Cueto and Giants shutout A’s on five hitter in 2-0 win

Oakland A’s hitter Tony Kemp takes one in the back in the third inning against the San Francisco Giants on Fri Jun 25, 2021 at Oracle Park in San Francisco (AP News photo)

Oakland 0 – 6 – 0

San Francisco 2 – 5 – 1

By Lewis Rubman

Friday, June 25, 2021

SAN FRANCISCO–The battered Oakland Athletics, limping back to the bay area after splitting a four game series with the last place Texas Rangers and dropping two out of three to the struggling Yankees, announced more discouraging news before tonight’s game in San Francisco. Mark Canha went on the ten day injured list thanks to the left hip strain he suffered early in Wednesday’s game in Arlington.

Canha’s modest batting average of .255 belies his value to the A’s. His OBP is .264, and his OPS , .826, second on the team only to Ramón Laureano’s .844.

He has been an effective lead off hitter, and was third in the league in runs scored when he was injured. The human bull’s eye was hit by 13 pitches and started games at all three outfield positions and as the designated hitter. He also has seen service in the infield.

His replacement will be Vimael Machín, who is as versatile, if not as accomplished, as Canha. He was with the A’s for about a month earlier this season and appeared in only nine games, going 1 for 20. He played second, third, and short.

He has played outfield and first base as well and, of course, could be used as a DH, which would be extremely unlikely. He hit .300, with seven doubles, three triples, three home runs and 28 RBI in 31 games for Las Vegas.

The Giants had their own bad news on the injury front. Buster Posey was a last minute scratch because of back stiffness.

The A’s started the game at 46-31, two games behind the division leading Astros, who were rained out in Detroit, and a game in front of the surging Mariners.

They were up against the winningest team in major league baseball. The Giants, at 48-26, took a 4-1/2 game lead over the Dodgers and Padres into the contest. They sent veteran right hander Johnny Cueto (5-3, 4.05) against Oakland’s ace, southpaw Sean Manaea (6-3,3.01).

The resut was a hard fought pitcher’s duel that the Giants eventually won, 2 -0.

The teams traded zeroes for a couple of innings, and then, with two down in the top of the third, events took an interesting turn. Manaea got the A’s first hit, splitting the gap between Mike Yaztremski in right and Mauricio Dubón in center and huffing and puffing his way to second base for a double.

Then Tony Kemp, batting in the lead off spot in Canha’s absence, followed Canha’s footsteps by getting hit by a pitch Matt Chapman loaded the bags on a slow grounder to short that Brand Crawford coluldn’t handle and which was scored—correctly—as a hit. This brought Matt Olson to the plate. Cueto got him to fly out to center, ending the game’s first serious threat.

But it was the Giants who drew first, and, it turned out, only blood. Wilmer Flores lined a two out double into the left field corner, and Crawford, who entered the game fourth in the National League in runs batted in, drove him home with a single, also to left. It was the Giants´ shortstop´s 50th RBI of the season.

He hada chance to drive in more when he came up with two out on two on two frames later, but he popped an infield fly. It bounced off the heel of Chapman’s glove, but an infield flyis an infield fly, and it didn’t look as if the A’s third baseman were trying to fool Darin Ruf, the runner on second.

Manaea left the game trailing 1-0 in the top of the seventh when Mitch Moreland pinch hit for him and flew out to left. The A’s stater had gone six innings, allowing that one (earned) run on three hits and three walks. He struck out seven Giantsand threw 93 pitchees, 64 for strikes.

It was a good outing, and he complimented it by going two for two at the plate, adding an infield single in the fifth to go with his third frame two bagger. He was took he loss, bringing his record to 6-4, 2.91.

Curt Casali greeted Cam Bedrosian, who took over for Manaea in the home seventh, with a booming home run over the National Car Rental advertisment in left field. The ball left home plate at 104 mph and travelled 378 feet. It was his first round tripper of the year.

Bedrosian left after surrendering a Texas League single to Dubón and retiring Alex Dickerson, pinch hitting for Cueto, on a fly to left. Deolis Guerra then took over on the mound for Oakland. He ended the inning by getting Steven Duggar, pinch hitting for Slater, to ground into an around the horn double play.

Cueto’s line was seven shut out innings of five hit ball, in. which he allowed one walk and hit one batter. Of his 102 pitches, 67 were counted as strikes, he would be credited with the win, giving him a 6-3, 3.63 record for the. year. The right handed submariner Tyler Rogers took over for him in the eighth and reetired the side on one hit.

Southpaw Jake McGee put the A’s away in the ninth, allowing only one base runner, Elvis Andrus, who got to first on an error byFlores. That was McGee’s 15th. save of 2021.

Saturday’s game is scheduled to start at 7:05, with Frankie Montás (7-7, 4.79) going against Alex Wood (6-3, 4.09)

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Sixth time was the charm for Tauchman on Wednesday night

San Francisco Giants outfielder Mike Tauchman struck out five times before hitting a grand slam in the 13th inning against the Los Angeles Angels on Wed Jun 22, 2022 (San Francisco Chronicle file photo)

On the Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 San Francisco Giant (48-26) outfielder Mike Tauchman had struck five times before getting a 13th inning opportunity to hit a game winning grand slam against the Los Angeles Angels on Wednesday night. Tauchman was just warming up in those previous five at bats.

#2 Tauchman said after Wednesday night’s game when he was coming to the plate “Please God put something in play” and got the kind of hit that he wanted.

#3 Michael big rally in that top of the 13th the most Giants runs scored in extra innings in the team’s history you got to see a little history in the making there.

#4 On the pitching side of it starter Kevin Guasman whose been having all sorts of success went seven innings, one run and four hits another good outing for Guasman.

#5 The Giants open up a three game series at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Friday against the Oakland A’s (46-31) the A’s will be starting Sean Manaea (6-3 ERA 3.01) going for the Giants Johnny Cueto (5-3 ERA 4.05)

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

Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah Salmonson: Manaea to start for A’s against Giants Fri; A’s get great outing from Bassitt Thu

Oakland A’s starter Sean Manaea will start for the A’s on Friday night against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park (AP News file photo)

#1 The Oakland A’s starter Chris Bassitt supplied a great start pitching seven innings and surrendering only one run to pick up his eighth win against two loses against the Texas Rangers on Thursday.

#2 Bassitt has had a number of great outing this season he’s walked only three batters and struck out four and has been keeping hitters off balance in particular Thursday’s game against the Rangers.

#3 The A’s who had lost two games against the Rangers after winning on Monday really wanted to come away with a split rather than lose three out of four games in Texas.

#4 The bullpen was of big help after Bassitt’s departure in the seventh as Jake Diekman and Lou Trivino pitched in the eighth and ninth innings to mop up.

#5 The Oakland A’s open a three game series in San Francisco on Friday the A’s will send out starter Sean Manaea (6-3 ERA 3.01) and the Giants will start Johnny Cueto (5-3 ERA 4.05) at Oracle Park to open a three game series.

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

A’s Bassitt shuts down Texas offense Oakland split the four-game series win 5-1

Oakland A’s starter Chris Bassitt allowed only one run in seven innings pitched against the Texas Rangers on Thu Jun 24, 2021 at Arlington (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s (46-31) needed to beat the Texas Rangers (27-48) Thursday afternoon at Globe Life Stadium in Arlington, Texas. Things have not gone for the Green and Gold on the ten-game road trip. The A’s were 2-4 coming into the game.

The A’s fell two games behind the rampaging Houston Astros in the race for first place in the AL West. Bob Melvin’s guys had to find a way to beat the young Texas team. Currently, in last place in the AL West, the Rangers beat the A’s twice in the series.

They scored eight runs in the first game, six in the second, and five last night. Bob Melvin knew the A’s had a chance to win as he sent out his ace, Chris Bassitt, to do the pitching. Bassitt entered the game with a record of 7-2. He gave the A’s what they needed. Bassitt went seven innings and allowed one run and five hits. He won his eighth game of the year 5-1 over the Rangers in Arlington, and it appears that Bassitt might be heading to this year’s All-Star game in Denver on July 13th.

The Rangers sent their promising lefty, Kolby Allard, to the hill to face the A’s. The A’s greeted him by putting three runs on the board in the first inning. With one out, Matt Chapman singled to start the rally. Chappie advanced to second on a wild pitch.

Matt Olson singled to send Chapman to third. Ramon Laureano doubled to plate Chapman with the A’s first run, Olson stopped at third base on the play. Olson scored the second run of the inning when Chad Pinder ground out 5-3. Jed Lowrie singled to drive in Laureano. The A’s led 3-0 halfway through the first inning.

The Rangers scored their only run of the game in the bottom of the second. Bassitt hit Rangers’ left fielder Eli White, leading off the inning with a pitch. White scampered to third on the play. Bassitt retired Willie Calhoun for the first out. The next hitter, Nick Solak, grounded out. White scored on the play. The A’s lead was now 3-1 after two innings.

Kolby Allard settled down. In the next five innings of work, he allowed just one and four hits. Jed Lowrie took Allard deep in the top of the fourth. Lowrie, hitting right-handed-blasted a 430-foot home run over the centerfield fence. It was Jed’s sixth dinger of the year. 

Oakland added a run in the top of the seventh. Josh Sborz was now pitching for Texas. A’s catcher, Aramis Garcia, singled to start the rally. Tony Kemp, who replaced Mark Canha in left field in the second inning, doubled to send Garcia to third. Sborz uncorked a wild pitch, and Garcia trotted home with the A’s fifth run.

Lefty Jake Diekman pitched a scoreless eighth, and Lou Trivino finished up, shutting the Rangers down in the ninth. The A’s win 5-1.

Game Notes and Stats: The A’s are now 46-31 for the season with the win. The A’s will either be one game or two games back, depending on what the Astros do against the Detroit Tigers later Thursday evening. 

Chris Bassitt was the man for Oakland Thursday. Bassitt improved to 8-2, and his ERA dropped to 3.25. In his seven innings of work, he allowed one run and five hits. He walked three, struck out four, and hit a batter. 

The hitting stars for Oakland were Jed Lowrie, Matt Olson, and Aramis Garcia. Lowrie had a single, homer, and two RBIs. Olson and Garcia each had two hits. The A’s finish the road trip with three games against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park starting Friday night. The Giants will open the park to full capacity Friday night, and a big crowd is anticipated. The A’s will have left Sean Manaea handle the pitching chores. Manaea’s is 6-3 with a 3.01 ERA. Johnny Cueto will go for the Giants. Cueto is 5-3 with a 4.05 ERA. The game will start at 6:45 pm. Let the Battle of the Bay begin!!!

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: A’s to conclude four game series with Rangers today

The Oakland A’s catcher Sean Murphy gets a greeting from teammates after hitting a solo homer in the top of the seventh inning at Globe Life Field in Arlington on Wed Jun 23, 2021 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 For a very brief period in Wednesday night’s game the Oakland A’s (45-31) held a 3-2 lead over the Texas Rangers (27-47) in Arlington. The A’s had scored three times in the top of the seventh inning to overtake a Rangers 2-0 lead.

#2 The 3-2 lead disappeared quickly after the Rangers scored twice in the bottom half of the seventh taking over the lead once again 4-3.

#3 In that bottom of the seventh when the Rangers took over the lead A’s reliever Yusmeiro Petit allowed two earned runs on two hits in one inning of work and that was all the Rangers needed to win it. For Petit it had to be a tough outing to lose the lead like that.

#4 Talk about Rangers slugger Adolis Garcia who was the offensive star for Texas on Wednesday hitting two solo home runs hard to keep a good hitter down.

#5 The A’s conclude this four game series with the Rangers today at Globe Life Field the A’s will send out starter Chris Bassitt (7-2 ERA 3.40) and the Rangers will start Kolby Allard (2-2 ERA 2.93) the A’s have lost two of the last three games with the Rangers and are hoping for a split.

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

Rangers’ Garcia slams two solo home runs to pace Texas to a 5-3 win over the A’s

Texas Rangers’ Adolis Garcia (53) gets the forearm bash from Joey Gallo (right) after hitting one of two solo home runs this one coming in the sixth inning at Globe Life Field in Arlington on Wed Jun 23, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s (45-31) met the Texas Rangers (27-47) for the third time this week on Wednesday night at Globe Life Stadium in Arlington, Texas. The A’s, hoping to build on their win Tuesday night, sent James Kaprielian to the hill. Kaprielian entered the game with a 4-1 won-loss record and a sparkling 2.84 ERA.

The Rangers’ starter, Mike Foltynewicz, has been struggling all season. The 29-year-old righty’s record was a woeful 1-7 and had a 5.59 ERA. Foltynewicz had been tagged for 17 dingers so far this year. He led all the AL pitchers in that department. One would think that the A’s would have an easy time with the Rangers on Wednesday night.

The A’s James Kaprielian pitched very well for Oakland. The young man from Southern California had another quality start. Kaprielian went six innings and allowed two runs and five hits. The Rangers’ 28-year-old-rookie from Cuba, Adolis Garcia, took Kaprielian deep in the sixth inning. Foltynewicz pitched well, too. In his first six innings of work, Folty allowed no runs and four hits. He did not look like a pitcher with a 1-7 record.

The Rangers drew first blood in the bottom of the fifth. The Rangers’ left fielder, Eli White, led off the frame with a single. Then, Brock Holt hit into a 4-6-3 double play. Kaprielian walked Nick Solak. The next hitter, former A’s catcher Jonah Heim, who was traded to the Rangers and Kris Davis for Elvis Andrus, doubled to drive in White with the Rangers’ first run. In the bottom of the sixth, with two out, Adolis Garcia blasted his 19th dinger of the season to make it 2-0.

The A’s rallied to plate three runs in the top of the seventh. A’s catcher Sean Murphy hit the first pitch from Folty into the seats for his tenth big fly of the year. The ball traveled an estimated 442-feet. Elvis Andrus followed with a double. Rangers’ manager Chris Woodward brought in Spencer Patton to pitch.

A’s centerfielder, Skye Bolt, greeted him with a single to drive in Andrus with the A’s second run. Tony Kemp and Matt Chapman singled, and the A’s now led 3-2 midway through the seventh. A’s manager Bob Melvin, brought in Yusmeiro Petit to pitch.

Petit had not pitched since last Saturday, and the Rangers would put two on the board and regained the lead 4-3. The Rangers’ first baseman, Nate Lowe, sent Petit’s first pitch out of the ballpark to tie the game. Eli White, who was six-for-12 so far in the series, doubled. Brock holt singled to put Texas ahead 4-3 after seven.

Cam Bedrosian was on the hill for Oakland in the bottom of the eighth. Bedrosian retired the first two hitters he faced. He served up a pitch that Garcia sent into the stands in right field. It was Garcia’s 20th of the year and the seventh opposite-field home run. Joely Rodriguez closed out the game for Texas. The Rangers win 5-3.

Game Notes and Stats- With the loss, the A’s are 45-31 for the year. They fell two games behind the Houston Astros in the race for first place in the AL West. The Astros won their tenth in a row as they destroyed the hapless Baltimore Orioles 13-0 Wednesday night. The Rangers are 27-47 for the year.

The A’s line was three runs, ten hits, and no errors. The Rangers’ line was five runs, ten hits, and no errors. The Rangers hit three homers in the game, and the A’s had one. The Rangers’ outfielders, Joy Gallo and Eli White, each made a sensational sliding catch to rob the A’s hitters of possible extra-base hits.

The A’s conclude the four-game series Thursday afternoon. Chris Bassitt (7-2, 3.40 ERA) will go for Oakland. Kolby Allard (2-2, 2.93 ERA) will be on the mound for Texas. The game will start at 11:05 am.

A’s get back on winning track rout the Rangers 13-6

Oakland A’s Elvis Andrus forearm bashes with Matt Chapman (26) after Chapman hits a first inning home run against the Texas Rangers on Tue Jun 22, 2021 in Arlington (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s (45-30) snapped a three-game losing streak as they routed the Texas Rangers (26-47) 13-6. The A’s sent lefty Cole Irvin to the hill Tuesday night. Irvin pitched well for the first four innings of the game. Things went south for him in the fifth.

The Rangers, trailing 9-0 at the point in the game, put four on the board to make it 9-4. Irvin started the rally by hitting the Rangers’ second Baseman, Nick Solak, with a pitch. Four hits and an error by Mark Canha in left field followed. Texas sent nine men to the plate in the inning. Irin was done for the night.

The Rangers decided to go with their bullpen to start the game. Rangers’ skipper Chris Woodward started lefty Taylor Hearn. The decision did not work out well for Texas. Hearn walked the A’s leadoff hitter Mark Canha. The next hitter, Matt Chapman, blasted a 422-foot home run into the seats in left field.

The ball had an exit velocity of 104.8 miles per hour. Hearn retired Matt Olson for the first out. Ramon Laureano singled. Pinder struck out swinging. Hearn then walked Jed Lowrie and Sean Murphy to load the bases. Former Texas Ranger shortstop Elvis Andrus singled to drive in two. The A’s led 4-0 midway through the first inning.

The A’s continued the onslaught in the second as they put three more runs on the board. Mark Canha led off the frame with a triple. He scored on Matt Chapman’s ground out. The Rangers’ second pitcher of the night, Brett de Gaus, walked Matt Chapman. Ramon Laureano homered to put the A’s ahead 7-0.

The Rangers brought in Jordan Lyles to pitch the third. A’s catcher Sean Murphy greeted him with a single. Elvis Andrus doubled to put men on at first and third with one out. Mark Canha singled to drive in Murphy and Andrus. The A’s had a commanding 9-0 lead after three complete.

As mentioned earlier, Irvin was in cruise control until the bottom of the fifth. He allowed three hits in his first four innings of work. The Rangers rallied for four in their half of the fifth and trailed 9-4.

A’s manager Bob Melvin brought in Burch Smith to pitch the sixth. Smith retired all three hitters he faced. In the seventh, Sergio Romo was on the mound for Oakland. Romo retired the first two hitters he faced. He didn’t get past Eli White.

White homered to close the gap to 9-5. In the eighth, Bob Melvin brought in lefty Jake Diekman to face left-handed slugger Joey Gallo. The strategy failed. Gallo belted his 13th dinger of the year, and the Rangers crept within three 9-6. Bob Melvin had to be thinking that they could lose. Diekman struggled. He struck out Andy Ibanez for the first out.

He then walked Nick Solak. Solak attempted to steal second. Sean Murphy’s throw arrived in time. Andrus applied the tag as Solak’s foot came off the bag. The Rangers challenged the call, but the umpires did not reverse the call. Diekman then walked Willie Calhoun. Melvin had seen enough. He brought in Lou Trivino to get the final out.

After allowing two runs in the third, Jordan Lyles held the A’s scoreless the next five innings. The A’s could muster only two hits.

Things changed in the ninth. Chris Woodward brought in rookie DeMarcus Evans to face the A’s. The A’s offense woke up as they put together two singles and three doubles to put four more runs on the board to extend the lead to 13-6. Bob Melvin could breathe a lot easier. He did not have to use Trivino to finish the game. He brought in Deolis Guerra to close out the Rangers. Guerra did his job to secure Oakland’s win 13-6.

Game Notes and Stats- With the win, the A’s are 45-30 for the season. They remain one game behind the Houston Astros in the race for first place in the AL West. The Rangers drop to 26-47.

The A’s line was 13 runs, 15 hits, and one error. The A’s had a season-high 15 hits in the game. They tied a season-high with 13 runs.

The hitting stars for Oakland were Mark Canha ( 3 hits including a triple), Ramon Laureano had two singles and a home run, And Elvis Andrus had three hits, two singles, and a double.

The A’s will meet the Rangers again Wednesday night at Globe Life Stadium in Arlington, Texas. Bob Melvin will have James Kaprielian go for Oakland Kaprielian is 4-1 with a 2.84 ERA. The Rangers will counter with Mike Foltynewicz. Foltynewicz’s season has not gone well so far this year. The righty owns a record of 1-7 and a 5.59 ERA. His ERA in his last seven starts is 6.88.

The game will start at 5.05 pm.

Rangers hand A’s their third loss in a row 8-3

Oakland A’s starter Frankie Montas (47) surrendered five runs in the first inning including a home run to the Texas Rangers Andy Ibanez (77) circling first base at Globe Life Field in Arlington on Mon Jun 21, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s (44-30) arrived in Arlington, Texas, Monday to start a four-game series with the lowly Texas Rangers (26-46) the Rangers wasted no time getting on the scoreboard in the first inning scoring five runs and it stood up for a 8-3 win at the Ballpark in Arlington.

The A’s played a hard-fought three-game set with the Yankees over the weekend. With just a little bit more good fortune, the A’s could have swept the Bronx Bombers, but things did not go their way in games two and three. The Yanks received a sterling relief performance from Nestor Cortes on Saturday.

The A’s were on the verge of breaking the game open when Cortes entered the game with the bases loaded and no out. Cortes pitched three scoreless innings, allowing New York to chip away at the A’s 4-1 advantage. The Yanks fought back to win 7-5.

In the Sunday game, with men on at first and second with no out, A’s catcher Sean Murphy hit a rocket down the third baseline. Yankees’ third baseman, Gio Urshela, picked the ball up, stepped on third for the first out, fired to second for the second, and the relay to first completed a triple play to end the game.

Monday Night Baseball: The A’s wanted to end the two-game losing streak Monday night against the Rangers. The Rangers had lost six in a row and have found themselves in the AL West basement. The Rangers sent Kyle Gibson to the mound to snap the losing streak.

Gibson did the job as he went four and 1/3rd innings without giving up a hit. The A’s Frankie Montas had a rough first inning. The Rangers put five runs on the board in the first inning. The Rangers went on to win 8-3.

The Rangers, as mentioned above, had no trouble figuring out Frankie Montas. With one out, Brock Holt singled. Rookie Adolis Garcia doubled to drive in Holt with the first run of the game. Joey Gallo walked. Rangers’ first baseman Nate Lowe doubled to drive in Garcia. Gallo stopped at third. The next hitter, Andy Ibanez, hitting about a buck fifty, hit his first home run of the year to put Texas ahead 5-0.

The A’s catcher Sean Murphy homered with one out in the fifth to make it a 5-1 game. The A’s put another run on the board in the sixth. They trailed 5-2 at this point. Montas was still pitching for Oakland. Frankie allowed just one hit in the four innings after the disastrous first frame.

The Rangers tallied three more in their half of the sixth. Montas retired the first two hitters but could not finish the inning. He gave up a single to Willie Calhoun and hit Eli WHite with a pitch.

Rangers’ catcher Jose Trevino ended Montas’ night when he blasted a three-run homer to make it 8-2. The A’s added a run in the seventh, but it was too little, too late. The Rangers win 8-3

Game Notes and stats- With the loss, the A’s are 44-30 for the season. They are now in second place in the AL West and will trail the Houston Astros by one full game as Houston is on its way to a big win over the Baltimore Orioles. The Rangers are 26-46.

Frankie Montas was the losing pitcher. He is 7-7 for the year. His line was five and 2/3rds innings of work. He allowed eight runs, all earned, and nine hits. He struck out six, walked two, and gave up two three-run home runs: the A’s used three relievers, Bedrosian, Guerra, and rookie Domingo Acevedo.

Acevedo made his Major League debut Monday night. He faced four hitters and allowed a single. To make room for Acevedo on the roster, The A’s sent lefty Jesus Luzardo to Triple-A Las Vegas. The A’s want Luzardo to get more work as they intend to use him as a starter later in the season.

The A’s line was three runs, seven hits, and no errors. The Rangers’ line was eight runs, ten hits, and two errors. The teams will play game two of the series Tuesday night at Globe Life Stadium. Lefty Cole Irvin goes for Oakland. Lefty Taylor Hearn will pitch for Texas. The game starts at 5:05 pm. The Game will be televised on YouTube TV.

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s and Rangers open four game series tonight in Arlington

Oakland A’s starter Frankie Montas gets the start against the Texas Rangers tonight to open a four game series at the BallPark in Arlington ( file photo from the Mercury News)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 Barbara, in the second game of the series against the New York Yankees, Yankees third baseman Gio Urshela took a part of the splintered bat in the eye which bounced off and he came out of it alright later hitting the go ahead game home run.

#2 The A’s opened the series in New York on Friday with a win when A’s pitcher James Kaprielian pitched 5.2 innings and picked up the victory 5-3 against his old teammates the Yankees. Kaprielian was the Yankees second round draft choice six years ago and he got to beat his old team to open the series it had to be pretty special for him.

#3 Barbara just checking the injured list the A’s pitcher right hand pitcher J.B. Wendelken who has a strained left Oblique is in Las Vegas for a minor league rehab assignment and Wendelken is looking forward to working his way back into the bullpen setting in Oakland.

#4 Oakland outfielder Stephen Piscotty is suffering from a left wrist injury and will see a specialist in Arizona and has been placed on the ten day injured list. Piscotty is a vital part of the A’s offense and is hitting .217, with 28 hits, four home runs and 11 RBIs so far this season.

#5 The A’s open up a four game series in Texas starting tonight against the Rangers, starting for the A’s Frankie Montas (7-6 ERA 4.21) and for the Rangers Kyle Gibson (4-0 ERA 2.09) how do you see this match up to open the series.

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

Yankees force historic game ending triple play in 2-1 win over A’s

Oakland A’s designated hitter Sean Murphy hits into a historic game ending triple play from a pitch thrown by New York Yankee reliever Aroldis Chapman in the top ninth inning. The Yankees took two of three from the A’s in the series at Yankee Stadium in New York on Sun Jun 20, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jessica Kwong

NEW YORK–The Oakland A’s wasted starting pitcher Sean Manea’s career-high 11 strikeouts in a 2-1 loss on Father’s Day to the New York Yankees who delivered a game-ending triple play.

Matt Olson hit a home run on a fly ball to center field in the first inning at Yankee Stadium on Sunday afternoon, putting the A’s up 1-0 and off to what appeared to be a good start.

But the sixth inning turned out to be devastating for the A’s. Gary Sanchez ruined Manea’s gem with a two-run double on a sharp line drive to center fielder Ramon Laureano, allowing Clint Frazier and Aaron Judge to score and putting the Yankees up 2-1. The A’s challenged the tag play but the call on the field was upheld.

In the ninth inning, the Yankees closing pitcher Aroldis Chapman allowed back-to-back walks and was not able to find the strike zone. The lefty seemed to be examining his pitching hand and a trainer looked at it, but he stayed in. New York bailed Chapman out and turned a triple play on Sean Murphy’s ground ball to finish Oakland off.

“There couldn’t have been a more – routine’s not the word, but triple play set-up,” Olson said of the triple play. “Shitty luck, tough way to lose.”

Manea threw only fastballs and changeups. He dominated the Yankees for most of his 5 1/3 innings and allowed two runs on three hits and two walks. His sinker averaged two miles per hour faster than average and generated 17 swings and misses.

Attendance at Yankee Stadium was 27,807, several thousand more than Saturday and Friday, when it accommodated fans in full capacity for the first time since the pandemic.

With losses on Sunday and Saturday, the A’s are 44-29 and still hold the top spot in the AL West.

The A’s continue their 10-game road trip with the first in a four-game series against the Texas Rangers on Monday. First pitch is at 5:05 p.m.