Giants get complete three game sweep on Rockies with 6-3 win at Oracle; SF now 1.5 back in NL Wild Card race

San Francisco Giants pitcher Keaton Winn works against the Colorado Rockies during the first inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Sep 10, 2023 (AP News photo)

Colorado (51-91. 030 000 000 – 3. 6. 0

San Francisco (73-70). 023 010 00x – 6 11. 0

Time: 2:32

Attendance: 31,781

Sunday, September 10, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–The Peter Stuyvesant character in Kurt Weil’s “Knickerbocker Holiday” could have been talking about baseball when he sang that Broadway show’s biggest hit, “The September Song:” “Oh, the days dwindle down/To a precious few.”

It’s September and after the Giants’ 6-3 win over Colorado Colorado, the magic number for San Francisco’s elimination from the NL Wild Card race remains 18. That means that any combination of Giant losses and wins of whoever is in fourth place spells doom for the Giants, who can’t afford to lose more than a very few of the 19 games remaining in their schedule.

The Giants sent rookie Keaton Winn (0-2, 3.33 at game time) to the mound for his third big league start. The 25 year old righty missed the 2021 season while he recovered from Tommy John surgery. His arsenal includes a splitter (used 56.7% of the time), a four seam fastball (26.2%), sinker (15.7%), and slider (1.4%). He has mid 90s velocity on his fastball and slider.

He weathered a rough first inning, in which he gave up all three of the runs he would yield, runs which, by the way, were earned but not entirely his fault.

The Rockies managed to get five hits over Winn, but he didn’t give up any walks. He threw 80 pitches, of which only 18 were balls. The win improved his won-lost balance to 1-2 but raised his ERA to 3.55.

The visitors went with 26 year old right hander Peter Lambert, 3-6, 5.03 for the year and 6-13, 6.34 lifetime before today. He pitched six frames in his last appearance allowing all of the Diamondbacks’ runs in Arizona’s 4-2 win last Monday. All of those runs were earned.

Lambert wasn’t any more impressive this evening, lasting five frames during which he threw 91 pitches, 57 of which went into the books as strikes. He gave up half a dozen runs, and all of them were earned. Three of the eight hits he yielded were home runs. He chalked up two strikeouts and issued an equal number of walks. He was the losing pitcher and now has a record of 3-7, 5.36

Although San Francisco wasted a one out triple by Tairo Estrada in their half of the first, Colorado’s Hunter Goodman’s three bagger was the key to the three runs they scored in the top of the second. Elehuris Montero led off with a line drive that bounced off Winn’s leg for a single.

Nolan Jones laid down a perfect bunt short of third to make it runners on first and second when Goodman sent his shot into triples alley. He came home on Sean Bouchard’s sacrifice fly that Mike Yastrzemski hauled down with a nice catch at the right field wall. The Rockies now had an early 3-0 lead.

The home team got two of those runs back at their next turn at the plate. Lamonte Wade, Jr. led off with a single to right and went to third on Mitch Haniger’s double, also to right. After Bake Sabol flew out to left, Brandon Crawford’s bouncer to second drove in Wade and a single by Luis Matos to left center brought Haniger home.

Estrada’s 12th home run of the year, a 412 foot wallop to left center that led off the bottom of the third, followed, two outs later, by back to back dingers to left by Wade (his 15th HR of ’23) and Haniger (his sixth), put San Francisco on top, 5-3.

Joc Pederson, whose opposite field fly to the warning track in left ended the Giants’ threat in the first, pulled a 352 foot fly over the right field fence in the fifth. It was the 13th round tripper of the year for San Francisco’s designated hitter and added a run to the Giants’ lead, which now stood at 6-3.

Lambert finished up the inning and didn’t come out for the sixth, when southpaw Brent Suter relieved him and kept the orange and black off the board for the one inning he pitched before giving way to Nick Mears, who somehow managed to get through his frame without being scored on in spite of issuing a walk, allowing a hit, committing a balk, and letting pinch hitter Austin Slater send a drive to warning track in center.

Tyler Kinley gave up an automatic double to Yastrzemski in the Giants’ eighth, but that was all the offence that San Francisco could offer.

Ryan Walker took over for Winn at the start of the visitors’ seventh, set the side down in order, and ceded the ball to Tyler, the right handed submariner, Rogers for the eighth. His eight pitches were three less than it had taken Walker to put the Blake Street Bombers down in order. That meant it was a safe situation, and that meant it was Camilo Doval on the mound for the top half of the ninth. He had to face the heart of the Rockies’ batting order.

Doval fanned McMahon, their number three batter but yielded a double to cleanup man Montero. Jones, batting in the fifth slot, grounded out to second, which advanced Monero to third. But Doval was on top of things tonight and earned his 37th save of the year while bringing his ERA down to 2.98.

Estrada, Pederson, Wade, and Haniger had two hits apiece. Haniger’s pair consisted of a double and a homer; Estrada’s, a triple and a homer.

The Cleveland Guardians come to town Monday night and will send righty Gavin Williams (2-5, 3.34) against an as yet unannounced Giants hurler. First pitch 6:45pm PT.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman: Giants catch Rockies at a good time; Rockies pitching suffering; Giants hitting is back

San Francisco Giants Thairo Estrada gives thanks to the good Lord for his first inning home run against the Colorado Rockies at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sat Sep 9, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Stephen:

#1 The San Francisco Giants scored nine runs in back to back games against the Colorado Rockies by scores of 9-8 on Friday and 9-1 on Saturday. After getting swept in Chicago the bats have woke up.

#2 The back to back nine run games is the first time the Giants scored nine runs and 13 runs on May 24 and May 25, 2022.

#3 Mike Yastrzemski swung a hot bat on Saturday night going 4-5, scoring two runs, two RBIs, and two doubles. This is Yastrzemski’s ninth four hit game this season.

#4 Can the Giants turn it up? They’re a noted franchise of making September comebacks and they were remembered as the torture team coming back and making the playoffs. In 2010 they came back to make post season on the last day of the season and went onto win the World Series.

#5 The Rockies are going downhill right now, they’ve won three of their last 15 games starting Aug 20th. They the Major League high for allowing nine or more runs in their last 31 games. Colorado’s pitching is suffering and it showed in the last two games of this series.

Stephen Ruderman is a podcast contributor at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

A’s drop 9-4 decision to Rangers in series finale

Photo credit: @Athletics

By: Mary Anne

The Oakland Athletics and Texas Rangers ended their series on Sunday. The A’s dropped a 4-9 decision to the Rangers in their series finale at Globe Life Field. Oakland fell to 44-99, while Texas improved to 78-64.

The A’s starting lineup featured Tony Kemp, Zack Gelof, Ryan Noda, Seth Brown, Jordan Diaz, Lawrence Butler, Kevin Smith, Tyler Sodestrom, Esteury Ruiz, and Luis Medina. Medina (3-9, 5.68 ERA) took the loss after pitching for 4 1/3 innings and giving up six hits, five earned runs, three walks, three strikeouts, and one home run.

The Rangers did it big in the first inning. Marcus Semien, a former A’s shortstop and second baseman, homered on a fly ball to left field for an early 1-0 lead. Robbie Grossman hit a ground-rule double on a line drive to center field. Nathaniel Lowe and Mitch Garver scored to make it a 3-0 game.

The A’s finally got on the board in the third inning. Tyler Sodestrom homered on a line drive to right field to cut the Rangers’ lead to 3-1. Seth Brown singled on a sharp line drive to Robbie Grossman. Zack Gelof scored to make it a one-run game, 3-2, as Ryan Noda went to third base. Jordan Diaz singled on a line drive to Leody Taveras. Noda scored to tie the game 3-3, as Brown went to second base. Lawrence Butler reached on a fielding error by Josh H. Smith. Brown scored for a 4-3 lead, as Jordan Diaz went to third base and Butler went to second base.

The Rangers regained the lead in the fifth inning. Nathaniel Lowe singled on a line drive to Tony Kemp. Marcus Semien and Corey Seager scored for a 5-4 lead, as Lowe went to second base. Lowe advanced to second base on a throwing error by Kemp.

The Rangers poured in the runs in the sixth inning. Josh H. Smith tripled on a sharp line drive to Esteury Ruiz. Leodys Taveras scored for a 6-4 lead. Evan Carter was out on a sacrifice fly to Lawrence Butler. Smith scored to make it a 7-4 game with two outs. Marcus Semien homered on a fly ball to left-center field to double the lead to 8-4. Corey Seager homered on a line drive to right field to expand the lead to 9-4.

Notes
The A’s wished the San Francisco 49ers good luck this season.

The A’s rejected an offer from the African American Sports and Entertainment Group, a local Black-owned development group, to buy half of the Coliseum. A’s president, Dave Kaval, sent a letter to AASEG leader Ray Bobbitt on Wednesday saying that they appreciate the offer but aren’t interested in selling or disposing of their interest in the Coliseum.

Up Next
The A’s will take on the Houston Astros for a three-game series starting Monday at 5:10 p.m. Pacific.

MLB The Show podcast with Charlie O: Dodgers in a world of pain; Nats Strasburg retirement announced prematurely; plus more news

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Walker Buehler will miss the rest of the 2023 as per the advice of his doctors and training staff and plans to return next season. (The Tennessean file photo)

On the MLB The Show podcast with Charlie O:

#1 The Los Angeles Dodgers are feeling the pain, two time All Star pitcher Walker Buehler is out for the rest of the season. Buehler hasn’t pitched since August 2022 after having his second Tommy John surgery. Buehler talked it over with his family, team doctors, front office staff and said it would be best if he waited until next season to return.

#2 Last week Sunday Dodgers pitcher Julio Urias 27, was arrested for domestic violence and was released on $50,000 bond. This was Urias’ second domestic violence charge his first time was in 2019. It’s unlikely that Urias will ever pitch for the Dodgers again as his contract expires after this season.

#3 The Washington Nationals regret that press reports say that pitcher Stephen Strasburg will retire and that such an announcement was premature and that the Nats really wanted to be the ones to make such announcement. Strasburg had been suffering from thoracic outlet syndrome, which is common for pitchers on the downside of their careers.

#4 More Dodger injuries on Thursday against the Miami Marlins Mookie Betts injured his foot after hitting a first inning pitch off his foot. The injury took it’s time to creep up on Betts as Betts realized it in the seventh inning and was seen leaving Loan Depot Park on crutches the good news is x-rays show Betts didn’t suffer a fracture.

#5 Schools over Stadiums is considered the last hope for the Oakland A’s to stay in Oakland. Schools over Stadiums is an organization working with the Nevada State Education Association who are planning to put a petition together which will stop the public funding that will pay for an Las Vegas A’s ballpark. Schools over Stadiums argues that money should be spent on education than funding a ballpark. Right now NSEA is looking for funding to cover contractors to go out and get the petitions signed. The estimated cost to run an anti public ballpark funding campaign would run nearly $2 million.

Join Charlie O for the MLB The Show podcasts Sundays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants bury Rockies 9-1 at Oracle; Giants 3 games out of NL Wild Card

San Francisco Giants pitcher Logan Webb works against the Colorado Rockies during the fifth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sat Sep 9, 2023 (AP News photo)

Colorado (51-90). 000 000 100 – 1. 7. 0

San Francisco (72-70) 200 403 00x. – 9 13 0

Time: 2:44

Attendance: 34,290

Saturday, September 10, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–The Giants opened their three day weekend series last night with a come from behind 9-8 win over the Colorado Rockies and home plate umpire Shane Liversparger’s peripatetic strike zone. The Friday night heroics prevented the home team from falling into the ignominy of a losing record and helped to keep alive their hopes for a chance to cast the dice in the October crap shoot that is the wild card race with a convincing 9-1 victory at Oracle Park.

When the lights went on in the cool, gray city of love this Saturday morning, Arizona was leading the chase for the fourth and final spot, followed by Miami, Cincinnati, and San Francisco, one full game behind the Reds.

The good news is that the home team, at 71-70, trailed the Diamondbacks by only two and a half games. Their magic number for elimination was 19 with 21 games to go, which would require them to play much better than .500 ball. Their rotund defeat of the Rockies tonight gave hope that they might. just do that.

The Giants sent hard luck Logan Webb, arguably their best pitcher, to the mound. Webb, 9-12, 3.51 at game time. The veteran right hander had lost his last three starts and hadn’t won a game since going 8-2/3 innings in near no hitter against Texas on August 2. His record for the season when he threw the game’s first pitch at 6:05 was 9-12, 3.51.

Webb was sharp tonight, shutting the Rockies out for six innings on three hits and a walk. He struck out four of the 21 batters he faced and had a total pitch count of 93, only 32 of which were balls. He was the winning pitcher and now is 10-12, 3.40.

Chase Anderson, who also throws from the starboard side, was Bud Black’s choice to start for the Rox. The 35 year old veteran of 10 campaigns with seven big league teams, including this year and the Rockies has a recent history of shoulder troubles and brought a record of 0-4, 5.98 for 2023 and a lifetime mark of 58-54, 4.36 with him today.

Anderson lasted only 3-1/3, in which he gave up six runs, all earned, although two were posthumous. He issued two bases on balls and unleashed a wild pitch. The Giants got six hits off him, one of them a homer. He threw 82 pitches, 45 for strikes and was charged with the loss, dropping his record to 0-5 with an ERA of 6.49.

Mike Yastrzemski and Thairo Estrada started things off with a bang, and from a double barrelled shotgun at that, with back to back first pitch home runs, to straightaway center and over the 354 foot sign in left, respectively, in the top of the first. For Yastrzemski, the round tripper was number 14; Estrada’s was his 11th.

The Giants tacked on four more tallies in the fourth after JD Davis banged a leadoff two bagger against the brick wall in right, went to third on Wade’s single to right, and overcame The Curse of the Leadoff Double by scoring on a wild pitch to Joey Bart on which Wade advanced to second. After Bart walked, Brandon Crawford’s fly to deep right allowed Wade to move on to third.

He scored on Luis Matos’s line single to center that advanced Bart to second and sent Anderson to the showers, relieved by Gavin Hollowell, who yielded a line drive single to right by Yastrzemski that plated Bart. Rockies center fielder Nolan Jones dropped Estrada’s fly ball, but his throw forced Yastrzemski out at second while Matos scored the Giants’ final run of the frame. The orange and black now held a 6-0 lead.

Victor Vodnik, promoted from Albuquerque yesterday, made his major league debut in the home sixth and gave up his first hit (a leadoff single to Crawford), his first extra base hit (Yastrzemski’s RBI double off the Levi’s Landing sign), his first two runs (ditto for the first, and Yastrzemski scored the other on a single by Pederson), and notched his first two strikeouts (Matos and Estrada).

Nick Mears relieved him with two out and gave up and RBI single to Davis that brought in Flores, who’d reached first on an infield hit, for the third San ‘Francisco run of the inning, all of them charged to Vodnik.

Webb left a 9-0 lead for Ryan Walker to protect in the top of the seventh. Elías Díaz hit a leadoff double and, no curse here, moved to third on Jones’s grounder to second and then scored on Elehuris Montero’s sac fy to left. Scott Alexander took Walker’s place to hold Colorado scoreless in the eighth.

The Rockies’ first southpaw hurler of the night, Evan Justice, kept San Francisco off the board in the bottom of that frame.

Luke Jackson mopped up for San Francisco in Colorado’s last chance to make it close. They didn’t.

Arizona had defeated the Cubs, 3-2, at Wrigley before play began this evening in San Francisco, to the Giants didn’t lessen the 2-1/2 gap that separated them from the Diamondbacks, the current leaders. On the contrary, it reduced San Francisco’s elimination number to 18. Miami lost to the Phillies, 8-4, so the orange and black now trail the Marlins by one game.

The final encounter of the series between the Blake Street Bombers and the Bay Bridge brotherhood will start Sunday, afternoon at 5:05pm PT. Right hander Peter Lambert (3-6, 5.03) will pitch for Colorado against an as yet unannounced Giant hurler. This usually indicates that it will be a bullpen game.

A’s Drop Game Two and Even Series Against Rangers 3-2

Oakland Athletics’ Zack Gelof (20) celebrates in the dugout with the team after hitting a two-run home run that also scored Tony Kemp in the seventh inning at Globe Life Field in Arlington on Sat Sep 9, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

The Oakland A’s (44-98) were able to tie up game two against the Texas Rangers (77-64) thanks to a two-run home run from Zach Gelof. A seventh inning melt-down on the mound saw Lucas Erceg walk three runners in a row. Texas was able to score one run in that inning and that was the final 3-2

Recap: Oakland pitcher Sean Newcomb started and went four innings, terrific innings, allowing one hit and had five strikeouts. Kyle Muller relieved him in the fifth inning.

This game was scoreless through five innings. Texas got on the scoreboard in the sixth inning taking a 2-0 lead. Nathaniel Lowe singled Robbie Grossman home. Another single off the bat of Leody Taveras brought Mitch Garver home from third for the 2-0 tally.

Going into the seventh inning Oakland was still looking for their first run. The A’s had the bases loaded in the third inning but the bats had been pretty quiet since with only four hits.

When things were looking pretty gloomy with two outs in the seventh inning, Oakland’s Gelof knocked one out of the park with Tony Kemp on second and this was a new ballgame all tied up at 2-2. It was his 11th home run of the year.

Oakland’s Lucas Erceg was having a solid seventh inning that turned ugly when he walked three back-to-back-to-back runners and the A’s had a situation that they needed to get out of with two outs. With the bases loaded that was it for Erceg.

Francisco Perez would take the mound and try to close out the seventh inning and keep this game tied. A wild pitch brought Grossman home and the Rangers had taken back the lead 3-2. The A’s got the third out but had some work to do going into the eighth inning.

A’s post game notes: Friday the Oakland A’s had a terrific win over the Texas Rangers by the score of 6-3. The Rangers had been in first place in the AL West but things are not going well for Texas right now. After spending five months in first place they are 5-16 in their last 21 games in a late-season collapse. They currently are a 1.5 game out of a wild-card spot and the A’s win just piled more misery on the Rangers with the win on Friday. Oakland wasn’t able to add to that misery in game two of this series losing in a one run game.

Oakland was able to get runners on base in both the eighth and ninth innings but could not get them home. The final was 3-2 in favor of the Rangers breaking a four game losing streak for Texas. Oakland will be in the hunt for a second win tomorrow. Luis Medina will take the mound for Oakland with a 3-8 win/loss record and a 5.46 ERA. Jon Gray will get the nod for the Texas with a 8-7 win/loss record and a 3.85 ERA. First pitch is scheduled for 11:35 AM

MLB The Show podcast with Augie Mesenburg: Severino might have thrown his last pitch for Yankees; Braves Jones No.25 retired; plus more news

New York Yankees pitcher Luis Severino holds his left side as he’s escorted off the field by the Yankees trainer at Yankee Stadium in New York on Fri Sep 8, 2023 (New York Post photo)

On the MLB The Show podcast with Augie:

#1 He grabbed his left side and he knew he had to leave the game the New York Yankees pitcher Luis Severino against the Milwaukee Brewers due to a left upper body oblique strain. Severino was coming off the mound and held his left side saying he felt a sharp pain like he was just shot. Severino most likely might have thrown his last pitch for the Yankees.

#2 The Atlanta Braves will be retiring Andruw Jones No.25 and are making the case for Jones’ bid to make the Hall of Fame. Jones had a .254 career batting average and had 434 career home runs. His best season was in 2005 when he finished the year with 51 home runs.

#3 The Cincinnati Reds third baseman Noelvi Marte was struck in the face before Saturday’s game by a warm up throw from Elly De La Cruz. Marte was distracted when starting pitcher Carson Spiers and catcher Tyler Stephenson were walking off the field and De La Cruz didn’t realize that Marte was distracted and the ball he threw hit Marte in the face giving him a cut. Marte was replaced at third base for Spencer Steer.

#4 Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Juilo Urias won’t be returning to the Dodgers rotation anytime soon after he was booked last Thursday for domestic violence. Urias and his girlfriend were outside at MLS Stadium when they had an argument over a cell phone. One of the fans at the stadium took a cell phone video of the physical altercation and Urias was arrested. This is Urias’ second domestic violence charge the first one was on 2019.

#5 More bad news for the Dodgers Mookie Betts is out with a foot injury after fouling a pitch off his foot on Thursday against the Miami Marlins. Betts left the LoanDepot Park on crutches and no time line for his absence has been disclosed. Betts had x-rays that showed no fractures. Also pitcher Walker Buheler will be out for the rest of the season. He still hasn’t recovered from his second Tommy John surgery.

Augie Mesenburg does the MLB The Show podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants end six game losing streak with rollercoaster win over Rockies 9-8

Photo courtesy of San Francisco Giants Twitter. J.D. Davis and Mitch Haniger celebrate Haniger’s home run against the Rockies on 9/8/23

By Titus Wilkinson (@TitusWisme)

SAN FRANCISCO- The orange-and-black played a wild game against the Rockies that ended with SF on top by a final of 9-8.

First pitch was thrown at 7:17 p.m. with the game having an attendance of 33,448.

The best left-handed pitching prospect in the MLB Kyle Harrison was on the mound tonight for the Giants. While for the Rockies they went with veteran left-hander Ty Blach to start.

Harrison was coming off a rough outing against the Padres when he gave up six runs in a 6-1 loss.

When an offense is cold it can be important to get off to a good start and get runners on base. The Giants did just that getting five on base in just the first three innings. None of them reached home. Though they got close as Luis Matos was caught trying to make it all the way on a single by Wilmer Flores.

On the other side of the coin the Rockies got three runners home in the second with Hunter Goodman knocking two of those home on a triple.

The young ace for the orange-and-black despite the rough start was able to calm the waters and strike out five. In the sixth Harrison threw a slurve to Nolan Jones that ended up being crushed to center field making it 4-0 and ending the young pitchers night. Coming in to replace Harrison would be Jakob Junis who ended the sixth giving up no more runs.

Then in the bottom of the sixth the bats came alive. It started off with Luis Matos drawing a walk and then on a sinker Flores took Blach deep to center field giving San Francisco some life. With the game now 4-2 and the fans starting to make some noise Mitch Haniger stepped up to the plate. Blach then on a 2-2 pitch threw a changeup that caught the bottom of the zone that Haniger somehow managed to poke over the center field wall making it back-to-back home runs.

Just when the moment couldn’t seem to get any bigger J.D.Davis delivered by launching another one over the center field wall sending the crowd into a frenzy. The Giants had just hit back-to-back-to-back home runs which San Francisco hadn’t done since April 4th, 2016. With the game now tied Blach was pulled from the game and in his place came Matt Koch. Koch was able to get the next three batters out but the damage had already been done.

The seventh felt like a crash back down to earth as after two singles Elias Diaz smacked one to left field and over the wall making it 7-4. The culprit was Taylor Rogers who threw a sweeper that Diaz dug out and launched.

Looking for another spark in the seventh Mike Yastrzemski pinch hit for Joey Bart and delivered with a single. The home run derby then continued when Blake Sabol roped one to center field notching his 12th homer of the season and making it 7-6. That homer got Koch yannked from the game and replaced by Jake Bird who finished the inning only giving up a double to Matos.

Momentum continued to go the Giants way as in the eighth after Brandon Crawford and DeJong got on base Yastrzemski got Crawford home tying the game up at seven.

Camilo Doval came in to try and close the game and did not get off to a great start as he gave up a lead off single to Charlie Blackmon. Nolan Jones then got a double knocking in a run with two outs. After that Doval closed the game on a ground out giving the Giants the victory.

John Brebbia was given the win while Jake Bird took the loss.

The second game of this series will be tomorrow at 6:05 p.m.

Oakland A’s podcast with Daniel Dullum: Schools over Stadiums needs funding to get petitions signed in Nevada

Former Oakland Mayor Jean Quan and Port of Oakland Commissioner Michael Colbruno spoke at a fundraiser on Aug 26, 2023 to support Schools over Stadium Nevada initiative to stop use of public funds for an A’s new ballpark in Las Vegas and put funding for use towards schools and education (@MikeOpera photo)

On the A’s podcast with Daniel:

#1 Daniel, Dawn Etcheverry, a music teacher and President of NSEA and Schools Over Stadiums in Nevada is moving on a petition referendum to stop the use of public funding tax dollars that would be used to build a ballpark at the Tropicana hotel and casino that was approved by the Nevada State Legislation in June in a special session.

#2 Etcheverry said the petition is pursuing every path possible to stop the use of public funding to pay for the Tropicana Park for a future Las Vegas A’s relocation. Etcheverry said that the Nevada voters were shutout in the process and didn’t have a say in the use of public funds for paying for the ballpark to the tune of $380 million.

#3 The organization Schools over Stadiums goal is to make sure public funding goes to public schools and not the Tropicana Park and once enough signatures are on the petitions from four the Nevada districts including Clark County which Las Vegas and Tropicana hotel are a part of the measure to stop using public money will be put on the ballot.

#4 If Nevadans vote to stop the use of public funds to build the Tropicana ball park succeeds the funding for the ballpark ceases and the A’s will have to seek private funding if they want to continue pursuing Las Vegas. They possibly could go back to the City of Oakland and negotiate terms about building at Howard Terminal.

#5 If everything goes as planned Schools over Stadiums will have the vote in November 2024, one year and two months from now. The MLB owners are voting on the A’s relocation in December. If the owners vote yes to relocate the A’s, the Schools over Stadiums measure could hold up shovels in the ground at the Tropicana until the voters have their say in Nov 2024.

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

A’s take care of business with 6-3 win over Rangers

Photo credit: @Athletics

By: Mary Anne

The Oakland Athletics and Texas Rangers met again for game two Friday. The A’s sealed their rodeo road game with a 6-3 win over the Rangers at Globe Life Field. Oakland improved to 44-97, while Texas fell to 76-64. Devin Sweet (1-0, 4.50 ERA) took the win in his first game pitching for the A’s.

The A’s starting lineup featured Zack Gelof, Brent Rooker, Ryan Noda, Aledmys Díaz, Jordan Diaz, Kevin Smith, Shea Langaliers, Nick Allen, Esteury Ruiz, and Paul Blackburn. Blackburn pitched three innings and gave up six hits, two earned runs, three walks, five strikeouts, and one home run.

The A’s got on the board first. Ryan Noda grounded out to Nathaniel Lowe and Jordan Montgomery. With two outs, Zack Gelof scored for an early 1-0 lead in the top of the first inning.

The A’s lead was short-lived as the Rangers went ahead in the bottom of the first inning. Corey Seager homered on a fly ball to right-center field. Marcus Semien scored for a 2-1 lead.

The A’s quickly responded with a game-tying single in the top of the second inning. Esteury Ruiz singled on a line drive to Evan Carter. Nick Allen scored to tie the ballgame 2-2. With three outs, Ruiz was at second base on the throw from Carter to Jonah Heim to Corey Seager.

The Rangers regained their lead in the bottom of the fourth inning. Nathaniel Lowe singled on a line drive to Brent Rooker. Marcus Semien, a former Oakland Athletic from 2015 to 2020, scored for a 3-2 lead.

The A’s immediately tied the ballgame 3-3 in the top of the fifth inning. Esteury Ruiz homered on a fly ball to left-center field.

The A’s took a two-run lead in the top of the sixth inning. This was a “welcome home” moment for Shea Langaliers. Langaliers, a Keller, Texas, native and a Keller High School and Baylor University alum, homered on a fly ball to center field. Kevin Smith scored for a 5-3 lead.

The A’s extended their lead just before the seventh-inning stretch. Ryan Noda doubled on a sharp fly ball to Leody Taveras. Brent Rooker scored for a 6-3 lead in the top of the seventh inning.

Notes
On Friday, the A’s reinstated Lawrence Butler from the bereavement list and optioned Jonah Bride from Triple-A Las Vegas.

A’s left-handed pitcher Easton Lucas made his MLB debut Friday. Lucas pitched one inning and gave up two hits, one earned run, two walks, and one strikeout.

Tony Kemp was named the A’s nominee for the 2023 Roberto Clemente Award. Vote for Kemp at mlbtogether.com/clemente21.

The A’s Filipino Heritage Night, hosted by P-Lo and Anthony Presents, is coming up. Get your tickets at athletics.com/filipino.

Up Next
The A’s and Rangers will meet again on Saturday for game three at 4:05 p.m. Pacific. The A’s starting pitcher is TBD, while the Rangers’ starter will be Nathan Eovaldi (11-4, 2.95 ERA).