Los Angeles Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully dead at 94; Nov 29, 1927 to Aug 2, 2022

Vin Scully towards the end of his career on Sep 24, 2016 meets with the news media at a press conference to take questions about his long and glorious career (AP News file photo)

By Michael Duca and Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–Long time Los Angeles Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully has passed away at the age of 94 years old. Scully broadcasted Dodger baseball from 1950-2016. Scully had the opportunity to break in with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1950 with Hall of Fame broadcaster Red Barber and Connie Desmond. Scully replaced another Hall of Fame broadcaster Ernie Harwell who left to call New York Giants games Harwell would later gain his fame as a Detroit Tigers broadcaster.

Scully replaced Red Barber in 1953 on the Dodgers TV broadcasts when Barber got into a contract dispute with sponsor Gillette. Scully upon taking the job became the youngest broadcaster to call a World Series that year a record that still stands today. After Barber left to call New York Yankee games in 1954 Scully became the team’s number one announcer. Scully called Dodger games in Brooklyn until 1957.

The Brooklyn Dodgers moved from New York at the end of the 57 season and Scully left to call Dodger games in their new home in Los Angeles at the Los Angeles Coliseum. The Dodgers stayed at the Los Angeles Coliseum where Scully called games there from 1957 until the Dodgers moved into Dodgers Stadium in 1962.

Longtime Yankee broadcaster Mel Allen got fired in 1964 and Scully was offered the job which he declined to remain in Los Angeles as the Dodgers broadcaster and a chance to move back to New York. Los Angeles would remain Vin’s home for the rest of his broadcast career until his retirement in 2016. Scully also called the NFL on CBS Sports from 1975-1982.

Amongst some of Scully’s achievements he was inducted into the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame in 1982, he won the Commissioners Achievement Award in 2014, Presidential Freedom Award (2016), The Hollywood Walk of Fame, and had his Dodgers microphone retired, he famously called Sandy Koufax’s no hitters, Kirk Gibson famous World Series home run in 1988, and one of the early TV broadcasts of the 1965 World Series that went seven games. In game seven Koufax closed out the Minnesota Twins to win the World Series for the Dodgers.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Padres win the Juan Soto sweepstakes; Soto addition can help San Diego make a run at Dodgers

By Amaury Pi Gonzalez

Juan Soto former Washington National after fouling off a pitch in the ninth inning on Sun Jul 31, 2022 at Nationals Park in DC now joins the San Diego Padres in a deal completed on Tue Aug 2, 2022 (image from ESPN)

What happen today is historic as the San Diego Padres picked up Juan Soto for six prospects from the Washington Nationals. Joining Soto is first baseman Josh Bell. The Padres Eric Hosmer has a no trade agreement in his contract and says he doesn’t want to go. Hosmer is a good player to sit on the bench for the Padres. The Nationals and Padres might get cash to settle the deal.

Hosmer has no interest in going to Washington a team that has the worst record in baseball. Hosmer could end up playing for someone whose going to the post season. Soto is hitting .241, leads MLB in walks and is among the home run leaders in home runs with 19.

Soto is happy to join a team that is contending and leaving the Nationals who lost four of their last five games and had no plans to stay in Washington who offered him 15 years for $440 million. No price for Soto has been disclosed yet but it’s speculated that Soto could fetch as much as $500 million.

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

Giants fall to rival Dodgers 8-2; Rodon and Belt for Soto possible in trade deadline deal

Los Angeles Dodgers Trea Turner heads home after rounding third and third base coach Dino Ebel (9) in the top of the seventh inning against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Mon Aug 1, 2022 (AP News photo)

Giants Fall to the Rival Dodgers 8-2

By Barbara Mason

Monday night the San Francisco Giants (51-52) took on their rivals, the division leading Los Angeles Dodgers (69-33). The Dodgers not only lead their division, they have the best record in the National League. The Giants have been struggling since the all-star game but they did win a couple over the weekend against the Cubs. The Dodgers scored twice in the second and three times in the third to jump on San Francisco for a 5-1 lead which would prove to pay off later winning by six runs 8-2.

The Giants got on the scoreboard early in this game. They had the bases loaded in the first inning but could only come away with one run for the early 1-0 lead. Villar walked and with the bases loaded, Darin Ruf who was on third got a free pass home.

The Dodgers got their bats going in the second and the third inning proved to be a nightmare for SF pitcher Logan Webb. Max Muncy hit a home run in the second inning with Jake Lamb on base and Los Angeles took a 2-1 lead going into the fateful third inning.

The Dodgers started stringing hits together and by the end of the third Los Angeles had a 5-1 lead. James Outman, Mookie Betts, Trea Turner and Freddie Freeman all had hits in the third inning for the Dodgers.

It was a quiet fourth inning for both teams. The Giants and the Dodgers would both score a run in the fifth inning. Will Smith hit a double bringing Freeman home. The Giants Wilmer Flores homered to left so a productive inning for both clubs. San Francisco still trailed 6-2 and had an uphill climb ahead of them.

The Dodgers refused to let San Francisco into this game. In the seventh inning, Trae Turner hit his 17th home run of the season extending their lead to 7-2.

Los Angeles added insult to injury in the ninth inning scoring another run. Freddie Freeman singled bringing in Outman for an 8-2 score. It was all Dodgers in this game. The Giants had a chance back in the first inning with the bases loaded but that was about all that Los Angeles was willing to give up. Phil Bickford closed this game out for the Dodgers. It was three up, three down and that was the ball game 8-2.

It will be back to the drawing board for the Giants as they look ahead to game two of this four game series. They will send Alex Wood to the mound. Wood has a 4.11 ERA and an 7-8 record. The Dodgers will start Tyler Anderson who comes in with a 2.61 ERA and an 11-1 win loss record. First pitch is scheduled for 6:45 PM PT.

Notes: Jon Moorsi of the MLB Network said that the Giants could be a sleeper in the Juan Soto sweepstakes.one possible scenario could have the Giants dealing pitcher Carlos Rodon and first baseman Brandon Belt to the Washington Nationals for Soto. Moorsi said that the Giants have gotten older and obtaining the 23 year old Soto and some prospects could be a huge benefit for a Giant team whose chance to make post season would improve by acquiring Soto.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: No Surprise A’s Frankie Montas Traded along with Lou Trivino

Former Oakland A’s pitcher Frankie Montas is shown here walking to the Oakland dugout after completing the top of the third inning of pitching in the night cap of a doubleheader against the Detroit Tigers on Thu Jul 21, 2022 at the Oakland Coliseum. Montas and reliever Lou Trivino both were dealt to the New York Yankees for minor league prospects (AP News file photo)

No Surprise: A’s Frankie Montas Traded along with Lou Trivino.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

The Oakland A’s rebuilding which began months before the 2022, continued ahead of the August 2, deadline for trades. Frankie Montas, their best starter will be wearing pinstripes as the New York Yankees acquired him along with reliever Lou Trivino.

Montas was one of the best top of the line starters on the market, Trivino, a reliever who did not performed as a closer as the team had hoped for, however, he will have a change of scenery going to New York, where in the land of the greatest closer ever Mariano Rivera, he will have to perform, or else. In typical rebuilding mode, the Oakland A’s in return received four of the Yankees top prospects.

Left handed pitchers J.P Sears and Ken Waldichuk, right handed Luis Medina and second baseman Cooper Bowman. The Yankees most requested prospect is their young shortstop Anthony Volpe, (their untouchable prospect), which the Yankees will keep in their organization

Other names potentially on the trading block for the A’s, Ramón Laureano, Sean Murphy and maybe a couple of relievers from the bullpen, all the players that have any value in order to bring a good return of younger prospects to continue the rebuilding process.

Stay tune for more. The deadline for trades is this Tuesday 6PM EDT, 3PM PDT.

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

Preview: Montas and Trivino head to the Big Apple; Oakland A’s and Los Angeles Angels open three game series at the Big A in Anaheim Tuesday

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s are set to start a three-game series with the Los Angeles Angels Tuesday night. The A’s had scheduled Frankie Montas to pitch in the opening game. All that went out the window Monday afternoon as the A’s announced they had traded Montas, along with reliever Lou Trivino to the New York Yankees for four prospects.

Montas was under team control through 2023, but the A’s moved him to continue selling assets for prospects. Trivino was not having a good year as the A’s closer. Both players will now be in the playoffs as the Yanks have the best record in baseball. New York sent four Minor Leaguers to Oakland for Montas and Trivino. Here’s how the trade went down: left-hander Ken Waldichuk (the club’s number five prospect, per MLB Pipeline), right-hander Luis Medina number ten, lefty JP Sears number 20, and second baseman Cooper Bowman number 21.

“I feel great. I’m excited about it,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “[Montas] is a great pitcher. There have been rumors around him most of the first half of the season. I’m excited we could push through on a deal for him. I’m just excited to get him into the mix because of his talent, especially with how he’s pitched the last couple of years.”

TRADE DETAILS

Yankees get: RHPs Frankie Montas and Lou Trivino

A’s get LHPs Ken Waldichuk and JP Sears, RHP Luis Medina, 2B Cooper Bowman. 

Tuesday night in Anaheim: The A’s have scheduled Cole Irvin to pitch Tuesday night. Irvin has pitched well. He is 6-7, and his ERA is 3.01. The A’s have not announced the starters for the Wednesday or Thursday night game. The Angels’ Noah Syndergaard (5-8, 3.83 ERA) goes Tuesday night. The American League’s reigning MVP, Shohei Ohtani (9-6, 2.81 ERA), will pitch on Wednesday, and lefty Jose Suarez will handle the chores for the Halos Thursday.

The Angels have had a very disappointing season this year. The Halos hoped to improve both the starting rotation and the bullpen. They thought they would contend for the AL West crown this year. They played well early in the season, but a 14 game losing streak derailed those hopes. They fired their manager, Joe Maddon, and replaced him with Phil Nevin. Injuries have also played a key role in the Angels’ frustrations.

The Angels gave the former Washington Nationals’ third baseman a huge contract before the 2020 season. Rendon has not played a full season yet. Currently, Rendon is on the 60-day IL. Their sparkplug shortstop/ second baseman, David Fletcher, has played sparingly due to injury.

Fletcher loves to see the Green and Gold. He has tormented the A’s in the past and hopes to get things going in the three-game set. The Angels’ three-time MVP, Mike Trout, is on the 10-day IL. Trout has a back injury. The A’s want him to get well soon, but not until the three-game series is over.

Some of the other players that the A’s will hope to contain are first baseman Jared Walsh, second baseman/shortstop Luis Rengifo, and David Fletcher. The Angels’ outfielders include Brandon Marsh, Taylor Ward, Magneuris Sierra, and Dillon Thomas. Like the A’s, the Angels love players that can play multiple positions. Shohei Ohtani will be the designated hitter. There were rumors the Yankees were in the market for Ohtani. The Angels’ management quickly said they were not trading Ohtani.

Raisel Iglesias is the closer. He is 2-6 with 16 saves. Other relievers include Ryan Tepoera, Jimmy Herget, Jaime Barria, Andrew Wantz, Touki Toussaint, Jason Junk, and lefties Jose Quijada and Aaron Loup.

The Angels are 43-59 and are 23.5 games behind the Houston Astros. They are in fourth place in the AL West. The A’s are 39-65 and trail the Angels by five games. 

The trading deadline closes at 3 pm on Tuesday. The A’s may continue the fire sale. Other players that they may trade are Ramon Laureano, Chad Pinder, or Sean Murphy. The A’s players must be wondering who will be the next guys to go. Time will tell.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Dodgers catch Giants stealing signs; LA comes to Oracle tonight as SF hosts four game series

San Francisco Giants first base coach Anton Richardson and manager Gabe Kapler were called out by the Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts and pitching coach Mark Pryor for stealing signs on Fri Jul 22, 2022. (file photo from Sports Illustrated)

On the Giants podcast with Marko:

#1 The San Francisco Giants were stealing signs as reported by Dodgers Nation during Fri Jul 22’s contest at Dodgers Stadium Dodgers pitching coach Mark Pryor and manager Dave Roberts noticed that Giants first base coach Anton Richardson was relaying the Dodgers catcher Will Smith’s signs to Giants batter Austin Slater. Pryor called time and went out to the pitchers mound to relay such information to Dodgers pitcher Tyler Anderson. It was then that Richardson started laughing while speaking with the first base umpire. The umpires met on the field to relay what was happening after talking with Pryor and Giants manager Gabe Kapler. Richardson was told to stay in the coaches box.

#2 The Giants knew the jig was up as Kapler and Richardson didn’t argue and going forward Richardson was no longer suspected of sign stealing.

#3 Marko, how much is sign stealing part of the game this incident in LA was not to the level of the trash can and cameras the Houston Astros used but there’s no doubt after the Dodgers past World Series experience with the Astros their on the look out for any kind of sign stealing.

#4 In their last meeting in LA the Dodgers swept the Giants. The Dodgers were in command with a three, four, two and three run wins during the four game series. The Giants couldn’t have come into LA in that last meeting with the Dodgers at a worse time as the Dodgers were coming off a four game sweep of the Los Angeles Angels.

#5 The Dodgers starting pitcher for Monday night is Andrew Heaney (1-0, 0.47) and for the Giants Logan Webb (9-4, 2.91) to start the four game series. Anytime these two teams meet it never fails something interesting always seems to happen?

#6 Will Clark’s number retirement speech was true to form that captured his character throughout his career with him thanking his family, friends, former teammates, and the Giants organization. By the way Will stayed to the very end of the game on Saturday night.

Marko is filling in for talk show host Morris Phillips who is heard Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s open three game series with Angels Tuesday at the Big A

Oakland A’s starter Frankie Montas could very well be making his last start on Mon Aug 1, 2022 at the Big A in Anaheim against the Los Angeles Angels (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara Mason:

#1 The Chicago White Sox Jose Abreu and Eloy Jimenez both homered against the Oakland A’s (39-65) in the final meeting between the two clubs on Sunday the Sox did most of the damage in the bottom of the second inning on Sunday at Guarantee Rate Field in Chicago scoring three runs in the 4-1 win.

#2 Chicago starter Dylan Cease threw for six innings giving up one earned run, four hits and seven strikeouts.

#3 The White Sox with the win move to a game over .500 (51-50) Chicago was predicted to win the AL Central now trail the first place Minnesota Twins by 2.5 games that could turn out to be an interesting race in the central.

#4 Trade deadline is upon the A’s and starter Frankie Montas is on the top of the A’s shopping list on Sunday. The New York Yankees showed interest in Montas and if they could get him they would consider him to be their number one starter.

#5 The A’s have the day off Monday and open a three game series in Los Angeles against Shohei Ohtani and the Angels at the Big A in Anaheim on Tuesday night.. Starting pitcher for the A’s Frankie Montas (4-9, 3.18) and for the Angels Ryan Syndergaard (5-8, 3.83) a 6:38 pm PDT first pitch.

Oakland A’s podcasts with Barbara Mason is heard Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Rodon sculpts a masterpiece shuts out Cubs 4-0 at Oracle Park

San Francisco Giants catcher Austin Wynns (16) congratulates closer Camilo Doval (75) after their contest against the visiting Chicago Cubs at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Jul 31, 2022 (@SFGiants photo)

Chicago (41-60). 0. 4. 0

San Francisco (51-51). 4. 9. 0

Sunday, July 31, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–It was over 110 years ago that Franklin P. Adams published his best known piece of doggerel, “Baseball’s Sad Lament.” It begins,

These are the saddest of possible words: “Tinker to Evers to Chance.” Trio of bear cubs, and fleeter than birds, Tinker and Evers and Chance. Ruthlessly pricking our gonfalon bubble, Making a Giant hit into a double— Words that are heavy with nothing but trouble: “Tinker to Evers to Chance.”

Sunday, neither team has a gonfalon bubble to be pricked. Before game time, San Francisco was 4-1/2 games behind St. Louis for the last National League wild card slot, and Chicago trailed the Giants by another 8-1/2.

Nonetheless, the two teams still have a rivalry that dates back to a couple of decades before FPA, who was a Cubs fan living in New York, penned the words that got the Chicago infielders into the Hall of Fame because, as Warren Brown, the father of the All Star Game, put it, “Don’t let anyone tell you that the poet’s pen isn’t mightier than the scorer’s pencil.”

What this scorer’s pencil recorded Sunday afternoon and evening was that the Giants made a four run outburst in the fourth inning stand up for a 4-0 shutout win over the visitors.

Earlier in the day, the Giants announced that the beaning Thairo Estrada suffered in Saturday night’s game had sent him to the seven day concussion list. We all wish him a full and speedy recovery.

To replace the versatile and talented Estrada, the team took advantage of the Cubs’ visit to acquire their farmhand Dixon Machado, a utility man who has a .227 major league batting average over 458 at bats. The Giants sent right handed pitcher Raynel Espinal to Chicago. Dixon started the game at short, batting in the seventh slot.

The Giants’ southpaw starter, Carlos Rodón, came to work with a record of 8 -6, 3.18. His favorite pitch is the four seamer, which he throws at an average of almost 96 mph. His slider clocks in at about 85-1/2 mph.

Those two pitches account for 92% of his offerings. He mixes in a curve and a change of pace, just to keep opposing batters guessing. He went seven scoreless, two hit innings, throwing 98 pitches without 34 of his offerings were balls, but he didn’t yield a single walk.

Rodón struck out ten, the eighth time he reached double digits in that category this season and the 16th time he’s done it in his career. John Brebbia replaced him to open the eighth. He earned, and the verb is absolutely correct, the win, improving his stats to 9-6, 3.00.

His opponent was right hander Adrian Sampson, who was 0-3,3.81 with the Iowa Cubs and 0-1, 3.20 with their parent team. He went 1-2, 2.80 for the south side squad last year and also has a year in Korea, where he went 9-12, 5.40 in 2020.

This was the first time he faced the Giants as a team; the only Giant he ever pitched to before today was Tommy LaStella, who had gone 0-2 against him before singling to right center to open the home first and doubling to right in the third.

Adrian Sampson pitched three shutout innings and a disastrous fourth. He threw 72 pitches, 45 of which were counted as strikes. He yielded four runs, all earned, on five hits, a walk, and a hit batter. He took the loss, and now stands at 0-2, 3.74.

The game began with a rush of excitement. Christopher Morel led off with a high drive to the left field wall, where Luis González made a perfectly timed leap to bring the ball down for the first out.

That was the closest either team came to scoring until two were down in the bottom of the fourth, when LaMonte Wade, Jr., drew a walk, Mike Yastrzemski, singled to right, and the newcomer, Machado, was hit by a pitch to load the bases for Jason Vosler.

Jason Vosler lined a 2-2 fastball to right for an RBI single. Austin Wynns, not to be outdone, took a 1-2 pitch to the base of the center field wall at the 391 foot sign that cleared the bases and put the orange and black on top, 4-0.

After Rodón struck out the side in the Cubs’ fifth, Brandon Hughes replaced Sampson on the mound.

Two fans, one of whom was wearing a Darth Vader mask, leaped onto the field and interrupted the action with Christoher Morel at bat with one out in Cubbies’ half of the sixth. They were carrying signs that read, “Expose Smithfield’s Death Star.” They were ejected and Morel struck out on the way to a 1,2,3 frame for Rodón.

Rowan Wick replaced Hughes, who had thrown an inelegant but scoreless inning, to open the home sixth. Steven Brault followed him in the seventh. Brault surrendered a one out single to Luis González, who, with Slater at the plate, stole second.

Chicago appealed the call, but Jeff Nelson and Mark Wegner in New York would have nothing of it. Their decision, however, didn’t enable San Francisco to stretch its lead although Slater singled to center, sending González to third, and Belt walked, clogging the bases with Giants and driving Brault from the mound, replaced by Eric Uelmen, who struck out Mercedes and Yastrzemski.

On Erich Uelmen’s third pitch, Yermin Mercedes sent a popup into foul territory that first baseman PJ Higgins made a valiant attempt to catch, banging himself up badly against the railing. But he recovered and stayed in the game.

After the San Francisco threat had subsided John Brebbia took over for Rodón. In spite of yielding a pair of base knocks, he kept Chicago off the board.

Uelmen hit two batters in the Giants´half of the eighth but still managed to kept the score at 4-0.

Camilo Doval pitched the ninth for the orange and black. It took him all of 14 pitches to dispose of the Cubs on a hit.

The Dodgers come to town Monday night for a 6:45 pm PDT game that will feature LA’s Andrew Heaney (1-0, 0.47) and SF’s Logan Webb (9-4, 2.91) as starting pitchers.

Cease, Desist, Refrain: A’s have no success with ChiSox ace in 3-1 loss

By Morris Phillips

These days, Dylan Cease has everyone fooled. The foolish Oakland A’s just happened to cross paths with the Chicago’s AL Cy Young contender on Sunday.

Again, Cease was flawless, capping a July in which he went 5-1 with an ERA of 1.87, beating the A’s 4-1 in a neat, eventless stint that lasted six innings.

Framber Valdez, Justin Verlander, Alex Manoah, Martin Perez and Logan Gilbert are also among the American League’s ten best starting pitchers in 2022, and all six pitchers have seen the A’s in the last six weeks. It’s unlikely the A’s would say that any of the other five impressed them as much as Cease, who had balls darting in and–at last second–out of the strike zone throughout.

“You have to give credit to Cease, because we came out aggressive on the fastball and Cease immediately went to his breaking ball,” manager Mark Kotsay said. “It’s a plus breaking ball and a wipeout pitch.”

Cease improved to 11-4 on the season, winning each of his last four starting assignments. In an unearthly stretch dating back to May 24, the right hander’s allowed five earned runs in 12 starts, and no more than one run in any of the 12.

Adam Oller took the loss, allowing homers to Jose Abreu (2nd inning) and Eloy Jimenez (7th) while pitching quite effectively in between those two bookmarks. Oller’s record fell to 1-4 with a 7.68 ERA but this particular outing was one of his best.

“I thought I executed pretty well, and threw two cutters that backed up,” Oller said afterwards. “Aside from those two, I made good catches and was ahead in the count a decent amount.”

The A’s started the post All-Star break with wins in seven of nine games before dropping the last two in Chicago. The team’s spirits are up, their play has been sharp, and their home run numbers have made a sharp increase. On Sunday, Ramon Laureano homered, and later on, doubled with both blows coming against Cease.

Outside of those two Laureano highlights, the A’s did little offensively, including an unsightly two at-bats all afternoon with runners in scoring position that both ended their respective innings. Not only was Cease good, but the A’s saw familiar faces Kendall Graveman and Liam Hendricks, also good, with Hendricks pitching the ninth and earning his 20th save.

The A’s have a pair of off-days this upcoming week before facing the Giants at the Coliseum on Saturday and Sunday afternoons. Frankie Montas faces Noah Syndergaard on Tuesday in the A’s next game at Anaheim.

NOTES: The A’s improved play hasn’t immediately impacted their century-low offensive numbers with the team batting average at .214 and the A’s scoring one run or no runs in 34 of their 104 games. This week is the critical one in regard to the team’s streak without at least one triple, which reached 64 games on Sunday. The major league mark for a team going without a triple is 68 games.

Oakland A’s podcast with Charlie O: Sox edge A’s 3-2: Tim Anderson is not talking suspension

Chicago White Sox Gavin Sheets (right) scores at home after hitting a seventh inning two run homer off Oakland A’s pitcher Austin Pruitt is congratulated by teammate Andrew Vaughn (left) at Guarantee Rate Field in Chicago on Sat Jul 30, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the podcast with Charlie O:

#1 Charlie during the Oakland A’s and Chicago White Sox first game on Friday shortstop Tim Anderson let plate umpire Nick Mahrley got an earful after arguing ball and strikes in the bottom of the seventh inning. Anderson was suspended for three games when the bill of his helmet made contact with Mahrley and Sox manager Tony LaRussa said Mahrley moved forward to get beaked by Anderson.

#2 Charlie, Anderson did play in Saturday’s game in Chicago and got two hits. Anderson has protested the suspension by MLB and said to the media after the game that he was not talking about the suspension after Saturday’s game.

#3 Meanwhile Gavin Sheets was the key player in Saturday’s game after hitting a two run homer in the bottom of the seventh that tied up the game and later Sheets scored the game winning run.

#4 The A’s who had the lead just couldn’t shut the door as reliever Zach Jackson gave up a double to Sheets and advanced to third when teammate Josh Harrison laid down a bunt and Jackson threw a ball that took a bounce with Anderson at the plate.

#5 The A’s will try and see if they can win another series again if they can pull it off with a win at Guarantee Rate on Sunday the A’s will be starting Adam Oller (1-3, 8.07, 4.15) he’ll be matched up against the White Sox Dillion Cease (10-4, 2.03) first pitch 11:10 am PDT

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