Fiers Dominates White Sox, A’s Keep Pace in Wild Card Chase with 7-0 Win

Photo credit: @MLBNetwork

By Matthew Harrington

The Oakland A’s hit a pair of solo homeruns in the first two innings to stake starter Mike Fiers to a 2-0 lead, and it’d be all he needed in a stellar seven-inning performance allowing no runs to the Chicago White Sox. Of course, the A’s would add in another five runs in the top of the eighth to turn the close contest in to a rout in a 7-0 A’s win in the South Side.

Fiers twirled a gem, punching out eight Pale Hosers, while scattering just three hits and walking none to give Oakland a tie with the Tampa Bay Rays for the second wild card spot with Tampa yet to play in San Diego Friday night. Matt Chapman and Stephen Piscotty hit solo shots in the first and second innings off former Athletic Ross Detwiler. Chad Pinder had the big blow in a five-run eighth inning, hitting a two-run homer, while Dustin Garneau knocked in a pair as well.

After Marcus Semien grounded out to open the game, Matt Chapman fell in an early 0-2 against Detwiler. He took a ball then sent an 84-mph changeup on a line over the wall in left for his 25th homer of the season. Piscotty would open the next inning working Detwiler to a 2-0 account before missing on another changeup. He took Detwiler to centerfield on the 4th pitch of the at bat, a sinker belt high for a 2-0 lead.

While Fiers (11-3, 3.30 ERA) was near unhittable, Detwiler did settle in. He exited the game with an out in the fifth having given up only four hits and the two runs, but control was an issue. The lefty (1-3, 5.35 ERA) struck out four, but also walked a quartet. Jose Ruis pitched 1 2/3 innings of scoreless baseball, including stopping a pair of inherited runners from scoring to keep the game in reach.

The game was handed over to Jace Fry in the eighth inning, who struggled for the jump. He worked a full count on Mark Canha, but lost him on ball four, then surrendered Chad Pinder’s 11th homer of the year on a 3-1 count for a 4-0 A’s lead. He then walked Khris Davis and gave up a single to Jurickson Profar before being replaced by former San Francisco Giant Josh Osich without recording an out.

Jurickson Profar gave Osich a rude welcome, sending a line drive past Leury Garcia at second on the first pitch to knock in Khris Davis for a 5-0 A’s lead and a double. Dustin Garneau would also jump on the first pitch, hitting a double to left that would score Piscotty and Profar for a 7-0 lead. He bounced back to strike out Marcus Semien and coax groundouts from Matt Chapman and Matt Olson, respectively.

With the lead in hand, manager Bob Melvin tabbed trade acquisition Jake Diekman with the bottom of the eighth inning. He struck out Matt Skole and Ryan Cordell on four pitches each then forced a ground out from Garcia in his frame. Joakim Soria nailed down the win in the ninth, allowing a single to James McCann but being otherwise flawless.

The A’s and White Sox meet again on Saturday at 4:10 p.m. PT.

Headline Sports podcast with Barbara Mason: The Greinke trade; Patterson story will become a movie; plus more

 

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Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

On this week’s podcast Barbara talks about:

  • The Zack Greinke trade
  • The incredible Nathan Patterson story that is sure to become a movie
  • The importance of the Warriors resigning Draymond Green
  • What does Tom Brady’s new contract mean to the NFL?
  • Antonio Brown’s feet
  • A tribute to the late Cliff Branch
  • Updates on the A’s and the Giants

Preview of the A’s and White Sox series in Chicago

Photo credit: mercurynews.com

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s have a day off on Thursday before they begin a three-game series with the Chicago White Sox at Guaranteed Rate Field starting on Friday.

The A’s are enjoying an entire week in the Windy City as the schedule makers gave them three days with the Cubs, one day off, and three with the White Sox. The A’s finish the eight-game road trip with two against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park next Tuesday and Wednesday.

The A’s need to continue playing well. They trail the Tampa Bay Rays by 1/2 game in the race for the second Wild Card. The A’s swept the White Sox when they met in July at the Oakland Coliseum. They would like to continue their success against the Sox. They need to take two from the Giants as the A’s meet the AL West-leading Houston Astros for four. They then play the AL East-leading New York Yankees for three, and wrap up the homestand with two more against the Giants. The Astros have dominated the A’s this season. They improved their starting rotation at the deadline with the additions of Zach Greinke and Aaron Sanchez. Joe Biagini joined the Astros bullpen.

The A’s will send Mike Fiers to the hill Friday afternoon against the White Sox. Fiers is 10-3 and has an ERA of 3.46. He has been pitching well since early May. He faced the Sox on July 12th and did not allow a run in 7 2/3 innings of work. He will be opposed by former Athletic, Ross Detwiler. Detwiler was a member of the A’s in 2016. Detwiler is 1-2 for the year and has an ERA of 5.72. In his last start against the Philadelphia Phillies, Detwiler went 5 2/3 innings and allowed just two runs.

On Saturday, Tanner Roark will be making his second start as an Athletic, and his first start ever against the White Sox. Roark is 7-7 for the year and has an ERA of 4.14. Roark won his first start as an A last Sunday when he went five innings and allowed just one hit, and as a result, received credit for the win.

Meanwhile, the White Sox will have Reynaldo Lopez handling the pitching chores. Lopez is 6-9 with an ERA of 5.41. Lopez has been pitching well since the All-Star break. In his last five starts, his ERA is a respectable 2.56.

On Sunday, Chris Bassitt will go for Oakland, and he will be opposed by the White Sox’ best pitcher, Lucas Giolito. Bassitt is 7-5 and pitched well Monday against the Chicago Cubs. Bassitt went six innings and allowed two runs. He did not figure in the decision. Giolito is 12-5 for the season. His ERA is 3.44. He beat the Detroit Tigers last Monday as he went six innings and allowed three runs.

The White Sox are 51-62 for the year and are currently in third place in the AL Central. The team is managed by Rick Renteria. Renteria is in his third season with the Sox. He and Frank Chance are the only two managers in history to have managed both the Cubs and the White Sox.

Chicago’s key players to keep an eye on are first baseman Jose Abreu, shortstop Tim Anderson, left fielder Eloy Jimenez, and catcher Wellington Castillo. Abreau and Jimenez are the main power guys. Tim Anderson has 12 homers this season, and he can also do damage. Other players to watch are outfielders Leury Garcia, Ryan Cordell, Adam Engel, and the veteran John Jay.

The A’s have won seven of the last 10 games. They need Matt Chapman to break out of his slump. They still have a lot of power in the lineup. Matt Olson is second on the club with 22 home runs. Marcus Semien has 19. The A’s will have Khris Davis back at DH for the series with the Sox. Davis has 17, but his production has declined since he suffered a hip injury in Pittsburgh. Mark Canha has picked up the slack as he has hit 17 so far this year.

The A’s have 10 players on the roster with 10 or more homers. The A’s have to continue winning. It would be nice if they could take four out of five from the Sox and the Giants. They have to contend with the Astros, which is no easy task. The Astros have an outstanding starting rotation. They have a virtual All-Star team on the field. They are loaded with stars such as Jose Altuve, Carlos Correa, Alex Bregman, Yule Guriel, Michael Brantley, George Springer, and Josh Reddick.

The A’s then have a day off to catch their breath and then go up against the mighty Yankees. The A’s will have to be at their best just to keep up with the Rays. A’s manager Bob Melvin will have his team ready. This is the time of the year that the fans will be seeing great baseball.

Cubs maul the A’s 10-1 on getaway day

Photo credit: @Cubs

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Chicago Cubs blasted three home runs on Wednesday afternoon to defeat the A’s 10-1 at Wrigley Field. Chicago won the series 2-1.

The A’s are off on Thursday. They are staying in Chicago to face the White Sox for three games starting Friday afternoon.

A’s starter Homer Bailey did not fare well on Wednesday. Bailey, who had faced the Cubs many times when he was with the Cincinnati Reds, was knocked around by the Cubs. The big hit came in the fourth inning with the score tied at one. With the bases loaded, Cubs second baseman Ian Happ blasted an opposite-field grand slam to put the Cubs ahead 5-1. The Cubs’ starter, Jose Quintana stifled the A’s bats on Wednesday. Quintana went seven innings and allowed one run and two hits. He struck out seven A’s.

The A’s drew first blood in the top of the fourth. Marcus Semien led off the frame with a double down the left-field line. He tagged and went to third when Matt Chapman flew out to right. Semien scored on Matt Olson’s sacrifice fly to center. The Cubs tallied five times in the bottom of the fourth. With one out, Cubs third baseman Kris Bryant singled. Bailey hit Anthony Rizzo with a pitch to put two men on. Cubs’ shortstop Javy Baez singled to drive in Bryant to tie the game 1-1. Bailey walked Kyle Scharber to load the bases. Happ hit the grand slam to make it 5-1. It was Happ’s second homer of the year and second career grand slam.

The Cubs put four more runs on the board in the fifth. Nick Castellanos continued to torment the A’s when he doubled with one out. He went to third on Rizzo’s infield single. A’s manager Bob Melvin brought in Lou Trivino to pitch. Trivino gave up a single to Baez for the Cubs’ sixth run of the afternoon. Trivino then had to face the left-handed hitter Schwarber. Trivino, who has not been effective lately, gave up a gopher ball to Schwarber. The ball made it into the stands in left field, and the Cubs now led 9-1 after five complete.

There was no more scoring until the bottom of the eighth. Blake Treinen was now pitching for Oakland. Treinen retired the first two hitters he faced. He could not get by the Cubs catcher Victor Caratini. Caratini blasted his sixth big fly of the season to make it 10-1.

Game Notes: Bailey saw his record drop to 9-8. The A’s are now 65-50 for the year. They remain 1/2 game behind the Tampa Bay Rays in the race for the second Wild Card slot. The Rays lost to the Toronto Blue Jays 4-3 on Wednesday in Tampa.

Jose Quintana improved to 10-7 for the year. Quintana is 6-0 in his last seven starts for Chicago. The Cubs improved to 62-52. The Cubs’ home record is 41-19 at Wrigley. They do not play well on the road.

The A’s line score was one run, three hits, and no errors. Marcus Semien had two of the three A’s hits in the game. The Cubs’ line was 10 runs, eleven hits, and no errors.

Time of game was two hours and 37 minutes. 41,179 fans jammed the friendly confines of Wrigley Field to see their beloved Cubs down the A’s.

Up Next: The A’s meet the Chicago White Sox Friday afternoon in Chicago. Game time is set for 12:10 pm PT.

A’s rout Lester, Cubs 11-4

Photo credit: @Athletics

By Jerry Feitelberg

The A’s came back from a tough 6-5 loss Monday night to pummel the Chicago Cubs and their ace, Jon Lester, 11-4 at Wrigley Field. Lester, who pitched for the A’s in 2014, suffered his worst loss since July 22, 2012, when he was with Boston and was trounced by the Toronto Blue Jays. The A’s sent Brett Anderson to the mound, and Anderson won his first game in a month. Anderson went six innings and allowed two runs and seven hits. Cubs third baseman rocked Anderson for a home run in the sixth.

The A’s put eight runs on the board in the top of the second. Mark Canha started the onslaught with a leadoff triple. Lester struck out Chad Pinder for the first out. Stephen Piscotty singled to drive in Canha with the A’s first run. Robbie Grossman singled to put two men on with one out. A’s catcher Dustin Garneau hit a blast that traveled 413 feet to the last row in the left-field seats to up the lead to 4-0. Brett Anderson followed with a single. Lester walked Marcus Semien and Matt Chapman to load the bases. Matt Olson singled to drive in Anderson and Semien. Chapman advanced to third on the play. Canha then grounded into a fielder’s choice. Chapman scored when the Cubs’ catcher Victor Caratini mishandled the throw from Cubs’ first baseman Anthony Rizzo. Olson went to third and scored on Chad Pinder’s ground out to second. The A’s led 8-0.

The A’s added three more in the top of the fourth. Matt Chapman worked Lester for a walk. Lester then struck out Olson and Canha. Pinder singled to put two men on with two out. Stephen Piscotty blasted his 10th round-tripper of the season to give the A’s a commanding 11-0 lead.

The Cubs scored two in the sixth and two in the ninth. It was too little and too late. The A’s won a laugher 11-4.

Game Notes; Brett Anderson improved to 10-7 for the season. Lester dropped to 9-8. The A’s are now 65-49 for the ear. They still trail the Tampa Bay Rays by 1/2 game for the second Wild Card Slot in the American League. The Rays beat the Toronto Blue Jays 7-6 in 10 innings to maintain their 1/2 game lead over the A’s.

Bob Melvin used Lou Trivino in the seventh, and Wei-Chung Wang pitched the eighth and ninth. Trivino pitched a scoreless seventh. Wang gave up four hits and two runs in his two innings of work.

Up Next: The A’s finish the three-game series with the Cubs on Wednesday. Homer Bailey (9-7) will go for Oakland, and he will be opposed by lefty Jose Quintana (9-7). Game time is at 11:00 am.

The Cubs hit four home runs to down the A’s 6-5

Photo credit: @Cubs

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s dropped a thriller to the Chicago Cubs 6-5 in the opener of a three-game series at Wrigley Field on Monday. It was the A’s first visit to Wrigley since June 2010. The A’s starter Chris Bassitt entered the game with a record of 7-5. The Cubs named Kyle Hendricks as their starter. Hendricks’ record was 8-8, and his ERA was 3.07.

The Cubs jumped out to an early 1-0 lead in the bottom of the first. Nick Castellanos, obtained by the Cubs from the Detroit Tigers at the trading deadline, hit his first home run as a Cub. It was his 12th of the year. He tormented the A’s when he was a member of the Tigers.

The A’s took the lead in the top of the third. Hendricks, who very rarely walks a hitter, issued a free pass to Jurickson Profar. Profar went to second on a sacrifice bunt by Bassitt. Marcus Semien followed with his 18th blast of the year. He hit an opposite-field home run to give the A’s the lead 2-1.

The Cubs tied the game in the bottom of the sixth when Cubs second baseman Javy Baez homered. Bassitt finished the inning. His line was six innings of work, two runs, and eight hits.

A’s manager Bob Melvin brought in Blake Treinen to work the seventh inning. Treinen had been pitching better of late, but Monday night was a nightmare for him. The Cubs scored four runs on four hits to take a 6-2 lead. Treinen served up a gopher ball to pinch-hitter Ian Happ, who was leading off. Jason Hayward singled and scored on Nick Castellanos’ double. Jay Baez hit his second of the night and 29th of the year to give Chicago the lead 6-2. Treinen’s lin was two thirds of an inning, four hits, four runs and he was tagged for two dingers in the inning.

The A’s rallied to put three on the board in the top of the eighth. Cubs veteran reliever, Steve Cishek, was on the mound. The first hitter he faced, Jurickson Profar, doubled. Cishek struck out A’s catcher Chris Herrmann for the first out. The A’s pinch-hitter Nick Martini gave Cishek quite a battle. Cishek and Martini engaged in an 11-pitch struggle that was won by Martini when he blasted a home run into the right-field seats to bring the A’s within two 6-4. The next hitter Marcus Semien blasted the first pitch from Cishek into the left-field bleachers to make it a 6-5 game. Cubs manager Joe Maddon brought in Brandon Kintzler to get the final out of the ninth.

The A’s failed to score in the top of the ninth. With two out, pinch-hitter Khris Davis walked. Chad Pinder followed with a single. Maddon replaced Kyle Ryan with David Phelps. Phelps, acquired by the Cubs in a trade with the Toronto Blue Jays, had to face the hot-hitting Marcus Semien. Semien hit the ball hard, but it was not far enough as it was caught in left field for the final out of the game. The Cubs won 6-5.

Game Notes: With the loss, the A’s drop to 64-49. The Tampa Bay Rays also lost so the A’s remain a half game behind the Rays for the second Wild Card slot. The Cubs improved to 61-51 and remain in first place in the NL Central.

Neither starter figured in the decision. Bassitt’s line was six innings, two runs, and eight hits. Hendricks line was 6 1/3 innings of work. He allowed two runs and just one hit.

Blake Treinen took the loss for Oakland.

The Cubs announced that their closer, Craig Kimbrel, was placed on the 10-day IL with a knee problem.

The Cubs’ line was six runs, 12 hits, and no errors. The A’s line was five runs, six hits, and no errors.

The A’s hit three homers in the game. Marcus Semien had two. The Cubs had four. Javy Baez also had two homers.

Time of game was three hours and 18 minutes. 40,721 people were crammed into the friendly confines of Wrigley Field to watch the Cubs win.

Up Next: Game two of the three-game series will start at 5:05 pm. It will be a battle of lefty pitchers. Brett Anderson (9-7) will go for Oakland, and he will be opposed by Jon Lester (9-7). Lester pitched for the A’s in 2014.

Stingy Athletics: A’s shut down Cardinals in series finale, 4-2

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND — It just so happened that the 163rd start of Tanner Roark’s seven-year, major league career intersected with the 117th big league game appearance of Dustin Garneau’s in a way that neither could have anticipated a week ago.

But they were–pitcher and catcher–making it up as they went, the best way that they knew how–in Oakland of all places.

Except that it wasn’t always apparent they were good at making it up, or going about it the best way. Not against a focused St. Louis lineup, stealing bases, and intent on avoiding a sweep.

Roark needed 95 pitches to get through four innings, 35 of those to end the third scoreless when Marcell Ozuna struck out with the bases loaded.

“Just how we drew it up,” said Roark, tongue in cheek.

The Garneau/Roark act, a trade deadline concoction, if there ever was one, surely had the Coliseum crowd fidgeting. But it was a veteran production, and it was effective. Roark departed after five frames, allowing four hits, in possession of a newly cemented 2-1 lead.

“He didn’t want any part of coming out of that game after four,” said manager Bob Melvin of Roark, who threw 109 pitches and got the win. “He felt great. If I’d have run him out there for the sixth, he’d have been all for it. He was throwing to corners still. Every pitch mattered to him.”

Filled with guts and gile (Melvin called Roark “a bulldog”), the outing was taking advantage of the trade deadline, at its best–a contending club getting an injection of energy at the season’s critical point. For five innings the A’s were in the hands of a pair of capable veterans enthusiastic about winning after spending the beginning of their seasons without winning, or in Garneau’s case, without a regular role.

That the two knew little of each other mattered little. They made it work.

“It’s a dance, pretty much,” said Garneau, picked up off waivers from the Angels as a stopgap until the A’s catching corps regains its health. “The more you can get on tempo, you just kind of let him lead.”

Offensively, the A’s were pesky, getting veteran starter Adam Wainwright off his game to the tune of three drawn walks and two hit batsmen. Those two–Stephen Piscotty and Mark Canha–came around to score the A’s first runs in the fourth, on Garneau’s two-out double.

That was one of only two hard hit balls Wainwright allowed. The other–Jurickson Profar’s home run in the sixth–made it 3-1 A’s and abruptly ended Wainwright’s afternoon.

“That was the key to the game right there,” Wainwright said of Profar’s homer and the two pitches that hit Piscotty and Canha. “I have to execute better pitches there.”

The A’s swept the season series with St. Louis 4-0 with the win, and the Cardinals were knocked out of first place in the NL Central as a result. The A’s kept pace with the Rays who swept Miami, and within striking distance of the Indians, who swept the Angels.

Only the Red Sox were made to suffer in the AL Wild Card chase this weekend. Boston was swept at Yankee Stadium, leaving them 6 1/2 games behind Cleveland, and their postseason aspirations on life support.

The A’s start their week in Chicago with the Cubs on Monday, then after an off day Thursday, take on the White Sox over the weekend. The A’s have won six of seven, but they’ll be pushed on the road trip with top starters Kyle Hendricks, Jon Lester and Lucas Giolito scheduled to face them.

A’s are banking on continuity, but what else should we know?

Photo credit: @Athletics

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND — Two things have been consistent—or nearly so—since Charlie Finley brought his Kansas City Athletics to Oakland for the 1968 season. A’s fans over the succeeding three decades could count, with short and infrequent exceptions, on the presence of the Coliseum itself and an outstanding fielder at third base.

The stadium opened in 1966 as the home of the Raiders. The A’s played their first home game there on the night of April 17, 1968, when the Orioles beat the home team, 4-1. The winning pitcher was Dave McNally, who bested Lew Krause. Tony La Russa got his first and only hit of the season, a pinch hit single to left to lead off the bottom of the ninth. Reggie Jackson made the last out, taking a called third strike. The night’s crowd of 50,164 was 6% of the A’s total home attendance for the season.

The Coliseum in its original configuration was a beautiful place to watch a ball game, although there were no seats in the bleachers, only benches, and they lacked backs. The view of the Oakland Hills to the east was lovely and easily surpassed anything Candlestick Park could offer. Baseball in the new venue was exciting as the prospects who had migrated from Kansas City developed into the stars who would earn the A’s a stranglehold on the World Series, which they won in 1972, ’73, and ’74.

Unfortunately, late summer and early fall also meant that the Raiders commandeered the field for football, with all the inconveniences that a shared use stadium and dealing with Al Davis entail. But that wasn’t the only trouble the Green and Gold would have with the Silver and Black.

Free agency for baseball players began in 1976, and Finley began to trade his best players before they could leave on their own for greener pastures. He sold Joe Rudi and Rollie Fingers’ contracts to the Red Sox for a million dollars each and Vida Blue’s to the Yankees for 1.5 million. Commissioner Kuhn nullified the deals, but the next year the three players were gone, and the A’s were in free fall.

Attendance already had been weak during their halcyon days. The World Series champions of 1973 and ’74 finished eighth and 11th, respectively, in that category among the 12 teams that comprised the American League. Attendance dropped further when the A’s stopped winning. The gate count at the April 17, 1979, game against the Mariners was all of 653. In 1980 Finley was on the verge of selling the team to Marvin Davis, who would have moved it to Denver. Shortly after that, Al Davis took his Raiders to Los Angeles in 1982, and the A’s had the Coliseum all to themselves. By that time, deferred maintenance, poor teams, and a correctly perceived disdain for the Charlie O’s fan base had led to the Coliseum’s derisive nickname of the Oakland Mausoleum.

Walter Haas, who had saved the A’s for Oakland when he bought the team in 1980, began to repair the damage Finley had wrought. Fan friendly policies and Billy Ball, which brought the Western Division title in the strike-shortened 1981 season to the East Bay, lifted spirits and attendance. By 1987, the rebuilt A’s were the powerhouse that won the AL pennant from 1988-1990 and swept the Giants in the 1989 World Series. The team had survived Charlie Finley. Now it survived the Loma Prieta earthquake.

Haas died in 1995, the same year that Al Davis brought his peripatetic Raiders back to Oakland on the condition that the Coliseum be remodeled to suit his exorbitant requirements. The work, which made access between levels cumbersome and destroyed the beautiful view of the Oakland Hills that the old configuration had provided, prevented the A’s from opening the 1996 season in their palace on the Nimitz. For the first time since their arrival in town, the A’s played a home game away from Oakland, playing their first six games as the home team at Cashman Park in Las Vegas. When baseball finally returned to the Coliseum, construction of the unfinished eyesore known as Mount Davis continued. As that monstrosity rose behind the bleachers, fans consoled themselves by watching the construction workers dance to the YMCA song during the seventh inning stretch.

Stephen Schott and Ken Hofmann, who bought the team from the Haas family on Walter Haas’ death and held on to it for a decade before selling it to John Fisher, brought a new type of Billy Ball to the Coliseum, Billy Beane’s Moneyball. Part of that complex concept consisted, in very crude terms, of getting the most while paying the least. That worked out fine on the field, but not on the ballpark. You can win, at least in the short run, with players whose strengths are undervalued on the market, and the A’s were underdog contenders in the early 21st century. But you can’t maintain a piece of real estate, without investing in its upkeep or maintain fan interest by churning your payroll contracts. Lew Wolff, who held a 10% stake in the team, was the infamous face of ownership during that period, in which the A’s got rid of their best players just as they reached baseball maturity and replaced them with a new crop of promising youngsters, who, in turn … you can fill in the rest. It was Wolff who announced the tarping over of the seats in Mount Davis, which didn’t offer much of a view of the action on the field any way, and the ones in the third deck, which did. Wolff sold most of his stock and resigned from his post as managing partner after the 2016 season, but not before sewage spills in the lower levels made a literal cesspool out of significant parts of the stadium.

The new management, led by Dave Kaval, has, when not pushing the development of a new ballpark, made real improvements to the current structure, notably the reopening of the third deck and the installation of hand rails to make climbing the steps there safer than it had been. New policies, like A’s Access, have lessened the fans’ well-earned cynicism towards the team’s front office and its home field. Even with Mount Davis there as a constant insult, the Coliseum is a grand place for watching baseball. Its sight lines and the raking of its seats provide a better view of the action than the one offered by the showcase across the bay. The most scenic part of the much-touted view from Oracle Park is of the East Bay shoreline. If you want to admire the statues of a Coke bottle and of Willie Mays’ glove, go to a game in San Francisco. If you want a view of 99% the playing area and a legible scoreboard, go to the Coliseum and sit anywhere but in the third row or higher behind sections 235 through 249. It may still be a bit of a dump, but it’s our dump and its design doesn’t detract from your enjoyment of the game.

Before I go on to talk about the A’s other constant, their apostolic succession of quality third basemen, I’d like to note briefly the other exceptions to the continuity of their use of the Coliseum for home games. The A’s were the home team in six MLB games played in Tokyo. They split two-game opening series with the Red Sox in 2008 and the Mariners in 2012 and were swept by the M’s in this year’s two-game set.

Sal Bando was the A’s regular third baseman from their arrival through 1976. Although his batting average with the team was only .255 over eleven years, he came in second in the MVP voting for 1971, third for 1974, and fourth for 1973. Captain Sal led the league in games played four times while with Oakland. A four-time All-Star, he didn’t have much range at the hot corner, but he had one hell of an arm. He also was a severe critic of Charlie Finley.

There was an interregnum following Bando’s angry departure from Oakland to Milwaukee at the end of the 1976 season. His successor,Wayne Gross, was serviceable but not in the same league as the erstwhile team captain. Gross’s replacement, Carney Lansford, was. He had a .290 lifetime batting average and one of .288 in his ten seasons (1983-1992) as the A’s third baseman. He was a spectacular fielder, throwing himself with wild abandon all over the field, an abandon he demonstrated on New Year’s Eve 1990, by injuring himself in a contract-violating snowmobile accident. Lansford was able to play in only five games the next season, but the Haas family paid him his full salary anyway.

There was another lull at the hot corner in 1993-98, but the A’s drafted a third baseman out of high school in their 1996 draft and assigned him to the advanced-A level Visalia Oaks for 1997. By the end of the next season, Eric Chavez had risen all the way to Oakland. In 1999, he started 98 games at third and, at the age of 21, was the team’s regular third sacker by 2000. Even though Chavez had played the position since high school, he wasn’t always comfortable there. At one pre-season meeting he told fans that when the signal came from the dugout to play in for a bunt by a right handed batter, his first reaction was, “Who, me?” But Chavvy polished his game under the tutelage of Ron Washington and went on to win six consecutive gold gloves from 2001 through 2006. In 2004, Chavez gave one of his growing collection of the trophies to Wash as a gesture of thanks and appreciation.

Chavez wasn’t just a great defensive player. Although his lifetime batting average was only .268 (.267 with the A’s and .273 during his Gold Glove years), he hit 230 home runs as an Athletic, for an average of 28 for each 162 games he played. Adjusted for inflation, that would be…

When Chavez’s chronic back troubles led the A’s grant him free agency after the 2010 season and to look for a new third baseman, it didn’t take them long to find one. It just took a while for them to realize that he was a third baseman. On July 28, 2008, the team had traded pitchers Chad Gaudin and Rich Harden to the Chicago Cubs for Sean Gallagher, Matt Murton, Eric Paterson, and a promising catcher named Josh Donaldson. He had played third at Auburn University but not as a professional. Oakland experimented with him in the infield in the hope that he might become a utility player but still thought of him as a receiver. An injury to Scott Sizemore gave Donaldson a chance to open the 2012 campaign at the hot corner for Oakland. He blew the chance (.153 batting average and 26 strikeouts in 28 games) and soon was back in Sacramento. While there, he tore up the PCL, hitting .335 with an OPS of 1.000 in 51 games. When Brian Inge, who by now was playing third for the A’s, injured his shoulder, Donaldson returned to the big club and hit .290 (51-for-176) with eight homers, 11 doubles and 26 RBI in 47 games. Just like that, the A’s had a star for their starting third baseman. In his remaining two seasons with the A’s, Donaldson came in fourth in the MVP voting for 2013 and eighth for ’14. He finally won the award, as well as being named MLB’s player of the year, for his work in 2015, after Oakland had traded him in the offseason to Toronto for Franklin Barreto, Kendall Graveman, Brett Lawrie and Sean Nolin.

Donaldson, every bit as much as Bando, Lansford, and Chavez, was a tough act to follow, maybe even more so. An exciting and tough new third baseman. Matt Chapman followed. The hard hitting, incredibly elegant third baseman made his MLB debut in 2017 and was last year’s winner of the gold glove for the best fielder among AL third sackers and the Platinum Glove for being the best infielder in the league, as well as of the Wilson Defensive Player of the Year award for both of the major leagues. He and Liam Hendricks represented the A’s at this year’s All-Star Game.

So, while there’s always something new happening on the field, and MLB is busy tinkering with ways to make the game resemble football, basketball, and hockey, we can pretty much rely on two aspects of Oakland’s baseball universe, their third base dynasty and the Oakland-Alameda County Whoever Has the Naming Rights Coliseum. At least until we learn the results of the search for a new home.

Chapman secures series win as A’s beat Brewers 5-3

Photo credit: @Athletics

By: Lewis Rubman

Milwaukee: 3-7-0 (10 LOB)

Oakland: 5-6-0 (6 LOB)

OAKLAND — The A’s sent Homer Bailey, who was 2-1, 8.59 ERA for them since being traded to the team from Kansas City on July 14, to the mound this afternoon. In his three Oakland starts, Bailey has been somewhat like the little girl with the little curl, right in the middle of her forehead. When he was good, he threw six innings of two-run, seven-hit ball against Seattle and 6 2/3 innings of three-run, seven-hit ball against Texas. One of those runs was charged to him after Ryan Buchter allowed a runner who had tripled off Bailey to score on a double. In between those starts, Bailey surrendered nine runs on eight hits in two horrendous innings against Houston. All of the runs he allowed in that game were earned.

Opposing him for the Brewers in today’s blearly eyed contest was Chase Anderson (5-2, 3.89 ERA), a 6’1″, 200 pound right handed hurler in his sixth year in the majors and whose current ERA exactly matches his lifetime figure. This was his 17th start of the season, which he has supplemented with five relief appearances. He features a four-seam fastball in the low to mid 90s and so far this campaign has managed to achieve an average of 8.69 strikeouts and 2.93 walks per nine innings. He throws some sort of fastball about half the time, although this figure has been decreasing steadily over his career.

Bailey threw nothing but strikes to the first two hitters he faced, and he retired both of them. But then he walked Keston Hiura on a 3-1 count, and cleanup hitter Mike Moustakas dropped a perfect bunt to third against the shift for a single that put Hiura in scoring position at second, from which he scored on Ryan Braun’s single to center. For the second straight game, Oakland was down a run before coming to bat.

Bailey pitched out of a jam in the third. With one down in the frame, Jurickson Profar committed a throwing error that enabled Christian Yellich to reach first safely. He advanced to third on Hiura’s single to center, Hiura taking second on the throw. The A’s starter rose to the occasion by getting Moustakas to pop out to Chapman and striking out Braun.

Chad Pinder led off the bottom half of the inning with a resounding round tripper off a 93 miles per hour four seam fast ball from Anderson.

The score remained tied for a very short time. A single by Eric Thames led off the fourth. That hit was followed by a walk to Travis Shaw. Orlando Arcia’s liner, knocked down by Bailey and thrown to Olson, retired the batter but moved the runners up to second and third. Trent Greshman, playing in his first major league game, got his first RBI with a sacrifice fly to Grossman in left center, unknotting the score.

Bailey left the game after thowing 101 pitches, 61 of them strikes, over six innings. He surrendered two runs, both earned, on five hits and three walks, while notching five strikeouts. He was good, although not very, very good.

Yellich extended his consecutive game hitting streak to 19 with a double off Bailey’s replacement, Jake Diekman, with a runner on first and no outs in the top of the seventh. The blast hit the right field scoreboard and tied Yellich for longest streak in the league. It was a weird inning for Diekman. He hit Hiura with a pitch to load the bases after Yellich’s two bagger had sent Grandal to third. Moustakas grounded sharply to Olson, who threw home for the force out. It took Diekman only three pitches to strike Ryan Braun out swinging on a wild pitch that enabled Yellich to sore from third, upping the Brewers’ advantage to 3-1. Diekman then needed only three more pitches to log another swinging K, this one against Thames to close out the inning.

Like Bailey, Anderson was lifted after six innings. He allowed one run, earned, on two hits, three walks, and a hit batter. He threw 92 pitches. 52 of them were strikes.

Anderson’s replacement in the home seventh, Junior Guerra, was as erratic as Diekman hd been. He let the A’s close the gap to one run by giving up a lead-off single to Canha, who moved up a base on a walk to Nick Martini, hitting for Pinder, after Profar had flown out at the center field fence. Beau Taylor’s ground out, first to the pitcher covering, moved each runner up a base, and Guerra’s wild pitch to Semien had the same effect, this time scoring Franklin Barreto, who was pinch running for Pinder and remained in the game at second, Profar moving to the outfield. Milwaukee now was up, 3-2.

Blake Treinen continued his comeback by setting down Milwaukee with one hit in the top of the eighth in relief of Diekman.

Josh Hader replaced the unfortunate Guerra, whose line was one each for innings pitched, runs, earned runs, walks, and hit batters. His pitch count was 25.

Josh Hader came in to pitch the eighth, his third relief apearance in as many days. The Brewers’ closer walked Grossman, the first man he faced. Then Chapman’s bat came alive as the A’s stellar third sacker rocketed a two run homer to straight away center field to give Oakland a 4-3 lead. Hader was pulled after Olson grounded out to first, unassisted. The reader won’t need any assistance from me to figure out Hader’s pitching line. He threw 16 pitches to earn it.

The resurgent Khris Davis greeted Hader’s replacement, Jay Jackson, with a single to center. Canha advanced the A’s DH to third with a line single to right. Canha then stole his second base of the game and advanced to third while Davis scored on Profar’s sacrifice fly to right.

Melvin called on Liam Hendricks to defend the A’s new found two run lead and in the process earn his tenth save of the season, which he had been unable to do Tuesday night. Today, he set down the side in order, striking out Yellich and Hiura and getting Moustakas to fly out to center for the game ending out.

Treinen got the win; he’s now 6-3. Hader was the losing pitcher; he’s now 1-5.

The A’s have a rare Friday off and will return to the Coliseum at 6:07 pm Saturday evening to face the Cardinals in another interleague battle. The scheduled starters are Mike Fiers (9-3, 3.54 ERA) for Oakland and the geographically named Dakota Hudson (10-5, 3.88 ERA) for St. Louis.

When the game ended at 3:50 pm, the A’s trailed Houston by 7 1/2 games for the division lead. They’re in a dead heat with Tampa Bay for the second wild card berth, both teams 2 1/2 games behind Cleveland.

A’s fall to the Brewers 4-2 at home

Photo credit: @Brewers

By Lewis Rubman

Milwaukee: 4 | 9 | 1 | 7 LOB

Oakland: 2 | 7  | 1 | 8 LOB

OAKLAND — Milwaukee’s newly acquired right-hander Jordan Lyles brought an unimpressive 5-7, 5.36 ERA record to the mound at the Coliseum tonight. Even though those dismal numbers, compiled while he still was toiling for Pittsburgh, were in line with his lifetime mark of 36-59, 5.29 ERA, they don’t give an idea of how badly he’d been struggling before he was dealt to the Brewers. He had gone 0-5, 10.00 ERA in his last five contests and 4-7, 6.06 ERA in his last 15. He features a slightly below average four-seam fast ball and a knuckle curve, but he has a few other pitches in his repertory. He threw a lot of classical curve balls tonight.

Oakland countered with Brett Anderson (9-8, 4.05 ERA), who recently has pitched effectively for the first four innings or so, but has run into trouble after that.

He didn’t start effectively tonight, allowing lead-off hitter Lorenzo Cain his eighth home run of the season, a line drive to left that came on the second pitch of the game. In spite of a one out single to right by Ryan Braun, the A’s lefty avoided further damage by inducing clean-up batter Yasmani Grandal to bounce into a 4-6-3 double play.

Anderson allowed another run in the third frame, giving up a single to Orlando Arcia, followed by Christian Yellich’s double to right, which extended the Brewers’ left fielder’s hitting streak to 18 consecutive games and drove in his teammate.

The A’s got one run back in their half of the inning when Marcus Semien led off with a double, and two batters later, Matt Chapman, who has been struggling at the plate, drove him in with a sac fly to right.

But Anderson coughed up that run in the top of the fourth. Yasmani Grandal led off with a single to left, and Keston Hiura drove him in with a double to deep left center. Once again, Anderson snuffed out the rally, but by now, the A’s were trailing 3-1.

Oakland came close to narrowing the gap in the bottom of the fifth, and Semien again was instrumental. He drew a two-out walk and advanced to third when Lyle’s pick off attempt ended up deep in the right field bullpen. But Martini’s fly to right closed out the frame.

A leaping grab of Grandal’s line drive to the right field score board by Robbie Grossman provided excitement in the top of the sixth, but his diving stab at Mike Moustakas’ sinking liner to right center got past him for a double. Anderson got out of the resulting jam by retiring Manny Piña on a fly to Canha in center.

Lyles didn’t come out for the bottom of the sixth. His line for five innings’ work was 94 pitches, 64 of which were strikes, one run earned, three hits, two walks, and four bases on balls. His replacement, Matt Albers, surrendered a one out double to Olson before getting Davis on a hard hit line drive to Cain in center and a full count strike out of Mark Canha.

Albers had two strikeouts to go with the one hit he allowed in his inning of work before giving way to Jeremy Jeffress, who started the home half of the seventh for the Brewers. With one out, Chris Herrmann drove a slicing liner into the left field corner for a two bagger. Jurickson Profar pinch hit for Barreto and spanked a leg double to right center to narrow the visitors’ lead to one run at 3-2. But Semien struck out, and Nick Martini flied out to left to end the comeback.

After seven innings of work, in which he gave up three runs, all earned, on eight hits, one a home run, struck out three, and didn’t walk anyone, Anderson’s task was completed. He had thrown 95 pitches, 64 of them strikes, a record almost identical to Lyles’, and was replaced on the mound by Lou Trivino, still struggling, in spite of his good performance last Sunday against Texas, to regain the dominance he showed last season.

Dominant he wasn’t, giving up a double to Braun and walks to Hiura and Mustakas before unloading a wild pitch to Manny Piña that let in Ben Gamel, running for Braun, from third, and then refilling the bases by walking Piña. Trivino gave way to Wei-Chung Wang, off of whom Eric Thames launched a deep fly that Canha tracked down spectacularly on the warning track in right center field.

Junior Guerra, who entered the fray to start the bottom of the eighth, allowed only a walk to Olson.

Joakim Soria set Milwaukee down 1, 2, 3 in the ninth.

Josh Hader, last night’s losing pitcher, relieved Guerra for the ninth inning, hoping to redeem himself. He did, allowing only a single to Profar.

Lyles got the win. He’s now 6-7 with an ERA of 5.15. Anderson was tagged with the loss. His record stands at 9-7, 4.04 ERA. Hader was credited with his 24th save.

Before the game, the Athletics acquired right handed pitcher Tanner Roak from Cincinnati in exchange for outfielder Jameson Hannah, who had been with Stockton, and an undisclosed amount of cash. They also designated pitcher Andrew Triggs for assignment and placed Ramón Laureano and Josh Phegley on the 10-day injured list, retroactive to July 29. The team recalled Nick Martini and Beau Taylor from Las Vegas to replace them and out-righted pitcher Brian Schlitter to the Aviators.

The Oakland bullpen continues to give reason for concern, although Blake Treinan’s performance last night was encouraging. Also troubling is Matt Chapman’s current slump at the plate. He now is two for 27, including 12 strikeouts, in his last seven games. His fielding, however, remains brilliant. Losing speedy, hard throwing, and hard hitting Laureano for at least 10 days to what is called a right lower leg stress reaction, comes at a particularly unfortunate time.

The A’s now have a won-lost record of 61-48, eight games behind Houston for the division lead. They are a half a game behind Tampa Bay for the second wild card spot and 2 1/2 games behind Cleveland for the first wild card berth.

Right-handers Chase Anderson (5-2, 3.89 ERA) and Homer Bailey (9-7, 3.53 ERA overall and 2-1, 8.59 ERA for Oakland) will be on the mound for the Brewers and A’s, respectively, tomorrow afternoon. That’s when the dog days of August begin. By month’s end, we should have a better fix on who the top dog will be.