A’s Go 12 Rounds Against The Diamondbacks, But Win 9-8 With A Walk Off Hit In Extra Innings

Oakland Athletics’ Esteury Ruiz, center, celebrates with teammates after a game winning single during the 12th inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Tuesday, May 16, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Troy Ewers

OAKLAND–In front of a crowd of 3,261 in the Coliseum, the Arizona Diamondbacks played the Oakland A’s for game two of this three game series. On the hill to start Kyle Mueller (Oakland) and Tommy Henry (Arizona) and they both went four innings and each gave up four runs. The A’s came away with a thrilling 9-8 win over the Diamondbacks in 12 innings at the Coliseum.

Christian Walker’s two run home run for Arizona in the first was just a sign of things to come all game. This was Walker’s tenth home run of the season. A’s responded when the star of this team Esteury Ruiz got a double, then stole third (Ruiz’s 20th stolen base), and Brent Rooker’s single would bring Ruiz in making the game 2-1.

Rooker’s RBI single makes 30 on the season so far, which shows that having Ruiz lead off can almost guarantee a run, because Rooker can bring him in. The second inning saw a quick innings as both sides were retired rather quickly, but in the third the A’s would tie the ballgame up when Nick Allen hit his first homerun of the season.

In the forth, the Athletics would take the lead from a solo bomb by Ramon Laureano with two outs in the inning. This home run seemed like the highlight of the night, but little did everyone know we were in for a longer night than expected.

The Diamondbacks would mute the crowd when a Emmanuel Rivera RBI double would score two men in, but right after that big double, Lourdes Gurriel Jr. hits a two run home run making the game 6-4 and the crowd in Oakland assumed that they were in for another Oakland loss at the hands of pitchers taking their foot off the gas when the batters put numbers on the board.

That feeling these A’s fans had was even amplified when two more runs by the D-Backs in the seventh were put up. Then the moment that caused a bigger eruption in Oakland than the K-Pop concert in the Oracle Arena right next to them was when the bottom of the seventh rally started.

With two outs Rooker and Diaz’s singles got them on base and got this momentum going, then an Evan Longoria error put Carlos Perez on base, making the bases loaded, and boom went the dynamite as Ryan Noda hit a monster grand slam over the left field wall.

This didn’t just tie the game 8-8, but it was Oakland’s first grand slam of the 2023 season. The Coliseum went absolutely crazy for this and after two scoreless innings, we had extra innings. A quiet tenth and 11th inning led the crowd to get restless, but it was the calm before the storm as in the 12th inning the Oakland star Esteury Ruiz with the bases loaded would hit the ball right at the shortstop, Nick Ahmed, and the ball would hit his glove, and the man on third walked right on home.This was Ruiz’s second walk off the season and it’s clear he’s making his presence felt on this roster.

The A’s split the series so far with Arizona one game a piece Wednesday is the finale in a day game at 12:37pm PT where Luis Medina (0-2, 8.18) of Oakland will take on Ryne Nelson (1-2, 6.20) of Arizona.

D-Backs win 4th consecutive game defeat A’s at Coliseum 5-2

Arizona Diamondbacks’ Lourdes Gurriel Jr. celebrates after hitting a two-run home run against the Oakland Athletics during the third inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Mon, May 15, 2023 (AP News photo)

Arizona (24-28). 022 100 000. – 5 10 1

Oakland (9-34). 001 000 010 – 2. 4. 0

Time: 2:35

Attendance: 2,064

Mon May 15, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–On this day in 1899, the Cleveland Spiders fell to 3-20 after a 3-2 loss to the Cincinnati Reds. The attendance at the game was all of 200.

On this day in 1962, the New York Mets won a 13 inning, four hour and 54 minutes long marathon under the lights at the Polo Grounds against the Chicago Cubs. The winning pitcher was Roger Craig. The attendance was 8,463, but there’s no record of how many of those hung around to the end.

On this day in 2023, the Oakland Athletics fell to the Arizona Diamondbacks, 5-2, before an intimate gathering of 2,064 paying customers who saw the team drop to 9-34.

Before game time, the A’s announced that they had reinstated Adrián Martínez from the 15 day injured list and optioned fellow right handed pitcher Zach Neal to their triple AAA farm team in Las Vegas.

It’s easy to make snide remarks about the Athletics; I was tempted to add, “and that’s your A’s highlight for tonight” to that last paragraph, but there are some hopeful signs among the current crop of Athletic players. The team’s game notes point out that going into today Ryan Noda was first among Major League rookies in on-base percentage and walks (27), fourth in OPS , tied for fifth in runs , tied for sixth in doubles and for seventh in three baggers and extra base hits (12), and was eighth in slugging .

That last is a category in which Brent Rooker led all of MLB> He also led the majors in OPS and ws tied for fourth in homers as well as being sixth in OBP. Esteury Ruizis the leader of the pack among rookies ML rookies in hits, doubles, stolen bases, and hit by pitches.

Drew Rucinski took the mound for Oakland with a record of 0-3, 8.16. When he left after 3-2/3 innings,his ERA had risen to 9.00 He’d thrown 89 pitches, 47 for strikes and yielded five runs, all earned, on six hits, two of them home runs, and five walks. He didn’t strike anyone out. The loss left him 0-4.

Nine year MLB and four campaign veteran of the Korean Baseball Organization, Diamondback starter Merrill Kelly, took a 3-3, 3.18 record with him to the mound. He was on his game tonight. His ERA fell to 2.92 over the course of his mound tenure, and at game’s end his won-lost record had improved to 4-3.

At one point, Kelly struck out five consecutive Athletics batters. His strike out total was nine. In his seven innings of work Kelly allowed only four hits, one of them for four bases. Only one of the two runs with which he was charged was earned. He threw 97 pitches, 70 for strikes

The Diamondbacks rattled their sticks early. Number nine hitter, Geraldo Perdomo lifted a hanging slider into the stairs behind the Oakland A’s Community Fund sign in right , bringing in Giant killer Dominic Fletcher from second, which he had reached on a lead off double, to grab an early 2-0 lead.

Lourdes Gurriel doubled the margin on another slider, a 2-2 delivery that carried over the NBC Sports California sign to the right of the 388 foot marker in center field. Corbin Carroll, who had led off the frame with a base on balls, scored before him.

Oakland didn’t get a base runner until there were two away in the bottom of the third. Nick Allen beat out Perdomo’s hurried throw on a grounder to third for a single and advanced to second when throw got past first baseman Pavin Smith. A Texas League single to right center by Ruíz made it 4-1.

But the momentum hadn’t shifted. A lead off walk to Perdomo in the top of the fourth was followed, one out later, by a seeing eye single that shortstop Allen chased down in right field while Perdomo motored to third. A broken bat sac fly to short by Carroll brought Perdomo in with Arizona’s fifth run. A walk to Gurriel, and Sam Long was on the mound for Oakland.

He got the last out on three pitches and remained in the game, somehow surviving a bases loaded game in the top of the fifth without yielding a tally and holding the Rattlers scoreless in the sixth. He gave way to Richard Lovelady, who retired the side in order in the top of the seventh. The newly returned Adrián Martínez performed his version of that feat in the eighth.

Jace Peterson made things interesting in the Oakland half of that frame with a lead off home run, his third homer of the year, a 409 foot no doubter to right center. Arizona now led,5-2 first base umpire then ejected Arizona’s manager, Torey Lovullo for arguing a check swing call, and then a walk to Díaz and a Nick Allen single, his third of the night, signaled the end of Kelly’s up to now successful start. Miguel Castro took over for him. He retired Ruíz , walked Noda, and ended the threat by getting Rooker to fly out to right.

The A’s had one more chance. Lefty Andrew Chafin came in to pitch the ninth. Aldemys Díaz pinch hit for Bleday and flew out to center. Langelieres flew out to left. Laureano skied out to right, and Chafin had earned his sixth save.

The D’backs will stick around the Coliseum for a couple of more days before both teams take to the road, Oakland departing for Houston, and Arizona decamping to Pittsburgh. Tomorrow’s, Tuesday’s, match up will feature Kyle Muller (1-3, 7.34)for the home team and Tommy Henry(1-1,4.43) for the visitors.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: 100s of jobs to be lost in Oakland as A’s head to Vegas; Legislature to vote on Tropicana site this week

Las Vegas ballpark at night the home of the Las Vegas Aviators the Oakland A’s minor league triple A club. The A’s could end up sharing the Ballpark with the Aviators at the end of the 2023 season leaving the Oakland Coliseum (Las Vegas Ballpark photo)

On That’s Amaury’s podcast:

#1 Amaury, One of the biggest concerns in the Oakland A’s move to Las Vegas is the hundreds of jobs that will be lost, in talking with the other broadcasters, writers, radio and TV production staff, official scorers, MLB clock staff, front office staff, fans, concession staff, custodians, engineers, grounds crew, security, and many we haven’t named here that’s a lot of people out of work in bad economy.

#2 Bally’s Corp who struck a deal with the A’s to begin construction at the Tropicana site this summer this is all contingent on an agreement that needs to be reached this week in the Nevada Legislature that would fund part of the park for $395 million.

#3 The Wild Wild West location was looking promising that had 49 acres but the A’s didn’t want to pay the back taxes at that location and the cost was higher to build and move there to the tune of $500 million the Tropicana location looks like the sure thing and it was a place that the A’s were considering when moving to Vegas in the beginning.

#4 With the Tropicana location it’s just nine acres almost no room for the office space, the retail space, the condos that A’s owner John Fisher was consider putting in at Howard Terminal. With nine acres sounds like it’s just enough room for the ballpark only.

#5 Some critics are comparing this A’s season to last season of former defunct clubs like the Washington Senators who moved to Texas, the St Louis Browns who moved to Baltimore, Boston Braves who moved to Atlanta, who saw small crowds during the regular season and the Senators in their last game in1971 had fans riot in their last home game grabbing anything that wasn’t nailed down.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play announcer 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

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: Diamondbacks come calling at the Coliseum as A’s open three game series Monday night

The Texas Rangers made a laugher out of game 4 of the four game series at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun May 14, 2023 (@Rangers photo)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 Barbara, in a contest that saw the Oakland A’s (9-32) tie the score up against the Texas Rangers (24-15) in the bottom of the seventh inning 3-3 on a Shea Langeliers home run to left center it would be the last time in the game that the A’s had a shot at taking game 4 of this four game set from the Rangers.

#2 The Rangers opened up on the A’s in the top of the eighth inning scoring eight times when Jonah Heim singled to center scoring Adolis Garcia on a error to break the 3-3 deadlock going up 4-3.

#3 Leody Taveras hit into fielder choice that allowed Heim to score making 5-3 and the Rangers touched up A’s relief pitching.

#4 The Rangers would add four more runs which included Garcia who got up again belting a grand slam homer and put the Rangers up by eight runs 11-3 for their 24th win of the season and the Rangers lead the A’s in the AL West standings by 16 games.

#5 The A’s open up a new series on Monday night against the Arizona Diamondbacks. The D-Backs are going Merrill Kelly (3-3 ERA 3.18) as starter, the A’s will be going with Drew Rucinski (0-3 ERA 8.16) for a 6:40 pm PT first pitch at the Oakland Coliseum.

Join Barbara Mason for the Oakland A’s podcasts Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

A’s dominated at home by Rangers 11-3

Photo courtesy of AP Photo/Jeff Chiu. Esteury Ruiz steals second base as Marcus Semien catches the ball.

By Titus Wilkinson (@TitusWisme)

OAKLAND- Mother’s day did not got in favor of Oakland against the Rangers as they fell by a final of 11-3.

JP Sears got the start against Andrew Heaney with Sears sporting a 0-3 record and a 5.27 era and Heaney having a 2-3 record and a 4.71 era.

The game got off to a rough start for Sears as Robbie Grossman got the Rangers on the board in the first inning with a two run homer on a fly ball to left field.

Oakland did find a response in the bottom of the second inning as Shea Langeliers singled on a ground ball that brought home Ramon Laureano.

In the third inning Adolis Garcia singled on a line drive to left field bringing home Marcus Semien bringing there lead back to two runs at 3-1.

Sears lasted until the sixth inning where he was replaced by Garret Acton who was making his major league debut. Sears finished the game with a stat line of 5.1IP, five hits allowed, two earned runs and six K’s.

Heaney was relieved after the sixth inning as Jonathan Hernández came in to replace him. Heaney finished with a stat line of six innings pitched, four hits allowed, one earned run, and nine K’s.

Hernández’s did not pitch great in the seventh inning as Langeliers homered on a fly ball to left center field tying the game at three.

Things were looking up for the A’s after tying the game up but the eight inning did not go well for the green and white.

It started with Jonah Heim singling on a live drive to center field bringing home Adolis Garcia. Then Leody Taveras grounded into a forceout that also sent Heim home as well.

With two outs already though it looked like the A’s could escape with only minimal damage with the score being 5-3. Sam Moll struggled to get that final out and cost the A’s another two runs bringing on Zach Neal to the mound.

Neal did not fair much better as Adolis Garcia hit a grand slam to left center field bringing the total runs in one inning to eight. That ended up being the rest of the damage but at that point the score was 11-3.

That scored ended up being the final as Hernández took home the win and Austin Pruitt took the loss.

The A’s next game will be tomorrow against the Diamondbacks at home and will start at 6:40 p.m.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Countdown to $395 M less than 30 days for A’s new Vegas ballpark

The front of the Tropicana Casino and Hotel entrance in Las Vegas site of the proposed 9 acre new ballpark location of the A’s set to open in 2027 (photo from WJAR 10 Providence)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 The Oakland A’s proposed new ballpark site in Las Vegas at the Tropicana site is facing opposition by casino owners and slowing traffic on the strip.

#2 Amaury, wanted to get your thoughts on the long shot possibility of A’s owner John Fisher selling the team to Bally’s who owns the Tropicana property and Bally’s would run the team from that point.

#3 If the tax credit fails or time runs out for the $396 million that the A’s are seeking for the Tropicana project and it’s not likely that Bally’s would put in their own money for the project unless they have ownership of the team.

#4 State of Nevada residents have sounded off that they don’t want to spend anymore public money on state funded arenas or stadiums. The Tropicana site is a nine acre site that has a reduced price tag from the Wild Wild West location that was $500 million to $395 million but that’s still not sitting well with the local tax payers.

#5 It’s been said with the expiration of last Friday’s deadline to extend the Howard Terminal plan that ship sailed and if the $395 million in tax credits fails if MLB or someone comes up with the $395 million the A’s may not have end up in a homeless situation.

Join Amaury Pi Gonzalez for all the play by play of Oakland A’s baseball on the A’s Spanish radio network at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

MLB podcast with Charlie O: Rookie one of the few bright spots for A’s; Twins Kepler out with hamstring; plus more

Oakland Athletics’ Brent Rooker celebrates after hitting the game-winning, three-run home run against the Texas Rangers during the 10th inning at Oakland Coliseum on Fri May 11, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the MLB podcast with Charlie O:

#1 The Oakland A’s Brent Rooker hitting .319, 19 runs, 36 hits, and 11 home runs and won the AL Player of the Week a couple weeks back and is one of the very few bright spots for the 2023 A’s who are on a pace to possibly catch the 1962 New York Mets in terms of wins and loses.

#2 The Port of Oakland announced that last Friday was the last day for the A’s to extend their attempt to make Howard Terminal a reality. There were members of the public speaking against the project and those for it but the odds are dimming for any chance that the A’s will stay in Oakland or would you say that ship sailed already.

#3 The Minnesota Twins outfielder Max Kepler has entered the IL for the second time in 2023 this time with a left hamstring strain. Kepler 30, was running up the first base line when he pulled up on Thursday against the San Diego Padres.

#4 Charlie, this has not been the season for New York Mets pitcher Max Scherzer who had earlier been suspended for ten days for using a sticky substance then suffering from neck spasms. Scherzer missed a turn because of the spasms Tuesday against Cincinnati.

#5 The Tampa Bay Rays Drew Rasmussen is yet one in several Ray players who have gone on the IL. Rasmussen is one of the most recent for a flexor strain the injury will put Rasmussen on he IL for two months. Rasmussen is hoping to avoid Tommy John surgery.

Join Charlie O for the MLB podcast Sundays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Rangers Gray tosses 5-0 five hit shutout against A’s

Texas Rangers pitcher Jon Gray works against the Oakland Athletics during the fifth inning  at the Oakland Coliseum on Sat May 13, 2023 (AP News photo)

Texas (24-15). 101 100 002. 5. 9. 1

Oakland (9-32) 000 000 000. 0. 5. 0

Time: 2:18

Attendance: 8,230

Saturday, May 13, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–On this date in 1899, the Cleveland Spiders lost to the Pittsburgh Pirates, 6-0, in front of a gathering of 1,800 spectators in Pittsburgh. It was the Spiders’ 10th consecutive loss and left them at 3-19 for the season.

On this date in 1962, lost to the MIlwaukee Braves, 3-2, and fell to 7-17. The paid attendance in Milwaukee was 13,447.

On this date in 2023. the Oakland Athletics were shut out 5-0 by the Texas Rangers. The Coliseum accommodated 8,230 attendees.

It was home run weather, 74º to be exact, at the Coliseum when James Kaprielian (0-2,12.94) threw his first pitch, at 1:09 on a sunny afternoon, to Marcus Semien, who quickly supplied the visiting Rangers with a Rickey Run. Not a lead off home run, but the other type.

He singled and then stole second and third, scoring on another single, this one by Nathaniel Lowe. Karprielian then induced an around the horn double play from Adolis García, but the A’s were behind, 1-0, before they took their first at bat. Small ball added another tally to the Texas total. There was no curse attached to Josh Smith’s lead off double. Number nine hitter Sandy León bunted him over to third, and he scored on Semien’s sac fly to center. 2-0, Texas.

But the home runs presaged by the weather did come. Nathaniel Lowe parked a 90.8 mph Kaprielien four seamer 380 feet from the plate to lead off the fourth, the Rangers’ first baseman’s fifth homer of the year, to add to Texas’s two run lead.

It’s not saying much to call this afternoon’s performance Kaprielian’s best of the season, but he did do a credible job on the mound today. He lasted seven frames, the most he has gone all year, and gave up three runs, all earned, on six hits (one out of the park), a walk, and a hit batter. He threw 104 pitches, 69 of which qualified as strikes. Zach Neal relieved him to pitch a perfect eighth. His ninth wasn’t so perfect.

With one down, he surrendered a single to Jung and then paid the price of a warm day in the Coliseum: a two run hoer to left by Durán. It’s surprising that that was only the game’s second round tripper. It was Durán’s fifth of the year, and it put Texas ahead, 5-0.

Jon Gray, the 31 year old right hander who started for the Rangers is a veteran who entered the day with a career record of 62-57, 4.48 (2-1, 3.82 for ’23). His lifetime ERA probably was inflated considerably by his stint in Colorado, where he pitched long enough to log 849 strike outs.

His numbers were helped a bit by his previ0us start, his best of the year, when he held the Mariners to a single run, earned, over seven innings in Seattle last Monday. He dominated the Athletics today. For 6-2/3 innings the Oakland offense consisted of a walk to Esteury Ruíz.

Then Peterson broke up the no hitter with a single to right. Laureano followed with a double to the same field, but Peterson was thrown out at home, 9–4-2, on a play whose call was disputed by Oakland but confirmed by New York.

Before leaving the game in favor of John King, who pitched the bottom of the ninth, Gray went eight full innings and gave up three hits and two walks. He threw 95 pitches, 66 for strikes in blanking the A’s, earning the win and improving his record to 3-1, 3.15.

The top of the second was a beautiful inning for A’s fans to watch. Josh Jung, who had led off with a single was erased by a strike ‘em out, throw ‘em out double play, and Jace Peterson did a perfect imitation of Josh Donaldson’s ironic over the rail catch of a foul fly to third

The A’s made a last minute attempt to come back, but last night’s hero, Brent Rooker, called in as a pinch hitter with two on and one down in the bottom of the ninth, hit into an around the horn twin killing.

The fourth and final game of this series will be played tomorrow, Sunday – Mothers’ Day for all you. fans of Dallas Braden – at 1:07. Oakland’s JP Sears (0-3, 5.54) will face fellow southpaw Andrew Heany (2-3, 5.25)

A’s four run 10th inning rally puts away Rangers 9-7 at Coliseum

Oakland Athletics’ Brent Rooker is doused with iced water by teammates after hitting the game-winning, three-run home run against the Texas Rangers during the 10th inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Fri May 12, 2023 (AP News photo)

Texas (23-15). 111 111 000 2 – 7 12. 0

Oakland (9-31). 110 110 010 4 – 9. 14. 1. 10 innings

Time: 3:22

Attendance: 6,575

Friday, May 12, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–On this date in 1899, the Cleveland Spiders lost to the St. Louis Perfectos, 5-4, dropping Cleveland’s record to 3-18. The attendance was 200.

On this date in 1962, the New York Mets swept the MIlwaukee Braves in a double header, 3-2 and 8-7, boosting their record 7-17 and defeating Warren Spahn in the opener, The twin bill drew 19,748 fans to the Polo Grounds.

On this date in 2023, the Oakland Athletics defeated the Texas Rangers. in a thrilling, come from behind surprise defeat of the Texas Rangers, 9-7.

Shintaro Fujinami (1-4, 12.17) was the winning pitcher, and Brock Burke (2-1, 3,71) was the loser. The announced paid attendance was 6,575. Appropriately, enough Fujinami’s first MLB win came on Asian -American, Pacific Islanders night.

Some pitchers start running into trouble on their second time through the batting order. Ken Waldichuk, who started for the A’s has a tendency to find trouble in the second inning. Although he had allowed only one first inning tally before tonight’s outing. he’d been touched for ten in the second frame of his six previous starts.

He was true to form tonight. He threw a shutout first inning but was scored upon in once in each of the subsequent four frames. He threw a total of five innings, allowing four runs, tree of them earned, on seven; hits and five walks. He struck out an equal number of batters. He threw 93 pitches, 56 for strikes.

Martín Pérez was the starter for Texas. He hadn’t looked good in his last start, allowing seven earned runs in 3-1/3 innings last Sunday in Anaheim. Still, his 4-1,3.86 record coming into today looked positively brilliant when seen in the light of Waldichuk’s 1-2, 7.25. Like Waldichuk, he lasted five innings and gave up four runs. All. of his were earned. Three of the eight hits off him were hoers. He walked two and struck out three. 54 of his 88 deliveries were strikes.

Esteury Ruíz got things started auspiciously for the home team. He took the first pitch Pérez threw, an 89.6 mph sinker 412 feet deep before it came to rest beyond the left center field fence. It was the first home run of Ruíz’s career. An out later, Brent Rooker, another hope for the A’s future, wherever that may be, doubled to right. But the A’s couldn’t pad their lead.

Oakland soon paid the price of their failure to capitalize on their opportunities. edging off in the second, Josh Jung hit a grounder to Kevin Smith at third on the first pitch he saw. Smith made a wild throw to first, and Jung made it to third. Ezeqiel Durán’s two bagger drove him in, tying the score with an unearned run.

Oakland got that back in the bottom of the inning by playing classic little ball. Langeliers led off with a single. Smith followed him with a walk. With weak hitting Nick Allen at the plate, a sacrifice seemed in order. Allen laid down a nifty bunt towards the mound and raced off to first.

Umpire Shane Livensparger called him out, but the A’s protested the call. The review umps in New York overturned the decision. Langeiers then came in when Ruíz forced Allen out at second. (He probably would have scored even if Oakland hadn’t won the appeal; the bunt was pivotal, and the hustle encouraging).

Of course Oakland coughed up the lead in the top of the third.. Bubba Thompson walked and stole second, followed by a walk to Marcus Semien. Robbie Grossman doubled to left, driving in Thompson, bit Semien got greedy, and the A’s cut him down at home, 7-5-2, Rooker to Smith to Carlos Pérez. Jung’s 6-4-3 double play kept the score knotted at tw0. A sac fly by Leody Taveras in the fourth unknotted it.

Kevin Smith promptly retied it with a 43 foot clout into the left center field seats, his third dinger of ’23 that led off the home fourth. Two outs later, Laureano tripled to the right field wall but died on third when Rooker’s blast to center was caught on the warning track.

You knew that wouldn’t last long, and it didn’t. Lowe got. a one out double in the top of the fifth and scored on singles by Jung and Heim.

The see-saw battle went on into the night. Carlos Pérez took an 89.5 mph cut fast ball deep to left, 406 feet deep, and the game was tied at four.

Spence Patton took over for Wladichuk in the sixth. He got his first two men out, but Laureano was unsuccessful in his leap at the right field fence trying to bring down Grossman’s fly that landed in the Budweiser seats, and Grossman circled the bases as Patton left the field. Richard Lovelady replaced him and caught Lowe looking at a third strike.

Josh Sborz replaced Pérez for the home sixth and held on to Texas’s 5-4. lead.

Austin Pruitt pitched a 1-2-3 visitors’ seventh.

Cole Ragans was on the hill to face the Athletics in the bottom of the frame. The lefty put them down in order.

Pruitt returned to the mound in the eighth. Huff and Taveras greeted him with singles. They advanced. to third and second, respectively, on a wild pitch to Bubba Thompson, who grounded out to short as the runners. held their bases. Sam Moll relieved Pruitt and granted an intentional walk to Semien, loading the bases for Robbie Grossman, who had gone two for four with a double and a home run.

He also had two strike outs. When Moll was through with him, Grossman had three strike outs. A weak grounder to the mound by Lowe ended the inning, and the A’s still were in the running, although trailing 5-4.

The A’s utilized their speed in the eighth. Jace Peterson, who had hit for Smith in the sixth. Manager Bruce Bochy yanked Ragans and replaced him with Jonathan Hernández. And then Ruíz came through a single center that brought Peterson home with the tying tally. But a pinch hitter Ryan Noda grounded out Semien at second, and we went into the ninth tied again. This time, at 5-5.

Zach Jackson tried to preserve the tie for Oakland in the ninth. He was successful, three up, three down, two by Ks.

Hernández remained on duty. The first batter he faced was Carlos Pérez, 1-4 with a homer. He walked on four pitches. Tony Kemp hit for Díaz. He dropped a sacrifice bunt down the first base line to put Pérez in scoring position. Exit Hernández. Enter Brock Burke. He issued an intentional pass to Langeliers, setting up a possible double play or a force at third with Peterson at the late. Peterson fanned for the second out, bringing up Allen. He worked a full count before flying out to center.

Josh Smith pinch hit for Hugg with Durán on second as the zombie runner in the top of the 10th. Smith walked. Taveras sacrificed them each up a notch, and Adolis García came up to hit for Thompson. The count went full. García lined a single to left, scoring Durán, putting runners on the corners, and, or course, giving Texas a 6-5 lead.

Semien dropped a single to right that brought in Smith and moved García to second. That brought Fujinami to the mound. He struck Grossman out looking and went to a full count on Lowe before walking him, clogging the base paths. Then Jung flew out to right, and the A’s had one more chance to crawl. back into the game.

Allen was he zombie runner in the A’s tenth. He immediately went to third on a passed ball and almost immediately after that scored on Ruíz’s single to right.JJ Bleday, who had hit for Laureano in the eighth, hit a single to center that sent Ruíz to third. Everyone scored on Rooker’s walk off blast 408 foot to left center. It came on a 3-2 change up that changed the game..

Tomorrow, Saturday, the teams will play the third of this four game. series. The A’s will send JJP Sears (0-3, 5.54) to the mound. Jon Gray (2-1, 3,82) is scheduled to start for the Rangers.

Oakland A’s podcast with Daniel Dullum: Texas’Eovaldi just kept mowing A’s down by the dozen; Howard Terminal proposal expires today

Texas Rangers second baseman Marcus Semien, right, tags out Oakland Athletics’ Shea Langeliers on a steal attempt during the second inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Thu May 11, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Daniel Dullum:

#1 Daniel the Oakland A’s just couldn’t figure out Texas Rangers starter Nathan Eovaldi who sat down A’s hitters with 12 strikeouts.

#2 Eovaldi is putting up some Cy Young numbers he now has a scoreless streak at 28 2/3 innings pitched improving to 5-2 ERA 2.70.

#3 Former Oakland A’s infielder Marcus Semien haunted his old club slugging a home run his seventh of the season and improving his average to .289.

#4 Daniel, Thursday night’s crowd was Oakland second smallest crowd of the season with only 2,949 in attendance. The news that the A’s will be locating at the Tropicana hotel and casino site in Las Vegas has turned off a few more fans and some fans even had a whole section to themselves on Thursday night.

#5 Daniel, the Port Commission hearing regarding the Oakland A’s Howard Terminal project and that proposal has expired today. During the hearing members of the public some expressed objections to building at the port mainly because of loses of port jobs and an A’s land grab and those in favor say that the idea of building there would mean jobs and the A’s would profit there and would not impact jobs at the port.

#6 The Texas Rangers (23-14) who at the top of the AL West and led by manager Bruce Bochy will match up against the A’s just underway at the Oakland Coliseum. Starting pitcher for Texas Martin Perez (4-1 ERA 3.66) and for the A’s left hander Ken Waldichuk (4-1 ERA 4.66)

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