Oakland A’s off day report: A’s open 7 game road trip Friday night in Tampa Bay

Oakland Athletics’ Jesus Aguilar watches his three-run home run against the Cleveland Guardians during the eighth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Wed Apr 5, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s have won two and lost four in the first six games of the season. Oakland played a competitive and entertaining three-game series with the Cleveland Guardians. The A’s could have won all three games but lost two in extra innings. Here are some facts about the team’s performance so far this season.

The A’s pitching staff has the fourth-highest ERA in Major League baseball. They have thrown six wild pitches, which is the second-worst. The A’s defense has committed one or more errors in the first six games. It is the longest season-opening streak by an A’s team in the last 47 years.

The offense could have done more in the series against the Angels. The A’s did score eleven runs last Monday against Cleveland. They beat Cleveland Tuesday night 4-3 but lost on Wednesday 6-4. In that game, Oakland managed four hits. Fortunately for the A’s, two of the hits left the yard.

The A’s are on the road for the first time in 2023. Oakland will face the Tampa Bay Rays for three and then play four with the resurgent Baltimore Orioles.

The Rays have won all six games to start the season. The Rays finished third in the tough American League East Division with a record of 86-76. It will be challenging for Oakland this weekend. On Friday, the A’s will send lefty Ken Waldichuk to the hill to face the Rays.

Waldichuk lost his first start against the LA Angels last week. He is 0-1 with an ERA of 9.53. His opponent will be Zach Elfin. Elfin was with the Philadelphia Phillies last year. Elfin won his first start, and his ERA is 1.80. He went five innings and allowed three hits and one run.

On Saturday, Shintaro Fukinami pitches for the Green and Gold. Fujinami had a nightmarish outing against the Angels last Saturday. Fujinami made it through the first two innings unscathed. In the third inning, the roof caved in as the Angels scored 11 runs in the frame.

Fujinami was charged with nine runs. His ERA is an astounding 30.86. Lefty Jeffrey Springs pitches for Tampa Bay. Springs had a great first start. The 30-year-old lefty went six innings and allowed no runs and no hits.

Sunday’s game will feature James Kaprielian against the Rays’ Drew Rasmussen. Kaprielian lost his first game, and his ERA is 9.00. Rasmussen pitched well last week as he went six innings and allowed two hits and no runs.

The Rays have some young players that are doing well right now. The Infield features Yandy Diaz at first base, Brandow Lowe at second, Wander Franco at shortstop, and Isaac Paredes at third base. Diaz has two homers and six RBIs so far this year. Wander Franco is 22 years old. Franco is hitting .417 and has two dingers and seven ribbies. Left Fielder Randy Arozarena is also hot. Arozarena is hitting .364 with one homer and six RBIs. Center fielder Jose Siri is hitting.333 with two homers and eight RBIs.

The A’s would like to take two out of three from the Rays. The A’s must improve in all three areas to accomplish their goal. The starting pitchers must go deeper into the game. The bullpen must not be overworked so early in the season. The A’s offense must get going, and the defense must stop making errors. It will be a very long season if the A’s cannot improve.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Giants home opener against Royals Friday; No starter announced for SF against KC

San Francisco Giants’ Blake Sabol reacts after striking out swinging during the fourth inning against the Chicago White Sox at Guarantee Rate Field in Chicago on Wed Apr 5, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the Giant podcast with Michael:

#1 Michael, On Wednesday the San Francisco Giants returned from their Tuesday off to face the Chicago White Sox. White Sox starter Dylan Cease started the game with a cold and had problems finding the plate.

#2 Cease must have found himself pitching five innings surrendering one run, one hit, five walks and eight strikeouts not bad for Cease who had some control problems to start out the game.

#3 The White Sox Tim Anderson got thrown out for arguing that he got quick pitched and was not ready to get back into the batter’s box, the pitched called a strike tell us what happened with Anderson in that ejection.

#4 The Giants lost by four runs 7-3 and starter Logan Webb was touched up in five innings for four runs and nine hits, and four strikeouts. Was Webb’s performance troubles based on loss of command or the Sox just seeing his pitches well and putting on a good offensive game.

#5 Starting pitchers for the Giants home opener on Friday at Oracle Park for the Kansas City Royals Brad Keller for San Francisco starter is Alex Cobb. First pitch slated at 1:35pm.

Join Michael Duca for the Giants podcasts Thursday mornings at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Guardians down A’s in ten innings 6-4

Cleveland Guardians’ Steven Kwan watches his RBI single during the 10th inning of a baseball game against the Oakland Athletics at the Oakland Coliseum on Wed Apr 5, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

OAKLAND– The Oakland A’s (5-2) and the Cleveland Guardians (2-4) met in a matinee Wednesday afternoon at the Oakland Coliseum. The teams had split the first two games played. The Guardians won Monday night 12-11 in the innings, and the A’s won a walk-off Tuesday night, 4-3.

The A’s offense was in snooze land for the game’s first seven innings. Oakland’s hitter managed just one single off the Guardians’ starter, Hunter Gaddis. Cleveland scored two runs in the sixth and two in the seventh. The A’s found a way to tie the game in the eighth.

A Ryan Noda solo homer and a three-run jack off the bat of Jesus Aguilar tied the game. The A’s had a chance to win the game. Alas, things went south in the tenth as Cleveland scored twice, and the A’s failed to counter. Cleveland downs the A’s 6-4.

The Guardians drew first blood in the top of the sixth. A’s starter Kyle Muller held Cleveland scoreless for the first five innings. Muller recorded the first two outs in the sixth. Muller then hit Cleveland’s third baseman Gabriel Arias with a pitch. Myles Straw singled. There were two men on with two out. Guardians’ catcher Cam Gallagher doubled to drive in both runners. Cleveland leads 2-0. 

levllThe Guardians added two more runs in the seventh to go ahead 4-0. The A’s offense for the first seven innings was one hit. Things changed in the eighth. A’s first baseman Ryan Noda led off the eighth with his first Major League home run to make it 4-1.

The Guardians’ reliever Tim Herrin walked Tony Kemp and Aledmys Diaz. The next hitter, Jesus Aguilar, hit his first home run as an Oakland Athletic to tie the game at 4-4. Neither team scored in the ninth.

Cleveland scored two runs in the top of the tenth. With men on at first and second, A’s reliever Zach Jackson uncorked a wild pitch. Both runners advanced a base. Will Brennan grounded out, and ghost runner Andres Gimenez scored on the play. Steven Kwan singled to drive in Myles Straw with the sixth run of the game for Cleveland. Emmanuel Clase held the A’s scoreless to preserve the win for the Guardians.

Game Notes: With the loss, the A’s are 2-4. The Guardians improved to 5-2. 

A’s starter Kyle Murray went five and 2/3rd innings and allowed two runs and four hits. He struck out five and walked three, one intentionally. He threw 95 pitches; 62 were strikes. Adrian Martinez, Dominic Acevedo, Jeurys Familia, and Zach Jackson pitched in relief. Jackson took the loss.

The Guardians also used five pitchers. Hunter Gaddis went six innings and allowed one hit. Reliever Eli Morgan, the fourth pitcher of the day, was the winning pitcher. Emmanuel Clase earned his second save of the year.

The time of the game was two hours and 58 minutes. 4930 people watched the A’s lose their fourth game of the young season

The A’s are going to Tampa Bay to play the Rays for three games starting Friday night. Lefty Ken Waldichuk will go for Oakland while the Rays will counter with righty Zach Elfin. The game will start at 3:40 pm.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitlelberg: A’s can’t get out of tenth Guardians score twice in 6-4 win

Oakland A’s Ryan Noda (49) gets a warm welcome in the A’s dugout after hitting his first home run of the season against the Cleveland Guardians in the bottom of the eighth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Wed Apr 5, 2023 (@Athletics photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 Jerry, Cleveland Guardians pitcher Hunter Gaddis pitched six innings without giving up a run to the Oakland A’s surrendering only one hit and four strike outs leaving with the Guardians in front 2-0 at the Oakland Coliseum.

#2 The A’s line up one through nine just struggled all game long to spray the ball outside of a Ryan Noda home run in the bottom of the eighth inning. Cleveland pitching for the most part had them off balance.

#3 It was a tough go for A’s starter Kyle Muller in the sixth who got charged with two runs when reliever Domingo Acevedo came in and gave up a two run single for Cleveland’s first two runs of the game.

#4 The A’s in the bottom of the eighth down 4-1 had two runners on and the tying run at the plate Jesus Aguilar took Guardians pitcher Jim Herrin deep to left field at the 362 mark to tie the game 4-4.

#5 Jerry tough top of the tenth inning for the A’s as the Guardians Steven Kwan singled to score Myles Straw and Will Brennan grounded to short allowing Andres Gimenez to score to put the Guardians in front by two runs 6-4 for the win.

Join Jerry for the A’s podcasts Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco Giants game wrap: Lackluster Offense Hurts Giants Losing To White Sox 7-3

San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Logan Webb throws against the Chicago White Sox during the first inning at Guarantee Rate Field in Chicago on Wed Apr 5, 2023 (AP News photo)

Lackluster Offense Hurts Giants Losing To White Sox 7-3

By Barbara Mason

Wednesday afternoon the San Francisco Giants (2-3) took on the Chicago White Sox (233) in game two of their three games series which winds up Thursday afternoon. Monday the Giants won a convincing game beating the White Sox 12-3. The White Sox evened the series in Wednesday’s game at Guarantee Rate Field in Chicago 7-3.

Chicago got on the board early when first baseman Andrew Vaughn doubled driving in Luis Robert Jr for the first run of the game and the early 1-0 lead. Gavin Sheets was next at bat and singled Andrew Benintendi home. Vaughn attempted to also score but was thrown out at home to end the inning.

The Giants hit a homer in the second inning off the bat of J.D. Davis for the single run in the inning. Chicago continued to hold the early lead 2-1.

The third and fourth innings were quiet for both teams, but In the fifth inning the White Sox scored a couple more runs. Hanser Alberto singled to left bringing Otto Colas home to extend their lead 3-1. Luis Robert Jr. would add to their lead doubling to right and bringing Elvis Andrus across home plate. Chicago had a 4-1 lead through five innings.

The White Sox didn’t let up going into the seventh inning. Yoan Moncada singled to right and Hanser Alberto scored followed by a Sheets single that brought both Benintendi and Robert Jr. home for a 7-1 Chicago lead.

The Giants continued to struggle on offense but they put together a rally in the ninth inning. Joc Pederson doubled bringing Michael Conforto and Wilmer Flores home but that was all there was for San Francisco.

It was a tough day for the Giants not able to generate much offense which has been a problem in this young season. San Francisco only had four hits in the game while Chicago had a solid offensive day with 13 hits. Despite having nine walks it just wasn’t enough for San Francisco to win this game.

Thursday the Giants will play the rubber game hoping to win this series. Starting for San Francisco Alex Wood matching up against the White Sox Lance Lynn First pitch is scheduled for 11:10 am.

A’s get the edge on Guardians to even series in 4-3 victory at Coliseum

Oakland Athletics second baseman Tony Kemp, left, and center fielder Esteury Ruiz dive unsuccessfully for an RBI double by Cleveland Guardians’ Jose Ramirez during the top of the fifth inning at the Oakland Coliseum in Oakland, Tue, April 4, 2023 (AP News photo)

Cleveland. 000 210 000 – 3 8 0

Oakland. 002 001 001 – 4 6 1

Time: 2:41

Attendance: 3,407

Tue, April 4, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Monday night’s game was marred by the strong winds that whipped around the Coliseum during most of the contest. Those winds, as unwelcome as those over the late Candlestick Park and Cleveland Municipal Stadium, not only not only played havoc with the balls’ trajectory, but the chill factor they caused made gripping bats and balls painful and difficult.

Tonight, the winds were milder. And the results were more satisfying for the East Bay Faithful as the outhit home team pulled off a walk off 4-3 triumph over their guests from the middle west.

Cleveland’s see-saw extra innings victory over Oakland yesterday was exciting and, to A’s fans, disappointing. That disappointment wasn’t caused by the mere fact of the home team coming out on the short end of the stick, which was, in any case, an almost foregone conclusion.

The game was disappointing because it was sloppily played. Although only two errors showed up in the official records, there were plays that deserved that description that were charitably given other names. There were base running mistakes.

And one batter, Seth Brown, had a third strike called on him because of a time clock violation. I have no problem with the shorter, crisper games that the TCV rule achieves; I question where MLB is cutting the temporal fat. Does it make sense to fundamentally alter the relationship between pitching and hitting–arts of timing, both of them–to allow for two minutes of television advertisements at every half inning break and the singing of “God Bless America” along with “Take Me Out to the Ball Game”? (To their credit, they don’t do that at every Coliseum game).

Southpaw JP Sears, Oakland’s starting pitcher was making his first appearance of the ’23 season. He came to the team from the Yankees last August 1 in the same deal that brought Ken Waldichuk, last night’s unfortunate starter, to the Athletics and sent Frankie Montás and Lou Trivino to the Bronx.

He had gone 3-0, 2.05 for the pinstriped Bombers and was 3-3, 4.69 with the green and gold for overall rookie year numbers of 6-3, 3.36. He has a good fast ball, change up, and slider, although their velocity isn’t particularly outstanding. They have plenty of zip to them, and he mixes them well.

Shane Bieber, his opposite number for the Guardians, already had one game under his belt this year. He started their season opener in Seattle, throwing six scoreless frame in a contest that the Ohians eventually lost, 3-0. Bieber has a distinguished resumé, having won the Cy Young award in the covid shrunken 2020 season. He toed the rubber with a lifetime record of 54-26, 3.15 and was 0–1,3.45 against the A’s in two starts.

Oakland drew first blood. Ryan Noda drew a lead off, full count walk and raced to third on a sinbgle to short center by Carlos Pérez. Esteuriy Ruíz followed with a double to left that drove in Noda with the game’s first run and enabled Pérez to motor to third. He scored on a sac fly (pretty much of a line drive) ro left by JacePeterson.

But the Athletics couldn’t hold that two run lead. Oscar González sent a fly ball that thudded against the centerfield fence for a one out triple in the Guardian fourth. An out later, Gabriel Arías drove an 81 mph sweeper into. deep center flied – 423 feet deep – to knot the score at 2-2.

Cleveland untied the knot in the next frame. With the speedy Myles Straw, who had drawn a leadoff wak, on first, José Ramírez lifted a can of corn to center. Brown and Ruíz collided beneath it, and the can of corn became a Texas League double that gave Cleveland and 2-1 lead and brought Zach Jackson in to replace Sears, who had pitched better than his numbers would indicate.

Those numbers were 4-2/3 innings pitched, in which the lefty allowed three runs, all earned, on eight hits, one of them out of the park, and a walk. Sears struck out five Gardoams and threw 98 pitches, 64 for strikes.

The A’s caught up with Cleveland in an improbable way. Kemp started the sixth with a single to left and stole second, advancing to third on a one out ground out to second by Díaz. When Brown swung and missed at a two out, third strike slider that Mike Zunino couldn’t capture, Kemp scored came home on the wild pitch.

So, when Dany Jiménez strolled to the mound to face the Guardians in the top of the second, he was pitching in a game tied at two.

That mean that Trevor Stephan, entering the fray after the cozy gathering of 3,407 had finished its rendition of “Take Me Out to the Ball Game,” neither starter would be involved in the decision. Bieber had gone sixth innings of three hit ball, in which he allowed as many runs, all earned, and struck out seven opposing batters. 65 of his 89 offerings were strikes, and he reduced is ERA to 2.25.

Jiménez left after a successful 1-2/3 innings to allow southpaw Sam Moll to pitch to fellow lefty Josh Naylor with two down in the top of the eighth, He got him to ground out to short. Enyel de los Santos then took over for Cleveland to face the A’s in the bottom of the frame. He got through the A’s first two batters but surrendered a ringing double to right by Brown and a free pass to Jesús Aguilar before blowing a third strike past Laureano.

And then it was Trevor May, last night’s loser, on the mound for Oakland. He retired Cleveland, allowing only a base on balls.

The Guardians called on James Karinchak ro try to force another extra innings contest. He walked Noda to start the inning but struck out Pérez and retired Ruíz on a productive ground out to second, on which Giménez made a lovely play to prevent a hit. But no one could prevent Kemp’s solid walk off single to right that brought Noda home with the winning, walk off run.

Trevor May earned the win. He’s now 2-1, 3,00. Karinchalk was charged with the loss, leaving him with a record of 0-2, 12.00.

The series will resume and end tomorrow, the fifth. Game time is scheduled for 12:37. Righty Hunter Gaddis (0-0,9.82) will pitch for the visitors. and lefty Kyle Muller (0-0,1.80) will start for the Athletics.

San Francisco Giants off day report: Giants take breather after losing three straight; Resume series with Sox Wed night

San Francisco Giants’ Mike Yastrzemski watches his solo home run during the fifth inning of the Chicago White Sox season home opening baseball game Monday, April 3, 2023. (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The San Francisco Giants have a rare off day Tuesday in the middle of a three-game series with the Chicago White Sox. The Giants had quite a night on Monday. The Giants pounded the White Sox 12-3.

The G-Men hit seven home runs in the game. They blasted four solo home runs in an inning- two back-to-back solo homers. David Villar had two homers, including a grand slam in the ninth. Another highlight was Anthony DiSclafina’s outstanding effort after missing the 2022 season with a leg injury.

The Giants evened their record at 2-2. They lost two out of three to the New York Yankees and were shut out twice. Having the bats come alive Monday night had to please the Giants’ manager Gabe Kapler. The question in Kapler’s mind is this: Can we find a way to beat the White Sox in the next two games?

It will take work. The White Sox will have their ace, Dylan Cease, on the mound for Wednesday’s game. Cease went 14-8 last year and was a candidate for the AL Cy Young Award. Cease will be making his second start of the season. He is 0-0 with an ERA of 1.40. The Giants will counter with their ace, Logan Webb. Webb took the loss in his first start on opening day against the Yankees. Webb was 15-9 last year and had a very impressive 2.90 ERA. Webb is 0-1 with an ERA of 6.0 this year.

The Giants have most of their players back from last year. New names include Michael Conforto, Vlake Sobol, Bryce Johnson, Taylor Rodgers, Roberto Perez, and Mitch Haniger. Haniger is currently on the IL.

The White Sox lost former AL MVP Jose Abreu to the Houston Astros. Their closer, former Oakland A’s reliever Liam Hendriks, is on the IL after he was diagnosed with non-Hodkins lymphoma in January. The White Sox are considered a team that can win the AL Central Division crown in 2023.

The White Sox moved Andrew Vaughn to first base to replace Abreu. They signed Andrew Benintendi to play left field. The Sox signed former Oakland A’s shortstop Elvis Andrus as their second baseman. Tim Anderson returns as the shortstop. Anderson is a potential All-Star every season.

Yoan Moncada is their third baseman. Luis Robert is in center field, and Oscar Colas will patrol right field for Chicago. Eloy Jimenez will be their DH.

The Giants will face the veteran hurler Lance Lynn on Thursday. Lynn is in his 12th year. He has a career record of 123 wins and 84 losses. The Giants will send lefty Alex Wood to the mound to face the Sox, Wood was 8-12 last year, but his lifetime record is 71-60.

The Giants would love to take the next two games and finish the road trip with a winning record. After the series with the White Sox, the Giants return home to face another American League team, the Kansas City Royals, at Oracle Park. It will be the home opener for the Giants.

Jerry Feitelberg covers the San Francisco Giants and Oakland A’s for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Guardians top A’s 12-11 in back and forth 10 inning game

Oakland Athletics’ Ramon Laureano hits a two-run home run during the fifth inning of a baseball game against the Cleveland Guardians at the Oakland Coliseum on Monday, April 3, 2023 (AP News photo)

Cleveland. 200 302 030 2 – 12 16. 1

Oakland. 150 020 009 1 – 11 14. 1. 10 innings

Time: 3:19

Attendance: 3,035

Mon April 3, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Without the magnet of Shohei Ohtani to attrack the paying customers, your Oakland Athletics, whose roots may be in The Town, but whose branches might soon cover Las Vegas, fought the Cleveland Guardians ten innings before succumbing 12-11 on this cool, clear, and very windy Monday night in front of an intimate gathering of 3,035 at the Oakland Coliseum.

The home team chose James Kaprielian as its starting pitcher. The 29 year old right hander, who came to the A’s as part of the deal that sent Sonny Gray to the Yankees in 2017, had a roller coaster of a season last year. He went 3-0, 1,89, with an opponents’ OPS of .612, in May and June.

But, if you count–as you must–the remaining four months of the season, his record was 5-9, 4.23, allowing his opponents an OPS of .735. He had a good spring, going 2-1, 2.81.

He began. the day with a lifetime mark of (0-1, 7.70) against Cleveland. He didn’t do that well tonight he lasted five frames and allowed as many runs, all of them earnbed. He surrendered seven. hits, including a home run, and a walk. He threw 89 pitches, 61 for strikes.

The visitors from Ohio, who arrived on the banks of the Nimitz with a 3-1 record, a half game out of the lead in the nascent AL Central Division season, went with Zach Plesac, like Karpielian making his his first start the mattered in 2023. He lasted 53 pitches, in. which he retired all of three Oakland batters. In his 1+ innnings of hard labor, Plessac surrendered six runs, all earned, on five hits, one of them for the distance, and a walk.

Cleveland almost fell victim to the Curse of the Lead Off Double Steven Kwan smacked the first pitch of the game into leftt for a two bagger. Kaprielian reovered to stroike strike out Amed Rosario and Josh Bell, but sandwiched betweenm them was a walk to José Ramírez. Josh Naylor singled to center, and Andrés Giménez gave the Guardians an early 2-0 advantage.

The A’s got one of those runs back in their half of the first on two out wind blown Texas League double by Seth Brown that would have plated Jace Peterson if he had been running full speed on what looked like the third out. Peterson scored on an infield single by the next batter, Conner Capper.

Oakland took the lead in the next frame.Ryan Noda led off with his first major league hit, a single to right. He moved on to third on Shea Langeliers’ line drive that rollled off short stop Rosario’s glove into left for a single. Moments later, Noda scored his first MLB run.

It came on a double to left by Estiuru Ruíz. After Kemp singled to right, Jace Peterson then rolled his first hit and first round tripper. in the show. It carried 401 feet into the right center field seats and put Oakland up 6-2. It also put Pleassc in the showers. He was replaced by Xzaviion Curry.

Naylor closed the gap a bit in the top of the fourth with a first pitch homer that took an 82 mph change up 406 feet into the right field seats, halving the A’s lead to 6-3. Then they almost closed the gap entirely. Jiménez lined one down the right field line that would have been a double if it hadn’t hit first base umpire Doug Eddings.

Will Brenman’s single to left moved Jiménez to second, and both came hone on a Myles Straw two bagger to left. All of a sudden, it was 6-5, with Oakland hanging on by the skin of its teeth.

The green and gold widened their lead to 8-5 in the home fifth thanks to a bunt singleo by Capel and a 408 foot homer to left center off Curry’s 85 mph slider.

Jeurys Familia took over mound duties for Oakland to start the sixth and was greeted by Zunino with a single to left. Brennan then sent a bouncing double play ball bouncing to second. A double play ball that Kemp bobbled. It was scored as a fielder’s choice and an error and opened the door for Straw’s sacrifice bunt to the mound, putting both runners in scoring posiition.

Both score; Zunino on Kwan’s sac fly to left and Brennan on Rosario’s single to center. When Ramírez followed those disaster with a singe to center, the A’s lead stood a 8-7. None of the runs scored on Familia was earned. He gave way to Sam Moll at the start of the seventh frame, and Tim Herrin replaced Curry for Cleveland in the bottom of the inning.

He almost gave up an unearned run on a two base error by his second baseman, but Brown, the beneficiary of Giménez’s misplay, was cut down at the plate trying to score on Laureano’s single to right, Brennan to Zunino.

Then it was the turn of Domingo Acevedo to try to hold off the Guardians in the top of the eighth. Straw led off with a single to left. With Kwan at bat, he stole second. The A’s challenged the call, but it was confirmed on video review.

Kwan then singled to right, driving in Straw with the tying tally; Rosario’s sac fly put Cleveland ahead, 9-8 Ramírez tripled to right in a play that had originally been scored as a single and. a two base error; and Bell’s sac fly to left brought Ramírez home with the Guardians’ tenth run.

After James Karnachak set Oakland down in order in the bottom of the eighth, Acevedo kept Cleveland off the board in spite of having plunked Straw, who then stole second.

Emmanuel Clase walked to the mound in the bottom of the ninth, looking for his second save of the season. Kemp greeted him with a single to second but was eliminated by a pitcher’s best friend, 4-6-3. Díaz wrangled a walk, took second on defensive indifference, and then trotted home on Brown’s majestic 432 foot improbable game tying home run to center, his first round tripper and RBI of the season. The hit it off a 97 mph cutter.

Trevor May pitched the tenth with Kwan as the zombie runner and Rosario at bat. His single to left brought Kwan 90 feet closer to home. He scored on a Ramírez single to center that allowed Rosario to make it to third.

Bell grounded out to second. Naylor was granted an intentional pass; Gabriel Arías pinch ran for him. May unleashed a wild pitch that allowed Rosario to score and the other runners to advance a base each. Giménez struck out and Zounino fouled out to Langiers to end the inning.

Eli Morgan took over pitching duties for Cleveland when the A’s came up for their last chance to stay alive. The speedy Laureano was the ghost runner; he went to third on Noda’s ground out to second and scored when. Ruíz doubled to right. But Kemp flew out to left, and the A’s had lost their third straight game, a game they could have won.

Clase got the win; he’s 1-0. May took the loss; he’s 1-1. Morgan got the save.

The two teams will square off tonight at 6:40 pm, with JP Sears scheduled to toe the rubber for the Athletics and Shane Bieber on the mound for the Guardians .That Tuesday contest will be the second of a three game series before the A’s hit the road for a seven games in seven days trip that will take them to Tampa Bay and Baltimore before they return to face the Mets on the 14th without even a day’s break for travel.

South Side Homer-cide: Giants hit 7 home runs in 12-3 rout of the White Sox

By Morris Phillips

Michael Kopech and the White Sox need a day off. Lucky for them, they’ll get one on Tuesday.

Kopech might need to get his neck checked and the Sox just need a reset after the visiting Giants ruined Opening Day on the South Side with seven home runs, including four off Kopech in the fifth inning alone.

Kopech was rendered to some incredulous reactions as he became the first pitcher to give up five home runs to the Giants in one game since 1987. The Giants went on to win easily, 12-3 at sold-out Guaranteed Rate Field.

The occasion was no doubt unexpected after the Giants were shut out on Thursday and Sunday at Yankee Stadium. But the outburst made it clear the Giants will be home run happy again in 2023 despite not landing home run king Aaron Judge in the off-season.

“That Sunday loss really left a bad taste in our mouth,” said David Villar, who connected twice. “We wanted to come out here and get things rolling.”

Villar was joined by Michael Conforto, Mike Yastrzemski, Joc Pederson, Thairo Estrada, and Bryce Johnson in the homer deluge. Johnson’s was the first of his Major League career, and Conforto’s his first as a Giant after missing the entire 2022 season due to a shoulder injury.

And even more impressive than the seven home runs by the visitors? The return of Anthony DeSclafani, who pitched six, scoreless innings to secure the win. DeSclafani appeared in just five games last season before he was shut down due to an ankle injury and won for the first time since October 2021.

“It felt like I was just throwing strikes with everything,” DeSclafani said. “The two-seam, the slider, I guess you could call them the keys to the game.”

DeSclafani even had time for an ego-driven argument/non-argument with Andrew Vaughn, who may have disagreed with the pitcher’s pitch selection on a 3-0 count with a runner on in the second inning. All we know is DeSclafani was quick to defend his choice of a slider that resulted in a harmless ground-out by Vaughn.

The White Sox were left to provide almost all the answers afterwards as their clunker followed an impressive weekend in Houston against the World Series champion Astros in a four-game split.

Manager Pedro Grifol promised his staff would look to see if Kopech was tipping his pitches or was hurt by a decrease in velocity within his pitching stint, which may have led to the five homers he allowed. Either way, the Giants have reclaimed their personality of a homer-hunting ball club with or without a crew of name-brand sluggers in their lineup.

The three-game series resumes Wednesday with a marquee matchup of Logan Webb and Chicago’s Dylan Cease.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Do these A’s have enough to compete this season?

Oakland A’s first baseman Jesus Aguilar takes a cut at the baseball is expected to be the regular first baseman this season (file photo by the San Francisco Chronicle)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Amaury, taking a look at the three game series the Oakland A’s completed with the Los Angeles Angels the A’s losing two of the three but winning that 2-1 Thursday opener has to be important last Thursday especially against Shohei Ohtani.

#2 Amaury, talk about Jesus Aguilar he went two for four Sunday and is hitting .300 the A’s are depending him to deliver at the plate and hold runners at first base.

#3 The Angels got plenty of help from the usual suspects Mike Trout and Shohei Ohtani who both hit a homer in Sunday’s 6-0 win.

#4 Taking a look at the San Francisco Giants Monday they made up for the lack of hitting they had in New York after getting shutout twice by the New York Yankees. They came out bats exploding with four runs in the top of the fifth and five run in the top of the ninth against the Chicago White Sox.

#5 The White Sox are coming off a tough series against the Houston Astros losing two out of three and today they used five pitchers including former A’s pitcher Jake Diekman who actually pitched well in relief two innings no runs or hits.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play voice for the Oakland A’s Spanish radio network on 1010 KIQI San Francisco