Oakland A’s podcast with Jeremiah Salmonson: Starting pitching a commodity as Irvin experiencing shoulder tightness

Oakland A’s starting pitcher Cole Irvin has experienced shoulder tightness and is questionable for Friday night’s start in Minnesota against the Twins at Target Field (file Cole Irvin Twitter page)

On the A’s podcast with Jeremiah:

#1 Oakland A’s (10-15) starter Cole Irvin is schedule to start Friday night’s game in Minnesota but is experiencing some tightness in his shoulder according to A’s manager Mark Kotsay.

#2 Kotsay said that Irvin threw on Tuesday and had the tightness after pitching against the Rays Kotsay he would decide if Irvin can go against the Minnesota Twins (15-10) Friday night. Right with the way pitching has been going for the starting rotation it’s become a commodity.

#3 Knowing what Irvin is going through the A’s called up pitcher Zach Logue from Triple A Las Vegas. Logue was at the Coliseum on Wednesday and Kotsay thought ahead to have him on hand just in case he had to pitch tonight in Minnesota.

#4 What was impressive about Irvin last season he made all of his 32 starts and was one of seven American League starters who didn’t miss a turn.

#5 Jeremiah, if Irvin does start he will be coming in with a 2-1 ERA 2.93 and he’ll be opposed by the Twins right hander Josh Winder (1-0 ERA 2.20) first pitch in Minneapolis is at 5:10 pm PDT.

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

Preview of weekend series between Oakland A’s and Minnesota Twins

The Minnesota Twins key hitter in the line up is Carlos Correa who could opt out of his contract after this season. The Twins are having a good run and chances are Correa could stay. Correa will be in the line up Fri May 6, 2022 against the Oakland A’s (photo from Puckett’s Pond)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s (10-15) start an eight-game road trip with three games against the Minnesota Twins (15-10). The A’s will then travel to Detroit for five with the Tigers.

The A’s will have their hands full with the Twins. The Twinkies are currently in first place in the AL Central with a 15-10 record. The Twins started the season by losing eight of the first 13 games. Since then, they have won ten of the last 12.

They beat the White Sox three straight, then won three more from the Tigers. The Twins are finishing a four-game set with the Baltimore Orioles on Thursday. So far, they have won two of the three games played.

Their manager, Rocco Baldelli, is in his fourth year as skipper. The Twins hired former San Diego Padres manager Jayce Tingler to be their bench coach. The Twins made a couple of trades to bolster their pitching and offense in the off-season.

The Twins acquired former A’s starter, Sonny Gray, from the Cincinnati Reds. Gray is currently on the 10-day IL. The big trade was sending Josh Donaldson and Isiah Kiner-Falefa to the New York Yankees for catcher Gary Sanchez and infielder Gio Urshela.

Another key acquisition was Carlos Correa. Correa’s contract was for three years and 105 million dollars. Correa can opt-out after the 2022 or 2023 season.

The Twins starting rotation does not have a lefty starter. All their starters are right-handed. They include Joe Ryan, Dylan Bundy, Chris Archer, and Chris Paddack.

The bullpen features a couple of relievers that once worked for the A’s. Emilio Pagan was with the A’s in 2018. Former A’s manager Bob Melvin called lefty Danny Coulombe out of the bullpen for three years from 2016 to 2018.

The Twins bullpen will use Tyler Duffey, the well-traveled Joe Smith, lefty Caleb Thielbar, Josh Winder, Cody Stashak, and Griffin Jax. Jhoan Duran has become a stalwart in the Twins bullpen. He is 0-0 with an ERA of 3.00 and has one save.

The former Yankee, Gary Sanchez, has settled in as the Twins catcher. Sanchez is off to a slow start. The slugger has only one homer and nine RBIs so far. Ryan Jeffers is the other Twins backstop. Miranda and Arreaz can fill in at all the other infield positions. Jose Miranda is a cousin of Lin-Manual Miranda.

Longtime Twin infielder, Jose Polanco, will be at second base. Carlos Correa will handle the shortstop chores, and Gio Urshela will be at third base.

The Twins will have Trevor Larnach in left-field. Larnach is hitting .300 with no home runs and seven RBIs. The Twins’ will start outfielder, Byron Buxton, will be in center. Buxton is hitting .290 with seven homers and 13 RBIs. Max Kepler will be in right. Kepler is hitting. 240 with five home runs and 12 RBIs. Kepler can move over to center if Buxton is the DH.

The A’s are struggling right now. Oakland has lost six straight. They were 0-6 at home for the first time since 1956, when they were known as the Kansas City Athletics. The A’s have lost nine of the last eleven games and are 10-15.

In the last eleven games, the A’s have scored more than two runs three times. They scored three in a game against Cleveland but still lost. In another game against the Guardians, Oakland lost 9-8. They scored seven against the Tampa Bay Rays but lost 10-7 in ten innings.

The offense in the other eight games produced eight runs. A’s manager Mark Kotsay has to find a way to get the offense going. During the 162 game season, teams will go into a slump. Teams will have hot streaks. Sometimes the offense is not going well, but the pitching is good. Sometimes the hitting is producing, but the pitching has gone south. Sometimes, both are going well and vice versa. The manager’s job is to figure out the lineups that will produce wins.

It will be a bid series for both teams. The Twins want to continue their winning ways. The A’s want their hitting to improve and the relievers to perform better. The A’s will send left hander Cole Irvin to the Hill on Friday. Irvin is 2-1 with a 2.93 ERA. He had some soreness in his shoulder after his last start.

The A’s have not announced that he will be scratched. On Saturday, righty James Kaprielian will make his second campaign start. Kaprielian had a rough outing in his last appearance. Kaprielian relies on pinpoint control. He could not locate his pitches and had an early exit from the game. Daulton Jefferies will go for Oakland on Sunday. The Twins have not announced any of their starters.

The series should be a good one. The A’s and Twins have had an intense rivalry for many years. From 1987 to 1991, The Twins went to the World Series in 1987 and 1991 and won both. The A’s won three consecutive AL Pennants in 1988, 1989, and 1990. They won the 1989 World Series. The season has a long way to go. Let us hope the A’s can right the ship and start getting some wins.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: A’s get out of town after getting swept twice by Cleveland and Tampa Bay

Tampa Bay Rays’ Manuel Margot hits a two-run single against the Oakland Athletics during the eighth inning at the Oakland Coliseum as the Rays shutout Oakland 3-0 on Wed May 4, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 The Oakland A’s (10-15) who were swept twice in the last homestand by the Cleveland Guardians and the Tampa Bay Rays (15-10) one thing that showed in this past homestand they just couldn’t get many runs on the scoreboard.

#2 Game three of get away day on Thursday was quite transparent as the A’s and Rays played to a 0-0 score until the top of the eighth and the Rays attacked with three runs and never looked back and wound up with a 3-0 shutout win.

#3 The Rays Manuel Margot who slugged a two run single in part of the Rays three run attack broke what was a great pitching duel between the A’s starter Frankie Montas and Rays starter Corey Kluber.

#4 Montas threw like he could have completed the game but his pitch count was up and he was lifted for reliever Zach Jackson in the top of the eighth. Jackson was the pitcher of record that was charged with the three earned runs.

#5 It’s once again back to the drawing board for the A’s as they head for the Twin Cities and Minneapolis and Target Field for Friday night as the A’s will start left hand pitcher Cole Irvin (2-1 ERA 2.93) and the Twins have not announced a starting pitcher yet a 5:10 PDT first pitch.

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

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Oakland A’s tough days at the Coliseum, Nothing new

Oakland Coliseum site of the smallest crowd since the 1980 season with one of the smallest customers on the stairs with a whole section to himself the A’s drew 2488 against the Tampa Bay Rays on Mon May 2, 2022 (USA Today photo)

Oakland A’s: Tough Days at the Coliseum, Nothing New

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-Gonzalez

OAKLAND–On April 17, 1979 the Seattle Mariners visited the Oakland Coliseum, the official attendance announced was 250. Yes, 250 people. We might not get to that point this season.

In 1979 there was also very high inflation, they were gas lines and shortages, a hostage situation, and a war in the middle east, in other words very similar to what’s happening now, with the big difference that covid was not around. The population of Oakland was around 330,000 people.

A’s owner Charlie Finley eventually sold the team to the Haas family/Levi Strauss, in my humble opinion, the best ownership the A’s ever had. Right away they got to work and built a winning atmosphere with great players, winning pennants and three consecutive trips to the World Series (1988-89-90) winning over the Giants in the 1989 World Series.

The Coliseum was a place to be and enjoy baseball with all kinds of promotions and great players like Henderson, Stewart, Canseco, McGwire, and company. Regardless of how you feel, we must credit Charlie O Finley because he built a tremendous championship team that won three World Series in a row, from 1972 to 1974. As a matter of fact, only the A’s and Yankees can say they have won 3 consecutive World Series.

Yankees as many as five in a row during their 1950s dynasty. However, after those 3-years Finley basically traded everybody, he didn’t want any part of the signing of free agents, he thought paying a million dollar for a player was crazy.

Finley suggested every player should become a free agent every year and sign a one-year contract. By the way, the current Oakland A’s have nothing but one-year contracts.

Soon this summer A’s fans will know if the team will definitely be able to build the new Howard Terminal ballpark or not. “It is Howard Terminal or bust”, said Dave Kaval President of the A’s, after the recent positive decision by the BCDC, San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission.

If the A’s get the final approval to build the new ballpark in downtown Oakland, they will still have to play at the Oakland Coliseum for a couple of years and chances are that with the current team, is not expected to be in the race for the postseason, attendances will continue to be so small that some players will tell you they can hear the stadium vendors as clear as if they were sitting with the fans. There are still hurdles and three lawsuits against the A’s building the new park at Howard Terminal.

I talked with many fans at the Oakland Coliseum, true Oakland A’s fans for years and they are more than frustrated, they are extremely cynical.

One told me a few days ago “We still support the A’s and come here knowing that Montas, Laureano, Murphy, and any player than can bring some value in return will be gone”.

Nobody can blame any A’s fans for their attitude, they are the ones paying for parking and for the games and for souvenirs and food. There used to be a saying that “the customer is always right”. And, in this case, they are right.

Rays send A’s down to their sixth loss in a row; Oakland shutout at Coliseum 3-0

Tampa Bay Rays’ Randy Arozarena slides home to score against the Oakland Athletics at Oakland Coliseum on Wed May 4, 2022 (AP News photo)

BY Jerry Feitelberg

OAKLAND–The Tampa Bay Rays (15-10) beat the Oakland A’s (10-15) 3-0 to sweep the three-game series. The A’s suffered their sixth loss in a row and have lost nine of their last eleven games. The team continues not to hit well.

The A’s had four hits on Wednesday afternoon. Seth Brown had the hardest-hit ball when he tripled in the bottom of the second. 

The game was scoreless for seven innings. The A’s ace, Frankie Montas, was dominant. He went seven innings and allowed four hits and no runs. His opponent, former two-time Cy Young Award winner Corey Kluber pitched a masterful six innings.

Kluber looked like the dominant pitcher he was when he pitched in Cleveland. Kluber’s line was six innings, three hits, and no runs. He threw just 64 pitches.

One of the adages in baseball is that good teams find a way to win. Bad teams find a way to lose. The A’s found a way to lose Wednesday afternoon. The Rays put three runs on the board as the A’s reliever Zach Jackson walked two, hit a batter, and gave up a single.

The Rays’ third run scored on a balk. The results are bad when teams have trouble scoring runs and the relievers aren’t performing well. The game summary follows below.

The Rays put three runs on the board in the top of the eighth with just one hit. In relief of Frenkie Montas, Zach Jackson walked Brett Phillips to start the frame. Phillips went to second on a wild pitch. Jackson retired Yandy Diaz for the first out.

Phillips went to third on the play. The next hitter Wander Franco struck out. Jackson walked Randy Arozarena and hit Brandon Lowe with a pitch to load the bases with two out. The Rays’ Manuel Margot singled to right-field to drive in Phillips and Arozarena.

A’s manager Mark Kotsay brought in Domingo Acevedo to pitch with men on at first and third. The Rays plated the third run when a balk was called on Acevedo. The Rays lead 3-0 midway through the eighth inning. The Rays’ bullpen shut the A’s down in the eighth and ninth innings to win the game 3-0.

Game Notes: The A’s ended the six-game homestand 0-6. The A’s are 10-15 for the year with the loss. The Rays are 15-10. The winning pitcher for Tampa was J.P.Feyereisen. Zach Jackson was the losing pitcher. 

The A’s are off on Thursday as they are traveling to Minneapolis to face the Twins for three games starting Friday night. Left Cole Irvin will itch for Oakland. Irvin is 2-1 with a 2.93 ERA. The Twins have not announced their starting pitcher. 

The time of the game was two hours and thirty-nine minutes, and there were 4838 people present to watch the A’s lose.

Flood gates open and A’s drown in 10th inning to Rays 10-7; Loss is fifth straight for Oakland

Tampa Bay Rays’ Mike Zunino gestures after hitting a two-run home run against the Oakland Athletics in the top of the ninth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Tue May 3, 2022 (AP News photo)

Tampa Bay. 10. 14. 0

Oakland 7. 10. 0

Tuesday May 3, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–The only consolation that the Athletics could salvage from last night’s debacle was their incredibly fine performance of their relievers, which hurled five innings without a blotch on its echelon. One runner reached first on an error, and that was it.

Lou Trivino once was a stalward of the A’s bullpen. He hasn’t been one this year, and the team hoped he change that situation with his return from the covid list, which was announced before game time. He didn’t.

Tonight the Athletics put their faith in their starter, Paul Blackburn. He’d justified that faith so far this season, going 3-0, 1.35 in his four starts, striking out 18 oppoints and walking only two. The only fly in that particular ointment is that the 6’1″, 195 lb. righty went five–no more, no less–innings in each and every appearance. In his first of the season, he held Tampa Bay runless on three hits over his quintet of frames.

The Rays chose southpaw Ryan Yarbrough to face the hometown crew in his first start of the season, in St. Petersburg on April 12, but tightness in his left groin kept him out of action and on the injured list until today.

The game started inauspiciously for the Oakland nine. Yandy Díaz led off with a nubber down the third base line that Kevin Smith couldn’t come up with. The ball bounced off the bag, and Díaz made it to first with a single.

Smith, playing in the shift, fielded Wander Franco’s grounder to the right of second and tagged Díaz out. But Franco had tied the A’s third baseman long enough for Franco to arrive safely at first. Brando Lowe’s two double to right center put the Rays ahead before Manuel Margot popped out to short to end the inning.

Oakland came back with a vengeance in its half of the frame. Chad Pinder beat out Franco’s throw from short for an infield single. He moved up to second on Sheldon Neuse’s walk. Jed Lowrie smacked a hard line drive to Randy Arozarena in left, who dropped it but recovered quickly enough to force Pinder out at third.

Sean Murphy popped out to first for the second out. Stephen Piscottty’s walk loaded the bases, and Christian. Bethancourt’s walk forced in Neuse and left the basepaths clogged.

That set the stage for Smith to redeem his two misplays in the top of the inning. He took an 84mph cutter 381 feet deep, into the left field bleachers for the first home run of the season, a grand slam that put Oakand up, 5-1.

Kevin Kiermaier’s lead off single, followed an out later by Brett Phillips 419 foot blast in right center off of an 85mph changeup closed that margin to 5-3 after two.

With Piscotty and Bethancourt on base with none out in the bottom of the third, Yarbrough caught Smith looking at a third strike and then left the game, relieved by his namesake Ryan Thompson. Tampa Bay’s starter had lasted 2-1/3 episodes, allowing five runs, all earned, on six hits, including Smith’s grand slam,three walks and a hit batter.

He threw 56 pitches, 32 of which qualified as strikes. Thompson got out of the inning without allowing the A’s to do further damage.

Blackburn had to face some more troubles in the fourth. It wasn’t as bad as what he’d faced in the previous inning, when he’d stymied the Rays after Arozarena’s one out triple. Now he had to deal with a one out double by Taylor Walls. He solved that problem by picking off the Floridian runner in a long rundown and striking out Phillips.

Thompson pitched 1-1/3 innings and did it well, not allowing anyone to reach base safely and fanning one. Jeffrey Springscame and ended the frame by striking out Lowrie.

Blackburn’s streak of four consecutive outings of five innings was shattering in the fifth. Zach Jackson relieved him with Díaz on first with a walk and one man out. Franco greeted the newcomer with a single to right that sent the runner to third. But Arozarena smacked a grounder that Andrus turned into a nifty 6-4-3 twin killing.

Blackburn left having thrown 64 pitches, 42 for strikes. The three runs scored against him were earned, and he allowed six hits and a walk. He struck out five. His ERA rose but only to a still more than respectable 2.22.

Manager Kotsay called on AJ Puck for Tampa Bay’s sixth. He sailed through both that and seventh frame; he struck out two of the six batters he faced. None reached base. Danny Jiménez relieved him, pitching a spotless eighth.

Matt Wisler took over after Spring´s successful 3-1/3 inning intervention.during which he held the A’s to two singles.

It now was up to Kirby Snead to face the Rays’ number four, five, and six hitters to save the game for the A’s. Except that Isaac Paredes pinch hit for the cleanup man, Lowe.

He worked a full count, but Snead got him to fly out to Billy McKinnie, who had pinch hit for Bethancourt and now was playing in right field. Margot reached first on a single to center. Mike Zunino, batting all of .106, lofted a 402 foot blast over the State Farm sign in left center, tying the game at five.

After Taylor singled to right and advanced to second on Phillips’ ground out to first, Trivino got a chance to prove his worth. He would have pitched to number nine hitter René Pinto, but it was pinch hitting Harold Ramírez who grounded out to Andrius to end the inning.

Andrew Kitteridge took over in the ninth to preserve the tie and send the game into extra innings, retiring the bottom third of the Oakland lineup in order.

Trivino remained on the mound in the top of the tenth, with Ramírez on second as the zombie runner. Soon it was Díaz on second, after Tampa Bay´s first sacker doubled off the Craftsman sign in right center, driving Ramírez home with the leading run. Franco then was granted an intentional pass to first.

He and Díaz moved up a bag on Arozaren’s slow ground out, Andrus to Seth Brown, now at first after having pinch hit for Piscotty in the eighth. The A’s pulled in the infield for a possible play at the plate. Paredes lifted a single to left over the drawn in fielders to bring in the two runners.

Then Margot smacked a triple to left center to bring Paredes home. Zunino drove in Margot for another tally, and, just like that, Justin Grimm was on the mound, facing Taylor Walls and trailing 10-5. Grimm retired Walls on a pop to third and then walked Phillips, but retired Ramírez to end Oakland´s misery.

Jason Adam was the last hurler on the mound for the visitors, starting the tenth with Pache placed on second, by fanning Plnder. Hope sprang eternal in the breasts of the 2,815 diehards in the stands when Neuse doubled to drive Pache in, making the score the score 10-6.

After Nuese reached third on Lowrie’s groundout to first, Murphy’s seeing eye broken bat single to left made it 10-7. Brown worked a full count before grounding out to short to end a most disappointing failure.

The win went to Kittridge, his second against. no defeats, for his inning of work. The loss, of course, was charged to Trivino, who, in a mere 2/3 of an inning allowed five runs, four of them earned on four hits and a walk. It took him 20 pitches to do this, lowering his won-lost record to 0-2 and raising his ERA to 12.46.

The series concludes Wednesday afternoon at 12:37 with A’s starter Frankie Montás (2-2 ERA 4.25) facing Corey Kluber (1-1ERA 3.50)

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Kaval and A’s jump another hurdle as BCDC on board with Howard Terminal project

Artists rendition of Oakland Howard Terminal ballpark as the A’s face several lawsuits regarding environmental and traffic issues after getting assurance from the Bay Conservation and Development Commission who plan to vote in favor of the project on Jun 2. (photo from NBC Sports Bay Area)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 The Bay Conservation and Development Commission who are to vote on Jun 2 on the Howard Terminal ballpark and project development said they will vote to move forward with the project and A’s president Dave Kaval called it a “massive deal.”

#2 Kaval said that with the vote from the Oakland City Council and now with the assurance of the BCDC it looks as if the project has a good chance to move forward.

#3 The East Oakland Stadium Alliance filed a lawsuit said that environmental protocols weren’t followed and that the Alliance wants the ballpark built at the existing location here at the Oakland Coliseum.

#4 Amaury not to mention there are shipping, steel, and the port groups that have filed environmental impact violation lawsuits against the project. The Alliance spokesman says the city process failed to meet environmental standards regarding the luxury condominiums, office and retail development.

#5 Kaval added that removing port designation puts the A’s on a path towards building at Howard Terminal.

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

Rays scored twice in third and forth innings defeat A’s 6-1; A’s play in front of smallest crowd of season

Tampa Bay Rays’ Kevin Kiermaier slides home to score against the Oakland Athletics in the fifth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Mon May 2, 2022 (AP News photo)

Tampa Bay. 6. 11. 0

Oakland. 1. 2. 2

Monday May 2, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–The Oakland A’s (10-13) started this season by dropping a three game series to the Phillies in the City of Brotherly Love. They righted the ship by taking three out of four in St. Petersburg, the retirement community that is home to the Salvador Dalí Museum and the monstrosity known as Tropicana field. The A’s took it on the chin on Monday night at the Oakland Coliseum with a 6-1 loss to the visiting Tampa Bay Rays (13-10) to open a three game set.

By April 19 they reached the giddy heights of 7-5 and a tie with the Angels for first place in the AL West. Oakland finished the month at 10-11, last in their division

They continued to decline at the start of this month. Their 7-3 May Day loss to Cleveland wasn’t a distress call, but it wasn’t a harbinger of a smooth passage to the extended playoffs. Indeed, it completed the Guardians’ sweep of the three game series between the two teams.

The pitcher who earned the green and gold their first win of the season was Daulton Jefferies. He has pitched decently, in spite of losing to Toronto, Baltimore, and San Francisco in his three post Tampa Bay starts, only one of which lasted more than 4-1/3 innings.

Jefferies took the mound tonight with a record of 1-3 ERA 3.26, hoping to spark a turn around similar to the one that followed his start in the bailiwick of tonight’s opponents, the Rays. At least he wouldn’t have to deal with catwalks and artificial turf.

It did, however, have to deal with a team that is 12-10 in spite of its current two game losing streak, during which they scored only four runs against The Twins, who crossed the plate 18 times.

Their choice to face the A’s was right hander Drew Rasmussen, who brought his record to 1-1ERA 3.50 by going six innings to gain his first win of the season by defeating the Mariners in Seattle, allowing only a walk, a single, and a double.

Back at the Coliseum, a select group of 2,288 spectators saw the Rays crush the A’s, shortly after the Bay Area Conservation and Development Commission voted to approve the proposed Howard Terminal Stadium.

Yandy Díaz started things off for the visitors by parking Jefferies´sixth pitch, an 80mph curve on a 1-2 count, 407 feet into the staircase to the right of the nearly empty left field seats.

Oakland countered that long ball with some small ball in the bottom of the second. Seth Brown worked a two out 3-2 count for a walk and, with Chad Pinder at bat, stole second. Pinder’s single to right center knotted this score.

Wander Franco unknotted it for the Rays, with a little help from Cristián Pache, in Tampa Bay´s next AB. With Díaz on first with a lead off single, Franco singled to center and a charging Pache let the ball bounce over his head.

Franco reached third on the two base error and came home on Randy Arozarená’s single to center, but that was all the scoring the Rays were able to muster in that frame. Nonetheless, they had stretched their lead to 3-1.

Mike Zunino, whose BA wasn’t even half way up to the Mendoza line, got only his third RBI of the season by singling Manuel Margot, who had led off with a double, home and then advanced his lumbering frame to second on the throw, scoring one out later on Franco’s single to right. The score now stood at 5-1 in favor of the visitors.

It was 6-1 after 4-1/2. Margot’s two out two bagger plated Kevin Kiermaier with two down was responsible for the additional tally.

Jefferies didn’t come out to pitch in the sixth. He had managed to throw 90 pitches, 60 of which were considered strikes, in his five innings of work. All six of the runs scored against him were earned.

They came on 11 hits, one of which left the park. He struck out four but didn’t walk anyone. He was the losing pitcher. Oakland’s new pitcher was Domingo Acevedo, who retired six of the seven hitters he faced over the next two innings. The only exception was Franco, who reached on an error by Elvis Andrus in the sixth.

Rasmussen’s night’s work also ended after five innings. His other numbers were quite different from Jeffries’. The Rays’ starter allowed but one hit and one, earned, run, while striking out three and walking one.

He would get the win. Jason Adam replaced him in the sixth and set the A’s down in order before passing the baton to Phoenix Sanders. Sanders gave up the Athletics’ second hit of the night, a bunt single by Jed Lowrie.

Sam Moll was Oakland’s third hurler, taking over to start the eighth and setting the Rays down 1,2,3 with two strikeouts. Ryan Thompson, in turn, pitched a perfect bottom of the eighth for Tampa Bay.

Adam Kolarek finished up for the Athletics, retiring all three batters he confronted. Indeed, Oakland’s bullpen was nearly perfect. The only baserunner it allowed in its four innings on the mound came on Andrus’s error in the sixth frame.

Andrew Kittridge threw a perfect ninth for the Rays.

Oakland’s ace, Paul Blackburn will get the start on Tuesday night 3-0 ERA 1.35 mark against Tampa Bay pitcher to be announced in the second game of the current. series. Game time will be 6:40 at the Oakland Coliseum.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: A’s host Rays after losing three straight to Cleveland

The Cleveland Guardians starter Triston McKenzie goes into his stretch in the first inning against the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun May 1, 2022 (AP News photo)

On That’s Amaury’s podcast:

#1 For the first time in 22 years that brings us back to the year 2000 the Cleveland Guardians (10-12) swept the Oakland A’s (10-12) in Sunday’s finale by a score of 7-3. But just to the history of those 22 years that’s a long time does that say something about how penetrable the A’s were in this series or the Guardians were just that good?

#2 Guardians starter Triston McKenzie went 6.1 innings of shutout ball against the A’s and very well could have gone the distance if it weren’t for the pitch count.

#3 A’s pitching did wonders for the Guardians Franmil Reyes who entered Sunday’s game with a 1-27 slump but broke out with a third inning two RBI single in an inning where the Guardians scored three times.

#4 It was A’s pitcher James Kraprielian’s first time back after coming back from shoulder surgery Kaprielian ended up walking four batters and struggled and was lifted in the third inning going two plus innings, three hits on four earned runs and three strikeouts. Is his shoulder still a concern because Guardian hitters certainly saw the ball pretty well.

#5 The A’s will try it all over again tonight at the Coliseum as the A’s have lost six of their last eight games and will face the Tampa Bay Rays tonight the Rays will start Drew Rasmussen (1-1 ERA 3.50) and for the A’s Daulton Jefferies 1-3 ERA 3.26) first pitch at 6:40pm PDT.

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

Guardians Make Them Fend For Themselves: Kaprelian roughed up in season debut, A’s lose 7-3

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND, CA–Comfortable opponents are bad news. The Guardians’ Tristan McKenzie was that guy Sunday, mowing down A’s hitters at the Coliseum like he owned the place.

McKenzie pitching into the seventh inning, scattering three hits, and departed with a 6-0 lead. Throughout the 24-year old’s confidence and command of his pitches dominated the afternoon. The Guardians cruised to a 7-3 win and a road sweep of the weekend series.

“To call pitches for a guy like that is awfully fun because even when he’s got something else in mind, you really can’t go wrong when he executes well,” McKenzie’ catcher Luke Maile said of him.

“There were times where he lost the strike zone, but he reeled it back in in a hurry, as opposed to 3-4 hitters,” Cleveland manager Terry Francona said.

“For me to be successful, a lot of it is mixing my pitches up and keeping guys guessing,” McKenzie said. “We stuck to the game plan really well today.”

Getting just one runner in scoring position was challenging for Oakland, and didn’t happen until McKenzie was at the end of his shift in the seventh. The loss marked a continuation of the host’s tip-your-hat portion of the schedule. The A’s have managed just three runs or less in eight of their most recent 10 games.

The A’s biggest moments came in the ninth when they narrowed a 7-0 deficit with three runs on the strength of Kevin Smith’s RBI double, which was preceded by Chad Pinder’s RBI sacrifice fly, and Christian Bethancourt’s pinch-hit double. The loss was their sixth in the last eight games.

“It was a tough series for us, losing those first two games the way we did,” manager Mark Kotsay said. “Going into today, I thought we had good energy, but we fell behind, and when you get behind, it puts a lot of pressure on our offense.”

James Kaprelian’s season debut was disturbing in that the returning starter said afterwards he felt fine but couldn’t find the strike zone in a ragged stretch in the third inning. Kaprelian dutifully rehabbed his shoulder only to see 12 of his final 13 pitches Sunday translate to three, consecutive walks.

“I pride myself in being able to attack guys and throw strikes and pitch off my fastball and I didn’t do that,” Kaprelian said. “I just need to do a better job, flat-out.”

The A’s trailed 5-0 after Kaprelian’s departure, 6-0 after four, and 7-0 after six innings. Pinder was the only Athletic to get a second hit but he was written into the seventh slot in Kotsay’s batting order.

The A’s face the Rays at the Coliseum on Monday night, the opener of a three-game set. Daulton Jeffries gets the start opposite Tampa Bay’s Drew Rasmussen.