M’s pound A’s pitching throughout contest 10-2 to open series at Coliseum

Eugenio Suarez of the Seattle Mariners hits one of his two home runs against the Oakland A’s at the Coliseum this one coming in the top of the sixth on Fri Aug 19, 2022 (AP News photo)

Seattle (66-54). 10 13. 1

Oakland (43-77). 2. 6. 2

Friday, August 19, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–On his return from the Soviet Union in 1919, San Francisco born muckraking journalist Lincoln Steffens proclaimed, “I have seen the future, and it works.”

The Oakland A’s returned last night from Texas, where we saw a glimpse of their future. Newcomers David MacKinnon and Shea Langeliers made their Athletics debut in Arlington during the team’s recent series against the Rangers, in which each team won two games.

MacKinnon, who had hit .189 in 37 at bats with the Angels, went 0 for 5 in his two games for Oakland, while Langeliers went 3 for 12 in his three with the Athletics.

26 rookies have played for the Athletics so far this season; with the addition of right handed pitcher Norge Ruíz, promoted today from Las Vegas, there currently are 15 of them on the roster. Three days ago, the A’s had four first year players in their batting order plus one, JP Sears, on the mound as the starter.

We know that Steffens was wrong about the Soviet Union, but at least he knew where the future he prophesied would occur.

We don’t even know where the newly incorporated members of Oakland’s active roster will play if and when they reach their peak years. How will they work out? We shall see what we shall see, although we might have to travel to Las Vegas to do that.

There were six rookies in the A’s starting lineup for tonight’s overwhelming 10-2 win by Seattle. They were, in addition to MacKinnon and Langeliers, Nick Allen, Jonah Bride, Skye Bolt, and Sheldon Neuse, who just sneaked in under MLB’s definition of “rookie,” 130 or less at bats in a previous season or seasons.

Tonight, Allen went 1 for 4 and had trouble with his baserunning and fielding. Bride went 1 for 3 and scored a run. Langeliers was held hitless in three ABs but drove in a run with a sacrifice fly. Both Neuse and MacKinnon went 0 for two, and the latter made some pretty nifty plays at first.

A’s starting pitcher was Cole Irvin, in his first appearance against the Mariners this season. Last year, he went 0-5, 8.69 against them. He began the day at 6-10, 3.13 for 2022 but 0-3, 3.60 for August. Tonight Irvin left after six innings, in which he gave up six runs, five of them earned, on six hits, two of them homers, and two walks. He took the loss and now stands at 6-11, 3.33.

Irvin’s mound opponent was Marco González, the 30 year old one time first round draft pick of the St. Louis Cardinals. He brought a lifetime mark 58-45, 4.08 and a season’s record of 7-12, 4.18, with him to the mound.

This was his fourth start of the year against Oakland. In the three that preceded it, he went 2-1, 4.42. His best performance in that trio of games came on June 21, when he went seven innings at the Coliseum, allowing two runs, both earned, on seven hits, on way to an 8-2 win over the home team. González lasted six innings tonight.

He held the A’s to a pair of runs, one of which was earned, on a half a dozen hits and two walks. He struck out seven on his way to eighth victory against 12 defeats and an ERA of 4.08.

Seattle jumped to an early lead in their first turn at bat. Julio Rodríguez led off by dropping a Texas League single to right. Ty France sent him to third with a solid single, also to right. With the infield conceding the run by playing at double play depth, the A’s pulled off a 4-6-3 twin killing that emptied the bases before Irvin got Mitch Haniger to. fly out to Bolt in left center to end the inning.

Oakland took advantage of Seattle’s mistakes to come back in their half of the first. With one out, González plunked Bride with an 85 mph cutter. A walk to Sean Murphy put men on first and second.

Chad Pinder followed with an RBI single that plated Bride and sent Murphy to second. Both Murphy and Pinder moved up a base on left fielder Sam Haggerty’s errant throw home. That paved the way for Langleliers sacrifice fly to center, the third RBI in his short major league career, and put the Athletics on top, 2-1.

That lead lasted until the top of the fourth. With one down, Haniger pulled a single to left. Then Eugenio Suárez hammered a hanging curve 307 feet to left for his 21st home run of 2022 and 3-2 Mariner lead.

The green and gold almost tied it up in the home fifth. Alllen sent a two out double down the first line. It looked like he got a late start running, as if he thought the ball was foul, but he made it safely to second, and it wasn’t a close call.

When Bride drove a sharp single to left, Allen seemed a cinch to score. But Haggerty atoned for his first inning error to snab the Oakland shortstop with a perfect throw to the plate for the third out of the frame.

Allen’s troubles carried over into the top of the sixth. Up to then, he had fielded his position with grace and distinction. But he had trouble with the transfer after fielding Haniger’s one out grounder with Winker on first.

Allen recovered the ball, but his throw arrived late at first. The A’s challenged the call, but the verdict from New York was “the call stands.” It was a bad time for Allen’s lapse to have occurred; Suárez smacked his second round tripper of the night, this one 416 feet to center field, to stretch the Mariners’ lead to 6-2.

By the time Irvin got Frazier to pop out to second to end the frame, he already had thrown 92 pitches. He didn’t come out for the seventh, being replaced by the newest A of them all, Norge Ruíz.

González also made an early exit. He allowed singles to Murphy and Pinder and a walk to Brown to load the bases with one out in the bottom of the frame.

Righty Matt Brash relieved him, a move that the A’s countered by sending Vimael Machín to the plate to pinch hit for Neuse. After he struck out, Tony Kemp batted for MacKinnon. He grounded out to short for a force out of Brown at second.

Ruíz, like Irvin, suffered from a faulty defense. After Haggerty beat out a bunt to open the visitors´seventh, Rodríguez sent Brown to the warning track with a towering fly, which he dropped. Ty France and Jesse Winker followed with sacrifice flies that scored Haggerty and Rodríguez.

Neither run was earned, but Seattle now led 8-2. Diego Castillo hurled the seventh for the M’s, striking out Bolt and Allen in the process.

Seattle continued beating up on Ruíz in the eighth. JP Crawford started it by beating the shift, going to the opposite field for a single to left. Cal Raleigh sent a seeing eye single up the middle to move him to second, and Jake Lamb hit another seeing eye single, this one to left that brought in the ninth Mariner tally.

Ty France sent a bouncer that just eluded Allen’s glove to go into left for a single that scored Fraziere and put Lamb on third. That was it for the 28 year old right handed Cuban rookie. Southpaw Sam Moll replaced and induced a foul out to left from Jesse Winker. It now was 10-2, Seattle.

Penn Murfee was given the none too arduous task of holding onto this lead in the home eighth. He did it in 1-2-3 fashion. Chris Flexen was given the ceremonial task of keeping the A’s in check for the final three outs. It took him all of nine pitches.

The A’s and M’s will go at it again tomorrow afternoon at 4:15. James Kaprielian (3-7, 4.33) will pitch for the hosts and Logan Gilbert (10-5, 3.51) for their guests.

Rangers rout A’s 10-3 earn a split of four-game series in Arlington

Bubba Thompson, Leody Taveras and Adolis Garcia, from left to right do their best Rockettes impression after the Texas Rangers defeat the Oakland A’s at Globe Life Field in Arlington to conclude the four game series on Thu Aug 18, 2022 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Texas Rangers routed the A’s 10-3 to earn a split of the four-game series played at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas, Thursday afternoon.

The A’s lefty Zach Logue did not make it out of the fifth inning. The Rangers tallied seven runs and had two home in the assault on Logue. The Rangers’ starter Dane Dunning went six innings and allowed four hits and two runs. 

The Rangers scored the game’s first runs in the bottom of the second. Adolis Garcia singled up the middle to get things going for Texas. Jonah Heim went to Texas in the trade for Elvis Andrus and tripled to drive in Garcia with the first run. Heim was thrown out trying to score on a wild pitch. Logue’s pitch went to the backstop. Langeliers got to the ball quickly, and his throw to Logue, covering home plate, nailed Heim. The Rangers’ DH Mark Mathias blasted his second dinger of the year to give Texas an early 2-0 lead.

Oakland tied the game in the top of the fourth. With one out, Seth Brown doubled. Dunning retired Stephen Vogt for the second out. A’s second baseman, Sheldon Neuse, homered over the left field wall to even the score. The tie didn’t last long as Texas scored two more in their half of the fourth. Logue hit Nate Lowe with a pitch. Logue walked Garcia to put two men on with no out. Jonah Heim singled to drive in Lowe. Garcia stole third and scored on a sacrifice fly. The Rangers led 4-2 after four complete.

Things went south for Logue in the bottom of the fifth. With none out, Logue walked Marcus Semien. Corey Seager singled, sending Semien to third. Seager went to second on the throw. Nate Lowe broke open the game when he blasted his 17th home run of the 2022 campaign to make it a 7-2 game. Logue was done.

Texas added a run in the sixth to make it 8-2. Oakland got one back in the seventh. Rookie catcher Shea Langeliers doubled., then went to third on a ground out. Langeliers scored on a wild pitch. The Rangers plated two more in the eighth to win, going away 10-3.

Game Notes: With the loss, the A’s finished the seven-game road trip, winning two and losing five. The A’s are now 43-76 for the year. Texas improved to 53-65.

Zach Logue took the loss. His record is now 3-7the A’s used four pitchers. In addition to allowing ten hits, they walked six and hit two batters. Texas’ starter Dane Dunning improved to 3-6. 

The A’s line was three runs, five hits, and one error. The only A’s hitter with more than one hit was Vimael Machin. Machin had two singles. 

Jonah Heim, Mark Mathias, and Bubba Thompson led the Texas attack with two hits each. Texas’ line score was ten runs, ten hits, and no errors.

The A’s defense committed their 71st of the season. They are tied with the Rangers for the second most errors in the American League.

The A’s return home to start a ten-game homestand. They play the Seattle Mariners for three starting Friday night. On Monday, The ‘s will host the Miami Marlins for three. After the Marlins leave, the A’s will play four with the New York Yankees.

Friday night’s game will feature a battle between two lefties. Cole Irvin will go for Oakland, and the Mariners will counter with Marco Gonzales.

Former Oakland A’s shortstop Elvis Andrus was not unemployed very long. Andrus signed on with the Chicago White Sox for the remainder of the season. Neither Jed Lowrie or Stephen Piscotty have signed play with another team.

The time of the game on Thursday was two hours and fifty-two minutes. Sixteen thousand six hundred ninety-five fans watched the Rangers rout the A’s.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: The tough decision of releasing players

Oakland A’s catcher Sean Murphy had a great night on Wed Aug 17, 2022 hitting two home runs against the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field in Arlington (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 The Oakland A’s released Elvis Andrus on Tuesday night ironically that was the night he hit a two run home run that contributed to the A’s 7-2 win over the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field. Andrus was a well liked player but the A’s were looking to cut salary and released him.

#2 Andrus was hitting .237 with eight home runs and 21 RBIs how much will his contribution be missed?

#3 There is also talk that catcher Stephen Vogt could be released by the A’s he’s still with the club and is looked as a leader in the clubhouse.

#4 The A’s released Jed Lowrie last week it was an emotional decision that was made by the A’s and manager Mark Kotsay. It was also emotional for Lowrie who had been with the team for three different times.

#5 A’s will try and get after it today at Globe Life to conclude the four game series with starting pitcher Zach Louge (3-6, 5.49) and Rangers starter Dane Dunning (2-6, 4.12) an 11:05 first pitch.

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

A’s hit three home runs to down Rangers 7-2

Texas Rangers catcher Meibrys Viloria can’t get a handle on the ball as Oakland Athletics’ Sean Murphy (12) scores on a single by Chad Pinder in the top of eighth at Globe Life Field in Arlington on Wed Aug 17, 2022 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

On another emotional day for the Oakland A’s (43-75) and the Texas Rangers (52-65), the A’s won their second game in a row, downing the Rangers 7-2. The A’s cut ties with their veteran shortstop Elvis Andrus. Andrus can now sign with any team. I have included the A’s press release in the game notes section.

The Rangers are in a bit of turmoil, too. On Monday, the Rangers fired their manager Chris Woodward. On Wednesday, they dismissed Jon Daniels, who was with the team for 17 years and was the president of their baseball operations. Daniels had also been their general manager. The Rangers also designated pitcher Garrett Richards for assignment.

Even with all the day’s events, the teams still had to play a baseball game. The A’s sent Adam Oller to the mound to face the Rangers. Oller struggled earlier in the season. His record of 1-5 and ERA of 7.62 was not impressive. He was sent down to Triple-A Las Vegas to work on some of his issues.

Since his return, he has performed better. On Wednesday night, Oller pitched his finest game as an Oakland Athletic. He went six innings and allowed five hits and one run. He recorded his second win of the year.

The Rangers’ starter, lefty Cole Ragans, went five innings and allowed four hits and three runs. The A’s catcher Sean Murphy sent two of Ragans’ pitches over the fence. Murph hit a solo blast in the first and a two-run jack in the fourth. 

The A’s grabbed an early 1-0 lead in the first when Murphy homered with two out. It was Murph’s 15th of the season. The Rangers tied the score in their half of the inning. With one out Corey Seager singled. Seager went to second on a wild pitch. Oller retired Nate Lowe for the second out. Adolis Garcia doubled to drive in Seager with the run.

In the fourth, David MacKinnon walked, making his first start in an Oakland uniform. Murphy brought him home when he sent the ball over the fence in right-center-field. It was the second time in Murphy’s career that he had a multi-homer game. The A’s led 3-1. The Rangers’ pitching kept the A’s off the board until the eighth. 

Murphy led off the inning in the eighth with a double, his third hit of the night. Chad Pinder singled to drive in Murphy. The play at the plate was close. The throw to Rangers’ catcher Meibrys Viloria was on the money.

Unfortunately for Texas, Viloria could not hold onto the ball as it dropped out of his glove, attempting to put the tag on Murphy. Pinder went to third on the error.

Vimael Machin, pinch-hitting for Sheldon Neuse, singled to drive in Pinder with the A’s fifth run of the game. Oakland was done. The next hitter, Shea Langeliers, homered over the wall in right-center-field to put the A’s in the driver’s seat 7-1.

The Rangers scored a run in the bottom of the ninth, but it was too little, too late. The A’s win 7-2.

Game Notes: The A’s won their second in a row to improve to 43-75. The Rangers fall to 52-65.

The winning pitcher was Adam Oller. He is now 2-5. The loser was Cole Ragans.

Sean Murphy was the hitting star for Oakland. Murphy had a double, a solo homer, and a two-run shot. He drove in three runs. Rookie Shea Langeliers hit his first Major League home run in just his eighth at-bat in the bigs.

Game four of the series will start at 11:05 am on Thursday. The A’s will have lefty Zach Logue (3-6, 5.49) on the mound. Texas will counter with righty Dane Dunning (2-6, 4.12)

The time of the game was two hours and 58 minutes. 14,846 fans were on hand to watch the A’s down the Rangers

Here is the press release from the A’s regarding Elvis Andrus

OAKLAND, Calif. — The Oakland Athletics recalled infielder Sheldon Neuse from Triple-A Las Vegas and released shortstop Elvis Andrus, the club announced today.

Neuse joins the A’s for the third time this year and is batting .227 with three home runs and 21 RBI in 70 games over his first two stints with Oakland. He was on the A’s Opening Day roster and hit .329 over his first 22 games, but a 13-for-91 (.143) stretch preceded his first option to Las Vegas on June 7.

The 27-year-old right-handed hitter batted .227 with a home run and four RBI in 21 games during his second stint from June 21 to July 27. Neuse is hitting .398 with five home runs, 20 RBI, and a 1.018 OPS in 25 games with the Aviators.

Andrus was batting .237 with eight home runs and 30 RBI in 106 games in his second season with Oakland. He was acquired by the A’s from the Texas Rangers on Feb. 6, 2021, with Aramis Garcia for Khris Davis, Jonah Heim, and Dane Acker and hit .243 with three home runs and 37 RBI in 146 games in his A’s debut last year.

The 33-year-old is a two-time All-Star (2010, 12) and left as the Rangers’ all-time leader in stolen bases (305). He also ranked second in games (1652), at-bats (6366) and triples (48), third in runs (893) and hits (1743), fifth in doubles (303) and walks (519), seventh in RBI (636) and eighth in extra-base hits (427).

Andrus has played 1,872 career games in the field, all at shortstop, which is the fifth-longest career-opening streak of appearing only at shortstop in Major League history behind Derek Jeter (2674), Luis Aparicio (2583), Ozzie Smith (2511) and Alan Trammell (1910). He is a .270 career hitter with 87 home runs and 703 RBI in 1,904 games in 14 seasons in the majors. Andrus is the active leader in stolen bases (324), is tied for fourth in triples (50), ranks sixth in hits (1948) and games (1904), and ninth in runs (994).

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: A’s releasing veterans-Looking 2023

Stephen Vogt of the Oakland A’s hits a RBI single in the top of the eighth inning at Minute Maid Field in Houston on Sun Aug 17, 2022 against the Houston Astros (AP News photo)

A’s Releasing Veterans – Looking to 2023

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Today the Oakland A’s released their veteran shortstop Elvis Andrus. Andrus was batting .237 with eight home runs and 30 RBI in 106 games in his second season with Oakland. He was acquired by the A’s from the Texas Rangers on Feb. 6, 2021 with Aramis Garcia for Khris Davis, Jonah Heim and Dane Acker and hit .243 with three home runs and 37 RBI in 146 games in his A’s debut last year.

The 33-year-old is a two-time All-Star (2010, 12) and left as the Rangers all-time leader in stolen bases (305). He also ranked second in games (1652), at bats (6366) and triples (48), third in runs (893) and hits (1743), fifth in doubles (303) and walks (519), seventh in RBI (636) and eighth in extra base hits (427).

Andrus has played 1,872 career games in the field, all at shortstop, which is the fifth longest career-opening streak of appearing only at shortstop in Major League history behind Derek Jeter (2674), Luis Aparicio (2583), Ozzie Smith (2511) and Alan Trammell (1910).

He is a .270 career hitter with 87 home runs and 703 RBI in 1,904 games in 14 seasons in the majors. Andrus is the active leader in stolen bases (324), is tied for fourth in triples (50), ranks sixth in hits (1948) and games (1904) and ninth in runs (994).

Elvis Andrus did a good job for the A’s, specially this year, However, if Nick Allen continues to show progress, he is more than likely their starting shortstop next season.

Other veterans that have recently gotten their release are: Jed Lowrie and Stephen Piscotty. Stephen Vogt could be next since the team just promoted their catcher prospect Shea Langeliers, from the minor leagues. The team is trying out all their young players during the last two months of the current season, to evaluate what they will have on hand for the 2023 season.

Join Amaury Pi Gonzalez for News and Commentary podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

A’s release Andrus; Elvis had the fifth longest shortstop streak in baseball

Oakland A’s shortstop Elvis Andrus rounds the bases after hitting a two run homer in the top of the seventh at Globe Life Field in Arlington against the Texas Rangers on Tue Aug 16, 2022 was released Wed Aug 17, 2022 by the A’s (AP News photo)

A’s release shortstop Elvis Andrus

By Amaury Pi Gonzalez and Lewis Rubman

Elvis Andrus, born in Venezuela, has played 1,872 career games in the field, all at shortstop, which is the fifth-longest career-opening streak of appearing only at shortstop in Major League history behind Derek Jeter (2674), Luis Aparicio (2583), Ozzie Smith (2511) and Alan Trammell (1910).

He is a .270 career hitter with 87 home runs and 703 RBI in 1,904 games in 14 seasons in the majors. Andrus is the active leader in stolen bases (324), is tied for fourth in triples (50), ranks sixth in hits (1948) and games (1904), and ninth in runs (994).

Jed Lowrie and Stephen Piscotty were also released by the A’s recently. Vogt could be next, they are “cleaning up” more payroll, and all the veterans are methodically being released. Paul Blackburn is out for the rest of the season due to discomfort in his pitching hand. The A’s are currently on the road in Texas against the Rangers.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play announcer on Spanish radio for the Oakland A’s and Lewis Rubman is an Oakland A’s beat writer at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

A’s snap nine-game losing streak beat Rangers 5-1 at Globe Life

The Oakland A’s Elvis Andrus is all smiles after belting a top of the seventh two run homer against the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field in Arlington on Tue Aug 16, 2022 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s snapped their nine-game losing streak Tuesday night as they beat the Texas Rangers 5-1. The A’s had a revamped lineup as they continued to make roster changes. The A’s released veteran outfielder Stephen Piscotty.

Piscotty had been with the A’s since 2018. Piscotty had a great year with the A’s in 2018, but injuries took their toll, and he was hitting below the Mendoza line and had missed considerable playing time in 2022.

The A’s put two players on the IL on Tuesday. Pitcher Paul Blackburn was shut down for the remainder of the season with a finger injury. Blackburn was the A’s only player to make it to the All-Star team. He was 7-6 for the year.

Outfielder Ramon Laureano is on the ten-day IL with an oblique strain. The A’s brought up infielder David MacKinnon and catcher Shea Langeliers. Langeliers came over from Atlanta in the trade for Matt Olson. Langeliers is 24 years old and was hitting .283 with 19 homers and 56 RBIs in 92 games for the Triple-A Las Vegas Aviators.

J.P.Sears was making his second start since coming to the A’s from the New York Yankees. Sears went five innings and allowed four hits, no runs, three walks, and two strikeouts. The A’s bullpen allowed the Rangers just one run over the last four innings of the game to give Sears his fourth win.

The Rangers had Kohei Arihara on the mound. Arihara was making his first start of the season. The A’s scored a run in the first three innings and recorded seven hits in the first three frames.

The A’s drew first blood in the tip of the first inning. Cal Stevenson led off the game with a double. Tony Kemp bunted for a single, sending Stevenson to third. Sean Murphy popped out to short for the first out. Seth Brown, playing in right field, singled to drive in Stevenson.

Oakland made it a 2-0 game when they plated a run in the second inning. Shea Langeliers, making his Major League debut, sent the first pitch from Arihama down the left field line for a double. Langeliers advanced to third on Vimael Machin’s ground out. Jonah Bride singled to make it 2-0.

In the third, Sean Murphy launched a 454-foot blast to straightaway center field. There was no doubt that it was an actual moonshot.

The A’s brought in the big lefty, A.J.Puk to pitch the sixth. With one out, Rangers’ right-fielder Adolis Garcia singled. First Baseman Nate Low singled, sending Garcia to third. Former A’s catcher Jonah Heim reached on an infield single. Garcia scored to make it 3-1 after six complete.

The A’s put two more on the board in the seventh. Sean Murphy singled with one out. Seth Brown was retired for the second out. Former Rangers’ shortstop Elvis Andrus homered to put the A’s ahead 5-1.

The A’s bullpen shut the Rangers down the rest of the way. Domingo Acevedo, Kirby Snead, and Dany Jimenez all kept the Rangers from scoring to preserve the A’s win.

Game Notes- With the win, the A’s are 42-75. The Rangers fall to 52-64

The line score for Oakland was five runs, eleven hits, and no errors. The line for Texas was one run, nine hits, and no errors.

Sean Murphy had a home run and a single. Vimael Machin also had two hits, both singles.
The A’s outfielders recorded two assists in the game. Nate Lowe was at first base with two outs in the bottom of the fourth. Jonah Heim hit a rocket to left field that bounced off the wall into Tony Kemp’s glove.

Kemp threw the ball to Elvis Andrus. Andrus double-clutched the ball, but his throw home was on the mark as Murphy tagged Lowe on the should before he could cross the plate. The play went 7-6-2.

The Rangers loaded the bases with one out. A’s starter J.P. Sears walked three hitters and needed a big play to get out of the jam. The Rangers had the speedy Leody Taveras at third. Ezequiel Duran was at second. Sears had to face a very dangerous hitter, Marcus Semien.

He got Semien to foul out to Seth Brown in right field. Brown had a long run and had to get into position to get ready to make a throw as Taveras had tagged up and was on his way home. Brown made a great throw.

Tavares stopped halfway down the line. When he tried to get back to third, he saw Duran was almost on the base. Taveras was caught in a rundown to end the inning.

Here is the announcement from the A’s regarding the release of Stephen Piscotty.
General manager David Forst thanked Piscotty, 31, for his impact on the club dating to his arrival ahead of the 2018 season in a trade from St. Louis that brought him back close to his home in Pleasanton.

His mother, Gretchen, died in May that year from Lou Gehrig’s disease, and Piscotty helped raise awareness for ALS. Major League Baseball held its first Lou Gehrig Day last year.

He helped lead the A’s back to the playoffs in 2018 after a three-year drought with career highs of 27 home runs and 88 RBIs.

“I want to acknowledge Stephen Piscotty first and just talk a little bit about his time here, which came at a really important time for us when we made that trade at the end of 2017,” Forst said in a conference call. “I appreciate everything that Stephen gave us both on and off the field in his time here.”

The time of the game was 3:07. The attendance was 15,260.

The teams play Wednesday night again at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas. The game will start at 5:07 pm. Adam Oller (1-5, 7.26 ERA) goes for Oakland. Lefty Cole Ragans(0-1, 4.82 ERA) will pitch for the Rangers.

A’s hitting woes continue lose their ninth in a row 2-1; Despite winning three straight Rangers fire Woodward

The Oakland A’s pitcher James Kaprielian rubs up the baseball in the foreground after giving up a top of the third inning home run to the Texas Rangers Marcus Semien at Globe Life Stadium in Arlington on Mon Aug 15, 2022 (AP News photo)

by Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s lost their ninth game in a row Monday night to the Texas Rangers 2-1 at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas. The Rangers fired their manager Chris Woodward before the start of the game. The Rangers, like the A’s, are in rebuild mode. They did spend 500 million dollars to sign Corey Seager and Marcus Semien. The Rangers’ story will follow in the game notes section.

The A’s were hoping to snap an eight-game losing streak. They sent James Kaprielian to the mound to face Texas. Kap has not more than six innings in his last 29 starts. Kaprielian did not snap that streak. He was the losing pitcher and is now 3-7. His line was five and 1/3rd innings, two runs, six hits, two walks, five strikeouts, and he gave up a solo home run to former A’s shortstop Marcus Semien.

The A’s scored their only run of the night in the top of the third. Nick Allen led off the inning with his third home run of the season and his second in the last two games. Semien homered to tie the game in the Rangers’ half of the third.

Texas scored the winning run in the bottom of the sixth. With one out, Leody Tavares triple to deep center field. A’s manager Mark Kotsay brought in lefty Sam Moll to pitch. Moll retired Eiler Hernandez for the second out. Texas’ left fielder, Bubba Thompson, singled to drive in Tavaras with the winning run. The Rangers win 2-1.

Game Notes: The A’s have lost nine in a row and are 41-75. They are 34 games under the .500 mark. The Rangers are now 52-63. The 2022 season has not been a banner year for either team. The A’s are on pace to lose over 100 games. 

Glen Otto (5-8) was the winning pitcher. Otto’s line was six innings, two hits, one strikeout, and six walks. The A’s managed just three hits in the game, but they received nine walks. They could not take advantage of Otto’s wildness. 

Lefty J.P.Sears (3-0, 2.20) will make his second start as an Oakland Athletic Tuesday night. The Rangers will use an opener, and the bullpen will handle the pitching chores. Their new manager, former third-base coach Tony Beasley won his first game as the Rangers’ skipper.

The time of the game was 3:10. 13,141 fans watched the Rangers down the A’s.

Here is the announcement from the Rangers about the dismissal of Chris Woodward.

The Rangers fired manager Chris Woodward amid a disappointing season that has them likely to miss the postseason for the sixth consecutive year. Third base coach Tony Beasley will take over as interim manager for the remainder of the season.

At 51-63, the Rangers are 9 1/2 games behind the third and final American League wild-card spot. The case can be made Texas is having a tough-luck season. The Rangers’ minus-2 run differential suggests their record should be close to .500 — a massive improvement from last year’s minus-190 run differential — but they are 6-24 in one-run games. A few lucky bounces and they could’ve been in the race. 

Woodward, 46, was in his fourth season as Rangers manager. The team went 211-287 (.424) under Woodward, though the club was clearly in a rebuild in 2020 and 2021. Texas committed over $500 million to free agents this past offseason, most notably Corey Seagar and Marcus Semien, and the brain trust surely expected to remain in contention longer this summer.

“We have had extensive discussions over the last several weeks, and while the team’s current performance is certainly a big part of this decision, we are also looking at the future,” Rangers executive Jon Daniels said. “As the Rangers continue to develop a winning culture and put the pieces together to compete for the postseason year in and year out, we felt a change in leadership was necessary at this time.”

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s hoping to snap out of 8 game losing streak tonight in Texas

The Oakland A’s starter Cole Irvin delivers a first inning pitch against the Houston Astros at Minute Maid Field in Houston on Sun Aug 14, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Barbara Mason:

#1 Houston Astros pitcher Cristian Javier threw six innings of shutout ball giving up one hit, three walks and six strikeouts the Oakland A’s simply couldn’t do anything against him.

#2 Alex Bregman hit his 16th home run against A’s starter Cole Irvin (6-10) and it was the second straight game that Bregman hit a two run home run.

#3 The Astros Jose Altuve hit a double for two RBIs in the bottom of the second inning to increase their lead to 4-0 and wound up winning their fourth straight game.

#4 The Astros who got swept by the A’s in July came back this past weekend to get a three game sweep against a struggling A’s team. Astros manager Dusty Baker made sure the A’s would not sweep them in their own ballpark.

#5 The A’s will try and snap out of their current eight game losing streak as they open a four game series against the Texas Rangers starting Monday night at Globe Life Field in Arlington. The A’s will start James Kaprielian (3-6, 4.38) he’ll be opposed by the Astros Glenn Otto (4-8, 5.20) a 5:05 pm PDT first pitch.

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

Late To The Party: A’s stymied through six innings, lose 6-3 to the Astros

By Morris Phillips

On Sunday, the A’s didn’t throw up, they threw their hands up.

The visitors’ weekend visit to Houston highlighted how competitive they’ve been with the division leaders in splitting the first 12 meetings. That thin veneer of big league equality got wiped out at Minute Maid Park as the Astros completed a three-game sweep on Sunday, winning 6-3.

Cristian Javier had gone since July 1 without a win, recording an 0-5 record over six starts. His issue–including a loss to the A’s in Oakland on July 27–was allowing walks (12) and home runs (8) in numbers too inflated to give himself a chance to win. That wasn’t the case on Sunday however. Javier allowed one hit, no runs and three walks that alone didn’t harm him.

Consequently, the A’s had to wait their turn… the one that materialized after manager Dusty Baker lifted his starter after six innings.

“Once he came out of the game, we had some good at-bats and put some hits together and gave (ourselves) a chance,” manager Mark Kotsay said of the A’s offense.

The A’s are challenged offensively, everyone with a bean counter knows that. But they’re also battlers and gamers, a testament to the atmosphere Kotsay has instilled in his clubhouse. So given an opportunity to rally, they did, it just came too little, too late to interrupt their eighth, consecutive loss.

Nick Allen homered in the eighth, and Noah Bride contributed an RBI groundout in the ninth in front of Tony Kemp’s run-scoring single that cut a 6-0 deficit to 6-3. Reliever Rafael Montero’s task was to finish the game, and give closer Ryan Pressly a day off, but that plan failed when he walked Cal Stevenson, forcing Baker to summon Pressly.

With two on and one out, and the A’s trailing 6-2, Pressly allowed Kemp’s RBI single but retired Vimael Machin to end the game, picking up his 22nd save.

Cole Irvin’s been fantastic as the top starter for a team on pace to lose 100 games that doesn’t hit much, but he’s shown wear in his last three starts, culminating on Sunday. Irvin’s lost all three, and allowed a home run in each. Besides Bregman’s blast, Jose Altuve’s two-run double stung the most, leaving Irvin in a 4-0 hole after two innings.

“Sometimes you tip your cap, a combination of just some good hitting and maybe some bad luck with placement of the balls,” Kotsay said of Irvin’s outing.

On Saturday, Skye Bolt went viral with his upset stomach and the resulting projectile celebration. Amazingly, he stayed in the game. On Sunday, a Ramon Laureano swing caused an ache, and the outfielder did depart in the fourth inning with soreness in his ribcage area. Both are day-to-day and any negative change would require a roster move to address a shortage of outfielders.

The A’s travel to North Texas and will meet the struggling Rangers on Monday. James Kaprelian will start opposed by the Rangers’ Glenn Otto. Texas has lost 14 of 22 since the All-Star break.