Oakland Ballers game wrap: Ballers KO Sky Sox 6-5 after 5-5 draw at Raimondi

The next homestand on Aug 5th for the Oakland Ballers will be against the Yuba City High Wheelers and it’ll be Bruce Lee night a tribute to the former Green Hornet TV star first pitch 6:30pm at Raimondi Park in West Oakland (Oakland Ballers image)

Colorado Sky Sox (2nd half:6-6,2025:15-44) 000 021 101 5 8 1

Oakland Ballers (2nd half:7-5,2025:45-15) 020 002 100 5 7 1 (Oakland wins in KO inning, 3-2)

Sunday, July 27, 2025

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–This sunny Sunday afternoon’s finale of the six game (aren’t they all?) series between the Colorado Springs Sky Sox and your Oakland Ballers felt like a return to normality. Sure, the B’s had to resort to a knock out inning before they could defeat the Sockin’ Sox , 6-5, but at least that side show, which has as much validity as a measure of a team’s performance as flipping trading cards, which, appropriately enough, were today’s giveaway, was an improvement over what we’d experienced earlier in the week.

Oakland’s Cam Bufford out homered Colorado Springs’ Christian Hall, 3-2. The game counts in the standings, but the official box score shows a 5-5 tie. So, how is this post game crap shoot different from Tuesday’s dreadful duel?

Time, for one thing. We had to wait for about an hour after the two teams had made 27 outs before we knew who won. Today’s wait took about ten minutes. And then there’s the matter of the happy ending, but that’s beside the point.

Today we were spared the bathos of sustained failure. Austin Coleman started for the Sky Sox on Tuesday.when he hung around for 5-1/3 innings, throwing 112 pitches, and all he had to show for it was 12 runs, all earned, on ten hits, half of which cleared the fence.

He started again today. His performance wasn’t stellar, but it was within the limits of an ordinary bad outing, especially in the Pioneer Baseball League, which makes the Pacific Coast League look like a pitchers’ paradise. Coleman went six innings today, threw 88 pitches, allowed four runs, again all earned, on seven hits, only one of which went yard,

And there was some sparkling defensive play on both sides today. The one that immediately comes to mind,—maybe because it’s the most recent and kept the B’s in the game— occurred in the top of the ninth. Matt Fabian had led off with a walk.

A pinch hitting Evan Sleight forced him out at second and advanced to third on Brett Robert’s double to left and scored the tying run when Quintt Landis doubled to left. Robert raced toward home and looked like a sure bet to score the run that would have put the Sox ahead. But he was thrown out by a clockwork 7-6-2 relay, Drewek to Cobb to Lozano. I don’t care what the PBL’s nominal level is, that play was major league.

The victory gave the Ballers their seventh consecutive series win. Bufford, whose post game batting practice exhibition put the game in the win column for them, and Jake Allgeyer were the only two Oakland batters to have multi hit games. Helmig, Bufford, and Allgeyer hit doubles, and Nick Leehey was the only Baller to go yard.

Oakland used five pitchers. Starter Gabe Tanner was mediocre, but the Pioneer League is no place to look for sustained pitching excellence. He went six innings and yielded three runs, earned, on five hits, one long.

He struck out four Sky Sox, walked five, and committed a balk. Dylan Delvecchio and Conner Richardson were effective in relief, neither allowing a base runner in his one inning of relief. James Collyer and Connor Sullivan weren’t.

The former faced two foes, one of whom walked, and the other, Robert, homered. Sullivan gave up the game tying run in the visitors’ ninth and would have yielded at least one more if it weren’t for sparkling work of the Drewek, Cobb, and Lozano trio.

The Ballers will be out of town for the next week, playing the Yuba-Sutter High Wheelers in Marysville. They’ll return home on Tuesday, August 5, to reciprocate the High Wheelers’s hospitality for another six games. The Tuesday game, with the usual 6:35 first pitch, will be Bruce Lee night.

Colorado Springs Sky Sox 5 (6-6)

Player AB R H RBI BB SO PO A LOB

Brett Robert cf 5 2 3 3 0 0 2 0 0

Quintt Landis lf 4 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0

Kamau Neighbors ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0

Christian Hall 1b 4 0 1 0 1 0 7 2 1

Zane Denton 3b 3 0 0 0 1 1 1 3 1

T.J. McKenzie rf 3 1 0 0 1 1 3 0 2

Kai Moody 2b 4 0 2 1 0 1 1 2 0

Omar Veloz c 4 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 1

Matt Fabian dh 1 1 1 0 3 0 0 0 0

Edwin Martinez Pagani ss 2 0 0 0 0 1 5 1 2

Evan Sleight lf 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Austyn Coleman p 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 0

Michael Byrne p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Adam Wibert p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0

Ethan Ross p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Totals 31 5 8 5 7 5 27 13 7

Oakland Ballers 5 (8-4)

Player AB R H RBI BB SO PO A LOB

Tremayne Cobb Jr. ss 4 0 1 0 1 0 4 4 3

Davis Drewek lf 3 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 3

Nick Leehey 2b 4 1 1 1 1 0 2 2 0

Christian Almanza 1b 2 1 0 0 2 0 10 2 0

Esai Santos pr 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Lou Helmig rf 5 1 1 1 0 0 2 0 0

Cam Bufford dh 4 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1

Jake Allgeyer 3b 4 0 2 2 0 1 0 5 0

Tyler Lozano c 4 0 0 1 0 0 6 1 0

Darryl Buggs cf 2 0 0 0 2 1 3 0 1

Gabe Tanner p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

James Colyer p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Dylan Delvecchio p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Conner Richardson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Connor Sullivan p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Totals 32 5 7 5 7 2 27 15 8

Colorado Springs Sky: E – Zane Denton. 2B – Quintt Landis; Kai Moody. HR – Brett Robert 2. RBI – Brett Robert 3; Quintt Landis; Kai Moody. Oakland Ballers: E – Christian Almanza. 2B – Lou Helmig; Cam Bufford; Jake Allgeyer. HR – Nick Leehey.RBI – Nick Leehey; Lou Helmig; Jake Allgeyer 2; Tyler Lozano. SB – Davis Drewek; Darryl Buggs. CS – Cam Bufford. (Source: oaklandballersbaseball.com) Umpires – HP: Bill Shortridge , 1B: Tony Prater , 3B: Jim Richins

Oakland Ballers game wrap: Ballers come up with 9-8 win on Cobb’s walk off ninth inning dinger

The Oakland Ballers Treymayne Cobb had lots of reasons to be thrilled after his ninth inning walk off home run against the Colorado Springs Sky Sox at Raimondi Park in Oakland on Sat Jul 26, 2025 (Oakland Ballers X photo)

Colorado Springs (2nd half:6-5;2025:15-43) 212 020 001 8 14 1

Oakland Ballers (2nd half:6-5;2025:44-15) 430 000 101 9 13 1

Time: 3:15

Attendance: Not announced

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Baseball, especially as it’s been practiced at 18th and Woodin West Oakland this last week, is the damndest calling. Just when you think you’ve witnessed every variety of the ineluctable modality of the visible, it bites you in the ass with a new one.

Take, for example, the variation wrought Saturday afternoon and evening on the array of improbabilities with which the Colorado Springs Sky Sox and Oakland Baller have been regaling us since Tuesday night.

The outcome of Saturday’s game, a 9-8 Ballers win, decided on a one out, full count pinch hit home run by Tremayne Cobb, thrilling as it was, also was the final exclamation point to a three and a quarter hour textbook example of revised expectations.

For all my literary allusions, words fail me. Still, putting real, surreal, and deja vu together a shot may be made at what this hybrid actually was like to look at.

Oakland logged ten plate appearances, resulting in four runs in the first and put another three tallies on the board in the second. Sounds like another Baller breakout, like the one that led to the blowing of a six run lead in the eighth in the series opener.

Cobb’s last pitch homer echoed Wednesday’s failed heroics that ended with a knock out inning defeat. Tuesday and Wednesday’s crowds grew progressively apprehensive as they saw their team’s prospects fade away like a Christy Mathewson screwball.

Saturday night’s audience also began to fidget as the sky darkened, the temperature dropped, and the score remained locked at seven. The fans’ moodlightened when Oakland pulled ahead, 8-7 in the seventh, and spirits remained buoyant even when Colorado Springs once again tied the score in the top of the ninth.

The possibility of failure lurked, but that seemed only to whet the home town partisans’ appetite to see their team confront and surmount that possibility, After four games we were sensing a situation worthy of being called dramatic. The drama was intensified when Cobb was announced a pinch hitter when failure could have sent us into another knock out inning crap shoot. But there was no failure. Cobb came through, and for a few minutes, all seemed right in the world.

Colorado Springs used seven pitchers. Starter Jacob Norris lasted an inning and threw 50 pitches, which resulted in four runs, all earned, on four hits, including a three run dinger by Cam Bufford. Eldrige Armstrong was more economical; it took him only 32 pitches to get through the second frame, and he surrendered only three runs,—like those charged to Norris, all earned—on three hits and a walk.

Joe Kinsky and Maykol López hurled a couple of scoreless frames each to allow the Sky Sox to hold on while the offence knotted the score at seven, Ryan Velásquez replaced López when we’d taken our seats after we sang our request to root, root, root for the Ballers.

A bad throw by TJ McKenzie allowed Jake Allgeyer, who was advancing to third on Esai Santos’ single to right, to score an unearned run that gained the Ballers a tie in their half of the seventh. In spite of a walk and a wild pitch, Velásquez got out of the seventh without allowing Oakland advance beyond a tie when Ethan Ross replaced him with one down in the home eight.

It took him two pitches to preserve the tie until the bottom of the ninth. It took his replacement, Alain López 12 pitches to dispose of Lou Helmig on a line drive to second and serve the game winning blast to Cobb.

Here’s a summary, courtesy of the Ballers, of how their five moundsmen fared: IP H R ER BB SO HR WP BK HP IBB AB BF FO GO NP

B. Eglite 2.2 6 5 5 3 4 1 0 0 0 0 13 16 2 1 71

Adam Bogosian 2.1 4 2 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 10 11 1 4 45

Dylan Matsuoka 1.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 3 4 0 2 14

James Colyer 1.0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 0 0 13

Caleb Franzen (W, 3-0) 2.0 2 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 9 9 3 2 30

Totals 9.0 14 8 8 3 9 2 1 0 1 0 38 43 6 9 173

Dillon Tatum was the only batter in the B’s starting lineup who did get at least one hit, going 0-3. No matter; Cobb pinch hit for him. Oakland batters connected for four extra base hits; Nick Leehey and Gelmig, for doubles; Cam Bufford and—I can’t say this enhough—Cobb for home runs.

The first pitch of the final game of this confounding six game series is scheduled for 1:05pm PT Sunday, afternoon. I have no idea what to expect at the game, but before it you can celebrate Halloween in July, and, if you bring kids, you can watch them run the bases after hostilities have ceased, when you and the kids can talk with the players and get their autographs.

The team will depart for a six game visit to the Yuba-Sutter High Wheelers this coming Tuesday through Sunday and then return for six home games against those same division rivals on Tuesday, August 5.

Whether you’re pre-gaming with the Kings or celebrating an A’s win, Cyprus Grille at the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena is your downtown go-to.

⚡Craft cocktails? Check.
🔥Game-day bites? Oh yeah.
🏟️Steps from Golden 1 Center? You bet.

Open daily, Cyprus Grille is serving up local flavor with a front-row seat to the action. Stop by before or after the game—or make it your new downtown hangout.

Cyprus Grille—where fans fuel up.

📍Located inside the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena @ 300 J Street

Happy Hour – 4pm-6pm

Show your ticket for additional discounts when dining in. 

Oakland Ballers game wrap: Sky Sox win 4th round in knock out edge Ballers 9-8; Official final an 8-8 draw

The score says a 8-8 tie the official final but the game went into the books as a 9-8 final as the Colorado Sky Sox win the fourth knock out round at Raimondi Field in Oakland on Thu Jul 24, 2025 (Oakland Ballers image)

Oakland Ballers game wrap:

Colorado Springs (2nd half:6-3;2025:2025:15-41) 001 000 010 8 11 1

Oakland (2nd half:5-4;2025:42-15) 000 030 140 8 9 2

4th round of KO inning

Time:2:53

Attendance: 1,677

Thursday, July 24, 2025

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–The variegated contests of the six game series between the Colorado Sky Sox and your Oakland Ballers unfolding this week at Raimondi Park took so many unexpended turns that it was difficult to imagine any set of surprises that could surpass them.

But there are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy, and this Wednesday night’s tangled web of improbabilities provided many of them. As Bill King, baseball’s renaissance man would—and did—say, “Not in your wildest alcoholic nightmare would you ever imagine such events unfolding!” So let me soberly try to summarize some of them.

The game went into the books as a 9-8 win for Colorado Springs,but the official box score showed an 8-8 tie with no winning or losing pitcher. This was owing to the Pioneer Baseball League’s bizarre knock out round rule for deciding tie games.

It resembles a home run derby in which each team provides one batter and a teammate to pitch to him. The details aren’t worth listing, and this time saving device delays games for anywhere between five and 15 minutes while the necessary equipment is put into place. Thursday night, it took four rounds of what the Ballers call the most exciting part of the game to give the visitor’s what went down in the won-lost records as a 9-8 win.

The real game, or games. began with an impressive performance by the Sox starting pitcher, Matthew Lauria. The only hit he allowed in his first four plus innings on the mound was a two out single to right center by Treemayne Cobb. That excellence enabled Colorado to hang on to a 1-0 lead going into the home half of the fifth, when what had been a tight pitchers’ duel turned into a rout in favor of the B’s.

Darryl Buggs led off with a walk and advanced to second on a balk. Cobb brought him home with his second hit, a game tying single to center. That was enough for Dimitri Young to yank Lauria, who for all his mastery, had allowed four walks and committed a fielding error and a balk and thrown 120 pitches.

His replacement, José Ochoa, threw another 31 to close out the frame, leaving the score 3-1 in favor of the home team. Adam Wilbert would follow Ochoa in the pitcher’s box at the beginning of the home sixth and retire the three batters he faced in order giving way to Danny Fox after the gathering of 1,677 fans had finished its choral version of “Take Me Out to the Ball Game.”

The game continued to be a close one, with the Ballers pulling further ahead with a run in the eighth and the Sky Sox adding one of their own in the top of the ninth.

The second in this Russian nesting doll of games came in the bottom of the ninth, when the Ballers blew it open with a four run outburst sparked by Nick Leehey’s a two run homer to left center with Dillon Tatum, who had walked, on board.

After that blast , Darryl Buggs doubled to left center and Fox plunked Cobb with a pitch, Jacob Norris relieved Fox and issued a pair of free passes, interspersed by a double steal and Christian Almanza’s sac fly before getting Tatum to pop out to end the carnage. The four runs scored that inning augured well for the B’s but the three runners stranded on the baseball paths were an adumbration of the trouble that lay in wait.

Noah Milllikan had started the game for the B’s and pitched eight full innings—an incredible feat in the PBL—and allowed only two runs on five hits and no walks, while striking out a dozen batters. The long top of the eighth had given his arm a chance to freeze up, and surely Connor Sullivan could be counted on to hold a six run lead for one inning.

We soon learned that he couldn’t. He faced five batters and left with the score at 8-4 and two runners on base, replaced by Caleb Franzen. He was charged with two runs, one of the earned, and allowed four inherited runners to score. The inning was further tarnished by a bad throw on a difficult play that was charged as an error to Cobb and an atrocious and unnecessary throw that catcher Dillon Tatum heaved into center field.

The Ballers loaded the bases with one out against Alain López in their half of the ninth, but they couldn’t push a run across the plate.

Who knows what these two rivals have in store for Friday night’s encounter, which is scheduled to start at 6:35. There’s one thing we can reasonably expect to occur; July 25 is Grateful Dead Night, with a pregame concert scheduled and a large crowd expected.