Oakland scores three in the ninth to beat the White Sox

by Jerry Feitelberg

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The A’s scored three times in the top of the ninth to rally from a 2-1 deficit to beat the Whites Sox 4-2 Thursday in Chicago. It was a warm and breezy day in the Windy City but after three games of high scores, it turned out to be a pitcher’s duel. Lefty Sean Nolin went for Oakland and he pitched very well. He went 5 innings and allowed just two runs on five hits. The White Sox lefty, Jose Quintana was up to the task and he restricted the A’s to just one run and four hits in seven innings of work.

The A’s put one run on the board in the top of the third. Catcher Josh Phegley doubled to left field leading off the inning. Phegley scored on a single to right by Marcus Semien. The White Sox tied the game in the bottom of the fourth. Third baseman Mike Olt blasted a monster shot to deep left center. Olt has homered in his last two games against the A’s. Olt is the only player in Major League history to homer for both the Cubs and White Sox in the same season.

The White Sox added another run in the fifth. Nolin walked Micah Johnson and Alexi Ramirez to start the inning. Left fielder Melky Cabrera singled to drive in Johnson to give the Chisox a 2-1 lead.
Fernando Rodriguez pitched two scoreless innings for the A’s and Sean Doolittle came through big time as he shut the White Sox down in the eighth and ninth innings. Chicago’s Matt Albers pitched a strong eighth inning to keep Oakland from getting even. The turning point came in the ninth inning. White Sox closer David Robertson was now pitching. Robertson, still in shock from his disastrous ninth inning Monday night, had another rough outing. A’s second baseman Brett Lawrie led off the ninth with a double to left. With one out, third baseman Danny Valencia singled to left. Lawrie made sure the ball went for a hit and was not able to score. Third base coach, Ron Washington, wisely put up the stop sign. Runners are at third and first with just one out. The designated hitter, Billy Butler, hit a long fly to right field. Chicago right fielder Avasail Garcia leaped high for the ball and appeared to have made the catch but coming down his wrist hit the top of the fence and the ball dropped out of glove for a home run. Oakland is in front 4-2 heading into the bottom of the ninth. As mentioned earlier Doolittle pitched the ninth inning. A’s manager Bob Melvin decided to let Doolittle pitch as he threw just fifteen pitches in the eighth. Doolittle did the job and
retired the side to secure the win.

Notes- The A’s split the four-game series with the White Sox. The A’s are on their way to Houston to play the Astros. Houston is now longer in first place in the AL West and trails the Texas Rangers by 1 and 1/2 games. The Astros are now the second Wild Card team and lead the Minnesota Twins by a game and a half.

Felix Doubront will pitch for Oakland on Friday and Mike Fiers will fo for Houston. On Saturday, it will be Sonny Gray going against his good friend Scott Kazmir. Gray beat the Astros and Kazmir last week when the Astros were in town. Game time will be at 5:10 pm PT.

The White Sox turn the tables, pound the A’s

by Jerry Feitelberg

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The Chicago White Sox rebounded from a pounding on Tuesday to defeat the A’s 9-4 Wednesday night in game three of the four-game series. Cody Martin called up from Nashville, started for Oakland in place of the injured Jesse Chavez. Martin lasted just three-plus inning allowing six runs and six hits. Eric Johnson, who is from the Bay Area, recorded his second win in three starts for the Sox. Johnson went six innings, threw 110 pitches and allowed three runs and six hits.

The White Sox hit three home runs in the game. Carlos Sanchez hit a two-run job in the first. Jose Abreu hit a solo homer in the third and Mike Olt hit a two -run tater in the fourth. The White Sox scored four more times in the fourth to take a 9-1 lead. The A’s offense scored one in the second, two in the sixth on the strength of home run off the bat of Billy Butler and one in the ninth on a solo blast by Jake Smolinski.
Final score- Chicago wins 9-4.

Notes- Pat Venditte relieved Martin in the sixth allowed one hit and three runs and could not retire a single batter. Dan Otero pitched two scoreless innings and reliever Arnold Leon, Fernando Abad, and R.J.Alvarez each pitched one scoreless inning.

Prior to the game. The Oakland A’s recalled right-handed pitcher Cody Martin from Triple-A Nashville and selected left-handed pitcher Barry Zito from Nashville.  To clear a spot on the 40-man roster, the A’s placed right-handed pitcher Jesse Chavez on the 60-day disabled list with a fractured rib.

 Martin joins the A’s for the second time this year and is scheduled to start tonight at Chicago (AL).  He was called up for the first time Sept. 1 and made his first Major League start and his A’s debut that day against Los Angeles (AL), allowing five runs on six hits in 3.0 innings for the loss.  The 26-year old right-hander began the season with Atlanta and made his ML debut, going 2-3 with a 5.40 ERA in 21 relief appearances over two stints with the Braves.
Zito signed a minor league contract with the A’s with an invite to Spring Training on Feb. 17.  He spent the entire season at Nashville where he went 8-7 with a 3.46 ERA in 24 games, including 22 starts.  After going 0-2 with a 5.96 ERA in five starts in April, Zito went 8-5 with a 2.88 ERA over his final 19 games.  He last pitched in the majors on Sept. 29, 2013 with the Giants against the Padres and has not pitched in an A’s uniform since Oct. 10, 2006 in Game 1 of the ALCS against Detroit.
Zito was drafted by Oakland in the 1st round of the June, 1999 draft and has pitched 14 seasons in the majors with Oakland (2000-06) and San Francisco (2007-13).  He won the American League Cy Young Award with the A’s in 2002 and is a three-time AL All-Star (2002-03, 2006).  Zito went 102-63 with a 3.55 ERA in 222 starts in seven seasons with Oakland before signing a seven-year contract with San Francisco Dec. 29, 2006.  He compiled a 63-80 record and a 4.62 ERA in 208 games, including 197 starts, in seven seasons with the Giants.  Zito ranks fourth on the Oakland career list in wins (102), strikeouts (1096) and games started (222), fifth in innings pitched (1430.1) and sixth in winning percentage (102-63, .618).
Chavez was 7-15 with a 4.18 ERA in 30 games, including 26 starts, with Oakland.  He went 3-9 with a 5.65 ERA and .295 opponents batting average over his final 14 starts after going 4-6 with a 3.16 ERA and .246 opponents average over his first 12 starts.  Chavez is currently tied for the Major League lead with 15 losses.
The fourth and final game of the series will be played Thursday morning at 11:10am PT.
Attendance was 13,005 human beings and 823 dogs.

The A’s trounce the White Sox, win 17-6

by Jerry Feitelberg

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The A’s and the White Sox squared off Tuesday night in game two of the four-game series. It was no contest as the A’s routed their former ace, Jeff Samardzija and won going away 17-6. The A’s jumped on Samardzija for five runs in the first inning. Oakland sent ten men to the plate in the inning and had six hits. Samardzija just didn’t have anything working for him as he lost his thirteenth game of the year, and his record stands at 9-13. He has pitched poorly in the second half, and his negotiating value is compromised as he will be a free agent after the season’s end. The White Sox showed a little life in the bottom of the first. Brooks allowed three singles and a walk as Chicago plated two to close the gap to 5-2.

Oakland added a run in the third. Josh Phegley walked with one out. Eric Sogard lined a ball down into the right field corner to drive in Phegley. Sogard had a triple. In the fourth, the A’s blew the game wide open. They sent fifteen men to the plate and scored ten runs. One of the key hits was a Josh Reddick two-run dinger. Samardzija was done for the night. He went three-plus innings allowing eleven hits and ten runs. The score in the middle of the fourth had Oakland in the lead 16-2.

Chicago scored a run in the fourth and two in the fifth to trail 16-5. In the sixth, former White Sox player, Marcus Semien, homered to right off Nate Jones. That ended the scoring for the A’s but the White Sox scored one more on a solo home run by Alexi Ramirez in the seventh. A’s win 17-6.

Notes- after the game Bob Melvin had this to say about Samardzija “The at-bats were great all the way around,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said. “That’s a pretty tough pitcher we’re facing. He’s a quality pitcher, and I know he’s having some struggles, but no one looks forward to facing him. To get him out of the game early on and to keep adding on was big for us.”
The A’s did not take batting practice before the game, and they rapped out eighteen hits. Worked wonders. They may not take batting practice ever again.
A’s pitcher Aaron Brooks won his second game of the year, and his record is now 2-3. The A’s had home runs by Josh Reddick and Marcus Semien. Melky Cabrera and Alexi Ramirez homered for Chicago.
The A’s announced that Jesse Chavez is out for the rest of the year due to a fractured rib. Right-hander Cody Martin will take his place and will start for Oakland Wednesday night. Eric Johnson will pitch for Chicago. Johnson has a record of 2-1. Chicago used seven pitchers including two position players, Leury Garcia in the eighth and Alexi Ramirez in the ninth.

Game three will be played in Chicago at 5:10 pm. PT
Time of game was 3:31 minutes and 12,446 watched their beloved Chisox get routed.

The White Sox outlast the A’s, beat them in the fourteenth inning

by Jerry Feitelberg

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The A’s lost their fourth game in the last fives, going down to the Chicago White Sox 8-7 in a fourteen inning marathon. Time of game was five hours and nineteen minutes. Dan Jennings won the game in relief for Chicago, and Arnold Leon took the loss for Oakland.

Sonny Gray started for the A’s and had the shortest outing of his career. Sonny lasted just three-plus innings and allowed seven runs before departing the game. White Sox starter John Danks pitched giving up just three hits. All the hits were solo home runs and the A’s trailed the White Sox 7-3 after seven innings of play.The A’s, however, came back in the ninth to score four times on just two hits to tie the game at 7. The game dragged on until the bottom of the fourteenth when Melky Cabrera singled to right to drive in the winning run.

The A’s took the lead in the top of the third. Jake Smolinski hit a solo home run to give the A’s the lead 1-0. The Chisox scored four times in the bottom of the inning. Gray gave up two two-run dingers. The first one was home run number twenty-eight for Jose Abreu and came with a man aboard. Trace Thompson also homered with a man on to put the A’s down 4-1 after three.

Brett Lawrie homered leading off the fourth inning to make it a 4-2 game but the White Sox scored three times to send Gray to the showers. The A’s picked up a run in the seventh on a Josh Reddick. The A’s loaded the bases in the ninth in a very strange inning. The A’s loaded the bases on a double, Danny Valencia struck out but reached as the pitch went wild, and he reached first safely. Josh Reddick reached on catcher’s interference after it looked like his grounder to second was a double-play ball that would have ended the inning. Coco Crisp walked to drive in a run and another run scored on a Tyler Flowers passed ball. The pitch hit Flowers in the masked and that allowed the run to score. Sam Fuld came through with a single to drive in two more to tie the game.

Both bullpens kept the other team from scoring until the fateful fourteenth inning. White Sox catcher Geovany Soto singled to lead off the inning. Adam Eaton bunted him to second. Leon struck out Alexi Ramirez, but Bob Melvin walked Abreu to take the bat out of hands. Leon faced Melky Cabrera. Cabrera, batting left-handed, singled to right. Reddick’s throw home was not in time as Soto beat the throw to end the game Game two of the four-game series continues Tuesday in Chicago. Game time will be at 5:10 pm PT.

The A’s hit the road for 10 games, eager to play spoiler

by Jerry Feitelberg

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The A’s begin a three-city, 10-game road trip Friday night with a visit to the Texas Rangers Friday night. The A’s would love nothing better than to play the role of spoiler and upset the Rangers’ apple cart. The A’s helped the Rangers out by winning two of the three games played with the Houston Astros this week. The Astros were two games ahead of the Rangers before the series with the A’s and left Oakland still ahead by two games.for the division lead. The Rangers lost to Seattle Wednesday and Thursday and now trail Houston by 2 1/2 games. Houston plays a big series with the Los Angeles Angels this weekend, and the Rangers have to face the A’s. The Rangers and Astros then play each other starting Monday in Arlington.

The A’s, without question, are not going to be in the playoffs this year, but they could play a role in determining the division champ as well as the second Wild Card team. The Rangers are currently the second Wild Card, but the lead over the Minnesota Twins is just one game. The Rangers cannot take the A’s lightly this weekend. The A’s, as mentioned earlier, are not having a great season, but A’s manager Bob Melvin will not let them lay down. There is no question that the A’s are in a rebuild mode and disappointments. Injuries have affected the A’s, too, but the Rangers were not exempt either. Coco Crisp, known as the engine that drives the team, missed most of the season. A’s starting pitching has seen Jesse Hahn, Kendall Graveman, Chris Bassitt go down with an injury. Jarrod Parker and A.J.Griffith had Tommy John surgery last year, and both players were lost 2015. Parker also had a setback to fix an elbow issue.

The A’s offense, however, is not bad. The A’s don’t have any player with more than 18 home runs, but the many of the players are solid. Billy Burns, taking over for Coco, has been a force.He is hitting a shade below .300 but once he reaches base, he can create havoc with his speed. The infield of Danny Valencia, Marcus Semien, Brett Lawrie and Mark Canha all contribute to the offense, and they all have pop in their bats. In fact, every one of them had double-digit home run performance. Catching is solid with Stephen Vogt and Josh Phegley. Josh Reddick made a nice comeback this year from injury, and he has hit sixteen dingers and knocked in sixty-eight to lead the team. Left Field has been a problem, but Coco is back and still contributes. The big problem for Oakland has been the arson squad, the bullpen.

So, the A’s have a chance to do damage in Texas with the potential to derail their playoff hopes. The Rangers made one pitching change for the weekend series. The Rangers are pushing back Cole Hamels one day. Hamels will start Monday against Houston, and he will be available to face the Astros when they play in Houston a few days later. The Ranger bullpen is solid. The Rangers have had success with Sam Freeman, Sam Dyson, James Diekman, Keone, Kela, Tanner Scheppers and their closer Shawn Tolleson. Tolleson has recorded thirty-one saves in thirty-three chances.

The Rangers have Colby Lewis (14-8) pitching Friday night. Yovani Gallardo (12-9) will go on Saturday and Chi Chi Gonzalez is set for Sunday. The A’s pitchers are Jesse Chavez, Sean Nolin, and Felix Doubront. Rangers’ manager Jeff Bannister, in his first year, is doing a great job in Texas. The Rangers lost Derk Holland and Matt Harrison last year. This year, they lost their ace, Yu Darvish, to Tommy John surgery. Holland has returned and is 3-2. Darvish is out but Harrison was traded to Philadelphia in the deal that brought Hamels to Texas. The Rangers have played well since Hamels arrived and they have shocked everyone as they are within grasp of not only the Wild Card slot but the AL West crown as well.
Adrian Beltre, Mitch Moreland, Prince Fielder, Elvis Andrus, Rougned Odor and Mike Napoli are the big boppers for the Rangers on offense. The A’s pitchers will have to work hard this weekend to keep those bats quiet.

Notes-

OAKLAND -– The Oakland A’s acquired left-handed pitcher Daniel Coulombe from the Los Angeles Dodgers in exchange for cash considerations, the club announced today. To clear a spot on the 40-man roster, the A’s placed right-handed pitcher Evan Scribner on the 60-day disabled list with a torn right lat muscle.

Coulombe appeared in five games over five stints with Los Angeles and had no decisions and a 7.56 ERA. He walked six batters in 8.1 innings and allowed a .265 opponents batting average. The 25-year-old left-hander was most recently with the Dodgers for a one-day stint July 5 when he pitched two innings and allowed a run on three hits and a walk against the Mets. Coulombe spent the balance of the season at Triple-A Oklahoma City where he compiled a 3-1 record, one save and a 3.27 ERA in 38 relief appearances. He was originally drafted by the Dodgers in the 20th round of the 2012 draft and made his Major League debut with Los Angeles in 2014.

The A’s also Bought up Max Muncy and Craig Gentry from Nashville.Also, the A’s announced that manager Bob Melvin has been given a two-year contract extension that will keep him at the helm through the 2018 season.

Scribner was 2-2 with a 4.35 ERA in 54 games with the A’s. He struck out 64 batters in 60.0 innings but also allowed 14 home runs, which were the most among ML relievers.

The Astros Take it to the A’s, Avoid the sweep.

by Jerry Feitelberg

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The Houston Astros avoided a sweep as they beat the A’s 11-5 Wednesday night. It was a big win for Houston as they increased their lead in the AL West to two games over the hard-charging Texas Rangers. The Seattle Mariners beat the Rangers to help them out. The Astros travel to Anaheim and Texas for two big series before returning home. The A’s lost for the eightieth time this year and are twenty games under .500 and have just twenty-two games left to play. Aaron Brooks started for Oakland, and he lost his third straight start. He lasted just four-plus innings and saw his record drop to 1-3, and his earned run average is now an astronomical 7.74. Houston starter Collin McHugh won his sixteenth win of the year. The A’s used six pitchers in the game and five worked for Houston.

The Astros drew first blood in the top of the second when left fielder Colby Rasmus deposited an Aaron Brooks fastball into the second deck in right field with no one aboard. For Rasmus, it was his nineteenth homer of the season. 1-0 after two complete.

The Astros scored three runs in the fourth as they touched Brooks for four hits including two singles and two doubles.  They scored three more in the fifth. Brooks was charged with another run in the fifth after Carlos Gomez doubled leading off the inning. A’s manager Bob Melvin saw enough and brought in switch-pitcher Pat Venditte to handle the pitching. Venditte retired Jed Lowrie on a fly ball to right, but Evan Gattis went yard to put Houston ahead  6-0. Venditte walked Colby Rasmus and gave up a double to Marwin Gonzalez to put men on at second and third with one out. Rasmus scored the seventh run on the night on a sacrifice fly. 7-0 in the middle of the fifth.

The A’s answered with four runs of their own in the bottom of the fifth. Billy Butler led off the inning with an opposite-field home run. Marcus Semien followed with a single. Semien advanced y=to second on a ground out and then scored the second run of the game for Oakland on a single by Billy Burns. Josh Reddick broke a 0-for-10 slump with his sixteenth home run of the year to bring the A’s back into the game. A’s trail 7-4 after five,

The Astros made it 8-4 in the sixth. R.J.Alvarez retired the first two hitters, but Astros center fielder hit his third home run since coming to the Astros in July. Oakland got a run back in their half of the sixth. Brett Lawrie reached on an infield single and advanced to second on a wild pitch. Billy Butler singled to drive in Lawrie with the fifth run of the game for the A’s.

The Astros made it a four-run game in the seventh. Fernando Abad struck out the first two hitters he faced. The Astros first baseman, Marwin Gonzalez, batting right-handed, hit a solo homer to left. Fourth home run of the game for Houston. The A’s put two men on in the bottom of the seventh but couldn’t score. Houston leads 9-5 heading into the eighth.

The Astros put another run on the board in the eighth without the benefit of a hit. Dan Otero hit George Springer with a pitch. Springer went to second on a wild pitch and made it to third on a ground out. The A’s brought the infield in to cut off the run at the plate, but Springer was able to beat the strategy. Carlos Correa hit a grounder to Marcus Semien. Semien checked him at third and threw to first for the out. Springer took off, and he beat Canha’s throw home with a head-first slide that enabled him to elude the tag. The Astros were at it again in the ninth. The A’s defense made two errors in the inning and that led to an unearned run. Astros lead 11-5 as the A’s come to bat in the ninth. The A’s went down 1-2-3 to end the game.

Game Notes- The Oakland A’s are now 33-42 at home this season. They have now homered in fifteen consecutive games and are 8-8 against Houston this season. Aaron Brooks is 0-2 with a 9.49 ERA in his last three starts. Billy Burns was 2-for5 and is hitting .348 in his last fifteen games. Billy Butler was 2-for 3 and now has a ten-game hitting streak.

The probable pitchers for the three-game series in Texas are Jesse Chavez against Colby Lewis on Friday. Sean Nolin will face Yovani Gallardo on Saturday, and Felix Doubront pitches Sunday against Cole Hamels.

The A’s announced that that manager Bob Melvin has received a contract extension that will take him through the 2018 season.

The A’s have an off-day Thursday and resume play Friday when they meet the Texas Rangers. They travel to Chicago for four with the White Sox then return to Houston for three more games with the Astros.

Game time was three hours and thirty-eight minutes. There were 13,387 diehard fans in the stands to watch the A’s go down to defeat.

Sonny Gray out pitches his buddy Scott Kazmir. A’s win again.

by Jerry Feitelberg

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Sonny Gray started game two of the three-game series with Houston. Gray was opposed by his good friend, former Athletic ace Scott Kazmir, was on the hill for Houston. The A’s prevailed 4-0. Gray outpitched his good friend Kazmir and was in control all the way. Kazmir pitched well but made two mistakes and Billy Burns and Mark Canha made him pay as they each homered against their old mate. Gray won his thirteenth game of the year, and his ERA dropped to 2.28, lowest in the American League. Ryan Dull pitched two innings of scoreless ball to close out the game for Oakland.

The A’s centerfielder, Billy Burns, took his old mate, Scott Kazmir, deep to give the A’s a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the third.The ball just made it over the wall, just to the right of the Comcast sign. It is Burns’ fourth tater of the season for Burns, and it came on a 0-2 pitch.

The A’s took a 4-0 in the bottom of the fifth. With one out, Marcus Semien worked Kazmir for a walk. Semien stole second and advanced on a Billy Burns single to right. The ball was not hit deep enough for Semien to score from second and third base coach Ron Washington put up the stop sign. After a visit to the mound by the Astros pitching coach, Kazmir went to work trying to get Mark Canha out. That strategy failed as Canha hit a bomb into the seats in left field for a three-run dinger. Kazmir composed himself to retire the next two hitters, but, the damage was done.

Neither team scored the rest of the way as the A’s beat the Astros for the second day in a row. Final score 4-0 in favor of the A’s.

Game Notes- The A’s won their sixtieth game of the season and fifteenth by shutout. Oakland leads the league in that department. The A’s homered for a season-high fourteen game in a row. Mark Canha was 2-for-4 and homered for the sixth time in his last twenty games. Billy Burns had two hits and is batting .344 with thirteen runs scored, one double, one triple, two home runs, eight RBIs and eight multiple hit games over his last thirteen games.

Houston has lost five of their last seven games. With the loss and a Texas win, their lead in the AL West division is just one game. The Rangers, right now, woul be the second Wild-Card team if the playoffs were to start tomorrow. Scott Kazmir is 2-5 since being traded to Houston.The Astros are 27-40 on the road this year and have eight more games to play before returning home.

Injury update- Stephen Vogt underwent a second ultrasound examination, and it the doctors determined that his injury does not require surgery. Vogt will travel with the team on the ten-game road trip starting Friday in Texas. Pitcher Chris Bassitt, recovering from a sore right shoulder, could play catch this week, but Bob Melvin expressed doubt about his return before the end of the season.

Sad News-The Astros and A’s are sending condolences to the family of Joaquin Andujar. Andujar, who pitched seven seasons with the Astros and was with the A’s for two seasons, passed away Tuesday at the age of sixty-two from complications of diabetes. Andujar had a thirteen-year Major League career.

The A’s and Astros play game three of the series Wednesday night at 7:05 pm at the O.co Coliseum. Aaron Brooks will pitch for the Green and Gold, and Collin McHugh will handle the pitching for Houston.

Time of game was 2 hours and thirty-three minutes, and there were 11,364 faithful on hand to watch the proceedings.

The A’s Outlast the Astros in to snap a five-game losing streak

by Jerry Feitelberg

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The game between the Houston Astros took almost four hours to play. The A’s and Astros entered the sixth inning tied at two apiece.  From the sixth to the ninth the two teams scored fifteen times. The A’s had eight and Houston scored seven. Four of the five home runs hit occurred after the sixth inning. It was a the hottest day of the year at O.co. The temperature at the start of the game was eighty-three degrees and probably got two or three degrees warmer later in the afternoon. The A’s sent Left Felix Doubront out to pitch. Doubront went six-plus innings allowing four runs on eight hits. Doubront earned his third win of the season. Mike Fiers, who pitched a no-hitter against the LA Dodgers about ten days ago, started for Houston. Fiers took the loss and his record with the Astros is now 2-1.

The ball was flying all over the park Monday. The A’s hit two home runs while Houston hit three. The A’s bullpen couldn’t keep the Astros down as they kept coming back. The A’s responded each time to hold on for the win.

There were several key hits for the A’s. Coco Crisp had a pinch-hit double to drive in two. Billy Burns singled in the sixth to also drive in two. Josh Phegley hit a key two-run blast. They A’s needed all the offense output as the bullpen gave up five runs in relief of Doubront. Lawrie’s error in the eighth opened the door for Houston as they scored three unearned runs.

The Astros took an early 1-0 lead in the top of the first inning. Astros’ right fielder, George Springer, led off with a double. He advanced to third on a sacrifice bunt by Jose Altuve. Springer scored on a Carlos Correa ground out to short. A’s first baseman, Mark Canha, tied the game at one with a solo home run into the left-field seats about six rows back of the BBQ Terrace. Thirteenth homer of the year for Canha.

The Astros regained the lead in the second. Marwin Gonzalez led off with a double. Chris Carter walked to put men on at first and second with no out. Former A, catcher Max Stassi laid down a beautiful sacrifice bunt to advance the runners. Jake Marisnick flew out to Josh Redick in right. Reddick’s throw home was not in time, and Gonzalez slid in safely under the tag. Brett Lawrie almost caused Reddick to drop the ball and as a result, Reddick had to double clutch the throw.

The A’s tied the game in the bottom of the fourth. Danny Valencia, who just missed a double down the left field line by an inch, walked leading off the inning. Brett Lawrie drilled a ball to left-center that made it past the Houston outfielders to the wall. Left fielder Jake Marisnick blocked Carlos Gomez view of the ball, and that allowed Lawrie to reach third with a triple.

The A’s scored six runs in the bottom of the sixth to take an 8-2 lead. The A’s benefited from four walks and four hits to score the runs. The key hits were a pinch hit double by Coco Crisp. Crisp doubled off the wall in deep right field with the bases loaded to drive in two. The A’s loaded the bases again with just out. Billy Burns singles to drive in two more. Mark Canha drove in the fifth run of the game with a single. Danny Valencia ground out into a force out to drive in Burns with the sixth run of the frame. A’s lead 8-2 after six.

The Astros scored four times in the seventh. Jonath Villar, pinch-hitting for Chris Carter, sent a Doubront pitch into the second deck in left field. Max Stassi singled to bring out Bob Melvin. Melvin took Doubront out of the game and brought in Fernando Rodriguez to pitch. Rodriguez struck out Marisnick but walked George Springer to put two men on with two out. Astros’ shortstop, Carlos Correa, took Rodriguez deep for a three-run dinger to bring the Astros within two of tying the game. Rodriguez retired Carlos Gomez for the final out. A’s lead 8-6 in the middle of the seventh.

In the bottom of the seventh. A’s catcher, Josh Phegley, hit a towering blast with a man aboard, to put the A’s ahead 10-6. The Astros scored an unearned run in the top of the eighth. Evan Gattis popped up to short right field. Brett Lawrie, shading his eyes from the sun, dropped the ball for a two-base error. Gattis tagged and took third on a fly ball out to deep left field. Gattis scored on a ground ball out to second. Jed Lowrie hit a pinch-hit single, and that was followed by a Jake Maresnick home run to left centerfield. Pomeranz is done, and Edward Mujica is brought in to get the last out of the inning. A’s now own a precarious 10-9 lead in the top of the eighth. Astros have hit three homers in the last 1 and 2/3rds innings. Pomeranz was done in by the error. He went just 2/3rds of an inning allowing two hits and three runs. All the runs were unearned.

The A’s brought in Sean Doolittle to close out the game. Doolittle has missed most of the season due to shoulder problem. He worked hard to get his velocity and location back, and Bob Melvin rewarded him bringing him to close out the game. Doolittle delivered. He retired Jose Altuve and Carlos Correa on just two pitches. Doolittle then struck out Carlos Gomez to seal the win for Oakland. 10-9 Final.

Game Notes- With the win, The A’s snap a five-game losing streak and snap a season-high five-game losing streak at home. The A’s have homered in their thirteenth consecutive games (seventeen home runs in that span) The A’s are 21-23 on Labor Day since moving to Oakland. Billy Burns was 2-for-5 and recorded his 41st multiple hit game. Burns also has fifty hits on the first pitch and is just four behind Carney Lansford’s team record.

The Astros have lost four of the last six games. Last year’s chumps are trying to become this year’s AL West champs, but they are just 29-26 against the AL West and are 27-39 on the road. Today was Game one of an eleven-day, ten-game road trip. Houston goes to Anaheim and Texas after the three-game set with Oakland.

Sean Doolittle earned his first save of 2015. He threw five pitches, all strikes. Retired Altuve and Correa on Popups and then struck out Carlos Gomez to end the game.After the game Doolittle said “it was great to do this at home.”

Game two of the three-game series will be played at the O.co at 7:05 pm. The A’s ace, Sonny Gray will pitch for Oakland, and he will be opposed by former A’s star, left Scott Kazmir. Gray wants to get back on the winning track and Kazmir would like nothing better than to beat his old team.

Time of game was three hours and fifty-three minutes. It is the longest nine-inning game of the year at home for Oakland. 22,215 people were on hand on the hot Labor Day holiday to watch the A’s prevail.

Painful afternoon at the Coliseum: A’s lose 3-2, Vogt injured and sent to the hospital

Vogt injured

By Morris Phillips

Sean Nolin’s Oakland debut was sprinkled with equal doses of pain and promise.  Nothing new there; the A’s have been consuming that concoction pretty much the entirety of 2015.

While Nolin acquitted himself quite well, allowing three runs in six innings of work, the A’s offense was quiet until the seventh, after the big, left-hander departed.  Single runs in the seventh and eighth weren’t enough, however, as the A’s fell 3-2, their 31st loss by a run this season.

The win was Seattle’s fifth straight, continuing their surge to the fringes of the AL Wild Card race that coincides with the firing of GM Jack Zduriencik 10 days ago.  The A’s have dropped five in a row, and now are a season-worst 21 games below .500.

Not surprisingly, given the A’s recent, rough times, this one could have gone either way, but swung to Oakland’s opponent, as the Mariners’ often-feeble bullpen did the job, escaping jams in the seventh and eighth innings.  The A’s couldn’t produce the big hit, going 0 for 7 with runners in scoring position.

In the seventh, with a run in and one out, and runners at first and third, Mariners’ reliever Tony Zych struck out pinch-hitter Marcus Semien and retired Billy Burns on a liner to center.  In the eighth, closer Tom Wilhelmsen came on with a run in, and the tying run at second, and retired Brett Lawrie and Billy Butler.

Wilhelmsen pitched the ninth as well, registering a five-out save, his 10th.

“That’s a gutsy as I’ve seen him in the two years I’ve been here,” Seattle manager Lloyd McClendon said.  “That was not an easy save.”

The A’s outhit the Mariners, nine hits to seven, but they weren’t smartly distributed.  Billy Burns, Mark Canha and Billy Butler each had a pair of hits, but none of the other six guys penciled into Bob Melvin’s starting lineup hit.  A trio of pinch-hitters each got a base hit, but none was the big one that could have at least sent the A’s to extras.

The A’s played without Sam Fuld, who has been dealing with back spasms.  Josh Reddick was dealing with an illness, and didn’t start, but managed a base hit as a pinch-hitter.  And Stephen Vogt left the field in severe pain and was taken to a local hospital after he was struck in the groin by a foul ball.

The Mariners weren’t at full strength either.  They played the entire series without Nelson Cruz, who was leading the majors in homers with 39 before being surpassed by Baltimore’s Chris Davis over the weekend.

Nolin became the 28th pitcher to take the mound for the A’s this season, which establishes a new team record.  The lefty was one of four players acquired in the Josh Donaldson deal with Toronto, and his major league history to date was neither lengthy or pretty.  Nolin allowed six runs on seven hits, while recording just four outs in his major league-debut in May 2013.  He didn’t pitch again at the big level until 2014 with the Jays, and that was again only one appearance.

So on Sunday, Nolin finally got a chance to truly get his feet wet as a big leaguer, and he was cruising until the fifth when he was done in by allowing back-to-back walks and then a wild pitch that allowed a runner to score from third.  Nolin got some nice help in that inning from third baseman Danny Valencia, who fooled Logan Morrison into thinking a throw wasn’t coming, and tagged out Morrison when he failed to slide.

Nolin didn’t allow a hit in four of the six inning he pitched, and all indications are that he will assume a spot in Oakland’s fluid rotation for the remainder of the season.  Due to a couple of injuries and stints on the disabled list in the minors, Melvin hadn’t seen Nolin pitch.  But what he saw Sunday, he liked.

“Kept them off-balance, really not too many good swings.  It was just the two walks that ended up costing him some runs,” Melvin said.

“I felt a little more comfortbale than I did my last two rehab starts,” Nolin revealed.  “I’m grateful for that.”

The A’s see the first-place Astros in the Labor Day matinee at 1:05pm Monday.  Felix Dubront will face no-hit Mike Fiers, two starts removed from his no-no against the Dodgers on August 21.  The A’s have really seen their lack of depth and talent crop up since last seeing the Astros last month, when they captured three of four.  Since then, the A’s are a major-league worst 7-17.

The A’s meet the Seattle Mariners this weekend in a battle for fourth place

by Jerry Feitelberg

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The Oakland A’s play three games with the Seattle Mariners starting Friday night at the O.co Coliseum. The A’s trail the Mariners by three games as they battle for fourth place in the AL West. Neither team has had a great season. The Mariners were picked by many to win the West, but they have been a major disappointment. The Mariners fired their GM last week and are now in the hunt for a new man. The A’s had a rough start to the season and have never recovered. The bullpen has been a disaster all season and A’s GM Billy Beane will have his work cut out for him as they rebuild for 2016. A’s fans would love to see their team climb out of the basement and land in fourth place. It may not be much, but the hardcore Oakland fans know that a fourth place finish would be a step in the right direction.

There have been some bright spots for the A’s fans this year. Billy Burns in center field has been terrific, and he is a candidate for AL Rookie of the Year. Big Mark Canha, playing first base almost every day and spot duty in left field has shown that he can hit more consistently playing every day. Josh Reddick, now healthy, has been solid. Brett Lawrie and Danny Valencia have shown that they belong. A’s starting pitching has been good, but injuries have made it difficult for Bob Melvin and the coaching staff. Jesse Hahn, Kendall Graveman, Chris Bassitt are out for the year, but these guys have shown that they belong and could be the nucleus of a great staff for years to come.

The Mariners, on the other hand, have been a disappointment. They still have Felix Hernandez as their ace and Hisashi Iwakuma is solid. Iwakuma threw a no-hitter a couple of weeks go. Nelson Cruz has been a big bat for them but Robinson Cano and Kyle Seager have not been as good as they have been the last couple of years, Cano, to his credit, has 30 doubles for the 11th straight year and is four extra-base hits away from having fifty extra-base hit for 11 straight years, too. He will then match Albert Pujols in that category.

The pitching matchups for the weekend will be the following. On Friday night, it will be 25-year-old Aaron Brooks taking the mound for Oakland. Brooks is 1-1, and he will be opposed by left Edgar Olmos, also 25 years old. Saturday’s game will feature the veteran right Jesse Chavez going against Seattle’s ace, King Felix Hernandez. Hernandez is 14-8 this year but is 21-8 lifetime against the A’s. There will be a fireworks show after the game. On Sunday, lefty Felix Doubront will go for Oakland, and Hisashi Iwakuma will pitch for Seattle. The Mariners are 9-4 against Oakland this year and need just one more win to win the season series for the third straight year.