Preview of A’s vs. Orioles in Baltimore; Three game series opens Friday

The Oakland A’s Ramon Lureano (22) swings for a base hit in the bottom of the tenth inning on Wed Apr 21, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum against the Minnesota Twins (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s head East to start a six-game road trip. The A’s will play three against the Baltimore Oriole’s and finish the trip against the Tampa Bay Rays. The A’s currently reside in the American League Western Division with a 12-7 record. The A’s started the season 1-7 but have won 11 in a row. No team in Major League history has ever started the season with an 0-6 record and then had an 11-game winning streak at any time during the same season.

The Orioles have been a franchise in the American League since 1903. They were known as the St.Louis Browns for 51 seasons. Their last year in St. Louis was 1953. The Browns were doormats in the AL for many, many years. Their only appearance in the World Series came in 1944 during World War II.

They lost to the St. Louis Cardinals. The Browns featured a one-armed centerfielder, Pete Gray. Bill Veeck owned the team, and he sold it to people who promptly moved the team to Baltimore and named them the Orioles. Since 1954, the Orioles have won three World Series.

They swept the LA Dodgers in 1966 to win their first crown. The Orioles right-fielder was Frank Robinson. The Cincinnati Reds traded Robinson to the O’s as they thought Robinson was an old 30-year-old player. All Robinson did that year was win the AL MVP>They beat the Big Red Machine in 1970. Third baseman Brooks Robinson put on a defensive show in that series that people still remember 51 years later.

The Orioles won their last championship in 1983, downing the Philadelphia Phillies. Shortstop Cal Ripken, Jr. led his team that season. Frank Robinson, Brooks Robinson, and Cal Ripken, Jr. are all Baseball’s Hall of Fame members.

Things have not gone well for the Orioles in recent years. Their last appearance in a World Series was in 1983, 38 years ago. The last time they made the playoffs was in 2016. The Toronto Blue Jays met them in the Wild Card game. The Jays sent the O’s home.

The A’s have not played the Orioles since the 2019 season. There are many new faces on the team. The Orioles traded their superstar third baseman, Manny Machado, to the Dodgers in 2018 as Manny was going to be a free agent at the end of the season. Manny signed with the San Diego Padres in 2019.

Buck Showalter was gone as the Orioles manager. Brandon Hyde replaced him and was tasked with bringing the club back to respectability. Hyde replaced Showalter before the start of the 2019 season. Showalter was the last manager to take the O’s to the playoffs.

The Orioles finished last in 2017 with a record of 75-87. In Showalter’s last year as manager, Baltimore fell to the bottom of the barrel posting a record of 47-115. In Hyde’s first year, Baltimore finished last again. They improved to 54-108.

They had a new young player, Trey Mancini, to lead them out of the wilderness. Fate wasn’t kind to Mancini. Trey had to miss the 2020 season due to cancer treatment. Mancini has recovered, and he will see playing time this weekend. The Orioles finished fourth in the AL East last year with a record of 25-35.

Oakland A’s fans don’t know too much about the Orioles’ roster. They have some new players and some oldies, too. As mentioned above, Baltimore wants to move up in the Eastern Division. They shocked the baseball world by sweeping the Red Sox at Fenway Park by winning all three games. However, they have faltered since then to enter the game against Oakland with a record of 8-10.

The A’s will send lefty Cole Irvin to the mound to start Friday night. Irvin will be making his fourth start as an Oakland Athletic. He did not fare well in his first two outings. In his last game against the Detroit Tigers, Irvin pitched six shutout innings. His overall record ia 1-2 with an ERA of 4.60.

Baltimore will counter with righty Jorge Lopez. Lopez will also be making his fourth start of the season. Lopez was hammered in his first two starts. He pitched well against Texas to earn the win. For the season, Lopez is 1-2 with an ERA of 8.56.

Chris Bassitt will go for Oakland on Saturday. The Orioles have not announced their starter for the Saturday game. Righty Matt Harvey may get the call. Other pitchers that could start are lefties John Means and Bruce Zimmerman.

The A’s enter the series scoring an average of 4.74 runs per game. The A’s have players up and down the lineup that can send the baseball into the stratosphere. Their big first baseman, Matt Olson, has been scorching hot. Olson had three home runs in the last two games of the series with the Minnesota Twins.

Olson has hit six homers and has 15 RBIs so far this year. Mark, Canha, Ramon Laureano, Stephen Piscotty, Jed Lowrie, Sean Murphy, and Seth Brown have all hit home runs to help the A’s to the current 11-game winning streak.

The A’s starting rotation has done the job since the 1-7 start. The team ERA is 4.71, ranking 26th in MLB. The reason for the high ERA was the poor start in the first games of the year. The A’s beat the Twins Wednesday in a wild one 13-12. Before the Wednesday game, the A’s pitching staff recorded four shutouts in five games. A’s starters Sean Manaea, Chris Bassitt, Frankie Montas, and Jesus Luzardo have all done well recently.

The A’s Mike Fiers will be available shortly. Fiers won 15 games last season. The A’s will have to figure out who Fiers will replace. The A’s bullpen has done well, too. A’s manager Bob Melvin has used righty Lou Trivino and lefty Jake Diekman as the closer.

The Orioles will probably put these guys on the field Friday night. Trey Mancini will be at first base. Rio Ruiz will be at second, Freddy Galvis at shortstop, and Maikel Franco, the former Philadelphia Phillie, will be at third. DJ Stewart will be in left field, Cedric Mullins in center, and Austin Hays in right. Paul Severino will handle the catching chores for the Orioles.

The Las Vegas oddsmakers probably would favor the A’s to win the series. The magic of baseball, as players well know, you never know what’s going to happen. Even the lowest of teams can upset the applecart of the favored team. Jorge Lopez could pitch his best game of the year. The A’s could send him to an early shower. No one knows. That’s the beauty of baseball. That’s why they play the games.

Jerry Feitelberg is an Oakland A’s beat writer for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: It ain’t over til it’s over; A’s 3 run rally in 10th keeps streak alive

The Oakland A’s Tony Kemp jumps for joy with Ramon Laureano after the Minnesota Twins third baseman Luis Arraez made a throwing error to allow two runs to score in the bottom of the tenth for the A’s win at the Oakland Coliseum on Wed Apr 21, 2021 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 Minnesota Twins third baseman Luis Arraez’ throwing error in the 10th inning costed the Twins the game Twins leading 12-11 in the bottom of the 10th scoring Elvis Andrus and Tony Kemp for the game winners to keep the A’s long 11 game win streak alive.

#2 You know the old saying good teams come back and win ball games and the A’s have done a little of everything they’ve had some shutouts pitched but on Wednesday afternoon they sure got some offense after being down by as much as 7-4 in the third inning.

#3 The Twins Byron Buxton was busy trying to keep the Twins the in the ball game scoring two runs, three hits which included a two run tenth inning home run that put the Twins on top 12-10.

#4 The A’s in the bottom half of the tenth scratched and clawed to score those three runs when they were down 12-10 to keep their 11 game win streak alive you have to wonder if the players were surprised or not really surprised based on the confidence of the team.

#5 Jerry, the A’s have the day off today after having Monday off due to their first game with the Twins which was canceled due to Coronavirus protocol issues.

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

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg Thu Apr 22, 2021 by Sports Radio Service | Free Listening on SoundCloud

Twins throwing error saves A’s 11 game win streak in 13-10 win

Oakland A’s catcher Sean Murphy (12) forefront, Tony Kemp (right) with Ramon Laureano (center) celebrate the team’s 11th straight win after a Minnesota Twins throwing error in the tenth inning on Wed Apr 21, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

Minnesota 12 – 18 – 2

Oakland 13 – 13 – 2

10 innings

By Lewis Rubman

April 21

OAKLAND–The Minnesota Twins, battered by Covid and the Oakland A’s announced earlier today that they had added J.T. Riddle, who had seemed healthy enough to pinch run in last night’s game, to their Covid Protocol list, which is now five names long. To replace him, Minnesota recalled switch hitting catcher Tomás Telis.

Battered they might be, but the Twin Cities’ team came out fighting. The Oakland starter, Frankie Montás (2-1, 4.91) threw only one pitch that was called a ball in the first inning. Maybe he should have thrown a few more. With one out, one-time A’s fan favorite Josh Donaldson slammed Montás’s seventh pitch of the game, a 98 mph slider over the left field fence to give Minnesota a 1-0 lead in the twinkling of an eye. They didn’t score again that inning, but Byron Buxton doubled to right, and, one frame later, Brent Rocker rocked a two bagger off the left center field wall.

Meanwhile, Minnesota’s veteran right hander Kenta Maeda, although he got through the first unscathed, gave up a game tying homer to Matt Olson, his fifth of the year, a line drive over the 362 foot marker, just to the left of the right field score board. Like Donaldson, Olson hit his dinger.

As it advanced, the Athletics´ offense abandoned the big blast for singles hitting and alert baserunning, aided by Maeda’s troubles with his control. With one down, he hit Mitch Moreland with a pitch. After Sean Murphy flew out to center, Seth Brown singled to right, sending Moreland to third.

Elvis Andrus singled him home, while Brown moved on to second. Mark Canha then hit a liner back to Maeda, who couldn’t handle it. That turned out to be an infield single that loaded the bases. Maeda’s first pitch to Ramón Laureano was a wild one, which brought Brown home with the A’s fifth run.

That two run lead for Oakland couldn’t survive Minnesota’s third inning onslaught. Luis Arraez led off with a double to center and scored the tying run when Donaldson followed that with a single to left. Donaldson prompted trotted home in front of Nelson Cruz, who sent an 87mph slider over the left field fence for his fifth round tripper and 11th and 12th RBIs of the campaign and, incidentally a 4-3 Minnesota lead.

Even though Jorge Polanco slipped a single between the two outs that followed Cruz’s homer it looked as if Montás had weathered the storm. But there stilll was room for more misfortune. The A’s hurler got Jake Cave to swing and miss an 88 mph split fingered fast ball, the second time Cave had struck out in as many at bats, but it wasn’t the third out. The third strike was a wild pitch, and now there were two men on base. But Montás got Brent Rocker to swing at a third strike, and this time it was definitive.

Minnesota was up 4-3, but it was a dry and fairly warm day at the Coliseum. Perfect weather for a Lowrie double and an Olson homer. And that’s how Oakland took a 5-4 lead. Seth Brown joined the long ball parade, sending a an 81 mph slider (what else?) just inside the right field foul pole and driving in Murphy, who had singled, and upping the A’s advantage to 7-4. It Brown’s third home run and gave him five RBI for the season.

Maeda didn’t answer the bell for the fourth. He had pitched three innings, allowing seven runs, all earned, on eight hits and a hit batter. He notched one strike out. 37 of his 51 pitches were strikes, his ERA blossomed to 6.11, and he was on the hook for the loss, but neither starting pitcher ended up involved in the decision. Tyler Duffey (0-0-0,4.50) came in to pitch.

Cruz closed the gap between the teams to 7-5 by sending a liner just over the glove of a leaping Laureano in front of the Stream Your A’s sign in center field. That gave him six HRs and 13 RBIs.

After Byron Buxton’s grounder slipped under Lowrie’s glove, beating the shift for a single, that was it for Montás. He left mound duties to J.B. Wendelkin (0-0-0,3.52), who gave up a seeing eye single to right by Polanco that allowed Buxton to go all the way to third.

Brown’s errant throw towards that base permitted Polanco’s advance to second. After Astudillio grounded out to Andrus, who held the runners in place, Jake Cave hit a grounder to the right side of a drawn-in infield and Lowrie’s legs that tied the game.

Montás had not pitched well in his four inning outing. He was charged with six runs, and all were earned. (The unearned run on Lowrie’s error was charged to Wendelken). That brought his ERA up to 6.75. He served up three longs balls. He didn’t walk anyone. He had four strike outs to his credit, one of them on a wild pitch. 56 of his 76 offerings were strikes.

The pitching merry-go-round had begun. Randy Dobnak threw a 1-2-3 fiftlh inning for the Twins in the fifth. Sergio Romo gave up two straight singles to the top of the Twins batting order in the sixth. He did retire Cruz on a grounder to Andrus, but that brought in the leading run for Minnesota.

Polanco’s single to left gave them a two run advantage, and, after Polanco stolen second, Astudillo’s single put them three runs ahead. Adam Kolarek came in and finally stopped the hemoraging. So much for yesterday’s two shutouts!

It was Hansel Robles who pitched the sixth for the visitors. He threw 27 pitches and left with two outs and two on. Laureano almost tied the score on him, sending a 3-1 pitch down the left field line only to land in the seats in foul territory. He eventually fanned for the second out.

That brought in Taylor Rogers, who gave up a two run double to right center and then closed the door on the A’s thanks to brilliant diving catch in left center by Byron Buxton of a blast by Olson that would have reknotted the score.

The top of the seventh brought Yusmeiro Petit to the mound to try keeping the deficit at 10-9. With a little help from a pitcher’s best friend (this time, Chapman to Lowrie, to Olson) he did. He kept the Twins off the board in the eigthth as well. Taylor Rogers also kept his opponents off the board in his two innings of work, thanks to a double play in the seventh. He didn’t need that sort of help in the eighth, striking out the side.

Lou Trivino pitched the ninth for the A’s, hoping, like Petit, to hold the line at 10 to 9. He struck out the first two batters he faced, Cave and Rocker. But Ryan Jeffers doubled down the line to left, and Arraez managed to wrangle a full count walk to bring up the dangerous Donaldson, hitting .558 as he came to bat. Trivino went to 3-2 on him as well before inducing a fly out to right.

It was time for Alex Colomé, the Twin Cities’ closer, to make his first appearance of the series. He hit Laureano with a pitch and got Lowrie out on a hooking fly to left. Olson’s sharp single to right just eluded the diving grasp of Arraez at second and sent the speedy Laureano to third with the potelntial tying run. Minnesota brought its infield in with Chapman at bat.

He almost won the game with a fly that landed over the 811 sign, just to the right of the right field foul pole. Instead, he tied it up with a sacrifice fly (actually a line drive) to left that brought Laureano home. Piscotty was at bat with a count of 1-1, and then, and then … Olson got picked off, 1-3-4 to send the game into extra innings.

Rocco Baldelli’s managerial gears began spinning. He sent in Travis Blankenhorn to run for Donaldson, who had been placed at second base. He also inserted Mitch Garver to hit for Cruz. Garver struck out, but Byron Bluxton unloaded a blast into the walkway separating the upper and lower portions of the outfield seats. After Polanco flew out to the center field warning track, Deolis Guerra relieved Trivino and ended the inning by getting Astudillo to pop out to first.

Colomé had a two run lead to work with in the bottom of the tenth. He got his first two men out but then walked Brown, who joined Chapman on the base paths, at least until, moments later, Tony Kemp replaced him at first. Andrus kept the A’s hopes alive by drawing a 3-2 walk to load the bases and bring Canha to the plate. Canha grounded to Blankenhorn, now playing second, who fumbled the ball, letting PIscotty score and leaving the bases loaded.

Laureano came up, 0-4 and needing a single to win the game for Oakland. Instead, he hit a sharp grounder to third. The A’s goose seemed well and truely cooked. But the Golden Glove winning Donaldson wasn’t there. He’d been replaced by Arraez when Blankenhorn stayed in the game to play second. Arraez, playing an unfamiliar position, threw the ball away, and the tying and winning runs came in to give the A’s the win, the series sweep, a 7-0 homestand, and an 11 game winning streak. Baldelli would seem to have outstrategized himself.

The win went to Guerra. He’s 1-0, 1.42. The loss was charged to Colomé. He´s 1-2, with three blown saves and an ERA of 5.63

The A’s have a day off tomorrow as they travel east for a three game series in Baltimore and a four game set-to at Tampa Bay. The A’s return to the Coliseum on April 30 to face the Orioles at 6:40.

Phillies, Harper slip past Giants 6-5

The Philadelphia Phillies Bryce Harper takes his swings in the on deck circle as he prepares to face San Francisco Giants pitching at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia on Tue Apr 20, 2021 (@Phillies photo)

By Daniel Dullum
Sports Radio Service
Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Philadelphia’s Bryce Harper tied Wednesday’s game against San Francisco with a home run, then scored the game-winning run on Andrew Knapp’s ninth-inning single, as the Phillies edged the Giants 6-5 at Citizen’s Bank Park.

In the bottom of the ninth, Harper started the final rally by drawing a walk off Giants reliever Wandy Peralta (2-1). Harper moved to second on a one-out single by Brad Miller and scored the game-winner when Knapp singled to left-center.

Hector Neris (1-1) struck out two in the top of the ninth and picked up the win.

Harper tied the game at 5-5 in the bottom of the seventh with a solo home run to right-center off Camilo Doval. The Giants had taken a 5-4 lead in the top of the seventh on Alex Dickerson’s RBI single to center. Earlier in the inning, pinch-hitter Darin Ruf hit a three-run home run to center, measured at 415 feet.

Philadelphia led 4-1 in the sixth after Nick Maton’s run-scoring single to left. Buster Posey scored San Francisco’s first run when Mauricio Dubon hit into a fielder’s choice in the top of the fifth.

Mickey Moniak’s three-run home run to left-center put the Phils up 3-0 in the second inning.

Miller went 4-for-5 to lead the Phillies’ 12-hit attack, while Dickerson was 3-for-4 for San Francisco. Philadelphia starter Zach Eflin worked six innings, giving up one earned run on seven hits, and struck out three without a walk. Anthony DeSclafani, the Giants starter, struck out five and walked two while giving up three runs on five hits in four innings.

The Giants return home on Thursday to start a four-game series against Miami. Probables are Aaron Sanchez (0-1, 2.45) for San Francisco, while the Marlins will start Daniel Castano (0-0, 1.80).

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: Baseball Laboratory Moving Back Pitcher’s Rubber

The MLB pitchers mound will be moved back 12 inches and the rubber will be back 61’6″ (photo from Bob Schloss flickr.com)

Baseball Laboratory: Moving Back Pitcher’s Rubber

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Major League Baseball (MLB) and the Atlantic League of Professional Baseball (ALPB) announced new experimental playing rules that will be in place during the 2021 Atlantic League Championship Season. These changes are an experiment that it could be adopted in the future by Major League Baseball.

The Atlantic League season is scheduled to begin May 28. Six-team circuit, after losing two teams to Minor League Baseball, but for MLB they are a laboratory this year, for “experiments” per instructions and agreement with the Atlantic League from the office of the Commissioner of baseball.

These are the two experiments according to the Atlantic League communiqué.

-PITCHING RUBBER MOVED BACK ONE FOOT (SECOND HALF OF SEASON ONLY)

Moving the pitching rubber back 12 inches to 61’6” will provide batters with more time to react to pitches. The expectation is that more reaction time will help batters make contact more frequently, putting more balls into play, and creating more action in the game. -The reaction time on a 93.3 mph fastball (average velocity in 2020) thrown from 61’6” is approximately equivalent to a 91.6 mph fastball (the average fastball velocity in 2010) thrown from 60’6”.

-As pitchers have gained velocity and used technology to improve the effectiveness of their pitches, the strikeout rate in Major League Baseball has increased for 15 consecutive years, from 16.4% of plate appearances in 2005 to an all-time Major League record 23.4% in 2020.

An analysis performed by MLB determined that a 12-inch increase would be the minimum interval needed to evaluate a change in mound distance. It is expected to be meaningful without being disruptive.

“DOUBLE-HOOK” DESIGNATED HITTER (FULL SEASON)

  • Once a team’s starting pitcher is replaced, the team will lose its Designated Hitter for the remainder of the game. The Club will be required to use a pinch hitter, or the relief pitcher will bat.

  • The “Double Hook” rule represents a potential compromise between the historical rules of the National League (which has not employed the Designated Hitter, except in 2020) and the American League (which has used the Designated Hitter since 1973).
  • Nearly 90% of pitching starts in the Major Leagues in 2020 lasted less than seven innings. By linking the DH to the starting pitcher, the rule aims to incentivize teams to leave their starting pitchers in longer, increase the value of starters who can work deeper into games and increase the strategic element in the late innings of a game.

The main objectives of these experimental changes are to shorten the length of the games. There was a laboratory in a land far far away from where MLB plays, that did an experiment and according to the majority of science experts in the world produced a problem that we are still dealing today in the US and all over the world, there was an error/mistake. I am always concerned about experiments.

Although I am not opposed to all changes, I hope baseball keeps their sanity and tries to maintain the game as it was intended to be played. Hope this is not a ‘slippery slope’, like maybe next would be to change the distance between the bases to 60 feet (like in softball) instead of the 90 feet it has been.

I just do not want a mistake to escape this baseball laboratory, and baseball is disrespected. This experiment to move the pitcher’s rubber back from 60 feet 6 inches to 61 feet 6 inches is important and personally I hope it strikes out, because when start changing distances in the structure of the game, we are playing with “fuego” fire.

Red Smith, famed sportswriter once wrote: “Ninety feet between bases is perhaps as close as man has ever come to perfection.”

Stay well and stay tuned.

Join Amaury Pi Gonzalez and Manolo Hernandez Douen for all the Spanish play by play excitement of Oakland A’s baseball as the A’s look for their 11th consecutive win today against the Minnesota Twins. Catch all the action at 1010 KIQI LaGrande San Francisco

Twin killing gets A’s 10th straight win in 1-0 shutout in night cap

The left field lighting powered off during the fifth inning at the Oakland Coliseum causing a 24 minute and 47 seconds delay during the second game of a doubleheader between the Minnesota Twins and Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Tue Apr 20, 2021 (AP News photo)

Minnesota 0 – 2 – 0

Oakland 1- 4 – 1

Game 2 of doubleheader

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–A half and hour after Oakland A’s (11-7) pitcher Sean Manaea, Mitch Moreland, and Matt Olson demolished the Minnesota Twins (6-10) in a seven inning laugher, the A’s attempted to pull off a twin killing that would extend their winning streak to double figures and set them up for a series sweep tomorrow. in the opening game of today’s double header.

Minnesota, it goes without saying, was seeking to reverse its recent tailspin to that end sent two-time all star (2018 and2019) right hander to the mound. He brought a 2-1, 3.38 record with him. His most recent start was in the second game of a double header in Boston on April 14. He left with the game tied at 1-1 in the fifth but took the loss, and the Twins were swept.

Oakland sent Jesús Luzardo, who, at 0-1, 8.31, still was trying to reestablish the rhythms that had made him one the A’s brightest hopes for the near future.

The first three innings passed quickly and more or less uneventfully, but right fielder Seth Brown provided two highlights in the second that are worth mentioning. In the top of the frame, he made a spectular diving catch of a dying quail off the broken bat of Brent Rocker for the third out. Then, in Oakland’s half of the inning, Brown’s one out double moved Mitch Moreland to third for the Athletics’ first threat of the game.

Then, in the bottom of the fourth, it was Brown who drove in the game’s first run. Olson went opposite field against the shift to lead off with a double and moved on to third on Chapman’s fly to right. Following a walk to Moreland, Brown’s single produced a 1-0 lead for the A’s.

Moreland was called out at second by a pick off throw from Berríos, but home plate umpire Scott Barry ruled that time had been called before the play began. The reprive was, however, short lived. Elvis Andrus lined out to left, and Luis Arraez made a swift, accurate throw to Willians Astudillo at second to double off Moreland and put an end to the threat.

A light bank failure in left field with one out in the top of the fifth caused a delay of 24 minutes, 47 seconds. When play resumed, Luzardo didn’t miss a beat, striking out Brent Rocker and getting Estudillo to pop out to shallow right field, where second baseman Vimael Machín made a lovely over the head grab of the ball.

Berríos didn’t lose any effectiveness during the delay, either. He set the A’s down, 1-2-3, in the fifth, and the game remained tied at one. After a walk to Arraez and a strike out of Ryan Jefferson, Luzardo handed the ball over to Lou Trivino, who struck Garver for the second out.

During Garver’s AB, Arraez advanced to second on a passed ball. With the dangerous ex-Athletic Josh Donaldson at the plate, Trivino uncorked a wild pitch that brought Arraez within 90 feet of home. Trivino struck Donaldson out looking.

Luzardo’s line ended up at no runs over 5-1/3 innings, on two hits, one walk, and three strike outs. He threw 65 pditches, 44 for strikes and reduced his bloated ERA to 5.89.

The fifth was the final frame for Berríos, who was replaced by Hansel Robles. Minnesota’s starter had allowed an earned run on four hits and one walk. He struck out five Athletics and hit one of them, Canha. 59 of his 89 hits were strikes.

Melvin called on Jake Diekman to try for the save in the top of the seventh. He started off inauspiciouslly, hitting Nelson Cruz with a 2-2 delivery to open the inning. The count went to 2-2 on the following batter, Byron Buxton, who fanned.

Jorge Polanco hit a 2-2 pitch to short, where Andrus couldn’t handle it. The error put runners on first and second with one out. Diekman struck out Rocker on an 0-2, 95 mph four seamer. Then Astudilo drove a 1-2, 96 mph four seam fastball to the left field wall, where Canha made a leaping catch to give the Athletics their tenth consecutive win.

The W went to Luzardo; the gutsy save to Diekman, his first. The tough loss went to Berríos.

Tomorrow´s fray, scheduled for 12:37. Frankie Montás (2-1, 4.91) will face Kenta Maeda (1-1, 2.45) in the final game of the A’s current home stand.

Posey goes yard twice in Giants 10-7 win

San Francisco Giants hitter Wilmer Flores hits for a three run home run against Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Connor Brogdon on Tue Apr 20, 2021 at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

Buster Posey did something in the second game of the three-game series that was last accomplished nearly five years ago.

Posey picked up his first multi-home run for the first time since 2016, as the San Francisco Giants came back to defeat the Philadelphia Phillies 10-7 at Citizens Bank Park.

Tommy La Stella hit a home run, but the big punches by the Giants came in the top of the eighth inning, as they scored six runs in the inning to take the lead for good.

Alex Dickerson slammed a three-run home run and then Wilmer Flores slammed a three-run pinch hit home run to secure the Giants third straight win.

All 10 runs came via the long ball, as the Giants have hit 25 home runs through 17 games during the 2021 season.

Dickersons three-run home run gave the Giants their first and only lead of the game, and then just four batters later, Flores picked up his first pinch-hit of the season that gave the Giants their final three runs of the game.

The six runs scored by the Giants were the first six runs allowed by Phillies reliever Connor Brogdon, who entered the game with a 0.00 earned run average and left with a 7.36 era.

It was the first multi-homer game for Posey since May 18, 2016 against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field.

Posey hit both of his home runs against former Giants farmhand Zack Wheeler, who was part of the Carlos Beltran trade with the New York Mets on July 11, 2011.

Logan Webb, who was activated off the injured list prior to the game after being placed on the list due to side effects from the Covid-19 vaccine went four innings, allowing four earned runs, seven hits, two walks and striking out four in just four innings of work.

To make room for Webb, Trevor Gott was designed for assignment, and closer Jake McGee was activated and pitched the ninth inning in the game. Sam Selman was sent to the alternate site after being called up to replace McGee.

Former Phillies pitcher Jose Alvarez pitched a perfect eighth inning to earn his first win of the season.

Brandon Belt was forced to leave the game with a right quad strain and will be re-evaluated by the team on Wednesday.

NOTES: According to the Elias Sports Bureau, Curt Casali is the first Giants catcher to catch shutouts in four consecutive starts since Broadway Aleck Smith, May 6-24, 1901…the last Major Leaguer to catch shutouts in four consecutive starts was Pittsburgh’s Francisco Cervelli (five straight) in June 2015.

The last time that the Giants threw back-to-back shutouts was against the Colorado Rockies on September 14 and 15, 2018 at Oracle Park.

UP NEXT: Anthony DeSclafani closes out the road trip on Wednesday afternoon, as he takes the mound versus the Phillies, who will send Zach Eflin to the hill.

A’s Manaea goes the distance (7 innings) to get 7-0 shutout in front game over Twins

Oakland Athletics’ Matt Chapman (26) and Matt Olson (28) make a celebratory reaction after Olson hit a grand slam off Minnesota Twins pitcher Jorge Alcala (66) in the fourth inning of game one of their MLB doubleheader at the Oakland Coliseum in Oakland, Calif., on Tuesday, April 20, 2021 (photo from Bay Area News Group)

Minnesota. 0 – 6 – 2

Oakland 7 – 5 – 0

First game doubleheader

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–After an unexpected day off yesterday, due to Covid19 problems in the Minnesota organization, the Oakland A’s and Minnesota Twins got around to the business of playing pandemic- inflected baseball with a pair of games scheduled to go seven innings each, beginning at 3:30 this afternoon.

34 year old right hander Matt Shoemaker brought a 1-0, 4.32 record with him to the mound for the Twinkies, while Sean Manaea, four years Shoemaker’s junior and throwing with his left hand, put his 1-1, 4.32 record on the line for the Athletics.

Eight of the nine batters Oakland’s southpaw would have to face in the visitors’ starting lineup were either right handed or, in one case, switch hitters. The home team brought an eight game winning streak with them to the Coliseum, while the Twins were 2-6 over their last eight contests.

Before the game, Stephen Piscotty was reinstated from the paternity list (congratulations) and was back patrolling right field at game time. Ka’ai Tom was designated for assignment. He’d gone one for 16 and scored one run in the nine games he’d played for the A’s.

Mike Moreland put the A’s ahead 2-0 in the bottom of the second with a line drive over the yellow line across the right field scorebord just to the right of the 382 foot marker. Sean Murphy, who had forrced Chapman out at second, was on base at the time. It was Moreland’s first round tripper and sixth and seventh RBI for the green and gold.

Moreland extended the lead in his next at bat, leading off the home fourth.. This time he went really deep, 405 feet to right center on a 92 mph slider that Shoemaker threw him on an 0-2 count. An out, a single, and a walk later, Shoemaker was out of the game.

He’d lasted a mere 3-1/3, in which he’d given up three runs (all earned) and still was on the hook for two more possible tallies. He hadn’t struck anyone out but had walked four batters and allowed four hits. Of his 67 pitches, 39 were strikes.

Shoemaker’s replacement, Jorge Alcalá, manmaged to get Laureano on a called third strike, but he walked Jed Lowrie to load the bases, and then surrendered a massive grand slam into the right field second deck by Olson. It was his fourth home run of the year and raused his RBI total to an even dozen, tying him with Lowrie for the team lead.

The two runs for which Shoemaker was on the hook now were on his record. He also remained on the hook for the loss, which left him at 1-1, 6.28. After Alacalá got his second strike out (Chapman) to end the inning, he was gone, and Luke Farrell made his first appearance as a Twin to open the fifth. Lewis Thorpe mopped up for Minnesota in the sixth.

Moreland and Olson’s power led the offense for Oakland, which also included four stolen bases, one each by Canha and Piscotty, and two by Andrus.

Manea was the winning pitcher, improving his record to 2-1, 3.04. He was credited with a complete game, the second of his big league career. His other CG was his 2018 no hitter against the Red Sox. In his seven inning stint today, Manaea gave up six hits and a walk. He struck out seven.

The teams will be at it again in a half an hour.

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: A’s and Twins will restart series with doubleheader today at Coliseum

The Detroit Tigers Will Castro slides behind Oakland A’s catcher Sean Murphy during the sixth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Apr 18, 2021 the A’s won the ball game 3-2 (AP News photo)

#1 After the tough start the Oakland A’s had at 0-6 the A’s look like contenders now after winning eight straight games.

#2 The A’s got two shutouts during their four game series with the Detroit Tigers the first shutout came on Friday when the A’s shutout the Tigers 3-0 behind A’s starter Frankie Montas and three relievers

#3 On Saturday starter Cole Irvin pitched six innings, four hits and the bullpen shut the Tigers out for the rest of the game.

#4 How much will the postponed game from Monday break the A’s momentum from their eight game winning streak going into today’s doubleheader.

#5 The Minnesota Twins organization is concerned about what is happening in their community with civil unrest, racial injustice and their Covid-19 protocols as a result they’ve had a number of games postponed.

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

One Belt, Two Runs: Giants win 2-0 in Philly

By Morris Phillips

Philadelphia fans will boo anyone at anytime. They’re pretty much known for that.

But it’s not all knucklehead behavior, there’s some common sense in there as well. So when it became clear that this was Gabe Kapler’s night, Philly fans relented.

The Giants, behind Brandon Belt’s bat and brilliant pitching, shut down the Phillies and stopped the boos, winning 2-0 at Citizens Bank Park on Monday.

Kevin Gausman survived six eventful innings to pick up the win and three Giants’ relievers finished the job, sparing Kapler any trips to the mound to incite the boo birds. The win, Kapler’s 200th as a manager, superceded all that huffing and puffing anyway.

“My feelings are I’m just kind of focused on doing a good job with the San Francisco Giants,” Kapler said when asked about his first return after two seasons managing the Phillies, “And that’s genuinely how I feel.”

What could have been all hyped up and agitated, was rendered mundane, first by Belt, who provided all the scoring in the third with a two-run shot off starter Chase Anderson. The slugger welcomed Anderson’s hanging breaking ball and redirected it 372 feet away beyond the right centerfield wall. But Belt’s blow didn’t portend a slugfest.

Instead, Gausman settled in, Anderson didn’t allow anything else and batters on both sides squandered some choice opportunities. The teams combined to go 1 for 15 with runners in scoring position, but it felt like Gausman faced all 15, as the Giants’ ace wiggled out of jam after jam.

“He wasn’t lights-out stuff — I think he’ll tell you the same,” Kapler said of Gausman. “He was just a fighter today, and I think that’s the reason he was able to do what he did.”

In the fourth, Gausman was saddled with runners at second and third, no outs. But he executed Plan A, striking out Mickey Moniak and Nick Maton, hitters with little big league experience (26 at-bats combined) inexplicably hitting back-to-back in the Philadelphia lineup. Pinch hitter Brad Miller was next, and Gausman tricked him with a splitter that was grounded to third for an easy third out.

Matt Wisler, Camilo Doval, and Wandy Peralta each contributed an inning of scoreless relief and the Giants had back-to-back shutouts after Sunday’s 1-0 win at Miami.

Kapler’s 200th win came with the fourth-year manager stuck on 200 losses, giving him the unique distinction in Major League history of holding both totals at same time. But that is his history: finishing two games under .500 with the Phillies (2018) and Giants (2020), and exactly. 500 in Philadelphia in 2019. This season’s 10-6 start–ironically with Kapler’s starting pitchers and bullpen being deployed brilliantly and backing it up with their performances–reflects the growth, especially juxtaposed against his numbers from the previous seasons.

“Hopefully it’s a big win for him, his first time coming back to Philly,” Gausman said of his manager. “It was a good way to kind of set the tone for this series.”

The Giants and Phillies resume play Tuesday with the Webb/Wheeler matchup at 4:05pm. Logan Webb returns to the starting rotation due to Johnny Cueto’s injury to face Zack Wheeler, who was traded from the Giants’ farm system nearly a decade ago.