A’s rally early Halos try comeback falls short 8-5

The Oakland A’s Sean Murphy (right) gets a forearm bash from teammate Mitch Mooreland (left) after Murphy’s solo homer in the second inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Mon Jun 14, 2021 (AP News photo)

Los Angeles. 5. 14. 1

Oakland. 8. 9. 0

By Lewis Rubman

Monday, June 14, 2021

OAKLAND–Baseball people are fond of saying, “It’s not who you play, but when you play them.”

That certainly was the case for the Athletics as they opened their four game series against the LA Angeles tonight. The Oaklanders, at 40-27, took the field a baker’s dozen games over .500, in first place in the AL West by two games over Dusty Baker’s Double Dirty Dozen by two games.

The Angels, at 33-32, were just hint above the break even point. But both teams were 9-2 (.818) in June, which put them level with Milwaukee for the best mark in the majors so far this month. The green and gold’s hitting has improved, and the team entered the day with a collective BA of .274, which, although probably helped by the threatened crack down on illegal pitches, still is fifth in the league, all of whose hitters received the same boost.

Oakland´s pitching, too, in spite of the sporadic melt downs it’s suffered, has been excellent recently. The rotation entered the fray with the lowest ERA in the majors, 2.32, and the figure for the entire pitching staff is the second best in the league, 2.85.

The team’s run differential had improved from a pre-June minus 11 to a pleasing plus 32 so far this month. On the negative side, the A’s have been outperformed in head to head encounters with their division rivals, against whom they have gone 10-13, but they’ve beaten Los Angeles in six of their 11 meetings so far.

Sean Menaea has been a valuable contributor to Oakland’s recent surge. The 29 year old southpaw gave up a paltry two hits over the 15 innings he had hurled earlier in the month and only two runs on 16 hits in the 16-2/3 innings he pitched over his last four starts, two of which were in Anaheim in games and were no decisions (each team eventually won one them).

He threw 111 pitches in each of his last two starts, a complete game shutout in Seattle on June 2 and six frames of two hit scoreless baseball against Arizona here at the Coliseum a week later. He took the mound with a season’s record of 5-2, 3.09.

Manaea’s opposite number, right hander Dylan Bundy, took some pretty awful numbers, 1-6, 6.16, to be exact, into the game with him. From looking at Bundy’s 2021 numbers you wouldn’t think of him as a top of the rotation kind of guy, but that’s no reason not to take him seriously.

In 2011, he was, at the age of 18, the Orioles’ first round draft choice, the fourth overall. Last year, he finished ninth in the voting for the Cy Young Award in the AL, and teammates voted him the best performing pitcher on the Halos’ staff. He finished that abbreviated season with marks of 6-3, 3.29 .

While neither pitcher was at the top of his game, Bundy’s performance was frankly bad, and Manaea showed grit in holding Los Angeles to one run in his team’s 8- 5 win over the visitors.

It was Juan Lagares, hitting all of .223, who put the Angels ahead in the second inning, driving Manaea’s first pitch to him, a 91 mph sinker, over the right field scoreboard with one out and nobody on. It wasn’t as if Lagares’s round tripper, his first of the year, was the result of a single mistake by the A’s starter.

He had left the bases loaded in the first, and there were runners on the corners when he finally escaped the second without allowing another run. By then, he pitch count was up to 50.

And it was Sean Murphy, giving the lie to his BA of .208, whose seventh homer of the season put the A’s on top. It drove in Mitch Moreland, whose single to left was the thousandth hit of the A’s DH’s career. Murphy’s blast came on an 0-1 89 mph four seamer, clearing the right center field wall at the 388 foot marker.

An inning later, Tony Kemp blasted a double into the right field ccorner with Mark Canha, the human bull’s eye who’d led off the inning getting hit by a pitch, on first. Canha crossed the plate and Kemp reached third when Taylor Ward mishandled the rebound for an error.

Moments later, Olson’s sacrifice fly to right brought in Kemp, Oakland’s second tally of the frame and fourth of the game. A walk to Lowrie and Chapman’s double to left put men on second and third, and Moreland’s 1,001st hit skipped under second baseman David Fletcher’s glove, driving in both runners, giving the A’s a 6-1 advantage and ending Bundy’s short evening’s work.

James Hoyt took over but didn’t take charge. Murphy singled to left, moving Moreland up a base. After Brown forced Murphy at second, Moreland taking third, Elvis Andrus punched a single into right, bringing Moreland home. Canha, in his second plate appearance of the inning, walked to load the bases. At long last, Kemp went down swinging.

Bundy’s ugly line was seven runs, all earned, on five hits, including one hoe run, two walks, and a hit batter. He threw 59 pitches. He was credited with 38 strikes and three strike outs.

His ungainly ERA rose to 6.98, and he left the game on the hook for the loss. Hoyt hung around until he hit Sean Murphy with a pitch to open the home fifth. He was yanked in favor of Alex Claudio, who promptly surrendered a double down the left field line to Chad Pinder, hitting for Brown.

That closed the book on Hoyt, who went 1-2/3 innings and was charged with one run, which was earned, on two hits, two walks, and a hit batter. He also struck out two Athletics. He threw 40 pitches; 18 were balls.

Whenever a team bats around, there’s always a danger that its pitcher will go stale on the bench, especially if he’s been having trouble like that which Manaea had been experiencing. But Manaea, even if he didn’t keep the Angels off the bases in the fourth, kept them off the board, stranding two but not permitting anyone to cross the plate.

He lasted until there were two out in the top of the sixth, when Fletcher lashed his 104th pitch into left for a double. They say you can judge a pitcher by how well he does when he doesn’t have all of his stuff. By that standard, Manaea showed himself an ace. He held the halos to one run on nine hits, including one long ball, and issued only one passport. 40 of his offerings were balls. He deserved the victory that brought his record to 6-2, 2.99.

His replacement, Burch Smith, struck out Justin Upton in the sixth but was ineffective in the seventh, coughing up three runs on three hits, a walk, and a hit batter, getting only two outs. Sergio Romo came in to save his bacon with runners on first and second and a reduced lead of 8-4. But Romo allowed a single to Fletcher, and he was hanging on to a three run advantage when he finally struck Upton out to end the threat.

There was a certain amount of excitement in the A´s half of the seventh, when Junior Guerra, who had relieved Claudio in the sixth, hit Murphy with a pitch to open the frame, balked him to second, and then plunked Pinder before getting Andrus to fly out to right and getting Canha to hit into an around the horn DP.

Jake Diekman held the Angels at bay in the eighth, and after Guerra wiggled out of trouble in the A’s half of the inning, Lou Trivino took over, looking for his 11th save. He got it, setting the halos down in order.

Tomorrow the 15th, it will be Frankie Montas (6-6, 3.47) going against Andrew Heaney (4-3, 4.37) at 6:40.

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s show resilience take three of four from Royals

Oakland A’s starter Chris Bassitt is having himself quite a season picking up his seventh straight win on Sun Jun 13, 2021 with a win over the Kansas City Royals at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 The Oakland A’s (40-27) showed no signs of giving up in this series the A’s have won nine of their last 11 games and took three of four from the Kansas Royals (30-34) for a 6-3 victory at the Oakland Coliseum on Sunday.

#2 Once again the A’s proved attacking early putting up runs early and getting good pitching in the later innings wins in Sunday’s game as they scored once in the first, twice in the second and once again in the third.

#3 In the series guys that have been having some good at bats , Mark Canha, Matt Olson, Matt Chapman and like you said Ramon Laureano is coming soon..

#4 Tony Kemp has been on base and was walked three times on Sunday he’s also helped out in the series with some solid base running.

#5 Barbara, Shohei Otani and the Los Angeles Angels (33-32) are back at the Oakland Coliseum to open up a series with the A’s on Monday night. starting pitcher for the Angels Dylan Bundy (1-6 ERA 6.16) and for the A’s Sean Manaea (5-2 ERA 3.09).

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

Home Run Happy: A’s stay hot in June with 6-3 win over the Royals

The Oakland A’s Matt Olson (28) gets a forearm bash from teammate Elvis Andrus (17) after hitting a fifth inning home run against the Kansas City Royals at the Oakland Coliseum Sun Jun 13, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND–The 2021 A’s don’t miss many opportunities. When an opponent comes in limping, the A’s make sure they don’t get medical attention.

The A’s improved to 9-2 in June by defeating the Royals 6-3 on Sunday at the Coliseum. The A’s got big afternoons from their biggest names–Matt Olson and Chris Bassitt–in drubbing Kansas City, losers of 8 of 9 and 24 of 38 after an exemplary 16-9 start to their season.

Olson homered twice to back Bassitt, who pitched into the sixth inning, allowing five hits and two runs to win his seventh, consecutive decision. Bassitt survived a scary moment when he was hit by a batted ball and found himself face down on the turf in pain. Trainer Nick Paparesta and manager Bob Melvin nervously approached Bassitt, but the A’s ace popped up slowly and didn’t need to leave the game.

“It hit me in the perfect spot. That may sound weird,” Bassitt said. “It didn’t affect me at all.”

The Royals didn’t affect Bassitt much either. Nicky Lopez, who delivered the batted ball to Bassitt’s side also had an infield hit for an RBI single. An inning later, in the third, Andrew Benintendi touched Bassitt for a solo shot to close the A’s lead to 3-2. But Bassitt cruised from their and departed in the sixth due to his elevated pitch count, which hit 104.

Kris Bubic surrendered both of Olson’s home runs and one to Matt Chapman. That had the lefty headed to the showers in the fifth, trailing 5-2. The former Stanford pitcher has allowed nine home runs in his last four starts, after not allowing any over his first six starts of the season.

The A’s improved to 40-27 on the season, and maintained their two-game lead on the second-place Astros in the AL West. Hot Anaheim visits the Coliseum starting Monday with six consecutive wins under their belts. The Angels reside in third place in the division, but have climbed above .500 for the first time this season at 33-32.

Dylan Bundy faces the A’s Sean Manaea in the series opener at 6:40pm on Monday. Bundy failed to win any of his first 10 starts of the season, falling to 0-6, before he won his most recent start at home against the Royals. Manaea has thrown 15 innings in June, winning both of his starts via shutout while allowing just six hits.

A’s pour it on with 5 run 8th inning defeat Royals 11-2 in a laugher

Kansas City 2 – 5 – 0

Oakland 11 – 14- 0

By Lewis Rubman

June Saturday, June 1 2021

The Oakland A’s Tony Kemp slides in at home in front of Elvis Andrus after Matt Chapman hits a two run double in the second inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sat Jun 12, 2021 (AP News photo)

OAKLAND–While the Oakland A’s (39-27) and Kansas City Royals (30-33) were taking batting and fielding practice before this afternoon’s game, the city of San Leandro paid tribute to one of baseball’s unrecognized heroes of the game by dedicating the local Little League and Senior Leagues field in that city to Lou Profumo and unveiling a plaque that identifies the place as Lou Profumo Field. The A’s rallied in the bottom of the eighth inning for five runs and pretty much put the kibosh on the Royals for a 11-2 win.

It’s a small park in a small city, but Lou, who had a short career as a pitcher in the minor leagues during the 1950s and ’60s, played a major role in the development of hundreds, if not thousands of children and young adults who went on to live productive lives while enjoying and nourishing the game.

He coached youth baseball and women’s softball, worked to maintain the playing fields of the east bay area, and, as San Leandro councilmember Victor Aguilar put it, “He helped close the equity gap for those who could not afford to play.”

He’s a frequent welcome participant at the meetings of the local SABR chapter and the Pacific Coast League Historical Society, where he shares the knowledge and experience he’s gathered in his long and fruitful life, both horizontal across the baseball globe and vertical, in his deep roots here in the bay area.

In spite of all of the baseball industry’s faults and problems, the game of baseball continues to thrive, thanks to the work and dedication of people like Lou. That last sentence isn’t quite right. There are thousands of people like him, but there’s really no one like Lou Profumo.

In order to reach the Coliseum in time for today’s game, I couldn’t attend the ceremony to honor him and his contributions. I hope these inadequate notes can provide a measure of appreciation to that shown him in this morning’s ceremony.

At the Coliseum, the A’s hosted a less intimate pre-game gathering, this one held to celebrate African American Heritage Day. The different types of tribute–the grass roots and the institutional, the individual and collective–can be complimentary, as they were today.

After the last two night’s battles between Oakland and Kansas City, there’s a temptation to skip the first six innings and start paying attention in the top of the action-filled seventh. But ball games begin at the beginning and not always in the big inning.

This game began with James Kaprielian (2-1, 3.08) toeing the rubber for the 38-27 Athletics. He lost his most recent start, the first L he received as a major league hurler, but he had pitched pretty well in that losing effort, having allowed only two runs over five innings in Coors Field, where ERAs go to boom in the rarified air and spacious distances betweeen outfielders.

Kansas City (30-32) countered with Jackson Kowar, making only his second big league start. He was their compensation round draft pick, in exchange for the loss of Lorenzo Cain, in 2018 and rose quickly to the top. He was, however, creamed in his MLB debut five days ago at the Big A, where the Angels disposed of him after just two thirds of an inning in which he yielded three hits on four runs, two walks, and three wild pitches. His pitch count was 39. That he started today, five days after that inauspicious outing, is a sign that the Royals still think highly of him.

Kowar’s first inning this afternoon wasn’t the nightmare he suffered in Anaheim, but he did allow Oakland to take a 1-0 on Mitch Moreland’s sacrifice fly almost to the left center field wall, which plated Tony Kemp, who had singled to right and advanced to third when Matt Olson also singled to right.

Add a couple of walks to that, and the A’s had loaded the bases before Chad Pinder forced Seth Brown, the recipient of Kowar’s second passport, at second. He threw 34 pitches in the process of getting through his first major league complete inning. Kaprielian responded by striking out the three Royals he faced in the top of the second.

The Kansas City bull pen began stirring in the bottom of the second when Chapman’s liner to left rebounded off the fence, driving in Andrus, who has singled, and Kemp who had walked. Two pitches later, Olson drove Chapman in with a double to right.

Roland Bolaños hadn’t had time to warm up properly, but he came in anyway. Kowar, in his 1-1/3 inning stint had served up 57 offerings, 28 of which were balls. He allowed four hits and three walks while striking out one, Skye Bolt, who was spelling Canha in center field.

Bolaños retired Moreland and Sean Muprhy, so Kowar was charged with only four runs, all of them well earned. At game’s end, he was the losing pitcher, with a record of 0-2, 36.00 Kaprielian faced some trouble of his own in the third, but he pitched his way out of it.

Jarrod Dyson’s lead off single to center and a walks to Nicky López brought Carlos Santana to the plate with runners on first and second with two down. The two runners executed a double steal before Santana walked to load the bases with royalty. Kaprielian restored order by getting Benindtendi to pop out to Kemp at second.

An innning later,a one out triple to right center by KelvinGutiérrez and walks to Dozie and Dyson had Kaprielian in a bases loaded jam. He wiggled out of it with a fly to right that Gutiérrez elected not to run on (a tribute to Seth Brown’s arm) and a grounder fielded by Andrus behind second and arriving in Olson’s glove before the speedy López made it to first.

Once Bolaños had retired his sixth consecutive batter by striking Olson out to end the fourth it looked like the Athletics had setled into their familiar pattern of jumping out to an early lead and then holding on for dear life while their bats went cold and their pitching faltered. But Kaprielian’s 1-2-3 fifth held at least the pitching part of that anxiety at bay.

In the bottom of the frame, the A’s allayed the anxiety’s offensive portion. A two out singgle to center by Brown, followed b a walk to Pinder and Andrus’s single to center scored a run and chased Bolaños from the mound. Carlos Hernández squelched the uprrising by striking out Bolt.

Bolaños had done a good job of keeping KC in the game. He allowed that one run in 3-1/3 frames, striking out four and walking two while yielding two hits and had stranded the runner in scoring position he inherited with only one out.His pitch count was 56, with 32 strikes.

Hernández stopped the A’s cold in the fifth, but he wasn’t as effetive in the sixth. After Kemp took a called strike three, Chapman continued to recover his batting stride, taking a 99 mph slider 388 feet deep into the right field stands and upping the Oakland lead to a more comfortable 6-0.

Six shutout innings were enough for Kaprielian on this warm–torrid for Oakland–afternoon. He left after allowing only two hits and four walks to go with seven Ks.

60 of his 95 pitchs were strikes. He eventually got the win Jesús Luzardo, whose seventh inning meltdown two nights ago was one of the most distressing components of that debacle, replaced him and kept the Royals off the board, allowing them only a walk.

He continued his attempt redeem his performance in last Thursday’s sinister seventh when he stayed on in the eighth. That was thwarted, despite Luzardo’s strike out of Pérez, by the 378 foot homer to left that Gutiérrez hit of a Luzardo change up with Santana on base with two out that brought Sergio Romo to the mound to put out the brush fire.

Hernández didn’t answer the bell for the seventh; Josh Staumont shut the A’s out for the visitors that inning. For the eight, it was Wade Davis, whose first pitch resulted in Skye Bolt’s first hit of the season and first major league home run, a 410 foot blast to center.

Before Davis knew what had hit him, Kemp and Chapman singled, and Olson smacked a three run homer to left center, his sixteenth round tripper of the year, raising his RBI totl to 44 and the A’s lead to 10-2. No one got up in the Kansas City bullpen; it was up to Wade to just sponge it up. It turned out that only one more Oakland run crossed the plate, scored by Moreland on Pinder’s sacrifice liner to right.

Cam Bedrosian mopped up for Oakland in the ninth, setting the Royals down in order.

It was a very satisfying vindication for the A’s, who now have bounced back from the affront to their dignity inflicted on them on Thursday. Chapman’s batting seems to have turned the corner, but Luzano’s poor showing is a concern.

The A’s have clinched a tie for this series. They hope to win it tomorrow, when Chris Bassitt (6-2, 3.44) is slated to go against Kris Bubic (1-1,3.32). The Angels will come to town for a three day series starting Monday. After that, the Athletics will take off for a three game series in the Bronx, a four game set in Dallas-Fort Worth, and a three day week end in Oracle Park.

Elvis’ single has left the infield; Walk off hit in 9th gets A’s 4-3 victory

Elvis Andrus jumps for joy as Oakland A’s teammate Seth Brown celebrates Andrus’ walk off single in the bottom of the ninth giving the A’s the one run win over the Kansas City Royals at the Oakland Ring Central Coliseum Fri Jun 11, 2021 (AP News photo)

Kansas City 3 – 9 – 1

Oakland 4 – 8 – 1

By Lewis Rubman

Friday, June 11, 2021

OAKLAND–Following Thursday night’s ill-starred loss to the Kansas City Royals (30-32), the Oakland A’s (38-27), still hanging on to a one game lead over Houston in the AL West, sent southpaw Cole Irwin (4-7, 3.70) to the mound to try to help them even their four game series with the Kansas City Royals that will last through Sunday. The A’s picked up the win in the second of this four game series with a 4-3 walk off single in the ninth by Elvis Adrus to even the series at 1-1 on Friday night.

Irwin’s history against Kansas City goes back to his first big league first game, which took place on May 12, 2019, at Kaufman Stadium, where he held the Royals to five hits over seven innings, allowing only one run. He was pitching for the Phillies, so, in a strange sort of way, his career follows the route of his team, from Philadelphia through Kansas City to Oakland. Perhaps it’s best we not think about where he’ll go next.

Irwin’s waxed hot and cold this season. He went 2-3, 3.67 in April and 1-4, 4.46 in May. In his only June appearance before tonight, Irwin performed the feat of holding the Rockies to one run on five hits over seven innings in the pitchers’ house of horrors that is Coors Stadium.The A’s took that contest, 6-3.

KC countered with Brady Singer (3-5, 4.88), their first round pick in the 2018 draft, who made a swift climb to the majors last year, when he went 4-5, 4.05 for the 26-34 Royals. Three of his 12 starts this season were frankly bad, in which he lasted no longer than 3-1/3 innings. In what was arguably his best outing, on April 24 at Detroit he went seven frames, allowing three hits and one run. Six days earlier, he had shut out Toronto at home on two hits over six innings.

Irwin set the first ten Royals he faced down in order but ran into trouble with one out in the top of the fourth. Back to back singles by Carlos Santana and Salvador Pérez brought up clean up and number five hitters Andrew Benintendi and Jorge Soler, both of whom had figured prominently in last night´s fatidic seventh inning Royals rally. Irwin rose to the ocassion and disposed of them with a strike out and a fly to right center.

Singer worked his way out of trouble in the first inning and had to face a runner on second with two out in the following frame, but he sailed through the third. He couldn’t manage that in the home fourth. With one down, Mitch Moreland and Matt Chapman hit back to back doubles to right and left field, respectively.

Then Seth Brown unloaded on a 94 mph sinker that landed in the right field stands, 405 feet from home, from which it had left at the speed of velocity of 105 mph. It was Brown’s ninth home run and 22nd and 23rd RBI of the year, and it put the A’s ahead, 3-1.

It looked as if the seventh inning curse was about to claim its second consecutive victim in the Oakland rotation when Salvador Pérez lifted Irvin’s second pitch of the inning down the left field line for his 15th home run of the year and Benintendi and Soler followed with singles. That was enough for BoMel, who replaced his starter, who now had given up six hits in six innings, striking out four without issuing a base on balls. He had thrown 62 pitches, 46 for strikes.

Yusmeiro Petit inherited the two runners, one of whom, Benintendi, advanced to third on Hunter Dozier’s fly out to right. Petit almost got out of the inning with no further damage, but Elvis Andrus flubbed an attempted backhanded pickup of Michael Taylor’s grounder, allowing Benintendi to narrow the gap to 3-2.

The run, unearned was charged to Irvin. Petit again seemed to have pulled a Houdini when Hanser Alberto hit a grounder right at Andrus … whose soft toss to Lowrie arrived too late to force Taylor out at second. That fielder’s choice loaded the bases. Whit Merrifield´s broken bat soft liner to second finally put an end to the threat.

Jake Brentz relieved Singer to start the bottom of seventth. Singer had pitched well, if not as well as the ill-served Irvin. KC’s starter allowed three runs, all earned, in his six innings of mound duty, during which he threw 104 pitches, 66 for strikes. He yielded five hits and a walk against seven strike outs. Brentz retired the side in order.

Jake Diekman replaced Petit on the hill to protect Oakland’s slim lead in the eighth. He couldn’t. After Carlos Santana grounded out to Lowrie at second, Pérez lofted his second straight four bagger, this time taking an 86 mph slider deep over the left center field fence to knot the score at three apiece.

After walking Benintendi, Diekman struck out Soler and handed the ball over to Lou Trivino to face Dozier, who blooped a single to right center. Benintendi tried to score from first, but was called out by home plate umpire Lance Barksdale, whose decision was upheld on review. The put out went Canha to Olson to García.

Kemp greeted Scott Barlow, the Royals´new pitcher in the bottom of the eighth with a line single off second baseman Merrifield’s gove into right, but he quickly was erased on a 4-6-3 double play from the bat of Olson. Barlow whiffed Lowrie to preserve the tie.

Trivino returned to the hill to open the ninth and gave up a sharp single to center on his first pitch to Gutiérrez and threw three straight balls to Taylor. When Taylor swung at and missed Trivino’s next offering, Jarrod Dyson, running for Gutiérrez took off for second. Umpire Shane Livensparger ruled him out on García’s throw to Andrus, but his call was overruled on review. With no one out and a fast runner in scoring position, Trivino proceeded to strike out Taylor and Hanser Alberto before getting Merrifield to fly out to right.

With Barlow back on the mound, Moreland opened the bottom of the ninth by grounding out to first on his first pitch. Then Chapman, whose bat had come alive earlier in the evening, hit his third straight safety, a double to left, his second of the game. Barlow conceeded a walk to Brown, preferring to face Andrus. Andrus came through. He lined a single to right, and Chapman dashed home with the winning run.

The win went to Trivino, who had given up two hits but no runs in 1-1/3 innings, during which 14 of his 20 pitches were strikes. His ERA dropped to 2.40 and he now stands at 3-2 in addition to his nine saves. The loss went to Barlow, who also worked 1-1/3 innings, but he gave up three hits, and that third won did him in. His won-lost record now is 2-2.

Over the weekend, the A’s will complete their four game battle royal with Kansas City. On Saturday, James Kaprielian (2-1, 3.08) will face the visitors’ Jackson Kowar (0-1, 54.00) in a duel of righties, and on Sunday, it will be the right handed Chris Bassitt (6-2, 3.44) who opposes KC’s southpaw Kris Bubic (1-1, 3.32). Both games are scheduled for 1:07.

Starting on Monday the 14th, the A’s will offer Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccines at the Coliseum, free of charge, with no appointments or insurance necessary. The A’s press release says, “Individuals are eligible to return to the vaccination clinic for their second dose at a future game and will once again receive a voucher for two tickets to an A’s game.”

This seems to imply that everyone who gets vaccinated at the ballpark will get a voucher, and Dave Kaval’s statement, “We encourage baseball fans to head to the Coliseum to receive a vaccine and then join us for a great day of A’s baseball,” strengthens that implication If you want a vaccination and don’t already have a ticket for the game, you can enter the vaccination clinic, which will be in the Eastside Club, through the BART Ramp.

People 12 years and older are eligible for the Pfizer vaccine as a first or second dose, although those under. 18 receiving the Pfizer vaccine must have consent from a parent or guardian.) Any one under 18 will need a parent or guardians’s consent to get the Pfizer shot.

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

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

On the A’s podcast with Jeremiah:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Kansas City 6 – 10 – 1

Oakland 1 – 3. – 1

By Lewis Rubman

Thursday, June 10, 2021

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Arizona 0 – 2 – 0

Oakland 4 – 6 – 1

By Lewis Rubman

Wednesday June 9, 2021

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Arizona 2 – 5 – 0

Oakland 5 – 6 – 0

By Lewis Rubman

Tuesday, June 8, 2021

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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