Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: A’s avoid homestand sweep; Open five game road trip tonight

The Houston Astros Myles Straw (3) reaches second base as the Oakland A’s shortstop Elvis Andrus (left) can’t make the catch on a throwing error by third baseman Matt Chapman (right) on Sun Arp 4, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

#1 The Oakland A’s just got by the Los Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday afternoon with a ten inning 4-3 win to close the three game series and homestand at the Oakland Coliseum.

#2 The A’s got runs in the bottom of the ninth to tie it up and got the game winner in the last of the tenth on Mitch Mooreland’s hit to center right scoring Mark Canha from second base it had to be a huge relief before heading out for the road trip.

#3 Jerry from the looks of things in the first two games of the Dodger series the Dodgers winning game one 10-3 and winning game two 5-1 there was this fear the A’s could go down 0-7 to open up their first regular week of the season but just got by the Dodgers on Wednesday 4-3 in extra innings.

#4 This is A’s team has the players to be better than a last place team, with Mooreland, Canha, Matt Chapman, Ramon Laureano, Sean Murphy, Yusmeiro Petit and Elvis Andrus it’s a good enough core of players to take the A’s to the post season.

#5 Jerry, let’s take a look at tonight’s starting pitchers at Minute Maid Field in Houston for the A’s Cole Irvin 0-1 ERA 8.31 who took a tough loss against the Astros allowing four runs and seven hits and for the Astros Cristian Javier who allowed two runs on three hits against the A’s on Friday night at the Coliseum.

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

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg Thu Apr 8, 2021 by Sports Radio Service | Free Listening on SoundCloud

A’s finally snap skid edge Dodgers in extras 4-3

Mark Chapman (26) of the Oakland A’s gets congratulated from third base coach Mark Kotsay (7) after hitting a seventh inning home run on Wed Apr 7, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (NL). 3-8-0

Oakland. 4-5-0

Ten innings

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Tuesday night, the Oakland Athletics were thwarted in their seemingly unending quest for their first victory of the 2021 season. The thwarter in chief was Los Angeles Dodger Clayton Kershaw, who, after retiring, will be a viable candidate for the Hall of Fame.

Wednesday afternoon the A’s snapped their losing streak at six games with a 4-3 ten inning win over the Dodgers. The bleary eyed hometown squad had to face a less daunting figure but one still deserving of respect and capable of causing concern. Trevor Bauer, although he stood at 1-1, 5.66 for this season, was, and will be until after the last out of the world series, the reigning National League Cy Young winner. He achieved that honor by leading the senior circuit in the following categories: ERA (1.73), WHIP (O.79), opponents’ BA (.159), hits/nine innings (5.06), and shutouts (2).

Those two shutouts tied him for first place in complete games. He did this for Cincinnati. Two months ago, he signed with the Dodgers for a reported three-year, $102 million contract. Before today, his lifetime record against Oakland stood at 1-4, 3.72. He was 0-3, 3.25 at the Coliseum.

The A’s sent their promising but as yet unproved left handed youngster Jesús Luzardo to face Los Angeles’ fearsome lineup. Luzardo’s numbers going into the game were distressing but hid a mitigating factor. Although he was an unprepossing 0-1, 9.00, he struck out eight Astros in only five innings of work. That’s more than he’d struck out in any of his previous big league appearances. Of course, his having gone only five frames is no cause for reassurance.

Tuesday, the A’s announced a couple of transactions, but neither involved $102 million over three years. They placed relievers Burch Smith and Reymin Gudjuan on the injured list and recalled pitcher Jeremy Weems, as I reported Tuesday night, and outfielder Seth Brown from the alternate site in Stockton.

Wednesday started out in a way the Oakland faithful are beginning to find annoyingly repetitious; the visitors jumped out to a first inning one run lead. Chris Taylor led off with a walk. Corey Seager followed suit, moving Taylor up to second.

It seemed as if the A’s might emerge unscathed after Luzardo set down Justin Turner and Will Smith on strikes. But A.J. Pollock lined a single to center, plating Taylor and moving Seager into scoring position at second. A walk to Max Muncy filled the bases Dodgers, but the A’s young southpaw got Austin Barnes to fly out

The newly promoted Seth Brown made a spectacular catch of Austin Barnes’ bid for a leadoff homer in the top of the fourth, leaping and leaning over the Ring Central sign in left field to haul down what looked like a sure four bagger. In addition to keeping the score at 1-0, Brown’s heroic grab extended Luzardo’s string of five batters faced without allowing a baserunner. That streak eventually reached seven.

Ramón Laureano manufactured the tying run for Oakland in the bottom of that that frame. He led off with a walk, stole second and third,, and then, with Brown at the plate, scored on a wild pitch. Brown almost put Oakland ahead with a line drive into the right field seats, but it landed foul. He then took a called third strike to end the inning.

Luzardo reached 104 pitches, 62 for strikes, before being lifted in the top of the sixth after granting a passport to Muncy, who advanced to second on a single to left by Barnes. Luzardo’s replacement, Adam Kolarek, reitired Lux on a grounder to first, unassisted, that moved both runners up a base. Then Zach McKinstry hit a hard ground ball that Chapman handled cleanly and, diving into third, tagged Barnes trying to reach that base. But Muncy already had crossed the plate, and Los Angeles taken a 2-1 lead.

Luzardo was charged with that second run, so when he went to the showers he was on the hook for two earned runs on five hits and four walks. He reduced his ERA to 6.10.

Although Oakland’s two young hurlers, Luzardo and Kolarek, had performed adequately, veteran Segio Romo did not. He opened the top of the seventh by hitting Taylor with a slow slider and then yielding a single to center by Seager. Turner’s subsequent double drove in Taylor and sent Seager to third. Then Romo hidt his striode. He got the remaining batters he faced, with an intentional pass to Muncy thrown in, but Oakland now was trailing 3-1.

Still, the A’s battled back. Chapman started it by blasting his first home run of the young, frustrating season, a definitive smash over the center field fence. Bauer got Brown to strike out looking but surrended a single to Piscotty before fanning Andrus. That finished the day for Bauer.

Corey Knebel took over mound duties, and Sean Murphy pinch hit for Aramis García, and Tony Kemp pinch ran for Piscotty at second after Murphy’s base on balls. It was all for naught; Kenebel caught Canha looking to end the threat. Oakland had inched closer to Los Angeles (at least on the scoreboard) and now trailed 3-2.

Bauer’s line was 110 pitches, 67 for strikes in 6-2/3 IP. Two runs, both earned, on three hits, one out of the park, and only one walk but two hit batters. He notched ten Ks.

Cory pitched an inning, spanning the final out of the seventh and the first two outs of the eighth, before giving way to Víctor González, who came in to face Moreland with the bases empty and closed out the inning.

Jake Dieckman pitched a perfect top of the eighth and was lifted for Lou Trivino after Seager led off the ninth with a ground single to left. Trivino promptly walked Turner on four pitches. He threw two more to Smith before getting a strike called on Smith, who eventually flew out to right, advancing Seager to third.

After a long at bat, the A’s reliever induced Pollock to fly to Brown, now playing right, in right center field while the runners held their bases. He walked Muncy on a full count to clog the base paths with Dodger blue before fanning Edwin Ríos to keep Oakland in contention.

Of course, that meant they’d have to face the nearly impenetrable Kenley Jansen. Chapman, who seems to have found his stroke, led off with a solid single to center. Brown’s walk put men on first and second. Kemp sacrificed Chappy to third and pinchrunner Ka’ai Tom to second.

Then as I was taught to say in high school Latin, Elvis Andrus lifted a sac fly to right that knotted up the score with two outs in the bottom of the ninth. A walk to Murphy brought Canha to the plate. Unforunately, he grounded out to short.

Yusmeiro Petit came in to start the first extra inning of the A’s season. That, in itself, was a triumph of sorts. Ríos was the runner placed on second. He stayed there as Lux flew out to Laureano and McKinstry flew out to Kemp, now playing left. Taylor then lifted a fly to short right field.

Tom, who had replaced Brown in that position, made a long charge to the fence near the pitchers’ mounds in the visitors’ bull pen behind first base, got his glove on the ball (or vice versa), but couldn’t hold on to it. Undaunted, Petit struck Taylor out on a curve.

Jimmy Nelson took over on the mound and Canha took second to start the home tenth.

After a ten pitch at bat, Lowrie walked, which helped Oakland only because he didn’t make an an out. Canha still was on second, and force plays now were possible. The A’s needed only one run. They came closer to getting it when Laureano’s fly to deep center allowed Canha reach third, bringing Moreland to the plate. Moreland came through, lacing a single to right center that brought in Canha.

The A’s had won, and in what a fashion!

Petit got the win. He pitched one inning of perfect ball, in which he threw ten pitches. Nelson got tagged with the loss and was charged with one run, which was unearned because it was scored by the placed runner.

The A’s left for Houston right after the game. After playing three games against the Astros, they´ll move on to a two game set with the Arizona Diamondbacks. They return to torture. They will return to Oakland to face Detroit on Thursday the 15.

Kershaw holds off A’s hitting for 5-1 victory; A’s losing streak hits six

Los Angeles Dodger pitcher Clayton Kershaw throwing in the first inning against the Oakland A’s on Tue Apr 6, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (NL). 5-11-1

Oakland. 1-5-0

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Monday night, the Oakland A’s were stimyed by Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Dustin May, a young right handed pitcher just entering his prime. Tuesday night, they had to deal with the offerings of Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw, a veteran lefty who likely will be a candidate for the Hall of Fame, but who was 0-1, 7.04 going into the game for the 4-1 NL West leading Dodgers. Kershaw’s starting performance stopped any A’s hitting for a 5-1 victory.

Facing him for the blue and gold was the irregularly effective right hander Chris Bassitt, bringing an 0-1, 5,06 record into his second start of the season. Bassitt is like the little girl with a little curl right in the middle of her forehead. When he is good, he is very, very good, but when he is bad ….

The Athletics’ line-up presented a few noticeable changes from theilr recent ones. Ramón Laureano was back in action, batting third. The slumping Matt Olson, was replaced at first base by the also slumping Mitch Moreland, battingi n the seventh slot.

The new aliignment produced one early welcome outcome. For the first time this year Oakland led after one inning. Jed Lowrie, who usually plays second, batted in that position, replacing Moreland as DH, while Tony Kemp took over at Lowrie’s customary position in the field.

Lowrie’s new assignment and Laureano’s return produced immediate results. After the former’s one out double to center field, the latter blasted another, this one to right center, putting the home team up by a run and markiing the first time in 2021 that they had drawn first blood.

That was too good to be true for long, and it wasn’t. Edwin Ríos led off the top of the second with a sharp single to center. A walk to Gavin Lux moved him up a notch, and Austin Barnes’s resounding double to left drove him in. Bassitt managed to escape that inning without allowing any more scoring, thanks largely to a great defensive play by Moreland on Seager’s scorcher down the first base line to close out the frame.

The Dodgers added another three runs in the top of the third, bringing the score up to 4-1 on Turner’s second straight two bagger, Muncy’s two run long ball to right, followed two batters later by Ríos’s homer to right center.

Stephen PIscotty’s blast into the the left field second deck in the bottom of the fourth almost reduced LA’s lead to 4-2, but it was called foul after a video review.

Bassitt got his act together and pitched well until he was removed after having thrown 102 pitches, 65 for strikes, over six innings. All four of the runs he allowed were earned, and they came on nine hits. He had four strikeouts to show against one walk and a hit batter. HIs undoing was the two home runs he surrendered. At game’s end his record stood at 0-2, 5,56.

Lou Trivino was his replacement. He set the Dodgers down in order, including one punch out, before yielding to Yusmeiro Petit at the top of the eighth.

Piscotty hit the ball well in the bottom of the seventh when, after having just missed a home run in his previous AB, he drove a 86 mph slider against the left center field fence for his first hit of the night. Moreland grounded out to first to end the inning and Kershaw’s night’s work.

His performance had been outstanding. 61 of his 91 pitches were strikes. He gave one run, earned, on four hits, didn’t walk anyone and strudk out eight Athletics. One-time Oakland closer Blake Treinen relieved him at the beginning of the eighth and retired the side while yielding a walk to Kemp, who stole second.

Jordan Weems, recalled today from the A’s alternate site in Stockton, pitched the ninth for them. He yielded Mookie Betts’ first home run of the season, a slam over the State Farm advertisement in left centerfiled on an 94 mph four seamer. He got his other three batters out, two on strikeouts.

Laureano’s leadoff single in the ninth knocked Treinen out of the box. He passed the ball to LA’s closer, Kenley Jansen. Laureano’s steal of second, followed by two fly outs to right, one a warning track drive by Murphy, made things interesting. But Moreland’s pop out to Lux in shallow right ended the game.

The win brought Kereshaw’s ERA down to 4.26 and evened his won-loss record at 1-1.

The two teams will go at it again at 12:37 tomorrow afternoon, with right hander Trevor Bauer (1-0, 5.68) matching arms with southpaw Jesús Luzardo (0-1,9.00).

A’s drop fifth straight game; Dodgers open up series with 10-3 win

It’s been that kind of a homestand for the Oakland A’s as the hot corner is too hot for A’s third baseman Matt Chapman who can’t handle a hard hit ball against the Los Angeles Dodgers at the Oakland Coliseum on Mon Apr 5, 2021 (AP News photo)

Los Angeles (NL). 10-14-1

Oakland. 3- 6 -1

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–In every one of Oakland’s four season opening loses to Houston, there was at least one point at which the A’s could have either burst the game open in their favor or convert a seemingly commanding Astros lead into a tight match. In every case, the failure to capitalize on Houston’s momentary vulnerability turned the series into a festival of blown chances. Tonight, Oakland didn’t even come close.

In a sense, the A’s pitching staff is emblematic of the team’s inability to make the potential actual. A.J. Puk, Jesús Luzardo and Sean Manaea are young hurlers of tremendous talent, just short of unlocking the door to success. Tonight’s starter against the 3-1 Los Angeles Dodgers, Frankie Montás is another member of that group seeking to take the final step into the role of reliable top of the line starter.

He went 9-2, 2.63 in 2019, the last time MLB played a full season. MLB’s season lasted 162 games, but Montas’s didn’t; the was suspended for 80 days, June 21 to September 24, for drug use. He seemed ready to resume his progress last year, ready enough to be the A’s (delayed) opening day starter and be named the AL’s player of the week for August 3-9.

But he missed his next start because of back troubles and didn’t pitch well again until the final game of the regular (if you can say that about 2020) season. He won a wild card series game in relief and pitched well for three innings in the last game of the division series only to fall apart in the fourth frame to take the loss.

During this year’s spring training, he lost time to a stint on the covid list. As if that weren’t enough, Montás was forced to leave the last start of his abbreviated Cactus League season with a cuticle tear on the middle finger of his right, pitching, hand.

His performance tonight did nothing to advance his career. And the A’s anemic hitting did nothing to offset his disappointing mound work.

Dustin May, the starter for the NL West leading Dodgers , already seems to have established himself as a front line hurler. Promoted after 15 starts for AA Tulsa to AAA Oklahoma City, Los Angeles called him to the show in mid 2019. He went 3-1, 2.57 and threw 3-1/3 innings against the Nationals in the division series, yielding three hits and a run, for an ERA of 2. 70.

Last year, still technically a rookie, he was the Dodgers’ opening day starter. In that assignment, he gave up one run, this time in 4-1/3 frames. He went on to finish the season at 3-1, 2.57, with 16 walks against 44 strike outs. Among National League pitchers who went 50 or more innings, he ranked eighth in ERA, 13th in opponents’ BA (.222), and tied for 12th in WHIP at 1.09. He faced the A’s once, on September 22, and beat them.

His post seson record was more extensive than it had been a year earlier. He made three starts and four relief appearances, with combined totals of 1-0,4.22, and 13 punch outs. The Dodgers’ game notes report that he went 3-0 , 2.37, with 21 strikeouts and four walks in four starts and one relief stint in spring training this year. His four seamer was the fastest of any major league pitcher with 40 IP or more, an average of 99.1 mph.

Los Angeles jumped off to a fairly early and fairly significant lead in the top of the second. With one out, Max Muncy hit an opposite field single to left. Then Chris Taylor lifted a fly to medium left field that eluded a diving Tony Kemp, subbing for the ailing Chad Pinder. After a walk to Edwin Ríos loaded the bases, Zach McKinstry´s sac fly to left drove in the first run of the game.

Then, Matt Chapman couldn’t handle Mookie Betts’ hard smash down the third base line. That infield hit reloaded the bases, and Corey Singer unloaded them with a double off the centerfield wall, to the right of the STREAM YOUR A’S sign. The A’s now were down, 4-0.

Will Smith promptly made it 5-0 with his line drive that curved around the left field foul line on a 2-2 88 mph spliterfast with one down in the visitor’s third. Muncy followed that with a single to center, and then Montás plunked Taylor to put men on first and second. After another out, McKinstry´s single to right brought in Muncy with the Angelinos´ seventh run. A walk to Betts, and Montás was through for the night. AJ Puk relieved him, making his season debut.

Montás´s ugly line for 2-2/3 innings was seven runs, all earned, on seven hits, a home run, three walks, a wild pitch, and a hit batter He managed to strike out seven. Of his 90 pitches, 53 were strikes. His HBP of Taylor caused the Dodgers’ second baseman to leave the game.

Puk put out the fire in the third, but loaded the bases with two out in the fourth. He escaped unscathed thanks to second straight inning ending strkeout. When he left the game after closing out the LA sixth, his stint was your Á´s highlight for the night. In 3-1/3 innings, 35 of his 53 offerings counted as strikes.

He surrendered but one hit, but gave up three walks and a wild pitch, while striking out four. His replacement was left handed sidewinder Adam Kolarek, who gave up a run, earned, in his inning on the mound before giving way to Sergio Romo in the eighth.

May also finished up his work after the sixth. His performance had been superb. He surrendered two hits and two walks while striking out eight. His pitch count was 85, only 28 of which were balls.

Romo was tagged for a homer to center on his third pitch to Justin Taylor, the first man he faced. The A’s suffered an egregious lapse during Romo’s brief tenure. With Will Smith on first and one out, pinch hitter Matt Bealy, hit a grounder to shortstop Elvis Andrus, playing to the right of second. Andrus tried for the unassisted putout at second but bobbled the ball, leaving both batter and runner safe. Then, while none of the A’s seemed to be paying attention, Taylor advanced uncontestedly to third.

Canha saved a shred of the Athletics’ honor with a round tripper to left to lead off the bottom of the eighth off Mays’ replacement, David Price. That reduced LA’s lead to 9-1. The A’s racked up a couple of tallies more on a walk to Lowrie, a single to right by Piscotty, batting for Moreland, an infield hit by Chapman that plated Lowrie, and Ka’ai Tom’s first big league hit, an RBI single to center.

Reymin Gudjuan tried to mop up for the A’s. Both he and Cody Bellinger had to leave the game in the top of the night when they ran into each other while Bellinger was beating out a 3-1 infield single. By then the Dodgers had run the score up to 10-3. JB Wendelken was called on to try to get the last out of the inning and stop the carnage. He succeeded and, in doing so, lowered Gudjuan’s ERA to … 27.00.

Three hours and 35 minutes after the first pitch, Scott Alexander closed out the game, setting the A’s down in order.

Tomorrow’s game will start at 6:40. Clayton Kershaw (0-1, 7.94) is scheduled to face off against Chris Bassitt (0-1, 5.06).

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s hope to get back on track against Dodgers after rough Astros series

Oakland A’s second baseman Tony Kemp makes a throw to first in the third inning to retire the Houston Astros Carlos Correa in game 3 of the four game series on Sat Apr 3, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

Barbara on the A’s podcast:

#1 Barbara for the Oakland A’s the series with the Houston Astros pure torture the A’s took four loses in the row on Thursday through Sunday.

#2 The Astros had their bats going all series long with Yordan Alvarez, Jose Altuve, and Alex Bergman A’s pitching looked like they just couldn’t figure a way to get them out.

#3 A’s pitchers who were hit during the Houston series, A’s opening day starter Chris Bassitt five plus innings three runs, Jesus Luzardo five innings five runs, and Cole Irvin four innings four runs, Sean Manaea on Sunday over four innings plus six hits and five earned runs .

#4 A’s manager Bob Melvin was asked if he would be interested in managing another team other than the A’s after this season and he said “I have no desire to go anywhere else”

#5 The A’s will try to win a series as they host the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Dodgers who opened up the season against the Colorado Rockies and both teams played pretty even ball. Do you see the A’s recovering and maybe having a more balanced series against the Dodgers after the mismatch series they just had against the Astros?

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

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason Mon Apr 5, 2021 by Sports Radio Service | Free Listening on SoundCloud

San Francisco Giants report: History of the Willie Mac Award

Willie McCovey holding one of his many awards played with the San Francisco Giants from 1958 to 1973 and returned to the Giants in 1977-1980 (National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

When the late Willie McCovey retired after pinch hitting against the rival Los Angeles Dodgers on July 6, 1980, the San Francisco Giants honored him by creating an award in honor of him.

The Willie Mac Award is awarded to the most inspirational player on the team, and McCovey himself would be there in attendance every year until untimely passing on October 31, 2018 at the age of 80.

McCovey, who played 22 years in the major leagues for the Giants, the San Diego Padres and the Oakland Athletics; however, he will mostly be remembered for wearing the Orange and Black from 1959-1973, then split between the Padres and Athletics from 1974-1976 and then came back to the Giants before the 1977 season.

The 64 McCovey would be a regular at PacIfic Bell Park, then SBC Park and AT&T Park, as he was usually in his box on the club level and would be seen by throngs of fans as he left the park in a cart.

Jack Clark won the inaugural award in 1980, then Larry Herndon won the award in 1981 and was subsequently traded to the Detroit Tigers for left-handed reliever Dan Schatzeder.

Oakland native and a member of the famed Big Red Machine, the late Joe Morgan won the award in 1982 and ended the season with one of the Giants most famous home runs in the history of the team, when he hit a three-run home run off of Terry Forster that knocked the Dodgers out of the playoffs and gave the National League Western Division. That home run came on October 3, 1982, exactly 31 years after Bobby Thomsons famous Shot Heard Round the World, off of Dodgers reliever Ralph Branca that sent the Giants to their first World Series since 1937.

Multiple players have won the award more than once, including current Giants TV analyst Mike Krukow, J.T. Snow, and Bengie Molina.

On three different occasions, there have co-winners, as in 1995, Mark Leiter and Mark Carreon won the award. Sixteen years later in 2001, Mark Gardner and Benito Santiago shared the award and in 2016, Brandon Crawford and Javier Lopez split the award.

Mike Yastrzemski won the award in 2020, his first full year with the ballclub.

Here is the list of winners.

1980: Clark
1981: Herndon
1982: Morgan
1983: Darrell Evans
1984: Bob Brenly
1985: Krukow
1986: Krukow
1987: Chris Speier
1988: Jose Uribe
1989: Dave Dravecky
1990: Steve Bedrosian
1991: Robby Thompson
1992: Mike Felder
1993: Kirt Manwaring
1994: No winner
1995: Carreon and Leiter
1996: Shawon Dunston
1997: Snow
1998: Jeff Kent
1999: Marvin Benard
2000: Ellis Burks
2001: Gardner and Santiago
2002: David Bell
2003: Marquis Grissom
2004: Snow
2005: Mike Matheny
2006: Omar Vizquel
2007: Bengie Molina
2008: Molina
2009: Matt Cain
2010: Andres Torres
2011: Ryan Vogelsong
2012: Buster Posey
2013: Hunter Pence
2014: Madison Bumgarner
2015: Matt Duffy
2016: Crawford and Lopez
2017: Nick Hundley
2018: Will Smith
2019: Kevin Pillar
2020: Yastrzemski

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: Was Astros Dusty outsmarting the A’s in Houston series?

Houston Astros Jose Altuve is congratulated from manager Dusty Baker upon returning to the dugout in the fourth inning after scoring against the Oakland A’s on Thu Apr 1, 2021 at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

#1 The A’s had a pretty rough start in their first series of 2021 Dusty Baker and the Astros are a very methodical team

#2 There’s very little doubt that the Astros can produce runs as seen in these three games of the series.

#3 The A’s host the Dodgers on Monday after they had a three game series with the Colorado Rockies. The Dodgers have lots of punch in that line up with Mookie Betts, Corey Seager, Justin Turner, and Cody Bellinger.

#4 The A’s pitching staff over the three games against the Astros were in question pitcher Chris Bassitt was rocked for three earned runs in his start Thursday, Jesus Luzardo gave up five earned runs in his start on Friday, then on Saturday the A’s got rocked again by Astros hitting 9-1, the A’s got bombed again 9-2 on Sunday.

#5 The Dodgers Dustin May 0-0 a right hander will be throwing against the Oakland A’s Frankie Montas 0-0. May had a great spring beating out David Price and Tony Gonsolin for the 5th spot in the rotation. Montas lost his splitter last season and has gained it again for this season and is hoping to have a season like he did in 2019.

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

A’s fans humbled, and the A’s dismantled by the Astros in a season-opening sweep

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND, CA–Season opening series observations from the Coliseum: pitchers ahead of hitters or hitters ahead of pitchers?

Well, more like Astros ahead of Athletics, and Houston hitters ahead of humorous, disgruntled A’s fans who had more than a year to prepare lugs to unload on their rivals and their cheating shenanigans.

The fans–especially that guy in Section 221–didn’t disappoint. Neither did the Astros.

“Castro Valley disowned yoouu!” Section 221 guy bellowed at Astros’ catcher Jason Castro.

And on the next pitch, Castro went opposite field off Sean Manaea for a 3-1 Astros’ lead.

The third inning, the same guy, his presence growing in a socially distanced crowd of fewer than 5,000, had Jose Altuve in his sights.

“Altuve! Show us your tattoo!” He shouted in reference to the shortstop’s equally humorous denial of wearing a wire signaling pitches during the 2019 playoffs. Altuve said he kept his teammates from ripping off his jersey in a game-ending celebration of a win over the Yankees to prevent revealing…a tattoo that was too ugly to be seen on national television.

But what was ugly on Sunday was Altuve’s response to the A’s and their fans. Two pitches after the tattoo reference, he ripped a double down the left field line. Later in that inning, with Manaea an out from escaping undamaged, Yuli Gurriel doubled into the right field gap to score Altuve and Yordan Alvarez.

And those exchanges encapsulated the weekend, the more the home fans yapped, the more the Astros slapped hits all over the place. In beating the A’s 9-2 and sweeping the four-game set, Houston never trailed and they had at least one base runner in 30 of the 36 innings. The A’s–truly an afterthought in a battle between the fans and the cheaters–came up empty on all fronts. They scored just nine runs, and 1-1 ties after the first inning on Friday and Sunday were as close as they got to being competitive. The Oakland bullpen was left so battered and bruised, outfielder Ka’ai Tom made his first major league pitching appearance in the ninth, a feat that comes before Tom’s first major league hit (0 for 6).

“We just crushed them from the first pitch to the last pitch of the whole series,” said Chas McCormick. “It was cool to watch, cool to be a part of.”

“We have to look at it as four games of 162,” manager Bob Melvin said. “We need to play with a little bit more urgency, we obviously have to play better. We got another tough team coming in, then we go there (Houston). We got to turn things around. It’s not just going to happen for us. We’ve got to play better baseball and this was not good baseball for us.”

“Altuve! You’re a cheater… and a bum… and you’re short!”

Injuries took a toll on the A’s as well with Sean Murphy suffering a wrist injury and missing the series final three games. Ramon Laureano played Thursday and Friday but injured his wrist sliding into a bag, which might have made Pete Rose famous, but is a move that isn’t endorsed by managers who prefer healthy players.

And on Sunday, Chad Pinder, already with a couple of slick catches to start his season, was forced to leave the game after a leaping catch at the wall left him dinged up. That incident happened four pitches into the ballgame, foreshadowing what would be a long Sunday afternoon for Oakland.

The A’s fell to 0-4, the first time they’ve started a season with four losses since 1987. Meanwhile, the Astros scored at least eight runs in each game of the series, becoming just the fourth team in Major League history to load all that offense into a season’s first four games.

It’s not often a team anticipates the arrival of the reigning World Champions for some relief, but that’s where the A’s are with the Dodgers arriving on Monday night. Frankie Montas will face the Dodgers’ Dustin May in the opener.

A’s Irvin can’t fool Astro hitting in 9-1 offensive barrage

Hit high the Houston Astros Yordan Alvarez says “good bye baseball” with a three run fourth inning home run against the Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Sat Apr 3, 2021 (AP News photo)

Houston. 9. 13. 1

Oakland. 1. 3. 0

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–The A’s came into this afternoon’s game still looking for their first win of the season. Slow starts are nothing new for this team; in eight of the last ten seasons, they have been 1-2 after three games. They tried today to join that not particularly prestigious club. (Spoiler alert: they didn’t) in a 9-1 shellacking to the Houston Astros on Saturday.

Last night’s contest threatened to become a prelude to disaster when Ramón Laureano had to leave the game after injuring his hand. It turned out to be merely a contusion, and the A’s centerfielder is listed as day to day.

Cole Irvin, Oakland’s starting pitcher, is a 27 year old lefty with a lifetime won-loss record of 2-2 and an equally unimpressive ERA of 6.75 for the Philadelphia Phillies, but his numbers for the A’s this spring were impressive: 1-1, ERA 1.00 over five games, three of which he started. He gave up ten hits in eighteen innings, surrendered only one home run, and struck out 18 opponents against three walks.

Irvin’s counterpart on the mound was the veteran right hander Lance McCullers, Jr. He brought with him a career record of 32-25, 3.70 against all comers and 5-2, 4.04 against the A’s. For 2020, those figures were 3-3, 3.93 and 5-2, 4.04, respectively.

It didn’t take long for Houston to get to Irvin. A hit batter, Michael Brantley, with one out, followed by Aledmys Díaz’s double off the left center field wall, and an RBI base knock by Kyle Tucker, and Oakland was trailing by a tally with runners at the corners. But Carlos Correa hit into an around the horn double play, and, just like that, Irvin had limited the damage.

McCullers got himsef in trouble in the bottom of the first and then, with a little help frome home plate umpire Dan Bellino, also escaped with minimal damage. Lead off walks to Mark Canha and Matt Olson, followed by a Matt Chapman strike out on a pair of wicked cutters after the count had reached 1-1, and Mitch Moreland´s RBI single to center evened the score with two on and none out. But Chad Pinder went down swinging, and Stephen Piscotty was called out on a 3-2 knuckle curve that seemed too many, including. me, to have missed the plate.

The Astros took the lead back in the second when Jose Altluve’s bases loaded two out single to left brought home Yordán Alvarez, who had opened the frame with a single to center. But, in spite of a walk to Yuri Gurriel and singles by Myles Straw and Altuve, Irvin wriggled out of the jam, striking out Martín Maldonado and Chas McCormiock, pinch hitting for Brantley, who left the game due to right wrist discomfort.

Irvin held the Astros in check until the fifth. He hit McCormick with a pitch and surrendered a single when Díaz´s line drive just barely eluded Chapman’s glove and landed in left for a single. Irvin got the left handed Tucker to pop out to short. This brought Correa to the plate, the righty-lefty match up, calling for a right handed hurler to face Houston’s shortstop.

Bob Melvin brouht in Lou Trevino to relieve his young starter. The tactic worked; Correa struck out. But last year’s rule change meant that Trevino had to pitch to the left handed hitting Alvarez, who blasted the second pitch he saw over the center field fence, just to the right of the 388 foot sign.

This gave Houston a 5-1 lead and Irvin a line of 4-1/3 innings pitched, 7 hits, one walk and 4 runs , all earned allowed, two strike outs. His pitch count was 82, with 55 strikes. Trevino retired all seven of the other batters he faced before being lifted for Burch Smith who took over mound duties to start the eighth.

Ryne Stanek replaced Lance McCullers to open the Oakland sixth. He left with a line of five innings pitched, one run, earned, two hits, and three walks charged to him. He struck out seven. 54 of his 95 pitches counted as strikes

Enoli Paredes, in turn, relieved McCullers at the start of the home eighth. getting Aramis García out on a grounder back to the mound. Then, hope rose eternal, and Oakland loaded the bases on a single Olson, sandwiched between walks to Canha and Chapman. But Brooks Raley came to Houston´s rescue and struck out Jed Lowrie, pinch hitting for Moreland, swinging. Hope rose again when Chad Pinder clouted one out to deep right center, only to die on the warning track in the glove of Myles Straw.

Reymin Guduan couldn´t hold the Astros within what they had, just a few minutes earlier, seemed like striking distance. Maldonado opened the visitors´ninth with a single to right. Altuve walked. McCormick doubled, sending Maldonado home and Altuve to third. He scored and McCormick replaced him on third when Díaz singled to left. McCormick then scored on a wild pitch to Tucker, while Díaz moved up to second. Another wild pitch sent Díaz to third. Correa broke the monotony with a single to center. He went to second on yet another wild pitch. Finally, Guduan got out of the inning by retiring Alvarez and Gurriel.

The As went down 1,2,3 in their half of the ninth.

McCullers got the win; Raley, the save. The loss went to Irvin.

Oh, well, tomorrow is another day, and Sean Manaea will try to save one game of the series before the Dodgers come to town on Monday. José Urquidy will try to extend Houston’s winning streak to four. Game time is 1:07 at the Oakland Coliseum.

A’s Luzardo coughs up 2 homers and 5 earned runs in 9-5 loss to Astros

Houston Astros baserunner Jose Altuve (27) reaches down to touch home plate behind Oakland A’s catcher Aramis Garcia (37) on a Michael Brantley double in the top of the fourth inning (AP News photo)

Houston. 9. 14. 0

Oakland. 5. 8. 1

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Ever since they traded Sean Doolittle and Ryan Madson to Washington for Blake Treinen, Sheldon Neuse and Jesús Luzardo July of 2017, the A’s have had high expectations for the Peruvian born, Venezuelan and state-side educated left hander Luzardo.

While he hasn’t yet fulfilled the team’s hopes, it hasn’t been for lack of talent or motivation but because of nagging problems with the shoulder of his pitching arm. Indeed, he underwent Tommy John surgery at 18, while still in high school. That was in 2016. He began last season in the bullpen and ended up starting in game 3 of the division series. In between he threw his first 100 pitch game. His record for the season was 3-2, 4.12.

Today, he left the game trailing 5-2 after five innings, in which he sent 92 balls to the plate, 56 of which were strikes. All five runs were earned, and Luzardo gave up eight hits, two of which were round trippers. He walked one and struck out eight Astros. Burch Smith relieved him to open the sixth. The A’s ended up losing their second straight game to the Astros 9-5 at the Oakland Coliseum.

Luzardo’s opposite number for the visitors was their promising right hander, Cristián Javier, who had finished third in last year´s rookie of the year balloting.

Houston drew first blood in the third, capitalizing on José Altuve’s short stature and the long ball prowess of Michael Brantey and Alex Bregman. The Astros’ second sacker opened the frame by taking a four pitch walk. Brantley followed with a double off the right-center field wall.

He looked out at second, and the A’s shortstop Elvis Andrus thought he was. Second base umpire Sean Barber did not. Alex Bregman then blasted a three and two 96 mph four seam fast ball over both the glove of a leaping Mark Canha and the left field wall, Luzardo settled down to retire the next three batters in order.

But the Astros added a couple of runs to their 3-0 lead in the very next inning. Yuli Gurriel led off with a homer to left. Two outs later, Altuve beat out a grounder to Chapman. He scored on Brantley’s resounding double to center.

Oakland finally got on the board in their half of the fourth. Canha led off with a single to third and scored on Laureano’s powerful triple. Olson was hit by a pitch, and, after Chapman fanned, Laureano came home on Mitch Moreland’s sacrifice fly to medium right field.

You can chalk that run up to Laureano’speed. After Lowrie lined a single to center, Astro manager Dusty Baker decided that Javier had pitched enough for the day and replaced him on the mound with Bryan Abreu, who closed out the inning by getting Andrus to hit into a force out at second.

Houston’s young starter left with no decision, having yielded two runs, both earned, on three hits over three and two-thirds innings. He gave up three hits and got four strike outs while hitting one batter. 46 of his 73 offerings were strikes.

With Smith on the mound for Oakland in the top of the seventh, Houston managed to tack on another to their lead when Altuve walked and advanced to third on single by Bregman. The speedy Altuve then managed to score on Kyle Tucker’s sacrifice pop up to Andrus in shallow right field.

The Athletics came roaring back in the bottom half of that inning, Chad Pinder, pinch hitting for Ka’ai Tom with Jed Lowrie, who had walked, on first, blasted a Brooks Raley 90 mph cut fast ball into the left center field seats to cut the Astros’ advantage to 6-4. They narrowed their deficit to a single tally on Olson’s two base hit, a productive ground out to second by Chapman, and a pinch hit ground out to short by a pinch hitting Stephen Piscotty off of Blake Taylor.

The deficit increased, however, in the Astros’ ninth. Jake Diekman made an inauspcious season debut by giving up a single to right by the pesky Altuve, who stopped at third on Brantley’s subsequent double to right. Diekman then loaded the bases with an intentional pass to Bregman.

Left handed hitter Kyle Tucker, with the shift on and the infield drawn in, slapped a hard bounder to Andrus, playing to the right of second base. The ball bounced off the shortstop’s glove and into center field for a two run single and an 8-4 Houston lead.

Althogh Diekman struck out the next two batters, the wheels continued to fall off Oakland’s wagon, JB Windelkin walked Gurriel, moving Bregman and Tucker up a base each. Myles Straw hit what looked like an inning ending grounder to Olson. But the Gold Glove winning first baseman bobbled the ball, and Straw beat his throw to Windelken at first. That was the final score, Houston winning 9-5.

Ryan Pressly closed out the game for the ‘stros with a scoreless ninth. Abreu got the win for his two and a third innings of one hit ball.

The A’s used five pitchers, Luzardo, Smith, Romo, Diekman, and Wendelken, in a losing cause.

The teams will go at it again tomorrow at 1:07. Lance McCullers, Jr. will take the mound for Houston. Col Irvin will make his debut for Oakland.

The A’s are now two games down with, let us hope, 160 to go.