Mariners score early for 4-2 win over A’s; M’s Kikuchi goes six one earned run

The Seattle Marines starter Yusei Kikuchi throws against the Oakland A’s line up in the fifth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Mon May 24, 2021 (AP News photo)

Seattle 4 -6 – 0

Oakland. 2 – 5 – 0

By Lewis Rubman

Mon May 24, 2021

OAKLAND–The Oakland A’s began today in sole possession of first place in the American League West standings, thanks to an unexpected sweep by Texas of their three game series against their Lone Star rivals, the Houston Astros, with two of the Rangers’ victories coming in the bottom of the tenth.

Somebody is stealing the Athletics’ walk off thunder. Some also must have stolen their bullpen’s mojo because, once Sean Manaea had thrown his 98th pitch of the afternoon yesterday in Anaheim, keeping the Angels scoreless on no runs on four hits over give innings, the quartet of Burch Smith, Sergio Romo, Reymin Gudjuan, and Deolis Guerra combined to cough up six runs in the game’s remaining three frames the guys from Anaheim needed to make the Athletics bite the Angels Stadium dust.

What hurt most in the loss was the poor performance of Romo, who had seemed to be coming out of his doldrums during the A’s last home stand, and the nearly complete shut down of the Oakland offense after the third innings, when they scored the fourth of their eventual five tallies.

Oakland’s middle and late inning troubles did not bode well for tonight’s starter, Frankie Montás, (5-3, 4.79) whose longest outing so far this year had been six innings, a limit he reached in five of his nine starts, most recently on May 14, when he held the Twins to one run on four hits at Target Field. In his last start, on the 19th, he alllowed two runs on seven hits over five innings at the Coliseum.

Seattle’s starting pitcher, Ysei Kikuchi (2-3, 4.02) , arrived on the mound with an impressive history against the A’s. He made his MLB debut against them in the Tokyo Dome on March 21, 2019. That was the first time a Japanese pitcher began his big league career in his native land, an event that was overshadowed at the time by Ichiro’s retirement, which seldom took a back seat to anything else in The Egg during the two days of what was called The Ichiro Series.

He faced the A’s twice during last year’s abbreviated season, pitching a total of 12 innings, equally divided over two starts, of shutout ball against them.

Kikuchi’s best performance this year came on April 29 at Houston, when he held the Astros to one hit over seven innings in a 1-0 win over the ‘stros. In that game, he walked two and struck out seven. His worst outing took place at Fenway Park, where the Red Sox hammered him for five runs, all earned, on six hits in only 4-2/3 frames in a game the Mariners lost, 6-4.

His most recent appearance also resulted in a loss, 4-1 against the Tigers in Seattle a week ago. In it, he surrendered three (earned) runs on three hits and four walks in the course of his five innings pitched.

The Mariners got to Montás early, with a lead off walk to Jarred Kelenic followed by a run producing double by Mitch Haniger. One walk and three strike outs later, Montás had gotten himself out of trouble with minimal damage done, but the 27 pitches he’d thrown in the the game’s first inning gave warning of an early withdrawal from the bull pen bank down the line. Kyle Lewis’s fourth home run of the season, coming with Haniger on first with his second straight hit and two down in the third and landing behind the left field score board, stretched Seattle’s lead to 3-0.

Mark Canha shrunk that lead by a run with two out in the bottom of the frame, depositing a 97 mph Kikuchi four seamer over the 367 foot marker in right field for his tenth round tripper and 35th RBI of 2021. A nice running catch in right center by Lewis, playing center, ended what for a moment looked like the A’s chance to extend the inning.

Seattle was a victim of the Curse of the Lead Off Double in the fourth, leavilng Ty France stranded at second when Montás retired the bottom third of the Mariners´ order on two flies to right and a strike out. There is no Curse of the Lead Off Homer, so Seattle was up 4-1 after Jarred Kelenic slamed Montás´s second offering, a 94 mph sinker so hard over the right field fence that Piscotty just twisted around without taking a step as he watched it fly the last of the 414 feet it travelled.

Montás left the game after striking out the side in the top of the sixth. That gave him 11 for the game, the first time this year he reached double digits in the K column and the fourth time he achieved that level in his big league career. He threw 101 pitches, 67 for strikes, and was touched for four runs, all earned on six hits, two of which were four baggers, three walks, and a wild pitch. His ERA rose to 4.92, and he eventually was charged with the loss.

Cam Bedrosian, recently arrived from Las Vegas, made his return to the majors and his season’s debut in the seventh. He gave the A’s two innings of shut out relief, allowing only base runner, on a walk to Lewis. Bedrosian’s performance may have been the most important event for the Athletics in tonight’s contest, indicating that the weak spot in their bull pen well might have been reinforced.

Lowrie’s single to deep short to lead off the home seventh precipitated Kikuchi’s departure. He’d allowed one run on four hits, one of which left the park, and a pair of walks to go with his trio of strike outs. 59 of his 88 pitches weren’t balls. When the dust had settled, he was the winning pitcher. Rafael Montero replaced Kikkuchi on the mound and disposed of the A’s by fanning Chapman and getting Murphy to ground into an around the horn double play.

Montero wasn’t that successful in the Oakland eighth. Tony Kemp pinch hit for Piscotty and walked. Seth Brown pinch hit for Andrus and doubled Kemp home, narrowing Seattle’s advantage to 4-2. Erik Swanson relieved Montero and walked Canha, putting the potential tying run on base with no outs. But Pinder struck out swinging on an 86 mph slider, and Laureano went down flailing at a 95 mph fast ball. And Olson swung and missed at a 2-2 fast ball, also thrown at 95 mph.

That left it for Deolis Guerra to try to keep Seattle off the board in the top of the ninth and give the A’s a one last shot at a come from behind victory. Two flies to left and a grounder to Kemp, now playing second, and he’d done his job.

Kenan Middleton came in for Seattle to face, at the least, Lowrie, Chapman, and Murphy. Lowrie fouled out to Seager behind third. With the count at 2-2, on Chapman, Middleton got him to swing and miss on an 85 mph slider for out number two. An 86 mph change of pace on a 1-2 did Murphy in and earned Middleton his third save.

The A’s now stand at 28-21, still a game ahead of the idle Astros, who go up against the Dodgers tomorrow. Cole Irvin (3-5, 3.59) will try to right the A’s ship tomorrow at 6:40, going against Seattle’s Logan Gilbert (0-2, 9.45).

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s open three game series against Seattle tonight

The Los Angeles Angels share congratulations after their come back win against the Oakland A’s at Angels Stadium in Anaheim on Sun May 24, 2021 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 The Oakland A’s (28-20) opened up their final game with the Los Angeles Angels (20-27) the A’s Matt Olson and Seth Brown both hit home runs scoring three runs in the top of the second and a run in the third to grab an early 4-0 lead.

#2 Down 4-2 the Angels came back scoring three runs in the bottom of the seventh Shohei Otani hit a sac fly to right to score Upton to tie the game. Iglesias got a base hit to score Rojas to take the lead 5-4 for the Angels.

#3 The A’s were able to tie the game for a last chance at the brass ring in the top of the eighth making as Sean Murphy got on on an infield single that scored Olson on a throwing error 5-5

#4 The Angels got a go ahead run in the bottom of the eighth when Upton hit a sac fly to left as Ward tagged up and scored which turned out to be the game winner for a 6-5 win.

#5 It’s back to the Oakland Coliseum as the Seattle Mariners will pay a visit and start pitcher Yusei Kikuchi (1-3 ERA 4.32) and the A’s will go with Frankie Montas (5-3 ERA 4.79) a 6:40 pm PDT first pitch.

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

A’s find out how desperate the Angels are in frustrating 6-5 loss

Los Angeles Angels closer Raisel Iglesias (32) gives thanks to the good Lord after sealing a victory against the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun May 24, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Morris Phillips

Once the A’s home run show concluded, the Angels’ desperation act commenced. It proved to be a powerful force at the Big A on Sunday afternoon.

Down 4-1 in the sixth, the Angels rallied with a run in the sixth, three in the seventh and the tie-breaking, game winner in the eighth courtesy of Justin Upton’s run scoring sacrifice fly.

With the rally, the Angels avoided an embarrassing sweep by their rivals at home, as well as a sixth loss in seven games since their team leader Mike Trout went on the injured list with a calf strain.

“We feel that we have put ourselves in position for a win and it just hasn’t worked out for us,” Upton said. “Hopefully this will spark the club.”

The A’s hit eight home runs in the series including a two-run shot from Seth Brown and another from Matt Olson on Sunday. They also got a quality start from Sean Manaea over five innings, but couldn’t get it to stand up.

“Give credit to them. They didn’t just roll over and let us have one,” Sean Murphy said. “Tough game sometimes.”

Dylan Bundy got the start for the Angels but didn’t survive the third inning as he was lifted by manager Joe Maddon after just 50 pitches. Five relievers followed but all were on point keeping the A’s off the scoreboard the remainder of the afternoon.

The A’s maintain their 1 1/2 game lead in the AL West despite the loss, and they’re just a game behind the Red Sox and Rays for the American League’s best record.

The A’s are back at home on Monday for the start of a three-game set with the Mariners. Frankie Montas gets the start in the opener in a matchup with Seattle’s Yusei Kikuchi.

A’s top Angels 6-2; Bassitt pitches seven plus for the win

Oakland A’s starter Chris Bassitt throws against the Los Angeles Angels line up in the first inning on his way to a win at Angels Stadium on Sat May 22, 2021 (AP News photo)

A’s Top Angels In Game Two

By Barbara Mason

Friday night the Oakland A’s (28-19) beat the Los Angeles Angels (19-27) 8-4 at Anaheim 8-4. After two back to back losses to the Houston Astros, the A’s showed some definite signs of getting back on track with their first win against the Angels. Game Two on Saturday would be the deciding factor.

Were they really back to the play that kept them in first place in their division for weeks? Yes they were as A’s starter Chris Bassitt threw seven plus innings and held the Angels to only two runs in the 6-2 victory at Angels Stadium in Anaheim.

The Angels despite their recent struggles are still a very good ball club. A second win for the A’s would be a very promising sign that this team is back to their winning ways.

Chris Bassitt was on the mound for Oakland and Patrick Sandoval opened for the Angels. The A’s would rebound.

The A’s first inning was a good one. Mark Canha hit a triple and he scored when Matt Chapman hit a sacrifice fly. Oakland had an early 1-0 lead. Canha had a double in the third inning and would score to extend Oakland’s lead to 2-0.

Then the green and gold homeruns came to life. Matt Olson had one in the sixth inning and Aramis Garcia had a second homerun in the seventh inning for a 4-0 A’s lead. Oakland’s Seth Brown would add a third homer with Tony Kemp on base and the A’s now led 6-0. So far in this series the A’s had seven home runs and seven doubles.

It sure looked like Oakland was cruising to their second win in this series. After seven innings Chris Bassitt was still on the mound. He already had six strikeouts and continued to throw hard in the eighth inning with an 85 pitch count. He was having a great outing.

The Angels got on the board in the eighth inning when Lagares and Iglesias scored trailing Oakland 6-2. After Ohtani hit a triple Chris Bassitt left the game. There were two outs when Petit came into the game and it would be up to him to get that third out. That third out was realized in quick order and this game would go into the ninth inning,

Diekman would come in to save this game. It would be a three up, three down and into the clubhouse for Oakland to celebrate their second win in the series. Tomorrow the A’s will go for the sweep. With the Astros and the Mariners both losing the A’s were taking advantage of the inter division schedule.

Sunday the A’s will start Sean Manea (3-2 ERA 4.41) and starting for the Angels Dylan Bundy (0-5 ERA 6.02) will be on the mound for Game Three. First pitch is at 1:07 PM.

A’s Break Two Game Losing Streak Beating Angels 8-4

The Oakland A’s Chad Pinder (4) holds onto the ball after rolling over to hold onto the baseball after Los Angeles Angels Jose Igelesias (4) hit a fly ball on Fri May 21, 2021 at Angel Stadium in Anaheim (AP News photo)

A’s Break Two Game Losing Streak Beating the Angels

By Barbara Mason

The Oakland A’s have gotten off track in their past few games. They dropped two in a row to the Houston Astros falling into second place in their division. They are now a half a game behind Houston after holding down first place for weeks.

The team is now struggling with leaving runners stranded on base. This has haunted them here and there throughout the season. They seemed to have turned it around and then it surfaced again in the Astro series. The A’s hope to leave the memory of the Houston Astros all behind them as they opened a three game series against the Los Angeles Angels with a 8-4 win.

Friday night the A’s began a three game series with the Angels who have trouble of their own with the loss of Mike Trout to injury. Kaprieliian was on the mound for Oakland and for the Angels, Quintana got the nod.

Mark Canha would give the A’s a brief lead in the third inning with his ninth home run of the year but the Angels would answer in the same inning. Jose Iglesias homered to tie up the game 1-1. Again the A’s had left runners on base through the first four innings.

In the top of the sixth inning the A’s got something going. Laureano doubled and Pinder singled. A double by Sean Murphy would drive in Laureano and Pinder. Oakland now led 3-1 going into the bottom of the sixth inning. The Angels Jared Walsh would make things very interesting when he homered cutting the A’s lead to 3-2. With two outs Yusmeiro Petit would take over on the mound.

It was a tough inning for Petit allowing hits by Ward, Rojas and a triple by Lagares. Ward and Rojas would both score giving the Angels their first lead of the game 4-3.

In the seventh inning the A’s had a chance to tie up the game but Mark Canha was thrown out at home, the second time for the A’s in this game. Matt Olson was also thrown out at home in the third inning. With two outs in the seventh Chad Pinder would knock the ball out of the park to give the A’s the lead back 6-4. It was time for another pitching change for Anaheim.

Anthony Rendon very nearly tied up the game but Ramon Laureano stole a probable home run hit deep in center field. Laureano leaped up to snag the ball and save the lead for the A’s. We have seen this same play time and time again from the center fielder.

Laureano who was 3 for 3 in this game came to the plate in the top of the ninth inning. He went 4 for 4 hitting a home run extending the A’s lead to 7-4. Oakland was not finished. Jed Lowry hit a homerun and the A’s led 8-4. It was Lowry’s fourth homer of the year.

Lou Trivino was the closer in the bottom of the ninth. The game would end on a very nice defensive play. A double play would hand the A’s the win.

It was a great win and coupled with the Astros and Mariners losing it was good news all-around for Oakland. The A’s and Angels will tangle tomorrow in Game Two. First pitch is at 7:07.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah Salmonson: Astros were just a little better; Took two of three from Oakland

The Houston Astros Jose Altuve returns to the dugout after scoring against the Oakland A’s in the seventh inning on Thu May 20, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah:

#1 The Oakland A’s (26-19) dropped their seventh game to the Houston Astros (26-18) for the season the A’s have defeated the Astros three times.

#2 With the win 8-4 on Thursday afternoon the Astros move a half game up on the A’s in the AL Western Division. The loss also marked the first time in 30 days that the A’s are no longer in first place. The A’s have been playing .500 ball winning five of their last ten games.

#3 The Astros Jose Altuve and Martin Maldonado both provided runs for the Astros Thursday afternoon for Houston there’s a different star everyday but someone is going to out pitch or hit a big fly on this team to beat their opponents.

#4 The A’s open a three game series against Joe Maddon and the Los Angeles Angels (19-24) on Friday night. The A’s will be starting James Kaprielian (1-0 ERA 1.80) and for the Angels Jose Quintana (0-3 ERA 8.53). The Angels have lost six of their last ten games.

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

Altuve and Maldonado provide punch as Astros take series from A’s in 8-4 win

The Houston Astros Martin Maldonado (right) takes catcher Sean Murphy (left) and the Oakland A’s deep in the fourth inning for a two run home run at the Oakland Coliseum on Thu May 20, 2021 (AP News photo)

Houston 8 – 14 – 0

Oakland 4. – 8 – 1

By Lewis Rubman

Thu May 20, 2021

OAKLAND–You don’t have to be the village explainer to understand that the modern pitching format of a six to seven inning starting performance + two or three relief specialists is fine if all of those moving parts are functioning properly on the same day. If not, not.

Wednesday night’s A’s defeat at the hands of the Houston Astros 8-1 and their own bullpen was an example. The struggling Frankie Montás, after an extremely rocky first inning, pitched gutsy but uneconomically through five frames, throwing 98 pitches in the process and managed to hold his opponents scoreless after a first inning that boded disaster and yielded three runs.

The A’s pitchers who followed him did not. Especially concerning was Sergio Romo’s brief stint on the mound, since he had been showing signs of breaking out of his early season funk and becoming a key member of the bullpen staff.

But, as Scarlette O’Hara observed, tomorrow is another day, and Thursday afternoon at the Oakland Coliseum it was left handed Cole Irvin (3-4, 3.02) who toed the rubber against Houston’s right handed starter Luis García in the rubber match of this important three game series, which would have been crucial had it occurred later in the season. Unfortunately for the A’s the hitting prowess of Jose Altuve and Martin Maldonado proved too much as the Astros took two out of three from the A’s winning Thursday 8-4.

This time it was Oakland that jumped ahead early. Mark Canha led off by blasting his eighth home run on García’s second offering, a 90 mph fast ball that landed 374 feet from home over the low fence in left field. The one run lead Canha’s homer gave Oakland soon was gone with the wind. Myles Straw led off the top of the third with a single to left.

He scored on Martín Maldonado’s double to left. The slow moving Maldonado was helped in his attempt to stretch his hit by the trouble Canha had in fielding it. Irvin walked Altuve before yielding a single to right center to Michael Brantley, which enabled Maldonado to score and the fleet footed Altuve to reach third. Alex Bergman’s single to center made it 3-1 with runners on first and second and still no one out. Irvin got out of that jam by striking out Yordán Alvarez and getting Yuli Gurriel to hit a bouncer to Chapman at third for an inning ending U5-3 double play.

The A’s came roaring back in their half of the third. Tony Kemp, wearing sparkling shoes that could have taken Dorothy back to Kansas the way they glilstened in the afternoon sun, led off by launching his first round tripper of the year, a 352 foot no doubter into the right field seats, on a 91 mph fastball. But all that Oakland could add to that was Canha’s base on balls.

Maldonado, who came into the game with the gross batting average of .144 and already had hit a questionably scored double in the third, hit an unquestionable home run in the fourth. Tucker was on second with two outs when the Astros’ backstop hit his third dinger of the year, 388 feet into the right field stands on an 89 mph fast ball. lt seemed that with each step forward, the A’s took two steps back. Houston now led 5-2.

Burch Smith relieved Irvin to start the sixth. He lasted five innings, giving up five runs, all earned, on eight hits, including one home run, and two walks, throwing 86 pitches, 55 for strikes, and was on the hook for the loss when he left the game.

The bottom half of the inning began with leftly Brooks Raley on the mound for Houston. García had thrown 92 pitches, 58 for stirkes, over five frames. He had allowed two runs, which were earned and had come on solo homers. His walk total was two, and his strike outs, seven. He was in line for the win on departing.

Oakland caught a break when Straw and Brantley couldn’t decide which of them would catch the fly ball Olson lifted into left center with one out, and it fell between them for a double. After Chapman flew out to Brantley in left, and Lowrie singled to right, scoring Olson and bringing the home team to within two runs of the visitors, whom they trailed, 5-3.

Houston got that run back in the top of the seventh. Altuve stretched his hitting streak to 14 on a single to left. Brantley then lined out to Kemp, who deliberately let the ball fall from his glove to the infield dirt and tlhrew to Andrus at second, hoping for. double play.

But first base umpire Chris Guccione would have none of that, and the play was ruled a line out with Altuve still safe at first. Bregman then doubled him home, and Oakland once more was looking at a three run deficit. They also were looking at the offerings of Bryan Abreu, who came in to pitch the seventh for the Astros.

The crafty but thwarted Tony Kemp greeted him with a double to left. Andrus hit a bounder to the mound, which caught Kemp in no man’s land between second and third, but he managed to stay in a rundown long enough for Andrus to reach second before Houston put Kemp out, 1-4-5.

Kemp’s heads up baserunning was as in vain as his attempted Little League trickery in the top of the inning had been. Both Canha and Brown grounded out, and that was it for the A’s in the seventh.

Reymin Gudjuan, who retired Houston with one hit in the ninth last night, came in and immediately gave up a hit, a double to left, to Correa. That was all he gave up.

Dusty Baker entrusted the job of holding the A’s at bay in the eigthth to Ryan Stanek. He hit the first batter he faced, Ramón Laureano, on the second pitch he threw. Five more pitches, and he’d walked Olson, putting two runners on with no outs and the resurgent Matt Chapman at the plate.

Chappy took him to 2-2, and then struck out swinging on a 99 mph fastball that he tipped into Maldonado’s mitt. It was a 98 mph fastball that got Lowrie swinging and missing for the strike out that made it two down. Now it was up to Sean Murphy. He walked, bringing up Kemp with the bases loaded. And that’s where Staneks’ labors ended, replaced by Ryan Pressly.

Kemp grounded out, second to first.

That was a letdown. What happened in the top of the ninth was a bigger one. Altuve singled to right. Laureano robbed Brantley of extra bases with his grab of a fly ln right in right center. Then Bregman singled to right, rifling a shot past Kemp.

Alvarez a grounder to Olson that had double play written all over it and threw to second for the force out. Andrus threw back to first, but wildly, allowing Altuve to score and Alvarez to move on to second. Gurriel drove him in from there on a single to center, and, for the second straight game, Houston had put up eight runs against the A´s. Seth Brown hit an anticlimactic home run to right, but it was too little, too late, and a called third strike on a full count to Laureano ended the frustrating day for the A’s.

The win went to García and the loss to Irvin. The A’s go to Anaheim to face the Angels in a three game set and will return to the Coliseum on the 24th to duke it out with Seattle. Melvin got ejected. The Astros now are in first place. And that’s that.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: Moreland’s absence and how it impacts A’s; Astros-A’s series feels like a rivalry

Oakland A’s designated hitter Mitch Moreland seen here turning on one for a two run homer against the Toronto Blue Jays in the second inning on Tue May 4, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News file photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 How much will the A’s miss designated hitter Mitch Moreland out of the line up he was hitting .237 with 11 runs, four homers, and 15 RBIs he will be replace by Luis Barrera an outfielder who is considered the top outfielder in the minors.

#2 Moreland is out with a inflamed costochondral junction on his left rib, Jerry explain what this injury is like and how long will Moreland be on the injury list.

#3 Jerry, JB Wendelken started doing sock throws on Tuesday he’s expected to recover but talk about his exercises and how soon he can come back?

#4 According baseball metrics the A’s have one of the worst defensive teams in baseball A’s manager Bob Melvin said the A’s might be struggling to win Gold Glove Awards but they certainly aren’t the bottom of the food chain in the American League.

#5 It’s game two of the three game series at the Oakland Coliseum today at 12:37pm as the Houston Astros will start Luis Garcia (1-3 ERA 3.34) and for the A’s Cole Irvin (3-4 ERA 3.02). Irvin in his last outing threw for 6.2 innings and gave up only one run against the Twins.

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

Astros even up series crush A’s 8-1; Touch up Montas and Guerra

Oakland A’s starter Frankie Montas (47) delivers a pitch in the first inning against the Houston Astros at the Oakland Coliseum on Wed May 19, 2021 (AP News photo)

Houston 8 – 15 – 2

Oakland 1 – 4 – 0

By Lewis Rubman

Wed May 19, 2021

OAKLAND–Tuesday night, the Houston Astros (25-18) had the Oakland A’s (26-18) against the ropes for most of their nine inning bout, but they never threw the knockout punch and couldn’t even pull off a split decision. Oakland flew like a butterfly and stung like a bee, a bee named Ramón Laureano, until the mean fighting machine from Texas hit the canvas at the final bell. You can’t expect a game like that every day, but you always come hoping that somehow, you’ll get one.

Wednesday’s contest promised at least one similarity with last night’s; Houston sent to the mound a pitcher who seemed to have the advantage over his counterpart for Oakland.

Indeed, Zack Greinke is an established front line hurler who, alone with Greg Maddox and Bob Gibson, has pitched in three All-Star Games and won six Gold Gloves. He is among the select list of a dozen pitchers with at least 1,000 strikeouts to his credit in each major league. He has won a Cy Young Award (not to mention a Silver Slugger trophy). These are only a few of the highlights of his sixteen year MLB career.

So, what has Greinke done for Houston recently? Five days ago, he went seven innings against the Rangers, allowing three runs, all earned, on seven hits and a walk while striking out five. In his three previous starts, he hadn’t gotten past the fourth frame.

He’s faced the A’s once in ’21, earning the win in the season opener with six innings of three hit shutout ball. Although his won-lost record stands at 3-1, his ERA is an unimpressive 4.18. It was 4.03 in last year’s anomolous season. He’s 37 years old and very likely on the down side of his distinguished career.

He is getatable; Detroit touched him for six earned runs on ten hits in 4-2/3 innings on April 12. And let’s not forget that Ramón Laureano had a slash line of .545/.545/1.182, in 11 plate appearance against the probable Hall of Famer before they faced each other in the bottom of the first.

Frankie Montás (5-2, 4.93), the immensely talented 28 year old the A’s will throw against the ‘stros, is anything but the seasoned veteran he faced off against. During his three year big league career, he has shown immense promise and experienced several difficulties, not always of his own doing.

So far this year, his record is decidedly mixed, not just in the contrast between his won-lost record and ERA. The quality of his work at home differs greatly from that of his road performances. Away from home, he’s gone 2-1 with an earned run average of 2.50. At the Coliseum, he’s 3-1, even though his ERA is a high altitude 6.75.

José Altuve greeted Montás rudely, driving his first pitch of the game, an 88 mph slider, 396 feet into the left field seats. It was the diminutive second sackers fifth home run and eighteenth RBI of the young season and extended his hitting streak to 13 games, a Baker´s dozen.

It seemed as though this might be a passing glinch in Montás´s evening when Michael Brantley went down swinging on three pitches. But Alex Bregman drew a walk, and, after Montás K´d Yordán Alvarez, Yuli Gurriel singled to right, sending Bergman to second.

He scored from there on Carlos Correa’s bloop single to right. Montás ended the inning by striking out Kyle Tucker. Nowadays, that´s called striking out the side. In my youth, it was called striking out three but allowing two runs to score.

The A’s halved the Houston lead when, with two down in the bottom of the second, Chad Pinder singled to right and scored on Sean Murphy’s double to left.

Montás finished his shift after five innings or hard labor. He threw 98 pitches in that span, and 66 of those counted as strikes. It was’t until the fourth, when Brantley was the only Astros to get on base, that he finished a frame without allowing a.t least two base runners. In fifth, he finally retired the side in order. The two runs charged to him were earned, and they came on seven hits and two walks. He struck out six.

Deolis Guerra took over pitching duties in the sixth. His battery mate was Aramis García, who had replaced Murphy in the bottom of the fourth following blow to the head of the A’s starting catcher in the top of that episode. Bob Melvin said that it looks like he might be able to play tomorrow.

The only offense the A’s could muster betwen Murphy’s RBI double in the second and Canha’s one out single to left in the sixth was an infield single by Andrus to lead off the third. Canha hustled to second when Brantley lost control of the Athletics’ DH hit, but that was as far as he got.

Guerra disposed of the Astros in the sixth with a little help from a pitcher’s best friend. He retired the first two men he faced in the seventh but then walked Bergman and allowed a single to right by Alvarez. Gurriel cleared the bases on a 3-2 count with a double that the leaping Canha almost caught at the fence (it almost got over the fence as well). Enter Sergio Romo. The much booed Carlos Correa slapped a single to right, plating Gurriel with Houston’s third run of the inning, all of them charged to Guerra.

Adam Kolarek was on the hill to open the eighth. Myles Straw greeted him with a grounder that just evaded Lowrie’s reach. The Houston center fielder made it into scoring position at second on the slow moving Maldonado’s grounder to short.

The dangerous Altuve struck out. He eventually had to settle for two hits in six at bats as the balance of his evening’s activity at the plate. It was Brantley’s single to center that brought Straw in with Houston’s sixth tally. After Kolarek walked Alvarez, Gurriel’s double to left brought Bergman in with Houston’s third run of the inning and eighth of the game. Montás was charged with the loss, bringing him to 5-3, 4.79, which actually lowered his ERA.

Greinke got the well deserved win. His record now stands at 4-1, 3.77. He threw 89 pitches (63 strikes) over eight innings, allowing one run on four hits, and no walks while recording eight strike outs, before being relieved by Kent Emanuel, a lefty who wears the number 0 on the back of his uniform and shut them down with only a man reaching first on an error by Bergman.

Besides Reymin Gudan, who came in to take the A’s to the finish line and escaped unscathed by anything worse than a single, Romo was the only Oakland hurler not charged with a run. On other hand, he allowed three inherited runners to score. It was not a an enouraging night for the Athletics’ bullpen.

The A’s will close out the series and their current home stand tomorrow in game a scheduled for a 12:37 start. Right hander Luis García (1-3, 3.34) will pitch for Houston. He’ll be matched against Oakland’s left handed pleasant surprise, Cole Irwin (3-4,3.02). The winning team will leave town in (probably temporary) possesion of first place in the AL West.

TO ERR IS HUMAN In my report on last night’s game, I mistakenly identified the pivot man in the nifty double play the A’s pulled off in the eighth inning as second baseman Tony Kemp. The shortstop, Chad Pinder, should have been credited with a put out and an assist on that play.

A’s Laureano swings for two HRs and sac fly for game winner to defeat Astros 6-5

Oakland A’s Ramon Laureano (22) touches them all after hitting hitting a home run in the bottom of the fourth inning off Houston Astros starter Cristian Javier (53) at the Oakland Coliseum on Tue May 18, 2021 (AP News photo)

Houston 5 – 13 – 0

Oakland 6 – 8 – 0

By Lewis Rubman

Tue May 18, 2021

OAKLAND–On the whole, the Oakland Athletics’ (26-17) recent six game excursion to the Hub and the Twin Cities was a success. Four wins out of six games played, especially on the road, is an effective ratio. Although Jake Diekman, who had been one of the bright spots when the team left Oakland, performed spotily, Sergio Romo began to show the form that made him such a favorite with the fans across the bay, and the offense was buoyed by the return to form of Matt Chapman, both at bat (although he still has a some more work to do there) and with his glove work, showing once more why he is, if not indisputably the best fielding third baseman in baseball, which he very well might be, he is the most elegant one.

The return of Chad Pinder from the injured list provided both a viable back up to those two left side of the infielders and added depth at every position except pitcher and catcher. Perhaps the A’s biggest problem on their swing through New England and the Mid West was located in New York, where MLB’s team of video replay analysts went its idiosyncratic way, overturning calls on the field or letting them stand without any visible cause.

Meanwhile, the A’s target for tonight, Dusty Baker’s Houston Astros, at 24-17, came into town only a half a game behind Oakland (25-17), snapping at the home team’s heels in what is shaping up as a tight race for the AL West lead. The game was even closer with the A’s taking the opening volley of the series 6-5 at the Oakland Coliseum.

Before the game started, Oakland announced that they had placed Mitch Moreland, used mostly as DH and occasionally as first baseman, on the 10-day injured list retroactive to May 15. He was sidelined by an inflammation of the area where his ribs join the cartridges that hold them to the breastbone, a condition that isn’t serious and which usually goes away on its own without treatment.

To replace Moreland, they recalled outfielder Luis Barrera from their AAA affiliate in Las Vegas. Barrera has no big league experience and was hitting at a .349 clip with two homers and seven RBI in eleven games when he was promoted. He bats and throws from the left side.

The man on the mound for the green and gold was Sean Manaea, who looked terrible at Fenway on Thursday, when he lasted only two innings against the Bosox, giving up ten hits and seven runs, every single one of them earned. Fenway’s a difficult park for left handed hurlers, although great and near great southpaws like Lefty Grove and Mel Parnell have prospered there.

But it’s not so overwhelming a venue that it could cause a debacle like that one. That’s a harsh judgement, but I make it with an awareness that Manaea has it in him to be a very good pitcher indeed. No mention of him and the Red Sox is complete if it doesn’t include the no hitter he pitched against them at the Coliseum on April 21, 2018.

Manaea’s opposite number, Cristián Javier (3-1, 3.08), was facing the A’s for the third time this season. He gave up three hits and two runs, both earned, in 3-2/3 innings against them on April 2, a game Houston eventually won, and then shut the A’s out over five innings, again yielding three hits, six days later in Houston, striking out seven and garnering his second win of the year.

It didn’t take long for Houston to get to Manaea. After retiring José Altuve on a fly to the warning track in left and striking Michael Brantley out swinging, the A’s starter surrendered a single to Alex Bregman, a double to Yuli Gurriel that advanced Bregman to third, and a double to Yordán Alvarez that brought both runners home. Manaea closed out the inning by inducing Carlos Correa to ground out to third.

Ramón Laureano got one of those runs back by driving a 94 mph four seamer over the left field fence for his ninth home run and 18th RBI of the season. It came with two out and no one on base, Javier having struck out Marc Canha and Seth Brown before his fellow Dominican took him deep.

Manaea held Houston in check until Kyle Tucker led off the fourth with a 459 foot blast into the right field seats, his tenth round tripper and twenty-eighth run batted in, puttng the Astros up 3-1. Manaea recovered to get Myles Straw out on a fly to left center, and Tony Kemp robbed Martín Maldonado of a hit with his leaping backhanded grab of the Houston backstop´s liner into the shift between second and third.

That was a break for Manaea because Altuve extended his hitting streak to an even dozen games when he beat out a slow grounder to Chapman. Then Canha made a nice running catch of Brantley´s fly to left to end the frame.

Once again, Laureano brought the A´s to within a run of Houston, leading off the bottom of the fourth with a 387 foot homer, again to left. The A´s threatened to tie it up when Chapman hit a resounding double off the right center field wall but Lawrie fouled out to Maldonado, and Murphy flew out to left center.

Settling down, Manaea pitched his first 1-2-3 inning in the fifth. Hopes for Oakland rose in their half of that frame with Pinder´s lead off towering fly to right but fell with the ball as it landed in Tucker´s glove at the wall.

Houston threatened in the top of the sixth with runners at the corners and one out, but Manaea came through, getting Maldonado to bounce into a 6-4-3 double play that kept the game tight.

It was Matt Olson’s tenth home run of the season, coming with two down and the bases empty in the bottom of the sixth off a 2-1, 93 mph four seamer that knotted the score at three all.

91 pitches, 66 of them for strikes, over six innings of work were enough for Manea, who left the game before the seventh frame began. He gave up three runs, all earned, on ten hits and a wild pitch, but didn’t walk anyone. His earned run average creped up a smidgen to 4.41.

Burch Smith relieved Manaea, and the visitors’ seventh started off ugly. Altuve beat out a slow grounder up the middle for a single, went to second on a wild pitch, and scored on Brantley’s double to deep right center. Brantley, in turn, advanced to third on Bregman’s fly to the same part of the outfield and scored on Gurriel’s sac fly to left. Smith struck Alvarez out swinging, but the damage was done.

Six innings also were enough for Javier. All three of the runs he surrendered were earned and came on solo home runs, two by Laureano. The Astros’ starter allowed two other hits and a walk and struck out nine. 56 of his 96 offerings were strikes.

His replacement, Enoli Paredes, quickly put the potential tying runs on base with a walk to Lawrie and a single by Murphy. After striking Pinder out swinging and loading the bases by walking Kemp, Paredes was up against the wall, and Baker replaced him with Andre Scrubb.

Canha brought Lawrie home with a sacrifice fly to center on Scrubbs’ first pitch. The two other runners held their places but advanced a base each when Scrubbs uncorked a wild pitch to Brown, whose fly out to right stranded them.

The A’s trailed the ‘stros 5-4 when Romo entered the fray to pitch the eighth. Correa led off with a dinky grounder that got past Romo for a single to short. But Romo got Tucker to hit another grounder in his direction, fielded it, threw from the seat of his pants to Kemp, who completed the double play by throwing Tucker out at first. Straw’s pop out to Pinder put an end to the inning.

Ryne Stanek came to pitch the home eighth and began by walking Laureano on four pitches. He got Olson out on a fly to left, but Chapman worked a 3-2 count before slamming a 97 mph four seamer to deep left center for a double that brought in Laureano and tied tbe game at five.

An intentional walk to Lowrie gave Murphy the chance to break the tie. He almost did, but Altuve fielded his grounder behind second and threw from the ground and behind his back to Correa for the force. Bryan Abreu came in and got Pinder to ground into a routine force at second, Correa to Altuve.

Melvin chose Yusmeiro Petit to pitch the ninth for the A’s. He retired pinch hitter Jason Castro, Altuve, and Brantley to a conga beat, as they say in Latin America. (For the younger set, the conga goes 1, 2, 3, kick).

Abreu stayed on to pitch the ninth for Houston. Altuve made a stellar dive to stop Kemp’s grounder and throw him out. Then Canha, after almost getting beaned, wallked and moved on to third on Brown’s shift defying single to center. Laureano drove in his third run of the game with a sacrifice fly to center, and the A’s had pulled off another unlikely comeback.

The win went to Petit, whose 16 pitches earned him his fifth win against no defeats (he has one save) and brought his ERA down to 1.82. The loss went to Abreu, his second against two wins.

Tomorrow’s battle, scheduled for 6:40 pm Oakland Coliseum, will feature two right handed starters, Zack Greinke (3-1, 4.18) for the ‘stros and Frankie Montás (5-2, 4.93) for the Athletics.