A’s Win First Series of the Season Beating Tigers 7-1

Oakalnd A’s JJ Bleday hits for a single RBI to center in top of the first inning at Comerica Park in Detroit against the Detroit Tigers on Sun Apr 7, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Barbara.Mason

The Oakland A’s (3-7) won their first series of the season Sunday afternoon beating the Detroit Tigers (6-3) 7-1. Zach Gelof continued where he left off in Saturday’s game finishing with three runs, four hits and four RBIs. He is playing some red-hot baseball right now. This was great team effort Sunday with all hands on deck, a really positive sign for the A’s.

Game recap: The second inning was again all Oakland as their lead grew to 5-0. Zach homered with Ryan Noda and Abraham Toro on base. This was the perfect start for the A’s both offensively and defensively.

The A’s scored again in the fourth inning. Abraham Toro reached third base off an infield hit and Ryan Noda had his second run of the game for a 6-0 lead.

The Tigers finally got up on the scoreboard in the eighth inning when Riley Greene hit a solo home run. That would be all that Detroit could muster in this game. Oakland continued to lead 6-1 going into the ninth inning.

The A’s refused to take their foot off the pedal scoring in the ninth inning. Seth Brown got in on the action singling Lawrence Butler home. Oakland had scored in four innings with 14 hits coming from seven different players.

The final score was 7-1. Joe Boyle had a great five innings on the mound and Michael Kelly finished off the Tigers in the ninth inning. The A’s record improved to 3-7 and Oakland had won their first series of the season.

Game recap: Sunday afternoon as the A’s played Game three of their series with the Tigers. Saturday in Game Two Oakland had a great showing on the mound, a terrific offensive effort winning by the score of 4-0. Sunday the A’s got great pitching and hitting to win their first series of the season. Boyle on the mound for Oakland this afternoon helped the A’s get that first series win.

The A’s will have Monday off before heading to Texas for a three game series with the Rangers. Oakland will hopefully take this energy into the Long Star state extending their winning streak to three in a row. Alex Wood will take the mound for the A’s and Nathan Eovaldi will get the nod for the Rangers. First pitch is scheduled for 5:05 PM.

A’s Wins Second Game of the Season Beating Tigers 4-0

Oakland A’s pitcher Mason Miller (19) is congratulated by catcher Shane Langeliers (23) after defeating the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park in Detroit on Sun Apr 6, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

Behind some excellent pitching by Paul Blackburn as well as some very efficient relief pitching, the Oakland A’s (2-7) won their second game of the season beating the Detroit Tigers (6-2) in a shutout 4-0. The A’s also had some great offense with some solid work from Zach Gelof and Brent Rooker.

Game recap: The A’s got the party started early in the first inning. Brent Rooker hit a home run with Zach Gelof on base and Oakland had an early 2-0 lead. The A’s were not finished and continued to add to their lead in the sixth inning. Seth Brown singled driving Zach Gelof home who as it turned out would be a very busy guy in this game. With a 3-0 lead Rooker hit a single in the eighth inning driving, who else, Gelof home giving Oakland a 4-0 lead. This would turn out to be the final, a 4-0 shut-out.

Paul Blackburn did indeed get the job done going six innings giving up three hits, no runs and four strikeouts. He had an outstanding day. Austin Adams pitched the seventh inning with no hits, no runs and 2 punch-outs. Mason Miller took over in the eighth giving up a single hit and had one strikeout and going into the ninth inning was looking to close out this game.

Oakland was on the verge of their second win of the season. Miller got the job done, in fact, the A’s had an all-around excellent showing on the mound today. This was not only their second win of the season, it was their first road win of this young season. This was an outstanding offensive and defensive game for Oakland. The A’s only had five hits but made every one of them count.

Rooker, Seth Brown, Shea Langeliers and J.D. Davis all had hits and Gelof scored three runs. It was a banner day for the team and a real confidence builder.

Game notes: Saturday afternoon, the A’s were back at work taking on the Tigers in game two of their series. The A’s lost a close and highly competitive game Friday to the Tigers 5-4. Game One of the series was not decided until the eighth inning with Oakland coming up just short. They played catch-up through six innings and tied up the game in the seventh. The Tigers pulled out the win in the eighth inning. Saturday Oakland got their second win of the season and pitcher Paul Blackburn made it happen with a shutout.

Sunday the A’s will wrap up the series with the Tigers before heading to Texas on Tuesday for a series with the Rangers. First pitch for Game Three is scheduled for 10:40.

A’s Drop Another One Run Game Losing to Detroit 5-4

The Oakland A’s right fielder Brent Rooker (25) chases after the baseball hit by the Detroit Tigers Gio Urshela for a double in the bottom of the eighth inning at Comerica Park in Detroit on Fri Apr 5, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

The Oakland A’s (1-7) played a hotly contested game against the Detroit Tigers (6-1) coming up just short losing 5-4. Both Zach Gelof and Abraham Toro hit home runs in the losing effort. They went through five pitchers struggling with inconsistency on the mound. JP Sears had a good five opening innings but stumbled in the sixth losing a bit of command.

Game recap: It was a quiet start to the game with no runs scored in the first three innings. In the fourth inning, the Tigers broke the game open scoring three runs. It was a rough inning for Sears who gave up a homer to Matt Vierling followed by a Spencer Torkelson double with Andy Ibanez on base and Detroit took a quick 3-0 lead.

After 22 scoreless innings the A’s Brent Rooker homered with Zack Gelof aboard in the sixth inning trimming the Tiger lead to 3-2 and this game got a lot closer. The Tigers Mark Canha knocked the Tigers second home run of the game out of the park extending Detroit’s lead to 4-2. Oakland was forced to pull pitcher JP Sears who not only gave up the two homers but also six hits. Austin Adams took his place on the mound.

In the top of the 7th inning Tiger pitcher Tarik Skubal gave up the long ball a one run home run from Oakland’s Abraham Toro, his first of the season. The A’s were within one run of a tie with the Tigers 4-3 and this would initiate a pitching change for Detroit.

Will Vest would take over on the mound for the Tigers. Oakland went to work putting runners on second and third with one out. The A’s tied up this game 4-4 when Nick Allen grounded out to second and JJ Bleday scored.

Oakland’s Dany Jimenez pitched the seventh inning trying to pin down the strike zone. He found himself in back to back full counts followed by walks. With Tiger runners on first and second Jimenez was out and T. J. McFarland would come in and try to get out of the inning unscathed. Detroit’s Kerry Carpenter hit into a double play and Oakland had gotten out of the inning with the game remaining tied 4-4.

Spencer Torkolsen doubled trying to put a productive bottom of the eighth inning together for the Tigers. Lucas Erceg had taken the mound for Oakland the fifth pitcher for the A’s this afternoon. An RBI double from Gio Urshela broke the tie driving Torkolsen home and giving the Tigers a 5-4 lead.

Oakland started off the ninth inning with an Abraham Toro walk. Brian Noda would take first base also on a walk and the A’s had two runners on. Detroit’s Alex Lange would take the mound looking for the final out and the win. He struck out Zach Gelof and that was the ball game 5-4. Oakland had lost their 3rd one run game of the season.

Game notes: Friday afternoon the A’s traveled to Detroit to take on the Tigers in a three game series. The A’s have been struggling offensively while the Tigers have had an excellent start this year only dropping a single game in this young season.

The A’s went into this game without a single run in 17 innings and would be looking to get going on the offensive side. They sent JP Sears to the mound for this game. Sears couldn’t limit the Tiger offense and let his defense clean up any Detroit hits.

This was a tightly contested game but the A’s came up just short. Oakland is struggling on the mound with some real inconsistent pitching. They will take on the Tigers in game two tomorrow with first pitch scheduled for 10:10 AM. Paul Blackburn will take the mound for Oakland and for the Tigers Kenta Maeda will get the nod.

Red Sox beat A’s 1-0 to complete three-game sweep; Loss is 6th out of last 7 games for Oakland

Oakland A’s pitcher TJ McFarland gives up the intentional pass to Boston Red Sox hitter Trevor Story (foreground) to load the bases with one out in the top of the eighth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Wed Apr 3, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg and Stephen Ruderman

OAKLAND- The Boston Red Sox beat the Oakland A’s 1-0 Wednesday afternoon to complete a three-game sweep. The A’s have lost six of the seven games played this season. The pitching for both teams was excellent—the game’s only run came in the fourth inning.

The A’s starter, Ross Stripling, pitched well enough to win.“Strip was great. [He] pounded the zone…..I think the biggest difference this outing from his first was he actually crowded some guys with his sinker, which is a good sign. Obviously, he’s a guy that’s gonna keep hitters off balance. He did a great job today…..It was a great outing for him.” said A’s manager Mark Kotsay.

The A’s had their chances but could not get a hit when needed. They threatened to score in the fifth, seventh, and ninth innings. They failed all three times. Each team’s bullpen held the opposition scoreless. The game summary follows below.

The Red Sox drew first blood in the top of the fourth inning. Stripling had the Sox under control for the first three innings. With one out in the fourth, Singles by Triston Casas, Matsataka Yoshida, and Cedanne Radaela loaded the bases.

Second Baseman Emmanuel Valdez’s fly ball to short right field drove in Casas with the first run of the game for Boston. The A’s mounted a threat in the bottom of the fourth. With one out, A’s third baseman, J D Davis, doubled to deep center field—Sox pitcher Nick Pivetta Struck out Seth Brown on a 95 Mile-per-hour four-seam fastball.

The next hitter, Brent Rooker, mired in an early season slump, blasted a ball Ceddanne Rafaela caught at the 400-foot sign. The Red Sox lead 1-0 after four. Kotsay said the A’s simply got beat by good pitching, “We know those first five games weren’t clean games. These last two games were clean; they were competitive. We had a chance to win both games. That’s the type of baseball that I was expecting us to play. We had opportunities with the bases loaded. We also got a couple balls dead center that is this park seem not to go anywhere…..the at-bats [today] were better, even though we didn’t score…..the Red Sox’ bullpen has got it going right now, [and] it was a challenge.”

In the bottom of the fifth, the A’s loaded the bases with one out. Singles by Tyler Nevin, his first Major League hit, Nick Allen, and Ryan Noda gave the A’s a chance to put some runs on the board. The next hitter, Zack Gelof, hit into a 6-4-3 to end the inning.

The Red Sox loaded the bases in the eighth inning. Lefty T.J. McFarland was on the hill for the A’s. McFarland retired Abreu for the first out. Jarren Duran singled. It was Duran’s fourth hit of the day. Rafael Devers doubled to put men on at second and third.

The A’s issued Sox shortstop Trevor Story an intentional walk to load the bases. The threat ended when Triston Casas grounded into a 4-6-3 double play to end the inning. The Sox still lead 1-0 halfway through the eighth. The Red Sox dodged a bullet in the eighth; with one out, Zack Gelof singled.

Story fielded J J Bleday’s ground behind second base. Trevor stepped on second to get the out on Gelof. Story’s throw to first to complete the double play went awry, and Bleday went to second on the error. Sox reliever Chris Martin could not field Davis’s ball. Bleday went to third on the play. Martin struck out Seth Brown to end the inning.

The A’s had a chance to tie the game in the bottom of the ninth. With one out, Red Sox closer Kenley Jansen walked Shea Lamgeliers and Lawrence Butler. Pinch hitter Abraham Toro hit into a fielder’s choice. Langeliers went to third on the play. All the A’s needed to tie the game was a hit. Jansen ended the A’s thoughts of tying the game when he struck out Ryan Noda to preserve the win for the Red Sox. The Sox win 1-0.

Game Notes: With the loss, the A’s are 1-6 to start the 2024 season. Boston improved to 5-2. The Line score for Oakland was no runs, eight hits, and no errors. Boston’s line was one run, ten hits, and two errors. The Winning pitcher was Nick Pivetta. Pivetta lost his first start 1-0 and won his second start 1-0.

Kenley Jansen recorded his second save. The A’s Ross Stripling pitched well for the A’s. Stripling went seven innings, allowing eight hits and one run. Stripling did not walk a batter and struck out three. Stripling threw 85 pitches, 61 for strikes. Stripling is now 0-2 for 2024.

The game lasted two hours and 21 minutes. There were 6,436 fans in attendance. The A’s are off on Thursday. They will start JP Sears and the Tigers have not yet decided on a starter in Detroit on Friday. The game will start at 10:10 a.m.

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s lack hitting in 4-1 loss to Tigers; Open 3 game set in Minnesota Tuesday

Oakland A’s second baseman Zack Gelof couldn’t make the catch on the Detroit Tigers Andy Ibanez’ line drive in the top of the third inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Sep 24, 2023. This was the A’s final home game for 2023. (AP News photo)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason:

#1 JP Sears, who had struggled through a 5-12, 4.52 season, also struggled again Sunday. He faced 23 batters over five innings, throwing them 97 pitches 58 of them strikes. 

#2 Opposing Sears in this battle of southpaws, was Eduardo Rodríguez, (11-9, 3.57 at game time), who did a fine job in his seven innings of work. He shut the Athletics out on five hits, four walks, and a wild pitch.

#3 Miguel Cabrera was in Detroit’s starting line up as the designated hitter. He closed out his Coliseum career by going 0 for 4 with a walk but drew loud applause after his last at bat, at which he struck out.

#4 Esteury Ruíz, leading off instead of batting in his recent number nine slot in order to improve his chances of breaking the record of stolen bases by an American League rookie (66) made two attempts in the bottom of the first. He was successful in pilfering second but was out by a mile when he tried to steal third.

#5 The A’s will travel on Minneapolis and Anaheim for the half a dozen games remaining in their schedule. Paul Blackman (4-6, 4,11) will face the Twins on Tuesday at 4:40 Pacific Time. The Twins will go against Kenta Maeda (6-7, 4.28).

Barbara Mason did the Oakland A’s podcasts Mondays during the 2023 season at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Tigers end A’s home season with 2-0 shutout; Detroit sends out 3 pitchers to silence A’s hitting

Detroit Tigers pitcher Eduardo Rodriguez throws to an Oakland Athletics batter during the sixth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on the last A’s home game on Sun Sep 24, 2023 (AP News photo)

Detroit (73-83). 002 000 000. – 2. 11. 0
Oakland (48-108). 000 000 000 – 0. 7. 1

Time: 2:34

Attendance: 13,102

Sunday, September 24, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND—Well, that did it. The Oakland Athletics wrapped up their home season with 2-0 loss to the Detroit Tigers in a contest riddled with missed opportunities.

JP Sears, who had struggled through a 5-12, 4.52 season, also struggled again this afternoon. He faced 23 batters over five innings, throwing them 97 pitches 58 of them strikes. He allowed two runs, both of them earned but not entirely his fault. He struck out seven and walked two before being relieved in the sixth by Adrián Martínez, who threw 2+ scoreless innings. Sears took the loss and went home with a record of 5-13, 4.49.

Martínez held the Tigers in check for 2+ frames before yielding to Kyle Muller with Jake Rogers on first with a bloop single to center. Muller managed to keep the Tigers off the board in the eighth, with a little help from a great throw by Rooker to nab Zach McKinstry trying to advance from first to third. McKinstry had gotten on base when Noda made a fine grab and throw of his attempted sacrifice to force Rogers out at second. Zach Neal hurled a scoreless ninth..

Opposing Sears in this battle of southpaws, was Eduardo Rodríguez, (11-9, 3.57 at game time), who did a fine job in his seven innings of work. He shut the Athletics out on five hits, four walks, and a wild pitch.He threw an even 100 pitches; 61 counted as strikes, chalking up five Ks.

Jason Foley followed him and was pulled in favor of Alex Lange after allowing a two out single to Rooker. Langer fanned the pinch hitting Seth Brown to end the inning and then stayed on to close out the game. Rodríguez earned the win, his 12th against nine losses and brought his ERA down to 3.40. Langer earned the save, his 25th.

Miguel Cabrera was in Detroit’s starting line up as the designated hitter. He closed out his Coliseum career by going 0 for 4 with a walk but drew loud applause after his last at bat, at which he struck out

Esteury Ruíz, leading off instead of batting in his recent number nine slot in order to improve his chances of breaking the record of stolen bases by an American League rookie (66) made two attempts in the bottom of the first.

He was successful in pilfering second but was out by a mile when he tried to steal third. That brought his total to 64. Ruíz’s leadoff double in the fourth gave him another chance to steal. He took advantage of it as the lead runner in a double steal that he and Gelof pulled off, catcher Jake Robinson’s throwing straight through to second.

That gave the A’s two runners in scoring position with none out. They blew that opportunity. when Ruíz was thrown out at home on Rooker’s grounder to third and Díaz bounced into an inning ending double play. It was a case of The Curse of the Leadoff Double being compounded by The Curse of the Double Steal and The Curse of the Double Play.

Another base running error conspired with The Curse of the Leadoff Double one inning later. Shea Langeliers laced the fatidic two bagger and then tried to advance to third on Ryan Noda’s hard ground ball to short. He. was not successful. The A’s went on to load the bases and leave three more runners on base.

Sears was the victim of some poor fielding in the top or the third that teamed up with a couple of Tiger hits to give the visitors the 2-0 lead they would hold for the rest of the game. Parker Meadows banged a double off the Budweiser ad beneath the 362 foot marker in left field. Matt Vierling followed with a walk.

Andy Ibáñez lifted a pop fly to short right. Zack Gelof attempted an over the shoulder catch but couldn’t keep the ball in his glove; it was scored as. single. Spencer Torkelson’s fly to right fell in for a single, driving in the two runners, and Torkelson took second on Rooker’s errant throw to the infield. Sears bore down, and second base is where Torkelson was stranded. Sears, Martínez, Muller, and Neal shut the Tigers down from there on.

The A’s will travel on Minneapolis and Anaheim for the half a dozen games remaining in their schedule. Paul Blackman (4-6, 4,11) will face the Twins on Tuesday at 4:40 Pacific Time. The Twins will go against Kenta Maeda (6-7, 4.28).

A’s May shuts door on Tigers for 4-1 win; Oakland wins second straight game

Oakland Athletics pitcher Joe Boyle works against the Detroit Tigers during the first inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sat Sep 23, 2023 (AP News photo)

Detroit (72-83). 001 000 000. – 1. 6. 0

Oakland (48-107) 002 000 02x. 4. 6. 2

Time: 2:38

Attendance: 9,776

Saturday, September 23, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND—About the only bright spot in the 10-1 beat down the A’s suffered at the hands of the San Diego Padres on September 17 was the brilliant debut of the 24 year old right handed pitcher Joe Boyle, who pitched three innings of one hit shutout ball before ceding the mound to a trio of his elders consisting of Ken Waldichuk, Darin Sweet, and Francisco Pérez, who proceeded to collaborate with Oakland’s impotent offense in the ignominious defeat that followed Boyle’s departure.

Friday night, the A’s bats regained their lost vim, vigor, and vitality, Waldichuk held the Detroit Tigers to a couple of runs on four hits in six innings as the Athletics broke their eight game losing streak in an 8-2 triumph over the visiting Bengals. Saturday, the green and gold defeated the orange in black, 4-1 in a game that was closer than the final score would indicate.

This afternoon Boyle was back on the mound for Oakland against the Tigers, who, with yesterday’s bitter defeat, joined the A’s in the group of teams mathematically eliminated from playoff competition. Boyle wasn’t as sharp this afternoon as he’d been six days ago, but he lasted longer and pitched extremely well.

He allowed a single in the first and a leg double to Parker Meadows in the second. A well hit two bagger by Zach McKinstry and an error by Jordan Díaz on a sharp grounder to third in the second combined for an unearned Tiger run in the third.

AJ Hinch, the ex-Athletic at the helm of the Detroit squad, indisputably used an opener, 28 year old right hander Miguel Díaz. He spent most of this season with the AAA Toledo Mud Hens, where he went 2-4-14, 5.05. His brief appearance ended after an inning and a third in which all he yielded was a second inning leadoff walk. The southpaw Joey Wentz took over after with one on and no outs and induced a 4-6-3 double play to end the frame.

The A’s reversed Detroit’s one run lead in the home half of the third. After Nick Allen’s one out single to center, Esteury Ruíiz lifted a fly just to the right of the left field foul pole for his fifth home run and 45th and 46th RBI of the season. Wentz took the loss because of those two runs, bringing his won–lost record down to 3-12 and his earned run average up to 6.45.

Boyle came out for the fifth with no one warming up in the Oakland bullpen, which qualified his performance as a traditional start in my book. He ended up going six innings and allowing just that one unearned run and a total of five hits and a walk while striking out five of the 24 Tigers he faced.

He threw 94 pitches, only 30 of which were balls, and maintained his immaculate ERA while winning his first victory in the show. Lucas Erceg relieved him at the beginning of the seventh and allowed nothing but a walk in his one inning tenure.

Dany Jiménez, who took over for Erceg for the eighth, wasn’t as effective as his predecessors. He struck out two but also walked three, with a wild pitch thrown into the bargain, before Trevor May was called in to bail him out with the bases loaded and Parker Meadows, who had gone one for two with a double and a walk, at the plate. May fanned him on five pitches.

Oakland scored a couple of much needed insurance runs off Jason Foley in the bottom of the eighth. He issued a one out walk to Nick Allen, who moved up a base on an infield single by Ruíz. Nola followed that with a double off the right field wall that drove in Allen and sent Noda to third. Gelof’s single to right made it a 4-1 Athletic lead. The rally was squelched when Seth Brown hit into a 4-6-3 twin killing.

The top of the ninth wasn’t easy for May. He issued a full count walk to Carson Kelly to lead off the inning. Akil Baddoo hit a hard grounder to Gelof. He had trouble getting the ball out of his glove, and the A’s had to settle for a force out at second.

Zach McKinstry smacked a hard ground ball to Allen at short. Rather than throw to second, he made a one hop throw to first that Noda couldn’t come up with. Matt Vierling’s single to center loaded the bases. But May celebrated his 34th birthday by fanning Torkelson and Carpenter to earn his 20th save.

Sunday’s, 1:07 game will end the A’s home season. JP Sears (5-12, 4.52) will face Detroit’s Eduardo Rodríguez (11-9, 3.57).

Oakland A’s podcast with Stephen Ruderman: Rooker connects for 29th HR for season, leading A’s in big flies

Oakland Athletics’ Brent Rooker (25) is congratulated by third base coach Eric Martins (3) after hitting a home run against the Detroit Tigers during the sixth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Fri Sep 22, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Stephen:

#1 The Oakland A’s ended that long dreadful eight game losing streak on Friday night with a convincing 8-2 win. For A’s manager Mark Kotsay would say that’s a weight off his shoulders.

#2 The A’s have lost ten of their last 13 games and are 47-107, the A’s have the losingest record in Oakland franchise history.

#3 Brent Rooker continues to get around on the ball hitting his 29th home run of the season he and Zack Gelof have been key in some of the A’s offense this season.

#4 Pinch hitter Shea Langeliers came in and belted his 21st a three run homer in bottom of the sixth inning the A’s wanted to win a ball game and the line up came out hitting on Friday night.

#5 Starting pitchers for Saturday’s contest for the Tigers right hander Joe Boyle (0-0 ERA 0.00) for the A’s right hander Miguel Diaz (0-0 ERA 1.04) whenever you don’t see enough of new pitchers it’s a game where the line ups could be doing some guessing.

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

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Acuna 5th player to join 40-40 club; Marlins Alcantara suffering from forearm tightness; plus more news

Atlanta Braves’ Ronald Acuna Jr. watches his solo home run in the first inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Truist Park in Cumberland, Cobb County, GA on Tue Sep 19, 2023. Acuna Jr becomes the fifth MLB player to join the 40-40 club on Fri Sep 22, 2023. (AP News photo)

#1 Amaury, the Atlanta Braves Ronald Acuna became the fifth player in MLB history to become a 40-40 player, Aucna joined the club after hitting his 40th home run of the year against the Washington Nationals on Friday night.

#2 In triple A baseball the Miami Marlins Sandy Alcantara who is on a rehab assignment suffered forearm tightness on Thursday night the Marlins announced on Friday night. Alcantara who won two Cy Young Awards struck out four hitters in four innings is headed back to Miami and will be evaluated by team doctors. Alcantara has not pitched since Sep 6th.

#3 MLB announced they will be selecting 12 of the top clock operators for the post season as the time clock rule will be in place for the post season. The league upon selection will use the same time clock operator for that specific series. The rule remain the same with the exception of the ghost runner in extra innings which will not be used.

#4 Amaury, Pittsburgh Pirates manager Derek Shelton finds Chicago Cubs manager David Ross’ comment that the Pirates “are not a very good team” comment unfortunate. The Cubs are the third team in the NL Wild Card and the Pirates are two games behind them. Will Ross’ comments fire up the Bucs and make it an interesting run for the Wild Card in this last week of the season?

#5 The Oakland A’s conclude their final homestand of the 2023 season on Sun Sep 24th against the Detroit Tigers. The A’s have a lease with the Oakland Coliseum through the 2024 season is there any chance that the A’s could break the lease and choose to play somewhere else maybe Las Vegas Ballpark for next season or will they honor the lease and play here in 2024?

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

A’s snap eight-game skid against Tigers 8-2

Oakland Athletics’ Shea Langeliers hits a three-run home run against the Detroit Tigers during the sixth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Fri Sep 22, 2023 (AP News photo)

Photo courtesy of Oakland A’s Twitter.

By Titus Wilkinson (@TitusWisme)

OAKLAND- After losing yesterday to the Tigers the A’s bounced back winning by a final of 8-2.

Getting the start for Oakland was Ken Waldichuk who coming in had a 3-8 record with a 5.25 era. While Detroit had Sawyer Gipson-Long on the mound who had a 1-0 record with a 2.70 era.

Scoring got going quickly for the A’s as in the first inning Ryan Noda singled and Zack Gelof doubled getting in a run.

Things quieted down until the fifth inning when after Javier Baiz got a double Carson Kelly homered on a 1-1 pitch giving the Lions the lead 2-1.

Once again both offensives slowed down until the bottom of the six when Detroit brought on Will Vest in relief of Gipson-Long. That first pitch would be launched right back out into the stands by Brent Rooker who got his 29th home run of the season tying the game up at two.

The fun didn’t stop for the A’s though as Tony Kemp reached on an error and then Lawrence Butler singled. On the play though unfortunately for Oakland Kemp rolled his ankle meaning he was only able to hobble to first on a ball that could’ve been double. Thankfully for the green-and-white Kemp ended up being alright and stayed in the game.

With the pressure mounting Tyler Holton came in to replace Vest and the A’s made a change as well bringing in Shea Langeliers to pinch hit. That move ended up paying off for Oakland as on a 2-0 pitch Langeliers launched one to left field making it 5-2. That home run was Langelier’s 21st of the season.

The A’s found some insurance in the seventh when with the bases loaded Esteury Ruiz poked one to right field scoring two. Ruiz would not be done there as he then stole second and third which brought his total stolen bases up to 63. One more run was brought home by the A’s as Lawrence Butler got a run home on a sac fly making it 8-2.

That score ended up being the final as Waldichuk got the victory and Vest took the loss.

The third game of this home series for the A’s will be played Saturday at 1:07 p.m. Starting pitchers for the Tigers TBA and for the Oakland A’s Joe Boyle (0-0 ERA 0.00) at the Oakland Coliseum.