Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: Ramon does it all with glove and bat; Ohtani hits 19th for Angels

The Los Angeles Angels Shohei Ohtani goes deep for his 19th home run of the season against the Oakland A’s in the second inning on Wed Jun 16, 2021 at the Ring Central Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 Jerry, The Oakland A’s (43-27) really did a job on the Los Angeles Angels (33-35) sweeping them at the Coliseum the A’s move up in the AL West standings three games over second place Houston.

#2 In Wednesday afternoon’s game a huge contribution from A’s centerfielder Ramon Laureano who made a great catch and hit a home run in his return off the injured list.

#3 The A’s piled it on in the sixth inning with six runs off Angels reliever Tony Watson who coughed up six earned runs on five hits.

#4 The A’s couldn’t contain the Angels star designated hitter Shohei Ohtani who slugged his 19th home run of the season on Wednesday and is second in the American League in home runs behind the Toronto Blue Jays Vladimir Guerrero who has 22.

#5 The A’s will open a three game series against the New York Yankees on Friday night at Yankees Stadium in the Bronx the A’s will be start James Kaprielian (3-1 ERA 2.51) the Yankees starter James Tallion (1-4 ERA 5.74).

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

Giants rout Diamondbacks 13-7 at Oracle Park

San Francisco Giants Buster Posey connects for a three run home run against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the first inning as Diamondbacks catcher Stephen Vogt watches at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Jun 16, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The San Francisco Giants continued to torment the Arizona Diamondbacks Wednesday night at Oracle Park. The Giants won as they routed the Snakes 13-7. The Giants, having come back from a 7-0 deficit to beat Arizona 9-8 Tuesday night, continued to torment the hapless D-Backs. The Giants banged out 13 hits, including five more home runs to send the D-Backs down to their 13th loss in a row and the 22nd consecutive road loss. 

Torey Lovullo’s team put two runs on the board in the top of the first. Giants’ starter, Anthony DeScalfini, gave up a double to Josh Rojas. Ketel Marte followed with a single. Lamonte Wade, playing in leftfield, mishandled the ball, and Rojas scored. Marte went to second. Eduardo Escobar doubled to drive in Marte with Arizona’s second run.

The Giants stormed back in the bottom of the first. They put four runs on the board to go ahead 4-2. Wade started the rally with a single to center. Wade stole second. The Snakes’ starter, Merrill Kelly, walked Mike Yazstremski. The Giants’ Buster Posey blasted his twelfth dinger of the year to put the Giants ahead 3-2. Kelly walked Brandon Belt. Belt went to second on a wild pitch and scored on Jason Vosler’s double. The Giants led 4-2 after one inning. They would not relinquish the lead.

Lovullo brought in Keury Melli to pitch the fourth for Arizona. The Giants plated four runs. Steven Duggar led off the inning with a home run. Melli retired DeScalfini for the first out. The next hitter, Lamonte Wade, also homered to make it 6-2. The G-Men weren’t finished. Melli walked Yaz, and Buster singled to put men on at first and third. Brandon Belt walked to load the bases. Donovan Solano singled to drive in Yaz and Posey. The Giants led 8-2 after four.

The onslaught continued in the bottom of the fifth. Ryan Buchter was now pitching for Arizona. Steven Duggar walked to start the rally. Wilmer Flores, pinch-hitting for pitcher Anthony DeSclafini, homered to make it 10-2. Buchter walked Yaz. Posey singled to sent Yaz to third. Brandon Belt blasted an Earl Weaver special(a three-run dinger) to propel the Giants to a commanding 13-2 lead.

Giants’ Manager Gabe Kapler brought Conner Menez into the game to pitch the sixth. Arizona roughed him up for five runs. The key blow was Asdrubal Cabrera’s homer. 

The Giants’ Jose Alvarez pitched the seventh and eighth and did not allow a hit. James Sherfy pitched a scoreless ninth to seal the win for the Giants.

Game Notes: With the win, the Giants are now 43-25 for the year. They have a two-game advantage over the LA Dodgers in the race for the NL West division lead. The Snakes fall to 20-49. 

The hitting stars for the Giants were Buster Posey with three hits, three ribbies, three runs scored, and a home run. Lamonte Wade had two hits, and one of them was a solo dinger. Brandon Belt drove in three with a home run. He finished the night with two hits. Steven Duggar had two hits, too. One was a solo homer.

The Giants face the Snakes again on Thursday. The game will start at 12:45 pm. The Philadelphia Phillies are in town for three starting Friday night.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Baseball Umpires to check Pitchers’ Balls

Former Cleveland pitcher Gaylord Perry was checked often for using foreign substances and doctoring baseballs which is now the case this season with the use of the spider tack baseball used by some MLB pitchers (file photo from Hobart Pulp)

Baseball: Umpires to check Pitchers’ Balls

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Being a few days since California “was opened” due to Covid, there is a new scandal brewing…… in baseball. Beginning this Monday June 21, MLB umpires will be enforcing new guidelines around pitchers using foreign substances on baseballs during games.

According to MLB, umpires will be urged to check the pitcher regularly and ask for the ball if they suspect the baseball has an unusually sticky feel to it. Also, when an umpire notices a pitcher going to his hat, glove, belt, or any place on his uniform or body to apply what may be a foreign substance, he will be checked.

Players caught will be ejected and suspended (with pay) for 10 games, even if the opposing manager doesn’t request inspection. Major League Baseball is responding to a season with: 1-Record strikeouts, 2-League batting average more than half-century low at .235 and 3-Spin rates of the ball.

This represents more responsibility for baseball umpires, who will be policing these new guidelines. MLB is not de-funding the umpires, but giving them more power. MLB investigated numerous complaints from players, tested balls, plus collected data during April and May.

Spin rates on the ball that provides pitchers with an unfair competitive advantage over pitchers and hitters who do not used foreign substances. All this has also translated to less action on the field. There have been six (6) no hitters this year (one of 7 inning thrown by Madison Bumgarner) but MLB doesn’t recognizes that as a no hitter because is less than 9 innings. The record is eight (8) no hitters in 1884.

This April, Trevor Bauer, now with the LA Dodgers and the 2020 NL Cy Young Award winner reacted sarcastically to the report on his twitter account. He also noted that many baseballs were being collected from games across baseball, not only from him.

More recently after the MLB announced on this new guidelines he told the MLB network that pitchers use the ‘rosin bag’ (a sticky substance extracted from the sap of fir trees) and is used by pitcher to improve their grip on the baseball and keep their hands dry, but Bauer said many pitchers use the rosin bad and it gets mixed with their sweat.

Gaylord Perry is 82 years old, born in Williamston, NC. He pitched for 22 years won 314 games, with 6 different teams, first pitcher to win the Cy Young in both leagues, with the Indians in the AL in 1972 and with the Padres in the NL in 1978 5 times All Star, five season with 20 or more wins, inducted into the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown in 1991.

He wrote the book “Me and The Spitter” an autobiographical confession by Gaylord Perry. This is one of Gaylord Perry’s quotes: “I’d always have grease in at least two places, in case the umpires would ask me to wipe one off. I never wanted to be caught out there with anything though; it wouldn’t be professional.” See you at the park.

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

A’s get six run sixth sweep Angels 8-4 at Coliseum

Oakland A’s Ramon Laureano fist bumps with third base coach Mark Kotsay in the fourth inning after hitting a home run at the Oakland Ring Central Coliseum on Wed Jun 16, 2021 (AP News photo)

Los Angeles 4 – 9 – 0

Oakland 8 -10 -0

By Lewis Rubman

Wednesday June16, 2021

OAKLAND–Five days ago, Cole Irvin pitched six beautiful innings at the Coliseum, shutting out the Kansas City Royals on two singles . Then, with Oakland leading 3-0, Salvador Pérez homered off the Oakland southpaw, followed by singles by Andrew Benintendi and Jorge Soler.

Yusmeiro Petit rode to Irvin’s rescue and retired the next two batters, but an error by Elvis Andrus, whose walk off single ended up winning the game for the A’s two innings later, opened the door for Benintendi to score KC’s second run of the inning.

In the next episode, Pérez blasted an encore home run off of Jake Diekman to tie the score, robbing Irvin of credit for what would have been his fifth win of 2021. His record had stalled at 4-7, 3.70.

Today, bolstered by the Oakland A’s (43-27) Ramón Laureano’s return to the line up, Irvin went for that fifth victory, facing the LA Angels (33-35), who sent Griffin Canning (5-4,5.22) to the mound.

Canning last saw action a week ago, when he held Kansas City to one run on five hits and two walks over 6-2/3 innings in a 6-1 victory over the Royals at Angel Stadium. Before today, he had a career record of 1-3, 4.88 against the green and gold. Last year, it was 0-2, 6.75.

There would be no win number five for the A’s lefty today. He left the game, trailing 4-2 with two men on and two down in the sixth. He had thrown 81 pitches, 55 for strikes, and surrender four runs, all earned on nine hits, including one homer.

He walked two and struck out two, and was on the hook for the loss. That went to Los Angeles’ Tony Watson after Oakland came back to defeat the fallen Angels 8-4..

The Angels gave Irvin a rude greeting. Justin Upton slammed his first pitch of the game up against the Kaiser Permanente sign between the 388 and 362 foot markers in right center field for a two base hit. He advanced to third on Shohei.

Ohtani’s ground out to Elvis Andrus, playing in the shift, and scored on Max Stassi’s single to left through a drawn in infield. Stassi went to second on another single to left, this one byo José Iglesias. Taylor Ward followed with yet another single to, you guessed it, left that brought Stassi home.

Jared Ward broke the monotony by sending a blast to deep left field, where Mark Canha made a spectacular leaping grab at the wall. Phil Gosselin drove in another run, scored by Iglesias with one more single, this one to center.

It looks as if the A’s might mount the start of a come back when Taylor Ward mishandled Matt Olson’s two out single to right and the A’s first baseman hustled to second, where umpire Mel Lentz called him safe. The umpires reviewing the play in New York called him out, Taylor to Stassi, covering.

The Angels padded their early lead with Ohtani’s 19th home run, a first pitch shot over the right field wall.

Laureano made two noteworthy catches in the top of the fourth. He made a long distance running catch of a liner off Lagares’s bat to open the inning and an excellent leap to pull Upton’s drive back from over the right center field fence to end the frame, the first one in which Irvin didn’t allow a runner to reach base.

In the A’s half of the inning, Laureano extended his stellar perormance, puting the Athletics on the board with a 404 foot blast on an 88 mph that left his bat at 107 mph before landing in the left field seats. It gave him an even dozen round trippers in his injury shortened season.

Irvin hung in there, benefiting from the Lefty Gomez method of successful pitching (clean living and a fast outfield) as the A’s slowly changed what looked like would be a rout into a ball glame.

Kemp walked with one down in the fifth and reached third on Aramis García’s seeing eye single to right and then scored when Canha beat out the relay from second on what would have been a double play for som without his hustle and speed. The scoreboard now read 4-2.

In the top of the sixth, Burch Smith took charge of Oakland´s pitching. He hurled 1-1/3 innings of perfect relief, earning himself his first win against no loses before turning the ball over to Sergio Romo, who pitched a 1,2, 3 top of the eigthth.

Canning was out of the game when the A’s next came to bat. He had worked five innings, in which he had yielded two earned runs on three hits, one of which went yard, two walks, and a hit batter. 45 of his 69 pitches were counted as strikes.

Canning’s replacement, Tony Watson, blew LA’s lead. He gave up back to back to back to back singles to Olson, Jed Lowry (batting for Moreland), Chapman, and Chad Pinder (recovered from his recent beaning and batting for Brown) that tied the game at four.

A conceded walk to Andrus, followed by Kemp’s single to center and the A’s were ahead 5-4, the bases were loaded, Watson was in the shower, and Steve Cishek was on the mound. His first pitch to García was a wild pitch, making the score 6-4.

Canha jrounded into a fielder’s choice that plated Andrus, and Laureano’s fly out to center moved Kemp to third, which ended Cishek’s failedattempt to stop the hemorage. José Suárez came in and struck out Lowrie to staunch the flow.

After Smith’s effective outing, Sergio Romo pitched a perfect eighth, giving way to Lou Trivino, who joined Smith and Romo in not having allowed anyone to reach base safely.

The A’s will resume play in the Bay Area on June 25 when they’ll take on the Giants in the first of a three game week end series at Oracle Park. After a day off, they’ll wrestle with the Rangers in another three game series and battle with Boston before taking off for Houston.

Yastrzemski hits a grand slam to give the Giants a dramatic victory 9-8

San Francisco Giants’ Mike Yastrzemski, second from right, celebrates after hitting a grand slam home run that scored LaMonte Wade Jr., from left, Brandon Belt and Curt Casali in the eighth inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue Jun 15, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

Mike Yastrzemski came with the biggest hit of the game when the San Francisco Giants needed it the most.

Yastrzemski hit a grand slam that landed into McCovey Cove that propelled the Giants to an unbelievable 9-8 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks at Oracle Park.

This was the seventh straight win for the Giants over the Diamondbacks and are now 12-2 since the beginning of the 2020 season and have outscored them 74-41 during that time.

Things did not start good for the Giants, as Zack Littell could not get a batter out and the Diamondbacks jumped out to a quick 4-0 lead in the top of the first inning.

Sammy Long came on to replace Littell, and the Diamondbacks added three more runs in the top of the second inning to take a 7-0 lead.

These are not the Giants of yesteryear, as they began to mount their comeback in the bottom of the second inning.

Donovan Solano drove in the first run for the Giants, as he grounded out to Josh Rojas at second base that allowed Wilmer Flores to easily score from third base and then Steven Duggar hit a two-run home run to cut the Diamondbacks lead down to 7-3.

Former Oakland As outfielder Josh Reddick added what turned out to be the last Diamondbacks run of the night, as he grounded out to Long that allowed Asdrubal Cabrera to score from third base.

The Giants began to mount their comeback, as Solano drove in his second run of the game, as he pulled the ball into left field that scored Brandon Belt to cut the lead in half.

Jason Vosler then got the Giants within three, as he beat out an infield single to score Solano.

Then the Giants came up with could be one of the biggest innings of the season, as Belt doubled to right field, then Solano singled on a 2-0 pitch and after Mauricio Dubon flew out to left field and then Lamonte Wade, Jr., grounded into a force play and Gabe Kapler gambled, as he sent his last pinch hitter on the bench and Curt Casali drew a pinch-hit walk to bring Yastrzemski to the plate and on the fourth pitch he saw from Humberto Castellanos, Yastrzemski hit his first career professional grand slam to give the Giants a dramatic comeback victory.

Jimmie Sherify pitched a perfect eighth inning, as he picked up his first win of the season for the Giants.

Tyler Rogers nailed it down in the top of the ninth inning, as he set the Diamondbacks down in order with a strikeout to pick up his ninth save of the season.

Littell last just six batters, as he allowed four runs on four hits, walking two and not striking out a batter and then Long came on to replace Littell.

Long ended up going five innings, allowing four runs on five hits, walking one and striking out three before giving way to Conor Menez, who allowed two hits and struck out two in his only inning of work and then Jarlin Garcia gave up a hit and strikeout in his only inning of work before Sherfy came on in the top of the eighth inning.

It was a tough no-decision for Alex Young, who went four innings, allowing three runs on five hits, walking one and striking out two.

The Diamondbacks bullpen let them down, as they were unable to get the Giants out, as they the trio of Conor Martin, Joe Mantiply and Castellanos went the final four innings, allowing five runs on seven hits, including that grand slam to Yastrzemski that proved to the game-winning hit.

NOTES: This was the biggest comeback by the Giants since they trailed the Cincinnati Reds 8-0 at Great American Ballpark on May 3, 2019, and ended up winning 12-11 in 11 innings.

When he hit a home run on Monday night, Brandon Crawford reached another milestone, as he became the quickest Giants shortstop since at least 1901 to reach 15 home runs in a season, as he reached the plateau in the Giants 66th game of the season.

Sadly, this was the 21st consecutive loss on the road for the Diamondbacks, and their 12th loss in a row overall.

Their last win away from Chase Field for the Diamondbacks came on April 25 against the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park, as Madison Bumgarner threw a seven-inning no-hitter; however, the no-hitter does not count as a no-hitter in the MLB record book.

UP NEXT: Anthony DeSclafani looks for his seventh win of the season, as he heads to the mound on Wednesday night, while Merrill Kelly goes to the mound for the Diamondbacks.

Montas wins 7th game; Murphy homers for A’s in 6-4 win over the Halos

The Oakland A’s Jed Lowrie (8) greets Sean Murphy (12) after both scored on a double by Elvis Andrus at the Oakland Coliseum on Tue Jun 16, 2021 (AP News photo)

Los Angeles 4 – 7 – 0

Oakland 6 – 8 – 0

By Lewis Rubman

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

OAKLAND–It’s not unexpected, but it’s good news that the A’s have picked up their option to renew Bob Melvin’s contract for another year. His record as the A’s manager with more wins than any other besides Connie Mack speaks for him. His players speak for him, too; not just when speaking about him, but when speaking about themselves.

Whenever I hear an A’s player assessing his performance in a post game interview, I’m always impressed at their willingness to criticize themselves and the modesty with which they accept praise. You don’t say things like that when you don’t trust your boss.

When Melvin has to criticize a player in one of those interviews, he almost invariably will say that a technique wasn’t working, as in “his slider wasn’t working today” instead of “he kept missing with his slider.” He reminds reporters that a fielding mistake came on a tough play.

It’s also good news that Chad Pinder, who was removed from last night’s game after his beaning still has not been placed under the protection of the concussion protocol and seems to be improving.

The A’s showing tonight gave BoMel a chance to say nice things about his charges. Oakland handed the crew from Anaheim a 6-4 defeat, and the A’s manager was positively glowing in post game comments.

The game between the Angels and the Athletics began with Frankie Montás (6-6, 3.47) setting Los Angeles down in order and his mound rival, Andrew Heany (4-3,4.37) shutting out Oakland in spite of a one out walk to Matt Chapman.

The Halos’ southpaw and the A’s righty swapped zeroes for another inning, and then Montás issued a lead off walk to Juan Legares, who took off for second with David Fletcher at the plate and so turned what could have been a double play into a 6-3 ground out that had the same effect as a sacrifice bunt. That effect enabled Legares to score on Justin Upton’s single to right center and put the Angels ahead 1-0.

A spiffy pick of Shoei Ohtani’s hard hopper to Olson, whose swift, accurate throw to Andrus the A’s shortstop just as quickly returned to help ended the frame with about as perfect a 3-6-3 twin killing that you’ll ever see.

Oakland pulled even in their half of the same inning. Tony Kemp open it with a single to center, and after Skye Bolt popped out to second, Canha sent a liner that split the distance between Taylor Ward in right and Lagares in center to go for a double that brought in Kemp. Chapman untied the short lived knotted up score with a line single to left that sent Canha home.

The bottom of the Angel’s order proved troublesome once more in their half of the fifth. One time Oakland receiver Kurt Suzuki lined a one out single to right and got to third on Lalgares’s single, also to right. David Fletcher shot a line drive to center for a run scoring single.

Montás put a stop to this seemingly endless tatoo by getting Upton to fly out to right and besting Ohtani, whose swinging strike out put him at 0 for three for the evening. But, like traffic on the Bay Bridge, the game had been tied up again.

The top of the sixth featured a beautiful, diving catch by Skye Bolt in center. He raced to his left and threw himself horizontal to the turf to capture Jared Welsh´s bid for a double into a line drive out.

When Olson led off the Oakland sixth with a single to left, Joe Maddon lifted Heany in favor of right hander Steve Cishek, who walked Lowrie on four pitches. He then walked Murphy on a full count, bringing up Seth Brown, hitting for Piscotty, with the bases loaded and nobody out. Brown lifted a sac fly to center, bringing Olson in with the go ahead run and moving Lowrie on to third.

The run was charged to Heany. The runs scored by Lowrie and Murphy when Andrus hit the Stream Your As sign in center, were charged to Cishek, who was dismissed from his mound duty, giving way to Alex Claudio, who put out the fire.

Heaney had thrown 98 pitches, 68 of them strikes, over five innings. He allowed three runs, all earned, on five hits and a walk, while striking out three. Claudio having done his job, it was Chris Rodríguez who faced Canha, Chapman, and Olson in the bottom of the seventh, setting them down in order.

After 98 pitches, 66 strikes, in seven hits, during which he surrendered two runs, both earned, on five hits and a walk while retiring eight men on strikes, Montás ceded the mound to Jesús Luzardo.

He did well on Fletcher and Upton, retiring them with out trouble, but Shohei Ohtani broke his oh-for by taking the 98 mph four seamer Luzardo threw him on a 3-1 count deep into center field for his 18th four bagger and 45th RBI of the year. It now was a 5-3 ball game.

Lowrie just missed restoring the A’s two run lead when he drove Aaron Slegers’ 3-2 slider to the base of the left centerfield wall, where Lagares corralled it.

Murphy, on Slegers’ very next pitch, was more succesful. He planted his eighth home run of the season over the fence in center, and the three run margin was restored. Andrus kept the heat on Slegers with a two out two bagger to left.

A walk to Kemp brought up Skye Bolt, whose ground out served as prelude Yusmeiro Petit’s entry into the game, faced with his third save opportunity of the 2021. (He’d converted one of the previous two).

Petit thrives on tight situations, but doesn’t handle commodious leads very well. So it didn’t come as suprise that Jared Walsh took his second offering deep to center to narrow the gap to 6-4.

The win went to Montás, now 7-6, 4.21, while Heaney was saddle with the loss, bringing his recordto 4-4, 4.45. Luazardo’s recovery remains a work in progress.

With this win, Oakland preserved its two and a half game lead over Houston in spite of the Astros’ come from behind walk off victory against the Rangers.

Tomorrow, Wednesday, afternoon both teams will rub the sleep out their eyes and face eachd other at 12:37. The probable pitchers are Griffin Canning (5-4, 5.22) for the visitors and Cole Irvin (4-7, 3.70) for host team.

He Was A Giant? John Pregenzer 1963-64 by Tony “The Tiger” Hayes

Former San Francisco Giant pitcher John Pregenzer who pitched for San Francisco 1963-64 is the subject of He was a Giant?

by Tony The Tiger Hayes

HE WAS A GIANT?

John Pregenzer – RHP – 1963-64 – # 40

He was a Giant?

In his brief stint with the Orange & Black, Pregenzer, an obscure right-hander with a thick waist and even thicker horn-rimmed eye glasses, was the toast of the town, for being, well…obscure.

In today’s parlance, the grizzly bear-sized Pregenzer – who pitched in 19 games for San Francisco over two seasons – would have been a “viral” sensation. But back in the happy-go-lucky days of the early 1960s, Jumbo John just made good copy.

And boy did the papers eat it up this loony “Only in San Francisco” spoof.

For a period from 1963 to 1964, Pregenzer – a colossal 6-foot-5, 250 pounder – made headlines not only in San Francisco but across the country when a 30-something year-old San Francisco Chronicle newsroom employee named Novella O’Hara started the “John Pregenzer Fan Club” upon hearing the Giants had acquired the unestablished spectacles-sporting pitcher from Pittsburgh for the low, low price of $100.

The single mother just couldn’t believe the Giants good luck in acquiring a man, let alone a professional baseball player, at such a reasonable price point.

In turn, she offered to take Pregenzer off the Giants hands for $110.

“Imagine that, buying a man for $100, I told (the Giants) they should get up a catalog of ball players available each year. There are a lot of us who would like to pick up such bargains,” O’Hara deadpanned to Stan Isaacs of New York’s Newsday.

At its peak, the Pregenzer appreciation society counted some 3,000 members. Verified $1 annual due payers included Joe DiMaggio, California Governor Edmund G. Brown, celebrity author Norman Mailer, NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle, comedic performers Shelley Berman and Allan Sherman and Pierre Salinger and Sargent Shriver – two high-ranking members of President John F. Kennedy’s White House.

Why Was He a Giant?

Well, there was that all important $100 transaction fee.

Pregenzer had never pitched above the lowest rungs on the minors. Throw in his age, 27, his lumbering physique and cut-rate purchase price and you didn’t exactly need Abner Doubleday to tell you baseball may not have been Pregenzer’s most ideal career path.

But the Giants saw something.

As did Ms. O’Hara, who, presumably aside from the plus-sized pitcher’s wife, counted herself as the Giant farmhand’s most ardent fan.

In her day job, O’Hara worked as a “Girl Friday” for famed Pulitzer Prize winning Chronicle columnist Stanton Delaplane. She was also the inquiring photographer for the Chronicle’s notorious zany daily feature, “The Question Man.” (“Do Housewife’s Deserve an Allowance?” , “Would You Let Your Daughter Date A Hippie?”).

O’Hara’s close proximity to a major daily helped promote her pet project. Delaplane occasionally wrote about Pregenzer in his satirical Chronicle column which was also syndicated throughout the U.S.

When Pregenzer actually beat the odds and made it to the big leagues, O’Hara and her pals went bananas.

They reacted as if the Giants had just discovered the second coming of Christy Mathewson, not a journeyman who as a Idaho Falls Russet had labored to miss bush league bats.

O’Hara hastily organized a lavish testimonial dinner in Pregenzer’s honor at one of San Francisco’s most sumptuous restaurants of the time, the ornate Blue Fox in the City’s financial district.

The Association Press even sent reporter Ron Bergman to cover the splurge.

In one of tony eateries’ spacious baroque banquet rooms, the fan club feted the prodigious pitcher under gold-leaf wallpaper and low-slung jewel encrusted chandeliers with a feast fit for a visiting dignitary – gourmet baked pheasant served under a sterling silver dome.

Pregenzer, his ample neck swaddled in an expansive white linen napkin, was also gifted a “quality” transistor radio and presented with a scroll naming him honorary mayor of Fresno.

“I could step in a pile of mud and come up with a (gold) nugget between my toes,” said the bemused Wisconsin native, half expecting Allen Funt of “Candid Camera” to appear masquerading as a bus boy.

“I had to struggle to make it to the big leagues,” said Pregenzer as he knifed into the mouthwatering squab. “And then to have a fan club – well I’ll tell you, it’s unbelievable. If this is the only way I can become famous, so be it.”

Just as San Francisco Mayor George Christopher was announcing plans to present Pregenzer with a Key to the City, the party -pooping Giants decided to farm out the humongous hurler.

But O’Hara wasn’t ready to give up on her beloved parsimonious priced moundsman. By the time Pregenzer had finished packing his duffle bag, she began campaigning for “Bring Back John Pregenzer Day.”

“The departure of John Pregenzer does not change the objection of our club which is to make the world a better place for John Pregenzer to pitch in,” she insisted.

With that, O’Hara hoisted the “John Pregenzer Cocktail” – consisting of “two parts gin and one part tears.”

Before & After

After playing college ball at Illinois Wesleyan University, Pregenzer skipped a couple of seasons before entering pro ball, signing with Pittsburgh at age 25 in 1958. He pitched well enough in his debut pro season, going 6-2, 2.88 for the Salem Rebels now of the Appalachian League. In 1959, he split the season between Idaho Falls and the Grand Forks Chiefs, going a combined 11-11, 4.17.

Pregenzer began 1960 with the Class-A Savannah Pirates, but shortly into the campaign the Giants produced a c-note and Pregenzer was all theirs.

In 1961, his first full season in the Giants system, Pregenzer posted a 10-7, 3.70 season at Class-C Fresno. He followed up with a fantastic 14-9, 2.85 year at Class-A Springfield in 1962.

Giants pitching was a fluid situation they entered spring training in 1963. Gone in a trade with Baltimore were RHPs Stu Miller and Mike McCormick. LHP Dick LeMay was peddled to Houston. Though a long shot to make the big league squad, Pregenzer was added to the spring roster. He took advantage of the look-see and proved a hundred bucks can go a long way.

The heavy-footed hurler gained a fan in Giants manager Alvin Dark who complemented Pregenzer’s command of the strike zone.

“That is a a big item for any pitcher and he has thrown the ball over the plate all spring,” the skipper stated matter of factly.

When the veteran LHP Billy Hoeft began the ‘63 season on the disabled list, Pregenzer took his spot in the San Francisco bullpen.

In his major league debut, Pregenzer lobbed two shutout innings in a Saturday afternoon, 4-0 home loss to the Cubs (4/20/63). The first two batters he faced and promptly retired were All-Stars Ron Santo and Ernie Banks. Each would eventually land in the Hall of Fame.

Pregenzer continued to pitch effectively over his next four relief outings. In one, he notched a one-out save in a 8-4 home win vs. St.Louis (4/25/63). In another, Pregenzer slung 2.1 innings of shutout ball in a 6-5, 12-inning home loss to Milwaukee (7/27/63).

But after the giant Giant was dinged for four earned runs, including a run scoring balk, in a 8-0 defeat at Los Angeles (Sandy Koufax’s second career no-hitter, 5/11/63), Pregenzer was optioned to Triple-AAA Tacoma. He would remain there the rest of the season.

Pregenzer began 1964 with Tacoma and pitched some of the best ball of his pro career. In 42 Pacific Coast League relief appearances, John posted a sterling 9-4, 2.01 record . San Francisco called in August and Pregenzer was back in the majors.

His second stint with San Francisco was a mixed bag of results. In 19 relief appearances, Pregenzer delivered a 2-0 record. But he also had a ERA hovering around a porky 5.00.

Pregenzer would return to Tacoma for one more season in 1965, and continued to thrive, posting a dynamic 4-5, 1.66 ledger with 28 saves in 55 games at age 32. But after San Francisco declined to promote him after that noteworthy campaign, Pregenzer decided to put a lid on his pro pitching career. The fan club would slowly dissolve.

Pregenzer and his family remained in the Tacoma area, putting roots down in lumberjack land. He continued to compete in beer league softball and enjoyed a long career as an educator, game official and high school coach in the Pacific Northwest.

He Never Had a Bobblehead Day. But…

Coincidentally, each of Pregenzer’s two MLB wins came against the the Pirates – the club that sold him for the price of six beers and a churro at Oracle Park.

He notched the first victory on his 29th birthday at Forbes Field (8/2/64). With the Giants up 1-0, Pregenzer inherited a two -runners on, two-out situation when he entered the game in the 6th. A young Willie Stargell smashed a drive to right, but Willie McCovey snagged the bullet to end the frame.

The Bucs tied the game in the 7th off Pregenzer when ex-Giant Manny Mota delivered a two-out RBI single. But the G-Men regained the lead for good in the 8th on a Duke Snider RBI single, winning 2-1.

Pregenzer’s win was the most popular national baseball story of the day.

The following Monday, nearly 200 daily newspaper’s sports sections – ranging from the Tyrone (PN) Daily Herald to the Deadwood (ND) Pioneer Times to the Pomona Progress-Bulletin – a ran a full-length newswire story detailing Pregenzer’s victory.

“For John Pregenzer the adulation preceded the accomplishment,” read the lede of UPI sports reporter Curt Block’s report.

Giant Footprint

In hindsight, one can see the creation of the Pregenzer Fan Club was most likely the result of one too many post-deadline hi-balls at the M&M, the now defunct newspaper bar located downstairs from the Chronicle.

But as the club grew exponentially large, the parody elements melted away as more people got to know the everyman Pregenzer.

To her credit, O’Hara never made Pregenzer the brunt of jokes or placed him in a comprising position.

For example, when one excited female guest at the Blue Fox shindig implored O’Hara to “kiss him!” – Novella quickly set the record straight.

“John Pregenzer is not a Bo Belinsky!” exclaimed O’Hara referencing the Los Angeles Angels notorious playboy pitcher of that era. “And this is not that type of club!”

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: Will $12 billion price tag make City Council balk on A’s stadium? plus more A’s news

Artist rendering of the Oakland A’s Howard Terminal ballpark. Oakland City Council will have meetings regarding approving the new ballpark on July 7th and a vote July 20th (photo from NBC Sports)

On That’s Amaury’s podcast:

#1 A $1 billion term sheet that showed the Oakland A’s price tag for the new Howard Terminal Ball Park was the initial figure but after infrastructure needs for development of the Howard Terminal and Jack London Square the price tag inflated for total developments to $12 billion.

#2 Amaury, how safe is the Howard Terminal footprint where the A’s ballpark? They have rail that surrounds the port area and it was reported to you first hand that it’s well known by the workers and contractors that have worked there that the ground is toxic radio active.

#3 Amaury, turning to the big series in Oakland with the Los Angeles Angels Shohei Ohtani brings with him the second highest home run total in the American League with 17 and he is just behind the Toronto Blue Jays Vladmir Guerrero who has 21.

#4 The A’s Matt Olson has been swinging the bats of late on Sunday he belted two home runs off of Kansas City Royals pitching and is leading the A’s with a .289 average.

#5 Tonight’s pitchers for game 2 of the series at the Coliseum the Angels will start Andrew Heaney (4-3 ERA 4.37) and for the A’s Frankie Montas (6-6 ERA 4.37) a 6:40pm first pitch.

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

Craw By Law: Giants, Crawford keep the D’Backs reeling in 5-2 win

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–The Diamondbacks came to Oracle Park on Monday as a collective bundle of energy, singularly focused on ending a pair of once in a baseball life losing streaks: a 10-game slide approaching two weeks in length, and a 19-game slide on the road that dates back to April 25. Earlier on, they ran the bases and defended with the purpose needed to end their misery.

But the Giants had simpler motivation: stay in first place by taking advantage of a struggling opponent.

As the hits piled up–and Brandon Crawford delivered a big homer–the Giants’ desires won out.

Crawford homered in the fifth to break a 1-1 tie, and the Giants raced to a 5-2 win, their National League-best 19th win after a loss this season. The team’s leader in home runs and experience was almost a late scratch due to needing a day after a lengthy cross-country flight and no day off. But Crawford answered the bell, hitting fourth, and delivered.

“(Brandon) and I talked a little bit about the potential of a day off when we got back from this trip,” manager Gabe Kapler said. “Maybe today, but then we agreed that perhaps we would try to push him for the next couple of games. He felt great about that, I felt good about it and his presence in the lineup was certainly needed tonight.”

“Without Brandon Crawford we aren’t where we are right now,” catcher Curt Casali said in part referencing a struggling lineup for the home team that had a number of guys scuffling after a weekend in Washington D.C. where the Giants were shutout twice and scored just three runs in four games.

Alex Wood pitched six innings, long enough to be the beneficiary of Crawford’s timely blast, and well worth it as the former Dodger won for the first time since May 16 in his fifth try at picking up a sixth win on the season. Wood had some shaky moments, but settled in, retiring seven of the final eight hitters he faced.

The D’Backs made some plays early, and almost were awarded a 2-1 lead, but a replay showing that a ball originally ruled a past ball actually hit Nick Ahmed’s trail foot in the batter’s box. That gave Ahmed first base, but denied Carson Kelly a free pass from third base to score. Tim Locastro, the next hitter, grounded out to third base to end the inning.

In the seventh, with Arizona trailing 3-2, Ketel Marte had an opportunity to knock in a run or two with a pair of baserunners aboard, but the D’Backs’ leading hitter popped out to shortstop while facing Giants’ reliever Dominic Leone.

But as the game wore on the D’Backs reverted to form, now approaching a major league record for consecutive road losses held by the ’63 New York Mets at 22.

“We’re in a grind right now,” manager Torey Lovullo said. “I don’t know where it’s at, what’s been happening or the reasons, but we’re working hard to figure that out.”

The Giants maintained their one-game lead on the Dodgers, who won at home against the Phillies on Monday night. But instead of focusing on the monster in their rear view, the Giants seem locked in on keeping Arizona reeling.

On Monday night, that objective was mission accomplished.

Neither the Giants or D’Backs have announced a starter for Tuesday night’s 6:45pm scheduled start.

A’s rally early Halos try comeback falls short 8-5

The Oakland A’s Sean Murphy (right) gets a forearm bash from teammate Mitch Mooreland (left) after Murphy’s solo homer in the second inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Mon Jun 14, 2021 (AP News photo)

Los Angeles. 5. 14. 1

Oakland. 8. 9. 0

By Lewis Rubman

Monday, June 14, 2021

OAKLAND–Baseball people are fond of saying, “It’s not who you play, but when you play them.”

That certainly was the case for the Athletics as they opened their four game series against the LA Angeles tonight. The Oaklanders, at 40-27, took the field a baker’s dozen games over .500, in first place in the AL West by two games over Dusty Baker’s Double Dirty Dozen by two games.

The Angels, at 33-32, were just hint above the break even point. But both teams were 9-2 (.818) in June, which put them level with Milwaukee for the best mark in the majors so far this month. The green and gold’s hitting has improved, and the team entered the day with a collective BA of .274, which, although probably helped by the threatened crack down on illegal pitches, still is fifth in the league, all of whose hitters received the same boost.

Oakland´s pitching, too, in spite of the sporadic melt downs it’s suffered, has been excellent recently. The rotation entered the fray with the lowest ERA in the majors, 2.32, and the figure for the entire pitching staff is the second best in the league, 2.85.

The team’s run differential had improved from a pre-June minus 11 to a pleasing plus 32 so far this month. On the negative side, the A’s have been outperformed in head to head encounters with their division rivals, against whom they have gone 10-13, but they’ve beaten Los Angeles in six of their 11 meetings so far.

Sean Menaea has been a valuable contributor to Oakland’s recent surge. The 29 year old southpaw gave up a paltry two hits over the 15 innings he had hurled earlier in the month and only two runs on 16 hits in the 16-2/3 innings he pitched over his last four starts, two of which were in Anaheim in games and were no decisions (each team eventually won one them).

He threw 111 pitches in each of his last two starts, a complete game shutout in Seattle on June 2 and six frames of two hit scoreless baseball against Arizona here at the Coliseum a week later. He took the mound with a season’s record of 5-2, 3.09.

Manaea’s opposite number, right hander Dylan Bundy, took some pretty awful numbers, 1-6, 6.16, to be exact, into the game with him. From looking at Bundy’s 2021 numbers you wouldn’t think of him as a top of the rotation kind of guy, but that’s no reason not to take him seriously.

In 2011, he was, at the age of 18, the Orioles’ first round draft choice, the fourth overall. Last year, he finished ninth in the voting for the Cy Young Award in the AL, and teammates voted him the best performing pitcher on the Halos’ staff. He finished that abbreviated season with marks of 6-3, 3.29 .

While neither pitcher was at the top of his game, Bundy’s performance was frankly bad, and Manaea showed grit in holding Los Angeles to one run in his team’s 8- 5 win over the visitors.

It was Juan Lagares, hitting all of .223, who put the Angels ahead in the second inning, driving Manaea’s first pitch to him, a 91 mph sinker, over the right field scoreboard with one out and nobody on. It wasn’t as if Lagares’s round tripper, his first of the year, was the result of a single mistake by the A’s starter.

He had left the bases loaded in the first, and there were runners on the corners when he finally escaped the second without allowing another run. By then, he pitch count was up to 50.

And it was Sean Murphy, giving the lie to his BA of .208, whose seventh homer of the season put the A’s on top. It drove in Mitch Moreland, whose single to left was the thousandth hit of the A’s DH’s career. Murphy’s blast came on an 0-1 89 mph four seamer, clearing the right center field wall at the 388 foot marker.

An inning later, Tony Kemp blasted a double into the right field ccorner with Mark Canha, the human bull’s eye who’d led off the inning getting hit by a pitch, on first. Canha crossed the plate and Kemp reached third when Taylor Ward mishandled the rebound for an error.

Moments later, Olson’s sacrifice fly to right brought in Kemp, Oakland’s second tally of the frame and fourth of the game. A walk to Lowrie and Chapman’s double to left put men on second and third, and Moreland’s 1,001st hit skipped under second baseman David Fletcher’s glove, driving in both runners, giving the A’s a 6-1 advantage and ending Bundy’s short evening’s work.

James Hoyt took over but didn’t take charge. Murphy singled to left, moving Moreland up a base. After Brown forced Murphy at second, Moreland taking third, Elvis Andrus punched a single into right, bringing Moreland home. Canha, in his second plate appearance of the inning, walked to load the bases. At long last, Kemp went down swinging.

Bundy’s ugly line was seven runs, all earned, on five hits, including one hoe run, two walks, and a hit batter. He threw 59 pitches. He was credited with 38 strikes and three strike outs.

His ungainly ERA rose to 6.98, and he left the game on the hook for the loss. Hoyt hung around until he hit Sean Murphy with a pitch to open the home fifth. He was yanked in favor of Alex Claudio, who promptly surrendered a double down the left field line to Chad Pinder, hitting for Brown.

That closed the book on Hoyt, who went 1-2/3 innings and was charged with one run, which was earned, on two hits, two walks, and a hit batter. He also struck out two Athletics. He threw 40 pitches; 18 were balls.

Whenever a team bats around, there’s always a danger that its pitcher will go stale on the bench, especially if he’s been having trouble like that which Manaea had been experiencing. But Manaea, even if he didn’t keep the Angels off the bases in the fourth, kept them off the board, stranding two but not permitting anyone to cross the plate.

He lasted until there were two out in the top of the sixth, when Fletcher lashed his 104th pitch into left for a double. They say you can judge a pitcher by how well he does when he doesn’t have all of his stuff. By that standard, Manaea showed himself an ace. He held the halos to one run on nine hits, including one long ball, and issued only one passport. 40 of his offerings were balls. He deserved the victory that brought his record to 6-2, 2.99.

His replacement, Burch Smith, struck out Justin Upton in the sixth but was ineffective in the seventh, coughing up three runs on three hits, a walk, and a hit batter, getting only two outs. Sergio Romo came in to save his bacon with runners on first and second and a reduced lead of 8-4. But Romo allowed a single to Fletcher, and he was hanging on to a three run advantage when he finally struck Upton out to end the threat.

There was a certain amount of excitement in the A´s half of the seventh, when Junior Guerra, who had relieved Claudio in the sixth, hit Murphy with a pitch to open the frame, balked him to second, and then plunked Pinder before getting Andrus to fly out to right and getting Canha to hit into an around the horn DP.

Jake Diekman held the Angels at bay in the eighth, and after Guerra wiggled out of trouble in the A’s half of the inning, Lou Trivino took over, looking for his 11th save. He got it, setting the halos down in order.

Tomorrow the 15th, it will be Frankie Montas (6-6, 3.47) going against Andrew Heaney (4-3, 4.37) at 6:40.