Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah Salmonson: How Spider Tack substance plays into free agency; Royals and A’s play game 2 tonight

MLB pitchers have been accused of throwing the spider tack ball which gives the pitcher a better grip on the ball and allows them to pitch a ball that gives it a different trajectory (photo from Amazon)

On the A’s podcast with Jeremiah:

#1 This season pitchers are throwing the spider tack balls. New York Mets first baseman Pete Alonso says MLB is manipulating the ball. Alonso said in 2019 it was a pitcher’s free agency year and MLB juiced the ball, in 2020 it was the COVID year of just 62 games and this year it the sticky ball as hitters are free agents.

#2 On the Oakland A’s report they opened a four game series with the Kansas City Royals last night at the Oakland Coliseum. Each of these games are crucial for the A’s as they hold a one game lead in front of the second place Houston Astros in the AL West.

#3 The A’s are coming off a two game series from last Tuesday and Wednesday that saw A’s pitcher Sean Manaea who continues to pitch consistently. Manaea threw a gem on Wednesday going six innings of two hit ball for a 4-0 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks.

#4 A’s hitter Mark Canha has been key in the lead off spot hitting .259 he has had some hits that have helped the A’s win ball games for example Wednesday afternoon against the Diamondbacks.

#5 Jeremiah the Royals will start Brian Singer (3-5 ERA 4.,88) going against A’s starter Cole Irvin (4-7 ERA 3.80) at the Coliseum tonight talk about this match up.

Jeremiah Salmonson does the Oakland A’s podcast each Friday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Gausman looks for his eighth win Saturday against Nats

Kevin Gausman seen here pitching against the Chicago Cubs on Sat Jun 5, 2021 at Oracle Park in San Francisco will make a start Saturday in the first game of a doubleheader against the Washington Nationals in DC (AP News photo)

On the Giants podcast with Michael:

#1 Michael talk about some of the call ups that have come through and surprised Sammy Long, Jason Vosler, and Chawick Tromp.

#2 Long pitched four innings after relieving starter Zack Littell, Long gave up a walk and struck out a batter manger Gabe Kapler liked what Long brought to the table during Wednesday’s game in Arlington.

#3 Giants right fielder Mike Yastrzemski is getting closer to coming back. Yastrzemski said his fingers and knuckles need to be pain free to swing a bat. Yastrzemski said he can play catch without pain.

#4 Talk about Alex Dickerson going on the IL with an upper back injury. Dickerson felt some back in the upper back after taking a swing against the Texas Rangers on Tuesday.

#5 Due to the rain out on Thursday Giants starter Kevin Gausman (7-0 ERA 1.27) will start against the Washington Nationals Joe Ross (2-6 ERA 4.80) a 11:05 AM first pitch as the front game of a doubleheader at Nationals Park in Washington on Saturday.

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

Royals rally late for six runs defeat A’s 6-1

The Kansas City Royals Hunter Dozier is greeted at the plate by teammates after scoring against the Oakland A’s in the seventh inning on Thu Jun 10, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

Kansas City 6 – 10 – 1

Oakland 1 – 3. – 1

By Lewis Rubman

Thursday, June 10, 2021

OAKLAND–Right handed throwing Frankie Montás, who started today’s game for Oakland, is one of the A’s talented crew of hurlers for whom the club has great expectations that are yet to be realized. He took the mound this evening with a record of 6-5, 4.52, a WHIP of 1.41, and an opponents’ BA of .273. To put that in perspective, the A’s came to the park having won 37 games against 26 defeats.

Their batting average was .232, and the opposition was batting .248 against them. Montás got off to an horrific start this season, losing 10-3 to the Dodgers on April 5, when he surrendered seven earned runs on as many hits in only 2-2/3 innings of work. He went 2-2, 6.20 for that month and a respectable 3-3, 3.18 in May.

He won his last start, six days ago against the Rockies, but gave up three runs, all earned, in his five innings of work. That performance needs to be taken with a grain of salt; Coors Field is a threat to any pitcher’s ERA.

Kansas City, sitting in the middle of the five team AL Central Division standings at 29-31, sent southpaw, nine year veteran, and former Athletic Mike Minor to the mound. He brought a record of 4-3, 4.34 with him. He throws mostly fast balls and sliders, which he mixes with the occasional curve and change up.

It was the late innings the top of the seventh and eighth that saw the Royals score three times in each frame and got them over the hump for a 6-1 win over Oakland.

The first four innings featured some exciting fielding by the A’s. Montás made a pretty glove-handed pickup and toss to first to nab Nlicky López to start the third frame, and Matt Chapman made a leaping catch of Salvador Pérez’s hot liner smashed over his head down the foul line for the second out of the third.

Jed Lowrie, tonight’s Oakland DH, injected some offensive pizzazz into the contest by leading off the home fourth with a 398 foot blast that went into the left field seats for his fifth round tripper of the season. It came on a 2-2 count and off a 90 mph four seamer.

The local nine has a troubling tendency to run into outs. Stephen Piscotty fell victim to it in the bottom of the fifth, when he laced a single to right and tried to stretch it into a double. He was caught, right fielder Hunter Dozier to first baseman Santana to Nicky López.

Although Montás allowed a Texas League single to Santana in ethe first inning and a weak infield single to Kevin Gutiérrez in the second, it wasn’t until the top of the seventh that he yielded a legitemate hit, a lead off single to center by Andrew Benintendi. And then the roof fell in, through no fault of Montás, who still was pitching beautifully.

He struck out Pérez, but Jorge Soler was awarded first on a catcher´s interference call. Hunter Dozier hit a hard grounder to Chapman, which took a bad hop and went for a game tying double and putting Dozier and Soler in scoring position. Then Gutiérrez singled to center through a drawn in infield to give the Royals a 3-1 lead and put an end to Montás’s night’s work.

He had pitched 6-1/3 innings, a season’s high for him, and allowed three runs, two of them earned but none of them deserved. He allowed five hits, of which only Benintendi’s single and Dozier’s double were hard hit, and even that last one needed a bad hop to escape being an inning ending double play.

He struck out eight and didn’t issue any walks. Of his 96 pitches, 64 were strikes. He got charged with the loss. Who says baseball is fair? Burch Smith got the last two outs to end the inning, giving way to Jesús Luzardo at the start of the KC eighth.

Benintendi did more damage to the Oakland cause by taking a first pitch Luzardo four seamer deep to center with two down in the eighth. Pérez followed that with double to right and scored moments later when Soler lofted a Luzardo change up over the left center field wall.

In the one inning Luzardo pitched, he gave up three runs on three hits, two of which were homers. He threw 25 pitches; 14 were considered strikes. Of course, that includes the ones on which the Royals hit a double and two round trippers. Cam Bedrosian closed out the game decorously, allowing one hit and nothing more.

When the A’s came to bat in their half of the disasterous eighth, they faced Scott Barlow. He put the A’s down 1-2-3,, striking out one. Greg Holland closed the game for the visitors, retiring the Athletics in order on eight pitches.

Minor, like Montás, had pitched a fine game, going seven inning and yielding but a single run, which was earned, on three hits, one of the for the distance. He struck out eight and walked one. 66 of his 106 pitches were strikes. He deserved the win, and he got it.

Only Houston’s 12-8 defeat by Boston kept the A’s in their tenuous position on top of the AL West.

The Athletics announced yesterday that they had reinstated Reymin Guduan, who had been pitching on a rehab assignment to Las Vegas, and designated him for assignment. He had appeared in 11 games with Oakland this season, without a decision, a save, or a blown save. His WHIP was 1.67, his ERA 6.28, and his opponents’ batting average .345 during his brief tenure with the big club.

The A’s and Royals will duke it out again tomorrow, Friday, evening at 6:40, with Cole Irvin (4-7,3.89) going against Brady Singer (3-5, 4.88).

Giants and Nats to make up rain out as doubleheader Saturday

Heavy rains in Washington DC postponed Thursday’s opening game of the San Francisco Giants and Washington Nationals series at Nationals Park on Thu Jun 10, 2021 (photo courtesy of KGO ABC 7 Sports San Francisco)

By Jessica Kwong

The series opener between the San Francisco Giants and the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on Thursday night was postponed due to inclement weather, specifically heavy rain.

“It will be made up as part of a split doubleheader this Saturday, June 12th,” the Giants and Nationals said in tweeted statements.

The first game that day is scheduled to begin at 11:05 a.m. and the second game is slated to follow at 4:15 p.m. Both will be seven-inning regulation games. Weather in Washington, DC, on Thursday was forecast as unpredictable, but wound up in a downpour.

Giants right-handed pitcher Anthony DeSclafani (5-2, 3.51 ERA), who was set to start on Thursday, will now start on Friday. Right-handed pitcher Kevin Gausman will start on one of the two games on Saturday. The pitcher for the other game in the doubleheader has not been announced. Right-hander Johnny Cueto was originally planned for Saturday, but it is unclear if he will still take the mound with the changes.

Nationals right-handed pitcher Max Scherzer (5-4, 2.22 ERA), who was ready to start on Thursday, will also open on Friday. Right-hander Joe Ross was already scheduled to start for Washington on Saturday and will pitch one of the games. The other pitcher for the Nationals that day has not been announced.

Fans who had tickets for Thursday’s game will be able to use them for the early game on Saturday. Those who are unable to attend are offered the chance to get a refund or trade for a later date at the box office.

San Francisco is 1-1 in one doubleheader this season. The four-game series is scheduled to wrap up on Sunday with first pitch at 10:05 a.m. The Giants will then head home to Oracle Park to host the Arizona Diamondbacks for a four-game series.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: A’s hold 1.5 game lead in AL West; Open 4 game series tonight vs. Royals

Oakland A’s Mark Canha (left) races past Arizona Diamondbacks catcher Carson Kelly (right) to score on a sac fly hit by Matt Olson in the seventh inning at the Ring Central Coliseum on Wed Jun 9, 2021 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 Oakland A’s (37-26) starter Sean Manaea had everything working for him through six innings of work on Wednesday afternoon at the Oakland Coliseum surrendering just two hits as the A’s got a two hit shutout against the visiting Arizona Diamondbacks (20-43).

#2 The A’s got a three run rally against Diamondbacks in the bottom of the second inning with two outs and two on the A’s Mark Canha hit a bullet that the Diamondbacks centerfielder Ketel Marte made a back hand catch against the wall but the ball bounced out and allowed the two runs to score. That’s how bad things have been for the Diamondbacks this season.

#3 The A’s bullpen delivered with relief appearances from Yusmeiro Petit, Lou Trivino, and Jake Diekman who all combined for three innings of mop up work throwing no hit relief ball.

#4 Jed Lowrie and Mark Canha provided the most offense of the day with Canha two hits and two runs scored and Lowrie with three hits and an RBI.

#5 The Kansas City Royals (29-30) open a four game series with the A’s tonight Mike Minor (4-3 ERA 4.84) starts for the Royals and Frankie Montas (6-5 ERA 4.52) goes for the A’s at the Coliseum tonight.

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

11th inning single puts the Holt in Rangers 4-3 win over Giants

The Texas Rangers Brock Holt gets congratulations from teammate Isiah Kiner-Falefa for getting the 11th inning walk off single against the San Francisco Giants at the Ball Park in Arlington on Wed Jun 9, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jessica Kwong

The San Francisco Giants lost 4-3 in extra innings to the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field on Wednesday afternoon, missing the chance to walk away with another series victory.

San Francisco had a one-run lead in the ninth inning but blew the chance to win when a grounder got infield. After a stolen base and bad hit, the Rangers tied the game.

The Giants made a run first in the 10th inning, but the Rangers also scored. In the 11th inning, Texas did not allow San Francisco to score and then Brock Holt got a two-out RBI single to give the Rangers the 4-3 win. The loss for the Giants was particularly surprising because they have the best record in the MLB at 38-22, while the Rangers at 23-39 are in last place in the AL West.

San Francisco used Zack Littell as the starting pitcher – his first opener since 2018 – before putting lefty Sammy Long in. Long struck out seven in four innings in his major league debut for San Francisco.

He allowed a run on one hit, a double by Eli White, in the sixth inning, and walked one. Long threw 47 of 69 pitches for strikes. Long, who stopped playing baseball after the Tampa Bay Rays released him three years ago, said he felt great on the mound.

‘That was above and beyond right there on,’ Long said. ‘Just felt like I was in my element.’

Giants manager Gabe Kapler said he didn’t think they could have drawn it up any better for Long.

‘I thought he was poised, obviously used all of his weapons, able to execute all of them for strikes,’ Kapler said. ‘The line is incredibly impressive for the first time out at the major league level.’

The Giants beat the Rangers on Tuesday, 9-4. They still hold the best record in the NL. The Giants start a four-game series against the Washington Nationals on Thursday at Nationals Park. First pitch is at 4:05 p.m.

Manaea goes six with two hit shutout in A’s 4-0 win over Arizona

Oakland A’s starter Sean Manaea threw another dandy pitching into the sixth giving up only two hits against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Ring Central Coliseum on Wed Jun 9, 2021 (AP News photo)

Arizona 0 – 2 – 0

Oakland 4 – 6 – 1

By Lewis Rubman

Wednesday June 9, 2021

OAKLAND–Sean Manaea, the Oakland A’s (37-26) starting pitcher, took the mound this afternoon hoping to continue his current stretch of effective pitching. The southpaw was 1-0, 0.87 over his last three starts, during which opposing batters managed to hit a measily .200 against him.

This has been an up and down season for the A’s southpaw, in his four previous starts, those numbers were 0-1, 6.64, and .326 respectively. In his two most recent performances, he’s shown a tendency to get stronger as the game progresses. He threw 111 pitches in his last previous outing, a complete game shutout of Seattle on June 2. His performance today, while not as masterful as that one, was admirable.

He gave up a clean single to Tim Locastro with two down in the top of the second, and no Arizona Diamondback (20-43) batter touched him for a safety until Ketel Marte sent a weak dribbler between the mound and the third base foul line in the sixth.

Manaea walked Eduardo Escobar in the first and didn’t yield another free pass until the same top of the sixth in which he was the victim of Marte’s infield single. He got out of that inning, his last, unscathed. Once more, as he had a week ago, Manaeea threw 111 pitches. 76 of them were strikes.

His strike out total was three. He earned the win. A trio of relievers replaced him. The first was Yusmeiro Petit, followed by a 1-2-3 inning later by Lou Trivino. Jake Diekman came in to close it out in the ninth. Betweeen them, they preserved the two hitter and the shutout.

Manaea’s opposing number was rookie right hander Matt Peacock, whose record stood at 2-2, 4.68 He’d faced the A’s only once before today, pitching to — and striking out — one batter, Stephen Piscotty.

The Athletics caught a break in the top of the second when, with Matt Chapman and Elvis Andrus on base and two out, Ketel Marte caught Mark Canha’s fly against the left center field wall … and then dropped it. At least, that’s what the umpires, here and in New York, said had happened, although it seemed as though Marte had taken several steps after bouncing off the wall and before losing control of the ball.

The decision, however counterintuitive it may have seemed, was correct. Rule 509 (a)(1), says that, for a such a play to be considered a catch, the ball’s release must be “voluntary and intentional.” The next batter, Jed Lowrie, hit a hard liner back to the mound that caroomed off Peacock’s leg and bounced towards short for an RBI single that gave Oakland a 3-0 lead and sent Peacock to the showers.

His replacement was Joe Mantiply, who ended the frame by fanning Olson.Peacock had pitched 1-2/3 innings and thrown 48 pitches, 25 for strikes. He allowed three runs, all earned but none deserved, on three hits and three walks.

He chalked up one strike out and was charged with the loss. Mantiply gave way to Humberto Castillano at the start of the Oakland fourth. He held the A’s to one hit over the three innings he hurled before yielding to Stephan Crichton, who came in to face Oakland in their half of the seventh.

The A’s caught another break in their half of the seventh when a Diamondback couldn’t catch another would-be out. Canha’s inoffensive pop up to second fell untouched to the ground when Ildemaro Vargas lost it in the sun. Lowrie singled Canha to third, and Olson’s sacrifice fly to the center field warning track, plating Canha with Oakland’s fourth tally.

The uncaught popup went down in the books as a hit, the run, though like the three against Peacock, was, though unmerited, earned, and charged as such to Crichton. The ex-Athletic Joakim Soria pitched the eighth against his old team. He struck out all three batters he faced. The A’s will begin a four game series against Kansas City at 6:40 tomorrow evening. Frankie Montás (6-5, 4.52) will face off against Mike Minor (4-3, 4.84)

Before signing off on this report, I’d like to correct a mistake in the one I. wrote on last night’s A’s win over the Diamondbacks. Yesterday was not Pride Day in baseball; that will be this coming Friday, the eleventh. Last night, the Athletics celebrated Bob Melvin’s having surpassed Tony La Russa as the second most winning manager, behind Connie Mack, in franchise history.

My notes about this coming Friday’s event somehow found their way into the text of my Tuesday dispatch. To make amends, I’ll throw in this tidbit: In 1988, Billy Bean, Vice President and Special Assistant to the Commissioner of MLB, with emphasis on social responsibility and inclusion, Billy Beane, the A’s Executive Vice President, and Pete Rice played for the Toledo Mud Hens. They were known as “The Rice and Beans Outfield.”

A’s Bassitt holds Snakes to two runs in 7 innings in 5-2 win at Coliseum

Oakland A’s starter Chris Bassitt throws to the Arizona Diamondbacks line up on the sixth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Tue Jun 8, 2021 (AP News photo)

Arizona 2 – 5 – 0

Oakland 5 – 6 – 0

By Lewis Rubman

Tuesday, June 8, 2021

OAKLAND–The Oakland A’s (36-26) returned home tonight after a successful trip to Seattle and Denver, winning twice in each of their three game series against the Mariners and the Rockies. That’s the same won-lost percentage as the green and gold’s season long 18-9, the equivalent of a season record of 108-54, which would be pretty hard to beat.

But not by road wins alone liveth the team. Before tonight’s fray, had compiled a record of only 17-17 on the banks of the Nimitz. The A’s took the first of the two game series Tuesday night with a 5-2 victory behind the fine pitching of A’s starter Chris Bassitt.

Home cooking definitely is not the reason the Athletics still were at the head of the pack in the AL West at game time, having gone 35-26, one game and only .0015 percentage points ahead of Houston. The Arizona Diamondbacks, on the other hand, came in at 20-42, the worst winning percentage in MLB, dragging a 17 road game losing streak behind them.

Today is LGBTQ+ Pride Day in all of the MLB. The A’s chose to make this more than a pro forma event by naming their version of the event the Glenn Burke Pride Night after the Oakland native and outfielder with the Dodgers and Athletics, whose promising career, —and eventually, his life—was destroyed, in great part by rampant homophobia, but not before he had teamed up with Dusty Baker for the first recorded high five in baseball history, on October 2, 1977.

One of the reasons that the belated honor bestowed on Burke tonight is that he is remembered more for his tragic endgame and a bit of trivia than for the talented player and courageous person that he, by all accounts, was.

Jon Duplantier, the D-back’s starting pitcher tonight, is a man of many talents. He turned down a proffered athletic scholarship at Yale, which coveted him as a quarterback, to accept one at Rice, where he played, what else?, baseball.

The Diamondbacks selected him in the third round of the 2016 draft. Duplantier went 1-1, 4.42 in 2019, spent all of last season at Arizona’s alternate site, and 0-1, 9.35 in his two previous starts for the Rattlers this year. One of them lasted 4-2/3 innings; the other, four.

He also had two starts for Reno, where he went 1-0, 7.71. He has a highly regarded curve ball, and major league batters are 0 for 7 against his slider this year. It goes without saying that he also throws a variety of fast balls.

Chris Bassitt (5-2, 3.53) pitched in one of the games on the A’s successful swing through the Rockies and Pacific Northwest, throwing four innings of mediocre ball in Oakland’s 12-6 rout of the Mariners on June 1.

In spite of that, he had a five game winning (or at least not losing) streak going when he toed the rubber, with a record of 5-0, 3.16 in his last ten starts, holding opponents to a BA of .204. Before that, he had gone 0-2, 5.56, and opposing batters had hit a hefty .289 against him. Like Duplantier, he’s a right hander.

A couple of Oakland fan favorites took the field for the Diamondbacks. Josh Reddick played right and batted in the seventh position. Following him in the line up was I Believe In Stephen Vogt behind the plate. With Ramón Laureano still on the injured list, even though he’s eligible to return from it, Mark Canha started in center for the Athletics.

Christian Walker got the scoring started for Arizona in the top of the second, leading off with a first pitch, line drive home run over the Ring Central sign in left on a hung slider. It looked like trouble ahead for Bassitt when he surrendered a single to Pavin Smith and a walk to David Peralta.

But the A’s righty got Reddick and Vogt to fly out and, in spite of a wild pitch to Ildemaro Vargas that advanced the runners to second and third, closed out the inning by inducing Arizona’s number nine hitter to pop out to Andrus in short left field.

Duplantier held the A’s hitless for three innings. Then Jed Lowrie beat the shift with a single to left, followed by a walk to Matt Olson. Mitch Moreland’s single to left loadd the bases and probably would have scored Lowrie if it hadn’t have been a no out situation.

Lowrie scored any way when Sean Murphy drew a five pitch walk. Duplantier took a longer walk, to the club house, leaving with the score tied at one, the bases loaded, and nobody out. Alex Young took over on the mound with Seth Brown at the plate. Chad Pinder pinch hit for him. Pinder singled to left, and everyone moved up a base as the A’s went ahead, 2-1. Chapman did the same, and so did the baserunners.

Tony Kemp went down swinging for the frame’s first out, but Alvis Andrus walked, leaving the bases loaded and the A’s head 4-1. That closed the book on Dupanier, whose line was four runs, all earned, in three innings on two hits and three walks. He struck out four and threw 65 pitches, 38 of which counted as strikes. His already high ERA zoomed to 10.03, and he eventually was charged with the loss.

There was more to come. Andrus walked, refilling the bases. Canha beat out a double play relay from second on his grounder to third, bringing in Pinder. The inning came to a merciful close when Olson went down swinging. Young pitched a scoreless fifth and sixth, so his traditional stats came out smelling like roses with only one run charged against him.

But he had allowed four inherited runners to score, so it wouldn’t be right to consider his performance an effective one. Ryan Buchter relieved him to open the bottom of the seventh and set the A’s down in order.

The Diamondbacks cut the Athletics’ lead to 5-2 in top of the seventh on Christian Walker’s single to right, their first since the second inning, another single, this one to center, by David Peralta, which sent Walker to third, and Josh Reddick’s sac fly to right.

Yusmeiro Petit took over mound duties for the home nine in the eighth and set the D-backs down in order. Bassitt left with a fine pitching line of two runs, both earned, on four hits, one of which went yard, a walk and a wild pitch. He threw 88 pitches, 63 for strikes, lowered his ERA to 3.44, and earned the win.

Lou Trivino came in to close the game in the ninth. Smith got a two out single on a dribbler to third that beat the shift. Trivino got save, his ninth in 11 opportunities. While the Athletics were busy taking a 5-1 lead in Oakland, the Astros got their 27th out in Boston to defeat the Red Sox, 7-1, making the action at the Coliseum a must win situation for the A’s if they were to retain their division lead for another day.

The A’s victory means that, in spite of Houston defeating Boston 7-1, Oakland still is on the top of the heap in the AL West.

At 12:37 tomorrow afternoon, if you’re reading this before midnight, the A’s will throw Sean Manaea (4-2, 3.36) against the D-backs’ Mark Peacock (2-2,4.68).

Tauchman hits a grand slam in Giants win 9-4

The San Francisco Giants Mike Tauchman (29) connects for an eighth inning grand slam home run off Texas Rangers pitcher Josh Sborz on Tue Jun 8, 2021 in Arlington (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

Mike Tauchman gave the allegiance of San Francisco Giants fans much to cheer about on one swing of the bat.

Tauchman lined his first grand slam of his career into the first row of the right field seats, helping the Giants to a come-from-behind 9-4 victory over the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field.

Lufkin, Texas native Brandon Belt got the eighth inning rally started, as he singled to lead off the inning, then Brandon Crawford walked and after Wilmer Flores struck out for the first out of the inning, Steven Duggar walked to load the bases. That was enough for Joely Rodriguez, as he was replaced by Josh Sborz, who got Donovan Solano to line out to Isian Kiner-Falefa for the second out of the inning.

On a 3-1 pitch to Tauchman, Sborz threw a four-seam fastball that ended up in the seats to give the Giants the lead for good and to get that monkey off their back, as they could not get a break with runners on base, as they were 1-for-9 prior to the Tauchman grand slam.

Jose Alvarez got the final two outs of the seventh inning to pick up his second win of the season. Alvarez came on with two on and one out, but was able to get out of the jam.

Alvarez then gave way to Jake McGee, who pitched a perfect eighth inning, as he got three ground balls to end the frame and then Dominic Leone got the final three outs of the game to secure to huge win to start this road trip.

Alex Wood ended up getting the no-decision, as he went 5.1 innings, allowing four runs on five hits, walking three and striking out two.

Brandon Crawford, who became the Giants all-time leader in games played by a shortstop broke the game wide open in the top of the ninth inning, as he his second home run of the game and 14th of the season, when he hit a three-run home run off of Rangers reliever Taylor Hearn.

Buster Posey singled with one out in the inning, then Belt picked up his third hit of the night and then Crawford hit a Hearn offering into the right-center field seats.

Crawford gave the Giants a short lived 2-1 lead in the top of the sixth inning, as he hit a solo home run off of Rangers starter Jordan Lyles that landed near where his second home run landed in the top of the ninth inning.

It was a tough no-decision for Lyles, who went six innings, allowing two runs on six hits, walking three and striking out three.

The Giants took a 1-0 lead in the top of the second inning, as Duggar reached on a fielding error by Nate Lowe at first base that scored Belt.

Unfortunately, that lead did not last long at all, as Joey Gallo hit his 11th home run of the season to tie up the game.

Adolis Garcia tied up the game after Crawford hit his first home run of the game, as he doubled to left field that scored Kiner-Falefa. Nick Solak then gave the Rangers the lead, as he doubled to score Willie Calhoun and Garcia and things were looking good for the Rangers until that fateful eighth inning.

LaMonte Wade, Jr., went three-for-five, as he continues to lead off for the Giants, while Belt returned to the lineup also picked up three hits and walked; however, the biggest hit of the night was the Tauchman grand slam that gave the Giants the lead for good.

NOTES: Belt was activated prior to the game, as he missed the previous 11 games with a left oblique strain. To make room for Belt, Camilo Doval was optioned to Sacramento following the game on Sunday against the Chicago Cubs.

With the victory, the Giants have won 10 out of their last 13 games.

The Giants are now 20-13 on the road, good enough for the fourth-best road record in the major leagues.

By hitting three more home runs, the Giants have now hit 59 home runs on the road, and have multiple home runs in six straight road games, tying the third longest streak in team history.

Crawford passed Travis Jackson for the most games played by a Giants shortstop, and was acknowledged by the crowd, as he went on the field in the bottom of the first inning alone. Crawford doffed his cap to the crowd, and eventually his teammates came out on the field to greet him.

Alex Dickerson was forced to leave the game with back tightness after he struck out in his second at-bat.

UP NEXT: Sammy Long will make his major-league debut on Wednesday afternoon, as he takes the mound for the Giants. Long grew up in Sacramento, and first went to Rosemont High School before transferring to Del Campo High School and ended up being the Western Athletic Conference Freshman of the Year in 2014 and was a Louisville Slugger Freshman All-American, as he went 8-2 with a 3.03 earned for Sacramento State.

The Rangers will send their ace Kyle Gibson to the mound, as he looks to improve to 5-0 on the season.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Sixers GM Morey tampering for Curry; Duane’s chemotherapy and how it effects brother A’s announcer Glenn plus more

Golden State Warrior Stephen Curry’s tweet regarding brother Philadelphia 76er Seth Curry (photo from @stephencurry30)

On That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast:

#1 In a tweet by the Philadelphia 76ers general manager Daryl Morey to the Golden State Warriors free agent Stephen Curry under the caption of “Join em” with the 76ers Seth Curry in the photo. The NBA fined Morey $75,000 for tampering. Morey said he meant that he was glad that Seth was on team and he meant nothing by the “Join em” tweet.

#2 Amaury you work very closely with Oakland A’s NBC Bay Area play by play announcer Glenn Kuiper after his brother San Francisco Giants play by play announcer Duane Kuiper on Monday announced that he would be receiving chemotherapy it has to come as a shock and something Glenn had to come to grips with?

#3 Amaury, you wrote about former Los Angeles Angels manager Mike Scioscia who will be managing the 2021 USA baseball national team. Will there be games schedule for baseball in the 2021 Tokyo Olympics with all of the pressure against the Olympics coming to Tokyo because of the Coronavirus spike?

#4 Former Kansas City Chiefs assistant coach Britt Reid and son of Chiefs head coach Andy Reid pleaded not guilty from a car crash that hit the back of a vehicle that had a five year old girl seriously injuring her. Britt who had a DUI issue when Andy was head coach in Philadelphia has been ordered to use a breathalyzer which has been installed in his vehicle before he can drive again. 5 year old Ariel Young’s cousin Tiffany Verhulst said the charge’s against Reid were not harsh enough and that he gets to live a normal everyday life while he changed the life of little Ariel with the accident.

#5 The Oakland A’s open a two game series against the Arizona Diamondbacks which starts Tuesday night at the Coliseum. You mentioned Diamondbacks pitcher Madison Bumgarner in your column on Monday he’s out with shoulder inflammation and has been mentioned as trade bait along with infielder Eduardo Escobar and outfielder David Peralta.

Join Amaury Pi Gonzalez for all the play by play action of Oakland A’s baseball on the A’s Spanish flagship station 1010 KIQI LeGrande San Francisco and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com