Sportstalk remote podcast at Kinara Fusion and Lounge in downtown SF; Monday, August 19, 2019

yelp.com photo: Entrance of Kinara Fusion and Lounge now located at 607 Geary Street in downtown San Francisco.

Cast: Michael Duca (host), David Zizmor, Amaury Pi-Gonzalez, Jeremy Kahn, Morris Phillips, and Lee Leonard (producer) podcasting from Kinara Fusion and Lounge at 607 Geary Street in downtown San Francisco. Our thanks to our hosts and owners of Kinara Fusion and Lounge Restaurant Rahil Patel, Shahil Patel and Jafar Patel.

Kinara Fusion and Lounge offers a wide variety of classic Italian pizza recipes along with exotic Indian and Mediterranean specialties. A full certified Halal menu also serving unique deserts guaranteed to satisfy your palate. Located in the heart of San Francisco, Kinara also offers relaxed seating for after hours hookah lounging. Located at 607 Geary Street at Jones in downtown San Francisco.

On today’s podcast: Discussion on the San Francisco Giants and Oakland A’s and their chase for a wild card spot, the Oakland Raiders get ready for Aaron Rogers and the Green Bay Packers for Thursday Night Football Thursday, August 22nd at Investors Group Field in Winnipeg Canada. The San Francisco 49ers host the Denver Broncos for Monday Night Football at Mile High Stadium on Monday August 19th.

Preview of the A’s vs. Yankees series

By Jerry Feitelberg

Oakland- The Oakland A’s will start a three-game series with the New York Yankees beginning Tuesday night at the Oakland Coliseum. The A’s and Yankees are both iconic franchises. Each franchise has a storied past. The Yankees, with 40 AL pennants and 27 World Series crowns, are seeking to add another pennant and championship to that list this year. The Yankees have the best record  (83-43) in the American League and own a 9 and 1/2 game lead over the Tampa Bay Ray for the AL East title. The A’s are in second place in the AL West with a record of 71-53. The A’s are trail the Rays by 1 and 1/2 games in the race for the second Wild Card. The A’s, if they continue to play well, could catch the Indians and win the first Wild Card. They trail Cleveland by 2 and 1/2 games.

Anytime the Yankees are in Oakland, there are usually above average crowds in attendance. Both teams have a lot to play for. The Yankees want to have the best record so that they will have home-field advantage throughout the AL playoffs. The A’s want to win to gain ground on Tampa Bay and Cleveland.

One of the great stories of this season has been the success of the Yankees on the field. They have had so many injuries to key players. Yet, they somehow have been able to have the best record in the AL. The replacement players have stepped up and done the job. They did make one acquisition in the off-season that has helped them immensely. D.J. LeMahaieu joined the Yankees after a stellar career with the Colorado Rockies. LeMahieu is leading the league in hitting, and if he wins the batting title, he will be the first player to have won the title in the American and National leagues.

The Yankees injury list is loaded with stars. Third baseman Miguel Andujar, who was second in the balloting for Rookie of the Year last year, is on the 60 day-IL and is out for the season. First baseman Greg Bird, Reliever Dellin Betances, outfielder Jacoby Ellsbury, and starter Luis Severino are all on the 60-day IL. Severino may pitch again this year but not before September. The Yanks have four other players of note on the 10-day IL. Their DH, Edwin Encarnacion is out with a fractured right wrist. Aaron Hicks has a flexor strain in his right arm, and no date has been set for his return. Outfielder Giancarlo Stanton, who hit 59 home runs two years ago for Miami, has a PCL strain in his right knee. Stanton has missed most of the season, and he may be back this year. First baseman Luke Voit is out with a sports hernia. He might be back in late August.

Even with all those injuries, New York is still loaded with talent. The Yankees have four infielders that play like All-Stars. Shortstop Didi Gregorius, who missed significant time due to an arm injury that required Tommy John Surgery, is hitting.261 with 11 homers and 38 RBIs since coming back. LeMahuie is hitting .339 and has 21 dingers and 86 ribbies. Second baseman Glyber Torres, who share second base with LeMahuie, has a batting average of .282 and he had hit 29 out of the park and knocked in seventy-three. Gio Urshela, who was penciled in as a backup infielder, has made sitting him on the bench impossible. Urshela is hitting .336 and has homered 18 times. Mike Ford is playing first base in place of Luke Voit and Greg Bird.

The outfield is manned by Brett Gardner in center-field. Garner, who is 35, still has a lot of speed and is a dangerous hitter. His average is .254, and he has hit 17 homers and driven in 50. Right field is handled by Aaron Judge. Aaron, who is from Northern California, missed a lot of playing time this year due to injury. He is back now, and he is a home run threat every time he steps to the plate. Cameron Maybin and Mike Tauchman will be in the outfield depending on which pitcher the A’s choose to pitch.

The catching is shared by Gary Sanchez and Austin Romine. Sanchez is like Judge, He is a home run threat every time he comes up to hit. He is not the best defensive catcher in the league, but he has worked hard to improve. Austin Romine is the backup.

The Yankees starting rotation has not been as strong as it has been in the past. It has been a work in progress this year. The A’s will not see lefties James Paxton or CC Sabathia during the series. The Yankees will send Dominga German to the hill Tuesday night. German is 16-2 with an ERA of 3.96. He has won his last four starts. He beat Boston twice, and Baltimore and Toronto once. The Yanks will be facing the A’s, Homer Bailey. Bailey was outstanding last Wednesday against the San Francisco Giants. He went seven innings and allowed no runs and just two hits. He won his tenth of the year that day.

Lefty J.A.Happ pitches on Wednesday for New York. Happ is 10-7and has an ERA of 5.40. He has pitched at least five innings in each of his last four starts. His ERA is a very high 6.23, however. The A’s will have Mike Fiers (11-3, 3.46 ERA) on the mound. Fiers has the second-best ERA  (2.52) among AL starters since April, 26th. He did give up four runs against Houston last Thursday. He did not figure in the decision.

On Thursday, Masahiro Tanaka goes for New York. Tanaka has been outstanding in his last two starts. He held the Blue Jays and the Indians to two runs and seven hits over 14 and 1/3rd innings of work. He won both starts. The A’s will counter with Tanner Roark. Roark went six innings and allowed two runs against the Astros last Friday. The A’s won the game in extra-innings.

The Yankees bullpen has been their strength this year. If their starters can give them six good innings of work, the Yanks’ bullpen usually closes the door for the win. Expect to see pitchers such as Adam Ottavino, Tommy Kahnle. Chad Green, Luis Cessa, Nestor Cortes, Zack Britton, and Aroldis Chapman. Britton and Chapman are lefties. Britton, who used to be the Baltimore Orioles closer is now the eighth-inning set-up man. Chapman is now the closer. Chapman can hit speed up to 103 to 105 miles-per-hour on the speed gun.

The A’s will have their work cut out for them. They know the Yankees will be tough. They knew the Astros would be tough and they took three-out off-four from the team with the second-best record in the AL West.

Look for a good series with big crowds. It should be fun.

A’s fall short of 4-game sweep of the Astros, still looking up in AL Wild Card chase

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND — After another highly satisfying weekend, one of baseball’s best teams is still on the outside looking in.

The A’s failed to sweep the AL West-leading Astros four straight, falling 4-1 on Sunday afternoon as Zack Greinke picked up his 200th career win. The Astros avoided a sixth, consecutive loss, propping themselves up with Alex Bregman’s 4 for 4 afternoon, including a three-run homer in the fifth inning.

But with the Indians, Twins and Rays winning Sunday, the A’s will need to pick it up to grab an American League Wild Card spot. Even as the second hottest team in baseball over the last 50 games (34-16), the A’s are still trailing in the race for the second, wild card spot which they captured in 2018.

Manager Bob Melvin remains focused on having his club prepared each day, without being preoccupied with the standings. In Melvin’s mind, with 38 games remaining, it’s still to early to compare wins and losses.

“We’re just trying to win as many games as we can,” Melvin said. “We know we’re quite a bit behind (the division-leading Astros), so every game we can win against them gets us a little bit closer. We’re still in August. It’s not until a little bit later in September ’til I start focusing on kind of where we are as far as the division and the wild card. Things flip around pretty quickly.”

That flip around was abrupt over the weekend, as the A’s had dropped nine of their first 11 contests against Houston, before finally standing up to the division leaders with three, consecutive wins. More impressive, the A’s matched the pitching-rich Astros on the mound while getting some key blasts from its powerful lineup.

Things reverted to the norm on Sunday with Bregman’s big day at the plate, and Greinke on his game, which has been the case in almost all of his Bay Area outings. The future Hall of Famer limited the A’s to four hits, and only Marcus Semien’s fourth inning home run came at a cost.

“He does it a little bit differently than most premiere starters,” Melvin said of Greinke. “He paints with his fastball. His changeup is almost the same speed as his fastball, yet it dives off the table and goes straight down.”

Brett Anderson struggled in his five innings of work, uncharacteristically walking four batters. That issue came in focus when Melvin abruptly removed Anderson in the middle of an at-bat, when he spotted the pitcher laboring due to a blister.

The A’s bullpen closed the door, but couldn’t aid the offense, which saw scoring opportunities evaporate in the seventh and ninth innings due to double plays.

The Yankees visit the Coliseum starting Tuesday, as the A’s brace for a second, consecutive elite opponent. New York is still without Giancarlo Stanton, but haven’t missed a beat with several other bit players taking more prominent roles during their injury-riddled, but productive season to date.

On Tuesday, Homer Bailey will take the mound for the A’s in a matchup with Cy Young candidate Domingo German (16-2, 3.96 ERA).

Oakland A’s podcast with Joey Friedman: A’s have a shot at sweeping Astros in 4 games today

sfgate.com photo: Oakland Athletics’ Matt Olson swings for an RBI-single off Houston Astros’ Rogelio Armenteros in the third inning of a baseball game Saturday, Aug. 17, 2019, in Oakland, Calif.

On the A’s podcast with Joey:

#1 The A’s could very well sweep the Houston Astros on Sunday that’s not a three game sweep, but it would be a four-game sweep.

#2 The Astros have been the A’s toughest customer all season defeating the A’s in all the series they’ve met. The A’s have to get the pitching as well as good hitting to win those games.

#3 On Friday night, there were 10 home runs hit by contrast on Saturday afternoon. The A’s didn’t get a home run and the Astros got only one, but the A’s got the win on Saturday.

#4 The A’s got a important rally going in the bottom of the third inning with five runs scored the A’s starting pitcher Chris Bassitt pitched for six inning giving up eight hits and giving up three earned runs.

#5 On Sunday, the Houston Astros will start Zack Greinke (12-4, 2.91 ERA) vs. the A’s starter Brett Anderson (10-8, 3.95 ERA).

Joey Friedman does the A’s podcasts each Sunday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

MLB The Show podcast with Daniel Dullum: A’s closing in on Astros in 4-game series; Giants still in the hunt for a wild card spot; plus more

photo from chron.com: Oakland Athletics’ Robbie Grossman watches his RBI single against the Houston Astros during the third inning of a baseball game Saturday, Aug. 17, 2019, in Oakland, Calif.

On the MLB The Show podcast with Daniel:

1 Swingin’ A’s take first three games out of four with Houston, ½ game out of second in the AL Wild Card

2 Giants feasting on D-Backs’ pitching, still in NL Wild Card hunt

3 Christian Yelich, Aristides Aquino continue slugging ways

4 Yankees skipper makes case for mercy rule in MLB

5 Bill Walton calls White Sox-Angels game

Daniel Dullum does the MLB podcasts each Sunday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Grossman’s 1st walk-off wins it for the A’s 3-2

Photo credit: @Athletics

By Lewis Rubman

In 13 innings
Houston: 2 | 9 | 0 | 12 LOB
Oakland: 3 | 8 | 2 | 6 LOB

OAKLAND, Calif. — Last night’s thrilling roller coaster victory over Houston, following Wednesday’s Perils of Pauline win over San Francisco, left the A’s 8 1/2 games behind the Astros in the Western Dvision, 2 games behind Cleveland for the first wild card slot, and 1 1/2 games behind Tampa Bay for the second wild card berth. The standings and the recent developments that led to them show that the there is reason for cautious optimism about the A’s chances for advancement even if their rehabbing pitchers–almost a starting rotation in itself–don’t recover as quickly and thoroughly as might be hoped.

Here’s a quick rundown of what the Athletic’s roster looks like nowadays.

Mark Canha has continued to show that, although lacking the injured Ramón Laureano’s pizzazz, he’s reliable and powerful at the plate and a more than competent center fielder with good range and a strong arm. He may not be as fleet afoot as Laureano, but who is? And Canha hasn’t a laser arm like Laureano’s, he hits his cutoff man and knows when not to attempt a Hail Mary throw.

Josh Phegley returned from the injured list today. That’s good news, although Dustin Garneau, who filled in for him admirably, was DFA’d to make room for Phegley.

Perhaps it’s too early to celebrate the return of stability to second base, but platooning right-handed hitting Chad Pinder and lefty batsman Corban Joseph at that position seems preferable to leaving the job to the switch-hitting (.304 right, .177 left) and throwing challenged Jurickson Profar. Pinder’s overall BA is .250, .264 from the right side. In the small sample of Joseph we’ve seen since he joined the team on Tuesday, he has gone 3-for-7 with one home run and three RBI. He did, however, commit an error tonight.

The bullpen situation is less encouraging. The acquisition of Jake Diekman, who joined the team on July 29, gave some wiggle room to the left handed relief crew. But his ERA in his 4 2/3 innings in eight appearances going into tonight was 5.79 and his WHIP was 1.93. The A’s go-to lefty had been Ryan Buchter, with an ERA of 3.19 and a WHIP of 1.61, nothing outstanding, but serviceable. His figures for August up until game time were more encouraging, 2 2/3 innings over three games with an ERA of zero and a WHIP of 1.13. The remaining southpaw in the Oakland pen, Weu-Chung Wang, has given up an earned run for each of the three innings he’s pitched so far this month and has a WHIP of 2.

The A’s major right-handed relievers, Joaquim Soria and Yusmeiro Petit, have been uneven, Petit being more reliable than Soria, who has given only occasional glimpses of how effective he can be. He had a chance to do that tonight and took full advantage of it. Last year’s one-two punch of Lou Trivino and Blake Treinen hadn’t seemed to have recovered the form that made them keys to the A’s late 2018 surge. Tonight Treinen pitched the seventh inning and showed some of the indominable skill and guts he exhibited last year. Trivino, the winner of tonight’s thriller, got a chance to strut his stuff starting in the eleventh . Mike Fiers continues to be solid starter if you discount his melt down in last night’s heat, and Homer Bailey was very, very good in his seven innings on Wednesday against the Giants. Brett Anderson has been starting his games well but faltering in the middle innings. Chris Bassitt turned a corner in late July and turned a decent start against the Cubs and an excellent one against the White Sox during the A’s visit to Chicago earlier this month.

This brings us to tonight’s starter. Tanner Roark, who was given the unenviable task of going up against Jutin Verlander. The A’s righty took the mound with a 1-1, 2.31 ERA record since joining the team, which is pretty close to his lifetime numbers of 2-0, 2.53 ERA against the Astros. Verlander, at 15-4, 2.82 ERA, is a strong contender for the Cy Young Award this year and has a good shot at making the Hall of Fame after he retires. At game time, he was 2-0, 0.64 ERA (yes, 0.64 ERA) against Oakland this season.

The teams traded zeroes and Ks for the first three innings, with Verlander striking out seven of the nine Athletics he faced (the two others flew out) and Roark fanning three of his 11 opponents.

Houston fell victim to The Curse of the Lead-Off Double in the top of the fourth, with Roark working his way out of trouble after Michael Bradley’s opposite field two bagger against the shift. But the A’s hurler had, by then, thrown 79 pitches. He also helped his own cause by making a couple of spiffy plays on balls hit sharply to the mound.

Oakland suffered a similar fate in its half of the frame when Marcus Semien led off the inning with a double off the center field wall but was stranded on third when Josh Reddick corralled Matt Olson’s fly to the warning track just in front of the 367 foot sign in right.

Mark Canha finally broke the tie in bottom of the fifth by blasting a 2-2, 95 mph Verlander four seamer into the left centerfield stands for his 18th round tripper of the season.

In their next turn at the plate, the Astros erased Oakland’s slim lead with another double–not a lead off one–by Brantley, a walk to Alex Bregman, a single by Yordan Alvarez, and Carlos Correa’s sacrifice fly to right. They went on to take the lead when Yuri Gurriel’s single to right center drove in Bergman from second. Canha came through defensively to compliment his dinger by throwing Gurriel out at second trying to stretch his hit.

It didn’t take the A’s long to catch up in their half of the sixth. With one out, Semien deposited a 2-2 pitch, a ninety-four mph, four-seam fast ball, over the Xfinity sign in right centerfield for his 20th dinger of the year.

Roark didn’t come out for the seventh, leaving after having thrown 102 pitches, 62 of them strikes. He allowed two runs, both earned, on six hits, and three walks. He symmetrically struck out three.

Melvin entrusted the inning to Blake Treinan, who promptly allowed a single to Robinson Chirinos to open the frame. Treinen then got Reddick to pop out to Olson and struck out Springer and Altuve on full counts.

Treinen’s succcessor, Jake Diekman, yielded a two-out double to rookie sensation Alvarez, but escaped the eighth without allowing a run.

Verlander’s work was over, having hurled 101 pitches (70 strikes) in seven innings, during which he gave up two runs (both earned) on four hits, which included a home run, and struck out 11 without allowing a walk. His replacement, Ryan Pressly, did, however, allow a base on balls, and it almost cost the Astros dearly. Semien got the pass and, with two out, stole second, advancing to third after Chirinos’s throw went into center field for an error. But Pressly dealt with the threat by getting Robbie Grossman to ground out to first, unassisted.

In the top of the ninth, it was another of the A’s bullpen question marks’ chance to preserve the tie. Joakim Soria set down Houston to a conga beat, 1-2-3. A.J. Hinch called on his closer, Roberto Osuna, to do the same to Oakland in bottom of the inning. He did, and the game went into extra innings with Soria back on the hill for the Green and Gold. He got the first two Astros he faced, K’ing Springer and getting Altuve to fly out to Piscotty in right. Then Brantley’s bouncer to Joseph in the shift at second went through the fielder’s legs for an error. He moved up to second when Soria walked Bregman on four pitches. Aledymas Díaz pinch hit for Jake Marisnick, who had pinch run for the DH Alvarez after his eighth inning double. Soria struck him out.

Enter Will Harris to pitch the last of the 10th for the visitors and to set down the home team in order. Lou. Trivino came in for the Houston half of the 11th, and the A’s erstwhile stellar set up man also had a 1-2-3 inning, as did Joe Smith in the bottom the frame for Houston.

Trivino gave up a two-out single up the middle to Altuve in the top of the 12th, but Brantley’s grounder to Olson, unassisted, put an end to the threat, such as it was.

Matt Chapman greeted Houston’s new pitcher, Hector Rondón with a first pitch double to center. He advanced to third on Olson’s slow grounder to Bregman. Chapman tried to score on Davis’s grounder to Correa, but was caught in a rundown between third and home, while the A’s DH made it to second, where Profar ran for him. Canha legged out a single to short, and Profar moved on to third. Piscotty, who was 0-for-4, came to the plate and grounded out to short.

Melvin kept Trivino on the mound for his third inning, the 13th. He struck out Bregman and Díaz. Then, with the count at 3-2, Correa hit a scorcher down the third base line that skipped past Chapman for a questionably scored two base error. After the A’s conceded a walk to Gurriel, Chirinos forced him at second on a ground ball to Semien. To the surprise of some of us in the press box, Houston chose not to request a review of the play, but instead brought in Cy Snead to pitch the bottom of the inning.

Joseph greeted him with a slicing single to left. Chris Herrmann sacrifice bunted him into scoring position. After Semien struck out, Hinch made another negative decision, not to walk Grossman and face Chapman. Grossman, batting from his strong side, laced a single to center, scoring Joseph. It was Grosman’s first career walk off hit.

The well deserved win went to Lou Trivino, who, in three innings, allowed only one walk, which was declared, or intentional, or whatever it’s called under the new rules, and struck out four Astros. His record now stands at 4-5. Snead took the loss.

The A’s now trail Houston 7 1/2 games in the division pennant race and are only a 1/2 game behind Tampa Bay for a play off spot.

Tomorrow afternoon’s game will feature Chris Bassitt (8-5, 3.56 ERA) against an unnamed Houston starter.

A’s win a wild and wooly thriller over the Astros 7-6

Photo credit: @Athletics

By Jerry Feitelberg

OAKLAND — On a very warm night at the Oakland Coliseum, the A’s and the visiting Houston Astros put a display of home run power never seen here.

For the first time in the history of the Coliseum, the teams hit a total of 10 home runs. Each side hit five. Four players hit two home runs, and that was the first time that was done since 1908. With the absence of the usual marine layer, the ball was flying out of the park. The Astros had nine players in the lineup with more than 10 homers. The A’s had six. The Astros came into the game with a record of 9-2 against the A’s, but the A’s prevailed 7-6.

The Astros put two on the board in the top of the fourth inning. A’s starter Mike Fiers had been cruising along. He walked the first batter of the game. He got Jose Altuve to ground into a 6-4-3 double play. Fiers retired the next nine hitters in order until Michael Brantly singled with two out in the top of the fourth. Astros third baseman Alex Bregman blasted his 29th homer of the year over the wall near the left-field foul pole to give the Astros a 2-0 lead.

The A’s responded with four in the bottom of the fourth. Robbie Grossman led off with a double to center-field. Matt Chapman reached on a fielder’s choice. He hit a come-backer to Astros hurler Aaron Sanchez. Sanchez chose to throw to second in the hopes of nailing Grossman. Robbie slid in safely, and the A’s had two on with no out. Sanchez then had to face the left-handed hitter, Matt Olson. Olson hit his 23rd bomb of the year that went into the seats just over the 362-foot marker in left-field. Sanchez retired the next two hitters. A’s second baseman Corban Joseph, playing his second game since being called up from Triple-A Las Vegas, hit his first of the year. The ball cleared the 400-foot marker in center-field. The A’s led 4-2 after four.

In the top of the fifth, Astros shortstop Carlos Correa led off with his 18th big fly of the year to make it 4-3. Yuli Guriel followed with a single, but Fiers settled down and got the next three outs.

The Astros tied the game in the top of the sixth. With one out, Michael Brantley, who is second in hitting in the AL with a .328 batting average, blasted his 17th of the year. It was the Astros’ third round-tripper of the game. The A’s regained the lead in their half of the sixth. The Matts — Chapman and Olson — hit back-to-back blasts. Chapman’s went into the seats in left-field, and Olson’s disappeared into the second deck in right-field. It was Chapman’s 28th of the year and Olson, with two homers, has 25. The A’s led 6-4. Fiers is out to pitch the seventh inning.

Carlos Correa led off the seventh with his second homer of the game. A’s manager Bob Melvin removed Fiers from the game and replace him with Yusmeiro Petit. Yet, the Astros still trailed the A’s 6-5. Petit walked Yuli Guriel, but retired the next three hitters to end the inning.

The Astros tied the game in the top of the eighth when Michel Brantley hit a solo homer off Blake Treinen. It was Brantley’s third hit of the game and second home run. The score was knotted at six heading into the bottom of the eighth. The game didn’t stay tied for long. Chapman led off with a blast the went into the second deck in left-field. It was Chapman’s second of the game, and it was the second day in a row that he had two homers in a game. So far, there have been 10 home runs in the game. Each team has hit five. The A’s led 7-6 after eight.

The A’s brought in their closer Liam Hendriks to pitch the ninth. Hendriks set the hard-hitting Astros down to secure the win for the A’s. The A’s won by a final of 7-6.

Game Notes: With the win, the A’s recorded their 9000th win since they started playing baseball in 1901. The A’s improved to 69-52 and picked up 1/2 game on the idle Tampa Bay Rays. The A’s trail the Rays by 1 1/2 games in the race for the second Wild Card.

The A’s beat the Astros for the third time this year. The Astros had a record of 9-2 against the A’s before the start of play Thursday night.

A’s starter Mike Fiers went six innings and allowed six runs and six hits. The Astros took him deep four times. Houston starter, Aaron Sanchez went 5 1/3 innings and gave up six runs and seven hits. He, too, was tagged for four bombs. Matt Chapman was 3-for-4,

Lefty Jake Diekman, who worked 1/3 of an inning was the winning pitcher. Chris Devenski took the loss for Houston. The Astros are now 78-44 for the year and have the second-best record in the AL.

The A’s line score was seven runs, eight hits, and no errors. The Astros’ line was six runs, seven hits, and no errors.

Time of game was two hours and 35 minutes. 15,323 fans saw quite a game. It had drama. It had home runs, and it was a history-making game with the A’s 9000th win. Four players each hitting two home runs, and 10 home runs total in the game. It was quite a night.

Up Next: Game two of the four-game series will be played Friday night at the Coliseum. Tanner Roark will go for Oakland, and Houston will send their ace Justin Verlander to the mound. Game time is set for 7:07 p.m.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: After 10 days on the road, A’s host Astros on Thursday night

Photo credit: athleticsnation.com

On the A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg:

#1 Stephen Piscotty has been out with the flu and had an injury earlier this season. How important is it to have him back in right field and back in the lineup?

#2 A’s second baseman Jurickson Profar continues to struggle with the glove and the A’s have called up minor leaguer Corban Joseph. Joseph was called up from Triple-A Las Vegas. Joseph hit .371, an OPS of 1.006, 13 homers, 73 RBIs, 63 runs in 381 at-bats.

#3 The A’s started Chad Pinder at second on Tuesday night against the Giants’ Pinder, whose been clutch in late innings, and wasn’t able to help the A’s overcome a one-run deficit. He struck out four times and was 0-4 against the Giants at the plate.

#4 A’s pitcher Sean Manaea is a work in progress, going 5 2/3 innings against in rehab at Triple-A Las Vegas in the game. He gave up a run and had 10 strikeouts and A’s manager Bob Melvin is anxious to get him back.

#5 The A’s host the Houston Astros on Thursday night. It’s the A’s first time back home after a 10-day road trip. The Astros, who lead the AL West will start Aaron Sanchez (5-14, 5.60 ERA) and for the A’s Mike Fiers (11-3, 3.30 ERA).

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

Headline Sports podcast with London Marq: Quakes have 4 straight fall-behind games going into Sporting KC match; Did Brown cave after he was mandated to wear new helmet?

Photo credit: pressdemocrat.com

On Headline Sports with London:

#1  The San Jose Earthquakes took a tough loss to the Colorado Rapids in Colorado last Saturday 2-1. The Quakes came back down 1-0 to tie it, but the Rapids wrapped it up in the end for the win Colorado went back up 2-1.

#2 For Colorado, Diego Rubio received the pass from Keegan Rosenberry with space, Rubio was easily able to maneuver himself into an advantageous position in the 73rd minute for the go ahead and later game-winning goal.

#3 This was the fourth straight game that the Earthquakes had fallen behind in a game something. They’ll have to work on for their next game coming up as they play Sporting KC in their next match their second of three games on the road.

#4 How close or how serious do you think the Oakland Raiders wide receiver Antonio Brown was to calling it quits if he didn’t get to keep his old Pittsburgh Steelers helmet?

#5 A’s and Giants  played a two-game series, which concluded on Wednesday night. These are two teams fighting for a wild card spot and it was a series for the ages because a lot is at stake in the final two months of the season.

London is a beat writer for the San Jose Earthquakes and does Headline Sports each Wednesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Spinning Their Wheels: Giants fail to seize momentum in 9-5 loss to Oakland

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO — Whatever momentum the Giants were attempting to seize Wednesday flew over the centerfield wall on the 14th pitch of the ballgame.

Matt Chapman homered off Tyler Beede–the first of his two home runs on the day–and the A’s were off to the races in their 9-5 win that gained them a split of the brief, two-game Bay Bridge Series.

The A’s scored in six of the nine innings, establishing a 7-0 lead in the eight before the Giants rallied with five runs to temporarily make things interesting. Beede surrendered the first eight of Oakland’s 15 hits in a performance that proved there’s currently an imbalance in the abilities of the two Bay Area clubs.

Beede’s struggles put the microscope on the Giants’ rotation that has youthful inexperience in three of the five spots at this critical juncture of the season. Beede is last of the three to win a start, and that was back on July 14. Since then, Beede lost four of his six starts, allowing at least eight hits four times. Manager Bruce Bochy conceded the performances of Shaun Anderson, Connor Menez and Beede are a concern.

“It’s up to me to try to get this figured out,” Bochy said. “You know when you bring up young pitchers you’re going to have some growing pains, and that’s the case.”

Beede’s inability to get ahead in counts played right into the hands of the patient A’s lineup. Matt Olson singled, doubled and was hit by a pitch with Beede in the game, and A’s starting pitcher Homer Bailey fouled off a couple of offerings, then got lucky with a dribbler that turned into an RBI single that made it 2-0. Olson’s double scored two more runs, and Beede was done, one batter into the fifth inning.

“He’s really good at times and then it gets away from him a little bit,” Bochy said of Beede.

Travis Bergen, one of the relievers getting an extended look after the Giants reconfigured their bullpen at the trade deadline, allowed a two-run shot to Robbie Grossman in the sixth to make it 6-0.

Down 7-0, the Giants rallied for five runs in the eighth with Mike Yasztremski’s three-run shot the centerpiece. But Chapman’s second home run in the ninth restored the A’s cushion to three runs.

Alex Dickerson was activated from the injured list but was not in the Giants’ starting lineup. The valuable outfielder pinch hit in the eighth, his ground ball out allowed Evan Longoria to score from third.

The Giants fell below .500 with the loss, which took on more significance when combined with the results on the out-of-town scoreboard. The Phillies, Brewers and Nationals all won, leaving the Giants four games behind the pace of the Cardinals, the current holder of the second wild card spot.

The Giants start another big series in Phoenix on Thursday, the first of four games against the team immediately above in the playoff hunt. Dereck Rodriguez appears to be the likely starter in that one, opposed by Arizona’s Alex Young.