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

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

On the A’s podcast with Jeremiah:

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

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

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

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

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

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

The Yankees Win their 12th straight game; A’s lose their fifth straight game 7-6

An eighth inning RBI single by the New York Yankees Aaron Judge holds up as the Yanks edge the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Ring Central Coliseum on Thu Aug 26, 2021 (AP News photo)

New York 7 – 9 – 0

Oakland 6 – 7 – 1

By Lewis Rubman

Thursday August 26, 2021

OAKLAND–George Bowering, the first Canadian Parliamentary Poet Laureate, tells the story of having gone to a Yankees-Red Sox game at Fenway with the Shakespearian scholar Edward Pechter. Whenever the Yankees scored, Pechter jumped to his feet and cheeered. When the Bosox crossed the plate, the other 30,000 fans in attendance jumped to their feet and cheered.

If Pechter had been at tonight’s contest at the Coliseum between the struggling Athletics and the surging New Yorkers, he would have felt less isolated. Yankee fans, identifiable by their pinstripes and loud cheering (and booing), comprised a signficant portion of the significantly less 8,147 paying spectators who saw the Yanks stave off a valient Oakland comeback attempt and defeat the A’s, 7-6 .

One time Yankee farm hand James Kaprielian (7-4, 3.25 at game time) and Jameson Taillon (8-4, 3.94), the second overall pick in the 2010 first year player draft, each threw a perfect first inning before things livened up in the top of the second.

After Karielian caught Joey Gallo looking at a called third strike for Kaprielian’s fourth strike out against as many batters, Yankee skipper Aaron Boone vociferously made his displeasure known to home plate umpire Todd Tichenor, who, in turn, made his displeasure known by giving Boone the heave-ho. Kaprielian retired two of the next four Yankee batsman, striking out one of them, Gary Sánchez. The other two, however, hit solo home runs.

The first was Giancarlo Stanton´s 23th of the season, a 436 foot blast to straight away center field on a full count four seamer. The second came off the bat of Brett Gardner, his 25th. It went over the fence in right.

The vistors added on in the third with a lead off double to right by Andrew Velázquez followed by Anthony Rizzo’s one out double to left, on which Harrison amost made a marvelous catch at the wall, a walk to Aaron Judge, and Joey Gallo’s three run dinger into the right field seats. It was his 30th of the year and fifth as a Yankee. When the dust had settle at the end of the third, the A’s were on the short end of a 6-0 shellalcking. I guess Boone’s ejection was the key play of the evening.

But all was not lost. Leading off the home third, Matt Chapman swung at a 3-2, 95 mph fastball that left his bat at 111.2 mph and ended up in the left field reserve seats. Sean Murphy then drove another 95 mph offering over the center field wall. Those were their home runs number 20 and 15, respectively.

Matt Olson led off Oakland´s fourth with a double to left. With one down, Harrison sent a line drive just over the glove of a leaping Gio Urshela at third, and Mitch Moreland walked to load the bases. Chapman, too, drew a walk, driving in his second run in as many innings and leaving the bases full of Oaklanders. Murphy fanned for the second out, bringing Andrus to the plate. He fell behind on the count, 0-2, before lining a single up the middle and bringing the Athletics to within a run of the Bombers, who now led, 6-5.

That liner drove Taillon out of the box, replaced by Albert Abreu with Canha coming up. During Canha’s at bat, Andrus stole second. Canha filled the void at first by walking, which refilled the bases. But Marte forced him out, unassisted, on a grounder to LeMahieu.

Taillon’s line was five runs, all earned, in a mere 3-2/3 frames, on four hits, two of them for the distance, and three walks. He threw 78 pitches, 47 strikes, and struck out four A’s. His ERA jumped to 4.18.

Abreu yielded the tying run in the fifth, on a two out no doubter 404 foot four bagger to left field by Harrison, his eighth of the year and second for the green and gold.

99 pitches (62 strikes) in five innings was enough for Kaprielian. In his gutsy performance he weathered a storm of six runs, all earned, on as many hits, half of which were four baggers, and a walk. He struck out eight, and, even though Yusmeiro Petit relieved him in the top of the sixth and Andrew Chafin followed Petit in the seventh and Romo in the eighth, saved more bullpen arms than could have been anticipated after the balls started leaving the park in the second.

When, in the sixth, Chapman led off for Oakland with a single up the middle, Clay Holmes was on the mound for New York. But the Yankee reliever struck out Murphy, Andrus, and Canha in order, to end that glimmer of hope. Jonathan Loásiga took over for Holmes in the home seventh.

Judge greeted Romo in the eighth with a slicing drive that landed just fair inside the right field line for a double, bringing up the dangerous Joey Gallo with the potential leading run in scoring position and no outs. Romo’s full count walk to Gallo wasn’t such a bad outcome to that confrontation.

Stanton skied out to center before Romo issued a four pitch pass to Sánchez that clogged the basepaths with one away. Gardner worked a 3-1 count, but Romo got him to pop an infield fly to second for out number two. The A’s reliever came through, getting Urshela to force Sánchez at second, Chapman to Lowrie. The curse of the lead off double strikes again!

The fireballing Loásiga held the A’s scoreless for two frames, so the game stilll was tied at six when Lou Trivino, who’d been going through a rough patch recently, entered the fray in the top of the ninth. He retired the first two batters he faced but yielded a four pitch walk to Rizzo that brought the ever dangerous Aaron Judge to the plate. Tyler Wade, runnng for Rizzo, broke for second, and Murphy’s throw flew into center field as Wade continued on to third. He scored on Judge’s single to right. Trivino was through, and Jake Diekman came in to put out the fire. To do that, he’d have to deal with Gallo.

Or would he? Judge broke for second. He beat Murphy’s throw, but the replay review showed that his foot came off the bag while Andrus’s glove still was touching his uniform. The call was reversed, and the A’s would need only one run to tie the game when they faced Aroldis Chapman in the ninth.

That’s easier said than done. After all Chapman came in with 299 career saves. Andrus flew out to center, and Canha fanned. But Marte singled to deep short, and a flicker of hope remained. It grew, just a bit, when Marte stole second. But Olson bounced out, 4-3.

The win went to Loásiga, whose two innings of hitless hurling stalled the Athletics’ comeback. He’s now 9-4, 2.23. Chapman became the 31st pitcher to reach the 300 save plateau. It was his 24th save of 2021.

Trivino took the loss. He’s now 5-7, 2.55. The possiblity of Romo becoming the new closer has been looking more inviting every day.

The teams will play the second of this four game series, tomorrow, Friday, night. The crowd will be larger; fireworks trump baseball in the attendance game. The starters will be Gerrit Cole (12-6, 2.92) and Sean Manaea (8-8, 3.77). Game time will be 6:40.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: If state stops Coliseum sale with county will that also change A’s from staying in Oakland? Powerful Yankees to face A’s tonight

Jerry takes a look at the Oakland A’s pitching rotation A’s starter Cole Irvin got knocked out of the box after three innings, seven hits, and three earned runs on Tue Aug 24, 2021 facing the Seattle Mariners at the Oakland Ring Central Coliseum (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 If the State says the sale of the Coliseum property is not legal and the deal for some further reason can not continue that also could put a monkey wrench in the A’s plans in their business model to use the Coliseum property.

#2 Jerry how relieved or glad does A’s manager Bob Melvin and the A’s happy to be to get a day off on Wednesday after have some rough series against the Chicago White Sox, San Francisco Giants, and Seattle Mariners this past week.

#3 The A’s going into the series with the New York Yankees have lost eight of their last ten games after going so well before the All Star break the month of August just simply fell apart for the A’s

#4 Jerry talk about the starting rotation for the A’s Chris Bassitt, James Kaprielian, Sean Manaea, Cole Irvin, and Frankie Montas it seems that after Bassitt got hit in the cheek with that line drive in Chicago things have really gone south for Oakland.

#5 They’re unstoppable and they come to Oakland with an 11 game win streak the Yankees have surpassed the Boston Red Sox and A’s in the AL Wild Card standings and lead them both by two games and with the A’s struggling the Yankees have the upper odds to take this four game series.

#6 Jerry, talk about tonight’s match up for the Yankees Jameson Taillon (8-4 ERA 3.94) and for the A’s James Kaprielian (7-4 ERA 3.25). For Kaprielian and the A’s every game now are must games to stay alive for any chance at the post season.

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

Preview New York Yankees vs. Oakland A’s four game series starts Thursday night

Oakland A’s pitcher Paul Blackburn will get the start on Thursday night at the Oakland Coliseum against the New York Yankees to open a four game series (whitecleatbeat.com file photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

OAKLAND–The Oakland A’s have an off-day on Wednesday. The A’s need the day off to regroup, and their manager, Bob Melvin, has to find a way to get his team back on the winning track. The A’s are 2-8 in their last ten games.

They are in second place in the AL West four and 1/2 games behind the first-place Houston Astros. The Seattle Mariners are in third place, one game behind the A’s. If the season were to end today, the A’s would not be in the playoffs.

They are two and 1/2 games behind the Boston Red Sox for the second Wild Card spot in the American League. Their chances to make the playoffs took a severe hit when they lost their ace, Chris Bassitt, for the remainder of the season. The A’s bullpen, so good for most of the season, blew leads in three consecutive games during the last ten played.

The A’s offense is in a slump. They are hitting .199 as a team in the last ten games. They have had men in scoring position but have failed to get the clutch hits needed. The three players they acquired at the trade deadline have played well since joining the team.

If they hope to make the playoffs, the A’s will have to find a way to stop the rampaging New York Yankees, who will be in town for a four-game series starting Thursday night. The Yankees have won 11 straight games. They have catapulted into the first Wild Card spot and have a two and 1/2 game lead over the Red Sox.

The Yankees have overcome injuries to their pitching staff as well as position players. They made two trades at the trade deadline that stunned the baseball world. They acquired two outstanding sluggers. They traded for Cubs’ first baseman, Anthony Rizzo.

The acquisition solved the problem at first base. Rizzo, a left-handed power hitter, has 17 homers and 49 RBIs. The other lefty power-hitter acquired was Joey Gallo. Gallo, hitting .206, has homered 29 times and driven in 63.
Along with Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton, and catcher Gary Sanchez, New York has a lineup that can pulverize their opponent’s pitchers.

The Yankees infield will feature DJ Le Mahieu or Rougned Odor at second base. Shortstop Glyber Torres and third baseman Gio Urshela are both on the 10-day IL. Urshela may be back for the series with the A’s. Andrew Velazquez will probably be the shortstop in the interim.

The Yankees use several players in the outfield. Aaron Judge, hitting .285 with 27 homers and 65 RBIs, probably will be in right field. The Yankees will use him in center if needed. Joey Gallo can play all three outfield positions. Brett Gardner will probably see time in centerfield. Their designated hitter, Giancarlo Stanton, has hit 22 homers and driven in 65.

Here are the pitching matchups for the series. Thursday’s game will feature Jameson Taillon (8-4, 3.94 ERA) going for New York Against the A’s James Kaprielian (7-4, 3.25 ERA). On Friday, the ace of the Yankee staff and one of the best pitchers in baseball, Gerrit Cole, will pitch for the Yanks.

Cole is 12-6 and has an ERA of 2.92. Lefty Sean Manaea will go for Oakland Manaea has been struggling in his last three or four starts. The A’s need him to get back in the groove and be able to shut down the powerful Yankee lineup. Manaea is 8-8 with a 3.77 ERA. On Saturday, Nestor Cortes, Jr (2-1, 2.56 ERA) will be squaring off against the A’s Frankie Montas. Montas pitched well in his last start but did not get a decision. Montas is 9-9 with a 3.84 ERA.

Thursday’s pitching match ups: Lefty Jordan Montgomery (5-5, 3.69 ERA) goes for the Yankees on Sunday. The A’s will counter with Paul Blackburn. Blackburn is 0-1 and has a 4.09 ERA.

The A’s have to right the ship. They have to start hitting. They cannot continue to leave men in scoring position. They must cash in when they have the chance. The A’s have about five or six weeks left to play. They have to overcome adversity if they hope to be a championship team.

Late August and early September is the time of the year when good teams make their move to advance to the playoffs. Right now, the A’s are floundering. Let’s hope the A’s can figure out a solution to their current woes and get back on the winning track.

A’s fall again swept in two game series by Mariners 5-1

Seattle Mariners Abraham Toro (13) gets congratulated by teammate Kyle Seagar (15) after both scored on a Luis Torrens two run single in the top of the third inning that proved to be the gamer as the Mariners sweep the Oakland A’s on Tue Aug 24, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

Seattle 5 – 11 – 1

Oakland 1 – 8 – 0

By Lewis Rubman

Tuesday August 24, 2021

OAKLAND–Things haven’t looked-or at least felt-this dismal for the Oakland A’s (70-57) since they began the season with six straight losses against the Astros and Dodgers. Objectively, the team isn’t out of contention. After all, today is the first time since April 16 that the A’s haven’t occupied a play off qualifying position in the standings chart. But three straight blown late inning leads are not the stuff championship dreams are made of. The A’s took another dive again losing their eighth out of ten games this time to the Seattle Mariners (69-58) 5-1.

Oakland came out of the chute strong. After Mark Canha led off by lining out to first, Starling Marte, Matt Olson, and Mitch Moreland, playing first and leaving DH duty to Matt Olson, jumped all over Mariner starter Chris Flexen (10-5, 3.65 going into the game) with singles, each to a different outfielder, to put the home team up, 1-0. But Josh Harrison flew out to left, and Matt Chapman, back in the line up, struck out swinging.

One run leads have not been particularly encouraging to Oakland fans these days, and this one didn’t last long. With one out in the second, Cole Irvin, who brought a 9-11, 3.57 record with him to the mound at game time, surendered a double to Luis Torrens, followed by singles to Tom Murphy and Jarred Kelenic, and, just like that, the teams were tied at one.

It didn’t stay that way long. An Andrus to Harrison to Moreland 6-4-3 double play wiped out Haniger’s lead off walk in the Seattle third. Undaunted, Kyle Seager singled to right, and Abraham Torro lashed a line drive that hit the right field fence on a one hop for double, with Seager going to third.

DH Luis Torrens brought both of them home with a clean single to right. When Tom Murphy, the M’s catcher, walked on a 3-2 count, the work day began early in the Oakland bull pen. But Irvin settled down enough to retire Jarred Kalenic on a ground out to Harrison, leaving the visitors’ advantage at 3-1.

Nonetheless, Deolis Guerra came out of the pen to start the fourth. The three runs Irvin had allowed were all earned; they came on seven hits and two walks. He threw 66 pitches during his brief tenure on the mound; 40 of them counted as strikes. After the game, Bob Melvin said that he had removed his starter as a precautionary measure involving a hip issue.

Guerra stayed in the game for three innings, over which he struck out five Mariners while walking only one. That was the only base runner he allowed. Of his 48 pitcches, 32 were in the strike column. AJ Puk took over for him to start the seventh.

After the A’s took their early and short lived lead in the first, it took them until there were two outs in the bottom of the seventh to get another runner as far as second base. The runner was Elvis Andrus, whose curving line drive landed just inside the left field foul line before bouncing into the corner while the A’s shortstop cruised to second.

Flexen then walked Canha, and that completed the day’s chores for the Seattle starter. Marte swung on Drew Streckenrider’s first offering and flew out to Haniger in right.

Flexen’s line was 6-2/3 innings of one run ball. That run was earned. He allowed six hits and one walk and hit one batter while striking out five. His pitch count was 105, including 66 strikes. When the dust settled, he was the winning pitcher, with a record of 11-5, 3.54.

Puk shut the Mariners out in the seventh but, after striking out Toro and Torrens to open the next frame, gave up a single to the weak hitting Tom Murphy, an RBI to the even weaker hitting Jarrede Kelenic, and an RBI single to the non threatening Dylan Moore.

After that, Yusmeiro Petit, making his 500th big league appearance, induced an inning ending fly out to center from Crawford. When the Mariners came up in the top of the ninth, still leading 3-1, Burch Smith was on the bump. Two line drives and a fly ball to center field later, he was back in the dugout as the A’s took their last licks against Streckenrider.

Chapman and Kemp went down meekly, a strike out and fly to left center, respectively. But Sean Murphy kept a flicker of hope alive for the downtrodden Athletics by lacing a double down the left field line. Andrus’ ground out to short stranded him there.

Irvin was charged with the loss, and his record now stands at 9-12, 3.68. The save went to Streckenrider, his sixth

Oakland dropped to four games behind Houston, who will play Kansas City tonight, in the division race. Seattle trails the A’s by a single game. The Athletics will have a day off tomorrow before opening a four game series against the Yankees. Thursday’s starters the Yankees will go with Jameson Taillon (8-4 ERA 3.94) for the A’s James Kaprielian (7-4, 3.25) to start the first game of that series a 6:40 first pitch at the Oakland Coliseum.

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: Stephen Curry’s parents divorce; A’s Marte stealing fans hearts and bases

Dell Curry and Soyna Curry are divorcing which turned out to be a very public split with all the headlines on Tue Aug 24, 2021 (USA Today file photo)

On That’s Amaury’s podcast:

#1 Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry and Philadelphia 76ers Seth Curry parents Dell and Soyna Curry are divorcing in a very public split that was well covered on Tuesday.

#2 Was A’s centerfielder Starling Marte a big base stealer when he played in Miami?

#3 Marte Leads the A’s in stolen bases with 17 and it took 19 games after arriving in Oakland July 28th for him to build up the total. Manager Bob Melvin is executing on Marte’s talent to steal bases.

#4 Former A’s players Sal Bando, Eric Chavez, Joe Rudi, director of player development Keith Lieppman, and clubhouse manager Steve Vucinich will all be inducted into the A’s Hall of Fame as the class of 2022.

#5 In other baseball news Tampa Bay Rays designated hitter Nelson Cruz was put on the team Covid-19 injured list. Cruz was hitting .195 in 24 games since joining the Rays on July 22 coming from the Minnesota Twins.

#6 The Detroit Tigers Miguel Cabrera became the 28th MLB player to hit 500 home runs. Cabrera did it against the Toronto Blue Jays on Sunday.

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

M’s comeback rally in 9th for 5-3 win; A’s drop seventh out of ten games

The Seattle Mariners Jake Bauers points the way to victory hitting a two run single in the top of the ninth as the Mariners get a three run rally past the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

Seattle 5 – 10 – 1

Oakland 3 – 6 – 0

By Lewis Rubman

Monday August 23, 2021

OAKLAND–After two consecutive days of snatching defeat from the jaws of victory, just how dire are the straits the Oakland A’s (70-56) find themselves in? Let’s look at what the statistically informed folks at fangraphs have to say on the topic.

They give the Athletics a 7.4% chance of winning the AL West pennant and a 23.2% chance of securing a wild card berth. That figure jumps to a 30.6% chance of getting into the playoffs and falls to 8% and 3.4% forsurviving the division and championship series, respectively before dropping to a 1.6% shot at taking the World Series.

By contrast, fangraphs gives the Rays, Yankees, White Sox, and Astros at least a 96% chance of winning the AL playoffs. They figure that the White Sox are 99.9% sure of making the playoffs.

So the situation’s not hopeless, but let’s enjoy the A’s games, rejoycing and suffering with the green and gold without making any plans for October.

Tonight’s contest between Oakland and the Seattle Mariners (68-58), who, with the wind at their back have won nine of their last 13 games and came into the Coliseum only three games behind the Athletics in the race for second place in the AL West, was a hard fought struggle that the visitors ended up winning, 5-3. In spite of the stirring end to the game, it seemed a rather humdrum affair after the frenzy of the weekend epic battles between Oakland and San Francisco.

The attendance was 4,140. The Athletics sent Paul Blackburn to the mound, making his second appearance of the season. His first came on August 18, the day he was called up from Las Vegas and resulted in a 3-2 loss to the White Sox in Chicago, where the A’s righty allowed three runs, all earned, and five hits in only five and a third innings of work.

Seattle’s starter, southpaw Marco Gonazales, brought a four decision winning streak and a 5-5, 4.10) record with him. Matt Chapman was a last minute scratch, owing to a left foot contusion he suffered against the Giants Sunday afternoon. Josh Harrison played third and batted sixth in his stead.

The A’s ran off to a 1-0 advantage in the first, with Mark Canha and Matt Olson executing a one out double steal that led to the former’s scoring on Yan Gomes’s ground out to second. Gomes exended the home team’s lead with a solo home run with one out in the fourth. It was his 12th round tripper of the year and third as an Athletic. It travelled 398 feet into the left field seats and came on a 79 mph change up.

Mitch Haniger wiped that lead off the board in the top of the sixth. After JP Crawford singled to center on a full count to open the frame, Seattle’s DH blasted a 79 mph curve by Blackburn into the left field seats for his 29th dinger of the year, knotting the score at two all.

After retiring Kyle Seger and the red hot Ty France, Blackburn retired for the evening, giving way to Andrew Chafin, who had been bady burned in Saturday afternoon’s heart breaking loss to the Giants. Blackburn’s numbers for tonight indicated a compitent, though not excellent, performance.

He allowed two runs, both earned, in 5-2/3 innnings, allowing five hits but not walking anyone although he uncorked a wild pitch. The threw 85 pitches; 30 were balls. Chafin allowed a full count swinging bunt single to the streaking Abraham Toro before getting Jake Fraley out on a grounder to second.

Oakland pulled ahead in the bottom of the sixth, even though they wasted an opportunity when Marte unwisely tried to extend a one out single to right and got thrown out at second by Jake Bauers . One pitch later, Olson deposited his 32nd home run of the year over the right center field fence.

Gonzales didn’t come out for the home seventh. In his six inning stint, he gave up three runs, all earned, on five hits and, like Blackburn, no walks. He struck out two, and of his 90 pitches, 59 were strikes. His replacement, Erik Swanson surrendered a lead off two bagger to Lowrie. Swanson retired Harrison, Seth Brown, pinch hitting for Pinder, and Sean Murphy to end the threat.

Sergio Romo took over mound duties for Oakand, facing the top of the Mariner line up to start the eighth. He set them down in order, striking out Crawford and Haniger before Marte caught Seager’s fly on the warning track in center.

Seattle brought on Anthonhy Misiewicz to hold the margin between the M´s and the A´s to a single run in the home half of the eighth. He accomplished this in spite of Canha´s reaching first on a throwing error by third baseman Seager. What saved him was the 4-6-3 pitcher’s best friend Olson hit into.

Lou Trivino entered the game in the top of the ninth, looking for the 22nd save that had eluded him Saturday. It eluded him again tonight when Ty France took him deep with a 394 foot home run to right center, his 16th round tripper of the year and tying the score.

The equally torrid Toro followed that with a single to center and advanced to third on Fraley’s resounding double off the left centerfield wall. Trivino came back and struck out Jarred Kalenic and Cal Raleigh, both of them swinging.

But, with the count 2-2 on the ninth place batter, Jake Bauers,. who two innings earlier had thrown Marte out at second, lined a two run producing single to left, lending Trivino’s fruitless labors of the night and brining on Deolis Guerra, who closed out the inning

Paul Sewald, who saved Seattle’s come from behind victory last night in Houston by striking out three Astros with the bases loaded in the tenth, pitched the bottom of the ninth for the M’s. He struck out only one Athletic, Harrison, to end the game and earn his 11th save.

Misiewicz got the win, his fourth against four defeats. His ERA stands at 4.08. Trivino took the loss and was charged with a blown save.

Bleary eyed and bushed, the two teams will meet Tuesday afternoon at 12:37. It will be Cole Irvin (9-11, 3.57) on the mound for the boys from the bay and Chris Flexen for the squad from the sound.

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s new stadium talks on the table; A’s Blackburn gets the call Monday night

Oakland A’s starter Paul Blackburn (58) will pitch Mon Aug 23, 2021’s opening game of the two game series against the Seattle Mariners at the Oakland Coliseum (file photo from whitecleatbeat.com)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 Oakland A’s president David Kaval said on Friday the team is still negotiating with the city of Oakland and the city’s latest proposal to build a $12 billion stadium and infrastructure at Howard Terminal at Jack London Square.

#2 Oakland Mayor Libby Schaff said that talks continue. In July the Oakland city council approved a amended non binding term sheet. Kaval told the media before last Friday night’s game at the Coliseum that the A’s are keeping talks open with the city and are looking for a mutual agreement to continue talks.

#3 In Las Vegas the A’s have looked at several locations in South Nevada Henderson, the site of their triple A affiliate Summerlin, and in the Las Vegas proper. The A’s who are looking for a downtown setting at Howard Terminal in Oakland would they consider a non downtown or non strip setting in Vegas?

#4 The A’s are coming off a tough series with the San Francisco Giants you’ve had a chance to attend the series could you share any of your perspectives from that series?

#5 The A’s open a brief two game series with the Seattle Mariners at the Oakland Coliseum on Monday night the M’s will start Marco Gonzalez (5-5 ERA 4.10) and for the A’s Paul Blackburn (0-1 ERA 5.06) for a 6:40 pm PDT start.

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

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: The Gods of Baseball are with the Giants

Donovan Solano connects for a two run homer in the eighth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Aug 22, 2021 (AP News photo)

The Gods of Baseball are with the Giants

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

OAKLAND–I was the Spanish play by play man for the Giants back in June 1997. I called that very first Inter league game, from what was then, The Ballpark at Arlington, Texas, and the Giants won that historic game. Later MLB re-structured their format to make is a “regional affair”, i.e, A’s vs. Giants, Yankees vs. Mets, Cubs vs. White Sox, Dodgers vs. Angels. It has been a great success, when the teams that play in the same area, in the case of NY and Chicago within their own city limits. It is no different here in the Bay Area.

The A’s and Giants concluded their last head-to-head series of the season. The Giants beat the A’s in June taking two out of the three games at Oracle Park and the Giants repeated the doses, beating the A’s at Oakland in two of the three games. If you watch enough baseball in your life, you know when there is something going on, where a team can’t make much wrong.

The only way we would see these two Bay Area teams again this year, would be another World Series, like 1989, but hopefully with no earthquake in the middle. I can never forget 1989, and specially that World Series as I was broadcasting A’s radio from an auxiliary box almost next to the roof at Candlestick Park during that October 17 around 5:05PM, and how the Athletics where better that the Giants, before and after that strong Loma Prieta earthquake.

The San Francisco Giants are the biggest surprise this 2021 season. Nobody could have predicted this type of season for a team, that although their front office never mentioned the R word, “rebuilding” because that word signifies, loosing for a while until you can win again and is not popular with your fan base.

Rebuilding never sells tickets, especially in the Bay Area. As simple as that. Their three veterans (all in the infield) Buster Posey, Brandon Belt, and Brandon Crawford visited Ponce De Leon Fountain of Youth in the off-season, Crawford is having one of his best years at the plate, where he had struggled in recent years, his glove has never been an issue.

An assortment of journeymen and young players have combined to provide Giants fans with an unexpected thrill as a winning season on the way to 100 victories. How far the Giants will go this season nobody knows, the Dodgers had more injuries than a Vietnam US Army battalion in 1966 yet they are right there. But there is no doubt who is the Manager of the Year and Executive of the Year in the National League.

The Oakland Athletics are not a surprise. They were picked to either win the division again or contend with Houston Astros, again, and that is exactly what is happening. The A’s brain-power made some very good strategic trades before the deadline acquiring Starling Márte, Yan Gomes, Josh Harrison and Andrew Chaffin.

The four made an instant impact with Bob Melvin ballclub. Especially the veteran Márte who is leading off at the top with 39 stolen bases in baseball this year. He came at the moment they needed that infusion of talent, especially after center-fielder Ramón Laureano was suspended for 80 games for the use of PED.

With the situation of the wild card nowadays figuring big during the last six weeks of a season, right now the hot Yankees have kidnapped that first wild card spot and put the Athletics in a precarious situation as they might have to fight in two fronts, trying to catch Houston for the division and having the troops to survive the Wild Card Assault, Boston in right behind the A’s. The teams fighting for the two wild card spots. Melvin says he doesn’t worry about the other teams, and he should not, he is correct, he is managing one team, which is his responsibility.

As far as the Giants protection from the Gods of Baseball, during the last two games which they won. Manager Gabe Kapler used a pinch-hitter, and they both delivered the winning blow. On Saturday Lamonte Wade Jr. came off the bench and hit a two run home run against A’s closer Lou Trivino in the top of the ninth as they beat the A’s 6-5.

On Sunday, the A’s were winning the game 1-0 until the eighth inning, when Kapler used his magic wand again and sent Donovan Solano to the plate as a pinch-hitter. Seconds later Solano hit a home run to left field with a runner on for the final 2-1 win. Every move the Giants manager made worked.

Whatever the last month and a half of the season has in store for us will be fascinating for these two Bay Area rivals.

Over 100,000 people paid to see the A’s host the Giants this weekend at the Oakland Coliseum.

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

A’s find out what the Giants are working with for the second, consecutive day in tough 2-1 loss

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND–For Mark Canha, who had the historical angle in his memory, it was a head scratcher.

“They did the same thing to us this year that we did to them last year,” Canha said. “It’s kind of insane to think about how that happened.”

Last year in the COVID-shortened season, Stephen Piscotty came up the ninth inning, grand slam to tie it, and Canha the three-run homer in the ninth the next night. Those surprises happened in the Giants’ ballpark, resulted in one run wins for the A’s, and they went to the playoffs and the Giants did not.

Fast forward to Saturday and Sunday, and the Giants come up with Lamonte Wade Jr.’s two-run shot in the ninth to win it Saturday, and a two-run shot from Donovan Solano to win Sunday, 2-1.

You can’t make this stuff up, and after a disastrous week at Chicago, and at home for Bay Bridge Series, the A’s have to wonder if their playoff hopes are in peril.

Maybe the biggest surprise Sunday was the A’s manager Bob Melvin followed Frankie Montas’ seven, scoreless innings with a relief appearance from inexperienced A.J. Puk. But his regular guys, Yusmeiro Petit and Andrew Chafin needed a day after some heavy lifting over the previous games. That put Puk in a big situation, and he appeared up to it, after he retired Wilmer Flores and Darin Ruf, the first two batters he faced.

But Puk then walked Austin Slater, and Solano took him out over the left field wall on the next pitch.

“He gets two out and nobody on,” Melvin said. “But two-out walks, a lot of times, end up hurting you.”

Offensively, the A’s struggled with five singles, and three doubles, but no key hits. The A’s finished 2 for 10 with runners in scoring position, and Starling Marte’s sixth inning base hit made contact with Canha running off second base, and produced an out–not a two-run lead.

After a 2-5 week, the A’s are 70-55, tied with the Red Sox for the second wild card spot, and looking at the Mariners, who have climbed within three games of Boston and Oakland for the second spot. The A’s see the Mariners at the Coliseum on Monday for the first of two games.

The A’s did have some bright spots. Montas was spectacular for seven innings, and showed that he may be ready to give the club what they’ll be missing with Chris Bassitt on the injured list. Also, Starling Marte had three more hits, and stayed as hot as possible, as he clearly is the most productive trade deadline acquisition anywhere in MLB.

Paul Blackburn will be called up to start Monday’s game in place of Bassitt in a matchup with Seattle’s Marco Gonzales.