That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: It could be a very cold and snowy World Series this year; Fall classic could finish by Nov 7th; plus more

Major League Baseball released the post season schedule and the World Series could possibly end on Nov 7th, 2022 the latest for any game in baseball history. The photo illustrates how that might look like. ( file photo by WILX TV 10 in Onondaga Michigan)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Amaury, Major League Baseball announced the post season schedule for 2022 and the World Series could finish by Nov 7th in game 7 by then it could be cold and snowy. That was the talk amongst the media that playing the World Series in November is a bad idea.

#2 None the less MLB is going to get as many post season games on their schedule as they can more eyeballs on the games and more advertising to be sold baseball is seeing dollar signs by playing into the first week of November.

#3 The Los Angeles Dodgers will lose one of their key pitchers as Walker Buehler will be out of action for the rest of the season due to elbow surgery Buehler is one of the Dodgers key pitchers talk about how this will effect the club.

#4 Amaury, Jonathan Papelbon on WEEI Boston radio said the whole Fernando Tatis Jr thing really enrages him. Papeldon said he played the game the right way. Papelbon said the way he feels right now if he were a pitcher he would drill him everytime he came up. Tatis is suspended from MLB for 80 games for using performance enhancers. Papelbon said if this continues the Padres are going to fall by the wayside.

#5 Amaury, talk about the nice introduction that Boston Red Sox fans gave Andrew Benintendi the former Sox player when he came up to bat in a New York Yankees uniform. Not too many Yankees that were former Red Sox players get a nice smattering of applause from the Fenway crowd like Benintendi did.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play voice for the Oakland A’s Spanish flagship station LeGrande 1010 KIQI San Francisco and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s hoping to snap out of 8 game losing streak tonight in Texas

The Oakland A’s starter Cole Irvin delivers a first inning pitch against the Houston Astros at Minute Maid Field in Houston on Sun Aug 14, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara Mason:

#1 Houston Astros pitcher Cristian Javier threw six innings of shutout ball giving up one hit, three walks and six strikeouts the Oakland A’s simply couldn’t do anything against him.

#2 Alex Bregman hit his 16th home run against A’s starter Cole Irvin (6-10) and it was the second straight game that Bregman hit a two run home run.

#3 The Astros Jose Altuve hit a double for two RBIs in the bottom of the second inning to increase their lead to 4-0 and wound up winning their fourth straight game.

#4 The Astros who got swept by the A’s in July came back this past weekend to get a three game sweep against a struggling A’s team. Astros manager Dusty Baker made sure the A’s would not sweep them in their own ballpark.

#5 The A’s will try and snap out of their current eight game losing streak as they open a four game series against the Texas Rangers starting Monday night at Globe Life Field in Arlington. The A’s will start James Kaprielian (3-6, 4.38) he’ll be opposed by the Astros Glenn Otto (4-8, 5.20) a 5:05 pm PDT first pitch.

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

Late To The Party: A’s stymied through six innings, lose 6-3 to the Astros

By Morris Phillips

On Sunday, the A’s didn’t throw up, they threw their hands up.

The visitors’ weekend visit to Houston highlighted how competitive they’ve been with the division leaders in splitting the first 12 meetings. That thin veneer of big league equality got wiped out at Minute Maid Park as the Astros completed a three-game sweep on Sunday, winning 6-3.

Cristian Javier had gone since July 1 without a win, recording an 0-5 record over six starts. His issue–including a loss to the A’s in Oakland on July 27–was allowing walks (12) and home runs (8) in numbers too inflated to give himself a chance to win. That wasn’t the case on Sunday however. Javier allowed one hit, no runs and three walks that alone didn’t harm him.

Consequently, the A’s had to wait their turn… the one that materialized after manager Dusty Baker lifted his starter after six innings.

“Once he came out of the game, we had some good at-bats and put some hits together and gave (ourselves) a chance,” manager Mark Kotsay said of the A’s offense.

The A’s are challenged offensively, everyone with a bean counter knows that. But they’re also battlers and gamers, a testament to the atmosphere Kotsay has instilled in his clubhouse. So given an opportunity to rally, they did, it just came too little, too late to interrupt their eighth, consecutive loss.

Nick Allen homered in the eighth, and Noah Bride contributed an RBI groundout in the ninth in front of Tony Kemp’s run-scoring single that cut a 6-0 deficit to 6-3. Reliever Rafael Montero’s task was to finish the game, and give closer Ryan Pressly a day off, but that plan failed when he walked Cal Stevenson, forcing Baker to summon Pressly.

With two on and one out, and the A’s trailing 6-2, Pressly allowed Kemp’s RBI single but retired Vimael Machin to end the game, picking up his 22nd save.

Cole Irvin’s been fantastic as the top starter for a team on pace to lose 100 games that doesn’t hit much, but he’s shown wear in his last three starts, culminating on Sunday. Irvin’s lost all three, and allowed a home run in each. Besides Bregman’s blast, Jose Altuve’s two-run double stung the most, leaving Irvin in a 4-0 hole after two innings.

“Sometimes you tip your cap, a combination of just some good hitting and maybe some bad luck with placement of the balls,” Kotsay said of Irvin’s outing.

On Saturday, Skye Bolt went viral with his upset stomach and the resulting projectile celebration. Amazingly, he stayed in the game. On Sunday, a Ramon Laureano swing caused an ache, and the outfielder did depart in the fourth inning with soreness in his ribcage area. Both are day-to-day and any negative change would require a roster move to address a shortage of outfielders.

The A’s travel to North Texas and will meet the struggling Rangers on Monday. James Kaprelian will start opposed by the Rangers’ Glenn Otto. Texas has lost 14 of 22 since the All-Star break.

SF’s Estrada belts two run walk off homer to defeat Pirates 8-7

San Francisco Giants Thairo Estrada belted a two run home run in the bottom of the ninth to win it celebrates at home plate with his teammates against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Aug 14, 2022 (AP News photo)

Pittsburgh (45-70). 7. 11. 0

San Francisco (57-57). 8. 13. 1

Sunday, August 14, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–The Giants came to work this afternoon having won five of the last seven games. Unfortunately, they also had won five of their last 11 and still were a game under .500 and 6-1/2 out in the race for the last wild card spot.

Alex Wood, their starting pitcher for today’s contest, pitched a fine game in his last outing, against the current occupants of that coveted fourth wild card place, the San Diego Padres. The 31 year old southpaw went 6-1/3 frames in a 1-0 win in which allowed three hits and struck out five opponents, throwing 89 pitches.

He wasn’t that impressive in his only appearance against Pittsburgh this year, allowing four earned runs on six hits in a 7-5 Giants win. His season record when he threw the his first offering, at 1:07 this warm, sunny afternoon was 8-9,4, 4.17)

The Pirates sent 28 year old righty Zach Thompson and his 3-9, 5.08 record against the possibly resurgent home team. He has been used as both a starter and reliever in his season and a half in the show this year, all but one of his 20 previous appearances were starts, while last season he started only 14 of the 26 games in which he was on the mound.

The game ended in a 8-7 walkoff win for the Giants. Wood threw 101 pitches, 64 for strikes, over six innings before leaving with a 5-3 lead.The three runs he allowed were earned and came on five hits, a walk, and two hit batters. All he got was a no decision that left him at 8-9, 4.18.

Thompson lasted only four innings, having thrown 90 pitches, 38 of them balls, and surrendering five runs, all earned, on seven hits, one of them yard, two walks, and a hit batsman. He escaped with a no decision and wound up with a record of 3-9, 5.34.

Brandon Belt was back in the San Francisco lineup, playing first and batting cleanup. It was his 1,394 game played as a Giant, tying Robbie Thompson for seventh place in that category since the team moved to San Francisco in 1958.

Kevin Newman wasted no time in attacking Wood and his defense. He lashed a leg double to right on the first pitch of the game. Although Wood put Bryce Reynolds on base by plunking him two pitches later, neither runner advanced.

It was a case of The Curse of the Leadoff Double in spades. Not only did the Pirates fail to score in the first, but Wood struck out four straight Buccos after he hit Reynolds with an 83 mph slider.

That strikeout streak ended when Greg Allen grounded into the second out of the second frame and Wood’s luck turned against him. Tucupita Marcano hit a dinky ground ball to second and got. an infield hit out of it.

Jason Delay was in no hurry and went to a full count before depositing a single to left that put runners on first and second, setting the stage for Newman to load the bases by being hit by another of Wood’s sliders. Reynolds flew out to deep right center, which preserved the scoreless tie.

That situation didn’t survive the Giants’ second inning onslaught. After Thairo Estrada took a called third strike, Brandon Crawford walked and scored on Tommy LaStella’s double to right. Joey Bart dropped a Texas League single that would have been called an error if MLB rules accepted the concept of team errors.

LaStella moved up to third. Both runners trotted home after LaMonte Wade, Jr. whalloped his seventh home run of the year, a. 406 foot no doubter to center that came off an 86 mph change of pace. The home team now had an early 4-0 lead to protect.

They didn’t merely protect it; they stretched it. Joc Pederson got hit by a Thompson fastball with two down in the home fourth and motored all the way home on Flores’s down the line double to left. Pederson left the game a couple of innings later with a contusion on his right hand.Rodolfo Castro’s relay throw to the plate might have nailed him if the Bucs’ third sacker had released the ball a mige quicker.

The Giants’ seemingly comfortable five run margin quickly shrunk to three in the fifth on Delay’s leadoff single to left center, followed by a full count walk to Newman, and a Bryan Reynolds double to left. Reynolds advanced to third on Chavis’s fly out to right and scoreddon Ben Gamel’s ground out to second. The Giants’ advantage now was down to two, 5-3.

The orange and black also had a new pitcher to face when they came to bat in their half of the fifth, the left handed Manny Bañuelos, who held them to Crawford’s single in his inning of work and was replaced in the sixth by Colin Holderman.

Kevin Newman beat out a hit to third, and Reynolds went way deep to center field, 442 feet, to be exact, for his 17th home run and 36th, 37th, and 38th RBI of the season, putting Pittsburgh up 6-5.

A single to center by Chavis sent Brebbia to the showers and Jarlín García to the mound. He fanned Gamel and Cruz, with Castro banging out a single to left sandwiched between them. Then he caught Allen looking at a changeup for an inning ending called third strike.

But it was a whole new ball game when Flores came to bat to face Holderman in the home seventh, who led off with a base knock to right that ended Holderman’s mound tenure. Southpaw Eric Strong came on to pitch a move countered by Evan Longoria pinch hitting for Belt.

He flew out to left but Yaz drew a four pitch walk that put Flores in scoring position. Estrad grounded into a short to second force out and just barely beat the relay to first, putting runners on first and third. Crawford then lifted a pop fly to shallow center field.

Allen and Newman collided, and the ball dropped off of the latter’s glove for what originally was scored as a two base error as Flores crossed the plate with the leading run. Upon review, the scorer reversed his decision and Crawford was credited with a double and an RBI, and Stout was charged with an earned run.

Stout didn’t come out for the San Francisco eighth. Wil Crowe relieved him and kept the Giants off the board with the help of a diving grab of Wade’s hard ground behind first for the second out.

Camilo Doval, who had earned his 17th save last night and his 16th the night before, came out of the bullpen, hoping to hold the Giants’ deficit at a single run. Reynolds led off with a clean single to right and took second on Chavis’s productive ground  out to short. Gamel then walked to put the potential leading run on base but also setting up a double play. Castro hit a weak grounder to third. Longoria made a barehanded pick up and threw wildly and late to first. Reynolds reached third on what was ruled Castro’s hit and scored on Longoria’s throwing error.

Gamel also tried to score, but Flores’s throw from first nipped him at home. The Pirates challenged the call, claiming that Bart had illegally blocked the plate. Sam Holberg and Greg Gibson in New York thought otherwise, and the scoreboard had the Buccos ahead 7-6 after Doval fanned Cruz to end the threat.

Longoria made amends for his error by leading off the bottom of the ninth with a single to left. JD Davis came in to run for him and was forced at second by Yastrzemski’s grounder to Newman. It might have been a double play if the Bucs’ second baseman had made a decent throw to the bag. The next pitch was to Estrada. It began as a 95 mph sinker. It ended as a game winning home run, 395 feet deep in center field.

What a game!

Doval didn’t get his save. Instead he got his fourth win against five losses. His ERA dropped to 2.76.

The loss went to Crowe, who now is 4-7. 3,34,

Arizona comes to town tomorrow for a 6:45 game. Alex Cobb (3-6,4.15) will start for the Giants. The Diamondbacks haven’t announced who will pitch for them.

Houston sweeps Oakland 6-3 at Minute Maid; A’s drop 8th consecutive game

Oakland A’s hitter Tony Kemp takes a cut at Houston Astros pitching all for not as the Astros swept the A’s on Sun Aug 14, 2022 at Minute Maid Field in Houston (@Athletics photo)

Houston Sweeps Oakland 6-3

By Barbara Mason

Sunday afternoon the Oakland A’s (41-74) took on the Houston Astros (75-41) in game three of their series. Oakland made it competitive in the first game of the series losing 7-5. In Game Two the Astros took control of this series and it continued on into the third game.

The A’s lost Game Two 8-0 and it did not get much better in Game Three on Sunday with a 6-3 loss. Nick Allen hit a homer in the eighth inning to at least get on the scoreboard.

The first inning was a replay of yesterday’s first inning. Alex Bregman homered and with Yordan Alvarez on base the Astros took a quick 2-0 lead. Jose Altuve hit a double in the second inning that drove in Christian Vasquez and Chas McCormick and the hits kept on coming for Houston now leading 4-0.

The Astros would continue to hit and continue to score in the sixth and seventh innings. Vasquez singled driving in Kyle Tucker in the sixth, and Bregman doubled in the seventh driving in Jeremy Pena extending the Houston lead to 6-0.

Oakland finally got on the scoreboard in the eighth inning when Nick Allen hit his second home run of the season a solo shot.

The A’s made some noise in the ninth inning. Bride grounded out and Elvis Andrus scored from third. There were some good at bats for the A’s but it was too little too late. We have seen this far too often. If Oakland wants to give themselves a chance to win games, they cannot was until the ninth inning to start hitting.

Right now the Astros are a runaway train and the A’s couldn’t even slow them down let along stop them. The depth of the Houston roster is a large part of their success. Their pitching has been outstanding and they really do look like the best team in the American League.

Cole Irvin went 6 innings allowing eight hits and five runs with a single strikeout.

The A’s will remain in Texas to take on the Texas Rangers on Monday for a four game series. James Kaprielian will be on the mound for the A’s 3-6 with a 4.38 ERA. Glenn Otto will be throwing for the Rangers 4-8 with a 5.20 ERA. First pitch will be at 5:05 PM PT.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: A’s fire sale of players appearances

Former Oakland A’s outfielder Yoenis Cespedes was one of the seven A’s All Stars that was dealt away from Oakland. Cespedes played in Oakland for two seasons 2012 and 2013 before leaving for the New York Mets (bleacherreport.com file photo)

A’s Fire Sale of Players and Playoff Appearances

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

Amaury Pi-González

No, it is not “Breaking News” that the Oakland A’s will not be in the postseason this year. After all, and with all the changes of players around Spring Training you not-needed-to-be Albert Einstein to realize they were not going to compete.

Now, the possibility of losing 100 games is very realistic with some 40-plus games left this season. Since they moved from Kansas City to Oakland in 1968 only in 1979 the A’s lost 100 or more games (54-108) Coming to the last part of the 2022 season the A’s have done what they have been doing for most of the 2000’s.

It has been the history of the A’s to get rid of star players with good salaries for younger players, mostly rookies that could become stars in the years to come. Unloading payroll while clinging to the narrative that they play in a small market.

A’s play in the Bay Area and this is not Kansas City or Milwaukee, this is not a small market. While it might not be Los Angeles, New York or Chicago the Oakland A’s play in the Bay Area, this is at least a “medium size” market, but not small by any means. The Bay Area had a record high 7.77 million people last year (US Census)

Remember 2014? I do, that is only eight years ago. These seven A’s players were All Stars: Yoenis Céspedes, Josh Donaldson, Jeff Samardzija, Scott Kazmir, Sean Doolittle, Derek Norris and Brandon Moss. Soon they left and the A’s brought another group of younger and role players.

This is nothing new. Although a World Series championship has not been produced with this system, the Oakland A’s is one of the top five (5) franchises in postseason appearances during the 2000s.

Below are the teams with the most playoff appearances in the 2000s Yankees (18) Cardinals (15) Braves (13) Dodgers (13) Athletics (11)

Note: The term Fire Sale originated in the late 19th century, around the time of the Great Chicago Fire. When goods were damaged by fire, merchants would quickly sell them off to raise capital. Although becoming famous for the “Fire Sale”, the A’s are not alone, there are other MLB teams that also dumps payroll by trading expensive players for marginal players and prospects.

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

Oakland A’s podcast with Charlie O: A’s just can’t hit or pitch suffering their seventh straight loss 8-0

Oakland A’s second baseman Nick Allen turns a double play retiring the sliding Chas McCormick at second base in the bottom of the sixth inning at Minute Maid Field in Houston on Sat Aug 13, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Charlie O:

#1 Charlie the A’s took their seventh straight loss Saturday night in Houston 8-0. The last time the A’s have won a game was back on Thu Aug 4 in Anaheim when they gave up seven home runs a record and still beat the Angels 8-7.

#2 A’s starter Zach Logue pitched 5.1 innings, eight hits and six runs it’s pretty tough on Louge as A’s manager Mark Kotsay said Louge missed some locations as the Astros were just tough outs all game long.

#3 The Astros spread their runs out in duces scoring twice in the first, fourth, sixth and seventh innings. The Astros Alex Bergman didn’t waste anytime hitting hit 15th home run of the season in the bottom of the first inning help the Astros grab a 2-0 lead.

#4 Charlie, how surprised were you after some 305 days without pitching the last time in game 4 of the ALDS against the Chicago White Sox last season, Astros starter Lance McCullers threw a gem against the Oakland A’s going six innings, two hits, four walks, and five strikeouts.

#5 Charlie, you mentioned the fanbase getting turned off and after Frankie Montas was shipped off to New York and the team has fallen off in the middle of a seven game losing streak and just got wiped out on Saturday night in Houston 8-0. The A’s when they return to Oakland next Friday could find them having attendance around 3,000 or less.

#5 A’s and Astros close out this three game set the A’s need to win today to avoid getting swept. The A’s will be starting Cole Irvin (6-9, 2.92) he’ll be opposed by the Astros Cristian Javier (6-8. 3.18) first pitch 11:10 AM PDT.

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

Giants Webb was dealing in 2-0 shutout of Pirates at Oracle Park Saturday night

San Francisco Giants starter Logan Webb pitches in the top of the first inning against the visiting Pittsburgh Pirates at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sat Aug 13, 2022 (AP News photo)

Pittsburgh (45-69). 0. 5. 1

San Francisco (56-57). 2. 4. 0

Saturday, August 13, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Before tonight’s game against the Pittsburgh Pirates, the Giants held a reunion and celebration of the team that won the 2012 World Series. The game itself featured another sort of reunion.

The Pirates’ starting pitcher, Tyler Beede, who toiled for the Giants from 2018 through early May of this year, with the exception of 2020, the COVID-shortened season, which he spent recovering from Tommy John surgery.

Beede went 0-0, 4.66 for the Giants this year and was 1-1, 3.28 for the Pirates, and 1-1, 3.57 overall when he first toed the rubber this evening. While playing college ball for Vanderbilt in 2012, his roommate was Mike Yasetrzemski.

Following that, during his tenure with San Francisco, the Bucco’s righty was good friends-indeed, he still is-with the Giants’ starter, Logan Webb, who came to do battle with his friend, bringing a record of 10-5, 3.17 in his duffel bag.

When the dust had settled, Webb had pitched a beautiful game, earning the win in a 2-0 Giants’ victory, in which the loser outhit the winners 5-4.

Beede lasted a scant three innings, during which he yielded a pair of runs, both earned, on three hits, one of them a home run, and three walks. He threw 74 pitches, 39 of which resulted in contact or were strikes. He was charged with the loss, which made his overall record 1-2, 3.72.

Webb, on the other hand didn’t throw his 74th pitch until, nursing a 2-0 lead, he faced his second batter of the seventh inning. He held on through the eighth and improved his record to 11-5, 3.00, allowing only four hits and two walks. Both runs scored against him were earned, and he struck out nine Bucs. The threw a total of 99 pitches, 34 of which were balls.

Tommy LaStella started at first base for San Francisco, replacing Brandon Belt, who was nursing a sore thumb.

The Giants overcame the dreaded Curse of the Leadoff Double, getting back to back two baggers from MonteWade, Jr., and Joc Pederson to start their half of the first inning. They did, however, fall victim to a mutated strain of the Curse; Pederson died on third.

The Pirates fell victim to the scourge in the top of the third when Rodolfo Castro’s leadoff shot went right through LaStella into left field for a generously scored two base hit. The frame ended with Castro on third when Webb made an exciting dive for the bag after fielding Newman’s weak grounder between the mound and first, getting the out by an eyelash.

Wade followed that exploit by opening the bottom of the third with a 410 foot blast into McCoy Cove, stretching the Giants’ lead to 2-0. The pitch was a sinker, but. I couldn’t see whether the splash hit floated or sank.

Eric Stout relieved Beede at the start of the Giants fourth. Wilmer Flores pinch hit for La Stella, who was due up first and tempted fate with a … you guessed it … leadoff double. Fate won, and San Francisco didn’t score in the fourth.

Stout walked JD Davis on a full count to open the fifth and then retired Mike Yastrzemski and Crawford before leaving the game in favor of Duane Underwood, Jr. He plunked Estrada, his first batter, with a change of pace before getting Flores out on a sinking liner to right, on which Greg Allen made a lovely diving catch.

Stout pitched a scoreless sixth and was succeeded in the seventh by Chase DeJong, who set the Giants down to conga beat, striking out Davis and Crawford in the process.

Pittsburgh threatened in the top of the eighth, loading the bases with two down. This was the first inning in which that had more than one runner on base. Webb rose to the occasion, striking out DH BenGamel on his 99th pitch of the game.

Camilo Doval, who earned his 16th save last night, fanned Oneil Cruz to open the top of the ninth. He walked Greg Allen, who proceeded to steal second and then advance to third on Bligh Madris’s ground out to second.

Allen’s potential run meant nothing but Rodolfo Castro, who was two for three on the evening, represented the possible tying run. He lined out to left to end a nerve wracking inning and a heartening Giants win.

The series ends tomorrow with a 1:05 contest in which Pittsburgh’s Zach Thompson (3.09, 5.08) will face San Francisco’s Alex Wood (8-9, 4.17).

Astros pound Athletics 8-0; Oakland now on 7 game losing skid

Houston Astros starter Lance McCullers was in a groove all game long against the Oakland A’s here he is dealing in the top of the first inning at Minute Maid Field in Houston Fri Aug 13, 2022 (AP News photo)

Astros Pound Athletics 8-0

By Barbara Mason

The Oakland A’s (41-73) had some great success against the Houston Astros (74-41) in July but that came to a screeching halt Saturday in game two of their series. Friday night Oakland had opportunities in game one but fell short 7-5. In today’s game the Astros took command from the first inning and they did not look back with some great offense and great pitching in a 8-0 shutout win. It was the A’s seventh consecutive loss.

It was a combination of hitting, a brilliant pitching performance by Lance McCullers Jr. and some great defense by Houston that shut the A’s out. McCullers finished with six shutout innings in his season debut his first appearance since the four game of the ALDS against the Chicago White Sox in October of 2021.

In the first inning Alex Bregman homered with Yordan Alvarez on base and Houston had a 2-0 lead to start the game.

The Astros struck again in the fourth inning when Chas McCormick tripled driving in Trey Mancini and Jeremy Pena and Houston was off to the races 4-0.

Houston hit a couple of doubles in the sixth inning extending their lead 6-0. The Astros had their second triple of the game in the seventh inning, a blistering shot to deep right by Kyle Tucker driving in Yuli Gurriel and Yordan Alvarez.

It a tough loss for the A’s; their seventh in a row. They only had five hits in the game and not a single Oakland player made it to third base in the game, in fact, only two runners got to second. They hit into three double plays and it was Houston all day long.

A’s pitcher Zach Logue went 5.1 innings and pitched over 100 pitches. He allowed eight hits and six runs. It was a tough loss for the 26 year old but it a great learning experience for him. More often than not things get worse before they get better for these up and coming youngsters.

Tomorrow the A’s will try and avoid the sweep sending Cole Irvin to the mound. He is pitching well with a 2.92 ERA and is 6-9. The A’s will face Houston’s Cristian Javier. He has a 6-8 win loss record and a 3.14 ERA. First pitch is scheduled for 11:10 AM PT.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Morris Phillips : Giants had it all in 2012 to win World Series in a four game sweep

The 2012 World Champion San Francisco Giants reunite at Oracle Park before the 2022 San Francisco Giants hosted the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sat Aug 13, 2022 (@SFGiants photo)

On San Francisco Giants podcast with Morris Phillips :

#1 Morris, kind of a special day at Oracle on Saturday night where the San Francisco Giants paid tribute to the 2012 World Championship team. The celebration included two of the remaining Giants who are still part of the starting line up Brandon Crawford and Brandon Belt.

#2 Belt said that it was ten years ago but said it’s kind of cool seeing all those guys again who will be part of the guest list for the Saturday night reunion.

#3 The Giants battled the Detroit Tigers and swept them in all four games to win the World Series and their second World Series win in two years winning their last one two year previous in 2010.

#4 During the 2012 reunion key players Tim Lincecum and Buster Posey didn’t attend. Lincecum whose wife passed away in June as announced by the Giants this week and Posey who moved back to Georgia had family obligations.

#5 One of the biggest ovations was for former Giants manager Bruce Bochy who managed the team to three World Series Championships.

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