That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: A’s unlikely to win AL West, but have a good shot at the AL Wild Card

Photo credit: @Athletics

Amaury does his News and Commentary podcast with Marko Ukalovic, Jeremy Harness, and Joey Friedman from Scotts Seafood Restaurant in downtown San Jose.

It seems like 20 years ago when Oakland A’s pitcher Kendall Graveman was on the A’s roster at the beginning of the 2018 season. That was five an half months ago and the A’s saw pitcher Sean Manaea throw a no-hitter, but later to be put on the DL for Tommy John surgery, which ultimately ended his season and also his season for 2019.

Also, A’s pitcher Jharel Cotton also is having Tommy John. The A’s are 90-60 as of Monday night and they look like they’re going to make it to the playoffs. The last three years, the A’s finished in the cellar. They look like they caught lightening in a bottle. Matt Chapman and Matt Olson are the real thing and Marcus Semien is having a good year. It’s Semien’s bat that has him in the big leagues, not his glove.

Amaury has much more on the A’s drive to the playoffs at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: A’s vs. Brewers…The “Oh No” World Series for FOX Sports

Photo credit: youtube.com

By: Amaury Pi-Gonzalez

There are two weeks left in the 2018 regular season. There are so many scenarios going into the postseason. For the networks, there are two dream World Series: 1) The Yankees and Dodgers, two of the most famous franchises with all the money in the world. They represent a very attractive scenario. Also, it would be a coast-to-coast affair. 2) The Boston Red Sox and Chicago Cubs is another dandy.

Of course, the Houston Astros trying to win back-to-back World Series would make for another great story. It doesn’t matter who they will play. They are a team with a great rotation and some of the greatest players in baseball: José Altuve, Carlos Correa, George Springer, this year’s Astros Most Valuable Player, and Alex Bregman. Not to mention, a rotation like no other with Verlander-Cole-Keuchek-Morton along with a good bullpen.

The Cleveland Indians could also be there and they have not won a World Series since 1948. Although the Indians’ most recent appearance in the World Series was in a seven-game loss to the Florida Marlins in 1997.

As thrilled as the A’s fans would be to see their team again in the October Classic for the first time since 1990 when they were swept by Lou Piniella’s Cincinnati Reds, or the Milwaukee Brewers fans whose team last made it to the World Series in 1982 to see their Harvey Wallbangers go down it in seven games to the St. Louis Cardinals, this would be a nightmare for Fox Sports, the official network for the World Series.

The baseball Gods are unpredictable, At the end this year it could be the A’s (with a 420,000 population) against the Brewers (with a 595,000 population). Obviously, these two teams will not bring the desired audience across the country that FOX Sports expects for a World Series like the previous match-ups I’ve mentioned. But maybe the country needs to know about unfamiliar names like: Laureano, Chapman, Olson, Piscotty, Treinen, Yelich,Aguilar, Harden and Shaw. World Series audiences are not all hardcore baseball fans. A big chunk of the audience are casual fans. However, if the Brewers met the A’s, there will be great curiosity. But in today’s television with 200 different channels, who knows who would tune in?

Yes, an A’s vs. Brewers World Series would be something. The Brewers look like a good bet for a wild card spot and the A’s can even still win the AL West, although it is unlikely, but they have one of the two wild card spots. I am not saying an A’s vs. Brewers October Classic is going to happen, but it could happen. For starters, who ever thought the A’s were going to win 90 or more games this season and finish second to the Astros? If you know of anybody, please let me know.

Notes: The Yankees have achieved one streak each of three, four, and five championships in a row, and the A’s have achieved a streak of three in a row. Back-to-back championships have been achieved an additional 10 times.

The Yanks were the last team to win back-to-back World Series from 1998-2000 when they won it in three consecutive years. If the Astros win this 2018 World Series, it will be the first time anybody has won it back-to-back in 18 years.

Listen to the A’s games in Spanish on KIQI 1010AM/990AM Bay Area, Sacramento and Stockton.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Pitchers Are Bigger, Stronger and on the DL More Than Ever

Photo credit: @NBCSAthletics

By: Amaury Pi-González

If the A’s advance to the postseason, they will not be able to depend with their No. 1  starter, Sean Manaea. He will have arthroscopic surgery to repair a left shoulder impingement on September 19. A’s manager Bob Melvin said that Manaea will be sidelined through 2019.

Just a few years ago when I asked Melvin in Spring Training about Manaea, he told me wonders about the then-rookie pitcher. Jharel Cotton missed this 2018 season with Tommy John surgery as well as the A’s top pitching prospect A.J Puk. Pitchers are having all kinds of surgeries–primarily Tommy John–to the point where it’s very common. No team is immune to injuries. Young pitchers mostly throw 95 mph and they are bigger and stronger than ever. Conditioning is the best it has ever been. Nutrition is much more advanced than ever. Plus we now know more about the human body, so people are living longer than ever. Yet, few teams can escape these injuries to their pitching staffs.

One of my favorite pitchers was the Phillies’ Robin Roberts, who would throw 300 or more innings each season, just like Nolan Ryan or Jaime Moyer. Moreover, Vida Blue pitched for 17 years, and in eight of those years, he hurled between 224 to 312 innings per season. Not to mention, Moyer pitched for 25 seasons, and in 10 of those seasons, he easily went over 200 innings.

Juan Marichal completed 244 career games, going the distance. Most recently, Pedro Martínez pitched for 2,827 inning in 18 seasons. Jim Palmer pitched a total of 3,948 innings over 19 years with the Orioles, and never gave up a grand slam. Bartolo Colón has pitched for 3,459 2/3 innings and counting in his 21-plus seasons, and he has easily pitched over 200 innings per season. None of these guys were near 6’4″ and 235 lbs.

Many established pitchers as well as rookies in the MLB would travel to Cuba, Puerto Rico, México, Venezuela and vice versa to pitch in the Winter Leagues. They reported to Spring Training the following year and continued their long careers–most of them free of surgeries. There was always tendinitis, tired arms and ailments like that, but the names of the surgeons were not as famously known back then. Pitchers used to run a lot and did not lift weights. Teams did not have a state of the art gym at each park like they have today with all types of supplements and vitamins along with qualified physiotherapists. Tommy John surgery has a high success rate, but around 20 percent of pitchers never make it back.

It is a never ending debate. Should they limit pitchers to 100 pitches per game? Are they training the wrong way? And there are many other questions without definite answers.

This is one of my favorite quotes. It is from Liván Hernández, who pitched for 17 years and in many seasons threw over 200 innings, “A mi no me preocupa la cantidad de lanzamiento que yo hago, lo que quiero es ganar el juego para mi equipo, si ellos quieren contar mis lanzamientos, está bien, en Cuba solo Dios sabe cuantos lanzamientos yo hacía por salida.”

Translation: “I am not worried how many pitches I throw, what I want is to win the game for my team, if they want to count the pitches I make, that is fine, in Cuba only God knew how many pitches I made every time I started a game.”

Notes: Tommy John pitched for 26 years from 1963 to 1989, winning 288 games while losing 231. He pitched for the Indians, White Sox, Dodgers, Yankees, California Angels, A’s and Yankees. Despite not being in the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y., his name is mentioned much more often than all the combined pitchers that are in the HOF.

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: Was umpire being sexist against Serena at U.S. Open?; Did Cleveland know Donaldson was damaged goods before obtaining him?; plus more

Photo credit: @CBSNews

On That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary:

#1 Do you believe if Serena Williams during the U.S. Open was thrown off her game because of getting hit with an illegal coaching call, abusing a racket, and verbally abusing an umpire? Was the umpire being sexist with his calls against Serena?

#2 Williams was hit with a $17,000 fine ($10,000 for verbal abuse, $4,000 for coaches violation, and $3,000 for racket abuse). Should umpire Carlos Ramos have given warnings before installing each violation against Serena?

#3 Josh Donaldson’s agent said that he was that he was not offered a multi-year deal by the Toronto Blue Jays before being dealt to Cleveland. Also, Donaldson was reportedly damaged goods before coming to Cleveland.

#4 First in the NL East, the Atlanta Braves have some hitters at top of of their lineup with Ronald Acuna Jr .293, Freddie Freeman .306 and Nick Markakis .309. The Braves are playing in S.F. this week in their bid to win the NL East.

#5 Amaury talks about whether there was too much pressure and hype on 49ers quarterback Jimmy Garopplolo to win the opener in Minnesota and continue his five-game win streak.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the Oakland A’s Spanish radio talent; is the MLB Hispanic Heritage Museum Hall of Fame vice president, and does News and Commentary each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Old-School Al

Photo credit: Oakland A’s Spanish radio KIQI 1010; Amaury Pi-Gonzalez (pictured) was close friends with the late Al Dougherty, a salesman for KBRG 105.3 FM.

By: Amaury Pi-Gonzalez

OAKLAND–Al Dougherty passed on Friday September 7, 2018 in San Rafael, Calif. I knew Al for around 40 years. We met when he was top sales person at the old KBRG 105.3 FM, a Spanish radio station in San Francisco with main offices and studios at the Merchandise Mart building on Market Street. A good man with a sense of decorum and good work ethics from whom I learned a lot about the radio business, way before social media. Al was really old-school. He was not into social media, just email. Nothing new, most people over 70 do not care much about social media.

Al knew the inner workings of radio, from sales management to programming. He loved the game of baseball and we clicked right away the first time. I met him late in the 1970’s. He helped put together the first scheduled broadcast of A’s games on Spanish radio.

Al was a sales person in the whole sense of old-school. At the station or when he went on a sales call, he will always be immaculately dressed. When he wrote a letter to a potential sponsor (in those days pitching sponsors), he corresponded with the teams via letters and in-person visits. The draft letters he wrote, he expected to be typed correctly by the secretary and he would be very strict about accuracy–no mistakes.

Al was a wordsmith. One time he was sending a sales proposal to a sponsor and he noticed that the letter did not leave on the same day it was written, he was very upset. He detested inefficiency, and at the office, he ran a tight ship.

When he sold the first schedule games of baseball as I was doing the play-by-play, he told me I should learn the commercial log and I did. It was an experience, but soon I found out how important that was, since when you sell spots you have to show the sponsors when and at what time they ran on the air.

Everything Al did had a purpose and a plan. He was very anal when it came to his business. Focused would be an understatement.

We went on sales calls and learned a lot from him. In those days it was paramount that you were always well-dressed to meet the client have a cohesive sales plan and explain to the potential sponsor about what they were getting in the market they were in. He also worked for the San Francisco Giants at Candlestick Park–in charge of Diamond Vision. Len Shapiro remembers very well that the Oakland Seals went on the air because of Al’s efforts. He worked at various Bay Area radio stations. He was a real baseball fan, always talking trivia with me, as well as a great movies aficionado.

During his last few years on this earth, I would often travel to his place in San Rafael, go out to lunch, where he always talking about business and baseball. He loved corned beef and cabbage. After all, he was an Irishman, and when I went to see him, my wife Gail would cook him corned beef and cabbage for me to take home. That was his favorite spread. He was a happy man, and told me that would make a few meals out of that and make sure I thank Gail for her kindness.

I wish I would have spent more time with Al towards the end of his life. He was like an older brother and always gave me the best advice money could not buy.

Al was a conservative in every sense of the word. He was very independent and didn’t like people that felt entitled. He always had a sense of responsibility for his actions, not blaming somebody else, but he would take full responsibility, and if he made a mistake, he would tell you. He had a great sense of humor. We would joke at many things in life, because ‘after all’ life is funny in many ways, things that happen day-to-day, especially in the radio business. You did not need a script. They are just funny sometimes.

I can go on and on about the many years I knew Al. We shared some very good moments at ballgames, playoffs, World Series and also shared some disappointment when a broadcast deal could not be reached. His favorite baseball play-by-play announcer was Walter Lanier Barber, better known as “Red Barber,” who called games for the Cincinnati Reds, Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Yankees. Interesting because Al was born in New York and was a N.Y. Giants fan since he was a young man.

I have met his two sons, and as soon as I got the email from Brian, I didn’t even had to open that email. I knew instinctively that Al had left us.

A good man has left us and my sincere condolences go to his immediate family.

Rest in peace, my friend.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Exclusive Interview With WFAN’s Suzyn Waldman

Photo credit: @NYDNSports

By: Amaury Pi-Gonzalez

The New York Yankees paid their recent visit to the Oakland Athletics at the Coliseum. Prior to the last game of the three-game series, I spoke with WFAN’s Suzyn Waldman, who handles commentary on all Yankee games with play-by-play man John Sterling.

Suzyn has been broadcasting sports for 32 years. This interview was conducted inside her broadcast booth at the Coliseum a good three hours prior to the game that night.

Q: Suzyn, how did you got started in sports broadcasting after 30 years of doing this?

A: Oh boy, well when I started I was in theater before I did this and musical theater it was changing and the only other thing I knew was sports, because I had my own season-tickets at baseball games with my grandfather when I was three and I was a sports person, but it was always my avocation, because little girls didn’t do that, and I was on Broadway and I sang and dance did all that and I go to ballgames, and…a friend of mine who used to be the announcer for the Boston Red Sox, Ken Coleman–we were very very close friends he said, “you know I have a friend and this next year they are starting this thing in New York it’s going to be called WFAN…and I told him he’s going to meet you, because you know more about sports than anybody I know and you’re female and they’re going to need a woman so I made a tape.

I didn’t know what I was doing and I was hired to do updates, I was actually the first voice on WFAN in 1987 so that’s the beginning, but then I realized that nobody wanted me there because I was female, so then it became something else and it became don’t you dare to talk to me like that, and don’t you tell me I don’t know because I am female…and so that’s how that started with people saying “no.”

Q: How do you feel being a pioneer? Actually there still not that many women in sports broadcasting in baseball like, say Jessica Mendoza, anymore.

A: Well I wasn’t trying to be a pioneer, I was just trying to make a living and I didn’t like being told I didn’t know anything…to tell you the truth I expected there to be a lot more women, it is just me in the broadcast booth, I know Jessica does ESPN, but it is only one game a week … it is just me and I am waiting for someone else to do this I know there are women down in the minor leagues trying to to this to get a chance or whether or not they give up, I think there is no failures. It’s just people that give up too soon.

Q: Is this more fun that playing Dulcinea in Man of LaMancha?

A: Nothing is more fun that being Dulcinea in Man of La Mancha. You know I did get over theater, although I miss it everyday, but I am still on stage. This a different stage, but I’m still performing. I don’t sing and dance anymore and I don’t get applause … Yeah, I miss theater everyday … but this is important and this is where I should be”

Q: Your best message for a young female that aspires to be in sports broadcasting like you maybe in baseball.

A: Think of what you can do that’s difference from everybody else go and look in the mirror and say to yourself, “I have a different way of looking at this, and I am going to do this, don’t let anybody stop you, because people are going to say no, you do commercials on television, you’ll get 200 no, before you get a commercial, but don’t let people tell you ‘no.'” You will know … and don’t want to be me, don’t want to be Jessica, just be you, because if you take my job is just one, but if it’s you, then there are two of us. Don’t let anybody stop you.

It was truly a pleasure to interview Suzyn for the first time, despite the fact we’ve known each other for decades during baseball games at many parks across the country.

Amaury Pi-González is the Spanish voice of the A’s and since 2016, he’s in the Advisory Board of the American Sportscasters Association in New York City.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Television, Patio Areas and Draft Kings

Photo credit: wbur.org

By: Amaury Pi-Gonzalez

There is little doubt that big money paid by television is responsible for some of the changes in major league baseball. A few years ago Time Warner (now Charter Spectrum) in Southern California paid the Los Angeles Dodgers $8.35 billion to carry their games for the next 20 years.

There are other big deals in other media markets like in 2012 when the Guggenheim Baseball Management Group bought the Dodgers for $2.15 billion for a record sale for a franchise. MLB Network pays a fortune for the rights to all games every day and night. I think they do a great job for all baseball aficionados who like to follow all the teams, not just their home teams.

I believe many of these moves and the big money by TV is driving the changes on today’s game. Earlier this season, YouTube and MLB announced their partnership in an attempt to offer fans other ways to watch baseball.

Games are also now broadcast live on Facebook. Someday, the bases will be electronic, which would mean no need for umpires, and the bases will respond to a “safe”or “out “call in this format: If the base lights up red, the runner was out; and if it lights up green, that runner is safe. It’s that simple.

Basically, traffic lights would be at each base, and the poles in left and right field will  also be the same, as there will be no umpires. This way, the game will go even faster, as there will be no need for replays. And, of course, the accuracy will be 100 percent. Keep in mind computers do not make mistakes.

I get it, they want to appeal to the younger audience and there is nothing wrong with that, but baseball used to be a game of strategy like chess. Managers’ arguments with umpires were usually fun and isn’t that what we want–fun for all? Today, there is little strategy, as it is all about the sabermetrics, launch angles, home run distances and strike outs. Few players try to hit the ball to the opposite side of the infield, where there is nobody standing with a glove in hand, and everybody wants to hit the ball in the air. It is players hitting .220 with 25 to 40 home runs every year. You can steal 30 bases during a full season and easily lead your league. Rickey Henderson doesn’t like that. You might see a “run and hit” or “hit and run” once every full moon. The bunt is extinct, which is fine with me because they do not even teach it, so why expect the players to execute it?

Today, we also have what they call the “millennial areas” in baseball parks around the country. These areas have the purpose of bringing more fans into the stadiums, as a patio area sets the scene for millennials to socialize, eat, drink and watch the game.

All businesses needs costumers. If your park is half empty, you just do not give tickets for free, just like a restaurant doesn’t give free food to people if it’s empty. MLB is about business first and the game second. It is also hilarious how the MLB has banned Pete Rose from the Hall of Fame due to gambling, yet they advertise Draft Kings, a popular destination for daily fantasy baseball players of all skill levels. They advertise Draft Kings to fans with the idea they can win millions of dollars. So they are encouraging young and old fans alike to bet on baseball and make money. I know the fans are not managing the games like Rose did, but it’s hypocritical to tell folks to make money betting on games, while preventing a man with the most hits, who is the current record holder with 4,256 hits to enter the Hall of Fame, is a mixed message to say the least.

But that is our culture right here. A lot of things are upside down, and like my father used to say, “Common sense is not common anymore.”

So I wonder about people who say they want their privacy, yet they go on different social media outlets and tell everybody what they are doing, where they are, what they did, what they are going to do, what airport they are headed to and so on; but they ask for their privacy. Like the song by the great Ray Charles, “What a Wonderful World.”

Listen to the A’s games in Spanish on KIQI 1010AM/990AM Bay Area, Sacramento, Stockton and the Valley. Also, listen on the A’s television network on the SAP line.

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: Piscotty’s inspiration on team is part of the reason for record run at postseason

Photo credit: @retrosimba

On That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast:

Oakland A’s outfielder Stephen Piscotty’s home run total at 21 is a career-high and is truyly having a remarkable season at the plate. Piscotty was pronounced with 60 extra base hits in 2016 with the St. Louis Cardinals, but his hitting hit a slump in 2017 as Piscotty’s mom was suffering from ALS.

In the offseason, Piscotty worked out a deal moving from the St. Louis Cardinals to the Oakland A’s so he could be closer to his mother in Pleasanton, Calif. Piscotty cared for his mother after each home game, putting her to bed and feeding her.

Piscotty’s care for his mother Gretchen lasted until May at her passing and later Piscotty began to swing the bats with great production. The team was inspired and now the A’s are in the hunt for an AL West title.

Amaury does the A’s Spanish radio play-by-play, serves as vice president of the MLB Hispanic Heritage Museum Hall of Fame, and does News and Commentary each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: Khris “Krush” Davis joins Jimmie Foxx in three straight years of hitting 40 home runs or more

photo from athleticsnation.com file: Oakland A’s slugger Khris Davis (2) joins former A’s slugger Jimmie Foxx for hitting at least 40 or more home runs per season for three consecutive years

By Amaury Pi-González

OAKLAND — On Saturday September 1, 2018, Oakland Athletics’ designated hitter Khris Davis hit his 40th home run at the Oakland Coliseum against Seattle reliever Alex Colomé. Davis joined Hall of Famer Jimmie Foxx (1932-34) of the Philadelphia Athletics as the only two players in three consecutive years to have 40 home run seasons in the A’s franchise. Khris Davis came to the A’s in 2016–that season he ended with 42 home runs and 102 runs batted in, 2017–43 home runs and 110 runs batted in, and as of the conclusion of Sept. 1–40 home runs and 105 runs batted in. Originally a left fielder, he is the A’s everyday DH. A quiet player that goes on with his business. Davis is a 30-year-old, Lakewood, Calif. native. His mother was born in Guadalajara, México. He has played on a “year to year” contract since he arrived with the A’s, making $10.5 million this season.

Here is the all-time list of players who have accomplished this feat: Babe Ruth, NYY 1926-32, Alex Rodriguez, 1998-2003, Sammy Sosa (1998-2003), Ken Griffey Jr. (1996-2000), Ralph Kiner (1947-1951), Ryan Howard (2006-09), Albert Pujols (2003-06), Jim Thome (2001-04), Mark McGwire (1996-99), Ernie Banks (1957-1960), Duke Snider (1953-56), David Ortiz (2004-06), Barry Bonds (2000-02), Vinny Castilla (1996-98), Andres Galarraga (1996-98), Juan Gonzalez (1996-98), Jay Buhner (1995-97), Frank Howard (1968-1970), Ted Kluszewski (1953-55), Eddie Mathews (1953-55), and of course, Jimmie Foxx (1932-34).

Listen to the A’s games on KIQI 1010AM/990AM in San Francisco, Oakland, San José, Sacramento, Stockton and the Valley. Also, on the SAP line on A’s television.

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: Amaury Pi-Gonzalez to be on NBC Bay Area’s Comunidad Del Valle

Photo credit: nbcbayarea.com

By http://www.sportsradioservice.com staff

Amaury Pi-Gonzalez will be featured during the Comunidad del Valle program on NBC Bay Area (KNTV; CH 3) in English as well as its sister station on Telemundo Bay Area (KSTS; CH 48) in Spanish this Sunday.

Damian Trujillo is the host on this popular weekly program with appearances by talented and influential Latino members. Pi-Gonzalez, who writes for this site, is in his 41st season as a MLB announcer and is currently the Spanish voice for the Oakland A’s.

Amaury has been interviewed about the new Mural of The Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum and Hall of Fame, which he is the vice president of a non-profit organization, at the Club Level entrance of the Oakland Coliseum. This exciting 2018 A’s season adds to his distinguished resume as a sports broadcaster.

Pi-Gonzalez has been considered a pioneer in Spanish sports broadcasts in the Bay Area since his first season with the A’s in the late 1970’s. He has also called games for the Giants, Mariners and Angels on radio as well as television for Fox Sports West. In addition, he has called two Caribbean World Series in the early 2000s as a play-by-play announcer in English for Fox Sports International.

Once the Spanish voice for the Golden State Warriors in the 1990’s, Pi-González has talked about his passion and tutored young Latino students throughout his career. He was also a sports anchor for Telemundo (CH 48) in the Bay Area in the 1990s and Trujillo has known him since those good old days.

Comunidad del Valle will be aired on NBC Bay Area (KNTV; CH 3) this Sunday, September 3 at 9:30 am PDT in English. A Spanish version of the program will be aired on Telemundo Bay Area (KSTS; CH 48) at 8 am PDT this Sunday. But, check your local listings for programming, just to be sure.