A’s three runs in second enough in 3-0 shutout over Red Sox; Oakland’s eight game losing streak comes to an end

Oakland A’s Almedmys Diaz (left) and JJ Bleday (right) celebrate after Bleday’s second inning home run against the Boston Red Sox at the Oakland Coliseum on Tue Jul 18, 2023 (AP News photo)

Boston (51-45). 000 000 000. – 0 5. 3

Oakland (26-71) 030 000. 000 – 3 7. 0

Time: 2:15

Attendance: 10,115

Tuesday, July 18, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–I’ve started to think that “bullpen game” is a misnomer. Last night’s knockout performance against the A’s by Boston’s Nick Pivetta featured a reliever, a starter and second relief pitcher, who served as mop up man. Only the order of their appearance was changed; the pitcher on the roster as a starter replaced the opener, a reliever, in the third. It wasn’t the bullpen that defeated the A’s; it was a member of the rotation, coming out of the bullpen.

Tonight’s contest between the teams from the place that calls itself with false modesty The Town and the city that proudly bills itself as The Hub of the Universe, also was one of those that baseball’s new lexicon dubs as a bullpen game. In this case, Red Sox reliever Joe Jacques , a veteran of 10 big league games, none of which he had started, opened for them and gave up three runs, all of them earned in 2-2/3 innings.

Jacques was charged with the loss and now has a record of 1-1, 5.79. He was followed by another left handed reliever, Chris Murphy, who pitched 4-2/3 strong frames . Joely Rodríguez and Richard Bleier also performed well on the mound for Boston.

The Athletics went with Luis Medina, the only right handed starter besides last night’s losing pitcher, Paul Blackburn, on their active roster. The result was a surprise 3-0 win for the home team.

Medina lasted 5-2/3 impressive frames, holding the Bosox to scoreless, although he left with a runner on first. He allowed only three hits and a walk. His pitch count was 80, with 53 strikes. He also was called for a pitch clock violation in the first inning. Sam Long, Shintaro Fujinami, Sam Moll, and Trevor also pitched for the A’s. Medina earned the win, bettering his season’s totals to 3-7, 5.79.

The A’s started strong and fizzled out quickly. Tony Kemp led off the bottom of the first with what might have been the Curse of the leadoff doubles to end all curses of lead off doubles. His hit landed near the right field foul line and got away from Alex Verdugo. It originally was scored as a triple, but that ruling was revised to a double and an error. An inning later, the scoring was again revised. Kemp was credited once more with a triple.

Kemp wisely didn’t try to score on Zach Gelof’s fly to medium deep left but did try to advance when Jacques’ 2-0 pitch to Jordan Díaz got past catcher Jorge Alfaro, who raced back to home to tag Kemp out. Kemp jumped over Alfaro, but home plate umpire Adam Hamari called him out for running out of the base path and ejected manager Mark Kotsay for his vehement arguing of the call.

In spite of that inauspicious start, Oakland took the lead in the home half of the second. with a home run by Ryan Noda, the only Athletic to have gotten a hit in last night’s debacle. It was Noda’s 11th round tripper of the year and travelled 402 feet into right center field with an exit velocity of 105.3 mph. Aledmys Díaz followed with a single to short and went to second on Yu Chang’s errant throw.

The 90 feet Díaz advanced proved to be irrelevant because JJ Bleday parked a sinker 396 feet into left center. The pitch came in at 91.2 mph and left and at 105.1 mph. The A’s now led 3-0, and Chris Murphy relieved Jacques to walk Kemp and strike out Gelof and Jordan Díaz to put out the fire.

Sam Long relieved Medina after Justin Turner’s two out single brought up left handed hitting clean up hitter Yoshida Masataka. The A’s southpaw got him to ground out to third, preserving Oakland’s 3-0 lead.

Shintaro Fujinami pitched a scoreless top of the seventh, and Joey Rodríguez put the A’s down in order in the bottom half of the frame. Sam Moll, with the help of a nifty play by Gelof at second for the third out, hurled a perfect top of the eighth.

Richard Bleier, reinstated yesterday from Boston’s injured list, allowed a leadoff double to Jordan Díaz, but The Curse worked, and we went into the ninth inning with the A’s hanging on to their 3-0 lead.

Trevor May earned the save, his seventh by surrendering nothing more harmful than a walk in the Bosox’ last at bat.

Oakland now is 26-71, .268 IF OK L 25-72 .258. Kansas City’s 11-10 defeat of the Tigers left the Royals. at 28-68, .292

One July 18, 1899, the Cleveland Spiders, until this year the worst major league team ever, split a double header with the Senators in Washington, winning the first game 5-4 and being mauled in the second, finishing the day at 14-64, .179.

The New York Mets of 1962, up to now the model of baseball futility in the modern era, were idle on July 18, which enabled them to preserve their record of 24-64, .273.

Tomorrow, Wednesday, the Red Sox will send Brayan Bello (7-5, 3.14) to face the A’s and Ken Waldichuk (2-6, 6.66). First pitch 12:37 at the Oakland Coliseum.

Headline Sports podcast with Auggie Mussenburg: MLB owners A’s relocation vote delay; Golden Fields memories; plus more

Golden Gate Fields is about to close permanently it opened in 1941 and is closing to merge their business model in the Southland leaving the Bay Area with no race tracks (San Francisco Chronicle file photo)

On Headline Sports podcast with Auggie:

#1 MLB owners have not taken a vote on relocating the Oakland A’s to Las Vegas do you think there is haggling going on behind the scenes and the owners don’t like the idea of moving a team in the fifth largest market to what would be the smallest market in MLB.

#2 If a move is made how much will MLB owner be concerned about losing the gate in the smallest MLB Park and smallest media MLB market.

#3 Golden Gate Fields Race Track will close permanently after the ’23 Meet in December 2023. The historic track is the last of what were two race tracks the other being Bay Meadows. The Stronach Group will double business at the Santa Anita Race Track and train at San Luis Rey Downs and at San Luis Rey Downs in the Southland.

#4 The Boston Red Sox shutout the A’s in a laugher Monday night. The Sox Connor Wong drove in three runs and pitcher Nick Pivetta matched a career high striking out 13 batters in the Sox 7-0 shoutout of the A’s at the Coliseum.

#5 Frustrations for the A’s Ryan Noda who was called out on strikes drew a line by the plate and was ejected by plate umpire Emil Jimenez. A’s manager Mark Kotsay came out to discuss and he and Noda went back towards the dugout.

Auggie is reporter KWAI 1080 Honolulu and podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice

Doubles and brilliant relief stymie A’s 7-0; Red Sox throw combined 1 hitter at Oakland

Oakland Athletics Ryan Noda flips the ball back to pitcher Paul Blackburn against the Boston Red Sox at the Oakland Coliseum on Mon Jul 17, 2023 (AP News photo)

Boston (51-44). 110 004 001. – 7. 10. 0

Oakland (25-71) 000.000 000. – 0. 1. 0

Time: 2:37

Attendance: 9,987

Monday, July 17, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–The Red Sox are having pitching trouble this season. Injuries have reduced their starting rotation to three, with two out of every five games featuring an opener. The team they fielded this evening had a respectable 50-44 won-lost record but nonetheless was in last place in the American League East, nine games behind the division leading Rays.

The Sox went the bullpen route again today, choosing as their opener Brennan Bernardino, who had shut out the A’s over two innings in his opener role ten days ago in Fenway. The young southpaw was followed by Nick Pivettta after Bernardino had completed his fourth consecutive scoreless frame against Oakland.

Pivetta was the real story of the night. He pitched six innings of no hit relief, walking two, and striking out 13 of the 20 batters he faced. He threw 87 pitches, 58 for strikes. He got credit for the Red Sox’ 7-0 win, his sixth against five defeats, and lowered his ERA to 4.44.

The A’s also started the evening in last place in their division, but east is east, and west is west. The former is the Lake Woebegone Division, where all teams are above average. The AL West, like the AL Central, is the dwelling place for a team that threatens to end the season with the lowest winning percentage in major league history, and that team is your for the nonce Oakland Athletics. The A’s often play bullpen games, but they’re usually not planned as such; they just occur as the natural outgrowth of poor starts by the regular rotation..

Blackburn, who didn’t come off the injured list until May 28 was 1-1, 4,86 at game time. He struggled in his first time through the lineup but rallied to hold Boston hitless in the third, fourth, and fifth innings before his troubles began resumed in the sixth. He ended up throwing 5-2/3 innings and allowing six runs, all earned, on nine hits, and two walks. He struck out two batters. 64 of his 97 deliveries counted as strikes. He took the loss, and now has a record of 1-2, 5.48)

The Bosox defied The Curse of the Leadoff (Leg) Double when Jarren Duran advanced to third on Alex Verdgo executed a productive ground out and Justin Turner hit a sacrifice fly to Seth Brown in right to start the game.

They defied The Curse again in the second when Seth Brown couldn’t get to Adam Duvalls’ fly in left, perhaps because of the way the shadows were falling on the grass before the lights had taken any effect. Triston Casas drove him in with a clean single to left, and the bay starters had a 2-0 jump on their hosts.

Boston had to wait an out before hitting its third inning two bagger. Verdugo hit it and died on second. They got another to lead off the sixth. It came from Turner’s bat, and it overcame The Curse, putting Boston ahead and ending Blackburn’s work for the evening. Masataka Yoshida followed Turner’s blow with a single that moved him to third.

Adam Duvall’s sac fly to right brought him home. Triston Casas walked. Christian Arroyo walked, and Connor Wong singled, and Yu Cheng hit a run producing ground out to third. That’s when Sam Moll took over for Blackburn and got the final out with Duran’s fly to left..

Moll retired the side in order in the seventh and then yielded to Angel Felipe, who did the same in the eighth. Boston loaded the bases against him in the ninth on a single and two walks On one of them, the third ball hit home plate umpire Emil Jiménez, who earlier had ejected Noda. The injury caused a delay, but Jiménez stayed in the game, and Turner hit into a force out at third that upped the visitors’ advantage to 7-0.

Chris Martin closed the book on the A’s in the ninth, walking one and striking out three.

Kansas City lost to Detroit 3-2. The Royals now are 27-68, .284, still a few steps behind the A’s and their 23-71, .245 in the race to the historical bottom.

The 1899 Cleveland Spiders split their July 17 double header at Baltimore before a gathering of 1,561 fans and finished the day at 13-63., 1.71.

The 1962 Mets were idle on the 17th and treaded water at 29-64, .312.

The A’s and Red Sox will have another go at each other tomorrow, Tuesday, evening at 6:40. Bryan Bello (7-5, 3.14) will face Oakland’s Ken Waldichuk (2-6, 6.66).

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Owners not too excited on playing A’s in minor league parks

Las Vegas Ballpark in Las Vegas home of the Las Vegas Aviators triple A minor league team of the Oakland A’s is considered as one of the possible interim homes for the A’s after 2024 while their Tropicana ballpark is under construction (photo by the Las Vegas Review Journal)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Amaury, the players are concerned about having to play in the interim in minor league parks whether it be in Reno, Sacramento or Las Vegas.

#2 Another issue about using a minor league park is locker room size, the amenities, the size and atmosphere does not fit Major League standards.

#3 another issue some of the Major League owners don’t want to use a Minor League facility because the gate will be much smaller than a big league park.

#4 The idea has surfaced about using Oracle Park in San Francisco that could go two ways #1 the Giants would say absolutely not they want to the A’s to figure out their own park issues or #2 they could extend a kind gesture since the A’s are leaving are leaving the market anyway and the Giants could get a cut of that gate as well.

#5 What would be strange about a A’s using Oracle Park circumstance and allowed by the Giants. The Giants will not relinquish their territory rights in the South Bay, why would they allow the A’s to their share their park at Oracle.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play voice on the Oakland A’s Spanish radio network on 1010 KIQI San Francisco and 990 KATD Pittsburgh and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: Once again A’s can’t hold onto lead fall to Twins getting swept at Coliseum

The Oakland A’s Tyler Soderstrom swings for a single in the bottom of the fourth inning against the Minnesota Twins at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Jul 16, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 Barbara lets review the scoring in Sunday’s thriller at the Oakland Coliseum between the Minnesota Twins and Oakland A’s. Second inning the A’s Jordan Diaz hit a 381 foot home run to left field to get the A’s on the scoreboard 1-0.

#2 In the bottom of the fourth the A’s added two more runs with Jordan Diaz’ sacrifice fly to left allowing Zack Gelof to score from third. Aledmys Diaz later doubled to left field scoring JJ Bleday A’s go up 3-0.

#3 In the top of the fifth the Twins get on the scoreboard scoring two runs Christian Vazquez hit a 395 foot home run to left centerfield. The Twins Alex Krilloff belted a homer to center left for 381 feet and it was 3-2 A’s leading by just a run.

#4 Krilloff did more damage with a top of the seventh double that scored three runs and the Twins took a three run lead 5-3.

#5 The A’s picked up another run in the bottom of the seventh when Zack Gelof doubled scoring Shea Langeliers Oakland had cut the lead to just a run 5-4 but it wasn’t enough as they have lost seven in a row and get swept by the Twins.

#6 The Boston Red Sox pay the A’s a visit at the Coliseum to open up a three game series on Monday night. Pitchers for Boston to be announced and for the A’s right hander Paul Blackburn (1-1 ERA 4.86) a 6:40pm PT first pitch at the Coliseum.

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

A’s drop series finale against the Twins 5-4

Photo courtesy of Oakland A’s.

By Titus Wilkinson (@TitusWisme)

OAKLAND- The A’s closed out their home series against the Twins on a sour note as they lost by a 5-4 final.

Getting the start for the A’s was J.P. Sears while for the Twins Joe Ryan was on the mound to start.

The first inning went by with no runs scored until the bottom of the second when Jordan Diaz launched a pitch over the left field wall getting his sixth home run and making it a 1-0 game.

The first four innings for Sears couldn’t have gone much better as Sears struck out five hitters.

In the fourth Oakland tacked on another run as with Zack Gelof on third Diaz got him home with a sacrifice fly. Adding to their lead Aledmys Diaz doubled on a line drive to left field that brought home JJ Bleday making it 3-0.

The next inning saw Minnesota start a rally as Christian Vazquez homered to left center field making it 3-1. Not to be outdone Alex Kirilloff followed that up with a home run of his own to a similar spot on the field bringing the A’s lead down to one.

In that same inning Ryan was relieved as the Twins brought in Jorge López in relief. Ryan finished with 5.1 innings pitched, three earned runs, and seven K’s.

The seventh saw the A’s go to the bullpen as Sears was finally relieved by Lucas Erceg. Sears finished with a fantastic line as he pitched 6.1 innings, gave up three earned runs, walked no one and struck out seven.

Erceg would have a less than favorable outing as he gave up a double to Kirilloff that knocked in three runs making it 5-3. He was yanked after giving up the runs and replaced by Shintaro Fujinami who finished out the inning.

The A’s were quick to respond as Gelof doubled in the seventh bringing home one run and making it 5-4.

That was all the runs Oakland could muster as the score finished at 5-4 bringing the Twins record to 48-46 and the A’s record to 25-70.

The A’s next game will be tomorrow where they’ll kick off a three game home series against Boston at 6:40 p.m.

MLB The Show podcast with Charlie O: Braves Ron Washington still a hit with players; Yankees front runner in Ohtani sweepstakes; A’s still have not submitted relocation app

Atlanta Braves third base coach Ron Washington always good for a laugh, MLB players said they love and respect the man during the All Star Game in Seattle this past week (New York Times file photo)

MLB The Show podcast with Charlie O:

#1 When former Oakland A’s third base coach and current Atlanta Braves third base coach Ron Washington affectionately called “Wash” was coaching third during this year’s All Star Game in Seattle it was no surprise that the players love and respect Wash for his reputation in teaching players and just getting along with the players. You remembered how he was when he coached in Oakland?

#2 Charlie, Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Angels has been the topic of trade rumors but the Angels have been of the position that it is unlikely that they will let him go until becomes a free agent at the end of this season. However the Angels will listen to offers.

#3 One team that keeps surfacing as a top contender in the Ohtani sweepstakes is the New York Yankees, number one market, they are MLB’s top drawing team, and most important they can afford Ohtani.

#4 What is the likelihood that the San Francisco Giants would also be a serious contender for Ohtani. Will they be willing to spend the $700 million to meet his salary demands, will the Giants give up their top prospects for Ohtani. Also talk about what it would do for that organization to get someone of Ohtani’s stature.

#5 Charlie talk about the most recent kerfuffle involving the Oakland A’s East Bay charity drive money that some fans in Oakland said went toward the “Battle for Vegas” charity. Battle for Vegas a softball event scheduled for Jul 21 and 22nd was supposedly being financed with charity money donated by Oakland fans for the purpose of charity groups in Oakland and the East Bay. The A’s said in a statement that the money that was donated for the East Bay groups will go towards those charities and not the money being used for Battle for Vegas.

Charlie O does MLB The Show podcasts every Sunday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Twins score late to catch A’s 10-7 at Coliseum

Kyle Farmer of the Minnesota Twins gets the Land of 10,000 Rakes sack jersey after clouting a top of the seventh home run against the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Jul 15, 2023 (AP News photo)

Minnesota (47-46). 222 010 111 – 10. 11. 1

Oakland (25-69) 001 321 000 – 7. 10 0

Time: 3:06

Attendance: 10,534

Saturday, July 15, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–The A’s decided to go the bullpen game route this afternoon, sending Austin Pruitt (1-6-4, 3.86, but with a decent WHIP of 1.26 when the decision was made) to open against the Minnesota Twins at the unlikely hour of 4:09 this afternoon.

He left off pitching at 4:18 after giving up two runs on a leadoff single by Carlos Correa, a walk to Donovan Solano, and a two out double to right center by Kyle Farmer. He was followed by more pitchers, including the honorary reliever Hogan Harris.. You could say that the bullpen went the route.

The Twins went the more conventional route and chose Pablo López, who had held the National League scoreless for an inning in this year’s all star game. He began this contest at 5-5, 3.89, representative numbers for a team that showed up at 46-46.

This afternoon, he managed to. blow a six run lead and leave with the score knotted at seven all after having thrown 106 pitches, 67 for strikes over 5-2/3 frames. All seven runs were earned; they came on eight, three walks, and a wild pitch. He escaped with a no decision, but his ERA zoomed to 4.24.

Harris, listed as a starter on the back of the pregame lineup sheet, loaded the bases with two walks and a bunt single by number nine hitter, Joey Gallo (how the mighty have fallen!). Carlos Correa drove in the walkees, and it was 4-0, Twins. Harris settled down to fan Solano and Byron Buxton before Tony Kemp got him out of the frame with a leaping grab of Max Kepler’s drive to the left field wall.

Harris surrendered another couple of runs in the third on Michael A. Taylor’s 423 foot blast that left his bat at 107.2 mph and landed in the left center field seats for his 11th. round tripper of the year.

Rookie Zach Gelof led off the home third with the A’s first hit, a triple that landed just fair in right and bounced past a diving Kepler. He scored on Nick Allen’s swinging bunt , slightly narrowing the gap to 6-1.

Ryan Noda reduced it further with his leadoff home run over the State Farm sign. in right center, his 10th four base hit and 37th run batted for the season. JJ Bleday’s single to right and Seth Brown’s ninth danger of ’23, a ringing shot that landed just inside the right field foul pole, made it. 6-4.

Harris gave up one more run, this one in the fifth, his penultimate inning. With two down and Willi Castro on third and Ryan Jeffers on first, the runner’s foiled catcher Tyler Soderstrom’s pick off throw and managed to pull off a double steal. 7-4, Twin Cities.

The A’s came roaring back in their next at bat. Consecutive single by Peterson, Allen (a beautiful bunt), and Kemp, in that order made it 7-5. A wild pitch with Bleday at bat brought in Allen, who had advanced to third on Kemp’s safety. Bledda walked, clogging the base paths with one out. The inning ended that way, with the A’s trailing, 7-6.

The recently promoted Freddy Tarnock replaced Harris with Gallo, who had walked to open the sixth, on first. He immediately induced a 6-4-3 Twin killing off the bat of Correa and sent Solano down swinging.

The A’s tied it up at seven in the sixth, pulling off a double steal of their own. The speedy Gelof stole an additional bag and had reached base in the first place by beating out a double play relay.

Allen’s sacrifice fly to center drove in the tying tally and ended López’s mound tenure. Jovani Morán relieved López at this point. Brent Rooker pinch hit for Kemp and sent a shot to dead center field that required a leap above the fence by Taylor to corral.

The momentum – and the lead – shifted back to Minnesota’s side after Tarnock had retired the first two Twins he faced in the top of the seventh. Farmer smacked a 3-2 slider 405 feet deep, into the left field seats.

Morán struck out Noda and walked Bleday in the home seventh and was replaced by Griffin Jax when Jordan Díaz was announced as batting for Brown. He stopped the A’s in their tracks.

Tarnock definitely had not stopped the Twins in theirs. He issued three walks and a double, managing to retire two batters, that enabled the visitors to tack on another run before Sam Long entered the game to strike out Kepler and keep the game close at 9-7.

Oliver Ortega pitched the bottom of the eighth for the Twins. The A’s couldn’t score off him, but Minnesota picked up another run, this one off Trevor Ray, on a triple by Castro and Jeffers’ sacrifice squeeze in the top of the ninth.

That gave Jhoan Durán a 10-7 cushion when he went for the save in the ninth. Three batters later, he’d earned his 14th save of 2023. Morán (2-2, 4.54) was the winning pitcher. Tarnok (0-1, 6.75) took the loss.

With today’s defeat, theA’s now record is 25-69, .266. Their nearest rival in the race for the worst won-loss percentage in major league history, the Kansas City Royals, lost to Tampa Bay this afternoon, 4-2.

KC now is 26-66, .283, The current all time worst record holders, the 1899 Cleveland Spiders, were whitewashed, 10-0 by the Orioles in Baltimore on July 15, leaving the Spiders at 12-60,.167 en route to their 20-134, .130 season.

The 1962 New York Mets, the losingist team in the modern era of the big leagues at 40-120, .250, won their July 15 game, defeating the Giants at Candlestick, 5-3, improving the Mets’ won-lost balance to 24-62, .286.

The A’s hope to salvage a win out of the three game series, which ends tomorrow at the Coliseum at 1:07. JP Sears (1-6 3.97) will start. for Oakland; Joe Ryan (8-6, 3.70) for Minnesota.

That’s Amaury News and commentary podcast: A’s rookies break into show open Twins series; MLB owners to look at A’s documents before vote; plus more news

Oakland A’s rookies designated hitter Tyler Soderstrom (left) and second baseman Zack Gelof (right) made their MLB debut against the Minnesota Twins at the Oakland Coliseum on Fri Jul 14, 2023 (USA Today photo)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Amaury, talk about Oakland A’s Tyler Soderstrom and Zack Gelof who both were in the line up on Friday night making their Major League debut against the Minnesota Twins how did they look?

#2 The A’s also have pitcher Freddy Tarnok do you look to see him as a middle reliever or a closer?

#3 Both pitcher Richard Lovelady and catcher Manny Pina were place on the IL before Friday night’s game how long are they expected to be out?

#4 A’s starter Ken Waldichuk got the call Friday night he was looking for the win he had a good night out on the mound keeping run total down early.

#5 Amaury, I didn’t get to interview you about Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao do you see her visit last Sunday in Seattle a last ditch effort to keep the A’s in Oakland or a hope that she could show the owners that the A’s did have something on the drawing board and it was close to fruition prior to A’s president David Kaval saying the team had a binding deal in Las Vegas?

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play voice for the Oakland A’s Spanish radio network at 1010 KIQI San Francisco and 990 KATD Pittsburg and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Twins catch A’s in ninth with 2 runs; Minnesota gets edge on Oakland 5-4 at Coliseum

Minnesota Twins centerfielder Michael A Taylor watches the ball take a bounce off the centerfield fence for a double for Oakland A’s Zack Gelof in the bottom of the third inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Fri Jul 14, 2023 (AP News photo)

Minnesota (46-46). 200 100 002 – 5 10 0

Oakland (25-68). 012 000 001 – 4. 7. 0

Time: 3:28

Attendance: 7,923

Friday, July 14, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–If it looks like a done deal that the A’s will be moving to Las Vegas (although I’d be interested to see what sort of odds the casinos are offering), it’s beginning to look like a sure thing that the Las Vegas Aviators are moving to Oakland.

Today’s new inhabitants of the crumbling edifice by the Nimitz were Tyler Soderstrom and Zach Gelof. The former can catch and play first base as well as, of course, serving as a DH. He was hitting .254 with 20 homers and 59 RBI in his 69 games in the hitter friendly PCL. MLB.com considers him the Athletics’ top prospect.

The latter is listed as number three. whose brother Jake was the Dodgers’ second round pick in this year’s draft, was hitting .304 with a dozen dingers and 44 RBI for the Aviators. The A’s also recalled right handed pitcher, who recently was reinstated from the injured list and sent to Vegas. Both position players were in Oakland’s starting lineup.

Soderstrom went 0 for 3, while Gelof was 1 for 4 with an RBI double. The final score was 5-4,k Minnesota.

Southpaw Ken Waldichuk, coming to work at 2-6,6.63 , was the starting pitcher for the home town team. His last two appearances was as an opener, His last conventional start , on May 19 at Houston, lasted only five innings, in which he surrendered four runs, three of them earned, on five hits in a 5-1 loss to the Astros.

Friday night, Waldichuk lasted only 3-2/3 innings and allowed three runs, all earned but one posthumous, on three hits and two walks. He struck out five and saw his ERA rise slightly, to 6.66 in a no decision. He threw 74 pitches in his short stint; 47 counted as strikes.

The Twins sent the veteran Kenta Maeda to the hill (61-46,3.93 lifetime in MLB and 2-5, 5.18 this year at game time), and his performance confirmed that he was over the hill. He threw 80 pitches (52 for strikes) in only three innings, during which he yielded three runs, all earned, on four hits and an equal number of walks, notching six strikeouts in the process. The no decision left him at 2-5 but raised his earned run average to 5.50)

It took one pitch for the Twins to put a man in scoring position with Carlos Correa’s double off the scoreboard above the Eva Air advertisement in right to start the game. One more pitch and The Curse of the Leadoff Double had dissipated; Donovan Sullivan sent an RBI single into right. He scored on Kyle Farmers’s triple, giving the Twin Cities’ squad a 2-0 lead to play with.

The A’s got one of those runs with two down in the bottom of the second. Shea Langeliers made amends for his first inning passed ball, which hadn’t affected the scoring, with a triple off the right fence. Nick Allen followed that up with a solid single to right. In spite of Allen’s theft of second and a walk to Ryan Noda, that was all the A’s could score in the frame.

Gelof’s first big league hit, a double that bounced off the fence above the Coca-Cola ad and beneath the one for State Farm in right center, tied the game in the next inning, bringing in Brent Rooker, who’d beaten out a single to short and advanced on a walk to Seth Brown. Brown went to third on the two bagger and scored on Jace Peterson’s sac fly to left center. giving the A’s a 3-2 lead.

Waldichuk almost got through the top of the fourth, but his wildness (he walked two batters) and catcher Christian Vásquez’s speed (he beat out the relay on a potentially inning ending double play attempt) combined to allow the tying run and caused the starter’s removal from the game. Austin Pruitt allowed the inherited Farmer, who’d led off the frame with a walk , to score on pinch hitter Eduard Juien’s double to left.

Maeda didn’t come out for the home fourth; Emilio Pagán did. He retired the A’s in order.

Angel Felipe entered the game, making his second appearance since joining the A’s on July 7. He struggled but, with a little help from Sam Long for the third out, kept Minnesota off the board in the fifth.

Jordan Balazovic came in to fan Gelof, which shut the A’s down after Pagán’s two out walk of Sodertrom in the home fifth.

Long got Vásquez to foul out to first at the start of the sixth, but a single and a walk later. he was gone in favor of Lucas Erceg. He caught Correa looking at a third strike before walking Solano to load the bases and then ended the threat with a called third strike on Buxton.

Jovani Morán replaced Balazovic and administered The Curse of the Leadoff Double to the A’s, stranding Peterson, who’d dumped the fatidic two bagger just inside the left field foul line, on third with two down.

Sam Moll pitched the top of the eighth and faced only three Twins, sandwiching a strikeout of Julien between singles by Vásquez and Kepler. Shintaro Fujinami took Moll’s place on the mound. He came through, getting Correa to ground into a 4-6-3 twin killing, Gelof to Allen to Noda.

Griffin Jax, retired A’s in to a conga beat in their half of the eighth.

Fujinami came out for the ninth and was greeted with a leadoff double by Solano. Buxton then was awarded first on catcher’s interference, but home plate umpire Nic Lentz’s call was overturned on review. Buxton ended up striking out; the second strike being the foul that had been catcher’s interference.

Joey Gallo long has had the reputation of being an all or nothing hitter. He struck out as a pinch hitter in the seventh. He homered to right as a left fielder in the ninth. His 16th four bagger of the year raised his batting average from .185 to .189 and put the Twinkies ahead, 5-3.

The Athletics now needed to score two runs off closer Johan Durán to tie. Langeliers grounded out to second. Tony Kemp sent a pinch hit double just inside the right field foul line. After Noda flew out to left, JJ Beday was Oakland’s last hope. He drove a 2-2 pitch into center for a single, and it was 5-4.

The next batter was Rooker, the A’s all star, who had been greeted in Seattle by chants of “Sell the team.” At this at bat, the chants were “Let’s go, Oakland.” He was hit by a pitch, which brought Seth Brown to the plate. He grounded out to second.

The win went to Jax, now 5-6, 2.84. Durán earned his 13th save. The losing pitcher was Fujinori, now 5-8, 9.06.

The loss puts the A’s at 25-68, .268. Kansas City’s game for today was postponed, leaving the Royals at 26-85, 2.86. On this day in 1899, the Cleveland Spiders were trounced by the Baltimore Orioles, 14-1 in front of 1,174 paying spectators, giving the Spiders a record of 12-60, 1.67 on their way to season’s mark of 20-134, .130, the worst in major league history.

The 1962 Mets, whose 40-120, .250 holds the record for worst in the modern day major leagues, went down 17-3 to Los Angeles in newly completed Dodger Stadium, with a paid attendance of 37,253.

Saturday’s game, in the 55 year old Oakland Coliseum, is set for a 4:07 start and will feature Hogan Harris (2-3, 6.07) on the mound for the A’s and Pablo López (5-5, 3.89) hurling for Minnesota.