Rally Wreckers: Giants do the same stuff in latest loss, 3-2 to the visiting Tigers

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–If the Giants were to find a way not to win a third, consecutive series, this wasn’t the way.

More of the same. When the Giants’ offense fails to get the key hit, and knock in some runs, they often lose. Wednesday afternoon’s loss to the Tigers, 3-2, was just another example in a less than lengthy stretch of games.

“I think it’s as simple as getting one more big at-bat,” manager Gabe Kapler said. “We’ve talked about that for a while now.”

The Giants rallied in the third–leading 1-0, then loading the bases with one out–but came up empty. In the seventh–now trailing 3-1–the Giants had the same, advantageous setup, but scored just once, on Mike Yastrzemski’s fielder’s choice ground ball. A run in each inning, and the hosts are likely winners, and building on a 41-33 record. Instead, they’re stuck in a 3-6 stretch against beatable opponents.

The Giants finished 2 of 9 with runners in scoring position, intriguing, in that the two successes were from guys that could pick it up and change things. Evan Longoria homered in the first inning, and his infield single loaded the bases in the third. Lamonte Wade Jr. returned to action–after missing 61 of the first 73 games–and singled in the seventh. Wade was put in a tough spot, hitting against a tough lefty Gregory Soto in the ninth, when the Giants normally would have pinch-hit, but at that point in the game on Wednesday, Kapler had expended all his hitting options.

Alex Wood–who started, and gave up the decisive two-run homer to Detroit’s Eric Haase in the sixth–best expressed the agony of his own shortcomings and the teams saying “these are the days that are just extremely frustrating. I felt really good. I thought it was the best my slider’s been in a long time, if not (this entire season). So to have that (home run) happen at the end really sucked, to be honest. Just really frustrating.”

“It starts with our staff. Webby and ‘Los have put up their lines. The rest of us have to step our s— up,” Wood said, applauding his staff mates Logan Webb and Carlos Rodón. “Start having the lines match up with how we’re feeling and putting up some zeroes and finishing some starts with zero or one run on the board. A lot of those one-run games are on us.”

There’s some truth to Wood saying this is not all on the offense. And, once again, this is a team with a winning record and a clear-path to the newly, expanded playoffs. But off a 107-win campaign, something missing or somethings are missing. To Wood’s point, the Giants ERA of 3.99 puts them just above the league average. Last season, their staff had a National League top-three ERA virtually the entire season. Defensively, the Giants have committed 41 errors, also a league average number, but reflective of how poor the defense has been, the Giants defensive efficiency, as defined by baseball-reference.com is in the bottom four in all of baseball. What’s that last bit really mean? The Giants could suffer even worse defensively going forward, so far, they’ve made defensive mistakes, but in a lot of cases, not suffered run scored against them.

The Giants open a three-game set with the White Sox on Friday at Oracle Park. Lance Lynn of Chicago and Alex Cobb will get the starting assignments.

Giants Rodon was dealing and Yastrzemski’s great defense with two RBIs in 4-3 win over Tigers

San Francisco Giants pitcher Carlos Rodon pitches against the Detroit Tigers line up in the top of the first inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue Jun 28, 2022 (AP News photo)

Detroit (28-45). 3. 10. 0

San Francisco (40-33). 4. 7. 0

Tuesday, June 28, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Clichés are the damnedest things. The word comes from a 19th century French printing technique that worked like a sort of mechanical stamp pad, along the lines of the Address-o-Graph, in which dog tags were pressed into an ink pad and then against envelopes. That’s how mass mailings were addressed before the advent of computers.

This etymology has given the cliché a bad reputation, only partially deserved. Clichés can be boring, lifeless, repetitious. They also can be precise and illuminating. But not always.

Take that old baseball cliché, the June swoon. It would be comforting-providing cold comfort, but comfort nonetheless, if we could believe that the San Francisco Giants (40-33) were suffering a June swoon, but they’re not.

They entered the month at 27-23, .540, 6-1/2 games behind the division leading Dodgers. They came to play today at 39-33, 5.42. Their opponents, the Detroit Tigers (28-45), left May at 21-30, .412, eight games behind the Minnesota Twins in the American League Central Race.

They slipped to 28-44, .389 at game time, still trailing the Twinkees, but now by 12 games. These teams have been swooning a long time.

One Giant came to the park this evening on the heels of a great month. Carlos Rodón’s combination of four seamers, sliders, curves, and changeups had earned him a record of 2-1, 1.20, with an opponents’ BA of .159 since May Day.

Overall, he was 6-4, 2.70 for the season. He exited the game after hurling six excellent innings and surrendering a lone run, which was earned, on seven hits and no walks, although he did throw a wild pitch.

He notched four punch outs and made 86 deliveries, 56 of which were counted as strikes, lowering his ERA to 2,62. He was rewarded with the win, bringing his W-L numbers to 7-4.

Rodón’s opposite number for the Detroiters, Tarik Skubal, Rodón’s opposite number, hadn’t been as successful.. The Tiger lefty did have a June swoon, going 2-3, 5.91 in the past 25 days, making him 5-5, 3.63 for the year.

He had to work hard tonight, and although his activity wasn’t particularly efficient, it was adequate. It took him 108 pitches, of which 42 were balls to complete his 4-2/3 innings on the mound.

He allowed three runs, all earned, but one of them came after he had left the game, which he did after yielding four hits and four walks against five strikeouts. He would take the loss to make him 5-6 and raise his ERA to 3.75.

The home team jumped out to an early lead. Austin Slater got caught looking at a third strike to start the bottom of the first. Then Wilmer Flores waited out a full count walk and motored to third on Joc Pederson’s opposite field down the line double against the shift.

The runners held their bases when Darin Ruf grounded out to second baseman Jonathan Schoop playing in the shift to the left of the sack, but they both scored on Evan Longoria’s single to center, giving San Francisco a 2-0 advantage.

San Francisco put another deuce on the board in the bottom of the fifth. With two down, Skubal walked Darin Ruf. That brought Evan Longoria to the plate and Wily Peralta out of the bullpen. The Giants’ third baseman hit a little number in front of the plate and beat Peralta’s throw to first, putting runners on first and second.

They were on second and third after the Detroit reliever uncorked a wild pitch with Yastrzemski at the plate. Yaz followed with a single to right that brought in both runners. One run was charged against each pitcher, and the frame ended with a 4-0 lead for the home team.

Detroit finally put a run on the board in the top of the sixth. With one out, Robbie Grossman smacked Rodón’s favorite pitch, the four seamer into deep right field for a double and went to third on a wild pitch to Miguel Cabrera, who singled to left for his 24th RBI of the season, which gave him 1,828 so far in his 19+ year career. It kept the Bengals in the game, 4-1.

John Brebbia took over SF’s pitching duties in the top of the seventh, and Detroit took advantage of Rodón’s departure. Willi Castro led off with a double to deep right center, and Jeimer Candelario doubled down with an automatic two bagger to straight away center that halved the Giant’s lead to 4-2 before Brebbia recovered and retired the next three batters.

Andrew Chafin replaced Peralta in the home half of the frame and allowed nothing more harmful than a walk to Flores and fly out to the left field warning track by Longoria.

Dominic Leone, coming in to pitch the eighth, retired his first two batters, with a little help from an acrobatic catch by Yaz of Cabrera’s liner to right for the second out. Right after that, he walked Riley Greene and Spencer Torkelson.

Willi Castro sliced a single to left, scoring Greene with Detroit’s third tally and moving Torkelson to second. Leone and Candelario battled to a full count, and then the bases were loaded as Candelario managed to check his swing on a cutter that missed the plate.

Enter Camilo Doval. He got two quick strikes on Schoop, who then fouled off a cut fastball and took another for a 1-2 count. He swung at a slider and missed.

Joe Jiménez, coming into the game for Detroit in the bottom of the eighth, retired the side in order, keeping the Giant’s slim margen a mere one run at 4-3.

Doval returned to the hill for the ninth, looking for his 12th save in 14 opportunities. He struck out Eric Haase, who had entered the game as catcher in the bottom of the seventh.

Doval then walked the veteran Robbie Grossman on four pitches, bringing up the veteran Javier Báez, who grounded into a 6-4-3 game ending double play. Or was it? Detroit appealed the call at first. But it was upheld, and San Francisco had won a thriller.

The two fairly evenly matched orange and black teams will go at it again tomorrow at 12:45 with Detroit sending Rony García (2-2, 4.57) against San Francisco’s Alex Wood (5-6, 5.05) to conclude this two game series at Oracle Park.

A’s Montas fails to get run support in loss to Yanks 2-1; New York has 2-0 series lead on Oakland

New York Yankees starter JP Sears throws to the Oakland A’s lineup in the top of the fourth inning at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx on Tue Jun 28, 2022 (AP News photo)

By Jessica Kwong

NEW YORK.—Oakland Athletics right-handed pitcher Frankie Montas held the league-leading New York Yankees to two runs in six innings, but his teammates came up short on offense and lost 2-1 in game two of the series at Yankee Stadium on Tuesday evening.

Montas had an impressive first start at Yankee Stadium. However, the A’s could not get a runner past second base until the ninth inning.

“I can’t go out there and pitch and worry about run support. I’ve got to do my job and try to keep the team in the game,” said Montas. “I mean, they’re trying to score runs. It’s not like they don’t want to.”

Oakland has scored one or less runs in a dozen of Montas’ 16 starts – and been shut out four times.

Montas tied his season-high with 105 pitches, allowed four hits, two walks and struck out seven. Among the seven he struck out was Aaron Judge, who leads the MLB in homers. A’s manager Mark Kotsay acknowledged Montas’ contribution to the team, as his record fell to 3-8.

“Frankie pitched great again and continues to go out and give us a chance to win,” said Kotsay. “He pitched six innings against a great team, and gets a loss for it.”

Despite not getting wins for his efforts, Montas has not appeared extremely frustrated, said Kotsay, praising his attitude.

“You don’t have to encourage Frankie. Frankie’s a beast. He’s going to keep pitching,” Kotsay said. “He’s a leader on our staff and a competitor. He knows where we’re at. We’ve had our struggles scoring runs.”

In the first inning, Jose Trevino singled on a ground ball to right field and DJ LeMahieu scored, putting the Yankees up 1-0. Marwin Gonzalez hit a home run on a fly ball to right center field in the second, boosting New York’s lead to 2-0.

Elvis Andrus in the ninth inning singled on a ground ball to center field, allowing Sean Murphy to score and cutting the Yankees’ lead to 2-1. But it was too little too late.

The Yankees improved to 55-20, their best 75-game start in MLB since the 2001 Seattle Mariners. Meanwhile, the A’s dropped to 25-51, the worst record in the big leagues. The A’s are 2-3 in their ten-game road trip that ends in Seattle.

First pitch for the last game of the three-game series at Yankee Stadium is at 10:05 a.m. PT on Wednesday. The A’s will start Cole Irvin (2-5, 3.29) he’ll be opposed by the Yankees Jameson Taillon (8-1, 3.19).

He was a Giant? Manny Mota he was a Giant for just a pinch. By Tony the Tiger Hayes

Former San Francisco Giant Manny Mota was a Giant for one season in 1962 (photo from Tony the Tiger)

Manny Mota: He Was A Giant For Just A Pinch

Manny Mota – OF – 1962 – # 38

He was a Giant?

By Tony the Tiger Hayes

The epitome of Dodger Blue stability, Mota – the game’s most renown pinch-hitter – is now well into his seventh decade of-employment with Los Angeles.

The amiable, seemingly ageless Mota is one of the game’s good guys. Born in 1938, Mota has been linked to the Dodgers since the late 1960s. The Dominican Republic native has been a player, coach, mentor, broadcaster, and goodwill ambassador for Los Angeles. And he’s done it all with class and style.

Despite his long ties, to Enemy No. 1 from the Southland, it’s next to impossible to dislike the humble career .304 batter.

If that sounds like we’re describing a Class-Act Giant ala Juan Marichal and Willie McCovey there’s a good reason. Mota was wearing Orange & Black long before adopting Dodger Blue – playing six seasons in the Giants organization before moving on to the Colt .45s, Pirates and Expos. A trade brought Mota to Los Angeles in 1969 and he’s been there ever since.

Mota played just one season in the big leagues with San Francisco, appearing in 47 games for the 1962 Giants – San Francisco’s first World Series participators.

Why was he a Giant?

One of the first clubs to seriously scout and sign players out of Latin America, the then New York Giants inked Mota in 1957, a year before the club relocated to Northern California.

Just 19 when he arrived in the States, Mota would lead the 1957 Class D Michigan City White Caps with a .314 average. He advanced a rung in the organization each year – making his debut in the Giants major league spring training camp in 1962.

Despite being overshadowed by established Giants stars such as Orlando Cepeda, Willie Mays and McCovey, the sharp-hitting Mota still stood out.

After sizzling an inside -the -park home run and pounding a two-run double in one spring exhibition, the press began to take notice.

“Fort Knox is not much tougher to break into than the San Francisco Giants outfield. But rookie Manny Mota is giving the later project an all-out try,” read one UPI nationwide dispatch from Arizona.

Mota would make the Giants ‘62 opening day roster as a backup outfielder and infielder.

Foreshadowing his future as a clutch batter, Mota’s first MLB hit – an eighth inning single off RHP Jim Brosnan, that went beyond the reach of Reds 2B Cookie Rojas – drove home Harvey Kuenn with the winning run in an 8-6 outcome at Cincinnati (4/21/62).

Playing off the bench would eventually become Mota’s ticket to fame and a long career, but it was his downfall as a Giants rookie.

Mota never did crack the Giants vaunted starting lineup and spent the bulk of his time with the G-Men scraping together playing time. Under manager Alvin Dark, Mota appeared in a starting lineup just a dozen times in his four months with the big league club.

Ironically, Mota was, frankly a crummy pinch hitter with San Francisco, batting just 1-for-16 for a puny .067 average coming cold into a game.

After he grounded out as a pinch-hitter in a 8-6 road loss to the Dodgers (7/28/62), Mota’s overall average sank to .176. The Giants had seen enough and sent Mota to Double-AA El Paso, swapping him out for hot-hitting farmhand OF Carl Boles.

Mota never made it back to the majors with San Francisco.

Before & After

A trade in exchange for IF Joe Amalfitano sent Mota and LHP Dick LeMay to Houston after the ‘62 season. The Colt .45s then flipped Mota to Pittsburgh before he had a chance to play a home game in Texas.

Beginning in 1963, Mota found stability with the Pirates, who like the Giants, openly recruited Latino and African American ball players.

Counting superstar Roberto Clemente as a good friend and mentor, Mota’s confidence soared in Pittsburgh. In 1966-67 Mota batted .332 and .321 respectively as a fourth outfielder.

In the Steel City, Mota was a prized pupil of influential batting coach Harry Walker and he watched up close as a burly contact hitter by the name of Smokey Burgess ambled from the bench on a nightly basis swinging a bat that resembled a two-by-four. Years later Mota would break Burgess’ all-time pinch-hit record.

While Mota was a frequently used pinch-hitter with the Pirates, it didn’t become his thing until after he landed with the Dodgers in 1969.

The moment Mota stepped into Dodger Stadium he became their most reliable pinch option. But initially he wasn’t limited to substitute hitting.

For several seasons with Los Angeles, Mota provided a keen pinch-bat and platoon option – often sharing LF starts with the left-handed swingers Willie Crawford and Bill Buckner.

But his most memorable moments seemed to come as a mid-game replacement batter.

One of Mota’s most consequential pinch-hits came at Candlestick Park during the classic Giants/Dodgers pennant race of 1971. The Giants began September with what seemed like a comfortable eight game lead over L.A. But then the Dodgers got super hot and San Francisco cooled – at least figuratively.

When the Dodgers dropped into Candlestick during the height of a blazing Indian Summer for a quick two-game set, the Giants lead had been whittled down to three games.

The Dodgers won the opener 5-4 in a game that featured a major brawl between the clubs (9/13/71).Tensions and and the temperature were still running hot the next night. When Gaylord Perry threw the game’s first pitch to Maury Wills, the ‘Stick temperature read 91 degrees.

Led by a pair of Bobby Bonds long balls, S.F. took a 5-3 advantage to the 9th. This one looked to be headed to the win column for the Giants.

But the lead quickly melted like the last unsold cup of chocolate malt in the bottom of a vendor’s aluminum basket.

Duke Sims led off the ninth with a broken bat single to center off Giants RHP Jerry Johnson. Pinch-hitter Bill Sudakis blooped a one-bagger to right and then the speedy Wills reached on a bunt to load the bases with no-outs.

The Giants brought in LHP John Cumberland while the Dodgers called on Mota to bat for Buckner.

On the first pitch, Mota crushed a deep double to left to score three runs. 48-year-old reliever Hoyt Wilhelm came on to close out the big 6-5 Dodgers win.

Dodgers manager Walter Alston compared the nail biter to a World Series contest.

“We wanted to win this game so badly,” said Mota who was doused with cold beer after the emotional victory. “I thought about the 25 guys on our team when I went up there to swing.”

But in the end, San Francisco would win the NL West flag by one game over the Dodgers.

In 1973, Mota got off to such a hot start that the Dodgers simply kept him in the lineup. When the time came to select an All-Star team, NL manager Sparky Anderson didn’t hesitate to include Mota and his league leading .351 average to the squad.

Naturally, Mota, age 35, appeared as a pinch-hitter in the ‘73 Kansas City hosted Mid-Summer Classic . He grounded out in his only career All-Star Game.

Beginning in 1974 the Dodgers changed their approach. They went with a set everyday lineup and Mota was made a full-time pinch-hitter. It worked. Mota rapped out 15 pinch-hits, resulting in a remarkable 16 RBI. The strategy took Los Angeles all the way to the ‘74 World Series before they tapped out to Oakland in five games.

From that point going forward, Mota was anointed King of the Pinch-Hit. From 1975 though his final game in 1982, Mota would remarkably make just three more starts in the field.

Though he was one of game’s most senior active players, Mota’s skill set seemed to get better within the strict boundaries of pinch-hitting.

“There aren’t many hitters who can do what Manny can do,” said the Dodgers Alston, the architect of Mota’s role. “He hits better as a pinch-hitter than a regular. He thrives on pressure.”

Los Angeles Times columnist Jim Murray put it more succinctly, writing: “(Mota) could get wood on a bullet.”

Mota hammered that point home on the final day of the 1977 season when the 39-year-old destroyed a blazing J.R. Richard fastball for a pinch-hit home run at the cavernous Astrodome.

Mota was at his apex in 1977-78 when the Dodgers went to the World Series in back-to-back campaigns.

In 1977, Mota batted 14-for-36 (.407) in the pinch for the pennant winners. Mota smoothed the Dodgers path to the Fall Classic with a ninth inning RBI pinch-double in Game 3 of the playoffs at Philadelphia – leading to a comeback Los Angeles victory.

In 1978, Mota compiled a .303 pinch average (10-for-33) with 6 RBI.

The Dodgers even added another full-time mature pinch-hitter during this time frame in left-handed swatter Vic Davillio.

In 1979, just over 17 years to the day that the Giants demoted Mota to the minors in part due to his failures as a pinch hitter – Mota, age 41, broke the all-time pinch-hit record – bypassing old teammate Burgess by stroking career pinch-hit No. 145 off Cubs RHP Lynn McGlothen at Dodger Stadium (9/2/79).

Mota finished his playing days with 150 career pinch-hit and an even .300 average in that role.

20 years later, Lenny Harris would break Mota’s pinch mark. Ex-Giant Mark Sweeney also passed Mota on the pinch-hit list.

He Never Had a (Giants) Bobblehead Day. But…

Willie Mays – not Manny Mota – was the reason the Mets packed out a raucous four-game series vs. the visiting Giants on the first post-Memorial Day weekend of 1962.

For the first time since the Giants confirmed their move to Northern California five years earlier, the Orange & Black were back on their old Coogan’s Bluff home turf.

While the stumble-bum expansion Mets were taking baby steps to popularity and the Giants still had a hard-core Big Apple fan base – it was clear from the first click of the Polo Grounds turnstiles that the only thing that mattered was the return of Mays.

A true New York folk hero, Mays had brought the basket catch, stick ball in Harlem and a 1954 World Series title to New York before his relocated to the City by the Bay in 1958.

The New York papers churned out tons of copy anticipating Willie’s return and from the the moment Mays peeked his head out of the Polo Grounds’ unique center field clubhouse, New York showered the “Say Hey Kid” with welcome home love.

Mays didn’t disappoint, clobbering three round -trippers and collecting six RBIs over the course of the a four-game Giants sweep that brought in 118,845 ticket buyers – the most to attend a Mets single-series in their maiden year.

Those paying attention to the on-field action and not just the fight action in the stands – there were several big-time Donnybrooks – would have also witnessed Mota’s first big league pinch-hit.

After starting his Giants career batting 0-for-6 in the pinch, Mota came through in the matinee of the Saturday twin-bill. The Giants were already up 8-1 in the fourth when Mota was subbed for Jimmy Davenport with two outs. Facing fellow 24-year-old rookie RHP Bob Moorhead – Mota stroked a single past New York 3B Felix Mantilla. The Giants won 10-1 (6/2/62).

Giant Footprint

Though he’s now dropped to third on the all-time pinch-hit list, Mota will forever be the People’s Pinch-Hitter.

The writers of the zany 1980 comedy “Airplane!” even wrote the lovable hitter into the film’s hilarious dry-witted script. Robert Hays’ pilot character hears voices in his head saying: “Now batting for Pedro Borbon, Manny Mota… Mota… Mota.”

Given that Mota’s playing days extended well into his 40s, it’s tempting call him a literal Silver Slugger. But the thing is, Mota never seemed to age. He didn’t sprout a gray hair or even change his look for that matter.

While other athletes adopted the daring mod styles of the 1960s and ‘70s, the forever clean-cut Mota never showed up at the ball park sporting aviator shades, love beads and a goatee.

Mota also never forgot his roots and for more than 20 seasons returned the D.R. to play for and manage Licey in winter ball in his beloved home land.

That consistency also showed itself on the field. After hitting .176 as a Giants rookie, Mota would never bat below .275 again.

To borrow a phase, that was just…”Manny being Manny.”

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: MLB will not charge A’s with relocation fee if they move to Vegas; A’s back in loss column after losing lead to Yanks

An overview of the Resort Corridor located by the Stratosphere and the Mirage Hotel on the Las Vegas Strip is a location that the A’s and the city of Las Vegas are interested in building a new ballpark. (file photo Las Vegas Review Journal)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 MLB is leaning towards Las Vegas make no mistake about it and didn’t hide the fact announcing Monday that the Oakland A’s will not be charge a relocation fee if they end up moving to Las Vegas.

#2 When the hockey Golden Knights moved to Vegas they were charged a $500 million relocation fee and the football Raiders were charged $378 million for a relocation fee. When asked why MLB will not charge the relocation fee to the A’s MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred refused to make a comment.

#3 The A’s are averaging 8,358 fans per game at the Oakland Coliseum. The A’s are 30th the bottom in MLB attendance behind the 29th place Miami Marlins. MLB by waiving the relocation fee makes the appearance that they want to make the path to Las Vegas as easy as possible for the A’s.

#4 The Resort Corridor is a area that the A’s and Clark County Commissioner Michael Naft were pleased with MLB’s waiving of the relocation fee and the location is not far off the strip close to the Mirage Hotel.

#5 With all this under consideration if the Bay Commission passes the Port usage for the A’s the A’s need to get past the two environmental lawsuits from Southern Pacific and Amtrak. Then the next hurdle the affordable housing between the A’s and the City of Oakland.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead Spanish play by play on Le Grande 1010 KIQI San Francisco and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

A’s five run third inning rally turns on it’s head: Yanks make six run 7th inning rally stand up in win 9-5

New York Yankees’ Aaron Judge gets congratulated after scoring a run in the bottom of the seventh against the the Oakland Athletics, Monday, June 27, 2022, at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx (AP News photo)  

By Jessica Kwong

NEW YORK. – The struggling Oakland Athletics appeared to be on their way to upsetting the best team in baseball – but the New York Yankees scored six times in the seventh inning and sealed a 9-5 victory at Yankee Stadium on Monday night.

Anthony Rizzo hit a homer to right center off Paul Blackburn’s fastball to put the Yankees up 1-0 in the first inning.

In the third inning, Ramón Laureano doubled on a fly ball to left fielder Aaron Hicks. The umpire reviewed the play to see if it was a three-run homer, but the call on the field stood, and the game was tied.

With the bases loaded, Elvis Andrus hit a double, allowing Christian Bethancourt, Laureano and Sean Murphy to score and putting the A’s up 4-1. Then Sheldon Neuse hit a single and Andrus scored, boosting Oakland to 5-1.

In the fourth inning, Giancarlo Stanton hit a home run on a fly ball to left center, pushing the score 5-2.

Leading MVP contender Aaron Judge singled on a line drive to left fielder Tony Kemp, deflected by Andrus, and DJ LeMahieu scored, to reduce Oakland’s lead to 5-3.

A’s starter Blackburn threw 91 pitches in five innings, allowed five hits, three errors, two walks, seven strikeouts and two homers.

“Couple of solo shots there, and then in the fifth one that tips off Elvis’ glove,” said Blackburn.

The right-handed pitcher added that he felt his sinker was the best it has been so far this season.

“Being able to move it to both sides of the plate,” Blackburn said, “Threw a couple of big change-ups today when I needed it. I felt good.”

The decisive seventh inning started with Aaron Judge and Stanton reaching base after swings hit catcher Sean Murphy’s glove. Murphy was called twice for catcher’s interference.

“Murphy was reaching in to get the ball, he’s one of the best at getting a low strike call,” said A’s manager Mark Kotsay. “It impacted that inning so it was an unusual night for that to happen.”

Josh Donaldson doubled on a sharp line drive to left field, then Jose Trevino doubled on a line drive, allowing Stanton and Donaldson to score. Marwin Gonzalez singled and Trevino scored, putting the Yankees up 9-5.

The A’s loss in game one of the three-game series dropped their record to 25-50, the worst in the league. Meanwhile, the Yankees (53-20) have a 12-game lead over the American League East. It was New York’s 23rd comeback.

First pitch for game two on Tuesday is at 4:05 p.m. PT. — The A’s will be starting Frankie Montas (3-7, 3.21) and for the Yankees JP Sears (2-0, 0.00).

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: A’s at Yankees A Book End Series

The Oakland A’s Sheldon Neuse takes a hack for a RBI single in the top of the third inning at Yankees Stadium in the Bronx against hosts the New York Yankees on Mon Jun 27, 2022 (AP News photo)

A’s at Yankees: A Book End Series

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

After winning their 3-game series in Kansas City, the Oakland A’s are now in New York to face the New York Yankees for the first time this season. A three-game series, Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. against the team with the best record in major league baseball, Yankees 53-20 will play the A’s 25-49, with the other 28 MLB teams in the middle.

The great disparity in records doesn’t mean the Yankees will sweep. The beauty of baseball, with so many games during a marathon of a season is that at any given time the team that is a long shot can come out on top.

Although these teams (at this time during the season) closing into the conclusion of the first half are at the top and bottom of major league baseball, one on a pace to win 100 or more games and the other one to lose 100 or more games.

After this series in the Bronx, the A’s will have 88 games left and the Yankees 89 to complete the 2022 regular season schedule. The Yankees could beat the best record for a regular season, which belongs to the 2016 Seattle Mariners 116-46, as well as the 1906 Chicago Cubs who also won 116 games.

In 2001 the Oakland A’s ended with 102-60 and 14 games behind Seattle, that year the A’s played to a .630 percentage. The next season, 2002 A’s had another terrific season 103-59 as they played to a .636 percentage. Both times they failed to win the league and advance to the World Series.

After the Bronx, the A’s will fly across the country to Seattle to face the division rivals Mariners for 4 games and then back to the Oakland Coliseum for a six-game home-stand on the 4th of July for 3 games against Toronto and 3 against Houston. Kansas City is the only team with a losing record that the A’s will face during this stretch.

After this week in New York, the Yankees will play the Athletics once more this year, at Oakland on August 25-28 a four-game series. At that time they could be on their way to the best record ever. But what we can predict is those four games at the Oakland Coliseum will be by far the best attendance for a series this season at the home of the A’s.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the vice president of the Major League Baseball Hispanic Heritage Hall of Fame Museum and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants At The Breaking Point: Poor play of late could send the 2022 season spiraling out of control

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–Not only did the Giants perform terribly on Sunday, they did so in embarrassing fashion.

That’s not a good combination.

Innings that spiraled out of control from a pitching standpoint, to lack of hustle and professionalism, the Giants did a little of everything in falling behind 7-0 and losing 10-3 to the NL Central-last Reds.

“I don’t feel the need to call any one individual out. We had a few mental lapses,” manager Gabe Kapler said. “We just have to do a better job of concentrating, particularly when games are starting to move fast and seemingly spinning a little out of control.”

When you’re coming off a 107-win division title, you won’t look the same. So many things went right for the Giants last season, it may take years to equal all that good fortune. But right now the Giants are struggling defensively, getting one too many disastrous, pitching performances and not hitting anywhere near what they were a year ago.

What stands out even more is the Giants aren’t bad, in fact they’re just outside of postseason position. But they’ve been less than competitive against good teams, and just plain mediocre against bad teams. Right now, the latter sticks out because the Giants have a favorable schedule in terms of opponents, but they haven’t done anything to take advantage of it.

“I just don’t think it matters the fact that it was the Reds or any other team. If we play good baseball, we beat good teams,” Kapler said when asked why the team struggled so in losing twice in a home series to Cincinnati.

Brandon Crawford was placed on the injured list (for only the third time in his career) after a collision in Atlanta last week, and his return–based on his play–seemed premature. Crawford’s defense suffered Friday and he was given Sunday off. Now, the banged-up shortstop will get at least nine days to recover.

Anthony DeSclafani started Sunday, recorded eight outs, then the proverbial roof caved in during the third inning with two outs and a runner on. The next six batters racked up five hits and a walk, and DeSclafani, just off the injured list, departed trailing 6-0. DeSclafani won 10 of his 13 decisions before the 2021 All-Star break, and hasn’t done much since outside sign a three-year deal to return. After missing the last 60 days, he’s 0-2 with a 9.95 ERA.

Evan Longoria homered on Friday and Saturday, but those came after a 19-game stretch in which the third baseman had just three extra-base hits and none of three home runs.

Luis Gonzales was going gangbusters then his back tightened and he landed on the injured list. Gonzales should return this week, but now that he’s assumed such an important role, can he keep it up?

Throughout the roster, stories like these four are present, bringing into question what the team’s ceiling is this season? The trade deadline should yield some needed additions, but will transpire before that. The Giants have dropped six of eight, and the Dodgers and Padres aren’t likely to wait much longer before they play better and force the Giants to give up on their hopes of repeating as division champions.

On Tuesday, the Giants open a two-game set with the Tigers and starting pitcher Tarik Skubal, who was outstanding in May (five starts, 1.45 ERA), and just the opposite so far in June (five starts, 5.86 ERA). Carlos Rodon pitches for the Giants after he suffered a hard-luck loss in Atlanta last week.

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: DeScalfani simply got rocked in third inning Sunday; Giants host Tigers for two games starting Tuesday

The San Francisco Giants Anthony DeSclafani is seen here pitching to the Cincinnati Reds line up in the top of the first inning at Oracle Park on Sun Jun 26, 2022. DeSclafani was later rocked for seven runs in the top of the third inning. (AP News photo)

On the Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic:

#1 Marko it was just too much Cincinnati Reds (25-47) on Sunday afternoon at Oracle Park where the San Francisco Giants (39-33) go lit up 10-3 thanks to a seven run rally by the Reds that pretty much put it away.

#2 Giant starter Anthony DeSclafani was touched up in just 2.2 innings of work, giving up seven hits and seven earned runs to say he was struggling was an understatement.

#3 The Reds Nick Senzel said everybody in the line up was contributing and when that happens the Reds could be a dangerous club. Senzel wound up with three singles in the ball game.

#4 Reds pitcher Terrry Mahle did his part on holding the Giants back in his starting role with 6.2 innings of work, four hits, three earned runs, just one walk and seven strikeouts.

#5 The Giants have Monday off and open up a brief two game series against the Detroit Tigers (28-44) on Tuesday and Wednesday. For Tuesday the Tigers will be sending Tarik Skubal (5-5, 5.63) against the Giants Carlos Rodon (6-4, 2.70) a 6:40 pm PDT first pitch at Oracle Park.

Marko is filling in for Morris Phillips on the San Francisco Giants podcast at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s relieved to win two straight; Big test tonight at Yankee Stadium

The Oakland A’s hitter Seth Brown turns on a sixth inning pitch for his tenth home run of the season against the Kansas City Royals in the top of the sixth at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City on Sun Jun 26, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 Oakland A’s (25-49) for the second day in a row put together back to back wins this one coming on Sunday at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City with a 5-3 win over the Kansas City Royals (26-45).

#2 The A’s got offensive punch something they had been missing for most of the month of June when the A’s Seth Brown belted his tenth home run for 2022 and Nick Allen slugged a couple of hits which turned out to be RBIs.

#3 Things started looking up until the Royals answered right back in the bottom of the sixth inning with a couple of runs of their own to tie it up 2-2.

#4 The Royals Carlos Santana in the sixth hit a two RBI single and Edward Oliveras got a bloop single that scored three runs for all of Kansas City’s offense for the afternoon. With the Royals in front 3-2 the A’s came right back and scored twice in the top of the seventh thanks to Nick Allen’s two run RBI the A’s then went up 4-3. Cristian Pache hit for an RBI single that gave Oakland some cushion for the eventual win 5-3.

#5 The A’s head to the Big Apple and face the hottest team in the Majors on Monday night the New York Yankees (50-20) the Yankees have won six of their last ten games. The A’s will start Paul Blackburn (6-3, 2.97) he’ll be opposed by Jordan Montgomery (3-1, 2.97) a 4:05 pm PDT first pitch.

Barbara does the Oakland A’s podcasts Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com