Giants Wade Jr gets walk off hit scoring Sabol in tenth in 5-4 win; SF remains 1.5 back in NL Wild Card chase

San Francisco Giants LaMonte Wade is congratulated by teammates for his walk off single that scored Blake Sabol to defeat the Cleveland Guardians in the bottom of the tenth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Mon Sep 11, 2023 (@SFGiants photo)

Cleveland (68-77). 002 000 100 1. – 4. 9. 0

San Francisco (74-70) 102 000 000 2 – 5 12. 3. (10 innings)

Time: 3:21

Attendance: 20,705

Monday, September 11, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–The Giants needed to win tonight’s battle with the AL Central second place Cleveland Guardians. To give you an idea of how different that division’s from the NL West, the Guardians came to town with a record of 68-76, while the Giants’. game time 73-70 had them in third. It was a long, hard fight, but the orange and black prevailed, 5-4, in ten mostly action packed innings.

San Francisco sent one half of the Cobb-Webb combo to the mound tonight. Alex Cobb, who’s been battling leg ligament problems recently and was thrown off his normal pace by his 103 pitch 5-2 loss to the Braves in Atlanta on August 18. The 35 year old veteran took the mound at 7-6. 3.74 but had gone1-3, 5.87 since August 1.

Cobb didn’t pitch long tonight, but he pitched well, throwing 79 pitches, 47 for strikes, to 20 batters over five innings. In that span, he allowed two runs, both unearned, on three hits, one of them a four bagger, and a walk while striking out two. W 8-6, 3.62. He had to settle for a no decision that lowered his ERA to 3.62.

Cleveland’s starter was the right handed rookie Gavin Williams, Cobb’s junior by 11 years. He was Cleveland’s first round choice in the 2021 draft and, now, two years later, he came to the city by the bay with a record of 2-5, 3.35 for a decidedly mediocre team. He went six innings tonight and, like Cobb, wasn’t involved in the decision.

The youngster threw 93 pitches, 40 of which were balls, to 26 batters over six frames, over which he gave up three runs, all earned, on five hits, one for the distance, and four walks, He struck out two and left with an earned run average of 3.43.

Mike Yastrzemski, leading off for the third straight game, which coincides with San Francisco’s current winning streak, sent Williams’ second offering, a 94.6mph four seamer 368 feet deep into right field to get the Giants’ off on the right foot. It was his 14th home run and 39th run batted in of the season.

Cleveland got that run back and another to go with it on two unearned runs in the top of the third. José Ramírez sent a two out line drive up the middle that just missed hitting Cobb. Crawford let the ball go by him into center for an error. Josh Naylor followed that with an authoritative two run blast over the wall in right, and the Guardians were up, 2-1.

That didn’t last long. With one down in the home third, Estrada singled to left, stole second and, after a walk to Haniger, scored on Pedeerson’s single to right, which sent Haniger to third. Guardian first sacker Josh Naylor made a beautiful catch of Davis’s hard bouncer or an unassisted put out that allowed Haniger to cross the plate with the tally that put the Giants ahead once more, at 3-2.

The left handed Rogers, Taylor, relieved Cobb for the sixth inning and set the heart of the Cleveland order down in order on seven pitches. After striking out Will Brennan at the start of the seventh, Rogers surrendered a sharp single to left to Bo Naylor and exited the game, replaced by John Brebbia, making his second appearance since returning from the IL on September 5. Naylor, stole second on him, the Cleveland catcher’s third stolen base in three attempts.

Myles Straw went down looking at a called third strike, and José Tena drew a walk that set the stage for Steven Kwan’s game tying single to right center. Tena motored to third, and Brebbia walked to the dugout, replaced by the right handed Rogers twin, Tyler, the submariner. Josh Naylor lashed a hard drive towards first; Wade made a magnificent grab of it and beat Naylor to the bag.

So the game was tied at three when Sam Hentges replaced Williams after the seventh inning stretch. The first two Giants he faced were pinch hitters, Austin Slater and Wilmer Flores, respectively. The two right handed hitters touched the lefty receiver for singles that put runners on the corners.

Hetges then fanned Estrada and was removed for a righty, Reynaldo López, who got Haniger to ground to Ramírez at third, who threw Slater out at home. Pederson got a single to deep second base to load the bases before the pinch hitting Blake Sabol popped out to third. López had preserved the tie; the Giants left the bases loaded.

Rogers wasn’t as effective in the eighth as he’d been in the seventh. Kole Calhoun hit a one out single to right; Tyler Freeman replaced him as a pinch runner. Giménez hit a grounder that Rogers fielded and then threw away. It was scored a hit with both Freeman advancing to third on Rogers’ throwing error. Giménez then stole second.

Will Brennan grounded back to the mound. This time Rogers threw accurately to Flores, now playing third, and Freeman was put out in a rundown, 1-5-2, with Brennan taking second. At this point, the Giants called on Camilo Doval, who retired Bo Naylor on a fly to right.

Matt Moore gave up a leadoff single to Sabol in the home eighth and then got past Matos and Crawford before Slater smacked a single to center that sent Moore to showers and brought Enyel De Los Santos in to face Flores. After working a full count, Flores flew out to the warning track in left. That made 10 men that the Giants had left on base.

It was Cleveland’s turn to miss opportunities in the top of the ninth, wasting a single, an intentional walk, and two passed balls to strand two runners in scoring position and sending us to the bottom of the inning with the score still knotted at three.

Where it stayed after De Los Santos pitched a 1,2,3 frame.

Luke Jackson faced Cleveland with Josh Naylor as the zombie runner and Freeman at the plate to open the tenth. Freeman tried to lay down a sacrifice bunt, but Jackson threw Naylor out at third. Freeman then stole second.

Giménez laced a single up the middle to put the Guardians ahead, 4-3 First base umpire Bruce Dreckman ruled that Estrada’s throw to first on Brennan’s grounder pulled Wade off the bag, but a review of the play overturned that call.

Nonetheless, Giménez took second on the play, the Giants issued an intentional pass to Bo Naylor, and Straw drew a base on balls to load the bases before Jackson fanned Tena for the final out.

It was do or die for San Francisco in their half of the tenth with Pederson placed on second and Sabol at bat. Sabol singled to right on the first offering from Emmanuel Close, the Guardian’s new pitcher. That tied the score again. Then he stole second and took third on a balk. Wade came through with a single to center center, and the Giants had gained a long, hard, victory.

Jackson, now 2-2, 3.14, was the winning pitcher. Close took the loss, his ninth against two wins. It was 11th blown save of the season.

So, where does this leave the Giants in the playoff chase? They’re in a dead tie with Miami at 74-70, 1-1/2 games behind the Diamondbacks for the last spot in the NL Wild Card race. Both teams. have an elimination number of 17 with 18 games left to play,

The probable starters for the game tomorrow, Tuesday, at 6:45 are Sean Manaea (5-5, 5.00) for the Giants and Cal Quantrill (2-6, 5.70) for the Guardians.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Dodgers Latino Fan base Shaken up by Julio Urías

Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Julio Urias throws to the plate during the first inning of a baseball game against the Atlanta Braves Friday, Sept. 1, 2023, in Los Angeles (AP News photo)

Dodgers Latino Fan base Shaken up by Julio Urías

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

At any given time during a Dodgers game at Dodger Stadium, one of every two fans is a Latino, most of Mexican heritage. The Los Angeles Dodgers are averaging close to 48,000 in attendance per game and are closing in 4 million in attendance.

Those are the best attendance numbers in major league baseball. Since the 1980s, when Fernando Valenzuela was the team’s ‘número uno star’ the Dodgers have not had a more giant Mexican star than lefty starter Julio Urías, originally from Culiacán, México, whom the Mexican fans affectionately called “Culichi.

However, his recent arrest for domestic violence has shaken the Latino community of the greater Los Angeles Area. On September 3, Urías was taken into police custody in a parking lot near BMO stadium, where soccer superstar Lionel Messi and Inter Miami CF played against Los Angeles FC in an MLS game. The pitcher was charged with felony corporal injury against a spouse.

The news is sad for all Dodger fans, including team Manager Dave Roberts, who said, “it is very sad; that is all I’ve got to say”. Urias is currently on administrative leave “until further notice”. This was not the first time for Urías.

In 2019, he was suspended for 20 games under MLB domestic violence policy. During the past few years, Julio Urías became the #1 starter for a team just a few magic numbers away from winning the National League Western Division again. The Dodgers are within days of winning their 21st NL West title.

Urías was a World Series champion in 2020, National League wins leader in 2021, and National League ERA leader in 2022. He could have taken the third position of the best three left-handers in Dodgers history behind the incomparable Sandy Koufax (Hall of Fame) and currently Clayton Kershaw, a future Hall of Fame member, but this for Urías was the second time and first player since the MLB policy on domestic violence to be punished twice.

Ironically, another big-time pitcher, 31-years Trevor Bauer, who won the Cy Young Award with the Cincinnati Reds in 2020, only pitched one year (2021) for the Dodgers and was given an unprecedented two-season suspension without pay by baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred for violating the league’s domestic violence and sexual assault policy. Bauer is out of baseball.

At this time, the final decision by MLB on Julio Urías has not been made; he was supposed to become a Free Agent after this 2023 season. Urías is facing the same fate as Trevor Bauer, as the Los Angeles Dodgers Latino fan base is waiting; many have shown their disappointment.

The Mexican star has become a fan favorite, especially for the Mexican fan base, with many comparing Urías as the best Dodgers Mexican pitcher since Fernando Valenzuela, who had an exemplary career and is still adored by fans all over Los Angeles.

Domestic violence is a serious charge, as it should, and the Office of the Commissioner of Baseball is investigating the Julio Urías situation.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play voice for the Oakland A’s on the A’s Spanish radio network 1010 KIQI San Francisco and 990 KATD Pittsburg and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Giants win improves NL Wild Card chances; SF now just 1.5 games back

San Francisco Giants’ Joc Pederson, right, celebrates with Mitch Haniger (17) after hitting a home run against the Colorado Rockies during the fifth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Sep 10, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic:

#1 The San Francisco Giants win over the Colorado Rockies cut the Giants games back to 1.5. The Giants with their win over the Rockies have swept the three game series 6-3 at Oracle Park. An huge improvement after getting swept in Chicago by the Cubs last week.

#2 The win gives the Giants their seventh sweep and first sweep since Jul 25-26 against the Oakland A’s in Oakland. The last time the Giants swept at home was back on May 15-17 at Oracle.

#3 Giants Keaton Winn picked up the win after pitching six innings, five hits, three runs, three earned runs and nine strikeouts. The nine strikeouts was Winn’s career high.

#4 The Rockies were swept for the 13th time this season and finished the season 1-5 against the Giants at Oracle Park. It’s least amount of win for the Rockies since 2003 when they went 1-9.

#5 The Giants open a three game series against the Cleveland Guardians at Oracle Park. Starting pitcher for the Guardians right hander Gavin Williams (2-5 ERA 3.34) the Giants starter Alex Cobb (7-6 ERA 3.74)for Monday night. First pitch 6:45pm PT.

Join Marko for the Giants podcasts each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants get complete three game sweep on Rockies with 6-3 win at Oracle; SF now 1.5 back in NL Wild Card race

San Francisco Giants pitcher Keaton Winn works against the Colorado Rockies during the first inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Sep 10, 2023 (AP News photo)

Colorado (51-91. 030 000 000 – 3. 6. 0

San Francisco (73-70). 023 010 00x – 6 11. 0

Time: 2:32

Attendance: 31,781

Sunday, September 10, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–The Peter Stuyvesant character in Kurt Weil’s “Knickerbocker Holiday” could have been talking about baseball when he sang that Broadway show’s biggest hit, “The September Song:” “Oh, the days dwindle down/To a precious few.”

It’s September and after the Giants’ 6-3 win over Colorado Colorado, the magic number for San Francisco’s elimination from the NL Wild Card race remains 18. That means that any combination of Giant losses and wins of whoever is in fourth place spells doom for the Giants, who can’t afford to lose more than a very few of the 19 games remaining in their schedule.

The Giants sent rookie Keaton Winn (0-2, 3.33 at game time) to the mound for his third big league start. The 25 year old righty missed the 2021 season while he recovered from Tommy John surgery. His arsenal includes a splitter (used 56.7% of the time), a four seam fastball (26.2%), sinker (15.7%), and slider (1.4%). He has mid 90s velocity on his fastball and slider.

He weathered a rough first inning, in which he gave up all three of the runs he would yield, runs which, by the way, were earned but not entirely his fault.

The Rockies managed to get five hits over Winn, but he didn’t give up any walks. He threw 80 pitches, of which only 18 were balls. The win improved his won-lost balance to 1-2 but raised his ERA to 3.55.

The visitors went with 26 year old right hander Peter Lambert, 3-6, 5.03 for the year and 6-13, 6.34 lifetime before today. He pitched six frames in his last appearance allowing all of the Diamondbacks’ runs in Arizona’s 4-2 win last Monday. All of those runs were earned.

Lambert wasn’t any more impressive this evening, lasting five frames during which he threw 91 pitches, 57 of which went into the books as strikes. He gave up half a dozen runs, and all of them were earned. Three of the eight hits he yielded were home runs. He chalked up two strikeouts and issued an equal number of walks. He was the losing pitcher and now has a record of 3-7, 5.36

Although San Francisco wasted a one out triple by Tairo Estrada in their half of the first, Colorado’s Hunter Goodman’s three bagger was the key to the three runs they scored in the top of the second. Elehuris Montero led off with a line drive that bounced off Winn’s leg for a single.

Nolan Jones laid down a perfect bunt short of third to make it runners on first and second when Goodman sent his shot into triples alley. He came home on Sean Bouchard’s sacrifice fly that Mike Yastrzemski hauled down with a nice catch at the right field wall. The Rockies now had an early 3-0 lead.

The home team got two of those runs back at their next turn at the plate. Lamonte Wade, Jr. led off with a single to right and went to third on Mitch Haniger’s double, also to right. After Bake Sabol flew out to left, Brandon Crawford’s bouncer to second drove in Wade and a single by Luis Matos to left center brought Haniger home.

Estrada’s 12th home run of the year, a 412 foot wallop to left center that led off the bottom of the third, followed, two outs later, by back to back dingers to left by Wade (his 15th HR of ’23) and Haniger (his sixth), put San Francisco on top, 5-3.

Joc Pederson, whose opposite field fly to the warning track in left ended the Giants’ threat in the first, pulled a 352 foot fly over the right field fence in the fifth. It was the 13th round tripper of the year for San Francisco’s designated hitter and added a run to the Giants’ lead, which now stood at 6-3.

Lambert finished up the inning and didn’t come out for the sixth, when southpaw Brent Suter relieved him and kept the orange and black off the board for the one inning he pitched before giving way to Nick Mears, who somehow managed to get through his frame without being scored on in spite of issuing a walk, allowing a hit, committing a balk, and letting pinch hitter Austin Slater send a drive to warning track in center.

Tyler Kinley gave up an automatic double to Yastrzemski in the Giants’ eighth, but that was all the offence that San Francisco could offer.

Ryan Walker took over for Winn at the start of the visitors’ seventh, set the side down in order, and ceded the ball to Tyler, the right handed submariner, Rogers for the eighth. His eight pitches were three less than it had taken Walker to put the Blake Street Bombers down in order. That meant it was a safe situation, and that meant it was Camilo Doval on the mound for the top half of the ninth. He had to face the heart of the Rockies’ batting order.

Doval fanned McMahon, their number three batter but yielded a double to cleanup man Montero. Jones, batting in the fifth slot, grounded out to second, which advanced Monero to third. But Doval was on top of things tonight and earned his 37th save of the year while bringing his ERA down to 2.98.

Estrada, Pederson, Wade, and Haniger had two hits apiece. Haniger’s pair consisted of a double and a homer; Estrada’s, a triple and a homer.

The Cleveland Guardians come to town Monday night and will send righty Gavin Williams (2-5, 3.34) against an as yet unannounced Giants hurler. First pitch 6:45pm PT.

MLB The Show podcast with Stephen Ruderman: Will “Sell the team” become a national rallying cry to save the A’s in MLB parks?; What a Mets rebuild would look like now; plus more news

Oakland A’s and Los Angeles Dodgers fans stood up to in protest of the A’s relocation to Las Vegas in the top of the fifth inning at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Mon Aug 1, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the MLB podcast with Stephen Ruderman:

#1 Top story had to be last night’s game in Los Angeles between the Oakland A’s and the Los Angeles Dodgers when A’s and Dodgers fans alike stood up in the top of the fifth inning while the A’s were at bat and chanted “Sell the team” another message loud and clear to MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred, the owners and A’s owner John Fisher expressing how opposed they are about the Oakland A’s relocation to Las Vegas. Will “Sell the team” become a national rallying cry at MLB parks?

#2 With the New York Mets it started with Max Scherzer expressing his discontent about the teammate and pitcher David Robertson being traded to the Miami Marlins and that he wanted a meeting with the Mets brass and Scherzer got traded to the Texas Rangers. Then Justin Verlander two days later was dealt to the Houston Astros. Are the Mets just trying to get rid of payroll or they know they can’t win even with such superstars on the payroll.

#3 More Astros news starter to the end Framber Valdez threw a no hitter last night against the Cleveland Guardians a pretty much respected offensive team giving up just one walk, one batter short of a perfect game. Valdez’ no hit bid is MLB’s third no hitter of the season.

#4 Can the Los Angeles Angels make the post season with Shohei Ohtani surviving the trade deadline and the Angels waiting for outfielder Mike Trout to return to action. Ohtani was on the trade rumor market for a time but owner Art Moreno but the kibosh on that as the Angels are destined to try and make post season with their superstars.

#5 The Angels also added infielder CJ Cron and outfielder Randal Grichuk two right handed hitters from the Colorado Rockies. Do you see this improving the Angels line up in the stretch drive?

Join Stephen for the MLB podcasts each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Woes continue Guardians send A’s down to their eighth straight loss 6-1

Oakland Athletics right fielder Brent Rooker catches a ball hit by Cleveland Guardians’ Josh Bell during the second inning at Progressive Field in Cleveland on Thu Jun 22, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

Oakland A’s left starter JP Sears had his best game of the year for the A’s. Sears gave the A’s seven innings and allowed four hits and two runs. It was certainly a quality start. Unfortunately for Sears, the A’s offense did not back the pitcher with enough of an attack to win the game.

The A’s offense produced three hits, all singles, as the A’s fell to the Cleveland Guardians 6-1 at Progressive Field in Cleveland. The A’s only run came in the fifth inning, and it came without the benefit of a hit.

Sears retired the first 11 batters he faced on Thursday. The Guardians’ third baseman Jose Ramirez singled with two out in the fourth to break the spell. Ramirez was caught stealing to end the inning. In the top of the fifth, the A’s scored their only run in the game, and that happened without the benefit of a hit.

Here’s how it happened. A’s left Fielder Tony Kemp walked. Esteury Ruiz was at the plate. A’s manager Mark Kotsay had Kemp running on the pitch to Ruiz. Amed Rosario fielded Ruiz’s ground ball. Rosario’s throw to first nipped Ruiz for the out.

Kemp motored to third base on the play. Ryan Noda’s sacrifice fly drove in Kemp with the run. Cleveland answered with two runs in their half of the fifth. Sears retired DH Josh Naylor for the first out. First baseman Josh Bell blasted a 430-foot home out of the park to tie the game.

It was Bell’s seventh of the year and the 18th home run allowed by Sears. Sears leads baseball in that department. Serving up gopher balls has been a problem for Sears this year. Sears gave up the second run when Andres Gimenez singled. Gimenez stole second and scored on Myles Straw’s triple. The Guardians led 2-1 after five innings.

The Guardians scored four times in the bottom of the eighth. The A’s summoned Yacksel Rios from the bullpen to pitch. Rios was making his A’s debut. It was a performance that he would like to forget. Rios threw 44 pitches in the inning. He struggled to find the strike zone.

The Guardians scored four times. Rios gave up two hits, walked four, and threw two wild pitches. The Guardians led 6-1 after eight innings. Reliever Eli Morgan set the A’s down to end the game.

Game Notes- The A’s lost their eighth game in a row. Their record fell to 19-56. The Guardians swept the three-game series to improve to 36-38.

The line score for Oakland was one run, three hits, and no errors. Cleveland’s line was six runs, six hits, and no errors.
JP Sears’ line was seven innings pitched, four hits, two runs, eight strikeouts, one walk, and one home run allowed. Sears threw 106 pitches and 79 strikes. The Guardians’ starter Logan Allen went four innings and allowed two hits and no runs.

Kemp and Esteury Ruiz had their hitting streaks stopped Thursday afternoon.

The A’s finish the six-game road trip against the Toronto Blue Jays. The A’s starter will be James Kaprielian (2-6, 6.38 era). Former A’s starter Chris Bassitt will be on the hill for the Blue Jays. Bassitt is 7-5 with an ERA of 4.16. The game will start at 4:07 pm.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: A’s can’t hold onto lead in late innings drop another one run game 7-6 in Cleveland

Oakland Athletics’ Esteury Ruiz steals second base as Cleveland Guardians shortstop Amed Rosario catches the throw during the fourth at Progressive Field in Cleveland on Wed Jun 21, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 The Cleveland Guardians catcher Bo Naylor slugged his first big league hit and then later scored an eighth inning run to put the Guardians on top 7-6 on an Oakland A’s throwing error.

#2 After winning seven straight games, the A’s have lost seven in a row, including the last four games, by a single run.

#3 Unfortunately for Oakland, the pen couldn’t keep the Guardians off the board. The Guardians’ big first baseman, Josh Naylor, blasted his ninth home run of the year to make it a one-run game, 6-5 in favor of the A’s after seven.

#4 The Guardians led 7-6 after eight. The Guardians’ Emmanuel Clase squirmed out of a jam in the ninth to earn his 22nd save of the year. With Tony Kemp at first and no out, Clase received a gift from the home plate umpire.

#5 The A’s finish the three-game series with Cleveland on Thursday. It will be a battle between two lefties. JP Sears (1-4 ERA 4.24) will go for Oakland, and Logan Allen (3-2 ERA 3.95) for Cleveland will oppose him. The game will start at 10:10 am.

A’s lose another one run game fall to Guardians 7-6; Loss is Oakland’s 7th straight

Oakland Athletics’ Ryan Noda watches his three-run home run off Cleveland Guardians starting pitcher Gavin Williams during the third inning at Progressive Field in Cleveland on Wed Jun 21, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg.

The Oakland A’s (19-57) lost another one-run game to the Cleveland Guardians (35-38) Wednesday night at Progressive Field in Cleveland. The final score was 7-6. After winning seven straight games, the A’s have lost seven in a row, including the last four games, by a single run.

The A’s gave starter Paul Blackburn a 4-0 lead in the top of the third. Cleveland scored three in their half of the inning. Cleveland tied the game in the fifth. The As’ went ahead 6-4 in the top of the seventh. The A’s needed the bullpen to stop the Cleveland offense in the seventh and eighth to secure the win.

Unfortunately for Oakland, the pen couldn’t keep the Guardians off the board. The Guardians’ big first baseman, Josh Naylor, blasted his ninth home run of the year to make it a one-run game, 6-5 in favor of the A’s after seven.

Naylor also drove in his 55th RBI with the homer. A’s skipper Mark Kotsay summoned Austin Pruitt from the bullpen to pitch the eighth. The Guardians found a way to put two more runs on the board. The rally began when Myles Straw singled with one out.

When he singled, Bo Naylor, Josh’s younger brother, recorded his first Major League hit, sending Straw to second. It was Bo Naylor’s first hit in Major League baseball. Pruitt now had to face the Guardians’ left-fielder Steven Kwan, the young man from Fremont doubled to drive in Straw with the Guardians’ sixth run of the night.

Ramon Laureano’s throw to second base went awry, and Naylor was able to score on the errant throw. The Guardians led 7-6 after eight. The Guardians’ Emmanuel Clase squirmed out of a jam in the ninth to earn his 22nd save of the year. With Tony Kemp at first and no out, Clase received a gift from the home plate umpire.

Aledmys Diaz was called out on strikes when charged with a time clock violation. Diaz stepped out of the batter’s box and nodded to the umpire for time. When Diaz stepped back into the box, the umpire called the violation, and Diaz was out.

Confusion reigned as Diaz and Kotsay argued for clarification. It was to no avail. Esteury Ruiz singled, sending Kemp to third. Ruiz stole second. It was Ruiz’s second steal of the game and 38th of the year. Clase struck out Ryan Noda for the second out and retired Seth Brown on a fly ball to center.

The A’s scored four in the third. Kemp and Tyler Wade singled to get the rally going for Oakland. Ruiz singled to drive in Kemp with the A’s first run Ryan Noda followed with his ninth big fly of the season to make it 4-0.

The Guardians scored three times in their half of the third. Catcher Bo Naylor walked to start the rally. Singles by Steven Kwan, Amed Rosario, Jose Ramirez, and Josh Naylor produced three runs. Cleveland sent eight men to the plate in the inning.

In the fifth, Jose Ramirez tripled to right field, leading off the inning. Josh Naylor’s infield single drove in Ramirez with Cleveland’s fourth run. The score remained tied until the top of the seventh. The A’s scored twice to take a 6-4 lead.

With one out, Tony Kemp singled. Aledmys Diaz, pinch-hitting for Tyler Wade, singled, sending Kemp to third. Terry Francona brought in setup reliever Trevor Stefan to pitch. Esteury Ruiz singled driving in Kemp. It was Ruiz’s second RBI of the game.

Stefan retired Ryan Noda for the second out. Seth Brown broke an 0-for-14 slump with a single to drive in Ruiz with the A’s sixth run. As mentioned above, Cleveland scored in the bottom of the seventh when Josh Naylor Homered. Cleveland added two more in the eighth to win 7-6.

Game Notes- With the loss, the A’s are 19-57. Cleveland improved to 35-38. The line score for Oakland was six runs, nine hits, and two errors. The line for Cleveland was seven runs, 13 hits, and no errors.
The Winning pitcher was Elijah Morgan. Austin Pruitt took the loss.

A’s starter Paul Blackburn went five innings and allowed nine hits and four runs. He struck out seven and walked one. Cleveland’s starter, rookie Gavin Williams went five and 2/3rds innings. He allowed four hits and four runs. Williams struck out four and walked three.

The A’s Esteury Ruiz had three hits, all singles, drove in two and stole two bases. Tony Kemp also had three hits. The hitting stars for Cleveland were Hosh Naylor and Jose Ramirez. Naylor had three singles and a home run. Ramirez had two singles and a triple.

The A’s finish the three-game series with Cleveland on Thursday. It will be a battle between two lefties. JP Sears will go for Oakland, and Logan Allen will oppose him. The game will start at 10:10 am.

It takes ten innings for Cleveland Guardians to down A’s 3-2

Oakland Athletics relief pitcher Luis Medina walks to the dugout after a groundout by Cleveland Guardians’ Will Brennan during the sixth inning at Progressive Field in Cleveland on Tue Jun 20, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s (19-56) lost for the sixth straight game Tuesday night. The A’s lost 3-2 in ten innings. While the pitching has improved in the last two weeks, the A’s could not snap the five-game losing streak. They needed a key hit in the tenth, but they could not get the one they needed. The Cleveland Guardians(34-38) rallied from a 2-0 deficit in the seventh to tie the game. Cleveland scored in the tenth to end it. The game summary follows below.

The A’s scored the first run of the game in the top of the third. Singles by Tony Kemp and Esteury Ruiz put men on at first and third with one out. A’s first baseman Ryan Noda’s ground out drove in Kemp with the run.

The A’s went ahead 2-0 in the seventh. Tony Kemp slugged his second home run of the year into the seats in right field. Cleveland tied the game in their half of the inning. Center fielder Myles Straw started the Guardians’ rally with a double.

With one out, A’s manager replaced Luis Medina with lefty Sam Moll. Moll retired Steven Kwan for the second out. Sam Moll gave up a single to Amed Rosario. Straw scored to make it 2-1. Jose Ramirez was the next hitter. Ramirez, a switch hitter and very dangerous in the clutch hit a line drive that got by a diving Seth Brown in left field. The ball rolled to the wall. Rosario scored on the play to tie the game.

Neither team scored in the eighth or the ninth. In the tenth, with Shea Langeliers as the ghost runner, Guardians’ reliever Enyel De Los Santos shut down the A’s offense. The Guardians scored in the tenth. Jose Ramirez was the ghost runner. The A’s issued a free pass to Josh Naylor.

Tyler Freeman laid down a sacrifice bunt. The A’s tried to nail Ramirez at third. The throw did not get there in time. The Guardians had the bases loaded with no out. All Cleveland needed was a sacrifice fly to win the game. The next hitter, Andres Gimenez, settled the affair with a single to right field to win the game for Cleveland. The A’s lost 3-2.

Game Notes: With the loss, the A’s are now 19-56. The guardians improved to 34-38.

The line score for Oakland was two runs, six hits, and no errors.

Cleveland’s line was three runs, ten hits, and one error.

The A’s Ken Waldichuk started the game. He was the opener and went one and 2/3rd innings. Luis Medina replaced him, and he pitched 4.1 innings. He gave up four hits and one run. Sam Moll replaced Medina and allowed two hits and one run. 

The Guardians’ starter Aaron Civale gave his team a quality start. He went six and 2/3rd innings of work. Civale allowed five hits and two runs. 

Tony Kemp had a single and a home run to extend his hitting streak to five games. Esteury Ruiz singled in the third and has now hit in six straight games.

The hitting star for Cleveland was Amed Rosario. Rosario had two singles and a double.

Game two of the three-game series will be played Wednesday night. The A’s will send Paul Blackburn to the hill. Blackburn is 0-0, with a 3.48 ERA. The Guardians’ starter will be Gavin Williams. Williams will be making his Major League debut. A 4:10pm PT first pitch at Progressive Field in Cleveland.

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s hope to end 5 game skid Tuesday night in Cleveland

Oakland Athletics’ JJ Bleday, bottom right, steals second base next to Philadelphia Phillies shortstop Trea Turner, left, and umpire Brennan Miller during the fourth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Jun 18, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 Tough loss for the Oakland A’s starter Hogan Harris who dropped his record to 2-1 in the A’s fifth consecutive loss on Sunday. The A’s lose by a run 3-2 to the visiting Philadelphia Phillies at the Oakland Coliseum.

#2 Harris went six innings, giving up four hits two runs, seven strikeouts. He had his pitches working for him and kept runners off the bases.

#3 The Phillies Kyle Schwarber led off with a left field home run in the top of the first for his 20th homer of the season and it didn’t shake Harris’ confidence.

#4 In the top of the eighth the Phils Trea Turner’s hit scored Cristian Pache and the Phillies went up by two runs 3-1. The A’s were able to pick up one run in the bottom of the eighth but weren’t able to tie the game going down by a run.

#5 The A’s will try it all over again as they have the day off on Monday and face the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field for a three game series starting on Tuesday night at 4:10pm. For the A’s Luis Medina (1-6 ERA 7.55) will go up against the Guardians Aaron Civale (2-2 ERA 2.67) to open the series.

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