A’s finally snap skid edge Dodgers in extras 4-3

Mark Chapman (26) of the Oakland A’s gets congratulated from third base coach Mark Kotsay (7) after hitting a seventh inning home run on Wed Apr 7, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (NL). 3-8-0

Oakland. 4-5-0

Ten innings

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Tuesday night, the Oakland Athletics were thwarted in their seemingly unending quest for their first victory of the 2021 season. The thwarter in chief was Los Angeles Dodger Clayton Kershaw, who, after retiring, will be a viable candidate for the Hall of Fame.

Wednesday afternoon the A’s snapped their losing streak at six games with a 4-3 ten inning win over the Dodgers. The bleary eyed hometown squad had to face a less daunting figure but one still deserving of respect and capable of causing concern. Trevor Bauer, although he stood at 1-1, 5.66 for this season, was, and will be until after the last out of the world series, the reigning National League Cy Young winner. He achieved that honor by leading the senior circuit in the following categories: ERA (1.73), WHIP (O.79), opponents’ BA (.159), hits/nine innings (5.06), and shutouts (2).

Those two shutouts tied him for first place in complete games. He did this for Cincinnati. Two months ago, he signed with the Dodgers for a reported three-year, $102 million contract. Before today, his lifetime record against Oakland stood at 1-4, 3.72. He was 0-3, 3.25 at the Coliseum.

The A’s sent their promising but as yet unproved left handed youngster Jesús Luzardo to face Los Angeles’ fearsome lineup. Luzardo’s numbers going into the game were distressing but hid a mitigating factor. Although he was an unprepossing 0-1, 9.00, he struck out eight Astros in only five innings of work. That’s more than he’d struck out in any of his previous big league appearances. Of course, his having gone only five frames is no cause for reassurance.

Tuesday, the A’s announced a couple of transactions, but neither involved $102 million over three years. They placed relievers Burch Smith and Reymin Gudjuan on the injured list and recalled pitcher Jeremy Weems, as I reported Tuesday night, and outfielder Seth Brown from the alternate site in Stockton.

Wednesday started out in a way the Oakland faithful are beginning to find annoyingly repetitious; the visitors jumped out to a first inning one run lead. Chris Taylor led off with a walk. Corey Seager followed suit, moving Taylor up to second.

It seemed as if the A’s might emerge unscathed after Luzardo set down Justin Turner and Will Smith on strikes. But A.J. Pollock lined a single to center, plating Taylor and moving Seager into scoring position at second. A walk to Max Muncy filled the bases Dodgers, but the A’s young southpaw got Austin Barnes to fly out

The newly promoted Seth Brown made a spectacular catch of Austin Barnes’ bid for a leadoff homer in the top of the fourth, leaping and leaning over the Ring Central sign in left field to haul down what looked like a sure four bagger. In addition to keeping the score at 1-0, Brown’s heroic grab extended Luzardo’s string of five batters faced without allowing a baserunner. That streak eventually reached seven.

Ramón Laureano manufactured the tying run for Oakland in the bottom of that that frame. He led off with a walk, stole second and third,, and then, with Brown at the plate, scored on a wild pitch. Brown almost put Oakland ahead with a line drive into the right field seats, but it landed foul. He then took a called third strike to end the inning.

Luzardo reached 104 pitches, 62 for strikes, before being lifted in the top of the sixth after granting a passport to Muncy, who advanced to second on a single to left by Barnes. Luzardo’s replacement, Adam Kolarek, reitired Lux on a grounder to first, unassisted, that moved both runners up a base. Then Zach McKinstry hit a hard ground ball that Chapman handled cleanly and, diving into third, tagged Barnes trying to reach that base. But Muncy already had crossed the plate, and Los Angeles taken a 2-1 lead.

Luzardo was charged with that second run, so when he went to the showers he was on the hook for two earned runs on five hits and four walks. He reduced his ERA to 6.10.

Although Oakland’s two young hurlers, Luzardo and Kolarek, had performed adequately, veteran Segio Romo did not. He opened the top of the seventh by hitting Taylor with a slow slider and then yielding a single to center by Seager. Turner’s subsequent double drove in Taylor and sent Seager to third. Then Romo hidt his striode. He got the remaining batters he faced, with an intentional pass to Muncy thrown in, but Oakland now was trailing 3-1.

Still, the A’s battled back. Chapman started it by blasting his first home run of the young, frustrating season, a definitive smash over the center field fence. Bauer got Brown to strike out looking but surrended a single to Piscotty before fanning Andrus. That finished the day for Bauer.

Corey Knebel took over mound duties, and Sean Murphy pinch hit for Aramis García, and Tony Kemp pinch ran for Piscotty at second after Murphy’s base on balls. It was all for naught; Kenebel caught Canha looking to end the threat. Oakland had inched closer to Los Angeles (at least on the scoreboard) and now trailed 3-2.

Bauer’s line was 110 pitches, 67 for strikes in 6-2/3 IP. Two runs, both earned, on three hits, one out of the park, and only one walk but two hit batters. He notched ten Ks.

Cory pitched an inning, spanning the final out of the seventh and the first two outs of the eighth, before giving way to Víctor González, who came in to face Moreland with the bases empty and closed out the inning.

Jake Dieckman pitched a perfect top of the eighth and was lifted for Lou Trivino after Seager led off the ninth with a ground single to left. Trivino promptly walked Turner on four pitches. He threw two more to Smith before getting a strike called on Smith, who eventually flew out to right, advancing Seager to third.

After a long at bat, the A’s reliever induced Pollock to fly to Brown, now playing right, in right center field while the runners held their bases. He walked Muncy on a full count to clog the base paths with Dodger blue before fanning Edwin Ríos to keep Oakland in contention.

Of course, that meant they’d have to face the nearly impenetrable Kenley Jansen. Chapman, who seems to have found his stroke, led off with a solid single to center. Brown’s walk put men on first and second. Kemp sacrificed Chappy to third and pinchrunner Ka’ai Tom to second.

Then as I was taught to say in high school Latin, Elvis Andrus lifted a sac fly to right that knotted up the score with two outs in the bottom of the ninth. A walk to Murphy brought Canha to the plate. Unforunately, he grounded out to short.

Yusmeiro Petit came in to start the first extra inning of the A’s season. That, in itself, was a triumph of sorts. Ríos was the runner placed on second. He stayed there as Lux flew out to Laureano and McKinstry flew out to Kemp, now playing left. Taylor then lifted a fly to short right field.

Tom, who had replaced Brown in that position, made a long charge to the fence near the pitchers’ mounds in the visitors’ bull pen behind first base, got his glove on the ball (or vice versa), but couldn’t hold on to it. Undaunted, Petit struck Taylor out on a curve.

Jimmy Nelson took over on the mound and Canha took second to start the home tenth.

After a ten pitch at bat, Lowrie walked, which helped Oakland only because he didn’t make an an out. Canha still was on second, and force plays now were possible. The A’s needed only one run. They came closer to getting it when Laureano’s fly to deep center allowed Canha reach third, bringing Moreland to the plate. Moreland came through, lacing a single to right center that brought in Canha.

The A’s had won, and in what a fashion!

Petit got the win. He pitched one inning of perfect ball, in which he threw ten pitches. Nelson got tagged with the loss and was charged with one run, which was unearned because it was scored by the placed runner.

The A’s left for Houston right after the game. After playing three games against the Astros, they´ll move on to a two game set with the Arizona Diamondbacks. They return to torture. They will return to Oakland to face Detroit on Thursday the 15.

Kershaw holds off A’s hitting for 5-1 victory; A’s losing streak hits six

Los Angeles Dodger pitcher Clayton Kershaw throwing in the first inning against the Oakland A’s on Tue Apr 6, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (NL). 5-11-1

Oakland. 1-5-0

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Monday night, the Oakland A’s were stimyed by Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Dustin May, a young right handed pitcher just entering his prime. Tuesday night, they had to deal with the offerings of Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw, a veteran lefty who likely will be a candidate for the Hall of Fame, but who was 0-1, 7.04 going into the game for the 4-1 NL West leading Dodgers. Kershaw’s starting performance stopped any A’s hitting for a 5-1 victory.

Facing him for the blue and gold was the irregularly effective right hander Chris Bassitt, bringing an 0-1, 5,06 record into his second start of the season. Bassitt is like the little girl with a little curl right in the middle of her forehead. When he is good, he is very, very good, but when he is bad ….

The Athletics’ line-up presented a few noticeable changes from theilr recent ones. Ramón Laureano was back in action, batting third. The slumping Matt Olson, was replaced at first base by the also slumping Mitch Moreland, battingi n the seventh slot.

The new aliignment produced one early welcome outcome. For the first time this year Oakland led after one inning. Jed Lowrie, who usually plays second, batted in that position, replacing Moreland as DH, while Tony Kemp took over at Lowrie’s customary position in the field.

Lowrie’s new assignment and Laureano’s return produced immediate results. After the former’s one out double to center field, the latter blasted another, this one to right center, putting the home team up by a run and markiing the first time in 2021 that they had drawn first blood.

That was too good to be true for long, and it wasn’t. Edwin Ríos led off the top of the second with a sharp single to center. A walk to Gavin Lux moved him up a notch, and Austin Barnes’s resounding double to left drove him in. Bassitt managed to escape that inning without allowing any more scoring, thanks largely to a great defensive play by Moreland on Seager’s scorcher down the first base line to close out the frame.

The Dodgers added another three runs in the top of the third, bringing the score up to 4-1 on Turner’s second straight two bagger, Muncy’s two run long ball to right, followed two batters later by Ríos’s homer to right center.

Stephen PIscotty’s blast into the the left field second deck in the bottom of the fourth almost reduced LA’s lead to 4-2, but it was called foul after a video review.

Bassitt got his act together and pitched well until he was removed after having thrown 102 pitches, 65 for strikes, over six innings. All four of the runs he allowed were earned, and they came on nine hits. He had four strikeouts to show against one walk and a hit batter. HIs undoing was the two home runs he surrendered. At game’s end his record stood at 0-2, 5,56.

Lou Trivino was his replacement. He set the Dodgers down in order, including one punch out, before yielding to Yusmeiro Petit at the top of the eighth.

Piscotty hit the ball well in the bottom of the seventh when, after having just missed a home run in his previous AB, he drove a 86 mph slider against the left center field fence for his first hit of the night. Moreland grounded out to first to end the inning and Kershaw’s night’s work.

His performance had been outstanding. 61 of his 91 pitches were strikes. He gave one run, earned, on four hits, didn’t walk anyone and strudk out eight Athletics. One-time Oakland closer Blake Treinen relieved him at the beginning of the eighth and retired the side while yielding a walk to Kemp, who stole second.

Jordan Weems, recalled today from the A’s alternate site in Stockton, pitched the ninth for them. He yielded Mookie Betts’ first home run of the season, a slam over the State Farm advertisement in left centerfiled on an 94 mph four seamer. He got his other three batters out, two on strikeouts.

Laureano’s leadoff single in the ninth knocked Treinen out of the box. He passed the ball to LA’s closer, Kenley Jansen. Laureano’s steal of second, followed by two fly outs to right, one a warning track drive by Murphy, made things interesting. But Moreland’s pop out to Lux in shallow right ended the game.

The win brought Kereshaw’s ERA down to 4.26 and evened his won-loss record at 1-1.

The two teams will go at it again at 12:37 tomorrow afternoon, with right hander Trevor Bauer (1-0, 5.68) matching arms with southpaw Jesús Luzardo (0-1,9.00).

A’s drop fifth straight game; Dodgers open up series with 10-3 win

It’s been that kind of a homestand for the Oakland A’s as the hot corner is too hot for A’s third baseman Matt Chapman who can’t handle a hard hit ball against the Los Angeles Dodgers at the Oakland Coliseum on Mon Apr 5, 2021 (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (NL). 10-14-1

Oakland. 3- 6 -1

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–In every one of Oakland’s four season opening loses to Houston, there was at least one point at which the A’s could have either burst the game open in their favor or convert a seemingly commanding Astros lead into a tight match. In every case, the failure to capitalize on Houston’s momentary vulnerability turned the series into a festival of blown chances. Tonight, Oakland didn’t even come close.

In a sense, the A’s pitching staff is emblematic of the team’s inability to make the potential actual. A.J. Puk, Jesús Luzardo and Sean Manaea are young hurlers of tremendous talent, just short of unlocking the door to success. Tonight’s starter against the 3-1 Los Angeles Dodgers, Frankie Montás is another member of that group seeking to take the final step into the role of reliable top of the line starter.

He went 9-2, 2.63 in 2019, the last time MLB played a full season. MLB’s season lasted 162 games, but Montas’s didn’t; the was suspended for 80 days, June 21 to September 24, for drug use. He seemed ready to resume his progress last year, ready enough to be the A’s (delayed) opening day starter and be named the AL’s player of the week for August 3-9.

But he missed his next start because of back troubles and didn’t pitch well again until the final game of the regular (if you can say that about 2020) season. He won a wild card series game in relief and pitched well for three innings in the last game of the division series only to fall apart in the fourth frame to take the loss.

During this year’s spring training, he lost time to a stint on the covid list. As if that weren’t enough, Montás was forced to leave the last start of his abbreviated Cactus League season with a cuticle tear on the middle finger of his right, pitching, hand.

His performance tonight did nothing to advance his career. And the A’s anemic hitting did nothing to offset his disappointing mound work.

Dustin May, the starter for the NL West leading Dodgers , already seems to have established himself as a front line hurler. Promoted after 15 starts for AA Tulsa to AAA Oklahoma City, Los Angeles called him to the show in mid 2019. He went 3-1, 2.57 and threw 3-1/3 innings against the Nationals in the division series, yielding three hits and a run, for an ERA of 2. 70.

Last year, still technically a rookie, he was the Dodgers’ opening day starter. In that assignment, he gave up one run, this time in 4-1/3 frames. He went on to finish the season at 3-1, 2.57, with 16 walks against 44 strike outs. Among National League pitchers who went 50 or more innings, he ranked eighth in ERA, 13th in opponents’ BA (.222), and tied for 12th in WHIP at 1.09. He faced the A’s once, on September 22, and beat them.

His post seson record was more extensive than it had been a year earlier. He made three starts and four relief appearances, with combined totals of 1-0,4.22, and 13 punch outs. The Dodgers’ game notes report that he went 3-0 , 2.37, with 21 strikeouts and four walks in four starts and one relief stint in spring training this year. His four seamer was the fastest of any major league pitcher with 40 IP or more, an average of 99.1 mph.

Los Angeles jumped off to a fairly early and fairly significant lead in the top of the second. With one out, Max Muncy hit an opposite field single to left. Then Chris Taylor lifted a fly to medium left field that eluded a diving Tony Kemp, subbing for the ailing Chad Pinder. After a walk to Edwin Ríos loaded the bases, Zach McKinstry´s sac fly to left drove in the first run of the game.

Then, Matt Chapman couldn’t handle Mookie Betts’ hard smash down the third base line. That infield hit reloaded the bases, and Corey Singer unloaded them with a double off the centerfield wall, to the right of the STREAM YOUR A’S sign. The A’s now were down, 4-0.

Will Smith promptly made it 5-0 with his line drive that curved around the left field foul line on a 2-2 88 mph spliterfast with one down in the visitor’s third. Muncy followed that with a single to center, and then Montás plunked Taylor to put men on first and second. After another out, McKinstry´s single to right brought in Muncy with the Angelinos´ seventh run. A walk to Betts, and Montás was through for the night. AJ Puk relieved him, making his season debut.

Montás´s ugly line for 2-2/3 innings was seven runs, all earned, on seven hits, a home run, three walks, a wild pitch, and a hit batter He managed to strike out seven. Of his 90 pitches, 53 were strikes. His HBP of Taylor caused the Dodgers’ second baseman to leave the game.

Puk put out the fire in the third, but loaded the bases with two out in the fourth. He escaped unscathed thanks to second straight inning ending strkeout. When he left the game after closing out the LA sixth, his stint was your Á´s highlight for the night. In 3-1/3 innings, 35 of his 53 offerings counted as strikes.

He surrendered but one hit, but gave up three walks and a wild pitch, while striking out four. His replacement was left handed sidewinder Adam Kolarek, who gave up a run, earned, in his inning on the mound before giving way to Sergio Romo in the eighth.

May also finished up his work after the sixth. His performance had been superb. He surrendered two hits and two walks while striking out eight. His pitch count was 85, only 28 of which were balls.

Romo was tagged for a homer to center on his third pitch to Justin Taylor, the first man he faced. The A’s suffered an egregious lapse during Romo’s brief tenure. With Will Smith on first and one out, pinch hitter Matt Bealy, hit a grounder to shortstop Elvis Andrus, playing to the right of second. Andrus tried for the unassisted putout at second but bobbled the ball, leaving both batter and runner safe. Then, while none of the A’s seemed to be paying attention, Taylor advanced uncontestedly to third.

Canha saved a shred of the Athletics’ honor with a round tripper to left to lead off the bottom of the eighth off Mays’ replacement, David Price. That reduced LA’s lead to 9-1. The A’s racked up a couple of tallies more on a walk to Lowrie, a single to right by Piscotty, batting for Moreland, an infield hit by Chapman that plated Lowrie, and Ka’ai Tom’s first big league hit, an RBI single to center.

Reymin Gudjuan tried to mop up for the A’s. Both he and Cody Bellinger had to leave the game in the top of the night when they ran into each other while Bellinger was beating out a 3-1 infield single. By then the Dodgers had run the score up to 10-3. JB Wendelken was called on to try to get the last out of the inning and stop the carnage. He succeeded and, in doing so, lowered Gudjuan’s ERA to … 27.00.

Three hours and 35 minutes after the first pitch, Scott Alexander closed out the game, setting the A’s down in order.

Tomorrow’s game will start at 6:40. Clayton Kershaw (0-1, 7.94) is scheduled to face off against Chris Bassitt (0-1, 5.06).

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s hope to get back on track against Dodgers after rough Astros series

Oakland A’s second baseman Tony Kemp makes a throw to first in the third inning to retire the Houston Astros Carlos Correa in game 3 of the four game series on Sat Apr 3, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

Barbara on the A’s podcast:

#1 Barbara for the Oakland A’s the series with the Houston Astros pure torture the A’s took four loses in the row on Thursday through Sunday.

#2 The Astros had their bats going all series long with Yordan Alvarez, Jose Altuve, and Alex Bergman A’s pitching looked like they just couldn’t figure a way to get them out.

#3 A’s pitchers who were hit during the Houston series, A’s opening day starter Chris Bassitt five plus innings three runs, Jesus Luzardo five innings five runs, and Cole Irvin four innings four runs, Sean Manaea on Sunday over four innings plus six hits and five earned runs .

#4 A’s manager Bob Melvin was asked if he would be interested in managing another team other than the A’s after this season and he said “I have no desire to go anywhere else”

#5 The A’s will try to win a series as they host the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Dodgers who opened up the season against the Colorado Rockies and both teams played pretty even ball. Do you see the A’s recovering and maybe having a more balanced series against the Dodgers after the mismatch series they just had against the Astros?

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

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason Mon Apr 5, 2021 by Sports Radio Service | Free Listening on SoundCloud

San Francisco Giants report: History of the Willie Mac Award

Willie McCovey holding one of his many awards played with the San Francisco Giants from 1958 to 1973 and returned to the Giants in 1977-1980 (National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

When the late Willie McCovey retired after pinch hitting against the rival Los Angeles Dodgers on July 6, 1980, the San Francisco Giants honored him by creating an award in honor of him.

The Willie Mac Award is awarded to the most inspirational player on the team, and McCovey himself would be there in attendance every year until untimely passing on October 31, 2018 at the age of 80.

McCovey, who played 22 years in the major leagues for the Giants, the San Diego Padres and the Oakland Athletics; however, he will mostly be remembered for wearing the Orange and Black from 1959-1973, then split between the Padres and Athletics from 1974-1976 and then came back to the Giants before the 1977 season.

The 64 McCovey would be a regular at PacIfic Bell Park, then SBC Park and AT&T Park, as he was usually in his box on the club level and would be seen by throngs of fans as he left the park in a cart.

Jack Clark won the inaugural award in 1980, then Larry Herndon won the award in 1981 and was subsequently traded to the Detroit Tigers for left-handed reliever Dan Schatzeder.

Oakland native and a member of the famed Big Red Machine, the late Joe Morgan won the award in 1982 and ended the season with one of the Giants most famous home runs in the history of the team, when he hit a three-run home run off of Terry Forster that knocked the Dodgers out of the playoffs and gave the National League Western Division. That home run came on October 3, 1982, exactly 31 years after Bobby Thomsons famous Shot Heard Round the World, off of Dodgers reliever Ralph Branca that sent the Giants to their first World Series since 1937.

Multiple players have won the award more than once, including current Giants TV analyst Mike Krukow, J.T. Snow, and Bengie Molina.

On three different occasions, there have co-winners, as in 1995, Mark Leiter and Mark Carreon won the award. Sixteen years later in 2001, Mark Gardner and Benito Santiago shared the award and in 2016, Brandon Crawford and Javier Lopez split the award.

Mike Yastrzemski won the award in 2020, his first full year with the ballclub.

Here is the list of winners.

1980: Clark
1981: Herndon
1982: Morgan
1983: Darrell Evans
1984: Bob Brenly
1985: Krukow
1986: Krukow
1987: Chris Speier
1988: Jose Uribe
1989: Dave Dravecky
1990: Steve Bedrosian
1991: Robby Thompson
1992: Mike Felder
1993: Kirt Manwaring
1994: No winner
1995: Carreon and Leiter
1996: Shawon Dunston
1997: Snow
1998: Jeff Kent
1999: Marvin Benard
2000: Ellis Burks
2001: Gardner and Santiago
2002: David Bell
2003: Marquis Grissom
2004: Snow
2005: Mike Matheny
2006: Omar Vizquel
2007: Bengie Molina
2008: Molina
2009: Matt Cain
2010: Andres Torres
2011: Ryan Vogelsong
2012: Buster Posey
2013: Hunter Pence
2014: Madison Bumgarner
2015: Matt Duffy
2016: Crawford and Lopez
2017: Nick Hundley
2018: Will Smith
2019: Kevin Pillar
2020: Yastrzemski

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: Padres Clevinger out for 2021; Hall of Fame balloting as Bonds and steroid era players try again; plus more

San Diego Padre pitcher Mike Clevinger leaving game 1 of the NLDS on Oct 6, 2020 at Arlington will have Tommy John surgery for his elbow and will miss the 2021 season (AP News file photo)

On That’s Amaury:

#1 Amaury how shocking is it that San Diego Padres pitcher Mike Clevinger is now out for the 2021 season after having Tommy John surgery on his elbow. He was a big value pitcher coming over from Cleveland during the season.

#2 Amaury bolloting for the 2021 MLB Hall of Fame saw Mark Buehrle, Torii Hunter, Nick Swisher and Barry Zito enter as candidates while high vote getters from the steroid era Curt Schilling, Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds are also in the running.

#3 Former Los Angeles Dodgers manager Tommy LaSorda has been admitted into ICU at an Orange County Hospital. LaSorda 93 had a heart attack when he was Dodgers manager in 1996 and had attended game 6 of the 2020 World Series between the Tampa Bay Rays and Dodgers. LaSorda’s reason for being in the hospital was not disclosed.

#4 Turning to hockey Amaury, The San Jose City Council had a meeting on Monday at San Jose City Hall regarding the planning of development around SAP Center which include 65 new buildings on 84 acres surrounding SAP Center and BART also plans to develop right across the street. The Sharks had been opposed to BART coming to SAP Center and tried to go stop it in court in 2017. Their fear was too much traffic, too much congestion. The City plans another meeting on Dec 3rd regarding street closures and the Sharks said if there is sufficient gridlock and their parking revenue is cut they will consider moving out of downtown San Jose.

#5 Amaury is there any future consideration for Sharks on Spanish radio as you might recall last season Jesus Zarate called the play by play on the Sharks original flagship station 910 ESPN Deportes. Fans received a “Los Tiburones” t shirt for Hispanic Heritage night at SAP Center and it was former San Jose Mercury News columnist Mark Purdy who coined the “Los Tiburones” name. Will the Sharks return on Spanish radio again for the new season?

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the Major League Baseball Hispanic Heritage Museum Hall of Fame vice president and does News and Commentary each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: The day the Manager became a Computer

Tampa Bay Rays manager Kevin Cash removes pitcher Blake Snell (4) in the sixth inning of game six on Tue Oct 27, 2020 at Globe Life Park in Arlington vs. the Los Angeles Dodgers (AP News photo)

The day the Manager became a Computer

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Tampa Bay manager Kevin Cash will probably be named the Manager of the Year in the American League. These awards are given for the regular season. He managed his ball club to the best record in the American League, 40-20. With a team riddled with injuries during the season, Cash did a very good job. However, he made one inexcusable move in the deciding six-game of this World Series.

It was a do-or-die game for the Rays, as the Dodgers were leading the Series 3 games to 2. Cash sent his best pitcher to the mound, lefty Blake Snell in hope to get more than a few innings from the 2018 Cy Young Award winner. Snell was pitching a great game and after four innings had given-up no runs and two hits, while striking out nine. While the Dodgers were celebrating on the field, this is what Blake Snell said to the media. “I wanted to go the whole game”. And why would he not? He was on, executing pitches, dominating a very dangerous lineup.

Then the six inning happened. Snell gave up a soft single to center to Austin Barnes. Manager Cash immediately came out, bringing his best reliever during the regular season, Nick Anderson, who right away gave up a double to left field to Mookie Betts advancing Barnes to third base, followed by a grounder by Corey Seager to first-baseman Choi who threw to the plate, but was late, Barnes scored, a fielder’s-choice and the Dodgers within just a few minutes had tied the game 1-1.

Anderson then threw a wild pitch and Mookie Betts scored, the Dodgers had their first lead 2-1. Regarding why he took Snell out of the game who only had thrown 73 pitches, Cash said: “I didn’t want him/Snell to see Mookie or Corey for a third time”. With that decision by manager Kevin Cash, the game was lost right there and so the hopes of the Tampa Bay Rays to win their first World Series.

Mookie Betts homered in the eighth inning against righty Pete Fairbanks for the final score of 3-1 and the World Series title to the Dodgers for the first time since their huge upset of the Oakland A’s in 1988.

Tampa Bay Rays philosophy, has always been right from their front office is to play all the numbers, like a milk shake you put it in a blender and then you have the result. The problem is that sometimes a manager needs to have a “feeling” for the game and just because Nick Anderson was his best reliever during the 60-game season; it is simply stupid to bring him in a situation where his best pitcher was leading them to a victory and a tied Series. Anderson’s numbers in the regular season: 2-1 (0.55 ERA) in 19 games he saved six. Anderson’s Postseason numbers: ten games, 14 2.3 innings, 16 hits, nine runs, three home runs, four walks, nine strikeouts.

Rays reliever Nick Anderson’s said after the game: “I take a lot of the blame”.

Tampa Bay Rays was the first teams to do the “experiment” of having a pitcher start a game as an “opener” with the only mission of pitching the first inning. It was in 2018 and it was used by many teams, including the Oakland A’s during their one-game wild card playoff at Yankee Stadium, which they lost.

Manager Bob Melvin named Liam Hendricks his “opener”. During this 2020 World Series we saw Kevin Cash use four outfielders a few times, aside from the defensive shift, which is now common in the game.

All this is well and good, baseball has changed big time, but a manager gets paid to manage the game as it happens and he makes decisions that do not necessarily have to follow the statistics. Just because Nick Anderson is his best reliever, you must bring him in the sixth (6th) inning and remove your best pitcher that was pitching a heck of a game? Folks, Anderson is very good, but he is no Mariano Rivera.

You can call it stupid, dumb, without basis, whatever, but for me this move by Kevin Cash in the sixth inning can be criticized and analyze ’till the cows come home’, but the bottom line is that the Rays lost the game and lost the Series.

Kevin Cash now will have to live and deal with this decision for the rest of his career. He is  lucky. Why Lucky? Because he manages a small market team, with a small following and a short history. There were times in baseball when a manager makes such move and the next day is fired, in New York in the days of owner George Steinbrenner, he would have fired you in 30 seconds after you made the decision.

But this doesn’t happen today, because of the computer (who was invented by man) is now running man and obviously many in the game of baseball. Some now just look at the “cold blooded numbers” and forget that baseball is played by humans not robots/computers. It is a game of feeling and that includes the manager.

Unless the Manager becomes a Computer.

Stay well and stay tuned

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

Headline Sports podcast with London Marq: Antonio Brown will join Bucs next week ; Earthquakes battle Real Salt Lake FC tonight

Antonio Brown wide receiver of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers will join the team on Sun Nov 8th. Here he is tuning up during his time with the New England Patriots. Some questions remain will there be a repeat of his problems when he returns with the Buccaneers?(file photo touchdownwire.com)

On Headline Sports with London:

#1 The Buffalo Bills (5-2) who lead in the AFC East won and played a close game last Sunday against the New York Jets (0-7) 18-10. Bills quarterback Josh Allen threw for 307 yards. Despite being winless the Jets did play some good defense against Allen and the Bills.

#2 Tom Brady quarterback of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (5-2) shows a lot of faith in newest Buc wide receiver Antonio Brown after his abrupt departure from the Raiders last season and his suspension from the NFL when he was briefly with the Patriots last season how do you see him working out with the Bucs this time around?

#3 The Los Angeles Dodgers had a lot to celebrate last night with their World Series win but third baseman Justin Turner who had a Covid positive test and was pulled in the eighth inning of the deciding game added to the strange ending to the season for the Dodgers and the baseball bubble called Arlington.

#4 The San Jose Earthquakes after getting a 0-0 draw from the Seattle Sounders on Sunday the 18th lost in a 2-1 neutral site game against the Vancouver Whitecaps. The Whitecaps Ali Adnan got a free kick and a 57th minute to tie it and got the go ahead goal from Tosaint Ricketts for the one goal win.

#5 The Quakes host Real Salt Lake FC at 7:30 at Earthquakes Stadium, the Quakes have gone winless in the three of their last four games and beat Real Salt Lake FC 5-2 in their last meeting July 27th can the Quakes do it tonight?

Join London for Headline Sports each Wednesday morning at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: 32 Years later the Dodgers win the World Series

The Los Angeles Dodgers Cory Seager swings for an RBI single in the first inning against the Tampa Bay Rays in game 6 of the 2020 World Series on Tue Oct 27, 2020 at Globe Life Field in Arlington (AP News photo)

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Congratulations to the Los Angeles Dodgers as they completed the mission, by winning the 2020 World Series in six exciting games against the Tampa Bay Rays. Game Six: Dodgers 3 Rays 1. There are a lot of stories to be told in every World Series, in this one that of the young Cuban-born Tampa Bay Rays rookie outfielder Randy Arozarena who established a new postseason record with 10 home runs, 28 RBIs, the affable Cuban-rookie was a highlight reel by himself.

Corey Seager, Dodgers shortstop won the Willie Mays MVP Award he hit .400 with 2 home runs and 5 RBI and no errors. Seager had a tremendous postseason spearheading this great offensive Blue Machine; he is now a Free Agent. Dodgers are a very rich organization and he should be rewarded with a juicy contract.

Seager gets a World Series ring, and also said he is buying two more rings as he announced he is getting married, right after their victory. Mookie Betts who came alive offensively with a double and a home run driving all three runs in that game six, and told David (Big Papi) Ortíz an analyst for FOX, when Ortíz told him he (Ortíz) would buy a present for himself after winning a World Series, (Mookie) was going to do something similar: “I think I am going to buy a Rolls Royce”. His contract-extension with the Dodgers was around $380 million, so he could buy more than one Rolls if he so desires.

The Dodgers did not have a positive Covid-19 test during the whole season, the Dodgers had the best record in baseball winning their division again for the eighth time-in-a-row, this time with 43-17 record during an abbreviated 60 game season. Dodgers veteran third baseman Justin Turner was removed from the series-clinching game six in the seventh inning, due to positive Covid-19 test, he was not there after the game to join his teammates for the celebration. This was announced after the game.

One move that will haunt Ray’s manager Kevin Cash for the rest of his life was removing his best pitcher, lefty Blake Snell in the six inning with a 1 to 0 lead, after totally dominating the powerful and difficult Dodgers lineup. But with this manager (like many other managers in today’s game) you win with the bullpen and you lose with the bullpen. His decision will be like a ghost that would be with him until he gets to win a World Series for his team.

You might have been too young, or maybe not even born, but it was in 1988 when the Los Angeles Dodgers upset the baseball world by beating the much superior Oakland Athletics in five games. This Series is mostly remembered as the pinch-hit walk-off home run hit by Dodgers Kirk Gibson against the best closer in baseball at that time, Fremont’s own Dennis Eckersley in Game 1. Gibson would never bat again in that Series. I was there with the A’s, the first of three World Series in a row for Tony LaRussa’s A’s.

Kirk Gibson could barely walk after some injuries he suffered during the NL Championship Series. I remember saying on the radio after the game something like: “It was Game One, but it had a Game Seven feeling” and also a bad omen for the Athletics.

When you talk about that ’88 Series most people remember it as the “Kirk Gibson moment”. It was pitcher Orel Hershiser who would be the MVP. He won it all that year as he led the league with 23 wins and 267 innings pitched winning the Cy Young, setting the all time scoreless streak at 59 innings. He also won the Gold Glove.

Orel was Superman, he won Game 2 and Game 5, pitched both complete games (18) innings allowed a total of seven hits, struck out 17 and had a 1.00 earned run average. In today’s baseball and in World Series history, that is one of the most dominant pitching performances, against the excellent and powerful offensive Oakland A’s team.

The 1988 AL Champion Oakland Athletics won 104 games and was maybe the best Tony LaRussa A’s team he managed during his 10 years as manager at Oakland. The A’s would go on to win it the next season, 1989 against the SF Giants in a historic Series stopped by 11 days because of an earthquake. That was the last time the Athletics won anything of significance in October.

Fast forward to 2020, the Year of the Dodgers, but not as the underdogs this time. They had the best record during the Covid 60-game season, with 43-17. After winning their eighth consecutive Western Division, they went into the playoffs swept the Milwaukee Braves in the two game Wild Card Series then eliminated the Atlanta Braves in an exciting seven game NL Championship Series. Stayed at Globe Life Field in Arlington to host the AL Champion Tampa Bay Rays.

In 1988 the Dodgers were not the best team, but they beat the Athletics. But now 32 years later, the Dodgers had the best team and they won the World Series. For the Dodgers franchise this was their six World Championship title, one in Brooklyn in 1955 the other five in Los Angeles. LA crowned the Lakers NBA Champs just a couple of weeks ago, now herer come the Dodgers. I picked the Dodgers in six, in a previous article on this website,

So, we say Adiós to this historic 2020 season and until next Spring Training.

Stay well and stay tuned

Join Amaury each week for That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: Rays Snell goes up against Dodgers Gonsolin in game 6 tonight

Los Angeles Dodgers Max Muncy rounds the bases as he’s cheered on by Cody Bellinger (35) and the Dodgers dugout in the fifth inning of the World Series game 5 at Globelife Stadium in Arlington. Both teams had Monday night off before game 6 on Tuesday. (LA Times photo)

On That’s Amaury’s podcast:

#1 Amaury it might have been a brief 60 game schedule for the regular season and a different format for the post season, and the Dodgers didn’t play at Dodger Stadium for the post season but none the less after losing three of the last three World Series the Dodgers have one more game to get a shot at the ring.

#2 Amaury Joe Pederson added to the Dodgers run tally with a home run in game 5 it proved to be important as the Dodgers beat the Tampa Bay Rays by two runs 4-2.

#3 The Dodgers got some great pitching from starter Clayton Kershaw pitching over five innings and giving up two runs striking out six.

#4 Max Muncy also hit for a key home run in the fifth inning a 406 foot shot to center right and it was enough for the Dodgers to come away with the two run victory.

#5 A crucial game for both teams tonight at Arlington as the Rays need to win game 6 to tie and stay alive in the series and for the Dodgers to win game 6 to wrap their first World’s Championship in their last four World Series tries.

Join Amaury each Tuesday for an edition of That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com