Oakland A’s podcast with Charlie O: Taking a look at how the A’s are faring so far; White Sox just the cure A’s looking for

Photo credit: @Athletics

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Charlie O:

1) How are the A’s doing so far this season in your opinion?

2) You say starting pitching is a problem–what can the A’s do to chance the situation?

3) Should the A’s be considering making trades for starting pitchers?

4) What should be the A’s immediate goals?

5) Will solving the stadium problem help the A’s get back on track on the field?

Charlie O is your host for the Oakland A’s podcasts each Tuesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury’s Podcast, News and Commentary: A’s attendance figures all the talk; compare tonight’s attendance to Tuesday’s free-for-all game

sfgate.com file photo: Whenever the Giants come to Oakland the Coliseum like this 2017 visit it gets busy otherwise it’s been pretty quiet around the Oakland Coliseum

On the That’s Amaury’s podcast:

#1 A’s attendance figures to have been all the conversation as the team is currently 29th of 30 teams in crowd counts.

#2 The A’s average attendance for games played at the Coliseum Mondays through Thursdays is at 8653, the lowest counts in some 15 years.

#3 What is most attributed to the drop in the crowds fans say it’s non-recognizable players and A’s president David Kaval says the amount of ticket sellers have been shifted to accommodating season ticket holders who reportedly are also below the average number in MLB.

#4 The A’s are having a struggle keeping top talent. The A’s have become an audition stage for top talent, who later bolt for bigger and better pay and end up leaving.

#5 The Oakland economy: Does the high rents, cost of living, low wages, play into fans sports dollars who may not be able to pay the $30 parking fee, tickets and feed a family of four at a ball game?

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the A’s Spanish radio play-by-play talent and does News and Commentary each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

MLB The Show podcast with Daniel Dullum: Tsunami wave of fans over Angels’ Ohtani in Japan; Free baseball at the A’s on Tuesday night; Giants’ Samardzija rocked in rehab

photo by @EspnStatsInfo: Shohei Ohtani who leads Major League Baseball with an on base percentage of .800 and also has held hitters while pitching to a .180 batting average

MLB The Show podcast with Daniel Dullum

1 I’m a believer! Ohtani rocks! His hot start is making waves back in Japan.

2 A’s 50th anniversary game coming up on Tuesday – on the house.

3 Giants’ Jeff Samardzija lit up in rehab start.

4 Rare baserunning goof robs D-Back of first home run.

5 Derek Jeter skipping the upcoming Marlins-Yankees series in New York.

Daniel does the MLB podcast each Sunday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

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

by Jerry Feitelberg

Image result for barry zito

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.

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

by Jerry Feitelberg

Image result for sonny gray pitching

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.

Felix King Again at O.Co as M’s top A’s 8-3

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

OAKLAND, Calif. – Yogi Berra wasn’t at O.Co Coliseum, but one couldn’t help but think of him following the A’s 7-3 loss to the Seattle Mariners. It was, as the Yankee legend famously said, “déjà vu all over again” following a dominant performance from Seattle starter Felix Hernandez.

Hernandez crafted a 6-hit, three-run masterpiece in his first appearance at O.Co since a July 4th loss that snapped 13 straight starts in Alameda County without a loss. The Phenom of the Pacific Northwest threw 102 pitches, including 72 strikes to handcuff the A’s offense over 8 innings. Where Felix was dominant, A’s starter Jesse Chavez was not.

Chavez (7-14, 4.17 ERA) was tagged early, tagging the righty for 5 runs over the first three innings. Seattle (65-71) chased the Oakland starter with no outs in the third one batter after surrendering the fourth and fifth runs on a Logan Morrison home run to right center. Morrison also plated a run in the first, part of a three-run inning. The M’s collected three hits and two walks in the first frame parade of baserunners.

“It seems like, in games where he doesn’t have his fastball,” said Melvin. “It seems like his cutter, fastball and changeup are pretty close in velocity. He probably only threw 7 or 8 curveballs which means he didn’t have an effective curve.”

Melvin didn’t believe it was an issue of stamina for Chavez, who has spent the majority of the season starting after mostly spot starts and short tenures as a starter in his career.

Arnold Leon, coming on in relief after Chavez’s brief outing, didn’t fare much better. He surrendered a solo home run to Shawn O’Malley, the first of the Mariners left fielder’s major league career, with no outs in the 5th and was tagged for a second run on a run-scoring base-hit by designated hitter Mark Trumbo in the 6th. The Mariners added another run in the 7th on a two-out single off R.J. Alvarez by Kyle Seager.

Hernandez (16-8, 3.65) stifled the Athletics, as he so often has in his career, The King added to his court a 22 career win against the A’s, running his record against the Green and Gold to 22-8 over 39 starts.

Hernandez cruised through the first three innings, allowing only one baserunner, a Stephen Vogt single over the first third of the game while picking up 4 punch-outs.

Oakland finally managed to string together some base hits against the six-time All-Star in the 4th. First baseman Mark Canha launched his 12th homer of the season, reversing Hernandez’ offering to put Oakland on the board. The M’s ace managed to retire the next two batters, but yielded three-straight two-out hits capped by Billy Butlers two-run single to cut the Mariners lead to 6-3 at the time.

Hernandez would rebound from the hiccup, allowing only one hit over the next 4 innings while striking out another 4 batters. He faced the minimum number of batters over the final 5 frames, doubling off Butler after his 7th inning single. Joe Beimel allowed a single in the ninth, but kept the A’s off the board to seal Hernandez’ victory.

The A’s (58-78) have now dropped to a season-worst 20 games below the .500 mark. Oakland currently sits four wins back of the Tigers with the lowest mark in the American League. If they want to stay ahead of the Phillies at 53, they’ll need Sunday’s starter Sean Nolin to avoid the sweep against Hisashi Iwakuma.

“We’re basically down 4 of 6 guys from where we started this season,” said Melvin on his rotation after the trade of Scott Kazmir and injuries to starters like Kendall Graveman, Jesse Hahn. “There’s significance to that. For some of the newer guys it’s an opportunity to make a mark.”

Nolin, a piece in the Josh Donaldson trade with Toronto in the offseason, will be making his major league debut against the international sensation who threw a no-hitter in early August. The labor of winning won’t be any lighter on Labor Day with the A’s welcoming the division-leading Astros to O.Co for a three-game set.

The Angels bounce back to beat the A’s.

by Jerry Feitelberg

The Los Angeles Angels took game two of the three-game series 6-2. Cody Martin started for Oakland, and he pitched well the first two innings. He faltered in the third and was charged with five runs while allowing just three hits. A’s manager Bob Melvin used five pitchers in the game, and none of them was on the roster yesterday. The Angels Matt Shoemaker gave up a home run to the second batter he faced but settled down. Shoemaker went seven innings allowing just one run and five hits. The Angels used three more relievers to finish the game.

The A’s took an early 1-0 lead in the bottom of the first. Brett Lawrie hit his fourteenth dinger of the season. It came on a 2-1 pitch and it landed about eight rows back in the left centerfield bleachers.

The Angels scored four times in the top of the third. Martin gave up three straight hits then walked a batter and hit Albert Pujols with a pitch before getting an out in the inning for two runs. The Angels scored another on a ground out, and the fourth run came in on a sacrifice fly..

The Angels added a run in the fourth and one in the seventh on a solo blast by Kole Calhoun. The A’s, on the other hand, have had just one hit since the second inning. 6-1 in the middle of the 7th.

The A’s scored a run in the bottom of the ninth. STephen Vogt and Billy Butler singled to put men on at first and third with no out. Vogt scored on a wild pitch. Street composed himself and retired the next three A’s hitters to secure the win for the Angels. Final score 6-2 in favor of LA.

Game Notes- Cody Martin, Arnold Leon, Dan Otero, Ryan Dull and R.J.Alvarez all pitched for Oakland Tuesday night. CVody Martin became the 26th player to pitch for Oakland this season. That tied an Oakland record set in 1997 and matched in 2009 and 2011.  Ryan Dull was the 27th, and that tied the franchise record of the Philadelphia A’s in 1915 and the Kansas City A’s in 1955.

The rubber game of the series will be played at 12:35 pm Wednesday afternoon at the O.co Coliseum. Sonny Gray will hurl for Oakland while Andrew Heaney will pitch for LA.

Time of game was three hours and four minutes and 14,178 were in the house.

Semien’s Blast Backs Bassitt to First Win With Oakland

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

OAKLAND, Calif. – It had been nearly a year since Oakland Athletics starter Chris Bassitt knew what it was like to see a W next to his name in the Sporting Green the day after one of his starts. It was a feeling he’d only experienced once in his two-year, 16-game major league career. Halfway through his 11th career start, this time coming against the Baltimore Orioles at O.Co Coliseum, it looked like the youngster would be waiting a little longer.

Orioles Hurler Miguel Gonzalez shut out the A’s for four innings Tuesday night, yielding only one hit before the Oakland offense roughed him up for five runs in the 5th and 6th innings combined. Marcus Semien launched a three-run homerun, Brett Lawrie hit a run-scoring triple and Billy Burns picked up an RBI single to support a near-flawless Bassitt (1-4, 2.64 ERA) earn a 5-0 win.

“I don’t really care about ERA, I don’t care about stats,” said Bassitt. “I just care about wins. I don’t care about anything else. I don’t look at any stats. I can tell you what my record is and that’s it. As for runs, I don’t care if it’s one, zero or eight as long as we win.”

Bassitt authored a standout performance, throwing a season high 104 pitches over 7 innings to handcuff the vaunted Orioles (54-52) offense. Bassitt came two pitches shy of matching his career high, 106, set last season in his first start of the year August 20th against the Tigers. The 26-year-old righty struck out seven Birds, besting a career-high most recently set in his previous outing against Cleveland.

“He’s a really intense kid out there,” said A’s manager Bob Melvin. “Since he’s been in the rotation, you see each and every time he goes out there he’s more and more confident.”

Bassitt’s only other win at the major league level also came in a 7-plus inning performance. Before joining the A’s in the Jeff Samardzija trade this offseason, Bassitt helped the Pale Hose to a 2-0 win over the Detroit Tigers, firing 7 2/3 innings of scoreless ball on September 22nd.

When asked how he felt about getting the win, Bassitt had only one word to describe it. “Relief.”

Bassitt scattered only 5 hits, allowing a single Baltimore baserunner to reach third base. Slugger Chris Davis was the only one to get 90 feet from scoring, opening the 2nd inning with a double. Bassitt froze Davis after catcher Matt Wieters roped a liner right into Brett Lawrie’s glove. Davis moved to third on a bounce out by J.J. Hardy but was stranded after Bassitt punched out Jimmy Paredes to escape the jam.

“Thank god for Stephen Vogt,” said Bassitt of his battery mate for the night. “Take all the credit and give it to him. I was really fast tonight and he just knew how to slow me down.”

The Orioles would again put a runner on 2nd base with one out in the next inning, but Manny Machado bounced out to Lawrie. Proving he is no worse for wear in his second game back from a lengthy DL stint, Coco Crisp stole a line drive basehit from Gerardo Parra with a diving catch to save what would have been the go ahead run.

“Coco is back,” said Bassitt emphatically.

“I said all along it’s going to be tough for him not to dive,” said Melvin of his left fielder. “He only plays one way.”

Heading in to the 5th, the A’s had managed only one hit and three baserunners against the stingy Gonzalez. They found an opportune time to piece together a two-hit inning, with Eric Sogard ripping a one-out double down the right field line to start the rally. After Marcus Semien struck out swinging, the rookie leader in hits Billy Burns came up to the plate looking for the clutch hit that proved elusive to the A’s over the previous four innings.

Burns delivered his 98th base knock, flicking a soft liner into shallow center field. O’s outfielder Adam Jones corralled the ball and fired a seed to home plate hoping to cut down Sogard at the plate. The ball took an Oakland bounce off the back side of the mound, allowing Sogard to come around easy for the 1-0 lead.

The next inning, the A’s struck again off Gonzalez after Billy Butler opened the inning with a ground-rule double. After an Ike Davis grounder to third for the first out, Brett Lawrie sat on a Gonzalez fastball, crushing a triple to the wall in left center field to put the A’s up 2-0 and stick Gonzalez (9-8. 4.32) with the loss.

Reliever Chaz Roe kept Lawrie stranded at first by coaxing a strikeout from Mark Canha before brining Sogard to the plate with two down. Showalter elected to issue the free base, presumably Sogard’s first in his major league career, to bring Semien to the plate.

“Both of us were a little surprised,” said Semien of his and his fellow keystoner Sogard’s reaction. “I don’t think he knew till he looked behind him.”

Semien responded to Showalter’s slight, mashing his 10th homerun of the season over the wall in left center. Semien’s dinger handed Bassitt a comfy 5-0 lead heading into the final three innings.

“Sometimes you can get a little too fired up,” said Melvin. “But after you hit a homer it’s nice.”

The Fernandos, Rodriguez and Abad, each tossed a scoreless inning to ensure Bassitt’s scoreless start would stand intact and give the A’s (48-60) their third win in four games.

The A’s could pull off the series win against an Orioles team just one game back of the second Wild Card with a win in Wednesday’s series finale. Kendall Graveman takes the mound in the matinee match-up, squaring off against Wei-Yin Chen.

Oakland travels to LA to face the Dodgers

by Jerry Feitelberg

Image result for los angeles dodgers

The A’s will be in Los Angeles for a short two-game series starting Tuesday evening against the Los Angeles Dodgers. The A’s lost the last four games since the Scott Kazmir trade and were swept by the San Francisco Giants over the weekend.

The Giants are red hot having won 11 of the last 12 games played and are just one game behind the NL West Divison leaders, the hated LA Dodgers. The A’s could help the Giants by knocking off the Dodgers, but they will have their work cut out for them as they will be facing two left-handed starters. The A’s are 7-19 against lefties in 2015, and one of the lefties is the reigning Cy Young award winner and the Most Valuable Player in the National League last year, Clayton Kershaw.

The Dodgers will enter the game with a record of 56-44 and hold a one game lead over the surging Giants. The Giants were four games behind the Dodgers last week but picked up three games in the standings as they were 9-1 in their last ten games while the Dodgers were a mediocre 5-5.

Former Oakland Athletic, Brett Anderson, will be on the hill for the Dodgers Tuesday night. Anderson sports a record of 5-5 and has an ERA of 3.33. The Dodger offense can be potent. The Dodger attack is led by first baseman, Adrian Gonzalez. Gonzalez is hitting .298 with 21 homers and 60 RBIs. The rest of the infield is solid with Howie Kendrick at second, Jimmy Rollins at short and Justin Turner at third. All four infielders have a lot of pop in their bats and can do a ton of damage. The outfield is manned by Andre Ethier, rookie Joc Pedersen, and Yasiel Puig. Ethier is hitting .276 with ten homers and 33 RBIs. Rookie-of the-year candidate, Joc Pedersen, has a low batting average, .230, but has hit 21 dingers and has knocked in 43. Rightfield is manned by Yasiel Puig. Puig missed six weeks of the season due to a hamstring injury and is batting just .253 with six homers and 22  ribbies. There has been a lot of speculation in the LA press that Puig might be traded. His production has gone down each year since he broke in 2013. The Dodger management has said that they have no intention of trading Puig, but one never knows. The catching chores are handled by All-Star catcher, Yasmani Grandal. Grandal came to the Dodgers in the trade that sent Matt Kemp to the Padres. On paper, the deal looked like a steal for the Padres as Grandal’s performance in 2014 was subpar. This year, however, Grandal has been a pleasant surprise handling the talented Dodger pitching staff while compiling a batting average of .281 and having hit fourteen home runs and making the NL All-Star team.

The A’s continue to flounder in 2015. They own a record of 44-56 and have just 62 games left to play. They have not had a lengthy hot streak so far this season and continue to play sloppy baseball. They have committed 86 errors to lead the majors. A’s GM Billy Beane traded away one of their best pitchers, Scott Kazmir, as it became apparent that the A’s were not going to make the playoffs. Rumors swirl around the clubhouse about the futures of closer Tyler Clippard, utilityman Ben Zobrist and reliever Eric O’Flaherty. All three players will be free agents at the end of the year, and Beane probably will trade them for prospects.

After the series in LA, they A’s return home for a ten game homestand against the Cleveland Indians, Baltimore Orioles, and Houston Astros.

A’s Don’t “Look Like Idiots”, Wait Out Walk-off Win

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

OAKLAND, Calif. – The Oakland Athletics hosted their 16th annual Root Beer Float day Wednesday night at the O.Co Coliseum, treating fans to a sweet treat before the game before Ike Davis served des the dessert during the game. After raising $34,709 for the Juvenile Diabetes Relief Fund, the A’s topped Felix Doubront and the Toronto Blue Jays 4-3 on a pinch-hit single.

Josh Phegley, Stephen Vogt and Jake Smolinski all knocked in runs as well, and starter Sonny Gray pitched seven innings of two-run ball to help Oakland (44-52) pass the Seattle Mariners to move a half-game out of the American League West cellar. The Blue Jays (48-48) fall back to .500 after winning the first game of the series.

The walk-off came in bizarre fashion in the bottom of the 10th, with the A’s not sure if they in fact were winners. Davis bounced a chopper that Jose Reyes dove for before tossing to first, allowing another late inning sub Josh Reddick to score on what first base umpire Marvin Hudson ruled a base hit in a bang-bang play.

“I didn’t think he was going to catch it,” said Davis. “As soon as I hit it I thought ‘that’s going to be a hit’. He made a good play and it was really close.”

Davis came off the bench to pinch hit against deposed Jays closer Roberto Osuna (1-4, 2.28 ERA) and quickly fell behind 0-2. He managed to fight off a fastball, trickling it to the opposite field for the hit.

“Ike was coming in cold,” said A’s manager Bob Melvin. “That’s a tough assignment. After the first couple pitches he was behind. He fouled some back, wasn’t trying to do too much. He wanted to put it in play on the other side of the diamond.”

“He blew it by me twice,” said Davis. “I knew I had to shorten up. I tried to hit the ball hard the first two times.”

It wasn’t without drama though. Amidst a brief A’s celebration, Toronto manager John Gibbons asked for, and was granted, a replay review. The A’s players gathered on the mound, awaiting their fate.

“It’s a tough position to be in,” said Reddick. “If they turn it over, we’re going to look like idiots.”

After a 2 minutes and 45 seconds of review, home plate ump Hunter Wendelstedt confirmed that the call on the field would stand, with there being inconclusive evidence to overturn the call.

“They stayed with what they were told to do,” said Melvin on the ruling. “If there’s no definitive proof to overturn, you stay with it. It was nerve-wracking waiting on the verdict, but we’ll take it.”

“It felt like the longest replay of the year,” noted Reddick.

The A’s very briefly celebrated before racing into the dugout.

“We had a lot of fun out there planning our exit,” said Davis on the pre-concocted curtain call.

The game could have gone entirely the other way though. With Oakland leading 3-2, Tyler Clippard took over in the ninth inning looking for save number 18. He opened the inning issuing a free pass to Danny Valencia then coughing up a double to Devon Travis. Jose Reyes walked to load the bases with former A’s slugger Josh Donaldson up to the dish.

Clippard managed to down Donaldson on strikes, but brought around the tying run after walking Jose Bautista. He managed to coax an Edwin Encarnacion strikeout and Dionner Navarro fly out to escape the jam tied. Fernando Rodriguez (1-1, 3.21) then pitched a scoreless tenth to pick up the win.

“That’s tough,” said Melvin on Clippard’s outing. “Now you’re in a no-win situation. All you can do is keep it tied. You have the middle of their order up, some tough customers to deal with.”

“To get back into the dugout a tie game allowed us to win that game later,” added Melvin.

For the second night in a row Josh Donaldson managed to sour his warm homecoming by driving in a run, plating the first run of the game on a single up the middle in the top of the third inning. He’d endear himself to A’s fans again an inning later, throwing a tricky grounder in the dirt to give Smolinski a two-base error. Smolinski moved over to third base on a Ben Zobrist single, then came around to score on Phegley’s liner up the middle, knotting the game 1-1.

With starter Sonny Gray not featuring his sharpest stuff the A’s offense supported its ace, tacking on a pair of runs in the fifth. Billy Burns reached on a single, then swiped second before being knocked in on Stephen Vogt’s base hit. Melvin wasn’t able to see the singling, getting ejected after arguing a strike call on a botched pitchout during Burns’ steal.

“There was a bit of a miscommunication,” said Melvin on the situation. “I was asking if it was a pitchout. I think (homeplate umpire Wendelstedt) thought I was continuing to argue.”

Zobrist would also single, forcing Doubront to issue the intentional walk to Billy Butler to create a force out. Smolinski hit a deep fly to center field, but center fielder Kevin Pillar managed to pull in the ball. Vogt scampered home to convert the sacrifice. Brett Lawrie appeared to crack the game open with a scorching liner up the middle, but second baseman Devon Travis was perfectly positioned to field the hot shot.

Gray gave the fans a scare in the sixth, taking an Edwin Encarnacion liner up the middle off his back foot. After a brief visit from the trainer and a smile from Gray, the ace continued on no worse for wear.

“I knew he broke his bat, I just didn’t know how fast it was coming,” said Gray. “I knew it hit me pretty solid.”

“I was telling Vogt and Phegley I was fine,” said Gray on why he was smiling during the trainer’s visit. “They told me to tell the dugout that, but the trainer was already out there.”

The A’s would need both runs after Danny Valencia opened the 7th inning with a first-pitch homer to straight-away center field. Gray would finish out the inning, sandwiching a Donaldson walk between a pair of outs. He’d depart the game after finishing the inning, having struck out three while walking two and allowing 9 hits for two earned runs but wound up with a no-decision.

“They really made him work for a while,” said Melvin. “He was throwing some good pitches and they weren’t trying to do too much with them. They were hitting the ball the other way, fouling some pitches off.”

“There are outings like that where you really have to work hard on it,” stated Melvin. “He ends up leaving with the lead. I thought he pitched really well.”

Edward Mujica relieved Gray in the 8th, opening the inning with a leadoff single to Encarnacion. Mujica would erase the baserunner, fielding a grounder from Chris Colabello to start the 1-4-3 double play. He would cough up a two-out single to Russell Martin, then hand second base to pinch runner Ezequiel Carrera on a wild pitch before mowing down Pillar on a ground out to shortstop Marcus Semien.

Doubront would have been the hardluck loser. The southpaw went just 4 2/3 innings, allowing 7 hits and two earned runs to go with the unearned marker.

Donaldson and the Jays wrap up their first visit to the Coliseum this season with a matinee game Wednesday. Scott Kazmir takes the mound in what may be one of his last starts in the green and gold with the trade deadline approaching. He’ll be opposed by youngster Drew Hutchinson.