Caratini’s late inning home run wins it for the Padres 3-1

San Diego Padres’ Victor Caratini, center, is congratulated by Manny Machado, right after belting a two run seventh inning home run against the San Francisco Giants at Petco Park in San Diego on Tue Apr 7, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

Things were looking good in the middle game between the San Francisco Giants and the San Diego Padres were going good, but that all changed with one pitch.

Victor Caratini hit a two-run home run off of Matt Wisler in the bottom of the seventh inning, helping the Padres to a 3-1 victory over the Giants at Petco Park.

With one out in the inning, Wisler walked Ha-Seong Kim on six pitches and on the first pitch to Caratini, he launched it into the right field seats to give the Padres the lead for good.

Keone Kela pitched a perfect seventh inning, striking out two to pick up his first win of the young season. Former Giants closer Mark Melancon threw a perfect ninth inning that included a strikeout to pick up his third save of the 2021 season.

Yu Darvish made his second start of the season, as he went six innings, allowing one run on three hits, walking one and striking out seven, as he was straddled with a no-decision.

Aaron Sanchez made quite a first impression on the Giants and their fans in his first start as a member of the team. In five innings of work, Sanchez gave up just one run on six hits, not allowing a walk and striking out four and like Darvish, did not fare in the decision.

Brandon Crawford got the Giants on the board in the top of the third inning, as he took a Darvish offering and planted it into the right-center seats for his first home run of the season to give the Giants a 1-0 lead.

Unfortunately, that lead did not last long, as Sanchez gave up a game-tying, run-scoring single to Eric Hosmer in the bottom half of the third inning to score Jake Cronenworth and that would be the score until Caratini untied it in the bottom of the seventh inning.

The Giants managed just three hits on the night against the Padres, as Buster Posey and Austin Slater picked up the other two hits.

NOTES: In the opener of the three-game series that the Giants won 3-2, they were helped by hitting three solo homers…the last time the Giants won a game by hitting three solo home runs to account for all their runs was October 3, 2015 vs. Colorado (Kelby Tomlinson, Marlon Byrd and Brandon Crawford each homered), this according to SportsRadar.

Crawfords home run in the top of the first inning was the teams 10th of the season and the ninth solo home run. Evan Longoria hit the only non-solo home run, when he hit a two-run home run on Friday night against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park.

UP NEXT: Kevin Gausman will make his second start of the season, as he takes the mound in the series finale for the Giants, while the Padres will send Blake Snell for his second start of the young season.

That’s Amaury’s Sports and Commentary: 2021 All Star Game – Mile High City–

View of Coors Field in Denver the site of the 2021 MLB All Star Game Tue July 13, 2021 after moving the game from Cobb County GA MLB says this is in protest of Georgia’s voter suppression law (file photo from mlb.com)

2021 All Star Game – Mile High City–

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Denver, Colorado was picked to replace Atlanta, Georgia for this year’s major league baseball mid-season classic on July 13. This because of a controversy from a new law in Georgia regarding voting ID. The Commissioner of Baseball Mr. Rob Manfred and the Colorado Rockies came to an agreement.

Coors Field is a spacious stadium in downtown Denver, just a couple of blocks from Union Station with capacity for 50,398. Opened on April 26, 1995. An open air stadium with sensational views and where the altitude makes the ball fly further.

Meanwhile the controversy continues as Georgia Governor Brian Kemp addressed the situation saying he is baffled by MLB decision. Moving the game from Georgia which under the new law requires ID to vote, the governor said about playing the All Star Game in Colorado a State that already requires ID to vote in elections. “So what I’m being told, they also have a photo ID requirement. So it doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to me.”

Another unexpected event during this 2021 MLB season when the game is trying to return some kind of normalcy. The Atlanta Chamber of Commerce is not very happy. This was a big event they had planned in advance for a few years and was hoping to bring an influx of business to many small minority owned places in the Atlanta metropolitan area. I wonder if Atlanta has cancellation insurance for this event? Make your plans for Coors Field!

Stay well and stay tuned.

Join Amaury for That’s Amaury’s Sports and Commentary each Tuesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: The Texas Factor – A Near Full House at Arlington

The Texas Rangers home opener against the Toronto Blue Jays drew 38,000 fans on Mon Apr 5, 2021. That was way over the recommended amount of fans other teams were allowing in. (AP News photo)

The Texas Factor – A Near Full House at Arlington 

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi Gonzalez

On Monday April 5, the Texas Rangers on their first ever regular season game at their new park Globe Life Field drew at least 38,000 fans. Although this might look as an “unusual” Opening Day during this pandemic, this was authorized by their local officials.

MLB teams do not determine how many people are allowed inside their stadiums, it’s all left to their State, County and City. Most owners detested the idea of empty stadium in 2020 and now in 2021 in some places (like Texas) things are opening-up as the cases of covid diminished in numbers.

The attendance was not a shocker to anybody; Texas was the first State in the Union to announce the removal of lock downs and the Texas Rangers the first MLB club to announce they will be allowing a capacity for their first game at home this season.

In Texas all reports point that coronavirus cases and death have collapsed since Governor Greg Abbott replaced their State’s mask mandate. As with everything these days all this has become political in nature as many Democratic politicians opposed Gov Abbott as they predicted Texas cases and death will rise as a result of the Governor’s decision, however that did not happened in Texas.

At the end of the story, it doesn’t matter what the politicians say, because the politicians do not buy the tickets, it is up to the people who have the last word to attend a baseball game and is only the people/fans that actually buy the tickets and attend to the games.

If the fans are “ok” with the park opening to a full capacity they have the freedom to attend and purchase their tickets regardless what anybody else says. And just because officials remove restrictions, you can still wear a mask in Texas if you wish. At the end it all boils down to personal decisions.

We are all individuals, not a herd of cattle. Carl Sandburg is a three-time Pulitzer Prize winner, journalist, editor, biographer of Abraham Lincoln and he once wrote this about the State of Texas: “Texas is a blend of valor and swagger”. The final score, Blue Jays 6 Rangers 2. The Texas Rangers are in a rebuilding mode and this year there is not a lot of hope in Arlington.

Stay well and stay tuned.

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

Giants smash three homers in hair-raising 3-2 win at San Diego

By Morris Phillips

The Giants didn’t impress anybody in Seattle with their late inning collapse on Thursday and eerily quiet bats on Saturday night.

But they did impress on Monday in San Diego.

Mike Yastrzemski, in a pinch-hitting role, broke a 2-2 tie with a home run in the seventh inning, propelling the Giants to a 3-2 win over the Padres at Petco Park. Yastrzemski’s big blow came after he was 1 for 13 against the Mariners, and told the local media he had no excuses for his substandard start to the season.

“I just stunk this weekend,” he said.

On Monday, Yaz was back in comfort zone: swinging a big bat, and characteristically saying as little as possible afterwards.

“We were gritty today, DeSclafani did great and we faced a good pitcher.” Yastrzemski told the NBC Sports Bay Area audience on the field after the game.

MLB.com’s Maria Guardado was able to get more out of Yastrzemski in a zoom session interview after the game, and the answers were revealing from one of the game’s more cerebral hitters.

“I was obviously hoping it was either a home run or a deep flyout,” Yastrzemski said. “It was kind of working into what I wanted to do mentally with my swing. I was getting beat a lot in Seattle and spinning off the ball. I just wanted to really stay through the middle of the field, and I just got a pitch that I could do it with.”

Yastrzemski’s home run off reliever Craig Stammen came on a 2-0 sinking fastball, and continued the slugger’s penchant for coming up with big hits in big spots, a trend that began in the COVID-truncated 2020 season. But Yaz wasn’t the only big bat for the Giants on Monday.

Darin Ruf homered in the second, and Evan Longoria homered in the fourth, his third round tripper in four games. All three blasts were solo shots and gave the Giants the lead each time.

Anthony DeSclafani made his San Francisco debut and held the Padres to one run on four hits in five innings of work. Even more significant was the team’s bullpen, working the final four frames while allowing a run on four hits as well.

Jake McGee picked up the save after walking Manny Machado and hitting Eric Hosmer with a pitch with two outs. Tommy Pham flew out with the two runners aboard to end it.

Padres star Fernando Tatis Jr. was injured while swinging at a pitch in the third. Tatis struck out and crumpled to the ground at home plate in obvious pain. He was diagnosed with a partially dislocated shoulder and could miss a month or more after signing a $340 million contract in the off-season.

Wondering how a 3-2 ballgame lasts 3 hours, 35 minutes in today’s baseball climate despite commissioner Rob Manfred’s insistence that games preceed at a faster pace? Here’s how.

Both teams started their fifth starter in their initial appearance of the season and both pitched deliberately. Between them, DeSclafani and San Diego’s Adrian Morejon started hitters with first pitch strikes on just 20 of 40 occasions. That led to a lot of deep counts, and lengthy at-bats as both pitchers were determined not to get hurt by lineups adept at extra-base hits and home runs. While both ultimately pitched well, they didn’t last long. Morejon, who had pitches hit as fast as 97 mph, allowed the first two Giants’ home runs, and was done after throwing 64 pitches in four innings.

DeSclafani threw 86 pitches in five innings of work, and had only one clean inning, the third, were he retired all three batters.

Both teams paraded relievers into the game after that–five on each side–and the common theme was yes, almost all pitched effectively, but they took their time. Matt Wisler, who found disaster in his previous appearance in Seattle, and McGee were particularly patient, mixing in balls and strikes at nearly an equal rate.

And that brings us to the main reason the game lasted so long: the Padres and Giants combined to throw 126 balls (with 184 strikes mixed in) and 314 pitches total. That’s a lot for a nine inning game, but reflective of how determined teams are of not letting lineups packed with power hitters hurt them. The Giants may be 2-2 and projected to finish third or worse in the NL West, but they can hit. Even at this early stage, and despite a Sunday afternoon off, the Giants lead MLB in homers with nine (tied with the Astros).

The Giants and Padres pick it up on Tuesday with Aaron Sanchez making his Giants debut in a matchup with Yu Darvish at 7:10 pm.

A’s drop fifth straight game; Dodgers open up series with 10-3 win

It’s been that kind of a homestand for the Oakland A’s as the hot corner is too hot for A’s third baseman Matt Chapman who can’t handle a hard hit ball against the Los Angeles Dodgers at the Oakland Coliseum on Mon Apr 5, 2021 (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (NL). 10-14-1

Oakland. 3- 6 -1

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–In every one of Oakland’s four season opening loses to Houston, there was at least one point at which the A’s could have either burst the game open in their favor or convert a seemingly commanding Astros lead into a tight match. In every case, the failure to capitalize on Houston’s momentary vulnerability turned the series into a festival of blown chances. Tonight, Oakland didn’t even come close.

In a sense, the A’s pitching staff is emblematic of the team’s inability to make the potential actual. A.J. Puk, Jesús Luzardo and Sean Manaea are young hurlers of tremendous talent, just short of unlocking the door to success. Tonight’s starter against the 3-1 Los Angeles Dodgers, Frankie Montás is another member of that group seeking to take the final step into the role of reliable top of the line starter.

He went 9-2, 2.63 in 2019, the last time MLB played a full season. MLB’s season lasted 162 games, but Montas’s didn’t; the was suspended for 80 days, June 21 to September 24, for drug use. He seemed ready to resume his progress last year, ready enough to be the A’s (delayed) opening day starter and be named the AL’s player of the week for August 3-9.

But he missed his next start because of back troubles and didn’t pitch well again until the final game of the regular (if you can say that about 2020) season. He won a wild card series game in relief and pitched well for three innings in the last game of the division series only to fall apart in the fourth frame to take the loss.

During this year’s spring training, he lost time to a stint on the covid list. As if that weren’t enough, Montás was forced to leave the last start of his abbreviated Cactus League season with a cuticle tear on the middle finger of his right, pitching, hand.

His performance tonight did nothing to advance his career. And the A’s anemic hitting did nothing to offset his disappointing mound work.

Dustin May, the starter for the NL West leading Dodgers , already seems to have established himself as a front line hurler. Promoted after 15 starts for AA Tulsa to AAA Oklahoma City, Los Angeles called him to the show in mid 2019. He went 3-1, 2.57 and threw 3-1/3 innings against the Nationals in the division series, yielding three hits and a run, for an ERA of 2. 70.

Last year, still technically a rookie, he was the Dodgers’ opening day starter. In that assignment, he gave up one run, this time in 4-1/3 frames. He went on to finish the season at 3-1, 2.57, with 16 walks against 44 strike outs. Among National League pitchers who went 50 or more innings, he ranked eighth in ERA, 13th in opponents’ BA (.222), and tied for 12th in WHIP at 1.09. He faced the A’s once, on September 22, and beat them.

His post seson record was more extensive than it had been a year earlier. He made three starts and four relief appearances, with combined totals of 1-0,4.22, and 13 punch outs. The Dodgers’ game notes report that he went 3-0 , 2.37, with 21 strikeouts and four walks in four starts and one relief stint in spring training this year. His four seamer was the fastest of any major league pitcher with 40 IP or more, an average of 99.1 mph.

Los Angeles jumped off to a fairly early and fairly significant lead in the top of the second. With one out, Max Muncy hit an opposite field single to left. Then Chris Taylor lifted a fly to medium left field that eluded a diving Tony Kemp, subbing for the ailing Chad Pinder. After a walk to Edwin Ríos loaded the bases, Zach McKinstry´s sac fly to left drove in the first run of the game.

Then, Matt Chapman couldn’t handle Mookie Betts’ hard smash down the third base line. That infield hit reloaded the bases, and Corey Singer unloaded them with a double off the centerfield wall, to the right of the STREAM YOUR A’S sign. The A’s now were down, 4-0.

Will Smith promptly made it 5-0 with his line drive that curved around the left field foul line on a 2-2 88 mph spliterfast with one down in the visitor’s third. Muncy followed that with a single to center, and then Montás plunked Taylor to put men on first and second. After another out, McKinstry´s single to right brought in Muncy with the Angelinos´ seventh run. A walk to Betts, and Montás was through for the night. AJ Puk relieved him, making his season debut.

Montás´s ugly line for 2-2/3 innings was seven runs, all earned, on seven hits, a home run, three walks, a wild pitch, and a hit batter He managed to strike out seven. Of his 90 pitches, 53 were strikes. His HBP of Taylor caused the Dodgers’ second baseman to leave the game.

Puk put out the fire in the third, but loaded the bases with two out in the fourth. He escaped unscathed thanks to second straight inning ending strkeout. When he left the game after closing out the LA sixth, his stint was your Á´s highlight for the night. In 3-1/3 innings, 35 of his 53 offerings counted as strikes.

He surrendered but one hit, but gave up three walks and a wild pitch, while striking out four. His replacement was left handed sidewinder Adam Kolarek, who gave up a run, earned, in his inning on the mound before giving way to Sergio Romo in the eighth.

May also finished up his work after the sixth. His performance had been superb. He surrendered two hits and two walks while striking out eight. His pitch count was 85, only 28 of which were balls.

Romo was tagged for a homer to center on his third pitch to Justin Taylor, the first man he faced. The A’s suffered an egregious lapse during Romo’s brief tenure. With Will Smith on first and one out, pinch hitter Matt Bealy, hit a grounder to shortstop Elvis Andrus, playing to the right of second. Andrus tried for the unassisted putout at second but bobbled the ball, leaving both batter and runner safe. Then, while none of the A’s seemed to be paying attention, Taylor advanced uncontestedly to third.

Canha saved a shred of the Athletics’ honor with a round tripper to left to lead off the bottom of the eighth off Mays’ replacement, David Price. That reduced LA’s lead to 9-1. The A’s racked up a couple of tallies more on a walk to Lowrie, a single to right by Piscotty, batting for Moreland, an infield hit by Chapman that plated Lowrie, and Ka’ai Tom’s first big league hit, an RBI single to center.

Reymin Gudjuan tried to mop up for the A’s. Both he and Cody Bellinger had to leave the game in the top of the night when they ran into each other while Bellinger was beating out a 3-1 infield single. By then the Dodgers had run the score up to 10-3. JB Wendelken was called on to try to get the last out of the inning and stop the carnage. He succeeded and, in doing so, lowered Gudjuan’s ERA to … 27.00.

Three hours and 35 minutes after the first pitch, Scott Alexander closed out the game, setting the A’s down in order.

Tomorrow’s game will start at 6:40. Clayton Kershaw (0-1, 7.94) is scheduled to face off against Chris Bassitt (0-1, 5.06).

San Francisco Giants podcast with Morris Phillips: Giants open up in San Diego for 3 game series tonight

The San Francisco Giants Evan Longoria goes deep in the top of the seventh inning against the Seattle Mariners on Fri Apr 2, 2021 at T Mobile Park in Seattle (AP News photo)

#1 The Giants (1-1) opened up their season in Seattle on Thursday night for the start of a three game series their most recent game Saturday night they were shutout 4-0 by the Mariners (1-1) pitching staff of starter Chris Flexan, relivers Kendall Graveman, Anthony Miseiewicz, and Rafael Montero.

#2 The Giants simply couldn’t get any hitting going on Saturday against the four Mariner pitchers was this a game that the M’s pitching staff had the Giants off balance or they were just that good.

#3 The Giants did pick up their first win of the season in game 2 of the series against the Mariners with a 6-3 win on Friday night. The Giants picked up the bulk of their run production in the sixth and seventh inning scoring two and three runs off M’s starter Yusei Kikuchi and reliever Drew Steckenrider.

#4 It’s not too often the Giants get a Sunday off and instead of making this a four game series it was a three game series giving the Giants Sunday off a travel day of sorts.

#5 The Giants open up a three game series against the San Diego Padres starting tonight at Petco Park, the Giants will start Anthony DeScalfani and for the Padres Adrian Morejon. This will be Desclfani’s first game pitching in a regular game for the Giants.

Join Morris for the Giants podcasts Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco Giants podcast with Morris Phillips Mon Apr 5, 2021 by Sports Radio Service | Free Listening on SoundCloud

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s hope to get back on track against Dodgers after rough Astros series

Oakland A’s second baseman Tony Kemp makes a throw to first in the third inning to retire the Houston Astros Carlos Correa in game 3 of the four game series on Sat Apr 3, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

Barbara on the A’s podcast:

#1 Barbara for the Oakland A’s the series with the Houston Astros pure torture the A’s took four loses in the row on Thursday through Sunday.

#2 The Astros had their bats going all series long with Yordan Alvarez, Jose Altuve, and Alex Bergman A’s pitching looked like they just couldn’t figure a way to get them out.

#3 A’s pitchers who were hit during the Houston series, A’s opening day starter Chris Bassitt five plus innings three runs, Jesus Luzardo five innings five runs, and Cole Irvin four innings four runs, Sean Manaea on Sunday over four innings plus six hits and five earned runs .

#4 A’s manager Bob Melvin was asked if he would be interested in managing another team other than the A’s after this season and he said “I have no desire to go anywhere else”

#5 The A’s will try to win a series as they host the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Dodgers who opened up the season against the Colorado Rockies and both teams played pretty even ball. Do you see the A’s recovering and maybe having a more balanced series against the Dodgers after the mismatch series they just had against the Astros?

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

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason Mon Apr 5, 2021 by Sports Radio Service | Free Listening on SoundCloud

San Francisco Giants report: History of the Willie Mac Award

Willie McCovey holding one of his many awards played with the San Francisco Giants from 1958 to 1973 and returned to the Giants in 1977-1980 (National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

When the late Willie McCovey retired after pinch hitting against the rival Los Angeles Dodgers on July 6, 1980, the San Francisco Giants honored him by creating an award in honor of him.

The Willie Mac Award is awarded to the most inspirational player on the team, and McCovey himself would be there in attendance every year until untimely passing on October 31, 2018 at the age of 80.

McCovey, who played 22 years in the major leagues for the Giants, the San Diego Padres and the Oakland Athletics; however, he will mostly be remembered for wearing the Orange and Black from 1959-1973, then split between the Padres and Athletics from 1974-1976 and then came back to the Giants before the 1977 season.

The 64 McCovey would be a regular at PacIfic Bell Park, then SBC Park and AT&T Park, as he was usually in his box on the club level and would be seen by throngs of fans as he left the park in a cart.

Jack Clark won the inaugural award in 1980, then Larry Herndon won the award in 1981 and was subsequently traded to the Detroit Tigers for left-handed reliever Dan Schatzeder.

Oakland native and a member of the famed Big Red Machine, the late Joe Morgan won the award in 1982 and ended the season with one of the Giants most famous home runs in the history of the team, when he hit a three-run home run off of Terry Forster that knocked the Dodgers out of the playoffs and gave the National League Western Division. That home run came on October 3, 1982, exactly 31 years after Bobby Thomsons famous Shot Heard Round the World, off of Dodgers reliever Ralph Branca that sent the Giants to their first World Series since 1937.

Multiple players have won the award more than once, including current Giants TV analyst Mike Krukow, J.T. Snow, and Bengie Molina.

On three different occasions, there have co-winners, as in 1995, Mark Leiter and Mark Carreon won the award. Sixteen years later in 2001, Mark Gardner and Benito Santiago shared the award and in 2016, Brandon Crawford and Javier Lopez split the award.

Mike Yastrzemski won the award in 2020, his first full year with the ballclub.

Here is the list of winners.

1980: Clark
1981: Herndon
1982: Morgan
1983: Darrell Evans
1984: Bob Brenly
1985: Krukow
1986: Krukow
1987: Chris Speier
1988: Jose Uribe
1989: Dave Dravecky
1990: Steve Bedrosian
1991: Robby Thompson
1992: Mike Felder
1993: Kirt Manwaring
1994: No winner
1995: Carreon and Leiter
1996: Shawon Dunston
1997: Snow
1998: Jeff Kent
1999: Marvin Benard
2000: Ellis Burks
2001: Gardner and Santiago
2002: David Bell
2003: Marquis Grissom
2004: Snow
2005: Mike Matheny
2006: Omar Vizquel
2007: Bengie Molina
2008: Molina
2009: Matt Cain
2010: Andres Torres
2011: Ryan Vogelsong
2012: Buster Posey
2013: Hunter Pence
2014: Madison Bumgarner
2015: Matt Duffy
2016: Crawford and Lopez
2017: Nick Hundley
2018: Will Smith
2019: Kevin Pillar
2020: Yastrzemski

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: Was Astros Dusty outsmarting the A’s in Houston series?

Houston Astros Jose Altuve is congratulated from manager Dusty Baker upon returning to the dugout in the fourth inning after scoring against the Oakland A’s on Thu Apr 1, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

#1 The A’s had a pretty rough start in their first series of 2021 Dusty Baker and the Astros are a very methodical team

#2 There’s very little doubt that the Astros can produce runs as seen in these three games of the series.

#3 The A’s host the Dodgers on Monday after they had a three game series with the Colorado Rockies. The Dodgers have lots of punch in that line up with Mookie Betts, Corey Seager, Justin Turner, and Cody Bellinger.

#4 The A’s pitching staff over the three games against the Astros were in question pitcher Chris Bassitt was rocked for three earned runs in his start Thursday, Jesus Luzardo gave up five earned runs in his start on Friday, then on Saturday the A’s got rocked again by Astros hitting 9-1, the A’s got bombed again 9-2 on Sunday.

#5 The Dodgers Dustin May 0-0 a right hander will be throwing against the Oakland A’s Frankie Montas 0-0. May had a great spring beating out David Price and Tony Gonsolin for the 5th spot in the rotation. Montas lost his splitter last season and has gained it again for this season and is hoping to have a season like he did in 2019.

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

A’s fans humbled, and the A’s dismantled by the Astros in a season-opening sweep

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND, CA–Season opening series observations from the Coliseum: pitchers ahead of hitters or hitters ahead of pitchers?

Well, more like Astros ahead of Athletics, and Houston hitters ahead of humorous, disgruntled A’s fans who had more than a year to prepare lugs to unload on their rivals and their cheating shenanigans.

The fans–especially that guy in Section 221–didn’t disappoint. Neither did the Astros.

“Castro Valley disowned yoouu!” Section 221 guy bellowed at Astros’ catcher Jason Castro.

And on the next pitch, Castro went opposite field off Sean Manaea for a 3-1 Astros’ lead.

The third inning, the same guy, his presence growing in a socially distanced crowd of fewer than 5,000, had Jose Altuve in his sights.

“Altuve! Show us your tattoo!” He shouted in reference to the shortstop’s equally humorous denial of wearing a wire signaling pitches during the 2019 playoffs. Altuve said he kept his teammates from ripping off his jersey in a game-ending celebration of a win over the Yankees to prevent revealing…a tattoo that was too ugly to be seen on national television.

But what was ugly on Sunday was Altuve’s response to the A’s and their fans. Two pitches after the tattoo reference, he ripped a double down the left field line. Later in that inning, with Manaea an out from escaping undamaged, Yuli Gurriel doubled into the right field gap to score Altuve and Yordan Alvarez.

And those exchanges encapsulated the weekend, the more the home fans yapped, the more the Astros slapped hits all over the place. In beating the A’s 9-2 and sweeping the four-game set, Houston never trailed and they had at least one base runner in 30 of the 36 innings. The A’s–truly an afterthought in a battle between the fans and the cheaters–came up empty on all fronts. They scored just nine runs, and 1-1 ties after the first inning on Friday and Sunday were as close as they got to being competitive. The Oakland bullpen was left so battered and bruised, outfielder Ka’ai Tom made his first major league pitching appearance in the ninth, a feat that comes before Tom’s first major league hit (0 for 6).

“We just crushed them from the first pitch to the last pitch of the whole series,” said Chas McCormick. “It was cool to watch, cool to be a part of.”

“We have to look at it as four games of 162,” manager Bob Melvin said. “We need to play with a little bit more urgency, we obviously have to play better. We got another tough team coming in, then we go there (Houston). We got to turn things around. It’s not just going to happen for us. We’ve got to play better baseball and this was not good baseball for us.”

“Altuve! You’re a cheater… and a bum… and you’re short!”

Injuries took a toll on the A’s as well with Sean Murphy suffering a wrist injury and missing the series final three games. Ramon Laureano played Thursday and Friday but injured his wrist sliding into a bag, which might have made Pete Rose famous, but is a move that isn’t endorsed by managers who prefer healthy players.

And on Sunday, Chad Pinder, already with a couple of slick catches to start his season, was forced to leave the game after a leaping catch at the wall left him dinged up. That incident happened four pitches into the ballgame, foreshadowing what would be a long Sunday afternoon for Oakland.

The A’s fell to 0-4, the first time they’ve started a season with four losses since 1987. Meanwhile, the Astros scored at least eight runs in each game of the series, becoming just the fourth team in Major League history to load all that offense into a season’s first four games.

It’s not often a team anticipates the arrival of the reigning World Champions for some relief, but that’s where the A’s are with the Dodgers arriving on Monday night. Frankie Montas will face the Dodgers’ Dustin May in the opener.