 1-4 with a 6.18 ERA in his last eight starts. Ryan Walker was also placed on the Injured List, and Kyle Harrison and Sean Hjelle were called up to take their places.
  • Brandon Crawford left the game in the third inning due to right hamstring tightness. Manager Gabe Kapler said it could be an IL situation.
  • Giants Director of Pitching Brian Bannister, who has been with the team since 2020, is expected to join the Chicago White Sox Front Office next season.

Mariners beat A’s 6-3 to sweep three-game series at Coliseum

Seattle Mariners’ Cal Raleigh, middle, is congratulated by Teoscar Hernandez (35) after hitting a home run as Oakland Athletics catcher Tyler Soderstrom, right, looks on during the fifth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Wed Sep 20, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

OAKLAND–The Seattle Mariners spoiled rookie pitcher Joey Estes’ Major League debut Wednesday afternoon. Estes went 4.2 innings, allowing six runs and six hits. Five of the six hits were for extra bases, two doubles, and three home runs. The Mariners, behind George Kirby’s seven innings, holding the A’s three runs, beat the A’s 6-3 to sweep the three-game series.

The M’s put two runs on the board at the top of the second. With one out, Tye France reached on Jordan Diaz’s fielding error. It was Diaz’s second error of the game. The next hitter, Dominic Canzone, homered to give the Mariners an early lead, 2-0.

Zack Gelof, leading off in the fourth, sent George Kirby’s pitch over the wall in center field to bring the A’s within a run of tying the game. The Mariners still lead 2-1 heading into the fifth inning. 

The M’s big boys put four more runs on the board in the fifth to take a 6-1 lead. Hit by one of Estes’ pitches in the third, Julio Rodriguez exacted a degree of revenge by blasting his 31st home run of the year. The next hitter, catcher Cal Raleigh, who doubled in the first, homered for the 29th time to give the M’s a 4-1 lead. Seattle scored two more.

With one out, Eugenio Suarez doubled. Estes hit first baseman Ty France with a pitch. A’s manager, Mark Kotsay, removed Estes from the game. Adrian Martinez came in to pitch. The first batter Martinez faced, Dominic Canzone, who had homered in the second, doubled to drive in both runners. The M’s led 6-1 halfway through the fifth inning.

With two out in the bottom of the sixth, the A’s rallied to make it a 6-3 game. Seth Brown singled for the second time, and the A’s best power hitter this season, Brent Rooker, sent George Kirby’s 97 mile-per-hour out of the park. For Rooker, it was his 27th big fly of the year. 

Neither team scored in the final three innings. Seattle wins 6-3.

Game Notes: With the loss, the A’s are now 46-106. They own the worst record in baseball. They have lost seven in a row and are sixty games under the .500 mark. They are close to exceeding the 1979 A’s team that lost 108 games, a team record.

The Mariners are now 84-68—the M’s kept pace with the Houston Astros and Texas Rangers. The Astros are just 1/2 game ahead of the Rangers and the Mariners in the race for first place in the AL West.

The Line score for Oakland was three runs, eight hits, and two errors. Joey Estes was the losing pitcher. The 21-year-old Estes was the fifth A’s pitcher this year to debut in 2023. Estes’ line was 4.2 innings, allowing six runs, five earned, six hits, three of which were home runs, two walks, and two strikeouts. Estes threw 90 pitches, 60 were strikes.

The Line for Seattle was six runs, eight hits, and no errors. George Kirby was the winning pitcher. Kirby’s record improved to 11-10.

Julio Rodriguez. Cal Raleigh and Dominic Canzone homered for Seattle. Canzone had a double and a home run and drove in four runs. 

Zack Gelof and Brent Rooker homered for the A’s. Rooker had two RBIs. 

The A’a are 0-6 on the ten-game homestand. Oakland will host the Detroit Tigers for four games starting Thursday night. Luis Medina (3-9 ERA 5.56) will pitch for Oakland. The Tigers will send lefty Tarik Skubal (6-3 ERA 3.25) to the mound to face the A’s. The game will start at 6:40 p.m at the Oakland Coliseum.