Vlad Jr. Debuts, Jays Walk Off Over A’s 4-2

Photo credit: @Cut4

By Matthew Harrington

All eyes were on the A’s Friday night as they took on the Toronto Blue Jays. No, it wasn’t because of the man leading the galaxy in homers, Khris Davis, but instead on a Jays player with a Hall-of-Fame pedigree. Vlad Guerrero Jr., baseball’s top prospect, made his debut Friday night, “accounting” for the winning run in a 4-2 walk-off win. Former Athletic Eric Sogard homered and Brandon Drury hit a two-run walk-off jack. Robbie Grossman knocked in both A’s runs with a two-run homer.

Mike Fiers started for the A’s and had arguably his best start of the season going seven innings with six hits and the two earned runs. He was touched up by Sogard in the first. Randal Grichuk added another on an RBI single in the bottom of the third, but Fiers wriggled out with the no-decision after Grossman took reliever Joe Biagini deep to tie the game in the top of the eighth. Marcus Stroman started the game for the Jays and was once again lethal against Oakland, firing seven innings of one-hit ball after limiting the A’s to one run on eight innings in an earlier outing this season.

For Guerrero, the debut started off failing to live up to the hype. He was 0-for-3 heading into his ninth-inning at-bat. Guerrero worked a double off Yusmeiro Petit for a double. He was lifted for pinch-runner Alan Hanson who moved to third on a sacrifice bunt but was stranded after Teoscar Hernandez’s line-drive out. Drury hit the game-winning homer off Petit (0-1, 2.93 ERA)  though to send the Toronto faithful home with a win. Closer Ken Giles (1-1, 2.19 ERA) wound up the winner with a clean top of the 9th, striking out two A’s while working around a hit.

Oakland will face Vlad Jr. and the Jays Saturday with Brett Anderson starting for Oakland and Aaron Sanchez taking the bump for Toronto.

A’s Report: Alameda County, A’s reach agreement for possible 50% Coliseum purchase

Photo credit: @Vince_Cestone

By Daniel Dullum
Sports Radio Service
Thursday, April 25, 2019

On Tuesday, the Athletics announced that the Alameda County Board of Supervisors voted 5-0 to approve the term sheet between the County and the Oakland Athletics providing for the possible purchase by the A’s of the County’s 50 percent interest in the Oakland Alameda County Coliseum Complex for $85 million.

The County Board of Supervisors and the A’s will now work to draft acquisition documents based on the non-binding term sheet. The final acquisition documents will require approval by the Board of Supervisors.

The Coliseum site is currently owned jointly by the City of Oakland and Alameda County. If the transaction is finalized, the A’s will own the County’s 50 percent interest in the site.

In November 2018, the A’s unveiled their vision for the redevelopment of the Coliseum site, seeking to transform the current Coliseum site in ways that will address several specific community needs and opportunities expressed by East Oakland residents.

Working with the city, public agencies, and community residents, the A’s seek to revitalize the Coliseum site by pulling the adjacent neighborhood fabric into the site and creating new economic, cultural, and recreational opportunities.

Preliminary plans include a large park, surrounded by substantial new housing, including affordable housing, a skills center, community gathering space, office and retail developments, and restaurants.

The new park would be anchored by the two focal points of Oakland sports history: Oracle Arena, repurposed as a concert and cultural events center; and the original Coliseum baseball diamond, preserved to inspire the next generation of ballplayers.

There was, however, no further statement concerning the possible construction of a new baseball stadium on the current Coliseum site.

OL’ CROOKED HAT TIES CY
Around the Turn of the Century, “Cy” Young pitched in 906 major league games. A’s reliever Fernando Rodney pitched his 906th career game last Saturday against Toronto.

There is, of course, a difference. Hall of Famer Young started 815 of his games, and Rodney has not started a game since his MLB debut in 2002.

Rodney, by the way, is fifth on the all-time list for games without a start. John Franco is first with 1,119, followed by Kent Tekulve with 1,050, Trevor Hoffman (1,035) and Francisco Rodriguez (948).

Rodney is also the last active MLB player who was born in the 1970s.

A’s FACE TORONTO THIS WEEKEND
The A’s will try to avenge a three-game sweep they suffered at the hands of Toronto last week, when they start a three-game weekend home series against the Blue Jays on Friday.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr., the Blue Jays’ top prospect, is expected to be in the Toronto lineup. Guerrero was called up from Triple-A Buffalo on Wednesday. He was hitting .367, with a .424 OBP, three home runs and eight RBIs at Buffalo.

Friday’s probables are righthanders Marcus Stroman (1-3, 1.76) for Toronto and Mike Fiers (2-2, 8.28) for Oakland.

A’s sweep the Rangers out of Oakland with a 6-5 win in the series finale

Rangers final
Photo/Graphic: @Athletics

By Charlie O. Mallonee

The Oakland Athletics completed a sweep of the Texas Rangers with a 6-5 win on Wednesday afternoon at the Coliseum. The victory did not come easily. The A’s had to battle the boys from Texas and finally won it in the bottom of the ninth in a walkoff.

As the A’s came to the plate in the bottom of the ninth inning, the game was tied at five runs apiece. Matt Chapman grounded out to lead off the inning. Stephen Piscotty then singled up the middle to give the A’s a baserunner. Khris Davis flied out for the second out of the inning. Piscotty moved up to second base with a steal. Chad Pinder singled to right and Piscotty was able to score the winning run for the A’s.

The A’s record improved to 14-13 with the win. The Rangers dropped to 12-11 with the loss. Blake Treinen (1-1) picked up the victory while Chris Martin (0-2) was saddled with the loss.

Seven of the 11 runs scored in the contest came via home runs. The A’s recorded two home runs. The Rangers recorded three round-trippers.

A’s key performances

  • Oakland starting pitcher Aaron Brooks gave up three earned runs in 5.0 innings of work. He tied a career-high with seven strikeouts. Brooks did not issue a base-on-balls. Unfortunately, Brooks did not figure into the final decision.
  • The A’s relievers gave up two runs which allowed the Rangers to tie the game. Soria was charged with a Blown Save after he gave up an earned run in the seventh inning.
  • Blake Treinen walked two and struck out one Ranger en route to picking up the win. He has now pitched 28.0 consecutive scoreless innings at the Coliseum dating back to July 31, 2018.
  • Marcus Semien had a 2-for-5 game that included a 3-run home run. Semien is currently batting .321 with five doubles and three home runs.
  • Stephen Piscotty has picked up a hit in each of his last six games. He is hitting .522 (12-for-23) over that stretch. Wednesday was also his 500th career game.
  • Chad Pinder’s walkoff single was his the first walkoff hit of his career. Pinder now has three consecutive multi-hit games.

Rangers Piscotty
Graphic: @Athletics

Texas stars

  • Nomar Mazara recorded the third multi-home run game of his career on Wednesday as he went yard against Brooks and Petit. Mazara now has four home on the season.
  • Logan Forsythe had a big day at the plate for Texas. He went 2-for-3 with a home run, a double and a walk.
  • Pitcher Kyle Dowdy made his first career start against the A’s and allowed three runs (all earned) on four hits in 3.0 innings on the hill.
  • Texas used four pitchers in the game.

Up Next

The A’s have Thursday off and will start a three-game series in Toronto with the Blue Jays on Friday. Vladimir Guerrero, Jr. will make his MLB debut for the Blue Jays on Friday night.

The Rangers head to Seattle for a four-game series that begins on Thursday night.

A’s mess with Texas 11-5

Photo credit: @Athletics

By Lewis Rubman
SRS Contributor
April 23, 2019

TEXAS: 5 | 14 | 1

OAKLAND: 11 | 14 | 1

Tonight’s match-up between the Rangers’ Lance Lynn and the A’s Frankie Montás had a chance to be a pitchers’ duel. Lynn, in spite of his less than mediocre 4.44 ERA, had allowed only five runs in his last 18-22/3 innings pitched, while Montás took the mound at 3-1, 2.70 ERA. It didn’t turn out that way.

The Rangers drew first blood in the opening frame when Elvis Andrus hit a two-out broken bat single to center. Nomar Mazara drove him home with a double off the left center-field wall. Montás pitched out of the jam by getting the powerful Joey Gallo to swing and miss on a 2-2 split-fingered fastball.

Matt Chapman promptly tied it up with a home run that landed just inside the left-field foul pole with two out in the bottom of the first.

The Rangers came roaring back in the next inning with a lead off double to left-center, following by Astrúbal Cabrera’s ringing RBI single to left. Cabrera made it to second on a wild pitch, but was left stranded on third after Montás got Logan Forsythe and Isiah Kiner-Falefa out on infield grounders.

The A’s didn’t wait long to tie the score again. Stephen Piscotty opened their half of the frame with a triple high off the right center-field wall, and Kendrys Morales drove him home with a ground out to deep second base.

Montás finally notched a scoreless inning in the third with the help of a nifty 6-4-3 double play, Semien to Pinder to Morales. Lynn returned the favor in the bottom half top of the next inning but without requiring help from the pitcher’s best friend.

The top of the fourth tested Montás’s meddle. Gallo led off with a four pitch walk. Pence just barely beat out Chapman’s throw to first for an infield single. The Cabrera hit a nubbler down to Morales at first, who tossed the ball to Montás, who dropped it. Forsythe followed with the first well-hit ball of the inning, a bouncer to Chapman, who threw to Phegley at home for the force. Pheglely then fired the ball to Morales to complete the 5-2-3 double play. Montás ended the threat by inducing Kiner-Falefa to ground out to Pinder at second.

Oakland blew the game open with five runs in the bottom of the fourth. Piscotty opened the frame with a line drive single to left center. He advanced to second on Morales’s line single to left. Piscotty made it to third, and Morales was forced out at second on Pinder’s grounder to Forsythe. Laureano drove in Piscotty and advanced Pinder to second on a single to center. Phegley drove in the two runners with a Mark Ellis double down the third base line. Robbie Grossman drove him in with a single to right. Semien brought him home on the next pitch with a double to left, After Semien advanced to third on a wild pitch, he scored on Davis’ single to left. At that point, Wei-Chieh Huang, called up from Double A Midland this afternoon, made his MLB debut in relief of Lynn. He escaped the inning by retireing Piscotty and Morales on deep fly balls, the former’s to the center field wall.

The rookie wasn’t so lucky in the fifth, surrendering two runs on a single by Pinder, a double by Laureano and a throwing error by second sacker Danny Santana.

Huang lasted another two-thirds of an inning, leaving two men on base in the sixth when he gave way to Jeffrey Springs with two men on base. Springs left them there and finished up the game for the Rangers, but not before surrendering a tally in the eighth when Pinder singled Piscotty–who had his second four-hit game of the season– home from second.

The game was over when Texas picked up a run on Forsythe’s sac fly in the top of the sixth. After Montás walked the next batter, Kiner-Falefa, Melvin brought in Yusmeiro Petit, who disposed Shin-Soo Choo with a called third strike on a full count with two outs and a man on first.

Montás’ line wasn’t impressive. Three runs earned on nine hits, two walks and a wild pitch in 5 2/3 innings. The bright spots were his six strikeouts and his ability to keep bad situations from becoming worse.

Ryan Dull came in for Oakland in the eighth. He got through that frame unscathed, but allowed a two-run homer to Danny Santana in the ninth. After the one-out dinger, Dull retired Andrus, but a single and double by Mazara and Gallo, stirred up the A’s bullpen. Dull prevailed with a called third strike on Pence.

Montás got the win, Lynn took the loss.

Left-hander Drew Smyly (0-2, 7.80 ERA) had been announced to start tomorrow afternoon’s game for the Rangers, but he’s been placed on 10-day injured list with left mid-arm tightness. Wei-Chieh Huang, who got his baptism of fire at the Coliseum tonight, took his place.

Texas has not yet named a starter for Wednesday. Whoever he is, he’ll face right handed Aaron Brooks (2-2, 5.32 ERA), who held the Red Sox scoreless on two hits over six innings on April 1, but has been struggling to regain the same form.

First pitch is scheduled for 12:37 pm.

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary with Barbara Mason: It’s a miracle, Sharks back home for Game 7; LA Clippers on brink, face Warriors for Game 5; plus more

Photo credit: @mercnews

Barbara Mason is filling in for Amaury Pi-Gonzalez on That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast:

#1 It’s a miraculous comeback playoff for the San Jose Sharks, who were down 3-1 in the series with the Vegas Golden Knights. The Sharks won games 5 and 6 by scores of 5-2 and 2-1 to force a Game 7 and not much thought they would get this far. Faceoff is on Tuesday night in San Jose for Game 7.

#2 After that horrific 31-point lead they had in Game 2 that got erased, the Golden State Warriors have now been cruising on the Los Angeles Clippers. The Warriors now have a 3-1 series lead and are just about ready to put the final touches in the elimination game on Wednesday night in Oakland in Game 5.

#3 After going through a 191 at-bats against the Pittsburgh Pirates, San Francisco Giants catcher Buster Posey finally broke out and got a home run, which proved to be the game-winner on Sunday. The Pirates were the only National League team that Posey had not hit a home run off of.

#4 The Oakland A’s not only got swept by the Toronto Blue Jays over the weekend. A’s pitcher Brett Anderson rolled his ankle coming off the mound to field a grounder hit by the Jays’ Randal Grichuk in the top of the third inning and had to leave the game. Anderson is hopeful for his next scheduled start on Saturday in Toronto.

#5 With the loss on Sunday to Toronto, the A’s have lost four straight in Saturday’s 10-1 loss. A’s manager Bob Melvin was upset up about the lack of hitting. The A’s pitching staff was exhausted using six pitchers, including first baseman Kendrys Morales as a ninth inning reliever.

Barbara Mason is filling in for Amaury Pi-Gonzalez for That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: A’s should sign Gio Gonzalez

Photo credit: @BrewCrewBall

By: Amaury Pi-Gonzalez

The New York Yankees released Gio Gonzalez from their minor league system and Gonzalez is looking for a new team. The perfect fit for Gonzalez is the Oakland Athletics. The way the weak A’s rotation is these days, Gonzalez would be a welcome addition back in Oakland, and he will probably be their #1 starter as of right now. Some of the injured pitchers will be returning starting with Sean Manea, who is the legitimate #1 starter for the team. But regardless if Manaea returns soon, Gonzalez would fit perfectly on the A’s rotation.

We all know that it all comes down to money, personality and politics of baseball. But Gio loved it in the Bay Area. Gonzalez was the most popular A’s on the A’s Amigos program, talking to young bilingual students as soon as they came to the Oakland Coliseum. There will be absolutely nothing wrong for the A’s to take a flyer and give Gonzalez a one-year deal in Oakland. He is a total asset to the A’s.

If the A’s do not pick him up, he will be picked up very soon by one of the other 29 teams in the majors. Gonzalez will likely be signed within the next 48 hours. I hope the A’s will be that team.

Oakland A’s podcast with Charlie O: Bassitt sets the tone with great bullpen help in Monday’s win over Texas

sfgate.com photo: Chris Bassitt pitched five innings of shutout ball against the Texas Rangers Monday night at the Oakland Coliseum for the win.

On the A’s podcast with Charlie O:

#1 A’s starter Chris Bassitt pitched five scoreless innings on Monday night, surrendering two hits and striking out seven and walking four a great line to help the A’s keep the Texas Rangers’ runs under control.

#2 Ryan Dull came into relieve for Bassitt. He struck two hitters in 1.1 innings

#3 The A’s bullpen, after Dull was lifted, came through with relievers J.B. Wendelken, Joakim Soria, and Fernando Rodney going 2.2 innings to shut the Texas offense down.

#4 The A’s Stephen Piscotty continues to hit the ball this time. He went yard for his fourth homer of the season in the second over center.

#5 You had a chance to speak with Oakland A’s president Dave Kaval in Sacramento on Monday regarding legislation in getting the environmental impacts and all the ground rules of constructing a new stadium at Jack London Square.

#5 The A’s and Rangers match up again tonight at the Coliseum for the Rangers Lance Lynn (2-1, 4.44 ERA) and for the A’s Frankie Montas (3-1, 2.70 ERA).

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

A’s get back into the win column by downing the Rangers 6-1

TEX score
Graphic: @NBCS

By Charlie O. Mallonee

Chris Bassitt made his 2019 season debut on the mound for the Oakland Athletics on Monday night and everything went Bassitt’s way. Bassitt worked five scoreless innings giving up just two hits while striking out seven Texas batters and walking four. That was good enough for him to earn his first win of the season.

Bassitt got some help from his friends in the Oakland bullpen. Ryan Dull who was just called up from Triple-A Las Vegas struck out two batters and allowed just one run in 1.1 innings of work in relief.

J.B. Wendelken, Joakim Soria, and Fernando Rodney combined to work 2.2 innings of scoreless relief to close out the game for Oakland to ensure the win for Bassitt.

The A’s scored first

Oakland put the first run up on the board when Stephen Piscotty hit his fourth home run of the season over the centerfield wall in the second inning.

Matt Chapman gave the A’s a 2-0 lead when he drove Josh Phegley home with a sacrifice fly in the bottom of the third inning.

The A’s added two more runs in the home half of the sixth and eighth innings to raise their final total to six runs.

The Rangers scored their only run in the top of the seventh inning.

In the spotlight

A’s (12-13)

Tex Rodney 2
Rodney in appearance #907 Photo: @Athletics

  • Stephen Piscotty had a 2-for-3 game that included a home run and three RBI. He extended his hitting streak against the Rangers to 15 games.
  • Chad Pinder went 2-for-4 with a double and an RBI in the game. Pinder is batting .354 (17-for-48) in 17 games in the month of April.
  • Fernando Rodney passed Cy Young for 24th on the all-time list of pitching appearances by taking the mound for the 907th time in his career.
  • The victory snapped a three-game losing streak for the A’s.

Texas (12-9)

  • Shin-Soo Chin has reached base safely in the first inning of the last 10 games he has been the Texas leadoff hitter.
  • Danny Santana has a hit in six of his first eight games with the Rangers since being called up from Triple-A on April 13.
  • Mike Minor (2-2) took the loss working six innings giving up four runs (all earned) off four hits including one home run. He struck out four and walked three.

Up Next

Tuesday night the Rangers will send RHP Lance Lynn (2-1, 4.44) to the hill to face off against Frankie Montas (3-1, 2.70). The first pitch is scheduled for 7:07 PM.

Hopes in the farm system for the A’s rotation?

Photo credit: bleacherreport.com

By: Lewis Rubman
SRS Contributor
April 22, 2019

OAKLAND — The other night, someone said to me that half of the A’s starting rotation for the second half of this season currently is pitching for the Triple-A Las Vegas Aviators.

The A’s starting rotation certainly needs a boost, given the struggles Mike Fiers and Marco Estrada have been experiencing. Estrada already has been removed from the rotation, having been placed on the 10-day injured list due to a lumbar strain. He had been battling lower back pain during spring training, and it’s not unlikely that the two 10-hour flights between Oakland and Tokyo aggravated his condition.

For the moment, Fiers, the mound staff’s ace as the season began, remains in the rotation, but it’s questionable how much longer the team can afford to keep him there.

To make matters worse, Brett Anderson, who had been a steadying presence on the mound until yesterday, when injured his left ankle trying to field Randal Grichuk’s swinging bunt in the top of the third . The good news that Anderson reports that he feels better and now can walk without limping.

But, in spite of this hopeful development and Chris Bassitt’s successful, albeit short (five innings) start in tonight’s 6-1 win over the Texas Rangers, the question of which, if any, Aviator starters are likely to help the parent club remains an important one.

Now seems like a good time to look at some of the possible answers, not only in Vegas, but also among the hurlers working their way up the ladder with the Double-A Midland RockHounds and the Class A-Advanced Stockton Ports. While we’re at it, a few glances at the A’s injured list also would be in order.

21-year-old lefty Jesús Luzardo is considered the team’s top prospect. He started two games for the big club during spring training, going a total of 9 2/3 innings, including his two stints in relief. He was impressive in that small sample, with 15 strikeouts against four walks, allowing six hits, no homers, and achieving a 0.93 ERA and a 1.034 WHIP. A shoulder strain shut him down in mid-March, and it’s likely he’ll be activated soon for a few appearances with Stockton or Midland before a promotion to what might be a brief fling with the Aviators, followed by a leap to the majors. Alas, this is the plan, but not the reality.

29-year-old Jake Buchanan, with a major league lifetime record of 2-3, 4.73 ERA, hardly qualifies as a prospect. But we’re not talking about prospects here. What interests us is someone who might help solve the A’s current need for effective starting pitching. After three starts, Buchanan looked like he might be the man for the job. He went 2-0 for the Aviators and boasted a 2.50 ERA while holding opponents to a .222 BA. But that was before yesterday’s outing against the Fresno Grizzlies. Buchanan was knocked out of the box after surrendering nine hits, two of them home runs, and five runs, all of them earned in four innings.

A.J. Puk, the A’s top draft pick in 2016, and the promising, but as yet unproved Jharel Cotton are recovering from the Tommy John surgery they underwent a little over a year ago. Reports on them have been encouraging, but, as with Luzardo, when they’ll return to full form remains an open question.

Daniel Mengden, who started 17 games for Oakland last year, is available in Las Vegas, where he’s won his three starts with a 3.00 ERA, throwing seven innings of two-hit ball in his last appearance, Saturday night in Fresno.

Edwin Jackson, who bolstered the A’s sagging pitching corps last year, going 6-3, 3.33 ERA after joining the team on June 25, didn’t land a major league contract after the season ended. The A’s signed him to a minor league deal a little over a week ago and sent him to Arizona for spring training. The plan is to bring him up to Vegas, where he’ll pitch himself into starter mode. We can only hope he’ll be able to repeat his mildly miraculous 2018 campaign.

Sean Manaea, the lefty who no-hit the Red Sox a year ago yesterday, is an outlier. He underwent arthroscopic shoulder surgery in September and might rejoin the rotation late this season. He has likely done some rehabbing.

Oakland obtained Jorge Mateo, Dustin Fowler and right-handed pitcher James Kaprielian in exchange for Sonny Gray just before the 2017 trading deadline. Kaprielian was the Yankees’ first choice in the 2015 but has missed over three years of action due to the Tommy John-shoulder syndrome. He’s on the A’s 40-man, assigned to Stockton, but has yet to make an appearance with the Ports. He seems the least likely of the A’s recuperating moundsmen to have any impact on the team in 2019. Daulton Jeffries and Wyatt Marks are two other Ports starters who might have a bright future with Oakland, but it’s more likely going to be at Howard Terminal than at the Coliseum.

Daniel Gossett had been recovering nicely from Tommy John surgery but was returned to the 60-day injured list last week. He’s not expected to be available this season.

None of the pitchers on the A’s double-A affiliate in Midland is on the 40-man roster. Until last Saturday, Brian Howard seemed to have a shot at making that list in the near future. In his first three starts, he threw 16 innings to go 2-0. The tall (6’9”) 23-year-old righthander accompanied that with a 0.56 ERA, a .200 opponents’ batting average and a 2.06 WHIP. Then last Friday he had a melt-down against the Frisco Rough Riders, allowing seven earned runs on nine hits in 3 2/3 innings, letting his ERA balloon to 7.20.

23-year-old righty Barry Feigl, with just one year’s experience in pro ball, has the best record on the Ports’ pitching so far this season. He’s started three games and has gone 1-0. His ERA is 2.25, and he has held opponents to a batting average of .175 over 16 innings. His WHIP is a sparkling 0.94, and his BB/K ratio is 5/22. It’s unlikely we’ll see him with A’s this year, but two or three years down the line, he’s a possibility (if he doesn’t flare out or get traded).

The picture I’ve just sketched is not a pretty one, but it’s not a complete one either. They are based on stats, not on observation or even a careful reading of the play-by-play. In any case, three starts are not enough to show a pitcher’s ability or potential or even to judge his performance with any great accuracy. Nor do my remarks necessarily mean that there is no one pitching in the A’s system who could rise quickly to the occasion. There may indeed, be several major league quality hurlers under contract to Oakland who haven’t caught my eye. And Fiers might catch fire, and Estrada could yet make his mark. But until then, the A’s face some serious problems with their starting pitchers.

A’s swept by the Blue Jays at the Coliseum, Anderson hurt in 5-4 loss

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By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND — A rare and surprising weekend at the Coliseum ended with the tying and winning runs on base, and the A’s failing to push the runners across in their disappointing, final two at-bats.

The A’s fell 5-4, officially ending the most impressive run of success in their home ballpark in their 40 plus years in Oakland.

The A’s were swept at home by Toronto for the first time since 1993. The sweep ended an unprecedented run which saw the team win 15 of its previous 18 series at the Coliseum, tie three and lose none dating back to June 2018.

“We have to give it to them,” manager Bob Melvin said. “We didn’t expect that. Hopefully it just inspires us for the next series to start playing better because it didn’t feel good getting swept.”

Adding injury to insult, starting pitcher Brett Anderson was removed in the third inning after he sprained his ankle attempting to field Randall Grichuk’s ground ball. Afterwards Anderson offered insight that incorporated his health, the current state of the rotation and the ballclub in one brief statement.

“Do some treatment and see how it feels tomorrow. It’s day to day. It’s annoying, a series that wasn’t very conducive to the health and success of the starting pitchers,” Anderson said.

Simply, the A’s have posted results all over the spectrum in their first 24 ballgames (11-13). But one denominator has remained consistent: if the A’s starters have dealt, they’ve won. If not, they’ve lost. Oakland starters went 6-1 in the team’s 6-4 start. They’ve won four times in 14 games since, only once in the last seven.

The A’s have lost five of six, and nine of 14 as their rotation has become unsettled with the injuries to Anderson and Marco Estrada.

Ramon Laureano was worth the price of admission all by himself by jumping up to rob Teoscar Hernandez of a home run in the second inning. Of course, the defensive whiz who has established himself as one of the game’s most prolific outfield assist guys since his promotion from the minors last season didn’t stop there. Laureano immediately unleashed a throw in excess of 400 feet that flew past first base in a failed attempt to double up baserunner Justin Smoak retreating to first base.

That’s actually when the play took on a unique life of its own, courtesy of Smoak and catcher Brett Hundley. Smoak, who should have been shocked and left motionless by the length of Laureano’s throw, instead turned opportunistic and tried to take second base. But Hundley, running well over 100 feet into foul ground, fielded the throw and tossed out Smoak at second base.

And the obvious question after the zany play: how do you throw a baseball that far?

“I threw without thinking. That happens sometimes,” Laureano explained.