That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Ohtani to start Tuesday is the biggest story in baseball

Los Angeles Angels hitter Shohei Ohtani who will start Tue Aug 9, 2022 game against the Oakland A’s was checked by the trainers on Sun Aug 7, 2022 at the T Mobile Field in Seattle after pitcher Marc Gonzales collided with Ohtani near the Angels on deck circle in the top of the third inning. Ohtani remained in the game. (AP News photo)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

The Los Angeles Angels starter and the face of baseball Shohei Ohtani better known as ShoTime will start Tuesday night against the Oakland A’s. Ohtani he’s one of the best pitchers in the Majors going into the Tuesday’s game.

Ohtani collided with Seattle Mariners pitcher Marco Gonsales after Ohtani’s first at bat near the Angels on deck circle. Gonsales said he was trying to back up a throw coming from the outfield in the top of the third inning but didn’t see Ohtani and collided with him. Ohtani was a little shaken up but staying the the ball game.

Ohtani is 9-7 with an ERA 2.83 he’ll be opposed by the A’s James Kaprielian (3-5, 4.32) for a 6:40 pm PDT first pitch out at the Oakland Coliseum.

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

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: A’s Celebrate 2022 Class of Hall of Fame Inductees

A’s Celebrate 2022 Class of Hall of Fame Inductees

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

From left to right Amaury Pi Gonzalez author (left), former Oakland A’s players Joe Rudi (center) and Shooty Mack Babbitt (left) enjoy the festivities at the 2022 Class of Hall of Fame Inductees at the Claremont Club Spa in Berkeley on Sun Aug 7, 2022 (photo from Amaury Pi Gonzalez)

OAKLAND–Sunday night, at the swanky and iconic Claremont Club and Spa in the Berkeley hills with breathtaking views of San Francisco, the Oakland Athletics celebrated their 2022 Class of Hall of Fame inductees with a bevy of past and present A’s stars.

A’s President Dave Kaval was master of ceremonies during a very happy group of players and their families representatives. 1972 World Champion Joe Rudi, Steve Vucinich, former A’s Clubhouse Manager, Keith Lieppman Special Advisor to Player Development, the family of “Captain Sal” Bando, family members of A’s third-baseman Eric Chávez, the wife and family of A’s broadcaster Ray Fosse. Ex-A’s owner Charlie Finley’s son and his family were also in attendance.

A’s Broadcasters Ken Korach, Vince Cotroneo, Glen Kuiper, Bip Roberts, Shooty Babitt, Chris Townsend, Manolo Hernández-Douen and yours truly sitting at the broadcasters tables. I had the chance of meeting the son of A’s owner Charlie Finley and his family.

My wife Gail night was made complete by a hug and kiss by A’s legend Rickey Henderson, in my opinion the best player ever in the history of the Oakland A’s. She thanked him for the great memories.

Rickey who is also in the National Baseball Hall of Fame at Cooperstown looked as happy as ever, as well as Vida Blue and friends. With background music playing hits from the 1970’s and 1980’s everybody had a great time. Muchas gracias, and Kudos to Melissa Guzmán, A’s Manager Alumni and Family Relations.

Reminiscing with Rickey Henderson that first named “million dollar outfield” during his rookie season in 1979 when he played left field, Dwayne Murphy center, and Tony Armas right.

I was broadcasting A’s in 1979 and I told Rickey his stolen base record is safe, nobody in our lifetime is going to tie or break his record, Rickey responded, “they do not play like that now”. Which is true, who steals bases anymore?

Another ex-player (anonymous) told me “today’s game is boring, all they do is hit home runs”, when I said, yes and everybody hits .220 also, he smiled and say “you got it”.

The A’s “got it” Sunday night, celebrating their glorious past. When it comes to celebrating the history, baseball is the king of sports. The Library of Congress is the home of the largest baseball-related collection in the world. There are more books written about baseball than any other sport.

Just In:

Oakland A’s fans can now vote to help select a member of the Athletics Hall of Fame Class of 2023 Members of the Athletics Hall of Fame are also voted on by a committee of A’s front office personnel, Athletics Hall of Famers, and the media. Fans can cast a vote until Sunday, Sept. 11, at athletics.com/fans .

Former Oakland players on the 2023 fan ballot include Jose Canseco, Coco Crisp, Mark Ellis, Jason Giambi, Dick Green, Dave Henderson, Ramon Hernandez, Ken Holtzman, Rick Honeycutt, Tim Hudson, Carney Lansford, Mike Moore, Mark Mulder, Dwayne Murphy, Mike Norris, John “Blue Moon” Odom, Tony Phillips, Terry Steinbach, Gene Tenace, Miguel Tejada, Bob Welch, and Barry Zito.

The full Class of 2023 will be announced during A’s Fan Appreciation Weekend in September. Fans can vote now until Sunday, Sept. 11, at athletics.com/fans.

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

San Francisco Giants podcast with Marko Ukalovic: Two game sweep was a pick me up for Giants who were skidding

San Francisco Giants third baseman JD Davis can’t quite get to the ball that the Oakland A’s Jonah Bride hit in the bottom of the sixth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Aug 7, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the Giants podcast with Marko:

#1 Sunday afternoon the San Francisco Giants (53-55) won their seventh consecutive interleague road game 6-4 over the Oakland Athletics (41-68). The Giants swept Oakland in this two game series.

#2 The game remained scoreless through the first two innings until the Giants Mike Yastrzemski stepped up to the plate and homered in the third inning, the first of two home runs for the slugger in this game, The Giants would add to their 1-0 lead in the fifth inning.

#3 Austin Slater doubled driving in Brandon Crawford for a 2-0 lead. The A’s would answer in the fifth inning with a single run but San Francisco was just getting started leading 2-1.

#4 Oakland made a valiant effort in the eighth to catch up to San Francisco in the later innings. Seth Brown who has been hitting great since he returned from paternity leave knocked one out of the park with Sean Murphy on base but that was all that the A’s could muster. The final was 6-4.

#5 San Francisco will continue their west coast road trip heading down to San Diego to take on the Padres Monday night. Alex Wood will take the mound for the Giants with a 4.42 ERA and a 7-9 win loss record. The Padres will send Blake Snell who comes in with a 4-5 win loss record and a 4.16 ERA. First pitch is scheduled for 6:40 PM PT.

Marko Ukalovic was filling in for Morris Phillips who does the Giants podcasts Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s coming off two game loss open up against Ohtani and Angels tonight at Coliseum

Oakland A’s pitcher Adrian Martinez deals against the San Francisco Giants line up in the top of the second inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Aug 7, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara:

#1 Allowing too many homers, and completely absent of hitting triples, the A’s were locked into their 2022 form on Sunday. Oh, and don’t dismiss the playing poorly at home at the Coliseum part as well.

#2 The Giants came across the Bay on life support, but left with a couple of deep breaths, after beating the hosts 6-4 on Sunday, and sweeping the brief, two-game Bay Bridge series affair.

#3 The A’s built momentum surrounding the All-Star break, winning 10 of 14, but that’s officially lost. They’ve dropped three straight, and six of eight following that two weeks of encouraging progress. 

#4 A’s Starter Adrian Martinez had Mike Yastrzemski in an 0-2 hole in the third inning when the first long ball was struck. Unfortunately, his pitch location on a potential strikeout pitch wasn’t near what it needed to be.

#5 The Los Angeles Angels and A’s open up a three game series at the Coliseum Monday night Angels starter Jose Suarez (3-4, 4.55) he’ll be opposed by A’s starter Cole Irvin (6-8, 4.40) a 6:40pm PDT first pitch.

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

San Francisco Giants report: Giants Top A’s 6-4 Retaining the Bay Trophy

San Francisco Giants Mike Yastrzemski (right) celebrates his solo home run with teammate Joc Pederson (left) in the top of the third inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Aug 7, 2022 (AP News photo)

Giants Top A’s 6-4 Retaining the Bay Trophy

By Barbara Mason

OAKLAND–Sunday afternoon the San Francisco Giants (53-55) won their seventh consecutive interleague road game 6-4 over the Oakland Athletics (41-68). The Giants swept Oakland in this two game series

The game remained scoreless through the first two innings until the Giants Mike Yastrzemski stepped up to the plate and homered in the third inning, the first of two home runs for the slugger in this game, The Giants would add to their 1-0 lead in the fifth inning.

Austin Slater doubled driving in Brandon Crawford for a 2-0 lead. The A’s would answer in the fifth inning with a single run but San Francisco was just getting started leading 2-1.

Thairo Estrada homered in the sixth inning with Wilmer Flores on base to take a 4-1 lead. Oakland continued to fight but did not even get on the scoreboard until the fifth inning. In the seventh inning Tony Kemp grounded into a fielders choice to second and Vimael Machin scored cutting the Giant’s lead in half 4-2.

In the eighth inning Yastrzemski hit his second home run of the game with Brandon Crawford on base and San Francisco had a 6-2 lead.

Oakland made a valiant effort in the eighth to catch up to San Francisco in the later innings. Seth Brown who has been hitting great since he returned from paternity leave knocked one out of the park with Sean Murphy on base but that was all that the A’s could muster. The final was 6-4.

The Giants got a great game from pitcher Logan Webb. He went seven innings allowing four hits, two earned runs and five strikeouts. The Giants had nine hits in the game as did Oakland. It was those long balls that made all the difference.

San Francisco will continue their west coast road trip heading down to San Diego to take on the Padres Monday night. Alex Wood will take the mound for the Giants with a 4.42 ERA and a 7-9 win loss record. The Padres will send Blake Snell who comes in with a 4-5 win loss record and a 4.16 ERA. First pitch is scheduled for 6:40 PM PT.

Triple Bad: A’s fall 6-4 to the Giants, lose Bay series and set a frustrating ML record

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND–Allowing too many homers, and completely absent of hitting triples, the A’s were locked into their 2022 form on Sunday. Oh, and don’t dismiss the playing poorly at home at the Coliseum part as well.

The Giants came across the Bay on life support, but left with a couple of deep breaths, after beating the hosts 6-4 on Sunday, and sweeping the brief, two-game Bay Bridge series affair.

The A’s built momentum surrounding the All-Star break, winning 10 of 14, but that’s officially lost. They’ve dropped three straight, and six of eight following that two weeks of encouraging progress. Lately, the A’s have given up too many home runs, with three coming on Sunday, and a total of 13 homers allowed in the last three games.

Starter Adrian Martinez had Mike Yastrzemski in an 0-2 hole in the third inning when the first long ball was struck. Unfortunately, his pitch location on a potential strikeout pitch wasn’t near what it needed to be.

“It shows how slim the margin for error is,” catcher Sean Murphy said. “Those hurt.”

Reliever A.J. Puk was also in an advantageous 0-2 spot facing Thairo Estrada in the sixth, but he too caught to much of the plate with his next pitch, and the Giants’ lead increased to 4-1. Yastrzemski struck again in the eighth off Austin Pruitt, not on an 0-2 pitch, but that capped the A’s hat trick of bumbles.

Other than that, A’s pitching competed. Martinez picked it up, leaving the door open for another start for the prospect that was acquired from the Padres in the Sean Manaea deal.

“He was more in line. His change-up had a lot of depth to it,” manager Mark Kotsay said of Martinez. “His slider had more depth, it wasn’t side to side. I think he’s moving in the right direction.”

Pitching actually kept the A’s in it, as they sliced the deficit to 6-4 in the eighth when Seth Brown connected. Overall, the A’s limited the Giants to 1 for 6 with runners in scoring position and stranded eight base runners.

The A’s went a 69th consecutive game without a triple which is lengthiest stretch for any Major League club since 1901. The A’s set the AL record on Saturday, and surpassed the 2021 Mets on Sunday for eliminating a key piece of offense from their repertoire. Hitting just .216 as a team with a .276 on-base percentage has the A’s poised to break a few more records for offensive futility, which hopefully doesn’t come to pass. In winning 12 of their previous 20 prior to Sunday, the A’s hit .244 which shows a little improvement not only goes a long way, it could keep you out of the unsightly portions of the record book.

On Monday, the A’s draw the Angels which is significant in that it may be their last chance to avoid a last place finish in the AL West. Cole Irvin will face Anaheim’s Jose Suarez in the 6:40pm opener.

A’s HALL OF FAME CEREMONY:

Joe Rudi, Eric Chavez, Sal Bando, executive Keith Lieppman, clubhouse man Steve Vucinich and the late Ray Fosse were inducted into the Athletics Hall of Fame in a pre-game ceremony. Present for the occasion were Reggie Jackson, Rickey Henderson and Dave Stewart, a subtle reminder of the better days for Oakland’s baseball jewel.

Experience of watching Class A ball in Stockton

Stockton Ports picked up a win over the Modesto Nuts in Class A minor league ball on Thu Aug 4, 2022 in Stockton (@stocktonports photo)

Thursday, August 4, 2022

By Eric Naiman and Lewis Rubman

Modesto Nuts (51-48). 10. 8. 2

Stockton Ports (33-66). 7. 11. 3

STOCKTON–Watching a ball game in the San Joaquin Valley is different from doing it on the shores of San Francisco Bay. For one thing, the temperature at game time was 93 degrees.

Here, in the low class A California League, Grantland Rice’s oft quoted lines “For when the One Great Scorer comes to mark against your name,/He writes – not that you won or lost – / But how you played the game,” takes on new meaning. It’s of no great moment that the 33-66 Stockton Ports, on their way to the worst season in franchise history, dropped an 11 inning 10-7 decision to the 51-48 Modest Nuts. What matters to the organizations to which the teams belong-the A’s and Mariners, respectively-is how well individual players performed. To the fans, it’s the pleasure of the players’ performances.

No one on the Ports’ roster figures in the list of Oakland’s top 50 prospects. Gone are the days when you could spend a balmy summer’s night watching the Matts, Chapman and Olson, strut their stuff on the banks of the delta. The Nuts, on the other hand, boast of four top prospects. They are, in descending order Harry Ford, tonight’s DH, left fielder Gabriel González, and two. switch hitters, third baseman Milkar Pérez and center fielder Jonatán Clase. Modesto’s starting lineup also included the delightfully named right fielder Walking Cabrera. The home plate umpire’s moniker also was a source of innocent merriment, Daniel Bytheway.

The top of the third was neither innocent nor merry. Modesto scored one run, no hits, one error, a passed ball, a balk, and two wild pitches. (The top of the second was pretty ugly, too, but you get the picture).

It wasn’t a well played game, but it was an exciting one. The victorious Nuts used four pitchers. They were, in order of appearance Jake Miednik, Chris Jefferson, José Geraldo, and the winner, Raúl Alcántara.

Ed Baram took the loss for The Ports sent five men to the mound, Yehizón Sánchez, who started, followed by Luke Anderson, Hunter Brreault, Ed Baram, who took the loss, and Clark, who closed out the top of the eleventh.

The outstanding player of the game for Stockton was probably Junior Perez, whose two doubles produced two RBIs. He also stole third base twice, dying there in the third and in the eighth, and temporarily prevented Modesto from taking the lead in the eleventh with a perfect strike from center field to the plate. Unfortunately, he probably could have won the game for Stockton in the bottom of the eight but failed to tag up after a fly ball to shallow left. (He had taken much more of a risk on the previous play, when he just managed to elude the tag on his second steal.)

The middle relief pitching for Stockton was also a strong point. Luke Anderson pitched two and two third innings, striking out five and allowing just one hit, albeit a home run. Hunter Breault loaded the bases in the ninth by walking two and allowing one hit, but he got out of trouble by striking out the other three batters he faced.

The Ports were one pitch away from escaping the tenth inning without having allowed a run, but at the plate and on the mound they were lacking in the clutch, leaving runners on third in both the eighth and ninth. They are 8– 25 in the second half of the season. They must play better than .500 ball for the rest of the year if they are to avoid having the worst record in the franchise’s history.

San Francisco Giants report: San Francisco handles Oakland 7-3 in Bay Bridge series

San Francisco Giants slugger LeMonte Wade Jr belts a two run sixth inning home run against the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Sat Aug 6, 2022 (AP News photo)

San Francisco Handles Oakland 7-3 In Bay Bridge Series

By Barbara Mason

OAKLAND–Saturday afternoon the San Francisco Giants (52-55) took on the Oakland A’s (41-67) at the Oakland Coliseum. San Francisco has been having quite a struggle since the All-Star game winning a paltry 3 of 15 games. Today they sent Carlos Rodon to the mound who comes in with an ERA of 3.00. Oakland pitcher Adam Oller has really been struggling with a 1-4 win loss record and an ERA of 7.68.

San Francisco had a strong start in this game scoring in the first inning for an early 1-0 lead. The Giants had the bases loaded in the first but only came away with a single run. Joc Pederson scored when Brandon Crawford walked. A’s pitcher Oller had a rough start walking three in the first inning giving the Giants a huge opportunity. Oakland was lucky to give up only one run in the opening inning.

The Giants put another run up on the board in the second inning extending their lead 2-0. LaMonte Wade Jr. scored off a Pederson single. Oakland would cut the Giants lead in half in the third inning. Sean Murphy singled driving in Nick Allen and the A’s were threatening.

San Francisco put an end to the Oakland charge in the sixth inning scoring four runs and taking a 6-1 lead. Wade Jr. hit a homer with Joey Bart on base for a couple of runs and J.D. Davis also solo homered in the sixth. The fourth run was off a Brandon Belt single with Austin Slater on base.

The third home run of the game for San Francisco came off the bat of Joey Bart and the Giants were in full control of this game 7-1 going into the ninth inning. The A’s inched a little closer in the ninth when Sky Bolt homered with Elvis Andrus on base, making it 7-3. It was just to little to late for Oakland. The final was 7-3

San Francisco had 11 hits in this game. The A’s had ten. Carlos Rodon had a good one giving up five hits and a single run. The A’s Adam Oller had a tough outing giving up eight hits and four runs with only one strikeout.

Tomorrow’s game will be another big one at the Coliseum. Saturday night’s game had an attendance of 40,065, the largest crowd Oakland has seen all season. The winner of the game Sunday will take possession of “The Bridge” trophy.

Logan Webb will take the mound for San Francisco with a 9-5 win loss record and a 3.20 ERA. At the time of this post Oakland’s starter was still undecided. First pitch is scheduled for 1:07 PM PT.

Oakland A’s report: Wade and Davis hit back to back home runs in Giants 4 run sixth to defeat A’s 7-3

Oakland A’s starter Adam Oller delivers a pitch against the San Francisco Giants in the top of the second inning at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

San Francisco (52-55). 7. 11. 0

Oakland (41-67) 3.10.0

Saturday, August 6, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–This past Thursday night, I took in a game between the Modesto Nuts and the Stockton Ports (and incidentally misreported Stockton’s losing pitcher as Clark Cota when the loss went to Ports’ Ed Baram).

When I returned after midnight from the sweltering banks of the San Joaquin Delta to Oakland’s benign breezes, I began to muse about what it would be like if the big leagues followed the minor league model of a split season.

The A’s before this evening’s nationally televised contest with the San Francisco Giants had a horrendous record of 41-66. But if, like the California League, we wiped the slate clean at the season’s half-way point, Oakland would have a respectable mark of 15-11 in the second half and a decent shot at a playoff berth.

Not that I’m advocating for such a radical change; I’m no fan of the existing open door playoff system, and opening the door even wider would just make the situation worse. But it’s a pleasant thought….

Giant backers don’t have even that consolation. The team that won 107 games last season was 41-41, the definition of mediocrity, in the first half of 2022. At 51-55, they came to the Coliseum a 10-14 team for the season’s second half. It’s nothing for the Athletics´faithful to gloat about, but a bit of schadenfreude can be tonic in the world of fandom.

Game recap: In the end, the tardily rebounding Athletics were trounced by the faltering Giants to the tune of 7-3.

The green and gold sent Adam Oller, a 27 year old righthander, who himself was rather green; his season record of 1-4,7.88 also constituting his lifetime mark. He has commuted between Oakland and Las Vegas, returning here most recently on July 27 to defeat Houston for his first big league victory.

He was up against Carlos Rodón, who had somehow escaped the orange and black’s August 2 yard sale and faced the A’s with a mark of 9-6, 3.00 at game time.

The experienced 29 year old southpaw throws twice as many four seamers as sliders, and the two of them account for about 93% of his deliveries. The other 7% or so is made up of curves and changeups. There’s a more than 10 mph difference between his fastball and change of pace.

Before the game started, the Giants restored Brandon Crawford and Joc Pederson to active duty. Both were in the starting lineup for San Francisco. To make room for them on the roster, the orange and black DFA’d Dixon Machado and optioned David Villar to Sacramento.

The A’s rookie lasted five plus innings and surrendered four runs, all earned although one was posthumous. The Giants touched him for eight hits, one of which was a home run, and a walk. He threw 93 pitches, 31 of which were balls. He took the loss and now has a record of 1-5, 7.63.

The Giants’ veteran, on the other hand, allowed only one run in his 5-1/3 innings of work. It was earned and came on five hits. Rodón struck out three without issuing a free pass. He threw 98 pitches, 38 of them balls. He earned his tenth victory against six defeats, and his ERA dropped to 2.95.

Oller began unpropitiously. He got two quick strikes on each of his first two hitters, Pederson and Luis González, only to walk both of them. He settled down to retire Wilmer Flores and Brandon Belt. But then Mike Yastrzemski laid down a beautiful bunt between the mound and third to load the bases. Brandon Crawford followed by drawing a walk on, you guessed it, another full count, and when Joey Bart flew out to center to end the inning, San Francisco was leading 1-0.

Chad Pinder blasted a one out double just to the right on the Craftsman sign in the right center field, but they wasted that opportunity to even the score.

The Giants’ didn’t waste LaMonte Wade, Jr.’s lead off double against the State Farm sign above and a little to the left of where Pinder’s shot had bounced. After Tommy LaStella grounded out to second, Pederson notched his 44th RBI of the season with a single to left center, bringing Wade home with the run that brought SF’s advantage to 2-0.

The home team drew close in the third with Nick Allen opening the frame with a single to right and, after Jonah Bride flew out to center, taking second on Sean Pinder’s ground out to third. Sean Murphy then sent a sinking liner that fell to the grass in center for an RBI single that brought Oakland to within a run of the Giants.

Oller held the Giants in check through the fifth but gave up a lead off single to Bart in the sixth. The count went to 1-2 on Wade. Oller offered him a 93 mh four seamer and the Giants’ DH took it deep, 385 to right for his fourth dinger of the year, a two run blast that put the Giants up 4-1.

That was it for Oller. Kirby Snead relieved (if that’s the word) him, letting pinch hitting JD Davis take his first pitch, a 92 mph sinker, a full 437 feet into center. The back to back homers came on back to back pitches from two different pitchers. But the Giants weren’t done. Austin Slater hit for Pederson and walked and stole second, scoring on a two out single to right by Belt that left Oakland behind by five.

Submariner Tyler Rogers took over for Rodón with one down and no one on base in the home sixth. A two out double by Lowrie didn’t prevent Rogers from A’s off the board.

In spite of his ineffective job in the sixth frame. Snead still was on the mound when the Giants came to bat in the seventh. He looked good striking out Crawford. He didn’t look good yielding Bart’s second round tripper of the afternoon, a solo shot that travelled 406 feet into center field. It boosted the Giants’ catcher’s batting average to .213 and his HR total to 10. Bart certainly is on track to coming out of his long slump. He finished the day at .211.

The A’s trailed 7-1 when everyone had sung “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” and Yuniór Marte was on the mound for SF. All he allowed was a base on balls to Nick Allen. Jarlín García held the Athletics to a swinging bunt single by Murphy in the eighth.

Austin Pruitt held the Giants scoreless on a walk in the eighth. Sam Selman did the same in the ninth.

Oakland showed some signs of life against García in their last turn at bat. Elvis Andrus hit a bouncer back to the mound that got past the Giant pitcher and that Flores couldn’t handle at second. Skye Bolt, who had pinch hit for Piscotty in the seventh, jolted a 94 mph four seamer 368 feet into left to close the gap to 7-3, where it stayed until the bitter end.

The A’s haven’t announced who will start for them in tomorrow’s 1:07 meeting with their cross bay rivals. The Giants will send Logan Webb (9-5, 3.20) to the mound.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: It’s the last time the Giants and A’s battle this season

San Francisco Giants hitter Luis Gonzalez takes the Chicago Cubs pitching deep on Sat Jul 30, 2022 in the bottom of the fourth inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco. Gonzalez has the highest batting average .283 coming into the two game series against the Oakland A’s at the Coliseum this weekend (AP News photo file)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary:

It would be easier for me to grow another arm than for the San Francisco Giants or the Oakland A’s to make it to post season for this season as these two teams will be on the same field this weekend at the Oakland Coliseum.

Big crowds are expected on for the weekend series around 40,000 predicted on Saturday and the A’s are expecting more on Sunday. Most of those sales are from Giants fans because when you win 107 games like the Giants did last season you sell a lot of tickets for the next year.

There also was a lot of hope that the Giants would be in the race this year but it’s either going to be the San Diego Padres or the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Giants won’t make it as a wild card and they certainly won’t win the division.

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