This Time, Almost Everything Runs Smoothly: A’s break through with 4-0 win over the Royals

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND–Jared Koenig, a 28-year old pitcher who’s never been anything special according to scouting reports, was just that on Sunday afternoon.

Koenig, who’s seemingly toiled professionally everywhere except the Major Leagues until now, pitched into the sixth inning, allowing two hits and no runs to pick up his initial big league win in front of friends and his father, Greg, up from Aptos, CA.

“He didn’t strike anyone out but he got through 5 2/3 with a lot of contact and a good defense behind him,” manager Mark Kotsay said of Koenig. “For him, his journey through independent ball, through Australia, through the minor leagues, it’s a great reward for him.”

“It’s a great feeling to know that I’m able to be successful out here,” Koenig said with a big smile on his face. “Today was awesome.”

Good news couldn’t come any sooner for Koenig, who lost his first two Oakland starts, and the A’s, who had lost 25 of 32, and the first two games of their series with the Royals. But on Sunday, with 14,341 in attendance at the Coliseum, the defense was staunch, the pitching stingy and Seth Brown and Sean Murphy supplied big home runs to end an eight-game slide at home.

The Royals ended a week in the Bay Area with little noise. They managed rallies in the third off Koenig, and the sixth but both were quelled with Domingo Acevedo coming on to retire Michael Taylor Jr. to end the sixth. Kansas City had won three straight, but starter Brady Singer allowed the home run to Seth Brown and he set the table in the sixth, prior to Murphy’s home run off Jose Cuas that put the A’s up four runs.

“Cuas has been really good,” manager Mike Matheny said. “He did a great job of getting that first out. Made a really good pitch to get that pop-up, then unfortunately got too much of the middle of the plate against Murphy and it cost us three runs.”

The A’s have won just 3 of their last 18, but they avoided getting swept by the Royals, who have the second worst record in the American League but looked “noticeably worse” in comparison according to local journalist Ben Ross, who covered Friday’s game.

The A’s afternoon had its moment when Tony Kemp, running hard from first base looked to take advantage of a base hit that was booted by centerfielder Taylor enough to keep Kemp churning to home plate. But after a beautiful slide eluded Salvador Perez, replay showed that Kemp’s back pocket, turned inside out and flapping was tagged by Perez, something only replay could catch. Kemp, on review, was called out.

“The most 2022 Oakland A’s play ever…” Kemp termed it.

The A’s are off on Monday and open a three-game set with the Mariners on Tuesday. James Kaprelian will face Marco Gonzales of Seattle in the opener.

Oakland A’s podcast with Charlie O: A’s can’t get it together drop two straight against Royals; A’s need a win Sunday to avoid sweep

Oakland A’s left fielder Seth Brown literally leaves it all on the field and can’t catch the Kansas City Royals Michael A Taylor’s drive which turned into a triple in the top of the seventh inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sat Jun 18, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Charlie O:

#1 The Kansas City Royals starter Brad Keller who had not won in two months came out Saturday against the Oakland A’s pitching no hit ball through six inning and was lifted in the seventh and was the winning pitcher in a 2-0 pitcher duel at the Oakland Coliseum.

#2 A’s starter Cole Irvin pitched 6.1 innings, giving up just three hits and an earned run it would have been good enough to win if the A’s just got some hitting.

#3 In relief for the Royals Jose Cuas got two batters out and gave up a double in the bottom of the eighth inning. Then Royal reliever Scott Barlow followed up facing four hitters and setting them down and the Royals came away with a two hit shutout.

#4 The win was Keller’s first win since May 3 and he kept the A’s line up off balance all game long retiring 17 of his first 18 batters and he looked like he might have a shot at no hitter going into the seven inning.

#5 The A’s have one more chance at the Royals and to avoid a sweep. The Royals will start right hander Brady Singer (3-1, 4.24) and for the A’s left hander Jared Koenig (0-2, 11.25) a 1:07 pm PDT first pitch at the Coliseum.

Join Charlie O every other Sunday for the A’s podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Clutch hitting and pitching lead Royals past A’s 2-0

Kansas City Royals’ Brad Keller pitches against the Oakland Athletics during the fifth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sat Jun 17, 2022 (AP News photo)

By Daniel Dullum
Saturday, June 18, 2022

Timely RBIs by Ryan O’Hearn and Whit Merrifield provided all the offense the Kansas City Royals (23-41) would need Saturday to compliment a quality pitching performance at the Coliseum, as the Royals blanked the Oakland A’s (22-45) 2-0.

The win was the third in a row for Kansas City before an announced crowd of 10,936, who saw the A’s lose their eighth straight home game. It was also the Royals’ third straight road win.

It was a tough loss for Cole Irvin (2-4), who threw 6 1/3 strong innings. Irvin surrendered one run on three hits, walked two and struck out six.

The Athletics’ bullpen – Domingo Acevedo, Zach Jackson, A.J. Puk and Dany Jimenez – combined for six strikeouts, two walks, and gave up one run on four hits over the remaining 2 2/3 innings.

Brad Keller (2-8), Jose Cuas and Scott Barlow combined for a two-hit shutout. Keller struck out six, walked three and retired the first 17 batters he faced until giving up a two-out double to Jonah Bride in the bottom of the sixth. It was Keller’s first win since May 3.

Barlow struck out one in a scoreless 1 1/3-inning effort to earn his eighth save.

With one out in the Kansas City seventh, Michael A. Taylor tripled to left center and scored with when Acevedo surrendered a double to O’Hearn, who was pinch-hitting for Emmanuel Rivera.
Going into Saturday’s game, O’Hearn was hitting .546 with a home run and three runs batted in as a pinch-hitter this season.

The Royals made it 2-0 in the ninth when Kyle Isbel was hit by a Puk pitch, was sacrificed to second and scored on Merrifield’s base hit to left-center.

Luis Barrera had the only other Oakland hit, his fifth double of the season.

The Royals will go for the sweep on Sunday, with Brady Singer (3-1, 4.24) on the mound, facing Oakland’s Jared Koenig (0-2, 11.25). Game time is 1:07 p.m.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: A’s just not getting any hitting; Are A’s saving up on player salaries until they get a new park?

Oakland A’s pitcher Frankie Montas bare hands a grounder in the top of the fifth inning as the Kansas City Royals Mike Lopez tries to run it out at the Oakland Coliseum on Fri Jun 17, 2022

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary:

Both the visiting Kansas City Royals (22-41) and the Oakland A’s (22-44) both teams are in last place in their respective divisions. It’s going to be an interesting series between these two clubs which opened up on Friday night.

Both teams are struggling trying to win a few more games before the halfway point of the season just in a few weeks mid July. The Royals are on a two game win streak after defeating the San Francisco Giants last Wednesday and with a four run 5-1 victory on Friday.

It’s been tough for the Royals a lot of people have expected a lot more from manager Mike Matheny’s team. Matheny formerly managed the St Louis Cardinals and was a catcher for the Cardinals and San Francisco Giants.

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

A’s just can’t score runs as Royals take advantage 5-1

Oakland Athletics left fielder Chad Pinder gets in the left field corner to make a brilliant catch on a ball hit by Kansas City Royals’ Bobby Witt Jr. in the top of the six inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Friday, June 17, 2022 (AP News photo)

Kansas City. 5. 11. 0

Oakland. 1. 5. 1

Friday, June 17, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–The Oakland A’s (22-44) and the Kansas City Royals (22-41) went into tonight’s encounter fairly evenly matched. Both teams had won the last game of their previous series, KC squeezing past the Giants 3-2 at Oracle Park on Wednesday and the A’s hanging on to beat the Red Sox 4-3 at Fenway Thursday.

That brought the season’s record for the visitors to 21-41, which left them in the cellar of the AL Central with an average of .339 ,and gave Oakland a mark of 21-43, .338, fifth in the five team AL West. The Royals would pick up their 22nd victory on Friday night at the Oakland Coliseum with a 5-1 win against their host the A’s.

The Royals were outhitting the Athletics .238 to .211, but the green and gold’s staff ERA was 4.44 against the midwesterners’ 5.12. As the one time manager of the Oakland Oaks, Casey (from KC) Stengel, wryly remarked, “Good pitching always beats good hitting and vice versa.”

When tonight’s dust had settled, the won and lost figures for the midwesterners were 22-41, and those of the hometown crew had fallen to 21-44.

Righty Frankie Montás, taking the mound at 3-6, 3.40 last pitched on June 11, where he won the first of the A’s two victories in that disastrous nine game trip. With his arsenal of fastballs, changeups, sliders, and cutters, he is a prime candidate for the Next Athletic To Be Traded Award.

Kansas City chose tonight’s starter, Daniel Lynch, as their first pick in the 2018 draft. The southpaw quickly rose through their ranks, arriving in the show in 2021 and managing to go 4-5, albeit with an ERA of 5.84. He features a fastball, a slider, and a change of pace.

Montás got into hot water early. Whit Merrifield pulled the second pitch of the game into left for a lead off single and was on second one pitch later after Andrew Benintendi’s opposite field single through the hole between short and third.

The Oakland starter earned himself a brief respite striking out Bobby Witt, Jr. but allowed clean up hitter Salvador Pérez a run scoring two base hit to center that sent Merrifield home and Benintendi to third.

After striking out MJ Meléndez, Montás walked Hunter Dozier to load the bases but escaped further damage by getting Kyle Isabel to foul out to Seth Brown at first.

The hot water got closer to a boil in the top of the second. Nicky López drove a one out single up the middle and advanced to second on a wild pitch before Merrifield went down swinging on a 3-2 cutter.

Benintendi drove him in with his second single to left in two innings. Montás closed down the frame by fanning Witt, also for the second time in as many innings. It was Montás’ fourth strike out, but the A’s now were down 2-0.

Between the top and the bottom of the second, first base umpire Charlie Ramos replaced crew chief Ron Kulpa behind the plate. No reason was given

The momentum shifted after Lynch retired Matt Davidson and Seth Brown to open their half of the second. Elvis Andrus hit a clean single to center and motored to third on Jonah Bride’s single to left.

Bride, recently called up from AA Midland, moved into scoring position when Lynch unleashed a wild pitch to Christián Pache, who eventually walked, clogging the base baths with Oaklanders. Chad Pinder then ripped a single to right, which plated Andrus. The ball was so well hit that Bride had to hold up at second.

It was a good thing he did because Kyle Isbel made a beautiful throw home that would have nabbed him. But Laureano grounded out to short, and the inning ended with Oakland trailing 2-1. Three men left on base. Where have I heard that song before?

Montás coughed the run his defense had just earned him, surrendering a 422 foot blast to center that went for Salvador Pérez’s tenth round tripper of the year. It came off of a 95mph four seamer. Thanks to a 6-4-3 twin killing and a fly to right, that was all the damage KC could inflict on the Athletics in that episode.

A pitcher’s best friend, this time Andrus unassisted to Brown, kept the Royals off the board in the fourth in spite of their two hits, both singles.

It looked as if the double play would once more help Montás escape trouble when, with Witt on first with a lead off single in the fifth, Pérez hit a bouncer to Davidson at the hot corner. But the ball skipped right by the rookie, Pérez reached at first and Witt was, briefly, on third before coming home on MJ Meléndez’s sacrifice fly to deep right.

Pérez took second on a wild pitch to Hunter Dozier, who finished his at bat grounding out to short. With two out and runners on first and second Michael Taylor popped up to third on Montás’s hundredth pitch.

But Davidson just stood there as pellet fell to earth for what the rules mandate had to be scored as a single. Montás finished the inning and his start by making a fine play to throw López out at first on a little nubber he hit between the mound at the plate.

It was a hell of a way to end an outing. Montás had lasted five innings and thrown 103 pitches, 62 for strikes. He allowed five runs, three of them earned, on ten hits, one of them a home run, three walks, and two wild pitches. He struck out four. He took the loss, giving him a record of 3-6, 3.53. Austin Pruitt replaced him in the sixth.

Pruitt didn’t receive any better infield support than Montás did. The first batter he faced, Merrifield, sent a bouncing ball to Davidson, I should say THROUGH to Davidson, that Andrus, backing up the recently promoted third sacker Davidson, fielded but wasn’t able to deliver to first on time. Again, it had to be called a hit.

The reliever did benefit from two fine catches by Pinder in left. On a leaping grab on the warning track, the other a running leaping grab at the wall. He managed to finish up the frame unscored upon and stay on the mound to pitch a perfect seventh and eighth.

Lynch also lasted five innings, during which he threw 99 pitches, 67 of which were deemed strikes. Like Montás he threw two wild pitches, but he allowed only a single run, which was earned, on four hits and two walks. His strikeout total, ten, equaled the number of hits Montás had yielded.

Lynch got the win, making him 3-6, 5,19 for the year. His replacement to open the Oakland sixth was right hander Dylan Coleman who needed 23 pitches to the A’s down and out before yielding to Taylor Clarke after the seventh inning stretch.

He retired them to a conga beat, 1-2-3 in his first inning of relief and put down the two batters he faced in the two-thirds of an inning that he hurled in the eighth. Lefty Gabe Speier took care of the third out and came back to face two A’s in the ninth, walking Brown and getting Andrus out on a liner to deep center.

Lou Trivino, once the mainstay of Oakland’s bullpen, came in to face the Royals in their half of the ninth, hardly the high leverage situation in which he was used in his hayday. He put KC away, allowing only a walk, helped by a beautiful backhanded catch and leaping throw to first by Andrus.

After Speier retired Andrus, Josh Staumont was given the ball. He walked Bride, sending Brown to second. Luis Barrera, who had hit for Pache in the seventh and stayed in the game as right fielder, fanned. With two down, Stephen Vogt pinch hit for Pinder and flew out to right.

The series continues with a pair of day games over the weekend. Saturday’s game starts at 1:07 with Cole Irvin (2-3,3.34) going for Oakland against Kansas City’s Brad Keller (1-8,4.74).

A’s salvage win to end nine-game road trip beat Red Sox 4-3

Tony Kemp (5) and Seth Brown (15) and Oakland A’s players celebrate their win over the Boston Red Sox to avoid getting swept at Fenway Park in Boston on Thu Jun 16, 2022 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s were able to finish off the disastrous nine-game road trip with a win over the Boston Red Sox on Thursday afternoon. It wasn’t easy, as the A’s know the Red Sox offense can erupt at any time, but they were able to hold on to beat Boston 4-3.

The A’s starter Paul Blackburn pitched very well for the A’s on Thursday. Blackburn went five and a third innings to win his sixth game. He allowed one run and eight hits. Blackburn walked two hitters and struck out four. He left the game with the A’s in the lead 4-1. The A’s bullpen did not cave when Boston scored two unearned runs in the bottom of the eighth.

Here’s how the game went. Oakland scored three runs in the top of the third. With one out, centerfielder Cristian Pache doubled when Boston’s second baseman Trevor Story misjudged the ball, and it fell in safely.

Chad Pinder singled to drive in Pache with the A’s first run. Ramon Laureano followed with a double to deep right-center-field. A’s catcher, Christian Bethancourt, who has been swinging a hot bat, singled to drive in both runners.

The A’s led 3-0 midway through the third inning. The Sox got one back in their half of the third. Rafael Devers walked to start the inning. J.D.Martinez singled. Devers went to third on an error and scored on Xander Bogaerts ground-out. The A’s lead 3-1 after three.

With two out in the top of the seventh, Seth Brown singled. Brown went to second on a passed ball. Brown scored on Devers’ fielding error. The A’s led 4-1.

The Red Sox scored two unearned runs in the bottom of the eighth. The A’s had lefty Sam Moll on the hill to work the eighth. Rob Refsnyder, pinch-hitting for Franchy Cordero, singled. Christian Vasquez walked to give Boston two men on and no out.

Moll retired Jackie Bradley, Jr. for the first out. Bobby Dalbec was out on a fly ball to centerfield. Rafael Devers reached on third baseman Jonah Bride’s throwing error. Vasquez advanced to third on the play. A’s manager Mark Kotsay brought in closer Dany Jiminez to pitch. J.D.Martinez drove in Vasquez with an infield hit. Jiminez got out of the jam by retiring Xander Bogaerts. The A’s led 4-3. 

Jimenez set the Red Sox down 1-2-3 in the ninth to preserve the win for the A’s. 

Game Notes: The A’s ended the road trip with two wins and even losses. They are 3-16 in their last 19 games. The A’s, for the season, are 22-43 and are in last place in the AL West. Boston drops to 34-30.

Blackburn threw 98 pitches, 61 for strikes. His record is now 6-2. Dany Jiminez earned his 11th save.

The line score for Oakland was four runs, eight hits, and two errors. Boston’s line was three runs, eleven hits, and one error. Boston won the season series with Oakland five games to one.

The A’s return home to face the Kansas City Royals for three games starting Friday night. The Royals have no announced a starter and Frankie Montas (3-6, 3.40) will go for Oakland.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah Salmonson: A’s scratch out a second win to end nine game road trip in Boston

Tony Kemp (5), Chad Pinder (10), and Elvis Andrus (17) all celebrate the Oakland A’s win over the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on Thu Jun 16, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jeremiah:

#1 Thursday night in Boston the Oakland A’s (22-43) picked up their second win to conclude their nine game road trip on Thursday night. The win marked the A’s second win in 15 games overall with a razor close 4-3 win over the Boston Red Sox (34-30).

#2 The A’s got help from starting pitcher Paul Blackburn who pitched into the sixth inning and got some run support from Christian Bethancourt who slugged a two run RBI single.

#3 The A’s also got some offensive help from Chad Pinder who got an RBI single. The A’s had a three run top of the third inning that gave them some insurance going forward in the contest.

#4 In a recent interview with A’s general manager David Forst, Forst said some of the reasons for the A’s struggles were coming from the ball park issues and what is happening on the field. The A’s had dealt some of their key players and basically Forst said the club shouldn’t be expected to win like they had in previous years.

#5 The A’s open a three game series Friday night against the Kansas City Royals at the Oakland Coliseum starting pitchers for the Royals no starter announced yet the A’s will go with Frankie Montas (3-6 ERA 3.40) a 6:40 pm PDT first pitch at the Coliseum.

Join Jeremiah for the A’s podcasts heard Fridays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: A’s Kaprielian facing too much Red Sox hitting in 10-1 loss

Boston Red Sox’s Alex Verdugo gets congratulations from first base coach Ramon Vazquez (84) after going yard for a two run homer in the bottom of the sixth inning at Fenway Park in Boston on Wed Jun 15, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 The Oakland A’s (21-43) were crushed in a 10-1 laugher at Fenway Park in the third game of this four game series. Jonah Bride who was called up Tuesday got two hits on Wednesday and Matt Davidson had a pinch hit home in the sixth inning for the A’s.

#2 The Boston Red Sox (34-29) kept pouring it on and got lots of help from slugger Rafael Devers who hit for his fourth consecutive game home run.

#3 The A’s just couldn’t get any traction on this road trip and A’s manager Mark Kotsay said A’s starter James Kaprielian has had some good outings but in this loss to the Red Sox on Wednesday Kaprielian will just have to forget about this one and move on.

#4 Oakland A’s pinch hitter Matt Davidson hit a top of the sixth inning home run off Red Sox reliever and former A’s pitcher Jake Diekman which ended Boston’s shutout.

#5 The A’s conclude this ten game road trip starting with Paul Blackburn (5-2, 2.31) for the Red Sox Rich Hill (2-3, 4.38) a 10:38 AM PDT first pitch at Fenway Park.

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

Red Sox cruise to an easy 10-1 victory over A’s; Devers homers for 4th game in a row

The Boston Red Sox Rafael Devers hits a second inning two run home run as Oakland A’s catcher Sean Murphy can only watch at Fenway Park in Boston on Wed Jun 15, 2022 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

For the first four innings of the game Wednesday between the A’s and the Red Sox, it was deja vu once more. The Red Sox tallied six runs in the first four innings, just as they did Tuesday night. Last night, they failed to score after the fourth inning. They scored four more times tonight to trounce the hapless Oakland A’s 10-1. 

James Kaprielian started for the A’s. Kaprielian pitched well in his last outing, and the A’s hoped Kaprielian would continue to pitch well. James had trouble with his command. In his three and 2/3rds innings of work, he threw 94 pitches; 48 were strikes.

He walked six batters and gave up seven hits and six runs. Reliever Domingo Acevedo was tagged for a two-run dinger off the bat of Alex Verdugo in the sixth inning. Lou Trivino had another rough night, giving up four hits and two runs in the eighth.

Boston grabbed an early 1-0 lead in the bottom of the first. With one out, Kaprielian walked Rafael Devers and J.D.Martinez. Xander Bogaerts singled to load the bases. Kaprielian retired Alex Verdugo on a ground to second.

Devers scored on the play. The Sox lead 1-0. The Red Sox increased the lead to 3-0 in the bottom of the second. With two out and a man at first, Devers sent a line drive into the bullpen in right field for his 16th home run. The exit velocity was a smoking-hot 113 miles-per-hour. It was the fourth game in a row that Devers had homered.

The Sox plated their fourth run in the bottom of the third. Bogaerts led off the inning with a fly ball that scraped the Green Monster in left field that was good for a double. Verdugo singled to drive Bogaerts in with the run. 

Kaprielian, normally a pitcher with good control, walked Jarren Duran and Devers to start the fourth inning. J.D.Martinez was retired on a fly ball to right field. Duran tagged and went to third. Bogaerts drove in Duran with a sacrifice fly to right.

Verdugo singled, sending Devers to third. Sox second baseman Trevor Story hit a swinging bun up the third baseline. Kaprielian fielded the ball, but his throw got by A’s first baseman Christian Bethancourt. Devers scored on the play. Boston owned a commanding 6-0 advantage after four innings of play.

The A’s scored their only run of the night in the sixth. Matt Davidson, pinch-hitting for Stephen Vogt, sent former A’s pitcher Jake Diekman’s pitch over the Green Monster onto Lansdowne Street. The Red Sox answered with two more runs in the bottom of the sixth. Alex Verdugo sent homered with a man on to make it an 8-1 lead for Boston.

The Sox added two more in the eighth. Lou Trivino retired the first man he faced. He then gave up back-to-back doubles to Martinez and Bogaerts for Boston’s ninth run. Two more singles produced the final run of the game. Boston wins 10-1.

Game Notes: With the loss, the A’s are now 21-43. Boston improved to 34-29. 

The A’s have lost 16 of the last 18 games played. They play Boston Again Thursday afternoon. The Red Sox have won all five games between the teams this year.

Kaprielian took the loss and is 0-4. Red Sox starter Josh Winckowski notched his first win in Major League baseball. His record is 1-1.

The bright spots for Oakland were Matt Davidson’s monster home run and Jonah Bride’s first two hits in the Majors. 

Oakland’s line was one run, seven hits, and one error. Boston’s line was ten runs, thirteen hits, and no errors. 

The teams meet for the final time in 2022 at 10:35 am PT. The A’s will send Paul Blackburn out to pitch. The Red Sox will counter with former A’s hurler, lefty Rich Hill.

The time of the game was three hours and eight minutes. Thirty-one thousand eight hundred seventy-seven fans were on hand to see Boston romp to the lop-sided 10-1 victory.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: The best division in baseball plus

Copy of the New York Daily News announcing the New York Mets and New York Yankees in the Subway World Series in 2000 edition could the two cross city rivals meet again in this year’s fall classic? (photo by wikipedia)

The Best Division in Baseball, Plus

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

OAKLAND–For the first time this 2022 season there will be a third wild card team on each league. No division in baseball is better than the American League East, with the New York Yankees walking-away with the best record in baseball and Toronto, Tampa Bay and Boston poised for a tremendous race.

For the first time ever, a division could have three wild card teams going into the postseason and a total of four of the five teams in this division playing in October.

The American League East is the only division in baseball with four teams playing over .500. In the AL West, there is only one team to beat, Dusty Baker’s Houston Astros, they are the best team and will stay in first place.

The LA Angels are sputtering again, after a very nice start, they went into a funk lost 14 in a row, from May 25 to June 8,and Joe Maddon (one of the best managers in baseball) was sent packing.

Next managerial change could come from Seattle, where expectations were high for this team to win this year. Manager Scott Servais and General Manager Jerry DiPoto are in the hot seat. The Texas Rangers spend a fortune (close to half billion dollars) signing Corey Seager and Marcus Semien, they are both starting to play the way everybody expected, but I do not believe they have the pitching to overtake their State rivals Houston Astros.

The Oakland A’s are what they are. All the other teams have more established talent, they are trying to compete with rookie manager Mark Kotsay, a good baseball man, but the best jockey in the world cannot win the race if the horse is limping.

In the Central Division, considered the weakest in all the major leagues, supposed to be an easy one for the Chicago White Sox, but the great Tony LaRussa is not having much fun so far, star closer Liam Hendriks just placed into the IL.

The Minnesota Twins will be in the playoffs, as of today leading that division and the Cleveland Guardians are playing good baseball, leading the way at third-base, José Ramirez an early candidate for MVP. Watch out for the Indians, sorry, the Guardians, they have a good team and a terrific manager in Terry Francona.

There are some 100 games left for each team this season. While in New York they are talking about a Subway Series, Mets vs Yankees. Most recently, in 2000 the New York teams faced each other with the Yankees winning in five games, a memorable series, which I happened to worked for the Latino Baseball Network.

In other cities there is lots of disappointment. In Los Angeles, the Dodgers, whose manager, Dave Roberts predicted a 2022 World Series win during an appearance on the Dan Patrick Show, when he said “We will win the World Series in 2022. We will win the World Series this year.”

The Dodgers have pitching problems, ace Walker Buehler recently went into the IL, Julio Urias is not going to win 20 games again this season (he was the only to win 20 last season) plus mixed with an inconsistent offense, the Dodgers have stuff to “figure out”, they do have the talent.

The San Diego Padres, at this time, even with the delayed return of superstar Fernando Tatis Jr, looks like the team that could win this division. Bob Melvin is doing a great job, which is nothing new for the three-time Manager of the Year.

The San Francisco Giants, while they are not going to win 107 games again, they find a way to win series, starter Jacob Junis went into the IL, veterans like Evan Longoria and Brandon Belt, can’t seem to stay healthy.

Giants lost some pieces in the off-season, perhaps the biggest one, starter Kevin Gausman who had his best year ever in 2021 with a 14-6 record, and 2.81 ERA, he left for a very lucrative contract in Toronto. Nobody expected the Giants to have a similar season as 2021, which was a dream season, when every player at the same time, had great years.

Trades: The new deadline this year is set for August 2. There will be many trades, some earlier than others, but the greatest commodities are starting pitchers. they are in high demand. Many of the teams with hopes of postseason play will reinforce themselves. In today’s game the old saying “you never have enough pitching” is new again.

Happy Fathers Day weekend.

Join Amaury Pi Gonzalez for all the play by play of Oakland A’s baseball on the A’s Spanish radio network and on flagship station Le Grande 1010 KIQI San Francisco and News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com