That’s Amaury News and Commentary: MLB-Owners will vote in November regarding A’s Relocation

Milwaukee Brewers chairman Mark Attanasio is part of a three owner relocation committee that will review the Oakland A’s relocation application and will forward the application to MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred. The relocation vote is expected to take place in mid November amongst the 30 baseball owners. (file photo by Bally Sports)

MLB-Owners will vote in November regarding A’s Relocation

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

OAKLAND–It is now official. The major league baseball owners are scheduled to vote in November regarding authorization for the A’s to move from Oakland to Las Vegas. This vote is expected during the owners’ meeting in mid-November. The A’s need 75 percent of the owners to vote Yes, which is scheduled after the A’s submitted their relocation papers in August, according to what A’s owner John Fisher told the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

The MLB relocation committee is currently reviewing the A’s relocation papers. This committee includes Milwaukee Brewers chairman Mark Attanasio, Philadelphia Phillies CEO John Middleton, and Kansas City Royals CEO John Sherman.

Once they are finished reviewing this application, it will go directly to the Office of Commissioner Rob Manfred and the eight-man executive council with a recommendation.

Then the executive council will review their findings and make their recommendation to the 30 MLB clubs, before the vote in November. MLB expects all this to be resolved before their MLB Winter Meetings which will take place in Nashville, Tennessee from Dec 4 – 7,2023, which mostly deals with  the teams administrative business, trades, players contracts and so on.

If all this “committee business” sounds to you like something politicians do in Washington,D.C., it is because of all the major professional sports leagues in the country. Major League Baseball Is the oldest of the major American leagues and in cases of this importance (relocation) they do operate like the US Congress.

Note: The Library of Congress is the largest library in the world with millions of items a variety of formats. The world’s largest collection of things related to baseball is housed at the Library of Congress,in Washington, D.C.

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

Oakland A’s Preview: A’s open 10 game homestand at Coliseum Friday

Oakland A’s pitcher Sean Newcomb will get the start on Fri Sep 15, 2023 at the Oakland Coliseum against the visiting San Diego Padres (photo by clutchpoints.com)

By Jerry Feitelberg

OAKLAND–The Oakland A’s (46-100) come to the Oakland Coliseum Friday night to host the San Diego Padres (69-78) for three games. The A’s finished the six-game road trip against the Texas Rangers and Houston Astros with a record of 3-3. The A’s are 12-10 in their last 22 games. The team has done better in all three phases of baseball lately. The pitching has been good, the offense has come to life, and the A’s defense has been solid.

The A’s will welcome their former skipper, Padres manager Bob Melvin, back to the Coliseum for the first time since leaving Oakland after the 2021 season. Melvin managed the A’s starting midway through the 2011 season and was with the club for ten and 1/2 years.

Melvin took the A’s to the playoffs six times in his tenure at the helm. Melvin was named manager of the year in 2012 when the A’s won the AL West division title on the last day of the season, and in 2018 when the team won 97 games.

Unfortunately for Melvin, his 2023 Padres team has been a disappointment. The Padres finished second in the NL West in 2022 with a record of 89-73. The Padres superstar Fernando Tatis, Jr. was suspended for 80 games for using an illegal substance.

The Padres signed free agent Xander Bogaerts to an eleven-year contract in the off-season to bolster the Padres infield. The Padres, in the 27th largest market, have a payroll of $251.1 million, the third highest in baseball. The Mets are number one with $336 Million, and the Yankees are second with a payroll of $268.

All three teams are underachieving this year. The Padres are 69-78 in fourth place in the NL West. Bob Melvin is in the second year of a three-year contract. There have been rumors that Melvin is on the hot seat, and his days as the Padres manager might end at the end of the season.

The Padres, like many other teams in baseball, have had injuries to key players. Two starting pitchers, Joe Musgrove and Yu Darvish, are out for the season. Catcher Gary Sanchez will not play again this year due to a wrist injury. First baseman Jake Cronenworth is also out for the year. However, the Padres have several key players that can be productive.

Their key players are third baseman Manny Machado, Shortstop Xander Bogaerts, and outfielders Juan Soto and Fernando Tatis. Soto leads the club with 30 homers and 90 RBIs. Machado is right behind with 28 dingers and 84 runs batted in.

Tatis, who missed the early part of the season due to his suspension, has belted 24 homers and knocked in 74. Bogaerts helped the offense with 18 big flies and 50 ribbies. Other players that can do damage include second baseman Ha-seong Kim, outfielder Trent Grisham, and first baseman Garrett Cooper.

As mentioned above, the injury jinx has hit the Padres pitching staff hard. However, starters Blake Snell and Michael Wacha have performed well for San Diego. Neither pitcher will face the A’s this weekend. The probable pitchers for the series will be Seth Lugo(6-7, 3.80 ERA) will go for the Padres and will be opposed by the A’s lefty, Sean Newcomb (0-1, 0.75 ERA).

On Saturday, The A’s Mason Miller, who pitched two scoreless innings against the Astros last Monday, will be opposed by Matt Waldron. Sunday’s game will feature Lefty Ken Waldichuk against the PAdres’ Pedro Avila. Waldichuk no-hit the Houston Astros for six innings last Monday, and it was Waldichuk’s best outing of the season.

The A’s, as mentioned above, have been playing better lately. Second baseman Zack Gelof has helped the A’s gain respectability with his outstanding play. Other players contributing to the A’s recent success include first baseman Ryan Noda, catcher Shea Langeliers, and outfielders Brent Rooker and Seth Brown.

Neither team has much to play for except bragging rights. Nevertheless, it will be interesting to see how the teams perform. A’s manager, Mark Kotsay, has his team playing hard until the final out. They may be down, but there is no quit on this young team. The Padres are a mystery. With all their talent, the question is, why are they floundering? On paper, they should easily handle the A’s. Will it happen? That’s why they play the games.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: Good pitching beats good hitting; A’s can’t sweep nearly no hit by Houston

The Oakland A’s Ryan Noda (left) runs past Houston Astros Yanier Diaz (right) for the A’s first run of the game in the bottom of the ninth inning at Minute Maid Field in Houston on Wed Sep 13, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Jerrry F:

#1 The Oakland A’s were prepared to sweep the Houston Astros on Wednesday night but as the old baseball saying goes good pitching beats good hitting. The Houston Astros used five pitchers who narrowly no hit the A’s. The Astros wound up with a two hit 6-2 win at Minute Maid Field.

#2 The Astros pitching into the ninth inning coughed up two runs but it wasn’t enough for the A’s to come back falling four runs short. Astros pitcher Ryan Pressly gave up the two hits and two runs in the failed no hit attempt.

#3 Jerry, talk about the Astros four run third inning off A’s pitcher Paul Blackburn who exited after the inning. Blackburn’s line three innings, four hits and four earned runs, three walks and two strikeouts.

#4 Jerry talk about Ryan Noda’s single on the bottom of the top of the ninth inning off Pressly to end the Astros no hit bid.

#5 The A’s will open up a ten game homestand against the San Diego Padres on Friday night. Starting pitcher for San Diego Seth Lugo (6-7 ERA 3.80) for Oakland Sean Newcomb (0-1 ERA 0.75) a 6:45pm PT first pitch at the Oakland Coliseum.

Jerry is a A’s reporter and does A’s podcasts Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Astros almost no-hit A’s beat the Green and Gold 6-2 at Minute Maid

Houston Astros pitcher Ryan Pressly thanks the almighty after striking out the Oakland A’s Brent Rooker to end the ball game in the top of the ninth at Minute Maid Field in Houston on Wed Sep 13, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s were set to sweep the Houston Astros Wednesday night at Minute Maid Park . The A’s won the first two games by shutting down the Astros’ potent lineup. The A’s had Paul Blackburn on the hill. His task was to give the A’s a quality start and hope the A’s offense could come through for the third straight game.

Unfortunately for Oakland, the Astros’ pitchers turned the tables on the A’s. The A’s recorded their first hit of the game with one out in the ninth. Had the Astros no-hit the A’s, the A’s would have been the second team in Major League history to have been the victims of a perfect game and a no-hitter in the same season. The only team to have that happen was the 2010 Tampa Bay Rays. As it was, the Astros beat the A’s 6-2.

With one out in the bottom of the third, Blackburn walked Jose Altuve and Jeremy Pena. The next hitter, Yordan Alvarez, who had hit 21 home runs against the A’s since 2019, stepped to the plate. Alvarez launched a missile that left the park traveling 117.7 miles per hour. It was Alvarez’s 27th big fly of the season. Astros third baseman Alex Bregman followed with his 23rd home run of the year to give the Astros a 4-0 lead. Blackburn labored through the inning. He threw 34 pitches and was done for the night. 

The Astros added a run in the fifth to make it 5-0. Lefty Kyle Muller was pitching for Oakland. With two out, Michael Brantley singled.. Astros’ catcher Yainer Diaz doubled to drive in Brantley. The Astros made it 6-0 in the seventh.

Lefty Easton Lucas, acquired from Baltimore in the trade for Shintaro Fujinami, retired the first two Houston hitters. Lucas had to face Kyle Tucker now. Tucker was hitless in ten trips to the plate in the series. However, Tucker had owned A’s pitching before this series.

Tucker found one of Lucas’ pitches to his liking and sent it out of the park to make it a 6-0 game. For Tucker, it was his 105th run batted in. Tucker leads the AL in that department. It was his 27th home run of the year and his 100th career homer.

The A’s put two runs on the board in the ninth. Astros’ closer Ryan Pressly was on the mound to finish off the A’s. Four Houston pitchers had held the A’s hitless for eight innings. Pressly retired Tony Kemp for the first out. Zack Gelof walked. He was the fourth base runner of the game for the A’s. All Pressly had to do was get the next two outs without a hit.

Ryan Noda, who hits from the left side, broke up the no-hitter with a single up the middle, sending Gelof to third. Seth Brown singled to drive in Gelof with Oakland’s first run. Noda went to third on the play and scored on Shea Langelier’s sacrifice fly. Pressly struck out Brent Rooker to end the game. The Astros won 6-2.

Game Notes: With the loss, the A’s are now 46-100 for the year. This is the second consecutive year that the A’s will have lost 100 or more games in a season. The Astros improved to 83-64. The Astros needed the win as the Texas Rangers beat the Toronto Blue Jays, and the Seattle Mariners beat the LA Angels. The Astros have a one-game advantage over the Rangers and a game and 1/2 lead over Seattle. With 15 games left in the season, the race will go down to the wire.

The Line for Oakland was two runs, two hits, and no errors. Blackburn was the losing pitcher. He pitched three innings, allowing four runs, four hits, and two home runs. 

The line for Houston was six runs, nine hits, and no errors. The Astros hit three home runs. The winning pitcher was Hunter Brown. Brown went five innings, allowing no hits and no runs. He struck out seven and walked two. 

The A’s are off on Thursday. The A’s will host the San Diego Padres for three games starting Friday night. Former A’s manager Bob Melvin will return to the Coliseum for the first time after leaving in 2021. Melvin took the A’s to the playoffs six times in the ten years he managed the club. Lefty Sean Newcomb (0-1 ERA 0.75) will go for Oakland. Seth Lugo (6-7 ERA 3.80) will go for San Diego. The game will start at 6:40 p.m.

Late Game Heroics LaMonte Wade Jr. Strikes Again; Giants Beat Rockies In Extras 6-5

San Francisco Giants’ Patrick Bailey, bottom, scores the winning run against Cleveland Guardians catcher Bo Naylor during the tenth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Sep 13, 2023 (AP News photo)

Wednesday, September 13th, 2023

By Troy Ewers

San Francisco, CA – The series finale to this three game series with the San Francisco Giants (75-71) and Cleveland Guardians (69-78) comes in the form of a 66 degree day game in Oracle Park overlooking a beautiful McCovey Cove.

On the mound today starters, Kyle Harrison for the Giants and Logan Allen for the Guardians. The Giants win after a review that showed runner Patrick Bailey was ruled safe scoring on a sacrifice fly. Bailey scoring from third base that was hit by LaMonte Wade Jr. in the 6-5 win in ten innings.

The game Tuesday night snapped a four game winning streak by a 3-1 Cleveland victory and today’s game started exactly where last night’s game picked up. After a lead off Steve Kwan walk, Jose Ramirez would smack a 1-1 pitch to the left field bleachers for a two run home run and with no outs, Guardians 2-0.

The first inning rally for Cleveland wasn’t done yet as an error for Casey Schmitt off a hit by Gabriel Arias would lead to scoring both Josh Naylor and Andres Gimenez, 4-0 Guardians. 

The Giants wouldn’t concede this early though as they jumped on Cleveland the same way Cleveland jumped on them. Luis Matos hits a single that scores Austin Slater and moves over Thairo Estrada. After Matos’s hit, Allen walked Patrick Bailey and loaded the bases, but that would be stopped and Guardians got out of the jam, but the score would be 4-1. 

In the second inning the Guardians would add another one to their onslaught as Josh Naylor hit a single that scored Steven Kwan, making it 5-1 Cleveland.

The Giants took Kyle Harrison out in the fifth and he walked away with three strikeouts, seven hits, and five runs which he’d probably want to forget for his first career day game. From the third inning on it was a scoreless pitching duel, with the score still in favor of Cleveland, but San Francisco broke that stalemate in the seventh inning with a Wilmer Flores scored Thairo Estrada who got on with a double, 5-2.

The Giants were coming down to their final chances and to give themselves better chances, the Giants had Joc Pederson pinch hit and he was hit by pitch so the eighth inning started with Joc on base, but that was just the set up. Patrick Bailey followed him up with a single and moved Joc to third.

Then J.D. Davis erupted the crowd with a home run that Steven Kwan couldn’t snag in left field. This three run home run would’ve blown the roof off this place if it had a roof and just like that, the score was tied 5-5 with no outs. After a DeJong grounded out to second, Lamonte Wade Jr. who was the hero in Monday’s game, hit a single making him the potential go ahead runner on first base.

Estrada almost electrified Oracle Park with a deep fly ball to left, but that was the inning and we headed into the ninth inning with a tie game. 

The Guardians scared the Giants fans with two hits on Tyler Rogers that put runners on second and third, but Camillo Doval came in and got the last out of the inning, now it was the orange and black’s turn in the ninth inning. Wilmer Flores started the inning at bat and singled to left.

Blake Sabol pinch ran for Flores and Mitch Haniger went to the box. Haniger would strike out, but Sabol would make it to second with a steal and Pederson next in the box. Joc would fly out to center and two outs Bailey was the one to possibly be the hero, but he would be struck out swinging and we have extra innings. 

Cleveland’s go at the 10th inning was three up, three down from Doval and now the pressure was on the Giants. A lead off walk for Davis made it a runner on first and the extra innings runner in second and pinch hitting was Brandon Crawford and the crowd was on their feet.

Crawford would flash bunt majority of the at bat and got on base on balls and now the bases loaded with no outs and Wade Jr. at the plate. Lamonte hit the ball to left field and it was caught, but Bailey would tag third and go home, at first sight it looked like Bailey beat out the throw, but after further review Bailey was safe and the game was over 6-5 Giants!!! 

The Giants walked away from this homestand 5-1 and won the series against Cleveland. The winning pitcher is Doval (6-4) and the losing pitcher is Xzavion Curry (3-4) who gave up the walk-off hit. No time to celebrate for SF as they play a brand new four game series against the Colorado Rockies in Colorado at Coors Field September 14th. It’s unknown who will start for the Giants in the first game of the series, but they know they will face Chase Anderson (0-5, 6.49) on the mound for the Rockies.

Headline Sports podcast with Bruce Magowan: Washington State and Oregon State can they stop the break up of the Pac 12; Jets HC Soleh don’t be surprised if Rogers come back; plus more news

Washington State Cougars Athletic Director Pat Chun was instrumental in filing a restraining order preventing the Pac 12’s presidents and chancellors from meeting until the court rules on the make up of the board of directors (Seattle Times photo)

On Headline Sports podcast with Bruce:

#1 Washington State and Oregon State have filed restraining orders through a Pullman Washington Court to stop the break up of the Pac 12. The other ten teams have left the barn can the lawsuit filed by the Beavers and the Cougars bring them back?

#2 Bruce, New York Jets head coach Robert Soleh said he wouldn’t be surprised if quarterback Aaron Rogers tries to return next season. Do you see him rehabbing and trying again for 2024.

#3 Bruce the San Francisco 49ers Brock Purdy had himself a great opening day against the Pittsburgh Steelers. In a 30-7 win. Purdy went 19-29, 220 yards, two touchdowns. How do you see him shaping up for this next game in the Southland against the Rams.

#4 Turning to baseball the San Francisco Giants are just 1.5 game out of the NL Wild Card race. They had won four of their last four games and have played a couple of nail biters with the Cleveland Guardians during the current series. Every win counts and every loss hurts their chances.

#5 As a network why does ESPN put all of it’s coverage on the NBA and NFL and almost never a mention of MLB during the regular programs and talk shows?

Bruce Magowan is a podcast contributor at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

MLB The Show podcast with Stephen Ruderman: Ex-Brewers pres baseball operations Stearns takes job at Mets; Braves Olson hits HRs 49 & 50 but loses game; plus more news

David Stearns has joined the New York Mets as president of operations. The Mets after dealing some of their superstar players players are looking to Stearns to replace and improve on the team. (AP file photo)

On MLB The Show podcast with Stephen:

#1 The New York Mets have hired Milwaukee Brewers David Stearns as president of baseball operations. Stearns was hired by the Brewers as general manager in 2015. Stearns was promoted to the Brewers president of baseball operations in 2019. Under Stearns the Brewers made the playoffs four straight years in a row. The Brewers missed the post season by just one game in the NL Wild Card.

#2 The Atlanta Braves Matt Olson hit home runs 49 and 50 in the second game of a doubleheader on Monday night. Olson’s first offering for #49 was an upper deck shot and his second home run was to opposite away left field.

#3 All the murals were covered up and the locker of Los Angeles Dodger pitcher Juan Urias was cleaned out and the Dodgers are trying to leave no hint that Urias had been there. Urias was arrested for the second time for domestic violence. Fans at an MLS game between Miami Inter vs. LAFC in Los Angeles saw Urias get into a fight with his girlfriend during the Sep 3 game.

#4 The Tampa Bay Rays outfielder Jeff Siri was placed on the 10 day IL on Tuesday after receiving a fractured right hand. Siri is a critical piece to the Rays line up and has hit 25 home runs this season. Siri was hit in the fifth inning of Tuesday’s game and left after being a base runner.

#5 The Texas Rangers and manager Bruce Bochy has melted down from when they were all the rage Aug 15th in the AL West winning 12 of their last 14 games. What came next was a eight game losing streak, the Rangers lost 16 of 20 games. The Rangers had a 6.5 game lead in the West and wound up with a three game deficit. As of Tuesday night the Rangers are just two games behind first place Houston.

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

San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca: Guardians-Giants duel in rubber game today at Oracle; SF remains 1.5 games back in NL Wild Card race

San Francisco Giants first baseman LaMonte Wade Jr can’t handle a hot shot baseball hit by the Cleveland Guardian Kole Calhoun in the top of the sixth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue Sep 12, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the San Francisco Giants podcast with Michael Duca:

#1 The San Francisco Giants took a tough loss and snapped a four game win streak on Tuesday night to the Cleveland Guardians at Oracle Park in San Francisco in a 3-1 loss.

#2 Key to the win was the Guardians Tyler Freeman slugged a two run single in the top of the sixth inning and that figured in as the game winner later. It was enough to get the Guardians over the top.

#3 The Giants are having a tough time fielding on Monday night they committed three errors and on Tuesday night they committed their 100th error of the season tying their 2022 season total.

#4 The Giants have now scored one run or fewer 34 times for the season that ties them with the Oakland A’s for the most in MLB.

#5 Rubber game match ups for the Wednesday matinee at Oracle Park. For Cleveland left hander Logan Allen (7-7 ERA 3.68) and for San Francisco left hander Kyle Harrison (1-1 ERA 4.87) first pitch 12:45pm PT.

Join Michael Duca for the Giants podcasts Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

He was a Giant? Frank Johnson – OF/IF – 1966-71 – # 20; By Tony the Tiger Hayes

Former San Francisco Giants infielder/Outfielder Frank Johnson (photo from 1971 topps baseball)

By Tony the Tiger Hayes

Frank Sinatra was rarely seen out out and about sans imposing Paisan Jilly Rizzo lurking

Elvis didn’t venture two steps outside the gates of Graceland without the Memphis Mafia.

And NBA player and full drag aficionado Dennis Rodman made sure good buddy Jack Haley always had a seat at the end if the bench wherever his NBA travels took him.

Since the beginning of recorded time, bigwigs and heartthrobs have surrendered themselves yes men and back slappers.

Hey who doesn’t enjoy being told how great they are.

But Willie Mays was one baseball superstar who didnt girdle himself with toadies and personal trainers as his Godson Barry Bonds would infamously do years later during his storied years with the Orange & Black.

Willie didn’t hang with Hollywood glitterati or spend his nights tripping the light fantastic – he was actually somewhat of a loner.

But Mays was not without a Candlestick cortege. While Mays didnt often publicly talk about his charitable work – as writer John Shea documented in his New York Times best seller “24” – Willie received as much joy working with and assisting children and young people as he did making basket catches and sending Russ Hodges into a frenzy with his “bye, bye baby!” round tripper calls.

And while Mays did not surround himself with a classic entourage he did have a Candlestick Park crew of young outfielders – particularly those of black American heritage – he liked to dote on during his long Orange & Black career.

Young fly chasing prospects such Bernie Williams, Ollie Brown, Garry Maddox, Ken Henderson, Gary Matthews, George Foster all few under Mays tutelage.

Another was the now largely forgotten El Paso, Texas born and raised outfielder named Frank Herbert Johnson.

Though his fanfare never exceeded the level of an inaudible whisper, Johnson actually spent six straight seasons in the big leagues alongside Willie and the Orange & Black.

While we would never label Johnson a Hangers-On, from 1966-71, he certainly did a lot of hanging around for the Giants.

Despite seeing big league action every season from 1966-71 never rose above benchwarmer status.

Giants were a well oiled machine in the 1960s with a stacked lineup and unforgiving pitching staff. There just wasn’t many opportunities for Frank to break into the Giants starting lineup.

What kept the club coming back to Johnson was his unselfish attitude and willingness to play multiple positions. Though primarily an outfielder, Johnson made close to 50 starts at third base for San Francisco. As a Giant he logged time at each position, sans pitcher and catcher.

Though his overall numbers don’t jump out at you – the handsome journey man contributed enough in the margins to make it and did his share to make the Giants one of game’s top winning clubs and highest drawing club’s of the 1960s.

Why Was He a Giant?

Giants super-scout George Genovese discovered and signed Johnson out El Paso’s Bel Air High School in June of 1961. The 18-year-old – who was still a semester shy of graduation- had just led the Highlanders to the El Paso city championship as a dual school boy version of Shohei Ohtani. A prep third baseman and pitcher, Johnson batted .431 and posted a mound ledger of 8-3 the year he turned pro.

In his first year of pro ball, Johnson immediately opened eyes, tattooing Appalachian League pitching for a .314 average in 55 games. Of the 44 youngsters who suited up for the Salem Rebels during that 1962 season, Johnson was the only one blessed to make it to the majors.

Johnson continued to stroke the ball well over the next few seasons in the Giants system and by 1966 he had reached the Triple -AAA Phoenix Giants. No longer an inexperienced pro, the 23-year-old became the cactus Giants, most viable threats, batting .308 while competing for playing time with numerous future big league players.

Meanwhile up north at the home office at Candlestick Park, the Giants were rampaging through the ‘66 National League season.

On September 1, with rosters allowed to expand to 40 men, the Giants sat atop the NL, tied with Pittsburgh at 78-56.

A week later Johnson got the call to to the bigs and in his debut game with the Orange & Black, the rookie won a key game, driving home Willie Mays with his first Major League hit against none other than the rival Los Angeles Dodgers (9/7/66).

Tied 2-2 going to the top of the 12th at LA, Dodgers reliever Joe Moeller recorded two easy outs. With Mays due up next representing the possible winning run, Dodgers manager Walter Alston made the call to intentionally walk the fabulous Willie to get to Johnson after Moeller ran a 3-0 count to Mays.

Considering it was Johnson’s debut game, and the youngster had struck out in the 10th inning with Mays on base in his first big league at-bat, Alston considered the free pass a no-doubt decision.

But if Uncle Walt thought Johnson’s knees might be knocking in a late game situation, he was dead wrong.

Johnson, ram-rodded a line drive to right field and Mays – aided by a Dodger error scored all the way fro first.

“I was a little nervous,” Johnson admitted later in the visiting clubhouse between bites of a hot dog. “But it was just another ball game. I’d faced Moeller at Spokane so I knew a little bit about him.”

With the 3-2 win that night, the Giants sat a half game back of the Pirates.

Hoping to catch lightning in a bottle, Giants manager Herman Franks wrote Johnson’s name into the lineup several times over the next week.

In his first major league start Franks even shifted Mays, hampered by a groin pull, to right field and had Johnson play center field vs. the visiting Cubs (9/10/66). Johnson swatted a pair of hits but the Giants lost 12-3 in the Saturday matinee.

The Dodgers would eventually storm back to win the division-less NL, with San Francisco finishing in second place 1.5 games.

Despite the early promise, Johnson never could secure a regular spot in the Giants lineup.

Over the next five seasons he would shuttle between Phoenix and San Francisco. Johnson’s best campaign came in 1970 when he batted a career big league high of .273, with 3 home runs and 31 RBI in 67 games for San Francisco.

Johnson’s final Major League game came in June of 1971. He batted into a force out as a pinch batter in a 5-1 road win vs. the Mets (6/12/71).

After leaving the Giants organization after 1971 season, Johnson played a year in Japan with the Lotte Orions.

Giant Footprint

Though many players – including of course Willie Mays – played in at least six consecutive seasons with San Francisco.

And many have spent their entire big league careers exclusively with the Giants, only a handful of athletes played in six straight seasons with SF without never playing in the bigs with another club.

Those players are RHP Matt Cain, SS Brandon Crawford, C Mike Sadek, RHP Rich Robertson, IF Jimmy Davenport, C Buster Posey and… Frank Johnson.

Guardians Freeman two run sixth inning single key to win over Giants 3-1 at Oracle Park

Cleveland Guardians’ Tyler Freeman reacts after being called out on strikes against the San Francisco Giants during the first inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue Sep 12, 2023 (AP News photo)

Cleveland (69-77). 100 002 000 – 3. 4. 0

San Francisco (74-71) 000 010 000. – 1. 6. 1

Time: 2:17

Attendance: 23,541

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–If the baseball gods played hunches the way lottery players do, today would have been an auspicious one for the Giants. Sean Manaea, the one time front line starter for the one time talent laden Oakland Athletics, was on the mound in a rare start for a San Francisco team searching to extend its winning streak. Manaea’s numbers at game time? 5-5, with an ERA of exactly five earned runs per nine innings.

Tuesday he started out poorly but got his act together and didn’t let a runner reach base after getting the final out in the first and a one out single by José Ramírez in the sixth.

Manaea left with the bases loaded and two outs in that frame finished up the inning without allowing a run if it weren’t for LaMonte Wade’s fielding error on ground ball to first by Kole Calhoun. But Wade made his error, and Ryan Walker replaced Manaea and gave up a bases clearing single, with both runs charged to Manaea.

The starter ended up allowing three runs, two of them unearned and posthumous. He walked two, plunked one batter and struck out five. 56 of his 80 pitches were counted as strikes. Manaea didn’t deserve to lose this game, but he did, and his record now reads 5-6, 4.80.

The final 3-1 defeat left the home team only 1.5 games behind in the race for the last NL Wild Card spot, but its elimination number has dwindled to 16 with 17 games left in the season..

Cal Quantrill, who took the mound for Cleveland, also came with ugly season’s numbers, 2-6, 5.70. Unlike Manaea, who’d been used mainly in relief this year, the Guardian righty had started all of his 15 previous games. In his most recent attempt, hurled six scoreless innings against the Angels in Anaheim but went home with a no decision in a 3-2 loss last Thursday. He’s been on the injured list twice this year, which may explain to some extent his poor performances.

Manaea certainly pitched well tonight, going six innings and yielding only one run, which was earned, on five hits and three walks, while striking out two. He threw 86 pitches, 65 for strikes on the way to his third win against six losses while reducing his ERA to 5.40.

The Guardians got a jump start over a wild Manaea in the opening frame, converting a single, a pair of walks, and two failed double play conversions into a one run lead before the Giants took their first swing at the plate. It took him 33 pitches to do it, but Manaea finally caught Tyler Freeman looking at a called third strike to stop the bleeding then and there.

The Giants comeback attempt was foiled in their half of the third when Brandon Crawford fell victim to The Curse of the Leadoff double and died on third, which he’d reached on a weak ground out by Luis Matos.

Quantrill continued to thwart the Giant bats, and it wasn’t until there was one out in the fifth that San Francisco managed to get its second hit, but it was a significant one. Blake Sabol launched his 13th home run of the year, a 417 foot blast to right center that left his bat at 107.6mph. It came off an 89.2mph cut fast ball and tied the score at one all.

Cleveland took the lead back in their half of the sixth on Ramírez’s single, after which Josh Naylor forced him out at second, Manaea hit David Frey with a pitch. Then came Wade’s fatidic error that brought Ryan Walker out of the bull pen. Tyler Freeman tagged Walker for a single that drove in Naylor and Frey and put the visitors ahead, 3-1.

Walker got the third out in the sixth, notched a K and surrendered a single before giving way to Scott Alexander in the seventh.

Reynaldo López was on the mound for Cleveland when the crowd stopped singing “Take Me Out to the Bal Game.” He allowed a walk but nothing more and gave way to Trevor Stephan, who shut the Giants down, yielding only a single to Flores.

John Brebbia stifled the Guardians in the top of the ninth.

Cleveland sent in Emmanuel Chase, last night’s losing pitcher, to try to shut the Giants down for good in the bottom of the ninth. He did it, in 1,2,3 order.

The antagonists return tomorrow, Wednesday, at 12:45 for the rubber game of the series. The Giants will send heralded rookie Kyle Harrison (1-1, 4.87) against Cleveland’s Logan Allen (7-7, 3.68)