San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Giants and Reds conclude 4 game set in matinee at Great American Ballpark today

Cincinnati Reds Will Benson rounds third base on the way home after getting congratulated by third base coach JR House after connecting with a three run home run in the bottom of the third inning at Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati (AP News photo)

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 The Cincinnati Reds (51-46) Will Benson slugged a bottom of the third inning three run home run which contributed to the Reds defeating the San Francisco Giants (54-42) at Great American Ballpark on Wednesday night 3-2.

#2 The loss ends the Giants seven game win streak. During the streak the Giants defeated the Colorado Rockies twice, swept the Pittsburgh Pirates in three games, and beat the Reds in the first two games of this four game series.

#3 For the Giants Blake Sabol turned on a ball for his 12th home run and pitcher Ross Stripling pitched six innings surrendering three runs. Talk about Sabol’s home run and Stripling’s outing.

#4 Giants manager Gabe Kapler said the Giants had fought to the end to try to keep the streak going but the Reds relief pitching just had enough to keep the Giants off balance and off the bases in the eighth and ninth innings.

#5 Giants hope to start a new streak with starter right hander Alex Cobb (6-2 ERA 2.82) and for the Cincinnati Reds Andrew Abbott (4-2 ERA 2.45) game is underway at the time of this recording.

Michael Duca does the San Francisco Giants podcasts each Thursday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants’ Seven-Game Winning Streak Ends With 3-2 Loss to Reds

Photo credit: @Reds

By: Mary Anne

The San Francisco Giants and Cincinnati Reds squared off Wednesday at Great American Ball Park. The Giants lost 3-2 to the Reds in the third game of their series. San Francisco fell to 54-42, while Cincinnati improved to 51-46.

The Giants’ starting lineup featured Joc Pederson, Mike Yastrzemski, Wilmer Flores, Michael Conforto, Luis Matos, Blake Sabol, David Villar, Brett Wisely, Casey Schmitt, and Ross Stripling. Stripling pitched for six innings and gave up four hits, three earned runs, two strikeouts, and one home run. Stripling’s now 0-3 with a 5.92 ERA.

After two scoreless innings, Cincinnati took the first lead of the game in the bottom of the third inning. Will Benson homered on a fly ball to left center field. Christian Encarnacion-Strand and Tyler Stephenson scored for a 3-0 lead.

The Giants finally scored in the top of the fifth inning. Joc Pederson grounded into a double play to Christian Encarnacion-Strand to Elly De La Cruz to Graham Ashcraft. David Villar scored to cut the Reds’ lead to 3-1. Brett Wisely went to third base, Casey Schmitt was out at second base, and Pederson was out at first base with two outs.

The Giants made it a one-run game in the top of the seventh inning. Blake Sabol homered on a fly ball to left field to cut the Reds’ lead to 3-2.

Notes
Giants infielder Brandon Crawford was put on the ten-day injured list with left knee inflammation, which was retroactive to July 17.

The Giants recalled infielder David Villar from Triple-A Sacramento. Moreover, outfielder Bryce Johnson was returned to Triple-A Sacramento.

Former Giants infielder Eddie Bressoud passed away peacefully last Thursday at age 91. Bressoud played for the New York and San Francisco Giants from 1956 to 1961.

Up Next
The Giants and Reds will wrap up their series on Thursday at 9:35 am Pacific.

San Francisco Takes Two From Reds 4-2 and 11-10 in Marathon Night Cap

San Francisco Giants pitcher Camilo Doval (left) shares congratulations with first baseman Wilmer Flores after their victory over the Cincinnati Reds in a make up suspended game (first game) at Citizens Bank Ballpark in Cincinnati on Tue Jul 18, 2023 (AP News photo)

San Francisco Takes Two From Reds 4-2 and 11-10 in Marathon Night Cap

By Barbara Mason

Monday night the San Francisco Giants (54-41) were tied with the Cincinnati Reds (50-46) 2-2 going into the eighth inning at Citizen’s Bank Ballpark. They had two runners on second and third with one out. The Giants have been having some amazing late inning success and this eighth inning had all the makings of yet another one. Mother Nature had other plans. The skies opened up complete with lightning and thunder and after nearly a two-hour delay, the game was suspended.

Front game: Tuesday afternoon both teams took the field to complete this game picking up where they left off with the score tied 2-2. San Francisco was unable to bring the two runners on base home and this game went into extra innings.

The Giants went to work in the tenth inning scoring twice. Joc Pederson doubled bringing Brett Wisely home and taking the lead 3-2. Next up Michael Conforto grounded into a field’s choice and Pederson scored for a 4-2 lead which would be the final and San Francisco had won game one of this series.

The two teams would take a breather before they headed back on the field for game two. Anthony DeSclafani was on the mound for the Giants. Luke Weaver got the nod for the Reds.

Night cap: In the first inning of game two Wilmer Flores got the Giants on the board with a home run taking the early 1-0 lead.

The Reds took the lead in the bottom of the first inning 2-1. Jake Fraley homered with Matt McLain on base. The Reds extended their lead in the second inning with another long ball from Will Benson with Spencer Steer on base and Cincinnati had a 4-1 lead.

San Francisco tied up the game in the third inning. Wilmer Flores hit his second home run of the game, a three-run shot and the Giants were right back in this game tied 4-4.

This game would see-saw all night with the two teams trading the lead. Going into the ninth inning San Francisco was clinging to an 11-10 lead. Six home runs left the park between the two teams in this slug fest.

The Giants were unable to put any runs on the board in the ninth and the Reds had the bottom of the ninth to tie up this game or pull off a win. The Giants defense held on and despite the Reds having two runners on base, San Francisco had won game two of this series 11-10 for their seventh win in a row.

The third game of four games of this series will be played on Wednesday with first pitch at 4:10 PM. Ross Stripling (0-2 ERA 6.11) will take the mound for the Giants. Cincinnati will be going with Graham Ashcraft (4-7 ERA 5.95) on the hill.

Rain suspends Giants-Reds opener in Cincinnati to be continued Tuesday

The field was covered after an 1 hr 55 min rain delay and suspended on Mon Jul 17, 2023 between the San Francisco Giants and Cincinnati Reds. The contest will continue Tue Jul 18, 2023 at Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

Monday night the San Francisco Giants (52-41) traveled to Cincinnati to take on the Reds (50-44) on Monday night as hard as both teams tried the game ended up suspended due to rain at Great American Ballpark with the score tied in the eighth inning at 2-2. The Giants are coming off a sweep of the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park in Pittsburgh this past weekend.

Before being called, this was a wild game laced with homers. The Reds took the lead in the first inning Matt McLain homered to right center for the early 1-0 lead.

The Giants tied up the game in the third inning. Austin Slater hit a long ball to center, an absolute blast of 442 ft.

In the sixth inning San Francisco took the lead with yet another home run off the bat of Wilmer Flores. This was a solo 387 ft shot. The Giants now had a 2-1 lead.

In the seventh inning the Reds came back to tie the game 2-2 when Jonathan India knocked the ball out of the part. There had been four home runs between the two teams in this game, all of them solo.

The Giants had it all going in the eighth inning. They had two runners on base. Joc Pederson walked and Wilmer Flores doubled. With one out, J.D. Davis came to the plate and San Francisco was threatening to break the tie. It was then that the skies opened up and thunder and lightning put a stop to the eighth inning.

The game was halted and after one hour and fifty-five minutes the game was officially suspended. The Giants were primed and ready to score some runs and it was a shame that the weather put a glitch in the inning.

This game will be continued at 2:40 PT followed by the regularly scheduled game two. San Francisco will have the two runners on second and third with one out. The Giants will try to break the tie and take this game one before going into game two at 4:10 PM.

 

              

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: 2nd place Giants making a move for first; SF battles Cincinnati at Great American tonight

San Francisco Giants Michael Conforto slides in ahead of the Pittsburgh Pirates catcher Jason Delay’s tag for the second run in the top of the tenth inning at PNC Park in Pittsburgh on Sun Jul 16, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the Giants podcast with Marko:

#1 The San Francisco Giants (52-41) wrapped up their series with the Pittsburgh Pirates (41-52) winning their fifth straight game in row at PNC Park in Pittsburgh with the win the Giants in second place in the NL West.

#2 Giants manager Gabe Kapler has this team turned around since rookies Casey Schmitt, Patrick Bailey, and Luis Matos have arrived on the scene they’ve seemed to have inspired the club to go on this run and their charging for first place since sweeping the Pittsburgh Pirates over the weekend.

#3 In Sunday’s contest Michael Conforto and Patrick Bailey were part of the Giants hit parade clouting doubles in the tenth inning to help the Giants take the eventual four run win 8-4.

#4 Giants closer in the tenth was Scott Alexander who shut the door on the Pirates going an inning with one hit and one walk. Alexander has done the job in relief for San Francisco so far this year.

#5 The NL West second place Giants head to Cincinnati to face the second place NL Central Reds at Great American Ballpark on Monday at 4:00pm for San Francisco Logan Webb (8-7 ERA 3.14) for Cincinnati Brandon Williamson (1-2 ERA 5.21). Marko talk about the match up between the Giants and the Big Red Machine.

Join Marko Ukalovic for the San Francisco Giants podcasts Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants Sweep Pirates With 8-4 Win in Pittsburgh

Photo credit: post-gazette.com

By: Mary Anne

The San Francisco Giants wrapped up their three-game series against the Pittsburgh Pirates on a positive note, a sweep on the road — and their fifth win in a row. The Giants defeated the Pirates 8-4 at PNC Park on Sunday.

The Giants improved to 52-41, while the Pirates fell to 41-52. Giants pitcher Ryan Walker picked up the win for a 3-0 record after pitching one inning and giving up one strikeout.

The Giants’ starting lineup featured LaMonte Wade Jr., Joc Pederson, J.D. Davis, Michael Conforto, Mike Yastrzemski, Luis Matos, Blake Sabol, Brandon Crawford, Brett Wisely, and Alex Wood. Wood pitched five innings and gave up one earned run, three walks, and one strikeout.

The Pirates got on the board first in the bottom of the second inning. Bryan Reynolds singled on a soft ground ball to Brandon Crawford. Jared Triolo scored for a 1-0 lead. Jason Delay went to third base, while Connor Joe went to second base.

The Giants took the lead in the top of the third inning. J.D. Davis singled on a line drive to Henry Davis. Brett Wisely and LaMonte Wade Jr. scored for a 2-1 lead. Joc Pederson went to second base as a fielding error was made by Henry Davis. Luis Matos grounded out softly to Nick Gonzales to Osvaldo Bido. Joc Pederson scored for a 3-1 lead. J.D. Davis went to third base, while Mike Yastrzemski went to second base with two outs.

The Pirates tied the game in the bottom of the sixth and eighth innings, respectively. Jared Triolo grounded out to Brandon Crawford to LaMonte Wade Jr. Henry Davis scored to cut the Giants’ lead to 3-2 with one out. Triolo was out on a sacrifice fly to Michael Conforto. Andrew McCutchen scored to tie the game 3-3. Josh Palacios went to third base with one out.

The game went to extra innings.

The Giants poured in the runs in the top of the tenth inning. Joc Pederson was out on a sacrifice fly to Josh Palacios. Casey Schmitt scored for a 4-3 Giants lead with one out. Michael Conforto doubled on a sharp fly ball to Henry Davis. Wilmer Flores and J.D. Davis scored for a 6-3 Giants lead. Patrick Bailey doubled on a sharp fly ball to Josh Palacios. Michael Conforto and Mike Yastrzemski scored for an 8-3 Giants lead.

The Pirates cut the Giants’ lead in half in the bottom of the tenth inning. Henry Davis singled on a ground ball to Luis Matos, deflected by Casey Schmitt. Andrew McCutchen scored to pull the Pirates within four, 8-4, but that’s all she wrote.

The Giants will take on the Cincinnati Reds on Monday at 4:10 pm Pacific.

MLB The Show podcast with Charlie O: MLB hoping to make big European market in roads for London series this weekend; plus much more news

Chicago Cubs’ Seiya Suzuki practices during a training session ahead of the baseball match against St. Louis Cardinals at the MLB World Tour London Series, in London Stadium on Fri Jun 22, 2023. (AP News photo)

MLB The Show podcast with Charlie O:

#1 The London Series is underway with the Chicago Cubs and the St Louis Cardinals matching up this weekend. It’s got to be an important series with MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred in attendance as he’s trying to boost the MLB brand in Europe.

#2 The Tampa Bay Rays Wander Franco who has expressed frustration by breaking a bat in the Rays dugout and not running out ground balls was sent home on Thursday night and benched on Friday night was back in the line up on Saturday and admitted that the organization is trying to get control of his frustrations and he admitted making errors that got away from him. Franco is hitting .287 and is in the second season of his $182 million contract.

#3 Charlie what can you say about the Cincinnati Reds that hasn’t already been said. The Red Legs are on a 12 game win streak and Elly De La Cruz’s cycle on Friday night added to the success the club has been having. The Reds are in first in the NL Central by 1.5 games on second place the Milwaukee Brewers.

#4 The Los Angeles Angels enhanced their infield up the middle acquiring Eduardo Escobar from the New York Mets for pitchers Coleman Crow and Landon Marceaux, who were 19 and 20th in the Angels system. Escobar’s $9 million contact will be picked up by the Mets at the pro rated MLB minimum. 2024 is an option year for Escobar.

#5 MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred who is attending the London Series this weekend as we spoke about earlier said that one big turnout for the Oakland A’s on Tue Jun 23 at the Oakland Coliseum doesn’t solve a “decade of inaction” referring to the fans reverse boycott and is waiting for the A’s to submit their relocation application in preparation for an owners vote that requires a 75% yes vote. Eight no votes can turn the tide for the A’s moving to Vegas.

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

A’s run in ninth edges Reds 5-4 to avoid sweep at Coliseum

Oakland Athletics’ Esteury Ruiz hits the game-wining RBI single against the Cincinnati Reds during the ninth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Apr 30, 2023 (AP News photo)

Cincinnati 010 003 000 – 4 12 1

Oakland. 200 100 101- 5. 9. 1

Time: 2:48.

Attendance: 18,271

Sunday, April 30, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–The Las Vegas Athletics’ (6-23) farm team in Oakland went into today’s encounter with the Cincinnati Reds 12-16) with several dubious distinctions on the debit side of its balance sheet. They were tied for fourth place for the worst record after 28 games in major league history since 1901.

That includes the Federal League but not the Negro Leagues that have achieved posthumous big league status. They set the MLB record for most losses in April. Here the proviso is that opening day used to be April 15. The 226 runs their pitching staff had allowed were the most in major league history in a season’s first 28 games with the exception of the 1923 Philadelphia Phillies.

The Elias Sports Bureau reports that the A’s starting pitchers, with their 0-15, 8.68 records hold the record for longest winless streak to open a season in the history of the major leagues. The starters also had the highest ERA in the show, almost 2-1/2 runs higher than the Red Sox’ woeful rotation.

The bullpen’s ERA of 6.95 was a little better than the starters’ but still managed to be highest in the majors. The relievers are MLB’s worst in save percentage, is tied for least saves, and tied for second in blown saves. The Athletics also are tied for second worst in fielding percentage. Oh, and did I mention that Oakland’s team batting average is .227? It’s not at the very bottom of leader board, but it barely reaches mediocrity.

That’s why this afternoon’s 5-4 walk off win was such a surprise.

Ken Waldichuk (0-2, 7.82 at game time) represented this woeful crew on the mound. The 25 year old lefty, who came to the A’s last August in the deal that sent Frankie Montás and Lou Trivino to the Bronx, was opposed another southpaw, sophomore Nick Lodolo, 2-1, 6.31 this year and 6-8, 4.26 lifetime.

Oakland went ahead early. With two out and the bases empty, Brent Rocker, one of the few bright spots on the roster, singled to right and the up and down Jesús Aguilar brought him home with an authoritive 428 foot blast over the State Farm sign in left center field for his fifth home run of the season and a 2-0 Athletic lead.

In an all too familiar scenario, the Reds cut that advantage in half. Nick Senzel’s second round tripper of ’23 landed in the stairs separating the Coliseum proper from the seats at the base of Mt. Davis. It came off a hanging curve.

Rooker restored the A’s two run margin all by himself by leading off the hoe fourth with a 411 foot drive to left that just stayed fair. The curve he hit came in at 80.4 mph and left at 112 mph. It was his eighth home run and 21st RBI. Seeing number 25 trotting around third and heading towards home brought back memories.

Cincy threatened in the fifth. Matt Reynolds led off with a fly that dropped safely between Smith and Ruíz . José Barrero followed with a single to left that sent Fairchild to third, after which Barrero stole second. With two out, Waldichuk plunked Spencer Steer to clog the base paths. The A’s starter wiggled out of the jam by getting Fairchild to fly out to center.

The visitors surged ahead in their next turn at bat. With one away, Ramos singled to left and went to second on a similar hit by Senzel. Reynolds flew out to center for the second out, and that ended Waldichuk’s day’s work. Domingo Acevedo came on and yielded a particularly ugly single to TJ Friedl, pinch hitting for Barrero.

Fried smacked a liner up the middle that bounced off Acevedo, who unwisely decided to throw to first. The ball sailed into foul territory, and Ramos sailed all the way home, Senzel raced to third, and Friedl ended up at second on the error. Kevin Newman rubbed salt in Oakland’s wounds with an RBI single to right before Steer lined out to third. Cincinnati now lead, 4-3.

Waldichuk managed to escape with a no decision. In his 5-2/3 innings of work, he allowed three runs, all earned but one posthumous He walked one batter and hit another, struck out seven, and allowed six hits, one for the distance.

He threw 91 pitches, 59 for strikes. Acevedo, who followed Waldichuk was charged with a blown save. Adam Oller and Sam Moll kept Cincinnati off the board, and Zach Jackson pitched an heroic top of the ninth to get the win .

Lodolo also departed the scene early in the day. He lasted five frames and surrendered three tallies, all. earned. He gavee up five hits and hit one batter. Two of the hits he allowed left the park He struck out seven and, like Waldichuk, a no decision. 49 of his 70 offerings were considered strikes.

Rooker’s sac fly to left in the bottom of the seventh with the bases loaded reknotted the score. Peterson had led off with a ssafety to left center, been sacrificed to second by Kevin Smith and gone to second and then to third on Laureano’s infield hit.

The Reds almost won it in the top of the ninth. Newman led off the frame against Jackson with a single to left, and Steere’s double, also to left, put two men in scoring position with no outs and the heart of the order coming to bat. Two strike outs and a grounder to third, and the threat was gone.

The A’s pulled off their win in the bottom of the ninth. Peterson single to left. Smith dropped a bunt down the first base line. Reynolds, how playing first, also dropped the bunt. He picked it up and threw the ball away. The error gave Oakland two men in scoring position and the top of the order coming up.

Alexis Díaz came in to relieve Derek Law, who had relieved Buck Farmer, who had relieved Lucas Sims, who had relieved Lodolo. Díaz hit Ruíz with a pitch. Or so it seemed. But the Reds challenged the call, and New York reversed it. Ruíz had no other choice but to hit a walk off single to left.

The A’s will return to the Coliseum Tuesday evening to face the Seattle Mariners at 6:40pm. Logan Gilbert (1-1 ERA 4.23) will start for Seattle, and Mason Miller (0-1 ERA 6.48) will toe the rubber for the rebounding at denizens of the decrepit pleasure dome on the banks of the River Nimitz.

A’s cough it up in ninth on Reds Fraley pinch double 3-2

Cincinnati Reds’ Luke Maile runs the bases after hitting a solo home run against the Oakland Athletics during the third inning  at the Oakland Coliseum on Sat Apr 29, 2023 (AP News photo)

Cincinnati. 001 000 002 – 3. 9. 1

Oakland. 020 000 000 – 2 7. 1

Time: 2:54

Attendance: 7,052

Saturday, April 29, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Every so often, the A’s find a promising young pitcher and hype him as a second coming of Cy Young. Tod Van Poppel, Tyson Ross, and AJ Puk have come and gone. But, then, so have Tim Hudson, Sonny Gray, and Barry Zito. This year’s candidate for greatness is Kyle Muller.

After the 2022 season, both Baseball America and MLB.com ranked him as the Braves’ top prospect. After he came to the A’s as part of a nine player in December, Baseball America listed him as the A’s #2 prospect, and MLB.com had him at #5 on their equivalent list.

The 25 year old lefty more or less lived up to his billings today. He threw five innings and gave up as many hits. They yielded one run, which came on a homer, and issued two walks while striking out three.Of his 80 pitches, only 33 were balls. Domingo Acevedo replaced him at the start of the sixth. Richard Lovelady took over for the seventh.

Muller’s opposite number for the Reds was another fireballer, Hunter Greene, making his 30th big league start. In the 29 that preceded it, he threw 34 or more pitches at more than 100 mph.

His average fast ball last year, his rookie season, was 98.9 mph. Like Muller, Greene lasted five innings this afternoon and surrendered an equal number of hits. None of them left the park, but they yielded two runs, both earned. Greene walked three Athletics and was guilty of one wild pitch. He struck out 10. His pitch count reach 112, 68 of them strikes.

Alex Young started the sixth to replace him and pitched an inning and a third, allowing only a down the line to left single to Peterson, the first batter he faced. Young handed the ball to Ian Gibaut with no one on and one down in the home half of the seventh,

Muller got into some trouble in the top of the second, thanks to some bad luck. Tyler Stephenson led off with a drive into left that went just under the glove of a diving Aledmys Díaz at short. Then Jace Peterson, who made two costly errors last night, made a beautiful stop of a hard shot to third by Henry Ramos, who beat out Peterson’s one bounce throw to first for a single that put runners on first and second with none down.

Then Ramón Laureano, restored from the injured list today, showed just how good an arm he has. He caught Newman’s foul fly near the home plate area of the visitors’ bullpen and fired a laser to third, nabbing Stephenson, who was trying to advance. That broke the back of a nascent Redleg rally.

The A’s, riding the momentum of Laureano’s throw, played heads up baseball to forge a 2-0 lead ion their half of the second. Carlos Pérez reached first on a throwing error by third baseman Senzel, a play that could just have as justifiably scored as a hit.

After Conner Capel struct out swinging, Laureano double to right, sending Pérez to third, where Kevin Smith replaced him as pinch runner. With Peterson, who eventual fanned, at bat, the A’s speedy right fielder stole third. Jordan Díaz sent a single into right that plated Laureano before Ruíz went down swinging for the third out.

Cincy got one of those two runs back in the top of the third on Luke Maille’s lead off 408 foot blast to right off a 93.9 mph slider. Maille’s homer, his first of the year, raised his batting average from .211 to .250.

The A’s still were leading, 2-1, after seven when Zach Jackson took over mound duties and held the visitors to an innocuous single.

Casey Legumina went to the hill for Cincinnati in the bottom of the eighth. He walked Peterson, but a strike out and a pitcher’s best friend kept Oakland at bay.

Jeurys Familia entered the fray in the top of the ninth looking for his third save in four opportunities. He fanned Stephenson for the first out. He went to a full count on Ramos before walking him, putting the potential tying run on base. Kevin Newman hit a grounder up the middle.

Smith went to his left to make a nice play, but Newman beat out his throw. Senzel drew a walk to load the bases. Barrero went down swinging. Jake Fraley, who had pinch hit for Maile in the eigth, doubled to right, drivving in Ramo and Newman, and, just like that, theA’s were looking up at the Reds, who led 3-2.

It now was Alexis Díaz who came in to pitch, looking for the save. Ruíz attempted a two strike but. It went foul for a strike out. Noda took a full swing for his K. And so did Rooker. A pleasant surprise for A’s fans had turned into a disappointing loss.

Legumina got the win, He’s now 1-0, 1.69. The save went to Díaz, his fourth. The loser was Familia, 0-1. It was his second blown save.

The A’s will try to salvage a little bit of this atroious home stand tomorrow, Sunday, afternoon, at 1:07. Two southpaws, Ken Waldichuk (0-2, 7.82) will toe the rubber for the green and gold. Nick Lodolo (2-1, 6.31) will do the honors for Cincinnati.

A’s come up short against Reds 11-7 to open 3 game set at Coliseum

Oakland Athletics fans hang signs at RingCentral Coliseum to protest the team’s potential move to Las Vegas and to call for team owner John Fisher to sell the team during a baseball game between the Athletics and the Cincinnati Reds on Fri Apr 28, 2023 (AP News photo)

Cincinnati. 032 000 312. – 11. 16. 1

Oakland. 100 002 202. – 7. 11. 2

Time: 2:56

Attendance: 6,423

Friday, April 28, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Friday night’s solid 11-7 defeat of the A’s at the hands of the Cincinnati Reds in the Coliseum brought back the sort of bittersweet memories we can expect as fans of the A’s undergo the long agony that precedes their move to Las Vegas. Not for nothing is one of the Spanish slang expressions to for dying is “to move to the other barrio.”

1988-1990 was one of the golden (or at least gilded) age of the now moribund Oakland franchise. It also was an age fraught with mixed emotions, especially, but not exclusively in the microcosm that is baseball. The ’88 Athletics won the AL pennant but got swept by the Dodgers, perhaps because Kirk Gibson’s walk off homer in game one destroyed Oakland’s morale the way the 1954 Cleveland Indians were demoralized by Willie Mays’s catch of Vic Wertz’s blast in the opener of that year’s series.

The A’s swept the Giants in ’89 in an October classic that was over shadowed by the Loma Prieta earthquake. The resumption of the series after a week’s delay contributed to the bay area’s recovery and return to what passes for normal around here. But the 1990 World Series was all about baseball, and Cincinnati won it in four games. Oakland didn’t even make it to the ALDS again until 2000.

The Cincinnati team that visited the Coliseum tonight was no Big Red Machine. And its starting pitcher, Luis Cessa, a 31 year old righty who brought an 0-3, 10.80 record to work with him. He didn’t need to be.

The A’s sent a well travelled veteran, 34 year old Drew Ruckinski, fresh off the injured list and making his fist appearance of the season, KO the mound. His baggage included a lifetime MLB record of 4-4, 5.33, but the last time he had appeared in the show was 2018. He spent the last four seasons toiling for the NC Dinos in the Korea Baseball Organization, where he went 53-36, 3.06, including marks of 19-5, 3.05 in 2020 and 10-12, 2.97 in ’22.

That year he either led the league or was second on the list in starts, strike outs, inning pitched, and strike out to walks ratio. On the other hand, only two pitchers allowed more hits than he did, and only three unleashed more wild pitches.

The Athletics jumped to an early lead on back to back to back singles by Ryan Noda, Brent Rooker, and Shea Langeliers. Cincy answered with three runs in the top of the second. It would have been less if Kemp and Esteury Ruíz hadn’t bumped into each other on Henry Ramos’s fly to left center that should have been caught but fell to the grass for a safety.

It would have more if Ruíz hadn’t mowed Ramos down at third when he tried to advance on Nick Senzel’s single that drove in Jake Fraily. In any case, the Reds led 3-1 after an inning and a half.

They didn’t stop there. Jace Petereson made two errors at third, one throwing and one fielding. Just the fielding error would have been enough to make both runs that Cincinnati scored in the frame unearned. Fraley, who picked up a couple of RBI with his second round tripper of the year wouldn’t have come to bat if Peterson had handled Spencer Steer’s hard hit drive down the line properly.

Still, it was 5-1 after two and a half frames were in the book. It would have been more if an inning later if the Friedl had violated the slide rule at second base, resulting in an inning ending double play. The Redlegs challenged the invocation of the rule, but New York ruled that it was correct.

The score still stood at 5-1 in the top of the sixth when Sam Long was called on to get the final out with a runner on second and number two batter Friedl at the plate. He got Friedl to foul out to third, preventing further damage.

Rucinski had lasted 5-2/3 innings and allowed five runs, two of which were unearned. He struck out one and walked one. His pitch count reached 89, 56 if them strikes.

Oakland’s bats came alive briefly in the bottom of the sixth with a single to right by Noda, followed by a walk to Rooker, and a bases clearing triple to center off the bat of Langeliers that closed the gap between the teams to 5-3 and spelled the end of Cessa’s tenure on the mound, replaced by another righty, Derek Law, who restored order.

Cessa threw 71 pitches, 50 of them for strikes, over five innings, in which all three runs he yielded were earned. They came on eight hits and a walk, and he recorded a pair of strike outs.

Senezel’s two on, out double in the top of the seventh and Stuart Fairchild’s seeing eye single to left restored the Red’s four run margin and tacked another on for good measure.

After the crowd, if you can call it that, finished singing “Take Me Out to the Ball Game,” Noda took the ball out of the park, driving in Ruíz, who had singled and stolen second, and driving a hanging curve ball 427 feet into the right field seats.

The Athletics’ first sacker’s third dinger of the season also drove Law to the showers and brought Buck Farmer in from the pen with the Rheinlanders still leading, now by a score of 8-5. A hit batter and a walk later, Jordán Díaz was at bat, representing the potential tying run. Farmer struck him out to end the inning.

Jonathan India walked to open the visitors’ eighth, and Friedl sacrificed him over to second, which ended Farmer’s chores for the evening. Shintaro Fujinami made his second appearance as a reliever and looked sharp striking out Spencer Steel, but India stole third in the process and then scored when Tyler Stephenson beat out a slow nubber between the mound and the plate for a single.

Fraley forced him out at second on a grounder to short, and Lucas Sims had a 9-5 lead to work with when he came in to hurl the eighth for the visitors. He put the home team down in order.

Fujinami looked uncomfortable on the mound in the ninth, and he was wild. He walked the first three batters he faced before José Barrero lashed a vicious liner to Smith at short, who was playing drawn in still managed to hold on to the ball. But Smith’s heroics were undone by Fujinami’s control problems.

A wild pitch to India moved everyone up a notch, with Ramos crossing the plate. India’s single to left brought in Senzel, the recipient of Fujinami’s second base on balls. Sam Moll then replaced Fujinami and retired Friedl and Steer.

Fernando Cruz was given the assingment of preserving Cincy’s 11-5 lead in the ninth. He didn’t quite succeed. Rooker’s eighth HR of the season, a no doubter that travelled 392 feet into the left field seats with Noda, who had walked, on base made it 11-7. But that was it.

Cessa got the win, making hin 1-3, 9.55. Rucinki took the loss and now stands at 0-1, 4.76.

A’s Fireballer Kyle Muller (0-2, 7.23) will face the Reds and Hunter Greene (0-1, 3.52) tomorrow, Saturday, at 1:07.