Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah Salmonson: A’s host Detroit Tigers series for last time at Oakland tonight

Oakland A’s Brent Rooker (25) slugs a ninth inning two run homer as the Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh looks on at the Oakland Coliseum on Fri Sep 6, 2024 (AP News photo)

On Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah:

#1 The Oakland A’s (61-80) lost game four in their series with the Seattle Mariners (71-70) 6-4 on Thursday but they did split the series winning two walk offs in games one and two. 

#2 Brent Rooker had a couple of home runs giving him a 35 home run season so far and he is sure to add to that total before it is all said and done. 

#3 The M’s Cal Raleigh hit a two home run which contributed to the split in first inning. Raleigh also hit a fifth inning sacrifice fly in the final visit for the Mariners to Oakland.

#4 Not to mention a number of people during this past homestand became emotional as the A’s will be packing up after the next homestand when they prepare to leave for Sacramento. No exception was Seattle starting pitcher Bryan Woo who was raised near the Oakland Coliseum and grew up watching A’s baseball and started the very last Mariners game in Oakland.

#5 The Detroit Tigers are in Oakland for their last Oakland appearance leaving lots of memories of some great Detroit Tigers from years past such as, Denny McLain, Mickey Lolich, Norm Cash, Al Kaline, Willie Horton, who could forget Mark the Bird Fydrich and of course former Oakland Athletic now Tigers manager AJ Hinch to name a few?

Jeremiah Salmonson does the Oakland A’s podcasts each Friday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Birdsong struggles, wasted opportunities and base-running blunders cost Giants, who fail to sweep Tigers and drop series finale 5-4

San Francisco Giants Matt Chapman (left) is tagged out by Detroit Tigers pitcher Brenan Hanifee (right) in the bottom of the eighth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sun Aug 11, 2024 (AP News photo)

Sunday, Aug. 11, 2024

Oracle Park

San Francisco, California

Detroit Tigers 5 (56-63)

San Francisco Giants 4 (61-59)

Win: Keider Montero (3-5)

Loss: Hayden Birdsong (3-2)

Save: Will Vest (1)

Time: 2:52

Attendance: 40,447

By Stephen Ruderman

SAN FRANCISCO–Wasted opportunities and boneheaded base-running burned the San Francisco Giants, and Hayden Birdsong struggled, as the Giants were unable to complete the sweep and lost the series finale to the Detroit Tigers 5-4 on Sunday.

The Giants came into Sunday winners of 12 of their last 15. After finally getting to three games over .500 for the first time all season with their fourth-straight win Saturday, the Giants had a chance to complete the sweep on this beautiful mostly-cloudy afternoon at Oracle Park.

Sunday would be a test for young Hayden Birdsong. After a solid first six big league starts in which he didn’t allow more than three runs, he suffered his first bad outing in his last start in Washington on Tuesday. It doesn’t matter who you are; bad outings happen. The question is how Birdsong would respond Sunday.

Birdsong would be tested right away. Matt Vierling stepped up to begin the game, and he lined a home run to the first row out in left-center field to give the Tigers an early 1-0 lead. Birdsong then retired the side.

The Giants would be up against the young right-hander, Keider Montero in this pitching matchup of kids who made their major league debuts this season. Tyler Fitzgerald would be first up, and he led off the bottom of the first with a ground-rule double to right-center.

One thing was apparent early on: the ball was carrying today. LaMonte Wade walked, and Heliot Ramos got Fitzgerald to third on a flyout to right. 

You gotta give credit to Fitzgerald. Tigers’ right-fielder Akil Baddoo made the catch in shallow right field and made a solid throw to third. It was pure gutsy base-running by Fitzgerald, and it paid off.

Michael Conforto walked to load the bases, and that brought up Matt Chapman. Chapman shot a base-hit into right-center, and two runs scored to give the Giants the lead.

Birdsong retired the first two men he faced in the top of the second, but Zach McKinstry singled with two outs, and that brought up Dillon Dingler. Dingler hit a high fly ball to right-center, and with the ball carrying the way it was today, it sailed into the Tigers’ bullpen, which put Detroit back ahead.

The Giants rallied in the bottom of the second. Jerar Encarnacion walked to start the inning, and Tyler Fitzgerald singled with one out. 

Wade hit a fly ball to deep right-center, and Tigers’ center-fielder Parker Meadows made a tremendous running catch as he collided and even somewhat trampled over right-fielder Alex Baddoo. It was reminiscent of an iconic catch that Willie Mays made while leaping over Bobby Bonds in 1970, but this one came against the Giants, who ended up not scoring.

Birdsong pitched a scoreless top of the third and a 1-2-3 top of the fourth. Montero pitched 1-2-3 innings in the bottom of the third and fourth.

The Tigers have a lineup full of guys whose names you would have expected to see in a lineup in either the 19th Century, or in Star Wars. Considering that Sunday was Star Wars Day at Oracle Park, it made perfect sense. In the top of the fifth, those names did some damage against Birdsong.

Dillon Dingler, who hit the home run in the top of the second, led off the top of the fifth with a ground-rule double to right-center. Akil Baddoo got Dingler to third with a flyout to center, and Matt Vierling laced a double down the left field line to knock in Dingler and make it 4-2. 

That did it for Birdsong, who struggled again Sunday. Birdsong did not struggle anywhere near as much as he did Tuesday in D.C., and he was burned by the fact that the ball was carrying Sunday, but it was still a rough outing. 

Left-handed flame thrower Erik Miller came in, and after Bligh Madris hit a chopped back to the mound, Colt Keith got Vierling in with a base-hit to make it 5-2. 

Montero threw a scoreless bottom of the fifth, and Miller ran into trouble in the top of the sixth. Miller walked Gio Urshela to start the inning, and two batters later, McKinstry walked to put runners at first and second with one out.

Bob Melvin brought in Sean Hjelle to face Dingler, who was 2-for-2 with the home run and ground-rule double. The Tigers were poised to blow this game open, but Hjelle and the Giants caught a break when Dingler hit a bullet right to Matt Chapman at third for the second out. Baddoo flew out to center, and the Giants were able to keep the deficit at three.

The Giants were able to stay in the game, and it paid dividends in the bottom of the sixth. Michael Conforto, who has been heating up here in August, hit one of the wall in left that he was able to leg out for a triple. 

Some weirdness happened while Conforto was at third. As Montero was going into his motion, he stopped and was called for a balk, and Conforto was sent home. However, First Base Umpire D.J. Reyburn had called time, because center-fielder Parker Meadows was out of position. The umpires conferred and sent Conforto back to third.

No big deal. Conforto would score on a base-hit by Matt Chapman. Tigers Manager A.J. Hinch pulled Montero for Tyler Holton, and former Tiger Mark Canha drew a pinch-hit walk. However, Patrick Bailey grounded into a 5-4-3 double play, which seemed to snuff out the rally.

Chapman did go to third on the double play, as Jerar Encarnacion came up with two outs. Encarnacion lined a double the other way to right to score Chapman and make it 5-4.

Hjelle returned to the mound for the top of the seventh, as the Tigers threatened again. Andy Ibanez singled with one out, and Justyn-Henry Malloy walked with two outs. 

Gio Urshela came up, and he hit a sharp chopper off the end of the bat to first. Wade dove to his left to come with it, and he flipped it to Hjelle to end the inning, as the Giants had dodged another bullet. 

Holton and Brenan Hanifee combined for a scoreless bottom of the seventh for Detroit, and Taylor Rogers came in to throw a 1-2-3 inning for the Giants.

Chapman tripled to lead off the eighth, and the Giants had the tying run 90 feet away. The Tigers then played the infield in for Mark Canha, who hit a sharp ground ball to short. Despite the drawn-in infield, Chapman took off for the plate, and he was caught in a rundown for a crushing and embarrassing first out. Chapman sat at the plate in disbelief as he caught his breath. 

Canha alertly took second on the play, but then he was caught in a rundown and tagged out when Bailey hit a chopper back to the mound. Back-to-back boneheaded base-running plays had single-handedly taken the Giants out of a rally, and Jerar Encarnacion grounded out to end the inning.

Jordan Hicks pitched through a pair of singles in the top of the ninth, and Hinch went to Will Vest in the bottom of the ninth. Vest retired the first two men he faced, but Wade worked a 1-2 count into a walk to extend the game for the potential winning run in Heliot Ramos.

Ramos was 0-for-4, and he was up there pressing, as he quickly fell behind 0-2. He then fouled off a fastball and took a changeup down for ball one, but he was caught looking at a 96-MPH fastball right on the outside corner to end it. Ramos had a few words for Home Plate Umpire Charlie Ramos—no relation—but Heliot Ramos had nobody to blame but himself there.

Keider Montero got the win; Hayden Birdsong took his second-career walk; and Will Vest got his first save of the season.

The Giants wasted a lot of opportunities Sunday, as they went 3-for-14 with runners in scoring position. Despite the run they have made, they have gone 31-for-161 with runners in scoring position since July 25. If that does not improve, you can forget about this team getting into October Baseball.

As much as the wasted opportunities hurt Sunday, once Chapman and Canha had their base-running blunders in the eighth, that pretty much sucked the life out of them. 

“[I’m] disgusted at myself for doing that,” Chapman bluntly said, taking full ownership of his mistake like the true leader that he is.

Those were the postgame words of a man who went 3-for-4; knocked in three of the Giants’ four runs; and had two of the Giants’ three hits with runners in scoring position Sunday.

Now, the Giants will have to move on and be ready to go when the Braves come in for a crucial four-game series starting Monday night. Not only are the Giants currently chasing the Braves for the third wild card spot, but if the Giants can at the very least split this series, they will have a winning record against the Braves and will hold the tiebreaker. 

However, with their schedule about to get much harder, the Giants really need to take three of four from the Braves. Another potential problem is that Jorge Soler will be making his return to Oracle Park after Farhan Zaidi traded him at the Deadline on July 30, and Soler will certainly be motivated to stick it to his former team.

Blake Snell (2-3, 4.31 ERA) will make the start for the Giants, and he will be opposed by veteran all-star left-hander Chris Sale (13-3, 2.75 ERA). First pitch Monday night will be at 6:45 p.m.

National League Wild Card Standings:

*1. Diamondbacks 66-53 +4.0

*2. Padres 66-53 +4.0

3. Braves 61-56 —

Mets 61-57 0.5

Cardinals 60-58 1.5

GIANTS 61-59 1.5

Cubs 59-60 3.0

Reds 57-61 4.5

Pirates 56-61 5.0

*Tiebreaking procedures taken into effect.

Tigers avoided Sweep (1-2) against Giants in Final game of the Series, 5-4; Star Wars Day in the City by the Bay

Detroit Tigers Dillion Dingler (above) celebrates his two run home with a big hug to Zach McKinstry (39) in the top of the second inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco against the San Francisco Giants on Sun Aug 11, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Michael Roberson

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. — The Detroit Tigers (56-63) salvaged the three-game series versus the San Francisco Giants (61-59), with a 5-4 victory on an overcast Star Wars Day.

The Tigers pounced upon the Giants right away, with a solo homer from leadoff designated hitter Matt Vierling. After a half inning, the Tigers led 1-0. However, the Giants had an immediate response in their bottom frame.

San Francisco scored during their first at bats on a two rbi single by third baseman Matt Chapman. He knocked in shortstopTyler Fitzgerald and Lamonte Wade Jr.. After an exciting first inning, the Giants led 2-1.

Detroit was right at it again in the top of the 2nd inning, scoring two more runs on another home run. Catcher Dillon Dingler hit his first “Dinger” of his career, plating shortstop Zach McKinstry, as well as himself. After two full innings, the Tigers led 3-2.

That lead lasted until the top of the fifth, when the MoTown Felines extended the advantage to 3 runs. Veiling reared his head again, this time with an RBI double, scoring Dingler. Next, second baseman Colt Keith hit an RBI single to right field, resulting in the aforementioned Vierling to cross the plate, for the Tigers’ fifth and final run. Detroit led 5-2 after 5 innings. Could they hold on to the lead, avoiding the Sweep in San Francisco?

Bottom of the 6th, the Giants made an attempt to cut into the lead and possibly eak out a come from behind win. Chapman belted an RBI single, knocking in Michael Conforto. Later, Jerar Encarnacionhit hit an RBI double, scoring Chapman. After six innings, 5-4 Tigers.

The Giants had an excellent chance to either tie or win the game in the bottom of the 8th inning. After Chapman opened the inning with a triple, they were poised to tie it up on a hit or sacrifice. Unfortunately, Chapman and Mark Canha were thrown out on back to back rundowns. Next, Encarnacion grounded out to Third, and a seemingly promising inning turned feeble, with 0 runs to account for. Still 5-4 going into the ninth inning.

The final inning was just a formality, as the Tigers kept their claws onto the 5-4 lead, while taking down the Giants with ease in the bottom of the 9th, only allowing a walk, while RHP Will Vest closed the game. The Detroit Tigers won 5-4!

The Tigers have Monday August 12 off, before they host Seattle the following day at 6:40 PM EST, with LHP Tarik Skubal (13-4, 2.57) on the mond versus TBD for the Mariners. The Giants host the Atlanta Braves 8/12 at 6:45 PM PDT with LHP Chris Sale (13-3, 2.75) vs. LHP Blake Snell (2-3, 4.31).

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Giants open up four game series with Braves Monday

San Francisco Giants Matt Chapman (left) gets tagged out at home plate by relief pitcher Brenan Hanifee (75) in the bottom of the eighth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sat Aug 11, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Marko:

#1 The Detroit Tigers avoided getting swept by the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park in San Francisco with a 5-4 win.

#2 The Tigers got home run help from Dillon Dingler and Matt Vierling. For Dingler it was his first career home run.

#3 The Giants in the bottom of the eight some bad base running, Matt Chapman was thrown out at home on a run down and then Mark Canha was hung up and thrown out at third base. That was an inning that basically saved the Tigers in the one run game.

#4 The Giants scored twice in the first and twice in the sixth but couldn’t capitalize in the eighth and in didn’t get one those heroic ninth inning walk offs.

#5 The Giants open a four game series with the Atlanta Braves on Monday night at Oracle Park with the Braves sending left hander Chris Sale (13-3, ERA 2.75) against the Giants starter Blake Snell (2-3, ERA 4.31) first pitch slated for 6:45pm

Marko Ukalovic does the Giants podcasts Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

San Francisco Giants podcast with Stephen Ruderman: Giants move 3 games over .500 for first time since Sep 2023

The San Francisco Giants Jerar Encarnacion (left) and Mike Yastrzemski (5) celebrate scoring on Brett Wisely’s RBI double in the bottom of the sixth inning against the Detroit Tigers at Oracle Park in San Francisco (AP News photo)

On the SF Giants podcast with Stephen:

#1 San Francisco Giants are now three game over .500 for the first time since September 15, 2023 that’s nearly a year’s worth of time. Stephen at this rate can you still see this team having a shot at a wild card spot.

#2 Tyler Fitzgerald has been doing it all first with the bat with 12 home runs. Now with some base running with his fourth career multi stolen base game. Fitzgerald stole three bases last Thursday in Washington.

#3 The Giants Brett Wisely has been key of late this time on Saturday he slugged a two run RBI double during a three run six inning rally in a two run 3-1 win for the Giants over the Detroit Tigers.

#4 Giants pitcher Logan Webb once again lights out pitching seven innings, surrendering four hits and no runs and striking out eight. Webb has three shutouts and two complete games this season so he’s bringing it this season he improves his record to 10-8.

#5 Tigers and Giants match up Sunday and a shot for San Francisco to sweep the series at Oracle Park. Tigers starter RHP Keider Montero (2-5, ERA 5.62) for the Giants Hayden Birdsong (3-1, ERA 4.73) first pitch at 1:05pm PT. The Tigers have been struggling losing eight of their last 11 games.

Stephen Ruderman is a podcast contributor for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Giants rally for 3 runs in 6th; Webb holds off Tigers for 7 innings in 3-1 win

The San Francisco Giants Brett Wisley slugs a sixth inning two run RBI double against the Detroit Tigers at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Sat Aug 10, 2024 (AP News photo)

By William Espy

SAN FRANCISCO–The San Francisco Giants (61-58) hosted the Detroit Tigers (55-63) in the second game of a three-game series on Saturday afternoon in front of a sold-out crowd at Oracle Park. Prior to the game, they hosted their 2014 World Series reunion.

With organizational legends in attendance, the modern Giants had some pressure on their shoulders. Logan Webb was on the mound for the Giants to start the night, while Alex Faedo started for the Tigers. The Giants picked all the runs they needed in the bottom of the sixth scoring three times for a 3-1 win Saturday.

The Tigers’ night started with three batters coming up, and immediately getting out allowing Webb to escape the first inning with only seven pitches thrown. The Giants on the other hand, immediately evened up with pitch count with just their first batter, as Tyler Fitzgerald fought his way to a full count before eventually being walked by Faedo.

The second batter of the night Heliot Ramos also drew a walk, putting the visitors in a tough spot early into the game. Faedo got one out when Michael Conforto struck out, but once again walked Matt Chapman, loading the bases for the Giants with just one out. The Tigers escaped the inning though, as a broken bat pop out from Patrick Bailey and a flyout by Mark Canha ended the inning, stranding all three runners.

The second inning started the same as the first, with three up and three down for the Tigers, this time on just 12 pitches for Webb. The Tigers made a pitching change for the bottom of the second, with Brant Hurter entering the game, who would give the Giants the same fate, three up, three down.

After a third straight inning without a base runner for the Tigers, the Giants needed to take advantage of their defensive play and get on the scoreboard early to avoid a similar outcome to the night before, when the difference-maker was a walk-off single by Mark Canha in the bottom of the ninth.

A win is a win, but the Giants needed to take advantage of their strong performances early to avoid unnecessary drama. They were unable to make anything happen in the bottom of the third though, and to this point, neither team had been able to record a hit.

That quickly changed though, as the Tigers got the first hit of the ballgame in the top of the fourth, when a dribbler by Akil Baddoo allowed him to out-run the throw. He advanced to second on a groundout to second base, giving the Tigers a runner-in-scoring position with just a single out. The Giants would get the next two batters out though, stranding Baddoo at second.

A one-out triple in the top of the fifth by Parker Meadows put some major pressure on the Giants. The next batter Dillon Dingler hit a groundball to the shortstop Fitzgerald who attempted to throw Meadows out at first, but was unsuccessful and the visitors took a 1-0 lead. That would be the only damage the Tigers could do though, as the Giants were able to get out of the inning.

Mike Yastrzemski got the Giants’ first hit of the night to open up the bottom of the fifth inning. That seemed to open the floodgates for the home team though, as Jerar Encarnacion hit a single, which advanced the runner to third and advanced to second himself on an E7.

A double by Brett Wisely brought both of them home, and it quickly went from a 1-0 deficit to a 2-1 lead for San Francisco. Hurter had a strong performance, but it seems he was left out too long. A single up the middle by Heliot Ramos drove in Wisely, extending the Giants lead to 3-1 and at this point, the Tigers had some movement in the bullpen.

The Tigers should’ve gotten out of the inning on a groundball by Chapman to short, but Javier Baez bobbled the ball, and the throw was still in time despite the error, but Bligh Madris was unable to cleanly make the catch and dropped the ball.

If either one had done their part correctly, they would’ve escaped the inning, but now Patrick Bailey had an opportunity to make them pay. He’d end up grounding to Baez, who would cleanly make the play this time, and a toss to Colt Keith at second got them the out.

A two-out double by Justyn-Henry Malloy showed some life for the Tigers, it seemed like Meadows was going to drive in the run with a blooper over Chapman’s head, but a sensational jumping catch robbed him of the hit to end the inning.

In a bit of a mind-boggling move, Hurter came out to start the bottom of the sixth inning as well. He had played well, but overall it seemed like he was being hung out to dry. He got through the inning without issue though. He had thrown 76 pitches through five innings, which was more than enough for the young reliever. At this point, it seemed certain that he was done for the night and wouldn’t be back for the seventh.

A two-out single by Baez was the Tigers’ only offense for the top of the seventh inning, and as expected they had a new pitcher enter the game for the bottom half of the inning, Shelby Miller. Fitzgerald immediately got on base with a leadoff single, putting pressure on the new pitcher immediately. He then stole both second and third base, while in the meantime Heliot Ramos struck out. Ultimately it wouldn’t lead to anything, as the Tigers would hold the Giants without a run.

Right-handed submarine pitcher Tyler Rogers entered the Giants to start the eighth inning. Chapman once again made a phenomenal play on a ground ball by Colt Keith, showing he still has his Gold Glove ability. Rogers did his job effectively, with the Tigers once again having a three up, three down inning.

Lefty Joey Wentz took the mound for the Tigers in the bottom of the eighth. Patrick Bailey got on base to lead off the inning after the ball went through Gio Urshela’s legs at third base. Canha popped out to first, then Yastrzemski got his second hit of the night putting runners on first and second. A fielder’s choice got the second out of the inning and Wisely stepped up with two outs and runners on the corners. Wisely would strike out swinging to end the inning.

With Camilo Doval no longer in the big leagues, newly promoted closer Ryan Walker entered the game in the top of the ninth inning. After a flyout by Urshela to start the inning, Walker walked Madris, giving the Tigers a base runner with one out.

Meadows followed that up with a single to left field, putting the tying run on first. Dingler struck out looking, bringing up Baez as the Tigers’ last chance to get back into the game. He’d strike out swinging, and the Giants walked away with a 3-1 victory and lead the series two games to none.

Giants return to cold and foggy San Francisco for big 3-2 win over Tigers; Canha comes through with RBI sac fly in 9th

Mark Canha(16) of the San Francisco Giants gets the waterworks after hitting a walk off sac fly to score Michael Conforto for the gamer against his old teammates the Detroit Tigers at Oracle Park in San Francisco in the bottom of the ninth on Fri Aug 9, 2024 (AP News photo)

Friday, Aug. 9, 2024

Oracle Park

San Francisco, California

Detroit Tigers 2 (55-62)

San Francisco Giants 3 (60-58)

Win: Tyler Rogers (2-4)

Loss: Jason Foley (3-4)

Time: 2:28

Attendance: 33,037

By Stephen Ruderman

The Giants returned home after an insane day and incredible win in Washington, D.C. Thursday to beat the Detroit Tigers Friday night thanks to three sacrifice flies, including a walk-off sacrifice fly by Mark Canha, 3-2. 

The Giants won one helluva 10-inning game played under the gun, as everyone was trying to get out of Washington, D.C. before Tropical Storm Debby hit. The Giants were able to get out of town, and returned to the cold and foggy confines of San Francisco.

It has always felt great for players to get back to San Francisco after a trip to the hot and humid conditions of the Midwest and East Coast during the Dog Days of Summer. However, considering everything that went down Thursday, there’s a very good chance that the Giants got in very late, and thus, they would have some jetlag Friday night.

Friday night, the Giants would kick off a seven-game homestand with a 2012 World Series rematch against the Detroit Tigers on this cold and foggy night at Oracle Park. Left-hander Robbie Ray took the mound for his fourth start of the season, and he pitched a scoreless top of the first inning to open things up.

Giu Urshela led off the top of the second with a double to left field. Urshela got to third on a wild pitch, and he scored on a sacrifice fly by Ryan Vilade to put the Tigers on the board.

The Tigers went with the bullpen game Friday night, and Beau Brieske was the opener. Brieske was solid over three no-hit innings against a tired and jet-lagged Giants’ offense, as he struck out five. 

Ray pitched a scoreless top of the third, and he pitched his first 1-2-3 inning of the night in the top of the fourth. Former Dodger Kenta Maeda came in, and he threw three perfect innings from the fourth through the six.

Javier Baez doubled to lead off the top of the fifth, and then he stole third and scored on an error to make it 2-0. Ray escaped further damage in the top of the fifth, and he was able to get out of a jam in the top of the sixth unscathed.

Ray was a bit shaky Friday night, as he only pitched one 1-2-3 inning, but he still gave the Giants a solid quality outing. Ray gave up two runs and five hits over six innings, while walking five and striking out seven.

The Giants were getting no-hit as the game went to the bottom of the seventh, but that ended when Tyler Fitzgerald lined a base-hit to left-center field off Maeda to start the inning. Heliot Ramos then singled Fitzgerald over to third, and the Giants had runners at the corners with nobody out.

Michael Conforto came to the plate, and he got the Giants on the board with a sacrifice fly to left. Maeda retired the next two, and the game went to the eighth with Detroit still up 2-1.

Landen Roupp, who was called up prior to the game, pitched 1-2-3 innings in the seventh and eighth, and Maeda returned to the mound for the Tigers in the bottom of the eighth.

Mark Canha lined a base-hit the other way to right to start the bottom of the eighth, and he got to third on a base-hit by Brett Wisely. Patrick Bailey then tied the game with a sacrifice fly to center.

Submariner Tyler Rogers came in for the Giants in the top of the ninth, and he threw a 1-2-3 inning. That sent the game to the bottom of the ninth still tied, and the Giants had a chance to win it.

Jason Foley, who came in for Maeda to finish the bottom of the eighth, was back out for the bottom of the ninth for Detroit. Heliot Ramos was the first up, and hit a ground ball up the middle just to the right of second base to second-baseman Colt Keith. However, Keith kicked it, and Ramos was aboard to start the inning.

Michael Conforto walked, and Matt Chapman was hit in the head to load the bases. Thankfully, Chapman was wearing a helmet, and he stayed in the game after he was checked on.

Tigers Manager A.J. Hinch brought in the veteran and former Giant, Shelby Miller. Mike Yastrzemski hit a ground ball to first, and Ramos was out at the plate on a 3-2 fielder’s choice.

The bases remained loaded for Mark Canha, who grew up a Giants fan, and who was playing in his first home game as a Giant in the park he came to as a kid. With the count 2-2, Canha flew out to just shy of the warning track out in left, and Conforto came in to score the winning run for a magical moment that Canha would never forget.

Tyler Rogers was the winning pitcher, and Jason Foley was the loser.

Not a single run scored Friday night on a base-hit, and four of the five runs scored in this game came on sacrifice flies.

It was another big win for the Giants, who have now won 11 of their last 14 games to tie their season-high two games over .500 at 60-58. They are now just two games back of the Mets, who were shut out 6-0 in Seattle Friday night, for the third wild card spot in the National League.

The Giants will try to get to three games over .500 for the first time this season Saturday afternoon. Logan Webb (9-8, 3.42 ERA) will be on the mound for San Francisco, and the Tigers will go with another bullpen game with their opener still to be determined. First pitch will be at 1:05 p.m.

National League Wild Card Standings:

1. Padres 65-52 +3.5

2. Diamondbacks 64-53 +2.5

3. Mets 61-55 —

Braves 60-55 0.5

Cardinals 60-57 1.5

GIANTS 50-58 2.0

Cubs 58-60 4.0

Pirates 56-59 4.5

Reds 56-60 5.0

Giants News and Notes:

  • Closer Camilo Doval was sent down to Triple-A Sacramento following his blown save in Washington yesterday. Doval had been one of the best closers in Baseball over the last two years, and he went to the All-Star Game last year in Seattle.

Doval got off to a great start this season, but after a blown save in which he gave up two earned runs on May 21 in Pittsburgh, things went downhill for him. He gave up four runs in a blown save against the Yankees on June 2, and continued to struggle over the next two-plus months afterwards.

  • Bob Melvin announced prior to the game that Ryan Walker will be the interim closer while Doval gets things together in Sacramento. Walker is 7-3 with a 2.24 ERA this season, and he has shined in some big situations, which has earned him the trust from his skipper to be the closer as the Giants continue to battle through this pennant race.
  • Catcher Jakson Reetz was also optioned to Sacramento. Right-handed reliever Landen Roupp was called back up, and catcher Curt Casali was activated off the Paternity List following the birth of his son, Cole.
  • According to Jon Heyman of the New York Post, the Giants are open to a long-term deal with Matt Chapman. Chapman, who was signed in Spring Training this season, has been great at the hot corner, as well as in the clubhouse. While Chapman was signed to a three-year deal, he does have an opt-out after next season.
  • As the Giants and Tigers square off in this 2012 World Series rematch, the Giants will have their 2014 world champion reunion prior to Saturday’s game. In attendance will be a variety of players, coaches, trainers and front office members from the team that won the Giants’ third world championship in five years.

Former players in attendance will be Buster Posey, Madison Bumgarner, Brandon Belt, Hunter Pence, Joe Panik, Tim Hudson, Michael Morse, Jeremy Affeldt, Gregor Blanco, Travis Ishikawa, George Kontos, Javier Lopez, Jake Peavy, Ryan Vogelsong, Yusmeiro Petit, Juan Perez, Sergio Romo, Andrew Susac, Jean Machi, Ehire Adrianza, Gary Brown, Juan Gutierrez, Chris Heston and Brandon Hicks.

Former coaches in attendance will be Ron Wotus, Dave Righetti, Tim Flannery, Mark Gardner, Shawon Dunston. Taira Uematsu, who is still on the Giants’ coaching staff, will also take part in the ceremony.

Final Thoughts:

For the third time this season, I gave up on this team, and for the third time, they have come right back to prove me wrong. 

I said at the start of the season that the Giants would get off to a slow and frustrating start over the first two-to-four months of the season and then get it together, but after their brutal 2-5 road trip to start the second half, the Giants were six games under .500 at 49-55 and five and a half games back of the Padres for the third wild card spot.

I just felt that there was no way. The frustrations amongst the players over how Farhan Zaidi was running things were clearly mounting for the third-straight year, and this team seemed poised to collapse just as they did the last two years.

However, something feels different this time, and I really think it’s the manager. Gabe Kapler may have been the most laissez-faire manager in the history of the game. This is the guy who told his players that his preferred way of communication was texting, even if his players were in the same room with him. With the frustrations with Farhan mounting, and a manager that players felt they could not really talk to, the last two years ended in utter disaster, and by the end of last season, Kapler had completely lost the clubhouse.

I don’t know for a fact that Bob Melvin has made the difference this season, but I highly suspect he has. With this team on the verge of collapsing in the second half for the third year in a row, Melvin has been a stabilizing force that has held this team together, and they have turned things around to win 11 of their last 14.

I trashed Farhan for his moves at the Trade Deadline on July 30. He didn’t trade Blake Snell for prospects, and the best he got offensively was Mark Canha. Then on Aug. 2, Snell threw his no-hitter in Cincinnati. Thursday, Canha went 4-for-5 to lead the Giants to their biggest win of the season, and he walked off Friday night with a sacrifice fly.

Farhan knows the Giants most likely have to go to the Playoffs for him to keep his job, and so far his moves have paid off. The Giants are now back at their season-high two games over .500 at 60-58, and they trail the Mets by just two games for the third wild card.

I definitely feel a lot more excited right now, but this team is very streaky, and they have a long 44 games still in front of them. Right now, the Giants are benefiting from having the easiest schedule in Baseball, but the real test of this team is going to come when the schedule gets much more difficult when they go to Seattle on Aug. 23.

When the Giants start their three-game series in Seattle against the Mariners on Aug. 23, they will suddenly have one of the hardest schedules in Baseball the rest of the way with 30 of their final 33 games coming against teams over .500. 

I really do believe in this team’s ability to go to the Playoffs, and the Giants have shown that they can beat the elite teams in Baseball this season, but they really need to continue to take advantage of the easy schedule in front of them over the next 13 days and get a lot of momentum going into what is going to be a very difficult final 33 games.

As of right now, I just don’t know if the Giants are going to go to the Playoffs. This is baseball, and anything can happen, but the one thing I do know is that the offense is going to have to collectively stay hot and keep getting the big RBI hits with runners in scoring position if they want to go to the Playoffs. 

The Giants’ rotation has been solid all season, and with the real Blake Snell finally showing up and Robbie Ray back, the rotation is the best it’s been all season. However, Camilo Doval’s struggles have dampened what has otherwise been a pretty good bullpen. If Doval can get it together in Sacramento and return to his old self, the Giants could suddenly have one of the best seventh-eighth-and-ninth-inning trios in all of Baseball. Ryan Walker in the seventh; Tyler Rogers in the eighth; and the Camilo Doval we know in the ninth will be absolutely lethal

The Giants are a young good team with some growing pains, and they have an offense that is capable of staying hot the rest of the way. All the moves have been made, and this clubhouse has remained strong following the moves at the deadline. They are gelling together and showing what they are capable of.

All we can do at this point is sit back and see what this team does over their final 44 games, but if the offense stays consistent, and if Doval can come back and be his old self, this team will stand a good chance of getting into October Baseball.

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s back home to open series with Pirates tonight at Coliseum

Baltimore Orioles runner Cedric Mullins (right) slides in ahead of the throw as the Oakland A’s Darell Hernaiz (left) waits for the ball in the bottom of the second inning at Camden Yards in Baltimore on Sun Apr 28, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 Barbara, the A’s rallied for two runs in the top of the ninth inning to beat the Baltimore Orioles 7-6 at Camden Yards after being down 6-5.

#2 The first place Orioles closer Craig Kimbrel had a blown save the second one in the series where the A’s came back from behind late in the game to win it. Orioles manager Brandon Hyde came out with the trainer during the pitching change to check on Kimbrel.

#3 Hyde said the Orioles had been playing good baseball but the O’s just had a couple unfortunate endings in the series.

#4 The A’s came away with their third road series win for the season an improvement over last season at this pace. The A’s Seth Brown hit a home run and Brent Rooker hit a two RBI single and the A’s scored their most runs out of the ten games on the road trip.

#5 The A’s return back to the Oakland Coliseum Monday night to host the Pittsburgh Pirates on Monday night at 6:40pm PDT starting pitchers for the Pirates LHP Bailey Falter (2-1 ERA 3.33) for the A’s Joe Boyle (1-4 ERA 7.06).

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

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Gelof is taking off with key hits; A’s open three game set in Texas tonight

Oakland A’s hitter Zack Gelof (with helmet) is congratulated by teammate after hitting a three run second inning home run at Comerica Park in Detroit against the Detroit Tigers on Sun Mar 7, 2024 (AP News photo)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Success in the Detroit Tigers series for the Oakland A’s winning two out of three. The last two games the A’s came away with wins on Saturday with a 4-0 shutout and a 7-1 win over the Tigers on Sunday.

#2 One of the key players for the A’s was Zack Gelof on Sunday hitting a three run home run with four RBIs as the A’s clobbered the Tigers 7-1 to conclude the series.

#3 To give you an idea how a great game that Zelof had he had an RBI triple in the top of the first inning and later scored on JJ Bleday’s single.

#4 The A’s also got good pitching holding the Tigers to just a run from starter Joe Boyle who went five innings, two hits, three walks, and six strikeouts.

#5 The A’s open a three game series in Texas tonight. The A’s will start pitcher Alex Wood (0-1 ERA 9.72) and for the Texas Rangers Nathan Evaldi (1-0 ERA 1.38). The Rangers are tough customers and manager Bruce Bochy would be a worthy opponent. First pitch 5:05pm PDT at Globe Life Stadium in Arlington.

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

#1

Oakland A’s day off report: A’s Finish Successful Series Against Tigers; Move On To Texas Rangers

Oakland A’s hitter Zack Gelof with helmet on is congratulated by a teammate after hitting a three run home run in the top of the third inning at Comerica Park in Detroit on Sun Apr 7, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

The Oakland A’s had only won one game to start the 2024 season back on March 31st, a 4-3 decision over the Cleveland Guardians. This past Friday night the A’s played a very competitive Game One against the Detroit Tigers just coming up short 5-4, the game not being decided until the eighth inning.

Oakland came back in games two and three with great energy, incredible pitching and offense. It was the pitching that really stood out in both games. Paul Blackburn was sparkling in game two and Joe Boyle in game three showed some great stuff, some excellent command.

Neither of these games were close. The final score in game two was a shut-out 4-0 and game three was 7-1 with Oakland scoring in four innings.

Paul Blackburn has had a strong start this season. He threw more change-ups in game two then we are used to seeing. He has given up six hits and one walk in 13 scoreless innings this season. He successfully mixed his pitches keeping hitters off balance. He has done a terrific job so far this season. In game three Joe Boyle got the job done striking out six while pitching five scoreless innings.

Both Brent Rooker and Zach Gelof had great games throughout the series. In game three Gelof had his best game of the series with three runs, four hits and four RBIs. He also drew three walks in game three. He has been on fire in this series. Abraham Toro has also been having some nice games as had Seth Brown.

The A’s had the day off Monday before heading to the Lone Star state taking on the Texas Rangers in a three-game series that will get underway on Tuesday with first pitch scheduled for 5:05 PM. Alex Wood will take the mound for Oakland looking for a third win in a row. The Rangers pitcher is yet to be determined.

The A’s should come into this game with a new resolves and a lot of confidence after winning their first series of the young season. The Rangers do have a 6-3 record and Oakland will have to shut down the likes of Marcus Semien, Cory Seager plus a plethora of .300 plus hitters on their roster. This will be a challenge for the A’s but they are showing some great signs of improvement over the start of the season.