San Francisco Giants podcast with Charlie O: Giants face another first place team as Brewers open 3 game series tonight

Milwaukee Brewers shortstop Rowdy Tellez (11) argues with umpire Jeremy Riggs as the Brewers come to Oracle Park in San Francisco tonight to open a four game series with the San Francisco Giants (USA Today file photo)

On the Giants podcast with Charlie O:

#1 Charlie O Giants going well they have won eight of their last 11 games and when they got into Cobb County at Suntrust Park on Friday were met by a Atlanta Braves club that showed them why their a first place team taking the first game of the three game series 6-5.

#2 The Giants answered right back on Saturday getting a 5-0 shutout victory behind starter Logan Webb who pitched seven innings and gave up five hits. Webb had all his stuff working against the Braves line up on Saturday

#3 Sunday the Giants got shutout in a laugher 9-0 the Braves used five pitchers to accomplish the shutout.

#4 Charlie this is a Braves club that the Giants could very well end up meeting in the post season seeing the Braves at this juncture of the season does that give the Giants a leg up with one more month to go until the post season starts?

#5 Kris Bryant has been a huge help especially with the bat since he’s joined the Giants. The Giants would like him to sign on and stay with the club for next season but everything boils down to money and a good contract. How important do you see it for the Giants to have Bryant sign on and be at spring training for the Giants next season?

#6 The Giants will be facing another first place club the Milwaukee Brewers who hold a 7.5 game lead on the second place Cincinnati Reds. The Brewers have won five of their last ten as they pay a visit to the Giants at Oracle Park for the first of four games which starts tonight at 6:40pm PDT.

Charlie O is filling in for Morris Phillips who does the San Francisco Giants podcasts each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: Bassitt wants back in before end of regular season

Oakland A’s pitcher Chris Bassitt wants to return to his starting role before the end of the regular season. Bassitt met with the media before Sat Aug 28th’s game at the Oakland Coliseum against the New York Yankees (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 How important was it for the club to see and be able to talk with A’s pitcher Chris Bassitt before the start of Saturday’s game against the Yankees?

#2 Morale is such an important thing in baseball and the A’s had been going bad with a five losing streak they ended up snapping and the Bassitt visit might have done wonders he was on the players minds ever since he took a line drive to the face off Chicago White Sox Brian Goodwin’s at bat on Aug 17th.

#3 Bassitt winningest pitcher on the A’s staff at 12-4 ERA 3.22 has been impressive all year but can he be the same when he gets back, will he be off track, rusty and wobbly when he returns. His spirits are great, he’s healing fast, and he’s got a real go get em attitude about returning.

#4 Bassitt sat in the A’s dugout before Saturday’s game speaking with the media before last Saturday’s game and said he hopes everything progresses, that he can impress manager Bob Melvin in bullpen sessions whenever that starts he’s ready to get back in. Doctors who performed the surgery on Bassitt in Chicago said it will take two weeks. Bassitt hopes to get back in sooner.

#5 The A’s have the day off today and are in Detroit on Tuesday for a 4:10 pm PDT first pitch at Comerica Park. The A’s snapped a five game losing streak on Saturday defeating the New York Yankees 3-2, the A’s trail the Yankees in the AL Wild Card standings by 3.5 games. The Tigers who are out of the Wild Card hunt by 12.5 games have lost six of their last ten going into Tuesday night’s game.

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

Kemp, Blackburn, Chapman key group effort in A’s critical, 3-1 win over the Yankees in series finale

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND–The A’s hope Sunday’s rousing finish signals the beginning of a fourth chapter of what has been a very, complicated story to their season.

If so, the dramatic elements were present, and the timing couldn’t be any be better for an Oakland bunch that simply has been hard to figure out.

The A’s got a two-run homer from Tony Kemp in the eighth inning to break up a 1-1 tie and propel them to a series split with the Wild Card-leading Yankees with a 3-1 win. The A’s avoided a 2-7 finish to their homestand, which would have been their worst showing since 2001. Instead, they gained ground on the Yankees, Red Sox in the wild card hunt and moved to within 5 1/2 games of the Astros in the race for the AL West.

In a game dominated by pitching and defense–both scintillating and head-scratchingly poor–Kemp’s home run was only the second extra-base hit of the evening, and came one pitch after the first, a scalding double by Mark Canha that set the stage for Kemp’s heroics.

“The last thing I was trying to do was hit a home run right there,” Kemp said. “I saw a good pitch and put my best swing on it, and I think I was as surprised as everybody else was in the stands.”

After opening the season 0-6, the A’s soared to a stretch of 44 wins in 65 games, including a 13-game win streak. Since then they’re 28-32 and were a season-worst 3 1/2 games out of a playoff spot entering Sunday’s contest. To put it mildly, Sunday’s stand against the Yankees, just off their own 13-game win streak, was put up or shut up.

Both starting pitchers were outstanding. New York’s Jordan Montgomery went six innings, allowing six hits and a run on Matt Chapman’s RBI fielder’s choice ground out. Paul Blackburn put up five, scoreless innings allowing five hits and a walk while departing with a 1-0 lead.

The A’s bullpen appeared equal to the task of backing up Blackburn, but were burned by consecutive errors in the seventh. Catcher Yan Gomes dropped a foul pop between third and home that extended Anthony Rizzo’s at-bat, and allowed him to deliver a ground ball that Chapman misplayed between his legs for an error that allowed Gary Sanchez to score from second and tie the game.

The back-to-back errors came during a streak in which the A’s committed just three miscues in their last 14 games.

In the eighth, the A’s took advantage of Chad Green, the third New York reliever who gave up Canha’s double and Kemp’s home run. Reliever Deolis Guerra pitched a scoreless eighth to earn the win for the A’s.

The A’s back-to-back wins follow a stretch of six, consecutive losses and losses in 10 of 12 games. On a positive note, the stretch precedes a three-game series in Detroit that starts Tuesday, followed by a trip to Toronto and home games against the White Sox. The A’s have had success this season against AL Central opponents, which they hope continues against the Tigers and Sox.

On Tuesday, Cole Irvin is scheduled to get the start for Oakland in a matchup with Hayward-native Tarik Skubal, who has a 8-11 record on the season.

Braves shutout Giants 9-0 to end road trip on a down note

Atlanta Braves pitcher Ian Anderson throws against the San Francisco Giants line up at Suntrust Park in Cobb County as Anderson and five relievers combined for a five hit shutout on Sun Aug 29, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

Jorge Soler loves to hit home runs and he showed it twice over the weekend in a big series between National League Division leaders.

Soler, who hit a three-run home run on Friday night, added a solo home run to lead off the bottom of the fourth inning, helping the Atlanta Braves to a 9-0 victory over the San Francisco Giants at Truist Park. This was the first series for the Giants since they lost a series to the Pittsburgh Pirates from July 23-25, a span of nine series.

Following the Soler home run, his 20th of the season, Freddie Freeman reached on an infield single and then Austin Riley made it 3-0, when hit his 28th home run for the Braves, who took two out of three from the NL West Leading Giants.

Eddie Rosario broke the game in the bottom of the sixth inning, as he hit a two-run triple and then Ozzie Albies hit his 23rd home run of the season in the bottom of the eighth.

Ian Anderson made his return to the starting rotation for the Braves, as he allowed just four hits and walked two in 5.2 innings. It was the first start for Anderson since July 11, as he was out with inflammation in his right shoulder.

Anthony DeSclafani also was making his first start since coming off the injured list himself, as he was battling inflammation in his right ankle.

DeSclafani retired the first six batters he faced in the game, and then Rosario singled to start the bottom of the third inning for the Braves and DeSclafani was able to get out of the jam unscathed, when he got Albies to strikeout to end the inning.

After he allowed an infield single to Dansby Swanson with nobody out in the bottom of the fourth inning, DeSclafani left the game, as he allowed three runs and six hits in those three innings and he saw his record fall to 11-6 on the season.

NOTES: Prior to the game, Brandon Belt was activated from the bereavement list, DeSclafani was activated from the injured list. To make room for Belt and DeSclafani, Thairo Estrada was optioned to Sacramento and Tyler Chatwood was designated for assignment.

With their 15th shutout of the season on Saturday night, the Giants tied Milwaukee Brewers for the most shutouts in the Major Leagues. The last Giants team to have more than 15 shutouts in a season was the 2015 team, who threw 18 shutouts on the season.

Thru 130 games, the Giants are 84-46, just one game behind the best Giants in the San Francisco era, as the 1993 team was 85-45 on their way to a second-place finish in the NL West and finished 103-59, one game behind the Atlanta Braves in the NL West.

UP NEXT: Johnny Cueto opens the seven-game home stand for the Giants, as he looks for his eighth win of the season, while the Brewers will send Corbin Burnes to the hill and will go for his ninth win of the season for the NL Central Leading Brewers.

Webb dominates Braves in 5-0 win

San Francisco pitcher Logan Webb held the Atlanta Braves in seven innings to five hits throws against the Braves line up in the first inning on Sat Aug 28, 2021 at Suntrust Field in Cobb County (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

Logan Webb continues to be one of the most dominating pitchers of the season for the San Francisco Giants, and his numbers show it.

Webb went seven innings, allowing zero runs on five hits, walking one and striking out six, as the Giants defeated the Atlanta Braves 5-0 at Truist Park.

Over his last 13 starts, Webb is now 7-0, as the Giants improve to 84-45 on the season and continue to have the best record in Major League Baseball.

During the 13-game stretch, the Giants are 12-1 that goes back to May 11 versus the Texas Rangers and over his last 73.1 innings, Webb has allowed just 12 earned runs in that span, and Webb has not allowed more than two runs in any of the 13 games, the second-longest streak since 1901

Tommy La Stella, who was robbed of extra bases on a fantastic catch by Joc Pederson to end the game on Friday night, got some redemption in his first at-bat of the night.

La Stella launched a solo home run to lead off the game off of Huascar Ynoa to give the Giants a quick 1-0 lead in the top of the first inning, and in the long run that would be the only run that the Giants would need against the first-place Braves.

Webb helped out his cause in the top of the third inning, as he doubled to left field off of Ynoa and moved to third on a base hit by LaMonte Webb, Jr.

Following the Wade, Jr., single, La Stella picked up his second RBI of the night, as he hit a sacrifice fly to Friday nights hero Jorge Soler in right field.

The Giants added three more runs in the top of the seventh and eighth innings, as Mike Yastrzemski hit his career-high tying 21st home run in the top of the seventh inning and then doubled to centerfield to score Wilmer Flores with the final run of the night for the Giants. Darin Ruf singled just before the Yastrzemski double to score Buster Posey, who singled to lead off the inning with a single.

The bullpen duo of Tyler Rogers and Jay Jackson finished off the 15th shutout of the season for the Giants, the most in the MLB this season.

Rogers gave up two hits, and struck out one, as he was able to get out of the jam without allowing a run.

Jackson came on to finish the game for the Giants, and responded by striking out the side to end the game.

NOTES: With the victory, the Giants have now been the best team in the National League for 105 days, the longest for the team since 1935, when they led the NL for 120 days, this according to STATS, LLC.

With their 84th win of the season, the Giants tie the 1993 team for the best record after 129 games since moving to California in 1958.

Webb threw a three-pitch inning in the bottom of the fourth inning, and it was the first three-pitch inning by a Giants pitcher since Madison Bumgarner during the 2010 season.

UP NEXT: Anthony DeSclafani will be activated from the 10-day injured list to take the mound in the series finale for the Giants. DeSclafani was on the IL with inflammation in his right ankle. Ian Anderson is expected to make his return to the Braves rotation and expected to make his first start since July 11, as he returns from inflammation in his right shoulder.

A’s bullpen holds off Yanks in 9th inning rally for 3-2 win; Victory ends NY’s 13 game win streak

Anthony Rizzo of the New York Yankees prepares to thrown down his helmet after striking out in the sixth inning against the Oakland A’s on Sat Aug 28, 2021 (AP News photo)

New York 2 – 5 – 2

Oakland 3 – 5 – 0

By Lewis Rubman

Saturday August 28, 2021

OAKLAND–The statistical expression “regression to the norm” can be translated to the vernaclular as the proverbial “water seeks its own level.” When the A’s opened the season with six progressively distressing defeats, they knew they weren’t as bad as their record indicated.

The responded by regressing to the norm by playing better than they really were, and three weeks later they were in first place in the AL West. They stayed there for two months before regressing once more to the norm, slowly but steadily dropping in winning percentage and the division and wild card standings.

Game time today found them at 70-59, trailing Houston by 6-1/2 games in the division and Boston by 3-1/2 for the second wild card spot. And they were in the throes of another six game losing streak, but now they have only 32 games left in the season.

Their starting pitcher, Frankie Montás is as capable of extreme performance swings as the rest of the team. In his most recent outing, last Sunday at the Coliseum, he held the Giants to two hits and two walks over seven scoreless innings.

His opposite number with the Yankees, Néstor Cortés, Jr., also had a successful seven innings in his previous mound appearance. The cagey southpaw held the Twins to a pair of earned runs to get the win and bring his record to 2-1, 2.56. That ERA is the second best in the American Leagiue.

The outcome of this encounter was a 3-2 win for Oakland, breaking the visitors’ 13 game winning streak and stopping the Athletics’ losing string at a half-dozen

Oakland struck first, on a two out double to left center by Chad Pinder, who notched the Athletics’ first tally when, after a walk to Sean Murphy, Tony Kemp’s single to center drove the versatile Pinder, the A’s starting right fielder, home and sending Murphy, DHing todaly, to third.

Cortés´s balk brought the DH in with the A’s second tally.They looked ready to score a Rickie run in the third when Starling Marte’s speed made Rougned Odor rush his throw on a grounder to third for a two base error and then stole third while Matt Olson was oin the process of striking out.

Yan Gomes then lashed a vicious liner up the middle on which second sacker DJ LeMahieu made a diving grab and rifled a throw to. Odor for the inning ending double play. Third Will Little’s call passed the video review test, much to Bob Melvin’s displeasure, and another A’s opportunity was lost, throuigh no fault of their own.

No one made a diving grab of Matt Chapman’s lead off drive in the fourth. It started out as an 86 mph slider and ended up 403 feet away over the fence in left enter for Chappy’s 21st round tripper of lthe year and a 3-0 lead for the Athletics.

When Canha got a single on a hard hit grounder to short, beating Velázquez´s one hop throw to first, with one down in the sixth, Aaron Boone decided that Cortés had seen enough action. He left the game, having yielded three runs, all earned, and was responsible for Canha.

Oakland reached him for four hits, one of them a homer, and three walks plus a run scoring balk. 60 of his 95 pitches were strikes. Right hander Albert Abreu relieved him and retired Pinder and Murphy to close the book on Cortés and bring New York up for the seventh frame.

Judge opened that inning with a line single to left center, the Yanks´ first safety since his double in the first. It came on Montás´s 86th pitch. The Oakland starter recovered from that brief setbackwith a swinging strike out of Stanton and beaiutiful Olson to Chapman to Olson inning ending double play, made possible by the extreme shift that had the A’s third baseman stationed just a few steps to the left of second. Who says that the use of shifts has made the game boring?

Kemp’s lead off fly to right in the home seventh turned Stanton around twice, converting a long fly into a two base hit. Once more, the curse of the lead off double struck. Two ground outs, an intentional walk, and a K, and the A’s had stranded two runners.

98 pitches in seven innings was the limit for Montás. He held the Bronx Bombers to two hits and a walk, throwing only 35 balls to the 23 batters he faced and mainly frustrated. Andrew Chafin relieved him and, after allowing a single to Voit, was lights out end the episode.

Lefty Lucas Luetge faced the A’s in their half of the eighth, starting with Chapman, who drove the reliever’s 2-2 offering over the left field fence, only to have Joey Gallo jump up and bring it down. It was three straight outs after that, bringing us to the top of the ninth and Sergio Romo taking the mound in his old role as closer.

LeMehieu socked a hard llner to third. Chapman caught it. Rizzo blooped a Texas Leaguer to left center. No one caught it. No one caiught Aaron Judge’s fly ball until lit had travelled 406 feet into the left field stands. The score was 3-2, and chants of “Let’s go, Yankees” filled the air, quieted when Stanton popped out to Harrison at second.

It sounded like more than the 18,337 paying customers were cheering when Gallo came to bat, but you couldn’t tell whom the were cheering for. Gallo grounded out to second for the final out. Romo’s performance wasn’t pretty, but he got the job done. Hhis first save of the year preserved the A’s lead and the win that brought Montás’s record to 10-9, 3.66. The loss brought Cortés’s record to 2-2.77.

The A’s will try to start a new regression to the norm and even the series Sonday at 1:08, with Paul Blackburn (0-1, 4.09) going against Jordan Montgomery (5-5, 3.69).

Yanks 13th straight win is longest in 60 years; A’s six game losing streak longest of season in 8-2 loss

Giancarlo Stanton rounds the bases for the New York Yankees after hitting a master blaster 472 feet for a home run off Oakland A’s starter Sean Manaea at the Oakland Coliseum on Fri Aug 27, 2021 (AP News photo)

New York 8 – 14- 1

Oakland 2 – 8. – 0

By Lewis Rubman

Friday August 27, 2021

OAKLAND–It’s tempting to think of tonight’s starting pitcher for the Oakland Athletics (70-59), Sean Manaea (8-8, 3.77 at game time) as the personification of the team. Both the man and the ball club show flashes of excellence, go on hot streaks of sustained and unsustainable superiority, and then go terribly, terribly cold.

And, when they took the field, they were, indeed, in spite of a temperature reading of 82 degrees, terribly, terribly cold. Oakland, at 70-58, was five and a half games behind Houston for the AL Western Division lead and two and a half games behind Boston for the second AL wild card spot and threatening to repeat their season opening nightmare of a six game losing streak. The A’s went down in a whimper a sixth straight loss defeated by their guests the New York Yankees (76-52).

Manaea, who was 3-2, 1.13 in June, went 2-2, 3.30 in July, and hadn’t won a game or gone more than five innings this month, losing half of his four August starts. The man who no hit the Red Sox three year ago still hasn’t fulfilled his potential.

Meanwhile, Manaea’s Yankee counterpart, Gerrit Cole (12-6, 2.92), he of the rising fast ball, had been undefeated in his two starts, both wins, in August. His highest ERA at any point this season was 3.38, following his opening day non decision against Toronto.

Tonight’s contest, an 8-2 drubbing administered by the visitors wasn’t out of character for either team or either of their starting moundsmen..

The two slightly mismatched pitchers traded zeroes until Giancarlo Stanton led off the fourth with a four base blast to center and, following Gallo’s pop up to. Andrus, Luke Voit followed suit with another round tripper to center. They were home runs number 25 and eight, respectively, for the two Bronx bombers, and they felt like a re-enactment of the second inning demolition derby Stanton and Gardner performed on Cole Irvin last night.

The Athletics’ recurring nightmare continued in the fifth, not exactly the same as the previous nights’, but close enough to be distressing. Kyle Higashioka and LeMahieu stroked singles to the left center and left, respectively; Rizzo went down swinging; and Judge swung for the fences.

His 28th dinger of the the year cleared the one in center field and sent Manaea to the showers. He left completing 4-1/3 innings of arduous labor, allowing five runs, all earned, on seven hits and a hit batter. On the other hand, he didn’t walk anyone. His pitch total was 86; 58 counted as strikes, and he took the loss.

Deolis Guerra took Manaea’s place on the mound and was hit hard for by Stanton, who flew out to left, Gallo, who doubled to right. He got Voit to strike out swinging and pitched a perfect sixth before giving way to AJ Puk, who held the Yanks to one hit in the seventh before he was, in turn, replaced by Jake Diekman, who set them down in order in the eighth.

The A’s stirred in the fifth, only to leave, as they have been doing too frequently these days, three men on base. A lead off single to center by Andrus, followed by another by Kemp and, after Marte fouled out to first, a walk to Olson put an Athletic on every base. But Lowrie went down swinging, and Harrison’s wicked line drive towards left somehow landed in the glove of the flying Urshela at third. RISP has been morphing into RIP for Oakland.

Ahead 5-0 after six innings, manager Aaron Boone decided he had no need to keep Cole on the job. He had allowed the A’s six hits and two walks; thaat was it. He struck out nine, and 70 of his 104 offerings were strikes. He went to the showers with an ERA lowered to 2.80 and, at game’s end, was the winning pitcher. His replacement, Joey Rodríguez, allowed the A’s a window of opportunity.

With one out, he walked Chad Pinder, pinch hitting for Kemp, and allowed singles to left by Marte and Olson. Olson’s safety drove in Pinder and advanced Marte to third. Gallo’s throw home was way off line, allowing Marte to score and Olson to make his way to second, occasioning Rodríguez’s early departure, Chad Green replacing him on the hill. He put out the fire by walking Lowrie and inducing a 4-6-3 twin killing from Harrison. He proceeded to strke out the three A’s he faced in the eighth.

New York put the game out of reach in the top of the ninth. Burch Smith gave up a first pitch lead off double to Velázquez. There was no curse of the lead off double for Kyle Higashioka when he brought all of his .179 batting average to the plate and blasted a 94 mph fast ball into the right center field seats to open up a 7-2 gap between the Yankees and their too accomodating host.

Singles by LeMahieu, Rizzo, and Judge made it 8-2, with runners on first and second and still not a man out. Stanton and the infield fly rule finally broke the Yankees’ streak of five successive hits, and, after Smith retired two more batters, allowed the Athletics one last chance, with Lucas Luetge on the mound for the New Yorkers, to catch up. They went down, 1-2-3.

As if the Yankees’ pyrotechnics hadn’t been enough for them, most of the 22,462 people in the stands hung around to watch the Star Wars fireworks that followed the game.

Saturday afternoon at 1:07, Frankie Montás (9-9, 3.84) will go against Néstor Cortés (2-1, 2.56) and his accompanying wrecking crew in an attempt to stop the A’s impending slide into oblivion.

Soler ends Giants winning streak on one swing of the bat; Five consecutive wins ends with 6-5 loss to Braves

Atlanta Braves slugger Jorge Soler slugs one so far out of the park for a three run home run in the eighth inning that it helps keep the game close against the San Francisco Giants at Suntrust Park in Cobb County (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

Joc Pederson maybe from the Bay Area, but he will do anything to beat the San Francisco Giants and he did it again in the opener.

Pederson made a fantastic catch, as overran the ball and crashed into a wall for the final out and the Atlanta Braves hung on to defeat the Giants 6-5 at Truist Park.

Tommy La Stella hit the ill-fated pitch that Pederson caught, as La Stella attempted to tie up the game off of Braves closer and former Giants closer Will Smith, who was able to notch his 29th save of the season.

The Giants were able to get to Smith earlier in the inning, as Wilmer Flores led off the ninth with a home run; however, Smith was able to get out of the jam and end the Giants five-game winning streak.

Following the catch, the umpires did go to the video review and it was confirmed that Pederson did catch the ball for the final out.

Jorge Soler gave the Braves the lead for good, as he hit the first pitch he saw from Zack Littell and put it into the left field seats to give the Braves a 6-4 lead.

Littell replaced Tony Watson, who came on to replace Kevin Gausman in the bottom of the seventh inning and struck out former Giant Adam Duvall for the first out. Pederson then walked and then Guillermo Heredia came off the bench and singled.

Ozzie Albies then doubled in Pederson and was the end of the night for Watson, and then Sler hit a 430 foot three-run home run to give the Braves the lead for good.

Georgia native Buster Posey gave the Giants an early 2-0 lead in the top of the first inning, as he hit an opposite field two-run home run just inside the right field foul pole.

After a 35-minute rain delay in the first inning, Kris Bryant left the game due to right side tightness and according to Giants manager Gabe Kapler, the decision to pull Bryant was made before the delay.

The Giants lead over the Los Angeles Dodgers remained at 2.5 games, as the Colorado Rockies defeated the Dodgers 4-2 at Dodger Stadium.

Gausman went the first six innings, allowing two runs on six hits, not walking anyone and two strikeouts, as he did not fare in the decision.

Max Fried like Gausman also went six innings, as he gave up four runs (three earned), not walking a batter and struck out five and also did not get a decision.

NOTES: Gausman was activated from the injured list, and Chadwick Tromp was optioned to Sacramento to make room for Gausman.

The home run by Posey was the 194th by the team this season, as they continue to lead the majors in that category over the Toronto Blue Jays.

UP NEXT: Logan Webb goes for his eighth win of the season for the Giants, as he takes the mound on Saturday. The Braves will Huascar Yoa to the mound, as he looks for his fifth win of the season.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah Salmonson: Bassitt is back in Oakland from Chicago surgery; Manaea starts tonight against Yankees

Oakland A’s pitcher Chris Bassitt is back in the Bay Area since his injury and surgery in Chicago. Bassitt is reportedly in good spirits and could visit the A’s clubhouse during the Yankees series (mercurynews.com file photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jeremiah:

#1 Oakland A’s pitcher Chris Bassitt flew to Oakland today from Chicago after having surgery for a broken cheek bone, Bassitt could pay a visit to the A’s clubhouse just to reassure his teammates at the Coliseum tonight as they get ready for the Yankees.

#2 The A’s outfielder Stephen Piscotty is going for wrist surgery and might make a return this season.

#3 The A’s had a such a good run and now find themselves not only behind the Houston Astros five games in the American League West but the A’s are also behind the Yankees in the Wild Card by two and half games. They need to get hot to catch.

#4 The A’s host New York tonight at the Coliseum for game 2 of this four game series. The A’s are on a five game losing streak and the Yankees came in with an 12 game win streak. The A’s will be pressed to get hot to try and make a run at the post season.

#5 Tonight’s starters at the Coliseum for the Yankees RHP Gerrit Cole (12-6 ERA 2.92) and for the A’s Sean Manaea (8-8 ERA 3.77) with a 6:40pm first pitch.

Join Jeremiah for the A’s podcasts each Friday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Solano and Viele staying in NY to quarantine for 7 days; Will Bryant stay with Giants after season?

San Francisco Giant Kris Bryant gets congratulations from first base coach Antoan Richardson while rounding first base after hitting a fourth inning home run against the New York Mets on Wed Aug 25, 2021 at Citi Field in Flushing (AP News photo)

Giants podcast with Michael:

#1 Giants second baseman Donovan Solano was experiencing cold like symptoms and will be quarantined in a New York hotel for the next seven days. Manager Gabe Kapler was asked if Solano was a breakthrough case and Kapler said he didn’t want to add anything to what he had said in the post game presser. Also hitting coach Justin Viele is also staying back in New York after testing positive for quarantining purposes.

#2 Kris Bryant will be a free agent this winter, Bryant said that he makes all his business decision in spite of having heavy power broker Scott Boras as his agent and with the Giants being the hottest team in the game Bryant is weighing if he’d liked to come back next season.

#3 Bryant also said about playing for the Giants that they just put their head down and go to work no egos just hard work is the key to their success.

#4 The Giants are rolling and have won seven of their last ten games that said their getting some serious consideration from the oddsmakers to make the World Series. That said MLB has just recently released the schedule for post season and have scheduled game 7 of the World Series for Nov 3rd.

#5 The Giants open a three game series at Suntrust Park in Cobb County against the Atlanta Braves tonight for a 4:20pm PDT first pitch. The Giants will start Kevin Gausman (12-5 ERA 2.74) and for the Braves Max Fried (11-7 ERA 3.49).

Join Michael for the Giants podcasts each Friday at http://www.sportsrasdioservice.com