Twin killing gets A’s 10th straight win in 1-0 shutout in night cap

The left field lighting powered off during the fifth inning at the Oakland Coliseum causing a 24 minute and 47 seconds delay during the second game of a doubleheader between the Minnesota Twins and Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Tue Apr 20, 2021 (AP News photo)

Minnesota 0 – 2 – 0

Oakland 1- 4 – 1

Game 2 of doubleheader

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–A half and hour after Oakland A’s (11-7) pitcher Sean Manaea, Mitch Moreland, and Matt Olson demolished the Minnesota Twins (6-10) in a seven inning laugher, the A’s attempted to pull off a twin killing that would extend their winning streak to double figures and set them up for a series sweep tomorrow. in the opening game of today’s double header.

Minnesota, it goes without saying, was seeking to reverse its recent tailspin to that end sent two-time all star (2018 and2019) right hander to the mound. He brought a 2-1, 3.38 record with him. His most recent start was in the second game of a double header in Boston on April 14. He left with the game tied at 1-1 in the fifth but took the loss, and the Twins were swept.

Oakland sent Jesús Luzardo, who, at 0-1, 8.31, still was trying to reestablish the rhythms that had made him one the A’s brightest hopes for the near future.

The first three innings passed quickly and more or less uneventfully, but right fielder Seth Brown provided two highlights in the second that are worth mentioning. In the top of the frame, he made a spectular diving catch of a dying quail off the broken bat of Brent Rocker for the third out. Then, in Oakland’s half of the inning, Brown’s one out double moved Mitch Moreland to third for the Athletics’ first threat of the game.

Then, in the bottom of the fourth, it was Brown who drove in the game’s first run. Olson went opposite field against the shift to lead off with a double and moved on to third on Chapman’s fly to right. Following a walk to Moreland, Brown’s single produced a 1-0 lead for the A’s.

Moreland was called out at second by a pick off throw from Berríos, but home plate umpire Scott Barry ruled that time had been called before the play began. The reprive was, however, short lived. Elvis Andrus lined out to left, and Luis Arraez made a swift, accurate throw to Willians Astudillo at second to double off Moreland and put an end to the threat.

A light bank failure in left field with one out in the top of the fifth caused a delay of 24 minutes, 47 seconds. When play resumed, Luzardo didn’t miss a beat, striking out Brent Rocker and getting Estudillo to pop out to shallow right field, where second baseman Vimael Machín made a lovely over the head grab of the ball.

Berríos didn’t lose any effectiveness during the delay, either. He set the A’s down, 1-2-3, in the fifth, and the game remained tied at one. After a walk to Arraez and a strike out of Ryan Jefferson, Luzardo handed the ball over to Lou Trivino, who struck Garver for the second out.

During Garver’s AB, Arraez advanced to second on a passed ball. With the dangerous ex-Athletic Josh Donaldson at the plate, Trivino uncorked a wild pitch that brought Arraez within 90 feet of home. Trivino struck Donaldson out looking.

Luzardo’s line ended up at no runs over 5-1/3 innings, on two hits, one walk, and three strike outs. He threw 65 pditches, 44 for strikes and reduced his bloated ERA to 5.89.

The fifth was the final frame for Berríos, who was replaced by Hansel Robles. Minnesota’s starter had allowed an earned run on four hits and one walk. He struck out five Athletics and hit one of them, Canha. 59 of his 89 hits were strikes.

Melvin called on Jake Diekman to try for the save in the top of the seventh. He started off inauspiciouslly, hitting Nelson Cruz with a 2-2 delivery to open the inning. The count went to 2-2 on the following batter, Byron Buxton, who fanned.

Jorge Polanco hit a 2-2 pitch to short, where Andrus couldn’t handle it. The error put runners on first and second with one out. Diekman struck out Rocker on an 0-2, 95 mph four seamer. Then Astudilo drove a 1-2, 96 mph four seam fastball to the left field wall, where Canha made a leaping catch to give the Athletics their tenth consecutive win.

The W went to Luzardo; the gutsy save to Diekman, his first. The tough loss went to Berríos.

Tomorrow´s fray, scheduled for 12:37. Frankie Montás (2-1, 4.91) will face Kenta Maeda (1-1, 2.45) in the final game of the A’s current home stand.

A’s Manaea goes the distance (7 innings) to get 7-0 shutout in front game over Twins

Oakland Athletics’ Matt Chapman (26) and Matt Olson (28) make a celebratory reaction after Olson hit a grand slam off Minnesota Twins pitcher Jorge Alcala (66) in the fourth inning of game one of their MLB doubleheader at the Oakland Coliseum in Oakland, Calif., on Tuesday, April 20, 2021 (photo from Bay Area News Group)

Minnesota. 0 – 6 – 2

Oakland 7 – 5 – 0

First game doubleheader

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–After an unexpected day off yesterday, due to Covid19 problems in the Minnesota organization, the Oakland A’s and Minnesota Twins got around to the business of playing pandemic- inflected baseball with a pair of games scheduled to go seven innings each, beginning at 3:30 this afternoon.

34 year old right hander Matt Shoemaker brought a 1-0, 4.32 record with him to the mound for the Twinkies, while Sean Manaea, four years Shoemaker’s junior and throwing with his left hand, put his 1-1, 4.32 record on the line for the Athletics.

Eight of the nine batters Oakland’s southpaw would have to face in the visitors’ starting lineup were either right handed or, in one case, switch hitters. The home team brought an eight game winning streak with them to the Coliseum, while the Twins were 2-6 over their last eight contests.

Before the game, Stephen Piscotty was reinstated from the paternity list (congratulations) and was back patrolling right field at game time. Ka’ai Tom was designated for assignment. He’d gone one for 16 and scored one run in the nine games he’d played for the A’s.

Mike Moreland put the A’s ahead 2-0 in the bottom of the second with a line drive over the yellow line across the right field scorebord just to the right of the 382 foot marker. Sean Murphy, who had forrced Chapman out at second, was on base at the time. It was Moreland’s first round tripper and sixth and seventh RBI for the green and gold.

Moreland extended the lead in his next at bat, leading off the home fourth.. This time he went really deep, 405 feet to right center on a 92 mph slider that Shoemaker threw him on an 0-2 count. An out, a single, and a walk later, Shoemaker was out of the game.

He’d lasted a mere 3-1/3, in which he’d given up three runs (all earned) and still was on the hook for two more possible tallies. He hadn’t struck anyone out but had walked four batters and allowed four hits. Of his 67 pitches, 39 were strikes.

Shoemaker’s replacement, Jorge Alcalá, manmaged to get Laureano on a called third strike, but he walked Jed Lowrie to load the bases, and then surrendered a massive grand slam into the right field second deck by Olson. It was his fourth home run of the year and raused his RBI total to an even dozen, tying him with Lowrie for the team lead.

The two runs for which Shoemaker was on the hook now were on his record. He also remained on the hook for the loss, which left him at 1-1, 6.28. After Alacalá got his second strike out (Chapman) to end the inning, he was gone, and Luke Farrell made his first appearance as a Twin to open the fifth. Lewis Thorpe mopped up for Minnesota in the sixth.

Moreland and Olson’s power led the offense for Oakland, which also included four stolen bases, one each by Canha and Piscotty, and two by Andrus.

Manea was the winning pitcher, improving his record to 2-1, 3.04. He was credited with a complete game, the second of his big league career. His other CG was his 2018 no hitter against the Red Sox. In his seven inning stint today, Manaea gave up six hits and a walk. He struck out seven.

The teams will be at it again in a half an hour.

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: A’s and Twins will restart series with doubleheader today at Coliseum

The Detroit Tigers Will Castro slides behind Oakland A’s catcher Sean Murphy during the sixth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Apr 18, 2021 the A’s won the ball game 3-2 (AP News photo)

#1 After the tough start the Oakland A’s had at 0-6 the A’s look like contenders now after winning eight straight games.

#2 The A’s got two shutouts during their four game series with the Detroit Tigers the first shutout came on Friday when the A’s shutout the Tigers 3-0 behind A’s starter Frankie Montas and three relievers

#3 On Saturday starter Cole Irvin pitched six innings, four hits and the bullpen shut the Tigers out for the rest of the game.

#4 How much will the postponed game from Monday break the A’s momentum from their eight game winning streak going into today’s doubleheader.

#5 The Minnesota Twins organization is concerned about what is happening in their community with civil unrest, racial injustice and their Covid-19 protocols as a result they’ve had a number of games postponed.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez has all the play by play of Oakland A’s baseball on the Oakland A’s Spanish flagship station 1010 KIQI LaGrande San Francisco and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s win 8 straight; Twins games postponed from racial injustice and Covid-19 issues

Manager Bob Melvin is none too surprised that the A’s had a seven game win streak after starting the season at 0-6. Melvin had said the team is too talented to be 0-6. (AP File photo)

On the podcast with Barbara:

#1 It’s not a matter of asking “who are these guys” with the recent eight game winning steak of the A’s but rather the question is more like “who are these guys” when the opened the season 0-6.

#2 A’s manager Bob Melvin knew all along that after breaking out of that opening week funk the A’s were good enough, smart enough to make things happen.

#3 In the four game series that the A’s (9-7) just completed against the Detroit Tigers (6-10) over the weekend the A’s threw two shutouts. A’s starting pitchers Frankie Montas and the bullpen on Friday threw a dandy after Montas who pitched six innings and surrendered just two hits left and three relievers shutout the Tigers the rest of the way for the 3-0 win.

#4 On Saturday’s game A’s starter Cole Irvin and three relief pitchers shutout the Tigers 7-0. Irvin went six innings and gave up just four hits.

#5 Tonight the Oakland A’s three game series against the Minnesota Twins (6-8) has been postponed until Tuesday as a doubleheader due the Twins having Covid-19 protocol issues.

#6 The Twins as an organization have been concerned and paid tribute regarding the recent murder of young motorist Daunte Wright 20 at the hands of 26 year veteran Brooklyn police officer Kim Potter , the Twins had postponed one of their games against the Boston Red Sox on Mon Apr 12th at Target Field out respect for Wright. The Derek Chauvin case is going to the jury if Chauvin is found guilty for involuntary manslaughter chances are Minneapolis could face heavy protesting and sports in Minnesota will most likely be further postponed.

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

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason Mon Apr 19, 2021 by Sports Radio Service | Free Listening on SoundCloud

Oakland A’s special report: A’s vs Twins Monday game Postponed, Tentatively will play Doubleheader Tuesday

The Oakland Coliseum will sit empty Mon Apr 19, 2021 as the game between the Minnesota Twins and Oakland A’s has been postponed and will be made up as a doubleheader on Tue 20th Covid protocols withstanding (file photo from the Hometown Fan)

A’s vs Twins Monday game Postponed, Tentatively will play Doubleheader Tuesday

By Amaury Pi-González

OAKLAND–The Minnesota Twins scheduled to arrive in Oakland Monday for a three-game series against the A’s had to cancel their last two games Saturday and Sunday at Angel Stadium against the Anaheim Angels, when Kyle Garlic and another player, whose name was not provided, plus a staff member tested positive for covid-19.

The team was already without their regular shortstop Andrelton Simmons, also because of covid problems. MLB said the delay will enable the Twins to allow more covid testing on their players. A’s vs Twins Monday game has been postponed, they will tentatively play a Doubleheader on Tuesday.

The Minnesota Twins scheduled to arrive in Oakland Monday for a three-game series against the A’s had to cancel their last two games Saturday and Sunday at Angel Stadium against the Anaheim Angels, when Kyle Garlic and another player, whose name was not provided, plus a staff member tested positive for Covid-19.

The team was already without their regular shortstop Andrelton Simmons, also because of covid problems. MLB said the delay will enable the Twins to allow more covid testing on their players.

The A’s and Twins are tentatively planning a regular doubleheader at the Oakland Coliseum this Tuesday afternoon.

Not the news the hottest team in the American League wanted, the Athletics have won eight games in a row after sweeping the Detroit Tigers in a 4-game series at the Coliseum.

The A’s and Twins are tentatively planning a regular doubleheader at the Oakland Coliseum this Tuesday afternoon.

Notes: The top news story the hottest team in the American League the Athletics have won eight games in a row after sweeping the Detroit Tigers in a four-game series at the Coliseum.

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

A’s win streak hits eight, sweep the Tigers with 3-2 walk off job

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND–The A’s tried to give Sunday’s contest away, but it was the Tigers that actually booted it, on Jeimer Candelario’s fielding error in the bottom of the ninth inning.

Mitch Moreland’s sharply hit ground ball got under Candelario’s glove and body, allowing Matt Olson to score from second base, in the A’s 3-2 win at the Coliseum.

What appeared to be an unlikely mistake with the game on the line gained greater context in the recent history between the two clubs in which the A’s have dominated, winning 22 of 23 since June 2015. Simply, disaster strikes Detroit when facing the A’s, and the Tigers’ new manager A.J. Hinch is merely catching up to the facts.

“Everything that kind of could go wrong did go wrong in this four-game series,” Hinch said. “We didn’t hit and then ultimately we just couldn’t finish them all off.”

Before the game’s deciding play, the A’s did plenty to damage their hopes, especially in leaving a baserunner stranded at third base in the fourth and eighth innings, as five Oakland hitters failed to hit the ball past the infield, and three of the five struck out. Overall, the A’s were 0 for 7 with a runner in scoring position, along with Mark Canha getting picked off first base in the second, and Aramis Garcia hitting into a double play in the fifth.

But while the A’s shot themselves in the foot on the basepaths, starter Chris Bassitt was keeping the A’s afloat with his first exemplary outing of 2021.

Bassitt went six innings, striking out eight, and retiring 14 of 15 in one stretch. The 32-year old veteran relied heavily on his mid-90’s cutter throughout, and caused Detroit’ batters pause with occasional curves and changeups. After being uncharacteristically wild at Arizona, Bassitt controlled his space by starting 15 of 25 batters with strikes, and issuing just two free passes.

“I thought he threw great,” manager Bob Melvin said of Bassitt. “We just didn’t score enough, didn’t support him enough early on. But he only ends up giving up two runs and keeping us in the game.”

The sixth inning offered the Tigers an opportunity they couldn’t refuse or squander, that after an amazing streak of 23 scoreless innings dating back to the first inning on Friday. Candelario drew a leadoff walk, then Willi Castro singled. With two outs, and after both runners advanced, Harold Castro delivered a two-run single and the lead to the Tigers.

Castro’s master stroke effectively ended Bassitt’s afternoon as well, but it didn’t end Detroit’s misfortune at the Coliseum.

In the bottom of ninth with the game tied following Sean Murphy’s solo shot, the sun demanded it make an impactful, cameo appearance. Victor Reyes was cast as the victim, unable to locate Olson’s fly ball as it landed harmlessly 20 feet to his right. That set the A’s up with the potential game-winning run at second base 6with one out. After Matt Chapman struck out, and Murphy walked, Moreland entered as a pinch-hitter batting lefty against left-handed reliever Gregory Soto.

And Moreland made it work.

The A’s were hoping to continue their mastery of AL Central teams on Monday, but the Twins are dealing with COVID issues on multiple fronts and they were shutdown Saturday and Sunday against the Angels, then not cleared for Monday in Oakland. The hope is the Twins’ positive tests will cease and they can resume play with a Twins-A’s doubleheader on Tuesday.

The A’s hope so: they’ve won 69 of 89 since June 2017 against the Twins, Tigers, White Sox, Indians and Royals.

Starters and bullpen do it again Irvin and relievers shutout Tigers 7-0

The Oakland A’s starter Cole Irvin throws to the Detroit Tigers at the Oakland Coliseum on Sat Apr 17, 2021 (AP News photo)

Detroit 0 – 5 – 0

Oakland 7 – 8 – 0

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Last night’s game was good news for Athletics fans. The team also had some good off field news. Stephen Piscotty went on on paternity leave. We shall miss him in the outfield. We shall miss him at the bat. But he and MLB have their priorities straight here, and let’s honor them for that.

Taking Piscotty’s place on the roster was Vimael Machín, the versatile rule 5 pick from 2020, who spelled Jed Lowrie at second this afternoon. He can play all positions except pitcher and catcher

Starting on the mound, hoping to extend the A’s six game winning streak, was left handed Cole Irvin, hoping to improve on his 0-2,7.45 record with the A’s this season. He brought with him to the mound a four game losing streak, dating back to May 22 of 2019. His last win had occurred five days earlier. He was with the Phillies back then.

Irvin’s counterpart for the Tigers, the right handed Casey Mize—a baseball name if ever there was one—presented more formidable numbers, 1-0,0.82). He throws very effective heat. In his seven games as a rookie last year, his opponents managed to squeak out a batting average of .136 against that pitch.

Of course, the 22 at bats on which that figure was calculated is not a convincing sample size. Still, forewarned is forearmed, especially if we’re talking about four seamers. By the way, Mize was the number one overall pick in 2018 draft.

For all that, the Athletics jumped off to an early lead in their half of the first when Matt Olson delivered a 96 mph four seamer deep into the right field stands. Matt Chapman followed that with a triple that almost left the park but bounded off the Southwest Airlines sign just to the left of the 367 foot marker. Those booming shots had come with two outs, so Mitch Moreland’s grounder to shortstop Willi Castro, playing in the shift, ended the threat,

The A’s kept pouring it on in the second episode. With two down, Machín celebrated his return to the show by singling to left. Aramis García then blasted a 3-2 slider into the State Farm advertisement between the 362 and 388 feet signs in left center field for his first home run as an A. Mark Canha cleared that sign on the next pitch, putting Oakland on top, 4-0. It was his third dinger of the season.

The Tigers seemed ready to pounce back into the game in the top of the fifth. With two men out, their number nine hitter, JaCoby Jones, hit a single to right, followed by Robbie Grossman’s seeing eye safety to left. Both men moved up on a wild pitch during Niko Goodrum’s AB, a ball that brought the count to 3-2. Irvin got him on a called third strike, a 93 mph sinker.

Oakland tacked on another run in the fifth when Chapman beat out the relay on an 4-6-3 double play attempt that brought Canha, who’d been hit by a pitch and reached third on an Olson single, home with the home team’s fifth tally.

Mize set the A’s down in order in the fifth, and that ended his work day. He had allowed five runs, all earned, on seven hits, two of them for the distance. He struck out four with no walks but two hit batters. 63 of his 95 offerings either were in the strike zone or swung at. His replacement was Daniel Norris, who allowed a hit but nothing else, in his one-inning stint, followed in the seventh by Joe Jiménez.

Bob Melvin removed Irvin, who had pitched admirably, after his sixth shutout inning. His balance sheet included four hits against six Ks with nary a walk, although he did hit one batter. He threw 93 pitches, of which only 30 were balls and was in line for the win when J.B.Wendelken replaced him.

Wendelken did well in relief for Irvin, setting Detroit down with only one baserunner, but Jiménez issued enough walks to allow two runs without a hit or error. The second of those runs was charged to Alex Lange, whose first pitch, with the bases filled with inherited runners, was wild.

Still, he got the third the third out in the seventh, and Detroit escaped further damage, as if their hosts hadn’t already inflicted enough of that on them. Lange remained in the game, closing the A’s out in the eighth.

Wendelken and Deolis Guerra pitched an inning each, and they were sharp and effective, Guerra especially so, dispensing with the top of the Detroit lineup 1-2-3 on a dozen pitches, including a strike out. Jordan Weems closed the books on the Tigers in the ninth.

The win went to Irvin. He’s now 1-2, 4.60. Mize took the loss, which left record his record at 1-1, 3.38.

Two shutouts in a row. Who’da thunk it?z

The series closes tomorrow, with game time at 1:07. The probable starters are Chris Bassitt (1-2, 4.96) for the A’s and Matthew Boyd (2-1, 1.86) for Detroit.

Montas and A’s bullpen keep Tigers off the scoreboard 3-0

The Oakland A’s starter Frankie Montas threw six innings of shutout ball before the bullpen took over against the Detroit Tigers at the Oakland Coliseum Fri Apr 16, 2021 (AP News photo)

Detroit. 0 – 4 – 0

Oakland 3 – 8 – 0

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Two weeks into the season, it’s early, but maybe not too early to look at how the teams in the AL West are stacking up.

Only two games separated the four teams as they went into play today. That, in itself, isn’t particularly surprising. What is noteworthy is the pecking order of the quartet. Seattle sits on top at 6-4, followed, in order, by the Angels, Astros, and, in a tie, the Rangers and A’s.

Oakland’s numbers for the fortnight are not encouraging, but there are some encouraging statistics besides the green and gold’s six wins, five of them consecutive, in the last seven games. In that period they went from a scoring deficit of 37 runs a surplus of 15, only a smidgin over two runs a game, but still a good sign. Unfortunately, you have to balance that against a two week (and too weak) BA of .213, although the lineup has hit at a ,275 clip over the past five games,which includes a couple played under National League rules.

The A’s mound staff reduced its collective ERA by half, going from 8.00 in the first six games to 4.00 in the following seven tilts. Nonetheless, their ERA for all 13 games came out to 5.85, considerably higher than any other team’s in the majors. Their opponents hit a staggering .321 of the first half dozen encounters. They were to held to .237 between then and Frankie Montás´s first pitch at 6:42 this evening.

He held the Tigers scoreless on one hit for four innings, while his oppposite number, José Ureña, held the A’s to those same anemic digits over three and a third frames. But, then Oakland’s bats awoke, After a walk to speed demon Ramón Laureano, who advanced to second on Matt Olson’s infield single to third, Matt Moreland drove the A’s center fielder home with the game’s first run on a single to right center that sent Olson to third, from where he scored on Sean Muprhy’s double down the left field line. A walk to Seth Brown loaded the bases, giving Elvis Andrus a chance to blow the game open. But there were two down, and Andrus’s fly to left center ended the threat.

When Montás wound up his sixth inning of mound labors, with an even hundred pitches, 66 of which were strikes, he had blanked the Tigers on two hits. He struck out seven and walked only one. He was in line for the win, which he got, bringing his record to 2-1, 4.91. Yusmeiro Petit, his replacement, preserved the lead through the seventh, giving up a hit and getting a punch out, before giving way to Jake Diekman at the start of the eighth. Diekman sent Detroit down in order.

After throwing 96 pitches, 64 for strikes, Tiger skipper A.J. Hinch removed Ureña in favor of Derek Holland. The Dominican righty had pitched an excellent game and deserved a better outcome. He had scattered seven hits and allowed two walks over his seven inning stint.

In his one-inning appearance, Ureña’s replacement, Derek Holland, gave up the A’s only home run of the evening, a towering solo blast to center that went for Chapman’s third round tripper of the year.

Lou Trivino closed the Tigers down in the ninth to earn the save and bring the A’s to the club house with a .500 winning percentage.

Tomorrow afternoon, Cole Irvin (0-2,7.45) fill face the Tigers, whose starter will bee Casey Mize (1-0,0.82). Game time is 1:07.

Four run sixth boosts A’s in four run win 8-4 over Tigers

The Oakland A’s Matt Chapman connects for a two run homer in the bottom of the sixth inning at the Oakland Coliseum part of a four run inning against the Detroit Tigers on Thu Apr 15, 2021 (AP News photo)

Detroit. 4 – 9 – 2

Oakland. 8 – 8 – 0

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–April 15th, the traditional opening day for major league baseball when it consisted of two eight team leagues, playing a schedule of 154 games, 22 against each of their intra league rivals, 11 at home and 11 on the road. No inter-league games (except for exhibitions like city series or games against farm clubs on stop offs along the railroad routes that took the teams to and from as far from each other as Boston and St. Louis). It was a different game then, almost as different as today’s game is from the one we knew last year and the one we knew then differed from how the game was played in 2019.

But on April 15, 1947, the game changed more profoundly than on any other April 15, more than any other specific day in baseball history. Jackie Robinson became the first Black American to play in a Major League baseball game since Moses Fleetwood Walker was released by the Toledo Blue Stockings of the American Association on September 22, 1884.

Of course, it’s not completely clear that Robinson was, indeed, the only Black major leaguer during that long and shameful period. Several mixed race Latinos made it to the show, men whose skin was light enough for them just barely to pass for white when it suited their employers but still allowed the players to be subjected to insults and indignities, bean balls, and high spikes because of the tone of their skin, their facial structure, or the tightness of their hair. Roberto “Tarzan” Estalella, an outfielder for the Washington Senators, ex-Giants’ catcher Bobby Estalella’s grandfather, was one of them. And there were numerous Native Americans whose DNA would have precluded participation in the national pastime if testing had been available then. (Of course, the number of people with exclusively white DNA is, for all intents and purposes, zero).

So whether Jackie Robinson was the first Black person to play in the major leagues, April 15, 1947, marks a before and after. Baseball—and America—had changed, and Jackie Robinson had changed it.

Since 2004 Major League Baseball, for reasons that were not purely cynical and yet not entirely uncynical, has celebrated that change by declaring that all players wear number 42 on April 15. I never liked that decision. As a practical matter, it’s difficult to tell who’s who when everyone has the same number. It’s ironic that one of the contriubtions the Negro Leagues made to the game was to place identifying numbers on each player’s back.

But my objection went further than the confusion caused by uniform uniform backs. If everyone is number 42, no one is number 42. Then I realized that, although just about every baseball fan knows about the abuse that Robinson continually suffered, relatively few have experienced or can even imagine what it was like.

I would guess that no white male can. So, even if no one is number 42, seeing today’s players wearing Robinson’s number and realizing that they are not Robinson, may just make them, and us, aware of the immensity of the gulf that separates us and the players we watch today, on the one hand, and Robinson, on the other. between the distance that separates us from him and in so doing lessen that distance somewhat.

And, even if it wasn’t Jackie Robinson who integrated twentieth century baseball, the generations of other Black players, those who were excluded because of their race as well as those who disguised it, also are number 42, and we have a chance to recognize them and their achievements and the injustices they suffered.

Jack Roosevelt Robinson was a complex and contradictory person. He and his achievement stand for more than just one person (or one just person) and just one cause (or one just cause). Jackie Robinson Day should not be a cause of self-congratulation or platitudes, but a day of humble recognition of the injustices people like us have participated in, sometimes and some of us as victims; others, as resisters; and yet others, as beneficiaries. And, finally, at others, in a combination of all those roles.

So much for the pre-game show.

The Tigers, at 6-6, and the A’s, at 5-7, came into the four game series that opened tonight trying to scratch their way towards emerging from the set with a winning record . The visitors arrived, fresh from a three game sweep of the Astros in Houston, where the felines had scored at least a half a dozen runs in every game.

In the first couple of games, Detroit owed 12 of the 14 runs they scored to home runs. Last night, they managed to score six without a single round tripper. Like the A’s, the Tigers have a contingent of players of the injured list. Two of them are position players, Miguel Cabrera and Nomar Mazara. They’re joined by pitchers Rony García and Julio Teheran, both righties.

Detroit sent their promising sophomore, Hayward native Tarik Skubal to the mound for his first appearance against Oakland. He was impressive last year, in spite of his won-lost record of 2-4 and ERA of 5.63. Standing against those not preposeszsing numbers are the six innings he hurled against the Twins, in which he gave up only one run and two hits, combined with two walks and six strikeouts.

Brandon Day of SB Nation reports that the lefty’s fastball and slider’s spin rates have declined noticeable this year and that these pitches are not as effective now as they were then. That decline in effectiveness is reflected in his 0-1, 7.71 figures for 2021.

The A’s, coming off a 2-1 series win over the high flying Astros and a 2-0 sweep of earthbound Diamondbacks, are beginning to strut their stuff. To night’s starting pitcher, Sean Manea, like Skubal, is having trouble regaining his previous form. He entered his 100th major league game with a record of 0-1, 5.06. He’s 39-32, 3.87 lifetime, with a record against Detroit of 2-1-2.84 (1-0, 3.00 in the Coliseum).

Those are based, however, on a small sample size of only 19 innings pitched. After a disaster of a start on April 6, in which he surrendered five earned runs in 4-2/3 to the Astros at the Coliseum, He pitched better in his second and most recent outing, allowing only one run, which was earned, over six innings of work against the ‘stros in Houston five days later.

Oakland’s injured list exceeds Detroits by 50% and consists of Mike Fiers, Reymin Guduan, Chad Pinder, A.J. Puk, Trevor Rosenthal, and Burch Smith).

Both pitchers handled their opponents with ease through two and a half’innings, although the A´s got good wood on the ball in the bottom of the second. Matt Chapman was the victim of a lovely leaping catch just in front of the Kaiser Permante sign in right center, and Matt Olson also saw his hard hit fly to the center field warning track fall for an out.

Both were corralled by center fielder JaCoby Jones. Oakland´s near misses ended when Stephen Piscotty led off the home third by taking a 2-2 Skubal 88 mph slider deep to left for the game’s first tally. But the Tiger from Hayward set down the next two Oaklanders on disputed called third strike calls by home plate umpire Ted Barrett. Mark Canha received an (undisputed) base on balls and advanced to second on Lowrie’s single to left. Short stop Willi Castro bobbled Laureano’s bouncer just to the left of second, loading the bases with Athletics. But Skubal wiggled off the hook by striking out Chapman, who swung and missed, on a full count 94 mph four seamer.

The Tigers quickly evened the score. With one down in thetop of the fourth Jeimir Candelario took advantage of the A’s shift and punched a single to right. After Manaea struck out Renato Núñez, Willi Castro lifted a fly down the right field line. It just barely raised chalk, as shown by the subsequent video review, fell for a double. Manaea retired the side on an innocent pop up to first by Jonathan Schoop. Oh, those missed opportunities!

But the Tigers were generous, and they gave thelead back to their hosts. Olson walked and reached third when Candelario overthrew first on Murphy´s grounder. The A’s catcher took second on the play. Olson ñwescored and Murphy advanced to third on Andrus’s sacrifice fly to surprisingly shallow right field, It looked as if Oakland might forge ahead they loaded the bases with walks to Kemp and Canha, but Lowrie’s warning track fly to center closed the book on the inning.

No one was surprised when Skkubal was removed after throwing 88 pitches (46 of them strikes). He had worked only four innings to reach those totals and had surrendered two hits and four walks. One of the two runs he allowed was earned. He struck out five. He would get the loss.

Skubal’s replacement in the bottom the fifth, Farmer, struck out Laureano and Chapman before allowing a towering home run over the right center field State Farm sign to Olson, his second of the year, to give the A’s a 3-1 advantage.

That advantage shrank to 3-2 when Niko Goodrum led off the sixth by blasting a 2-1 pitch over the center field wall for his first homer of the season.

Joe Jiménez took over mound duties for Detroit in the bottom of the frame. That´s a way of putting it, What he did was walk the bases loaded while striking out one man, Tony Kemp, before giving way to Alex Lange, who was tasked with dealing with Laureano in that dangerous situation.

He dealt with the A’s centerfilelder by walking him. That brought up Chapman, who promptly doubled in Canha and Lowrie and advancing Laureano to 90 feet from home. A 3-2 walk to Olson reloaded the bases, and Lange was gone, replaced by Tyler Alexander, sporting a 12.27 ERA. He walked Murphy, and it was 7-2 with the bases still FOA, full of Athletics. Jiménez had managed to give up three earned runs on no hits in a third of an inning, One run was charged to Lange and non were charged to Alexander until the eighth when he let the score against the Tigers rise to 8-2. He stayed in the game to the bitter end

Yusmeiro Petite pitched a perfect seventh in relief of Manaea, who would get the win. The A’s southpaw pitched a full six innings, throwing 82 pitches, 58 for strikes, two runs he allowed were earned, but his ERA still went downto 4.32. He gave up five hits, one for the distance and struck out seven.

Then JB Wendelken did some mopping up in the eighth. He allowed a walk and a single without letting any Tigers cross the plate. Sergio Romo closed it out inelegantly for the home team, giving up a double to Núñez, a triple to Willi Castro, and a sacrifice fly to Schoop, allowing two runs. He also gave up a single to pinch hitter Sergio Castro.

Tomorrow will see Casey Mize (1-0, 0.82) take for the visitors against Cole Ervin (0-2, 7.45). I wouldn’t recommend that the A’s rest on their laurels.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: A’s open up four game series against Tigers

Oakland A’s lefthander Sean Manaea will start against the Detroit Tigers tonight to begin the first of a four game series at the Oakland Coliseum is seen here pitching to the Los Angeles Dodgers on Sep 23, 2020 (AP file photo)

#1 Jerry, How much of a concern should the A’s (5-7) have right now about starting pitcher Jesus Luzardo, Luzardo went 2.2 innings giving up six hits and five runs before being lifted in the third against the Arizona Diamondbacks (4-8) on Tuesday night.

#2 After Luzardo was lifted the A’s bullpen came through six pitchers powered through the D-Backs line up and held Arizona to just two runs from the third inning going forward for the win.

#3 Jed Lowrie was the number one star on Tuesday night after hitting a three run home run to tie the ball game up in the top of the seventh 5-5.

#4 The A’s picked up go ahead runs in the eighth and ninth innings and came away with a 7-5 win their offense has also bailed them out of some close games.

#5 The A’s had the day off on Wednesday and are back to work tonight to open a four game series with the Detroit Tigers (6-6). The Tigers are coming off a four game losing streak which included getting swept by Cleveland and have turned it around with a three game win streak against the Houston Astros. The Tigers will start LHP Tarik Skubal (0-1 ERA 7.71) he’ll be matched up against the A’s Sean Manaea (0-1 ERA 5.06) at the Coliseum tonight at 6:40p.

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