Preview Oakland A’s and Washington Nationals open three game series Tuesday night

Oakland A’s starter Cole Irvin gets the ball back. Irvin will get the start Tue Aug 31, 2022 at Nationals Park in Washington DC to open a three game series. (@Athletics photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s will start a three-game series against the Washington Nationals Tuesday evening in Washington DC at Nationals Park. The Nationals, who won the World Series Championship in 2019, are currently in last place in the NL East Division.

The Nats own the worst record in the National League and the worst in all of baseball, 43-85. The A’s have the worst record in the American League, 48-81, and it is the second worst in baseball.

The Nats had a magical year in 2019. Things didn’t go well for them in the first half of the season. However, they caught fire and made the playoffs. They won the National League pennant and then defeated the Houston Astros to win the World Series Championship.

The A’s won 97 games that year. They didn’t advance past the first round. What happened to these teams is not unusual these days in baseball. Some of the players became free agents and went to work elsewhere. Other players got traded.

As a result, the A’s and the Nats find themselves at the bottom of the barrel for 2022. They are in the process of rebuilding the team. The A’s have traded players like Matt Olson, Matt Chapman, Chris Bassitt, and Sean Manaea and lost Mark Cannha, Starling Marte, Josh Harrison, and Yan Gomes to free agency. They traded Frankie Montas and Lou Trivino to the Yankees at the 2022 trade deadline. The A’s hope the players they got back will develop into stars in the coming year.

The 2019 Nationals featured a very potent lineup. Their infield comprised first baseman Matt Adams, Brian Dozier, Trea Turner, Anthony Rendon, and Howie Kendrick. Addams and Dozier each had 20 homers, Turner, 19, Rendon 34, and Kendrick had 17.

Kurt Suzuki and Yan Gomes were the catchers. 21-year-old Juan Soto homered 34 times. The pitching staff featured Max Scherzer, Stephen Strasburg, Joe Ross, and Anibal Sanchez. Turner and Scherzer were traded to the Dodgers last year. Soto is now with the San Diego Padres.

Rendon went to the LA Angels as a free agent after the 2019 season. Rendon has been injured for most of the last three years. Anibal Sanchez is the only player listed above who is still with the Nats.

So, on Tuesday night, the who are these guys Oakland A’s will be playing the who are these guys Washington Nationals. As bad as their record, the A’s still have some bright spots on their roster. Lefty Cole Irvin (6-11, 3.16 ERA) was brilliant in his last start against the Miami Marlins last Wednesday at the Oakland Coliseum.

Irvin went seven innings and allowed three hits. He struck out a career-high eleven hitters and did not issue a walk. He has pitched way better than what his record would indicate. Adam Oller, who did not pitch well earlier this year, seems to have corrected some of his problems while at Triple-A Las Vegas. Oller was brilliant in his last outing against the Yankees.

He allowed one hit in eight innings of work. He did not get the decision, but his performance in his last couple of outings gives the A’s hopes that he will be a featured starter next year. J.P. Sears, acquired from the Yankees, has pitched well.

He took the loss against his former team last week, but all indications appear that Sears will be in the starting rotation. Another young player that the A’s got in the Matt Olson trade, Shea Langeliers, appears to be headed for a regular spot in the A’s lineup.

Langeliers has 11 hits in 47 At-bats since joining the team. He has hit the ball hard and has homered twice.

Oakland severed ties with Jed Lowrie, Stephen Piscotty, and Elvis Andrus. Nick Allen has become the A’s everyday shortstop. Vimael Machin has spent a lot of time at third base. Sheldon Neuse and Jonah Bride have played at several infield positions. Cal Stevenson is patrolling centerfield these days as Skye Bolt and Ramon Laureano are on the 10-day IL.

So, we now take a look at the Nats’ roster. Righty Eric Fedde will go for Washington Tuesday night. Fedd is 5-8, with a 4.88 ERA. On Wednesday, the pitchers will be James Kaprielian for Oakland against veteran Anibel Sanchez. The Yankees pounded Kap in his last start. Sanchez is 0-5 with a 5.72 ERA. The A’s have not announced a starter for Thursday. Cade Cavalli will pitch for the Nats.

The Nats’ bullpen will feature all right-handers except the well-traveled lefty, Jake Mcgee. Fans can expect to see Kyle Finnegan, Carl Edwards, Jr., Steve Cishek, Victor Arano, Hunter Harvey, and Erasmo Ramirez get the call from Nats’ manager Dave Martinez.

The power-hitting Luke Voit will be at first base. Voit came to the Nats from the Padres in the trade for Juan Soto. Luis Garcia will be at second, C.J. Abrams is the shortstop, and llDemaro Varga will be at third base.

The Nats will have Lane Thomas in left, Victor Robles in the center, and Joey Meneses in right. Josh Palacios is the backup outfielder. The DH will be Nelson Cruz or Luke Voit. Cruz, who loves to hit against the A’s, has hit just ten homers this season.

The Series will be about two teams trying to see what players will be on the roster next year. While neither team will be in the playoffs, the fans should watch to see who will be up to the challenge.

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s Martinez good pitching beat Yankees good hitting on Sunday

Oakland A’s starter Adrian Martinez was dealing against the New York Yankees at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Aug 28, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 Barbara talk about the pitching efforts by Oakland A’s starter Adrian Martinez against the New York Yankees line up on Sunday going 5.1 innings, three hits, one earned run and struck out six hitters.

#2 Martinez has been called up by the A’s triple A affiliate in Las Vegas four times and this was his best appearance of the four with a great mix of pitches and keeping the hitters off balance with off speed pitches.

#3 A’s manager Mark Kotsay said. “This kid just seems to feed off big environments or the Triple-A numbers don’t show how he’s able to go out and perform here. He did that today against one of the best lineups in the league.”

#4 Martinez even had control over Yanks superstar Aaron Judge striking him out one three pitches. Judge even chased a few pitches and had to go down for them.

#5 The A’s head to Washington to face the Nationals at Nationals Stadium in Washington. Starting pitcher for the A’s on Tuesday night left hander Cole Irvin (6-11, 3.16) and for the Nationals right hander Erick Fedde (5-8, 4.88) a 4:05 pm first pitch.

Join Barbara for A’s podcasts Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

What’s Wrong With The Yankees? More Like What’s Right With The A’s in 4-1 win

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND–Mark Kotsay promised enthusiasm would be his greatest currency in what has proved to be a trying, first season as manager of the A’s.

On Saturday, Adrian Martinez matched that enthusiasm and carried into Sunday’s series finale with the Yankees.

The 25-year old rookie shut down the AL East-leading Yankees into the sixth inning, and the A’s made two, first inning runs stand up in their 4-1 win. Martinez, making his fourth appearance in Oakland this season each time summoned from Triple-A Las Vegas was impressive, mixing pitches and changing speeds to fluster the New York lineup for a second straight day.

“When I saw Adrian last night, he had a big smile on his face,” Kotsay said. “This kid just seems to feed off big environments or the Triple-A numbers don’t show how he’s able to go out and perform here. He did that today against one of the best lineups in the league.”

Aaron Judge, the Major League leader in WAR (7.4) and home runs (49) was transformed into Martinez’ poster child, striking out twice, both times on just three pitches. Judge finished the day 0 for 4.

“Got a lot of swings and misses on the changeup and threw strikes with his fastball,” Kotsay said.

The win didn’t prevent the A’s (48-81) from mathematical elimination from the AL West crown (the earliest they’ve been eliminated in Oakland history) but it did open the door to the possibility that Martinez could earn a regular turn in the rotation down the stretch. His door was opened by Kotsay’s decision to move Zach Logue to the bullpen.

“I’m going to keep on working and continuing to work will hopefully allow me to continue to be with the team,” Martinez said with the aid of an interpreter.

Meanwhile the Yankees ended a week of bi-coastal ups and downs highlighted by desperately-needed wins over the Mets on Tuesday and Wednesday, followed by 18 innings of one-hit offense against A’s pitching starting with the final innings on Friday night. Yankees fans and manager Aaron Boone glossed over the five-game win streak the Gothams squeezed in and fretted over their one-series win (Mets, two games) in their last eight series.

“We should be able to put together more offense,” Boone said. “We got to if we’re going to be the kind of team we expect to be.”

A’s 20-GAME WIN STREAK REUNION: The 2002 A’s might not be the biggest fans of “Moneyball” the movie dramatizing the team and the organization with the 20-game streak being the film’s dramatic apex, but they are fans of each other and what they accomplished.

“I tell people this all the time, and all of us are in the same boat, we all won the lifetime lottery ticket,” said Rick Peterson, that team’s pitching coach.

Approximately half of the 2002 squad and many of the coaches were present for the reunion prior to Sunday’s game and the invitation-only meet-and-greet. Manager Art Howe, players Dave Justice and Scott Hatteberg, among the biggest personalities from the movie spoke to the assembled. Justice voiced his displeasure with how Howe was portrayed in the movie.

One of the team’s biggest stars, Miguel Tejada who departed for Baltimore after the 2003 season, was especially jazzed to be in the Coliseum and revisit his professional roots.

“This is the team that gave me the opportunity to come from the Dominican,” he said. “I played my first game in this stadium. Walking here makes me proud.”

Cory Lidle, who died tragically in a 2006 plane crash in which he was the pilot, and Jeremy Giambi, who committed suicide less than a year ago, were fondly remembered.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Morris Phillips: Giants try to make up ground in wild card chase open against Padres tonight; Rodon gets the start

San Francisco Giants starter Carlos Rodon will go into his wind up tonight against the San Diego Padres at Oracle Park in San Francisco to open a three game series. (file photo San Francisco Chronicle)

On the Giants podcast with Morris:

#1 The only competitive game out of the three game series for the San Francisco Giants against the Minnesota Twins was on Saturday when the Twins edged the Giants 3-2. But the bullpen lost that game for the Giants allowing two runs in the bottom of the ninth inning for the loss.

#2 With a 3-3 tie the Giants couldn’t hold on the tie and starter Jakob Junis was charged with six earned runs on his pitching line. The Twins scored five times in the bottom of the fifth inning to pull away from San Francisco on Sunday.

#3 The bullpen has been struggling trying to get the Giants out of log jams this one wasn’t any different after Junis was lifted in the bottom of the fifth reliever Alex Young who pitched two thirds of an inning gave up two runs both earned and two walks.

#4 The first bad sign about going to Minneapolis was the opening game on Friday where the Giants got outslugged 9-0 and Giant starter Alex Wood got rocked after pitching six innings giving up eight run earned runs on six hits.

#5 The Giants go back to the drawing board and get set to host the San Diego Padres at Oracle Park to open the homestand. Starting pitcher for the Padres Mike Clevinger (4-5, 3.59) the Giants will be starting Carlos Rodon (12-6, 2.81) a 6:40 pm PDT first pitch.

Join Morris Mondays for the San Francisco Giants podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Swept By Twins For Fourth Loss in a Row In a 8-3 Final

San Francisco Giants pitcher Junis Jakob delivers a second inning pitch against the Minnesota Twins at Target Field in Minneapolis on Sun Aug 28, 2022 (AP News photo)

Giants Swept By Twins For Fourth Loss in a Row In a 8-3 Final

By Barbara Mason

The San Francisco Giants (61-65) took on the Minnesota Twins (65-61) Sunday afternoon to finish off their three game series. It has been tough going for the Giants in the first two games. Game one was one to forget losing 9-0 and Game two was crushing after leading into the top of the ninth inning and falling 3-2 in extra innings.

The Giants attempted to stop the bleeding in the final game of the series. They are struggling with injury and at times poor offense. Leaving runners stranded has added to their woes. It was just too much Twins who scored five runs in the bottom of fifth that pretty much put the game out of reach for the Giants.

Both teams scored one run in the third inning and took the 1-1 tie into the fourth inning. The Giants LaMonte Wade Jr. doubled driving in Austin Slater for their first run of the game. The Twins answered with a Carlos Correa double driving in the speedy Gilberto Celestino.

The Twins walked in a run giving the Giants a 2-1 lead. With the bases loaded Minnesota walked Wilmer Flores and Austin Wynns scored.

That lead was short-lived when Jake Cave sent a bullet out of the park with Nick Gordon on base and the Twins were on top for the first time in the game 3-2.

The Giants tied up the game 3-3 in the fifth inning. Evan Longoria scored off a Brandon Crawford single.

The Twins would have another monster inning in the fifth similar to the run that they had Friday night that one in the third inning. They scored five runs all of them coming off doubles. Max Kepler, Jose Miranda Gio Urshela and Jake Cave all doubled giving the Twins an 8-3 lead. San Francisco had a lot of ground to make up going into the seventh inning.

The Twins would hang onto the 8-3 lead and sweep the series. This was the Giants fourth loss in a row.

The Giants will head home for another tough series with the San Diego Padres. The Padres are currently in second place in the National League West with a 70-58 record. Carlos Rodon 12-6 will take the mound for the Giants coming in with a 2.81 ERA. The Padres will send Mike Clevinger 4-5 with a 3.59 ERA. First pitch on Monday will be 6:45 PM PT.

Oakland A’s podcast pt 1 with Charlie O: Old pro Vogt hits 10th inning tying 2 run blast; Oakland wins in 11innings 3-2

Oakland A’s Tony Kemp (5) jumps on the back of Chad Pinder (10) after Pinder hits a ground ball to Yankee shortstop Isiah Kiner-Falefa who throws it away to first base and allows ghost runner Shea Langeliers to score from second base in the bottom of the 11th inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sat Aug 27, 2022 (@Athletics photo)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Charlie O:

#1 Charlie it was Nickelodeon Night at the Coliseum and if you like a good pitching match up the New York Yankees Domingo German and Oakland A’s starter Adam Oller pitched a gem for both teams, both pitchers had a no hitter going until the sixth inning.

#2 For the Yankees German he went 7.2 innings three hits and five strike outs, German had a nice mix of pitches going from him and kept the A’s hitters off balance.

#3 For the A’s Oller eight innings one hit, one walk, and three strike outs he pitched like he was a veteran he had his struggles but he kept the Yankees in check all night.

Join Charlie O every other Sunday for the Oakland A’s podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast pt 2 with Charlie O: Vogt could end up coaching or managing one day; Today’s pitching matches

Oakland A’s Stephen Vogt slugs an RBI single in the top of the eighth inning against the Houston Astros at Minute Field in Houston on Jul 17, 2021 (AP News photo)

#1 Oakland A’s pinch hitter Stephen Vogt came up with a ghost runner on board and hit a two run blast to tie up the game 2-2 in the bottom of the tenth. In the bottom of the 11th Chad Pinder hit a a double play ball that was thrown away by Yankee shortstop Isiah Kiner-Falefa it allowed Shea Langeliers score the winning run for the 3-2 win.

#2 A’s and Yankees conclude this four game series Sunday afternoon at the Oakland Coliseum starting for the A’s right hander Zach Logue (3-8, 6.04) and for the Yankees right hander Clarke Schmidt (5-2, 2.18) a 1:07pm PDT

Join Charlie O every other Sunday for the Oakland A’s podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Lose Game Two In An Ugly Finish Minnesota 3 – San Francisco 2

San Francisco Giants’ Mike Yastrzemski reacts after striking out against the Minnesota Twins during the first inning at Target Field in Minneapolis on Fri Aug 27, 2022 (AP News photo)

Giants Lose Game Two In An Ugly Finish Minnesota 3 – San Francisco 2

By Barbara Mason

Friday night the San Francisco Giants (61-64) got smoked by the Minnesota Twins (64-61) 9-0 in a no-contest. The Twins took charge of the game in the first inning and never looked back. San Francisco was looking to even the series Saturday night in game two of the three game series.

Game two had a far different look from last night’s game. This game was a pitcher’s duel through seven innings. The Giants starter Alex Cobb pitched five innings allowing four hits, no runs and seven strikeouts. Sonny Gray went five innings for the Twins with one allowed hit and no runs with four strikeouts. The Giants weren’t able to hold on losing by a run 3-2 at Target Field in Minneapolis.

San Francisco was first up on the scoreboard in the fifth inning. Tommy La Stella sacrificed and Luis Gonzalez scored for the 1-0 lead. That lead would hold through seven innings.

The game was halted when the skies opened up in the eighth inning in an absolute deluge. It had been threatening throughout the game but with two innings left it became reality and the game was delayed.

Minnesota threatened in the eighth inning with runners on first and third with one out but the Giants kept them off the scoreboard heading into the ninth inning.

The Giants loaded the bases in the ninth inning and Wilmer Flores scored off an Austin Slater sacrifice taking a 2-0 lead going into the bottom of the ninth.

The Twins tied up the game when Carlos Correa singled driving in Max Kepler and Jake Cave singled and Luis Arraez scored. It was a new ball game.

This was another ugly finish for the Giants. After intentionally walking Max Kepler in the bottom of the tenth, the bases were loaded. San Francisco pitcher Dominic Leone walked Gilberto Celestino and that was the ball game. It was another devastating loss for the Giants.

Sunday San Francisco will be looking to avoid the sweep with first pitch at 11:10 AM PT. Jakob Junis will take the mound with an 3.58 ERA and a 4-3 win/loss record. The Giants will be facing Aaron Sanchez 3-4 on the mound for the Twins. His overall ERA is 7.36 but does have a 4.50 ERA over the last 7 days.

Vogt’s 10th inning home run keeps A’s alive in eventual win over Yankees 3-2 in 11th

Oakland A’s pinch hitter Stephen Vogt is congratulated by third base coach Darren Bush after hitting a two run home run in the bottom of the 10th inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sat Aug 27, 2022 (AP News photo)

New York (78-49). 2. 1. 2

Oakland (47-81). 3. 6. 2. 11 innings

Saturday, August 27, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND-Often while watching a game between two mismatched baseball teams, I think of an afternoon in 1952 when the New York Yankees, who won every World Series from 1949-1953, played a double header against the lowly St. Louis Browns, who after the following season would become the Baltimore Orioles.

Like many arrogant 11 year old New Yorkers, we figured the Yanks would walk all over the second team of the gateway city. But the Brownies pulled off a win in the second game against the Bronx Bombers, bolstered by three innings of shutout relief by a member of their bullpen staff.

That bit of trivia came back to me again last night when Jared Koenig’s three inning stint of scoreless pitching held the Yankees in check long enough to give Oakland a chance to defeat their powerful rival, even though the home team finally succumbed, 3-2.

Of course, today’s Yankees aren’t the 1949-53 Yankees, and Jared Koenig isn’t Satchel Paige, for he was the 46 year old wizard who stumped the champs that Sunday seventy years ago.

The more of my mental meanderings is that you should never take the outcome of any baseball game for granted.

Saturday night game recap: This evening’s tilt between the grey clad pinstripers and the green and gold featured some pretty exciting fielding, but it was the pitching that, at least during the first nine innings, stole the show. That, however,was upstaged by the home halves of the 10th and 11th frames of the A’s dramatic come from behind 3-2 victory.

The pitchers at game time seemed as mismatched as the teams, with New York’s Domingo Germán’s acceptable 2-2, 3.89 overshadowing Adam Oller’s inadequate 2-6, 6.41). Germán ended up going 7-2/3 excellent innings, in which he allowed no runs and onythree hits, one of them to the infield. He didn’t walk anyone, but did hit one batter.

He struck out five and threw 79 pitches, 66 for strikes. For this, he got a no decision and lowered his ERA to 3.19. Oller did an even better job, although he, too, left without a decision.

The Athletics’ starter threw eight frames of one hit ball, blanking the Yanks while striking out three and granting only one base on balls. 65 of his 88 deliveries were counted as strikes. His ERA was reduced to 5.66.

Before the game, the A’s announced that they had put right handed reliever Dany Jiménez on the 60 day IL with a strain in his pitching shoulder. They replaced him with Austin Pruitt, who had been DFA’d last Monday, the day after he earned his first major league save.

The opening innings featured a few surprises. Aaron Judge got picked off after walking in the first. Less surprising but certainly not routine events followed.

Chad Pender robbed Oswaldo Cabrera of an extra base hit in the third with a leaping, crashing against the wall catch against the right field wall, just to the left of the foul pole, a catch he made after a long run. Jonah Bride made a spectacular backhand grab and throw to prevent what looked like a sure up the middle single by the next batter, Isiah Kiner-Falefa.

Bride led off the bottom inning by getting hit by a pitch. No surprise there. What was surprising was Bride letting a bounding ball by Andrew Benintendi, leading off the fourth, go through his legs in shallow right for an error.

The first hit of the game for either team didn’t come until Oswaldo Cabrera smacked Oller’s 65th offering for a double off the Kaiser Permanente sign in right center to open the top of the sixth. And he got caught stealing, pitcher to third. The Curse of the Leadoff Double strikes again!

Judge foiled Cal Johnson’s bid for a lead two bagger in the bottom half of the frame with a running, jumping catch in left center, which would have been outstanding had it not paled in comparison with Pinder’s third inning heroics.

Nick Allen followed with a high bounder to the mound. Germán made a nifty play to catch it, but Allen reached base safely with Oakland´s first hit. Germán’s throw to first went wild, allowing Allen to advance to second on the error.

The A’s threatened again in the eighth. Stevenson smacked a one out leg double to second. Allen advanced him to third with a grounder to second that looked for a moment as if it would go through to center for a tie breaking single. That ended Germán’s labors for the night. Jonathan Loasiga relieved him and got Tony Kent bounce into an inning ending ground out to second.

One Domingo left, and another, Domingo Acevedo, entered the game. Oakland’s Dominican Domingo relieved Oller to face the bottom of the Yankee order in the ninth. He set them down one, two, three on pitches.

Loasiga retired Langeliers for the first out of the home ninth. Then Murphy punched an opposite field single through the hole into right, and Losiga was pulledd in favor of Ron Marinaccio. Brown took three balls and then struck out. That brought up Pinder, who, in addition to his contribution with the glove, was one for three against the hit-stingy Domingo.

The game into the 10 the AJ Puk on the mound for Oakland and the Yanks’ catcher Higashioka placed on second. Benintendi an ill-advised attempt to bunt him over to third, and he was thrown out, Puk to Machín. It was power against power with Judge at the plate. Puk struck him out, but Benintendi stole second.

The A’s granted an intentional. walk to Donaldson. Puk then hit Rizzo on the shoulder with a pitch to load the bases. Murphy made two great saves to prevent wild pitches with LeMahieu at bat. Finally one got by him.

Benintendi scored. Donaldson scored.Murphy’s back hand flip went past Puk, who was slow to cover home. Rizzo went to third. LeMahieu flew out toright, but the Yankees had a seemingly insurmountable 2-0 lead.

Oakland, however, wasn’t done yet. With one out, Stephen Vogt, hitting for Bride, sent a change up 396 feet deep over the right field fence, driving Pinder, the zombie runner, in before him to tie the score. Marinacccio struck out Allen, but the third strike sailed wild and Allen reached first, moving up to second on Kemp’s single to right.

Marinaccio was through. In came Lou Trivino, the not too long ago Athletic reliever who once had been their closer. He got Langeliers to go down swinging in vain at an 82 mph slider.

We went into the 11th with Joel Payamps on the mound and Torres the ghost runner on second. He stayed there as Payamps retired Cabrera, Kiner-Falefa, and Higashioka, the last on a fine play by Allen, going into the hole at deep short and firing a bullet to first.

Trivino walked Murphy, who joined Langliers on the basepaths. Brown flew out to center, and both runners held. Pinder grounded to Kiner-Falefa at short, tailor made for a double play. His toss to LeMahieu forced Murphy at second, but LeMahileu threw wildly past second, allowing Murphy to dash home with the winning tally.

As the Cubans say, all we know about baseball is that it’s round and comes in a square box.

Payamps (3-3) got the win; Trivino P(2-8), the loss.

Sunday the A’s will celebrate the 20th anniversary of the 20 game winning streak, followed at 1:07 with a chance for Oakland to even the series. Stranger thinks have happened; they did today. Clarke Smith(5-2, 2.18) will go for the Yankees; Zach Logue (3-8, 6.04) for the Athletics.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Dodgers Spanish announcer Jarrin prepares for retirement after 65 years in baseball; plus more commentary

Los Angeles Dodger Spanish announcer Jaime Jarrin in his broadcast booth at Dodgers Stadium is good friends with Oakland A’s Spanish announcer Amaury Pi Gonzalez. Jarrin broadcasted Dodger baseball in Spanish from beginning to end of his career. (file photo Los Angeles Times)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 In recent interviews Los Angeles Dodgers Spanish radio lead announcer Jaime Jarrin reflected back on a long 65 year career. Jarrin will call it quits after the Dodgers post season.

#2 Amaury, Jaime is a Hall of Famer in the Ford C Frick wing of the Hall of Fame in talking with him what does his enshrinement mean to him.

#3 Amaury, there are a number of fans who are calling out teams who aren’t traveling their play by play announcers because they can tell by the delay on a play that is in question and something they might notice while waiting for clarification on a play that an announcer who is at a live game can call and dial up right away.

#4 Amaury, is it a matter of saving a buck for MLB teams not traveling their broadcasters and how much have has the broadcast suffered not having play by play announcers on the road?

#5 During Friday night’s game at the Coliseum relief pitcher Lou Trivino was warming up in the New York bullpen when bat boy came up to him with a No. 56 jersey Trivino was warming up with a No. 50 jersey. Trivino said after the mishap he wasn’t paying attention and it wasn’t the first time and it won’t be the last. Trivino said he might try on the No. 99 jersey Aaron Judge’s number for a little run.

Join Amaury Pi Gonzalez for That’s Amaury News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com