A’s rough up MadBum in 9-5 win over Snakes

Arizona Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo makes a pitching change as starter Madison Bumgarner hands over the ball in the fifth inning at Chase Field in Phoenix on Mon Apr 12, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Daniel Dullum
Sports Radio Service
Monday, April 12, 2021

Oakland jumped to an early lead against Arizona starter Madison Bumgarner and defeated the Diamondbacks 9-5 Monday in the first of a two-game interleague series at Chase Field in Phoenix.

Chris Bassitt (1-2) picked up his first win of the season, giving up two earned runs and two hits while walking five in five innings. Bumgarner (0-2) struck out five in 4 2/3 innings, but was tagged for six earned runs on seven hits while walking three. Bumgarner’s earned run average ballooned to 11.20.

Oakland took a 1-0 lead in the top of the first when Mark Canha scored on Jed Lowrie’s infield ground out. The A’s picked up two more runs in the third when Lowrie hit a two-run double to left.

The Diamondbacks cut the Oakland lead to 3-2 on an RBI single by Kole Calhoun and Asdrubal Cabrera’s sacrifice fly to center.

Oakland scored three times in the top of the fifth. After Lowrie delivered a run-scoring single and scored on Matt Olson’s sacrifice fly to left, Matt Chapman hit a solo home run to left, giving the Athletics a 6-2 lead.

Arizona battled back to pull within 6-5 with a run in the sixth and two more in the seventh on a run-scoring double by Cabrera, who scored on David Peralta’s single to center.

Elvis Andrus singled to drive in Stephen Piscotty in the top of the eighth, and the A’s tacked on two more runs in the ninth on an RBI single by Chapman and Sean Murphy’s run-scoring double.

Chapman finished 3-for-5, while Lowrie, Ramon Laureano and Sean Murphy each collected two hits, as the A’s outhit Arizona 12-7. Calhoun finished 3-for-4 for the D-Backs.
In the series finale, Oakland will start Jesus Luzardo (0-1, 6.10), and the Diamondbacks will counter with Zac Gallen (0-0, 0.00). Game time is 11:40 a.m.

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s showing signs of snapping out of it; Had day off on Sunday

Oakland A’s hitter Jed Lowrie singles for two RBIs in the seventh inning at Minute Maid Field in Houston against the Astros on Sat Apr 10, 2021 (AP News photo)

#1 The Oakland A’s started the 2021 season going 0-6 but once that streak ended the A’s have now won three of the their last four games. Including two wins in Houston against the AL Champion Astros.

#2 The A’s got a big 7-3 win over the Astros on Saturday that included a two run home run from Ramon Laureano for his first home run of the season.

#3 The A’s run production came up with two runs in the fourth, fifth and seventh innings something they lacked in those first six games and stayed ahead for the series win.

#4 The A’s got pitching help from starter Frankie Montas going six innings giving up six hits and one run, reliever Sergio Romo threw for two thirds of an inning giving up one hit and two runs. A’s relievers Jake Diekman and JB Wendelken shutout the Astros for the rest of way.

#5 The A’s open a brief two game series in Arizona against the Diamondbacks who have lost six out of their last ten games. The D-Backs are in dead last at 3-6 but the season is still early. The A’s will start Chris Bassitt whose looking for his first win of the season (0-2 ERA 5.56) the Diamondbacks will counter with Madison Bumgarner (0-1 ERA 11.00) since coming to the Diamondbacks he’s struggles and in his last outing he surrendered five runs on eight hits to the Rockies.

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

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason Mon Apr 12, 2021 by Sports Radio Service | Free Listening on SoundCloud

A’s not letting early season struggles define them

By Morris Phillips

Among the encouraging things happening with the A’s the last couple of games?

Seth Brown may finally be ready to bring his big fly game to the Major League level.

The 28-year old is well-known in minor league circles as an unrepentant slugger, the author of 92 home runs since his debut in 2015, including 37 in just 112 games for AAA Las Vegas in 2019.

That last line had the A’s hopeful Brown could elevate his game in Oakland, but in his first 36 games with the A’s over the last three seasons, Brown didn’t clear any fences…

Until Saturday night. With the A’s 6-0 lead cut in half, Brown took reliever Ryan Stanek into the upper deck, a not-high-enough fastball turned into a memory of a lifetime. So majestic was Brown’s homer, the flight of the ball on television revealed the entire Minute Maid Park scoreboard showing Brown’s numbers without a home run for the last time.

“The only thing he doesn’t have on his resume is a homer for a guy who really is a home run hitter,” manager Bob Melvin said. “I know that takes a lot of pressure off him now that he finally has a home run.”

Pressure off Brown? More succinctly, pressure off the entire Oakland roster. Brown’s shot put the finishing touches on a 7-3 win, the A’s third in four games after an 0-6 start. Not wanting to get buried in the competitive AL West two weeks in, the A’s are fighting back, and giving their 2021 season a healthier look.

In the last four games, the A’s have out-manuvered the Dodgers late, come up with some more late game magic in Houston on Friday, and set up a couple of wins with nearly identical, exemplary starts by Sean Manaea and Frankie Montas.

The key? When you don’t fall behind early–as the A’s did repeatedly in their winless start–you can pick your spots and pounce on the opposition in the later innings.

“We grind it out a little bit and stay in the game until we do something nice late,” said Mark Olson, who came up big in Friday’s win. “I think we can take this momentum and ride it out.”

A few key presences must be reclaimed from the injury list with Chad Pinder (knee), Mike Fiers (hips), Burch Smith (strained groin) and A.J. Puk (strained biceps) on the 10-day injured list, and Trevor Rosenthal on the 60-day list after surgery for thoracic outlet syndrome on Thursday.

Matt Chapman and Sean Murphy remain mired in awful slumps, but both have expressed optimism in recent days–not just for themselves, but for the team as a whole.

We’re always rotating guys and new faces, so for us, it always takes a little bit to get going,” Chapman said. “But once we get going, we’re able to really bond and really pick up steam.”

The A’s open a two-game set with the Diamondbacks in Phoenix on Monday. Familiar face Madison Bumgarner squares off against Chris Bassitt in the opener at 6:40pm.

Oakland Takes Series From the Astros 7-3

Oakland A’s hitter Ramon Laureano (right) is greeted at the plate by teammate Mark Canha (left) after hitting a two run homer in the fifth inning against the Houston Astros at Minute Maid Park in Houston on Sat Apr 10, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

After yesterday’s game against the Houston Astros, the Oakland A’s reclaimed the form that we have grown to expect. The form that has taken them into the post-season for quite a few years now. Beating the Astros 6-2 was a real boost for the A’s and also gave them the opportunity to win the series should they win todays game.

Oakland certainly came out in this game full of confidence and once again it was the fourth inning when the A’s began to make some noice. Ramon Laureano and Jed Lowrie scored giving the A’s a 2-0 lead. The Astros would come up empty in the fourth inning and so trailed by the score of 2-0.

The fifth inning was also a good one for the A’s extending their lead to 4-0. Laureano homered scoring Mark Canha who was on base. Frankie Montas was having a great outing through seven innings. Pitching for the A’s was starting to turn around, something that we all knew was just a matter of time.

Oakland would strike again in the seventh inning. Lowrie would hit a single and Mark Canha and Ka’ai Tom would score and the A’s were looking at a 6-0 score in the middle of the seventh. The Astros would get on the scoreboard when Kyle Tucker homered to right giving Houston their first run of the game. Houston was not done scoring two more runs. Myles Straw and Jose Altuve crossed home plate and just like that the Astros were well within striking distance. You can never count the Astros out regardless of the score.

The eighth inning was a highlight for Oakland DH Seth Brown who hit his first homer of the season giving the A’s a 7-3 lead.

It was a quiet ninth inning as the Oakland A’s took the series from the Houston Astros. The Oakland A’s have their rhythm back and now we can all look forward to some high-powered Green and Gold baseball.

Oakland will have the day off on Sunday and will be back on the field on Monday against the Arizona Diamondbacks for a two game series. First pitch is at 6:40 PM.

Oakland Hits 3 Home Runs To Beat Houston 6-2

Oakland A’s hitter Matt Olson (right) celebrates with Mark Canha (left) after hitting a three home run in the eighth inning against the Houston Astros at Minute Maid Field on Fri Apr 9, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

Saturday evening the Oakland A’s took on the Houston Astros in Game two of their three game series. It has been a rough start for Oakland this year. They lost a four game series against the Astros to start the season. The A’s then went on to play the defending champs the Los Angeles Dodgers losing two out of three games. It was game seven for the A’s that broke the six game losing streak. They beat the Dodgers 4-3 in ten innings. This year has been their worst start for Oakland since 1916.

Now the A’s are once again tangling with the Houston Astros who seem to have their number. In Game 1, the Astros won handily 6-2 and now the A’s have to suffer through two more games against Houston. In game two loss against the Dodgers, the Oakland club looked far better than they had looked all season. They began hitting and their defense was solid. The bottom line is that this team is far better than they are currently showing. The A’s got a 6-2 win over the Astros on Friday night at Minute Maid Field.

A win over the Astros would be a real confidence builder, especially since the Astros have looked unbeatable. Their current record is 6-1 while the A’s have a 1-7 record. Houston is on a real roll and it will be tough to stop them.

At the end of five innings the game was tied 1-1. Both of the runs in the game were scored in the fourth inning. Jed Lowrie hit a 374 feet homer and Yuli Gurriel scored for the Astros.

The game remained quiet until the eighth inning when both Mark Canha and Jed Lowrie had hits and the A’s had a chance to break the tie. Oakland did exactly that when Matt Olson hit a 414 ft homer scoring three runs and taking the lead 4-1.

The A’s were not finished with the Astros. In the top of the ninth Mark Canha hit a two run homer scoring Elvis Andrus for a 6-1 lead.

This was a great game for the Oakland A’s with 3 homers, Lowrie, Olson and Canha each hit one looking like the team that we have seen for the past few years. It sure was a lot of fun seeing the A’s playing such great baseball. We had to wait a bit but it sure worth the wait. Game three of this series will be played Saturday with first pitch at 1:05.

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: Athletics Sabermetrics and Closer

Former San Diego Padre pitcher and current Oakland A’s pitcher Trevor Rosenthal seen in this Sep 26, 2020 photo is congratulated by catcher Austin Nola after pitching against the San Francisco Giants. Rosenthal will be out for approximately four months after having arm surgery (Bay Area News Group file photo)

Athletics: Sabermetrics and Closer

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Perhaps the worse news for the Oakland A’s 1-7 start to the 2021 season is that they will be without Trevor Rosenthal, signed to a 1-year deal for $11 million contract to take the place of Liam Hendricks, who is now the closer with the Chicago White Sox. Rosenthal had surgery Thursday.

An issue affected his pitching arm (he threw 100 mph) this surgery required removing his first rib releasing the pectoralis minor muscle of his chest-wall. It is called Thoracic Surgery. Matt Harvey had same surgery a couple of years ago when he was pitching for the Cincinnati Reds; today he is pitching with the Baltimore Orioles.

Rosenthal will be out a few months, maybe back in July or August, if everything goes very well during his rehab. About the Rosenthal surgery, manager Bob Melvin said; “I had a feeling that was going to happen,” Melvin said before Thursday’s game against the Astros. “Everything went well. I don’t really have a timetable or anything like that.”

Without a legitimate experienced closer, the team is left with these potential replacements for that position: Jake Diekman, Lou Trivino, J.B. Wendelken or Jordan Weems. Some suggested that young A.J Puk was given a shot, but he was recently placed on the Injured List as they called up Deolis Guerra.

The closer has become one of the most specialized and important jobs for a pitcher in baseball, it’s a given, that nobody can win without a star closer. We do not know, if the A’s would make a trade to acquire somebody to take their closer spot, nobody knows.

You really never know who is going to become a great closer. In 1987 I remember when Dennis Eckersley came to the A’s from the Chicago Cubs (already a 13-year veteran and 20-game winner in 1978 with Boston) Eckersley started two games with the A’s before an injury to then closer Jay Howell.

That opened the door for Eckersley as pitching coach Dave Duncan and manager Tony LaRussa gave him the ball to move into the closer’s role. That year Eck saved 16 games, next year 1988 he saved a league-leading 45 games helped the A’s win the pennant and went to the World Series, and the rest is history.

He was a dominant closer with the Athletics until 1995, then ended with St Louis and finally back to Boston for his last season in 1998. Dennis Eckersley pitched for 24 years ended with 390 games saved. In 2004 he was elected with an A’s uniform to the Baseball Hall of Fame at Cooperstown, New York.

I will never forgot one of my interviews with him while playing here in Oakland. I asked him what makes him that sharp (I nicknamed him, “La Cuchilla”- “The Knife”) he responded “I am afraid of failure and that keeps me motivated.”

He was as automatic as any closer during those years in baseball. The Oakland Athletics and Tampa Bay Rays are the sabermetics darlings of Major League Baseball. They have not spend a lot but they have gotten very good return on their investment, the A’s won the Western Division last season, the Tampa Bay Rays won the American League pennant and lost to the Dodgers in the World Series.

Both clubs are similar in their approach to player’s salaries and they have worked the Sabermetrics very well. The world (everybody not only baseball people) was made aware of Sabermetrics by the movie Moneyball in 2011. “Baseball is like a poker game, nobody wants to quit when he’s loosing; nobody wants you to quit when you are ahead” -Jackie Robinson.

Stay well and stay tuned

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

A’s woes continue lose fifth straight time to the Astros 6-2

Oakland A’s starter Cole Irvine throws against the Houston Astros line up in the first inning at Minute Maid Field in Houston on Thu Apr 8, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s lost again for the seventh time in the first eight games of the season. The Astros beat them 6-2 Thursday night at Minute Maid Park. The A’s offense has been non-existent so far this year, and it did not produce until late in the game.

The Astros’ pitchers held the A’s scoreless for eight innings and allowed them just three hits. They plated two runs in the ninth, but it was too little, too late. The Astros continued to pummel Oakland pitching as they bashed three dingers in the game. The A’s have not been able to find a way to stop the Astros’ relentless offense. The recap of the game follows below.

The Astros grabbed an early 1-0 lead in the bottom of the second inning. Houston’s All-Star shortstop Carlos Correa hit a lazy fly ball to right field that barely made it over the fence for the score. The only other park in the American League where that would have been a home run is New York’s Yankee Stadium which is just 314 feet from home plate.

The Astros put another run on the board in the fourth. With one out, Astros’ DH Yordan Alvarez doubled to left-centerfield. Carlos Correa followed with a double to left to drive in Alvarez. Correa’s second RBI of the game gave the Astros a 2-0 lead after four complete.

The A’s threatened in the top of the fifth. With one out, Elvis Andrus doubled to left field. Andrus tagged on Tony Kemp’s fly to right field. Mark Canha walked to put men on at first and third. Astros’ pitcher Christian Javier struck out Matt Olson looking. The Astros still lead 2-0 halfway through the fifth.

Houston plated three runs in the sixth. With one out, Yordan Alvarez did his best Willie McCovey impersonation as he blasted a solo home run into the second deck of Minute Maid Park. Irvin walked the next batter, Carlos Correa. A’s manager Bob Melvin brought in J.B. Wendelken to pitch.

Wendelken retired Yuli Guriel for the second out. Astros’ right fielder, Kyle Tucker, doubled down the left-field line to send Correa to third. Myles Straw singled to right to drive in Correa and Tucker. The Astros increased their advantage to 5-0 after six.

The Astros extended the lead to 6-0 in the seventh when Jose Altuve homered off A’s reliever Deolis Guerra. Guerra was called up to fill a vacancy in the bullpen.

The A’s put two runs on the board in the top of the ninth. It was too little, too late. Aramis Garcia, pinch-hitting for Mitch Moreland, singled to start the rally. He scored the A’s first run when Stephen Piscotty doubled. Jed Lowrie, pinch-hitting for Tony Kemp, singled to drive in Piscotty with the A’s second run. The A’s could do more. The Astros win 6-2.

Game Notes- With the loss, the A’s are 1-7 for the season. The Astros are 6-1. Five of the Astros wins have come at the expense of the A’s

Houston’s hitting stars were Carlos Correa with a home run and two RBIs and Yordan Alvarez with a monster dinger and a double.

The A’s received bad news about the closer, Trevor Rosenthal. Rosenthal had Thoracic Outlet surgery Thursday to remove an impingement in his shoulder. He will be re-evaluated in eight weeks and is expected to miss about four months of the season. The A’s also announced that lefty A.J.Puk has gone on the ten-day IL with a shoulder issue. The A’s recalled Deolis Guerra to take his spot in the bullpen.

The A’s meet the Astros Friday night at Minute Maid Park in Houston. Lefty Sean Manaea will start for Oakland, and righty Lance McCullers will go for Houston. The game will start at 5:10 pm.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: A’s avoid homestand sweep; Open five game road trip tonight

The Houston Astros Myles Straw (3) reaches second base as the Oakland A’s shortstop Elvis Andrus (left) can’t make the catch on a throwing error by third baseman Matt Chapman (right) on Sun Arp 4, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

#1 The Oakland A’s just got by the Los Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday afternoon with a ten inning 4-3 win to close the three game series and homestand at the Oakland Coliseum.

#2 The A’s got runs in the bottom of the ninth to tie it up and got the game winner in the last of the tenth on Mitch Mooreland’s hit to center right scoring Mark Canha from second base it had to be a huge relief before heading out for the road trip.

#3 Jerry from the looks of things in the first two games of the Dodger series the Dodgers winning game one 10-3 and winning game two 5-1 there was this fear the A’s could go down 0-7 to open up their first regular week of the season but just got by the Dodgers on Wednesday 4-3 in extra innings.

#4 This is A’s team has the players to be better than a last place team, with Mooreland, Canha, Matt Chapman, Ramon Laureano, Sean Murphy, Yusmeiro Petit and Elvis Andrus it’s a good enough core of players to take the A’s to the post season.

#5 Jerry, let’s take a look at tonight’s starting pitchers at Minute Maid Field in Houston for the A’s Cole Irvin 0-1 ERA 8.31 who took a tough loss against the Astros allowing four runs and seven hits and for the Astros Cristian Javier who allowed two runs on three hits against the A’s on Friday night at the Coliseum.

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

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg Thu Apr 8, 2021 by Sports Radio Service | Free Listening on SoundCloud

A’s finally snap skid edge Dodgers in extras 4-3

Mark Chapman (26) of the Oakland A’s gets congratulated from third base coach Mark Kotsay (7) after hitting a seventh inning home run on Wed Apr 7, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (NL). 3-8-0

Oakland. 4-5-0

Ten innings

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Tuesday night, the Oakland Athletics were thwarted in their seemingly unending quest for their first victory of the 2021 season. The thwarter in chief was Los Angeles Dodger Clayton Kershaw, who, after retiring, will be a viable candidate for the Hall of Fame.

Wednesday afternoon the A’s snapped their losing streak at six games with a 4-3 ten inning win over the Dodgers. The bleary eyed hometown squad had to face a less daunting figure but one still deserving of respect and capable of causing concern. Trevor Bauer, although he stood at 1-1, 5.66 for this season, was, and will be until after the last out of the world series, the reigning National League Cy Young winner. He achieved that honor by leading the senior circuit in the following categories: ERA (1.73), WHIP (O.79), opponents’ BA (.159), hits/nine innings (5.06), and shutouts (2).

Those two shutouts tied him for first place in complete games. He did this for Cincinnati. Two months ago, he signed with the Dodgers for a reported three-year, $102 million contract. Before today, his lifetime record against Oakland stood at 1-4, 3.72. He was 0-3, 3.25 at the Coliseum.

The A’s sent their promising but as yet unproved left handed youngster Jesús Luzardo to face Los Angeles’ fearsome lineup. Luzardo’s numbers going into the game were distressing but hid a mitigating factor. Although he was an unprepossing 0-1, 9.00, he struck out eight Astros in only five innings of work. That’s more than he’d struck out in any of his previous big league appearances. Of course, his having gone only five frames is no cause for reassurance.

Tuesday, the A’s announced a couple of transactions, but neither involved $102 million over three years. They placed relievers Burch Smith and Reymin Gudjuan on the injured list and recalled pitcher Jeremy Weems, as I reported Tuesday night, and outfielder Seth Brown from the alternate site in Stockton.

Wednesday started out in a way the Oakland faithful are beginning to find annoyingly repetitious; the visitors jumped out to a first inning one run lead. Chris Taylor led off with a walk. Corey Seager followed suit, moving Taylor up to second.

It seemed as if the A’s might emerge unscathed after Luzardo set down Justin Turner and Will Smith on strikes. But A.J. Pollock lined a single to center, plating Taylor and moving Seager into scoring position at second. A walk to Max Muncy filled the bases Dodgers, but the A’s young southpaw got Austin Barnes to fly out

The newly promoted Seth Brown made a spectacular catch of Austin Barnes’ bid for a leadoff homer in the top of the fourth, leaping and leaning over the Ring Central sign in left field to haul down what looked like a sure four bagger. In addition to keeping the score at 1-0, Brown’s heroic grab extended Luzardo’s string of five batters faced without allowing a baserunner. That streak eventually reached seven.

Ramón Laureano manufactured the tying run for Oakland in the bottom of that that frame. He led off with a walk, stole second and third,, and then, with Brown at the plate, scored on a wild pitch. Brown almost put Oakland ahead with a line drive into the right field seats, but it landed foul. He then took a called third strike to end the inning.

Luzardo reached 104 pitches, 62 for strikes, before being lifted in the top of the sixth after granting a passport to Muncy, who advanced to second on a single to left by Barnes. Luzardo’s replacement, Adam Kolarek, reitired Lux on a grounder to first, unassisted, that moved both runners up a base. Then Zach McKinstry hit a hard ground ball that Chapman handled cleanly and, diving into third, tagged Barnes trying to reach that base. But Muncy already had crossed the plate, and Los Angeles taken a 2-1 lead.

Luzardo was charged with that second run, so when he went to the showers he was on the hook for two earned runs on five hits and four walks. He reduced his ERA to 6.10.

Although Oakland’s two young hurlers, Luzardo and Kolarek, had performed adequately, veteran Segio Romo did not. He opened the top of the seventh by hitting Taylor with a slow slider and then yielding a single to center by Seager. Turner’s subsequent double drove in Taylor and sent Seager to third. Then Romo hidt his striode. He got the remaining batters he faced, with an intentional pass to Muncy thrown in, but Oakland now was trailing 3-1.

Still, the A’s battled back. Chapman started it by blasting his first home run of the young, frustrating season, a definitive smash over the center field fence. Bauer got Brown to strike out looking but surrended a single to Piscotty before fanning Andrus. That finished the day for Bauer.

Corey Knebel took over mound duties, and Sean Murphy pinch hit for Aramis García, and Tony Kemp pinch ran for Piscotty at second after Murphy’s base on balls. It was all for naught; Kenebel caught Canha looking to end the threat. Oakland had inched closer to Los Angeles (at least on the scoreboard) and now trailed 3-2.

Bauer’s line was 110 pitches, 67 for strikes in 6-2/3 IP. Two runs, both earned, on three hits, one out of the park, and only one walk but two hit batters. He notched ten Ks.

Cory pitched an inning, spanning the final out of the seventh and the first two outs of the eighth, before giving way to Víctor González, who came in to face Moreland with the bases empty and closed out the inning.

Jake Dieckman pitched a perfect top of the eighth and was lifted for Lou Trivino after Seager led off the ninth with a ground single to left. Trivino promptly walked Turner on four pitches. He threw two more to Smith before getting a strike called on Smith, who eventually flew out to right, advancing Seager to third.

After a long at bat, the A’s reliever induced Pollock to fly to Brown, now playing right, in right center field while the runners held their bases. He walked Muncy on a full count to clog the base paths with Dodger blue before fanning Edwin Ríos to keep Oakland in contention.

Of course, that meant they’d have to face the nearly impenetrable Kenley Jansen. Chapman, who seems to have found his stroke, led off with a solid single to center. Brown’s walk put men on first and second. Kemp sacrificed Chappy to third and pinchrunner Ka’ai Tom to second.

Then as I was taught to say in high school Latin, Elvis Andrus lifted a sac fly to right that knotted up the score with two outs in the bottom of the ninth. A walk to Murphy brought Canha to the plate. Unforunately, he grounded out to short.

Yusmeiro Petit came in to start the first extra inning of the A’s season. That, in itself, was a triumph of sorts. Ríos was the runner placed on second. He stayed there as Lux flew out to Laureano and McKinstry flew out to Kemp, now playing left. Taylor then lifted a fly to short right field.

Tom, who had replaced Brown in that position, made a long charge to the fence near the pitchers’ mounds in the visitors’ bull pen behind first base, got his glove on the ball (or vice versa), but couldn’t hold on to it. Undaunted, Petit struck Taylor out on a curve.

Jimmy Nelson took over on the mound and Canha took second to start the home tenth.

After a ten pitch at bat, Lowrie walked, which helped Oakland only because he didn’t make an an out. Canha still was on second, and force plays now were possible. The A’s needed only one run. They came closer to getting it when Laureano’s fly to deep center allowed Canha reach third, bringing Moreland to the plate. Moreland came through, lacing a single to right center that brought in Canha.

The A’s had won, and in what a fashion!

Petit got the win. He pitched one inning of perfect ball, in which he threw ten pitches. Nelson got tagged with the loss and was charged with one run, which was unearned because it was scored by the placed runner.

The A’s left for Houston right after the game. After playing three games against the Astros, they´ll move on to a two game set with the Arizona Diamondbacks. They return to torture. They will return to Oakland to face Detroit on Thursday the 15.

Kershaw holds off A’s hitting for 5-1 victory; A’s losing streak hits six

Los Angeles Dodger pitcher Clayton Kershaw throwing in the first inning against the Oakland A’s on Tue Apr 6, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (NL). 5-11-1

Oakland. 1-5-0

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Monday night, the Oakland A’s were stimyed by Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Dustin May, a young right handed pitcher just entering his prime. Tuesday night, they had to deal with the offerings of Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw, a veteran lefty who likely will be a candidate for the Hall of Fame, but who was 0-1, 7.04 going into the game for the 4-1 NL West leading Dodgers. Kershaw’s starting performance stopped any A’s hitting for a 5-1 victory.

Facing him for the blue and gold was the irregularly effective right hander Chris Bassitt, bringing an 0-1, 5,06 record into his second start of the season. Bassitt is like the little girl with a little curl right in the middle of her forehead. When he is good, he is very, very good, but when he is bad ….

The Athletics’ line-up presented a few noticeable changes from theilr recent ones. Ramón Laureano was back in action, batting third. The slumping Matt Olson, was replaced at first base by the also slumping Mitch Moreland, battingi n the seventh slot.

The new aliignment produced one early welcome outcome. For the first time this year Oakland led after one inning. Jed Lowrie, who usually plays second, batted in that position, replacing Moreland as DH, while Tony Kemp took over at Lowrie’s customary position in the field.

Lowrie’s new assignment and Laureano’s return produced immediate results. After the former’s one out double to center field, the latter blasted another, this one to right center, putting the home team up by a run and markiing the first time in 2021 that they had drawn first blood.

That was too good to be true for long, and it wasn’t. Edwin Ríos led off the top of the second with a sharp single to center. A walk to Gavin Lux moved him up a notch, and Austin Barnes’s resounding double to left drove him in. Bassitt managed to escape that inning without allowing any more scoring, thanks largely to a great defensive play by Moreland on Seager’s scorcher down the first base line to close out the frame.

The Dodgers added another three runs in the top of the third, bringing the score up to 4-1 on Turner’s second straight two bagger, Muncy’s two run long ball to right, followed two batters later by Ríos’s homer to right center.

Stephen PIscotty’s blast into the the left field second deck in the bottom of the fourth almost reduced LA’s lead to 4-2, but it was called foul after a video review.

Bassitt got his act together and pitched well until he was removed after having thrown 102 pitches, 65 for strikes, over six innings. All four of the runs he allowed were earned, and they came on nine hits. He had four strikeouts to show against one walk and a hit batter. HIs undoing was the two home runs he surrendered. At game’s end his record stood at 0-2, 5,56.

Lou Trivino was his replacement. He set the Dodgers down in order, including one punch out, before yielding to Yusmeiro Petit at the top of the eighth.

Piscotty hit the ball well in the bottom of the seventh when, after having just missed a home run in his previous AB, he drove a 86 mph slider against the left center field fence for his first hit of the night. Moreland grounded out to first to end the inning and Kershaw’s night’s work.

His performance had been outstanding. 61 of his 91 pitches were strikes. He gave one run, earned, on four hits, didn’t walk anyone and strudk out eight Athletics. One-time Oakland closer Blake Treinen relieved him at the beginning of the eighth and retired the side while yielding a walk to Kemp, who stole second.

Jordan Weems, recalled today from the A’s alternate site in Stockton, pitched the ninth for them. He yielded Mookie Betts’ first home run of the season, a slam over the State Farm advertisement in left centerfiled on an 94 mph four seamer. He got his other three batters out, two on strikeouts.

Laureano’s leadoff single in the ninth knocked Treinen out of the box. He passed the ball to LA’s closer, Kenley Jansen. Laureano’s steal of second, followed by two fly outs to right, one a warning track drive by Murphy, made things interesting. But Moreland’s pop out to Lux in shallow right ended the game.

The win brought Kereshaw’s ERA down to 4.26 and evened his won-loss record at 1-1.

The two teams will go at it again at 12:37 tomorrow afternoon, with right hander Trevor Bauer (1-0, 5.68) matching arms with southpaw Jesús Luzardo (0-1,9.00).