Oakland A’s podcast with Charlie O: Farm club hitters busting at the seams for A’s; Davis walks A’s to a victory; plus more

sfgate.com photo: Oakland Athletics’ Marcus Semien, right, is congratulated by third base coach Matt Williams (4) after hitting a home run off Texas Rangers pitcher Pedro Payano in the third inning of a baseball game Sunday, July 28, 2019, in Oakland.

On the A’s podcast with Charlie O:

#1 Taking a look at the A’s triple-A affiliate farm club, the Las Vegas Aviators, they’re a team coming along with 11 home runs in a 20-11 win over El Paso last Friday night.

#2 Amongst some of the Aviators prospects are catcher Sean Murphy who hit three home runs, Jorge Mateo, Dustin Fowler, and Mark Payton with two home runs each.

#3 The Oakland A’s got a walk-off walk when Khris Davis walked with the bags loaded on Sunday. Davis’ home run totals have been down. How much confidence does this give him after forcing a run in on a walk for the game-winner on Sunday?

#4 Josh Phegley. the A’s catcher, is out with a thumb contusion and catcher Todd Hundley was released by the club, Beau Taylor is up with the club plus the A’s have Sean Murphy and in Las Vegas swinging a hot bat.

#5 The A’s host the Milwaukee Brewers on Tuesday night. The Brewers will go on Tuesday with Adrian Houser (4-4, 4.19 ERA), and the A’s will start Chris Bassitt (7-5, 4.09 ERA).

Charlie O does the A’s podcasts each Tuesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Preview of the A’s series with the Brewers

By Jerry Feitelberg

Oakland- The Oakland A’s begin a stretch of eight interleague games starting with the Milwaukee Brewers Tuesday night at the Oakland Coliseum. The A’s play three with the Brewers, are off on Friday, and play two in Oakland against the St.Louis Cardinals. The A’s then go to Chicago for a week. They play three with the Cubs and three with the Whites Sox.

The Brewers come to town with a record of 56-51. They are currently in third place in the NL Central. They trail the Cardinals and the Cubs by one game for the lead in the division.

The Brewers have a very potent offensive lineup. Their start player is the reigning National League MVP, Christian Yelich. Yelich is having another MVP caliber year. He is hitting .337 and has hit 36 home runs and driven in 80. He has also stolen 23 bases. He is joined in the outfield by former Kansas City Royals’ center fielder, Lorenzo Cain. Another former NL MVP, Ryan Braun, will either play in the outfield or DH. Braun is hitting .271 with 15 homers, and 49 RBIs A’s fans can expect to see the former Dodger, Yasmani Grandal, behind the plate. Grandal is having an excellent season.as his average is .258, and he has hit 19 homers, and driven in 54. Another power guy for the Brewers is the third baseman Mike Moustakas. The former Royal is hitting .261, and he has sent 26 balls out the park and has knocked in 60. Other key players for the Brewers are second baseman Keston Hiura, Eric Thames and Travis Shaw at first base, and Orlando Arcia is at shortstop.

The big problem for the Brewers has been their starting rotation. Three of the five starters have been on the IL. Lefty Gio Gonzalez, who once pitched for the A’s, has a record of 2-1 but has just come off the IL. Starters Jhoulys Chacin and Jimmy Nelson are still on the IL and will not be available to pitch. Zach Davies, who pitched on Sunday against the Cubs probably will not see action against the A’s. Chase Anderson pitched last Saturday, and he may be available on Thursday. The Brewers have not announced who will pitch for Milwaukee against the A’s. The Brewers bullpen will be manned by Adrian Houser, who may be used as a starter, Jeremy Jeffress, Freddy Peralta, Taylor Williams, former starter Junior Guerra, Matt Albers, lefty Alex Claudio, and the closer’s spot is held by lefty Josh Hader. Hader has 23 saves in 25 chances.

The A’s are 60-47 for the season are in a dogfight for the second Wild Card spot with the Tampa Bay Rays, and  Boston Red Sox. The Los Angeles Angels trail the A’s by five games but are playing well. They could be a factor.

The A’s rotation for the series with Milwaukee shapes up this way. Chriss Bassitt (7-5, 4.09 ERA will go for Oakland. Bassitt pitched well against the Astros, but a pair of two-run dingers did him in. Lefty Brett Anderson goes on Wednesday. Anderson is 9-6 with an ERA of 4.05. Anderson had a rough outing last week due to lack of sleep after the birth of his son. On Thursday, Daniel Mengdenn (5-2, 4.85 ERA) will try to get back on track. Mengden has been struggling with his command lately, In his last two games, he walked nine. To be successful, he has to be more consistent and throw strikes.

The A’s have played three tough teams in the last 2 weeks. The split the series in Minnesota with the Twins, lost two out three to the Astros, and split the four-game series with the Rangers. The Brewers have a lot to play for as do the A’s. I expect to see a well-played exciting series. If the A’s are to win, their pitching will be the key.

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: Historic A’s Spanish Radio Now 10,000 Watts, 24 Hours a Day

Photo credit: athleticsnation.com

By: Amaury Pi-Gonzalez

Historic KIQI1010AM/990AM Oakland Athletics Spanish Radio Network used to be 10.000 watts at day and 500 Watts at night, but is now a clear 10,000 watts all day and all night. Owned by Multicultural Radio, a media company based in New York City owned by Chinese-American businessman Arthur Liu. it caters mostly to the multi-cultural community and owns television and radio stations in several of the top markets’ multiple languages. One of those stations is the flagship station for the Oakland Athletics Radio Network KIQI1010/990AM covering the nine counties of the Bay Area as well as Sacramento/Stockton and other communities in Northern California.

KIQI1010 AM radio is a historic radio station in the Bay Area that was once owned by James Gabbert, a radio and television entrepreneur and innovator. I met Gabbert at the last year’s Christmas party for the Bay Area Radio Hall of Fame and we reminisced of the year 1980 when he sold the station to Cuban-born René De La Rosa, who became one of the first Latino owners of a radio station in the State of California. During the 1980’s, De La Rosa’s KIQI 1010AM broadcasted MLB and the NBA’s Golden State Warriors in Spanish with a format that included live news, sports and talk shows.

Gabbert, who speaks fluent Spanish, told me how proud he was of selling the station in 1980 to De La Rosa, who intended to change the format to Spanish. James Gabbert, who is still involved in the media business of radio and television, also told me he travels frequently to Latin America and predicted that California would become one of the largest markets in the US for Spanish format stations with the influx of the Hispanic population, the largest minority in California and in the United States.

With a signal of 10,000 watts, located in the middle of the radio dial (1010AM frequency), KIQI now can serve the over 2 million Hispanics in the Bay Area with a much stronger signal at night, which is vital for sports, especially most Major League games, which have night schedules.

These increases in wattage power are authorized by the FCC and sometimes takes years for a radio station to obtained that permission. The old KOFY had the radio dial of 1050 AM in Spanish format. The studios were located in Burlingame, near the San Francisco Airport. It took them many years to increase their wattage from 1000 watts to what it is today. Also, they originally had permission to broadcast from sunrise to sunset. It seems that it took them forever to become a 24/7 station.

Davis walks, A’s walk off in tense, 7-6 win over the Rangers

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND–Only one run–or one bases-loaded walk–separated the Rangers and the A’s on Sunday, but those small margins tend to play much bigger this time of year.

The A’s escaped a late deficit, and salvaged a split of a four-game series when reliever Jose Leclerc walked Khris Davis with the bases loaded in a tie game in the ninth inning.

Oakland hitters were well aware of Leclerc’s situation. Pitching for the third straight day, and the fourth in five days, the reliever was running on fumes in the absence of closer Chris Martin, who was scratched due to back tightness. LeClerc’s fatigue shaped the A’s approach in which they fouled off nearly half of the 31 pitches he threw.

Tabbing Leclerc wasn’t a stroke of genius, Texas manager Chris Woodward admitted his hands were tied.

“It’s unfair to put him in that role three days in a row and four out of five,” Woodward said. “It hurts my heart to see him take the loss.”

Chris Hermann led off, and singled on a 1-2 fastball. Then Marcus Semien fouled off four, consecutive pitches and drew a walk after seeing 10 pitches. Matt Chapman flew out for the inning’s first out, but he also fouled off four, two-strike pitches.

Matt Olson was the next batter and he singled through a drawn-in infield to tie the game. The Rangers then elected to intentionally walk Mark Canha, loading the bases. But that strategy was foiled when Davis showed patience, drawing the game-winning walk.

“You know you have to be patient,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said. “He saw it well enough to see it was a ball and in that situation it’s as good as a hit, as good as a homer, and it gives us a win.”

Davis was an unlikely hero given his home run drought, dating back to June 18, and his grand total of 11 hits in July despite being a regular presence in the lineup.

So was Blake Treinen, who pitched a scoreless ninth to pick up the win. Liam Hendriks, who took over Treinen’s job, couldn’t close the door in the eighth when he inherited a runner in scoring position and allowed run scoring hits to the first two batters he faced. That started a three-run rally that wiped out the A’s 4-2 rally.

The A’s maintained the second wild card spot with the win, just ahead of the surging Red Sox and Rays. The Indians blew a big lead in Kansas City on Sunday, keeping Oakland within three games of the top wild card spot.

After winning five in a row to open the second half of the season, the A’s have dropped 6 of 11. Will that cold snap prompt the A’s to make more moves before Wednesday’s trade deadline? It appears likely.

 

 

Oakland A’s podcast with Joey Friedman: Piscotty working on a come back rehabbing in Vegas; Canha filling just fine in right field; plus more

mercurynews.com file photo: Stephen Piscotty #25 is helped off the field by by manager Bob Melvin #6 and Matt Chapman #26 of the Oakland Athletics after he injured his right leg as he avoids the tag by Luis Rengifo #4 of the Los Angeles Angels sliding into second base in the sixth inning of the game at Angel Stadium of Anaheim on June 29, 2019

On the A’s podcast with Joey:

#1 A’s outfielder Stephen Piscotty who has been out for a month due to a sprained knee who injured himself on June 29th in Anaheim is not too sure when he’ll be back but has been rehabbing.

#2 Piscotty will be joining the Las Vegas Aviators the A’s Triple A affiliate for rehab the Aviators will be using Piscotty as a designated hitter in his first game back and as an outfielder in his second game back.

#3 The A’s Mark Canha has started in right field in 18 of his last 20 games during Piscotty’s absence Canha has hit 18-68 for average .265 and on base percentage of .375.

#4 The A’s opened up Mount Davis for fireworks night on Saturday night sections 335-355 are obstructed views of the outfield but the tickets for those locations are half off.

#5 Starting pitchers for Sunday’s game at the Coliseum for the Texas Rangers Pedro Payano (1-0 ERA 1.50) for the A’s Mike Fiers (9-3 ERA 3.57).

Joey Friedman does the A’s podcasts each Sunday at http://www.sportsrasdioservice.com

A’s end their losing streak beating the Rangers 5-4 in a wild game Saturday night

727 final out

All photos by Charlie O Mallonee Sports Radio Service

by Charlie O. Mallonee

Oakland — The Athletics had lost three straight games going into their contest on Saturday night with the Texas Rangers. More importantly, the A’s were no longer in possession of a Wild Card Playoff slot.

Yes, there is slightly over two months of baseball remaining to play, but with the tight race for the Wild Card spots, no team can afford to fall very far behind. Two of the teams that have a realistic chance to grab a Wild Card slot are in the Western Division – the Angels and the Rangers.

Major start for Homer Bailey

The A’s made the trade with Kansas City for the veteran Bailey hoping that he would be able to shore up their starting pitching woes. While it true that the team added Bailey for very little cost, that did not mean the Athletics had low expectations for what he could bring to the mound.

Bailey was spectacular in his first game for Oakland as he picked up a 10-2 win over the Mariners. His second start was extremely disappointing. On July 22, he made the start against the Astros in Houston. Bailey lasted only two innings while giving up nine earned runs. At that point, the front office was not sure who they had added to their team.

On Saturday night, Bailey was in control on the hill. He worked 6.2-innings allowing three runs (all earned) while striking out seven and walking just one. The three runs he allowed came with two in the seventh inning. As manager Bob Melvin said, Bailey just could not get that one pitch over to get Danny Santana out. Santana hit a two-out two-run double to keep the inning alive.

In his postgame analysis, Melvin said that Bailey on Saturday night was is exactly who they wanted him to be when they traded for him. Bailey threw a total of 105 pitches (71 strikes). He faced 28 Texas batters. Bailey induced six hitters to groundout and four to flyout.

Bailey is now 2-1 as a member of the A’s. His overall record is 9-7 with an ERA of 5.33.

National Enquirer Story of the game

727 fight
This picture proves no one was injured when the benches cleared Photo: Charlie O Mallonee

This story actually began back on June 8 in Texas when Rangers starting pitcher Adrian Sampson had a problem with Mark Canha when the A’s outfielder flipped his bat after hitting a home run. Words were exchanged and people were removed from Christmas card lists.

Flash forward to Saturday night, Canha came to the plate to face Sampson for the second time in the game, and you guessed it. The pitcher hit Canha with a pitch. Canha just trotted to first base like the man he is and was ready to play on.

In the bottom of the sixth inning, Oakland center fielder Ramon Laureano hit his 21st homer of the season off Sampson. It was a “screamer” that landed halfway up the steps behind the left-field wall. Laureano did take a little time to admire his work and then began his home run trot. Sampson came off the mound and began yelling at Laureano to start running and stop looking. Words were exchanged. Again, names were crossed off the Christmas card list. The benches all stood up but nothing happened.

By the way, the Laureano home run was the fourth round-tripper Sampson had issued in the game.

Now for the rest of the story. In the bottom of the eighth inning, relief pitcher Rafael Montero was on the hill for Texas when Ramon Laureano came to bat for the Athletics with Canha on at first. Montero hit Laureano with a pitch and the benches along with the bullpens cleared.

There was lots of yelling and screaming. Some players were discussing their favorite IPA brands. It was stupid like most baseball bench-clearing situations. The umpires took charge and ejected Montero along with his manager Chris Woodward just as baseball mandates.

This time nothing bad happened, but it is only a matter of time before a situation gets out of hand. Commissioner Rob Manfred has to “suck it up” and take charge before one of these stupid situations becomes tragic.

Focus on the Athletics

  • All of the Oakland runs came via the home in this game. All were solo shots except Matt Chapman’s fifth inning 2-run home run off Sampson. Sampson gave up all four home runs.
  • Ramon Laureano went 2-for-3 in the game with a home run (21), a double (26) and a hit-by-pitch. He is batting .348 versus Texas.
  • Marcus Semien had a 2-for-4 night at the plate that included his 16th home run and he scored two runs. Semien is batting .400 against the Rangers this season.
  • Homer Bailey (9-7) was the winner. Liam Hendriks picked up his ninth save of the year.
  • The A’s scored five runs on six hits and left just four runners on base.

Rangers Watch

  • Adrian Sampson – who took the loss – allowed a season-high-tying four home runs in 6.0-innings pitched. He did the same thing versus the Red Sox on June 13. Sampson is 3-11 with a 5.77 ERA as a starting pitcher. He is 3-1 with a 3.15 ERA as a reliever.
  • Nomar Mazara went 3-for-4 with the bat on Saturday night. He is 7-for-15 in his last four games. Yes, he is starting on Sunday.
  • Elvis Andrus snapped an 0-for-11 streak at the plate by having a 2-for-4 game against the A’s on Saturday night.

Up next

The fourth and final game of this series is set to begin 1:07 PM on Sunday. The Rangers will send RHP Pedro Payano (1-0, 1.50) to the mound. It will be Payano’s third appearance in his Major League career. This makes Payano a bit of a wild card because the Oakland hitters will have to look at some pitches to figure how to hit off him. The scouting reports and videotape will be in limited supply.

The Athletics will counter with veteran RHP Mike Fiers (9-3, 3.57) who is hoping to take young Mr. Payano to school. Fiers is 7-0 with a 2.26 ERA in his last 14 starts.

 

Rangers beat the A’s again, 5-2

Photo credit sfgate.com: Oakland Athletics’ Ramon Laureano, left, reacts after being hit by a pitch thrown by Texas Rangers’ Rafael Montero in the eighth inning of a baseball game Saturday, July 27, 2019, in Oakland, Calif.

By: Lewis Rubman

Texas: 5 | 7 | 2
Oakland: 2 | 5 | 2

OAKLAND — Last Monday, the Houston Astros clobbered the A’s, 11-1. The next day, Mike Fiers and the bullpen combined to revenge that loss by holding the powerhouse team from the Lone Star state to three runs on eight hits over 11 innings while Oakland managed to score four times, also on eight hits, on a double by Ramón Laurano.

This evening, the A’s took the field behind Daniel Mengden, hoping to replicate that recovery and bounce back from last night’s similar 11-3 drubbing at the hands of the other Texas team, the Rangers from Arlington. The A’s righty went into the game at 5-1, but with an ugly ERA of 4.65. He has a six-pitch repertoire, and his most frequently thrown pitch is the four seam fastball, which he uses about a third of the time. His counterpart on the Rangers, the also right handed Lance Lynn, took the more impressive record of 12-6, 3.93 ERA, to the mound. His favorite pitch also is the four seamer, which he throws a little less than half the time, at an average velocity of between 94 and 94.5 miles per hour. The A’s bullpen looked shabby last night, with only Brian Schlitter failing to disappoint. Tonight, it looked better, but still not good.

In spite of last night’s dismal showing, at first pitch Oakland still was in a virtual tie with Tampa Bay for second place in the craps shoot that is the wild card race, leading the Rays by a minute fraction of a percentage point. Both clubs were three games behind Cleveland for the first wild card slot. As far as the Western Division lead is concerned, they’ll cross that bridge if and when they come to it.

The A’s opened the scoring in the bottom of the first when they loaded the bases on back to back errors by shortstop Danny Sanatana on grounders by Semien and Chapman followed by a three and two walk to Olson. After Llynn used his four seamer to strike out Mark Canha swinging, Laureano drove in Semien from third on a sacrifice fly to left. Lynn closed out the inning by striking out the struggling Khris Davis.

The second inning featured two spectacular defensive plays, one in each half of the frame. In the top of the inning, Chapman made a leaping grab of Willie Cahfoun’s hard line drive to what would have been short if the A’s hadn’t been deploying the shift. Not to be outdone, Delino DeShields performed a high jump over the center field fence to rob Chris Herrmann of what would have been a two run homer in the the bottom of the frame. In retrospect, it might well have been the decisive play of the game.

The series of outstanding plays continued in the top of the third when Matt Olson chased down DeShield’s foul fly to the right of the visiting bullpen. Turnabout, I guess, is fair play.

Oakland doubled its lead in the bottom of the third on a single to center by Semien, followed, after Lynn K’ed Chapman, by a four pitch walk to Olson and Canha’s single to left. Lynn recovered, getting Laureano and Davis to strike out swinging.

Texas went ahead with two out in the top of the fourth when Nomar Mazara smashed a hard liner past a diving Jurickson Profar and into right center field for a double that scored Shin-Soo Choo, who had led off the inning with a walk, on a close play at the plate. Calhoun followed suit with a double to left that brought in Mazara, who, in turn, scored the tie breaking tally on Asdrúbal Cabrera’s single to right. Forsythe’s fly to left stopped the bleeding, but the Rangers held a 3-2 lead.

Megden’s day’s work was over when he threw his 93rd pitch, a ball to Calhoun on a three and two count that put runners on first and second with one down in the top of the sixth. Blake Treinen, still trying to regain a semblance of the form that had made him the best closer in baseball last season, replaced him. He promptly surrendered a clean single to right by Cabrera, driving in Mazara from second with the fourth Texas run, which was charged to Megden. After a walk to Forsythe, Treinen found success with his power sinker, striking out DeShields and forcing Mathis to pop out to Profar to end the inning.

Ryan Buchter, who replaced Treinen to pitch the seventh, escaped unscathed in spite of his allowdng a single to Odor and Santana’s reaching base on an error by Semien. One reason for Buchter having achieved this was his picking the speedy Odor off first. Buchter stayed in the game long enough to give up a lead off homer to Mazara in the eighth, a shot into the right center field bleachers. Cabrera followed that with a hard line drive down the left field line that a diving backhand stop by Chapman held to a single. After a called third strike on Forsythe for the first out, Buchter gave way to the veteran Joaquim Soria. He got back to back strike outs of DeShields and Jeff Mathis and returned to the dugout.

Jesse Chavez, the ex-Athletic, came in for Lynn at the beginning of the A’s seventh and was effective in his one inning of relief, striking out two and not allowing a base runner. His eighth inning replacement, José LeClerc, who, after a terrible start to the season, has been on a hot streak over his last two dozen appearances, set the top of the Oakland line up down in order.

Lou Trivino held the line for the A’s in the top of the ninth. After a rare error at first by Olson, Rougned Odor blasted a fly to deep ccenter field, just short of the 400 foot sign. Laureano caught it and threw out Choo, trying to advance to second.

Canha greeeted Chris Martin, trying to close out the win, with a double to left center to lead off the home ninth. A walk to Laureano brought Khris Davis to the plate as the potential tying run. But mighty KD struck out. So did Robbie Grossman. Now Chris Herrmann represented the potential tying run or its possible last out. He grounded out to third to end the game.

When the tumult and the shouting had subsided, the A’s were tied with Boston, a half a game behind Tampa Bay for the last wild card spot and four behind Cleveland in the race to be the home team in the play in.

Lance Lynn got the well deserved win, allowing only one earned run. Martin earned his fourth save. Daniel Megden took the loss, as, once again, the A’s starter coughed up an early lead, and the bullpen couldn’t keep the game within reach. Poor control was Megden’s undoing. Of his 93 pitches, only 49, that is, 57%, were strikes. Lynn, in contrast, threw 111 pitches, 73 of which were strikes.

Tomorrow’s contest is scheduled to begin at 6:07 pm and will feature two right-handers, Adrian Sampson (6-7, 5.19 ERA) on the mound for Texas against the A’s Homer Bailey (8-7, 5.42 ERA overall; 1-1,12.38 ERA) for Oakland.

Rangers rout the A’s 11-3

Photo credit: bdtonline.com

By Jerry Feitelberg

OAKLAND — The Oakland A’s returned home Thursday to start a four-game series against their division rival Texas Rangers. The A’s lost four out of seven on the road trip and were hoping to reverse their fortunes at the expense of the Rangers. The A’s started lefty Brett Anderson, and Texas countered with righty Ariel Jurado. The A’s started well as they scored three runs in the first inning and it looked as if they were on their way to a victory. The Rangers’ Jurado composed himself after the dismal start and allowed the A’s just one hit in the next six innings. Brett Anderson pitched well for four innings. He met his Waterloo in the fifth when the Rangers scored five times and took the lead for good. The Rangers scored five more in the sixth and one in the seventh to win 11-3.

The A’s put three on the board in the bottom of the first. A’s leadoff hitter Marcus Semien started the rally with a double to left-center. Matt Chapman worked Rangers’ starter Ariel Jurado for a walk to put men on at second and first with no out. Matt Olson flew out to deep center. Semien tagged and went to third. Canha walked to load the bases. Ramon Laureano followed with a single to drive in Semien and Chapman. Canha went to third. A’s DH Khris Davis drove in Canha with a sac fly to right. The A’s owned an early 3-0 lead.

The Rangers plated five runs in the top of the fifth to take the lead 5-3. Three consecutive singles produced the Rangers first run of the game. Anderson retired Tim Fedorowicz for the first out. The next hitter Shin-Soo Choo singled to load the bases. Rangers’ left fielder Danna Santa doubled down the right-field line to drive in Cabrera and DeShields to tie the game. Choo stopped at third. Elvis Andrus hit a sac fly to right to drive in Choo with the fourth run of the inning. A’s manager Bob Melvin removed Anderson from the game and brought in Yusmeiro Petit to pitch. Petit gave up a single to former San Francisco Giant, Hunter Pence. Santana scored, and the Rangers lead 5-3 midway through the fifth.

The Rangers blew the game open in the top of the sixth. The big blow was Danny Santana’s first career grand slam. The Rangers scored a run earlier in the inning when A’s reliever Lou Trivino hit Logan Forsythe to start the inning, Trivino walked Cabrera. DeShields laid down a bunt for a hit to load the bases with no out. Trivino retired Fedorowicz for the first out. Lefty Wei-Chung Wang was now pitching for Oakland. Choo singled to drive in Forsythe and Santana followed with his big blast. Texas leads 10-3 after six.

The Rangers added a run in the seventh to end the scoring for the night.

Game Notes: With the win, the Texas Rangers improve to 52-51. The A’s drop to 58-46. Oakland remains in second place in the AL West. The A’s would be the number 2 Wild Card if the playoffs were to start today. They trail the Cleveland Indians by 2 1/2 games for the top Wild Card spot. The A’s are a 1/2 game ahead of the Tampa Bay Rays and one game ahead of the Red Sox in the race for the second Wild Card.

The Rangers’ Ariel Jurado was the winning pitcher. He is 6-6 for the season Brett Anderson went 4 2/3 innings and allowed seven hits and five runs. Anderson’s record drops to 9-6.

A’s relievers Lou Trivino, and Wei-Chung Wang had rough outings Thursday night. Trivino went 1/3 of an inning. He hit a batter, then walked a hitter, and gave up a single before being lifted from the game. His line was one hit and three runs. Wang went 1 2/3 innings and gave up four hits and three runs. He threw the pitch to Danny Santana that left the park for Santana’s first career grand slam. Santana finished the night with six RBIs.

The Rangers announced that their slugging first baseman Joey Gallo will be out for at least four weeks. Gallo will be having surgery to repair a broken hamate bone in his right hand.

Time of game was two hours and 45 minutes. 11,854 fans watched the A’s go down to defeat.

Up Next: The A’s will have to regroup Friday night. Players have to have short memories and remind themselves that each game is a new portrait. The A’s will send Daniel Mengden to the hill. Mengden is 5-1 for the year. He will be opposed by Lance Lynn. Lynn has a record of 12-6.

Headline Sports podcast with Tony Renteria: Raiders’ Gruden expects Carr to lead team in offense; Jimmy G has a brand new knee, looking good in drills; plus more

Photo credit: @NBCSRaiders

On Headline Sports podcast with Tony Renteria:

#1 What are the expectations of Oakland Raiders head coach Jon Gruden for quarterback Derek Carr and will Carr get the protection he needs?

#2 49ers quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo says that it was a tough process to rehab from the ACL injury he had last season, but says he ready and he’s agile and mobile.

#3 You can’t win them all. The SF Giants took on the NL Central first place Chicago Cubs and lost two out of three. The Cubs are one of baseball’s toughest clubs in the majors.

#4 The A’s are a wild card team, but for them to play catch up to the Houston Astros is a reach. The A’s lost two out of three to the Astros, including an 11-1 laugher to open the series on Thursday.

#5 Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr said that Andre Iguodala’s move to the Memphis Grizzlies was like a punch in the gut and Iguodala’s absence will no doubt impact the Warriors as he was considered one of the best presences on the club.

Tony Renteria does the Headline Sports each Thursday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: Despite loss to Astros, A’s had competitive road trip

Photo credit: @sbgglobal

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg:

#1 The Oakland A’s dropped their second game of the three-game series 4-2 to the Houston Astros at Minute Maid Field in a Wednesday matinee.

#2 The A’s went 3-4 on the road trip, splitting a four game series with the Twins and losing two out of three with the Astros. The record reflects how competitive the A’s are.

#3 The Astros’ Justin Verlander improved his record to 13-4 and pitched six innings, two hits, two walks, and 11 strikeouts.

#4 The Oakland A’s starter Chris Bassitt went six innings with five hits and four runs. Although he got the loss, Bassitt had a decent outing.

#5 The A’s host the Texas Rangers starting Thursday night at the Oakland Coliseum. The Rangers will start Ariel Jurado (5-6, 4.92 ERA), and for the A’s, Brett Anderson (9-5, 3.82 ERA).

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