A’s to open road trip with 3-game series against Orioles starting Tuesday

Photo credit: @Athletics photo: A’s players wearing their favorite football jerseys as they board the plane to Baltimore, Md.

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s start a six-game road trip against the Baltimore Orioles starting Tuesday. One of the problems that these teams may have is the weather. The forecast is as follows: Tuesday (thunderstorms) along with Wednesday and Thursday (scattered thunderstorms; Hurricane Florence). Hopefully, they will be able to play.

If the games are played, the A’s will be facing a Baltimore Oriole team that has the worst record in the AL. O’s manager Buck Showalter probably will be gone after the season as the team will be in rebuild mode. They traded Manny Machado to the Dodgers. Machado will be a free agent at the end of the season, and he will be getting a contract that will take care of him and his family for years. Jonathan Schoop has been traded to the Brewers. Ace reliever, Zach Britton, is now a Yankee. Kevin Gausman is now in Atlanta. Former A’s players Danny Valencia and Craig Gentry did not produce and are currently unemployed. Chris Tillman, who was once the O’s best starter, had a dismal season and was released on July 25th.

The O’s own a 41-102 record and are languishing in the basement of the AL East. They still have Adam Jones, but not much else. Slugging first baseman Chris Davis (not to be confused with the A’s DH Khris Davis) is having a terrible year. His batting average is a .177 with 16 homers and 49 RBIs on his tally sheet. The rest of the players with the exceptions of catcher Caleb Joseph, second baseman Jonathan Villar, and outfielder Trey Mancini are either young players or fill-ins. The veteran, Mark Trumbo, who is the O’s DH, is out for the season following knee surgery.

The A’s are rolling and would love to sweep the O’s. They travel to Florida to play the Tampa Bay Rays over the weekend. The weather won’t be a problem there as their games are played in a dome.

If the games are played in Baltimore, Mike Fiers will pitch Tuesday night. Fiers is 11-6 overall and 4-0 since coming to the A’s. His opponent will be Alex Cobb. Cobb got off to a terrible start with Baltimore after signing a free agent deal this year. Cobb has been pitching better in the second half. The A’s have not announced their starters for Wednesday and Thursday. Lefty Brett Anderson is due to come off the DL, and he may be available. A’s manager Bob Melvin might have to have two bullpen games if he can’t find a starter.

The A’s swept the three games from Baltimore when they played in Oakland on May 4th, 5th, and sixth. The A’s are just 2 1/2 games behind the AL West division-leading Houston Astros for first place and 2 1/2 games behind the New York Yankees for the first Wild Card spot.

After the two series on the road, the A’s play three with Minnesota and three with the LA Angels. They finish the season on the road with three against the Seattle Mariners and the last three of the year with the Angels.

Melvin puts his bullpen on speed dial in A’s 7-3 come-from-behind win over the Rangers

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND — The first sign of something gone horribly wrong was actually the precursor to things going smoothly as usual at the Coliseum on Sunday afternoon.

A’s starter Trevor Cahill–undefeated (5-0) and extraordinarly comfortable pitching at the Coliseum–couldn’t find the strike zone, walking the first three batters he faced on just 14 pitches. After escaping a first inning disaster, Cahill was done before the end of three innings, trailing 3-0, having walked six of the 14 batters he faced, and doing so in an perversely economical 53 pitches.

“I don’t think the stuff was bad, just the command of it was not so good,” said manager Bob Melvin of Cahill’s rocky start.

But after Cahill departed, the Oakland bullpen kicked in as did the bats in a five-run, fifth inning that highlighted the A’s 7-3 win. Minus Cahill, the now familiar formula involving late offense and sting relief pitching rang true again. Are these A’s as hot as your grandmother’s A’s? Apparently so, they’ve won 53 of 74, the hottest the club has been in the last 20 years over a stretch that long.

When you’re this hot, and have this many buttons to push, a Cahill dud is quickly absorbed. And while Melvin acknowledges his club has way more answers than questions these days, it’s something that demands a discerning eye at all times.

“We were getting deeper contributions from the starters there for a while,” Melvin said. “Right now, maybe not so much, and we’re having to cover a lot of the game, but my feeling is that they’ll respond and they’ll start going deeper in games so we can cut down on the amount of relief we use.”

That Oakland resourcefulness kicked over to the offense in the fifth, when the A’s did a little of this, and took a little of that in fashioning their five-run explosion. Matt Olson and Ramon Laureno provided the explosiveness with a double each, Nick Martini’s infield hit scored a run, and then a second when Roughned Odor threw the ball away. Three other batters walked, including Matt Joyce to load the bases with two outs, and the Rangers contributed as well with Odor’s error and Ariel Jurado’s wild pitch.

The one you probably don’t focus on is the Joyce at-bat. And that ended up probably being the biggest at-bat of the inning to load the bases with two outs.  If he makes an out, the inning’s over,” Melvin recounted. “A lot of guys contributed today, but Matt Joyce’s at-bat was huge.”

Like the A’s have done in recent weeks, the Rangers employed the featured reliever approach with Jurado as the guy scheduled to get the first and lengthiest relief stint. But this time, the strategy imploded as the A’s took off when Jurado entered.  The A’s weren’t expecting Cahill to pitch so poorly, but Melvin quickly turned to his bullpen with seven guys making appearances after the starter departed.

The A’s have used 23 different relievers this season, and with the addition of Ryan Dull to the active roster before Sunday’s game, Melvin has 15 at his disposal currently. Blake Treinen remains the unquestioned star of relief, his one-inning stint closed Sunday’s contest, and the closer lowered his ERA to a Major League best 0.87.

Both the Yankees and Astros lost on Sunday, bringing the A’s within 2 1/2 games of both teams in their quest to host one or more playoff games.

“I think getting a home game here is very important,” said Stephen Piscotty, who homered in the seventh to provide insurance. “Get a playoff game in the Coliseum with our rowdy fans. I think that gives us a definite advantage.”

MLB The Show podcast with Daniel Dullum: Ex-D-Back helps Braves to defeat old mates; New hero every day for Oakland A’s–Olson helps beat Rangers; plus more

Photo credit: theathletic.com

On the MLB The Show podcast with Daniel:

1 Beware of the boomerang! Ex-D-Back helps Braves defeat Arizona and its imploding bullpen.

2 Matt Olson, playing off the bench, helps A’s beat Texas.

3 Top White Sox pitching prospect Michael Kopech has UCL tear, likely candidate for Tommy John surgery.

4 Tigers announcers suspended after brawl; fight started over a chair and ended with a chokehold.

Daniel Dullum does the MLB The Show podcast each Sunday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Laureano Better Than Big Mac, Canseco in A’s 8-4 Win over Texas

Photo credit: @SportingGreenSF

By: Matthew Harrington

OAKLAND–Just think where the Oakland Athletics might be if they’d called Ramon Laureano up sooner. Maybe a 3.5 game division deficit is actually a division lead at this time. The 24 year old rookie has won games for the A’s with his glove, his arm, his baserunning and his bat since getting the call August 3rd and Friday night was no different.

The speedy center fielder became the first Athletic to have two multi-homer games in his first thirty big league appearances, going deep twice in the A’s 8-4 win over the Rangers at the Coliseum on Friday night. He joins the Bash Brothers, Mark McGwire and Jose Canseco as the only players in A’s history to accomplish the feat in the first 50 games of their careers.

The A’s needed the win with the Astros rallying past the Red Sox and the New York Yankees dispatching of the team directly below the A’s in the Wild Card standings. A loss would have pushed Oakland 4 1/2 games back of each team. The A’s pounced on Rangers starter Yovani Gallardo, plating five runs of him in just 4 1/3 innings.

Laureano put the Rangers on the ropes in his first at bat of the game, working his way into the leadoff spot after earning manager Bob Melvin’s trust over a first cup of coffee that includes a .309 batting average in 81 at-bats. Laureano rewarded his manager with a solo shot to center field, his 4th homer of the year already, to give the A’s a 1-0 lead just one batter into their licks at the dish.

Marcus Semien hit his 12th long ball of the season with a runner on in the bottom of the 2nd inning, then the rally continued till Matt Chapman’s two-run single made it 5-0 A’s.

Joey Gallo did what he does best, crushing two-run homer off Chris Bassitt in the top of the 4th. Bassitt, the second man out of the pen after Liam Hendriks served as “opener” once again, allowed three runs over his three innings of work.

Yusmeiro Petit was credited with the win for his work pitching the fifth and sixth innings despite the A’s already being up 5-2. He got some major run support when Laureano blasted another solo shot, this time off reliever Adrian Sampson. Sampson would get tagged for another pair after an error and three straight singles put Oakland up 8-3.

It wasn’t all smooth sailing for the A’s. Fernando Rodney labored for his appearance in the seventh inning. He gave up one run, his fourth of September in just 2 2/3 innings and it could have been much worse. Ronald Guzman hit a ball that appeared to hit the top of the wall in right, but was ruled a double and scored only one run. Rodney walked the bases loaded with two outs, but Ryan Buchter came in and got the deep fly out from Rougned Odor to escape the big inning.

Jeurys Familia also struggled in his inning of work after getting one out, but giving up a hit to Nomar Mazara, a walk to Adrian Beltre and an RBI double to  Gallo to pull Texas within four at 8-4. He’d get the final to outs and turn the game over to the closer Blake Treinen. Treinen, a dark horse Cy Young candidate, finished off the ninth in his usual dominant fashion to give the A’s the final 8-4 lead.

The A’s and Rangers will continue their series with game two on Saturday afternoon at 1:05 pm PDT.

The A’s will send one of their few true starters to the hill, Edwin Jackson, a journeyman with a 5-3 record and 2.91 ERA. He’s locked in a battle with Mike Fiers to determine who will pitch in the one-game playoff come October if needed. He’ll be opposed by Yohander Mendez, a southpaw with a 1-1 record and 5.59 ERA.

Oakland A’s podcast with Joey Friedman: A’s need every win in this Rangers series starting tonight

Photo credit: @Athletics

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Joey:

#1 The Houston Astros never quit. They’re just 3 1/2 games ahead of the A’s with five straight wins and a convincing win over the Minnesota Twins 9-1 on Wednesday at Minute Maid Field.

#2 Alex Bergman hit for five RBIs on Wednesday as the Astros have some different player to come through every other day and they manage to stay ahead of the A’s in what can be called a real race in the AL West.

#3 The A’s meanwhile beat the New York Yankees two out of three and they out foxed and outbombed the Bronx Bombers’ best pitcher Luis Severino 8-2 with some early hitting.

#4 The A’s go up against the Texas Rangers tonight. The Rangers are 26 games out of first place. The season is finished for the Rangers, but as they say in the show, anything can happen on any given day and the A’s need every game of this series.

#5 The A’s need this series if they want to continue to chip away at the Astros. It starts Friday night at the Coliseum, the Rangers will start Yovani Gallardo (8-3) and the A’s will start Chris Bassitt (2-3).

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

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Exclusive Interview With WFAN’s Suzyn Waldman

Photo credit: @NYDNSports

By: Amaury Pi-Gonzalez

The New York Yankees paid their recent visit to the Oakland Athletics at the Coliseum. Prior to the last game of the three-game series, I spoke with WFAN’s Suzyn Waldman, who handles commentary on all Yankee games with play-by-play man John Sterling.

Suzyn has been broadcasting sports for 32 years. This interview was conducted inside her broadcast booth at the Coliseum a good three hours prior to the game that night.

Q: Suzyn, how did you got started in sports broadcasting after 30 years of doing this?

A: Oh boy, well when I started I was in theater before I did this and musical theater it was changing and the only other thing I knew was sports, because I had my own season-tickets at baseball games with my grandfather when I was three and I was a sports person, but it was always my avocation, because little girls didn’t do that, and I was on Broadway and I sang and dance did all that and I go to ballgames, and…a friend of mine who used to be the announcer for the Boston Red Sox, Ken Coleman–we were very very close friends he said, “you know I have a friend and this next year they are starting this thing in New York it’s going to be called WFAN…and I told him he’s going to meet you, because you know more about sports than anybody I know and you’re female and they’re going to need a woman so I made a tape.

I didn’t know what I was doing and I was hired to do updates, I was actually the first voice on WFAN in 1987 so that’s the beginning, but then I realized that nobody wanted me there because I was female, so then it became something else and it became don’t you dare to talk to me like that, and don’t you tell me I don’t know because I am female…and so that’s how that started with people saying “no.”

Q: How do you feel being a pioneer? Actually there still not that many women in sports broadcasting in baseball like, say Jessica Mendoza, anymore.

A: Well I wasn’t trying to be a pioneer, I was just trying to make a living and I didn’t like being told I didn’t know anything…to tell you the truth I expected there to be a lot more women, it is just me in the broadcast booth, I know Jessica does ESPN, but it is only one game a week … it is just me and I am waiting for someone else to do this I know there are women down in the minor leagues trying to to this to get a chance or whether or not they give up, I think there is no failures. It’s just people that give up too soon.

Q: Is this more fun that playing Dulcinea in Man of LaMancha?

A: Nothing is more fun that being Dulcinea in Man of La Mancha. You know I did get over theater, although I miss it everyday, but I am still on stage. This a different stage, but I’m still performing. I don’t sing and dance anymore and I don’t get applause … Yeah, I miss theater everyday … but this is important and this is where I should be”

Q: Your best message for a young female that aspires to be in sports broadcasting like you maybe in baseball.

A: Think of what you can do that’s difference from everybody else go and look in the mirror and say to yourself, “I have a different way of looking at this, and I am going to do this, don’t let anybody stop you, because people are going to say no, you do commercials on television, you’ll get 200 no, before you get a commercial, but don’t let people tell you ‘no.'” You will know … and don’t want to be me, don’t want to be Jessica, just be you, because if you take my job is just one, but if it’s you, then there are two of us. Don’t let anybody stop you.

It was truly a pleasure to interview Suzyn for the first time, despite the fact we’ve known each other for decades during baseball games at many parks across the country.

Amaury Pi-González is the Spanish voice of the A’s and since 2016, he’s in the Advisory Board of the American Sportscasters Association in New York City.

A’s to host Rangers in weekend series starting Friday night

Photo credit: markmoneyhoffman.com

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s will host the Texas Rangers at the Coliseum for three games beginning Friday night. It will be the final time the teams will meet this season.

The Rangers find themselves in last place in the AL West with a 61-79 record. The Rangers had hoped to have had a better record as they put together a lineup with hitters that could put runs on the board. On the other hand, their pitching could not keep the other team from putting more runs on the board.

The A’s, who have an off-day on Thursday, after 20 consecutive games, find themselves in a race for either one of two possibilities. The A’s are 3.5 games behind the Houston Astros in the race for first place in the AL West.

If the A’s were to win the division, they would not have to play in the one-game playoff between the two Wild Card teams. They are also 3.5 games behind the New York Yankees for the first Wild Card slot. The first Wild Card hosts the game at their home park. If the A’s finish in the second spot, they would have to fly to New York for the game.

Also, history is not on the side of the second Wild Card. The home team usually, but not always, prevails when the one-game playoff is held at their home stadium.

The A’s have a lot to play for this weekend. While they have successfully handled the Rangers so far this year, they cannot take them lightly. The Rangers would love nothing more than upsetting the A’s apple cart.

Below are the A’s and Rangers pitching matchups:

On Friday night, The A’s will send Chris Bassitt to the hill. Bassitt has pitched well at times, but he has not been as consistent as the team had hoped. However, in his last start against Minnesota, he went 4 2/3 innings and allowed one run. The A’s could potentially use an “opener” when a bullpen pitcher to start the game and then bring in Bassitt after the first or second innings.

The Rangers will counter with the veteran hurler Yovani Gallardo who has a 8-3 record and a 5.97 ERA. Gallardo beat the Twins 7-4 in his last start. His line was pitched five innings and gave up three runs. Gallardo has a 5-2 record with a 4.07 ERA in his last eight starts.

On Saturday, the A’s Edwin Jackson will pitch for the Green and Gold. Jackson has a 5-3 record and a 2.91 ERA so far this year. In his last start, Jackson went six innings and allowed just one run and three hits.

The Rangers will start Yohender Mendez. Mendez recorded his first MLB win last Sunday when he beat the Twins. He pitched six scoreless innings and allowed three hits while walking one and striking out three. He has a 1-1 record and a 5.59 ERA for the season.

On Sunday, Trevor Cahill will start for the A’s, and Texas has not yet announced their pitcher. Cahill has a 6-3 record and a 3.60 ERA. The big righty has pitched extremely well at the Coliseum this year. In his nine starts at home, he has a 5-0 record and a 1.09 ERA. He beat the Yankees last Monday before 41,000 fans. He allowed the Yanks’ three runs (two earned) and five hits while walking one and striking out three.

The A’s pitching will have their hands full as they try to stop the Rangers’ hitters. The Rangers’ infield consists of Ronald Guzman at first, Rougned Odor at second, Elvis Andrus at short, and Adrian Beltre at third. The Rangers’ outfield will be patrolled by Shin-Soo-Choo, Joey Gallo, and Nomar Mazara. Robinson Chirinos will handle the catching. Every one of these players can hit the ball out of the park.

The A’s also have big boppers. They have five guys that have hit 20 or more balls out of the park this season. Part-time players such as Mark Canha and Chad Pinder are in double figures in that department.

As I’ve mentioned earlier, the A’s cannot let their guard down. The team knows what’s at stake and their manager Bob Melvin will prepare them. The A’s are 84-57 and have 21 games left to play. They have to keep winning, and they will need help from other teams if they are to move up in the standings.

The Boston Red Sox could really help the A’s as they host the Astros at Fenway Park this weekend, and have six more, three at home and three in New York, against the Yanks. The Red Sox would love nothing more than upsetting the Yanks’ apple cart.

The surprise team and feel good story of the 2018 season have been the A’s. The players know they are good and they are showing the world what they can do.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: A’s honor their very best in the Hall of Fame class, then go out and beat Yanks 8-2

Photo credit: @Athletics

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 Big night for the Oakland A’s honoring their Hall of Fame class of 2018 of ex-owner Charlie O Finley, Jim Catfish Hunter, Dave Stewart, Rollie Fingers, Reggie Jackson, Rickey Henderson, and Dennis Eckersley.

#2 You gotta love it when Rickey gave his speech and said, “I’m the youngest player up here” and “I’ve been called back here four or five times already.”

#3 Everybody got one of those green jackets that were for the honorees in the A’s Hall of Fame. There’s a lot of hard work that went into earning that jacket.

#4 The A’s got an 8-2 win over the New York Yankees and got great pitching out of starter Mike Fiers to take the series 2-1.

#5 The A’s open up a three-game series with the Texas Rangers. Each series is important as the A’s are trying to chip away at the Astros and Yankees in the AL West and Wild Card races.

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

A’s rout the Yankees 8-2 to take 2 out of 3 from New York

Photo credit: @Athletics

By Jerry Feitelberg

OAKLAND — The A’s beat the Yankees 8-2 at the Coliseum on Wednesday night to take two out of three and even the season series at three apiece.

The A’s had several legends in the ballpark. The A’s honored former greats Reggie Jackson, Dave Stewart, Dennis Eckersley, Rollie Fingers, Rickey Henderson, Catfish Hunter, who was represented by his wife. Charlie Finley’s son Paul was in attendance for the Finley family.

The A’s sent Mike Fiers to take care of the pitching duties. The Yanks had an opportunity to do damage in the first inning. Fiers retired leadoff hitter Brett Gardner for the first out. Yanks’ DH Mike Stanton blasted a double to deep right center field. Fiers got Andrew McCutchen to fly out to center for the second out. Fiers walked the next two hitters, Aaron Hicks and Gary Sanchez, to load the bases. Fiers was laboring as his pitch count was now in the 20s. He now had to face the Yanks’ first baseman Luke Voit. Voit has been on a tear since being recalled from the minors as he has homered seven times in his last 12 games. Fiers retired Voit for the third out as he hit a ground ball to Matt Chapman. Chapman stepped on third for the force out. Fiers regained his composure and allowed the Yankees just one hit over the next five innings. A’s manager Bob Melvin allowed him to start the seventh. He walked the first batter Aaron Hicks and then Gary Sanchez took him deep for the Yanks’ only runs of the game.

The Yanks had their ace, Luis Severino, going for them. Severino came into the game tied for the most wins in the AL with 17. The Yanks were 22-6 in games started for Severino, but that didn’t faze the A’s one bit. They put six runs on the board in Severino 2 2/3 innings of work and sent him down to his seventh loss of the year.

The A’s put four runs on the board in the bottom of the first. Rookie Ramon Laureano started the rally with a solid double to left. Laureano went to third on a passed ball and scored on Jed Lowrie’s single. A’s DH Khris Davis doubled to right. Lowrie stopped at third. Severino uncorked a wild pitch that allowed Lowrie to score and Davis motored to third. First baseman Matt Olson doubled to left to drive in Davis with the A’s third run of the inning. Olson went to third on a passed ball and scored on a wild pitch.  It was a very strange inning that featured two passed balls and two wild pitches.

The A’s added two more in the third and one more in the fourth to take a 7-0 lead. Matt Chapman walked to start the third. Lowrie singled to met on at first and second. Both advanced a base when Davis’s ground ball to third was momentarily bobbled by Neil Walker. Davis was out at first. Both scored on Stephen Piscotty’s single. The A’s added another run after Chad Pinder singled. Josh Phegley walked to put men on at first and second with no out. Laureano reached on a fielder’s choice. Phegley was out at second, and Pinder moved to third on the play. Matt Chapman ground out to first on a checked swing and Pinder crossed the plate for the score.

The A’s plated another tally in the bottom of the sixth. Yanks’ reliever Luis Cessa retired the first two hitters he faced. Laureano then lined a double to right-center. Matt Chapman followed with a rocket past third baseman Neil Walker to drive in Laureano to give the A’s a commanding 8-0 advantage after six complete.

The Yanks finally put two on the board in the top of the seventh. Fiers walked the leadoff hitter to start the frame. Yanks’ catcher Gary Sanchez slammed Fiers’ pitch into the left-field seats to make it an 8-2 game. It was just the third hit of the game that Fiers had allowed. Melvin replaced Fiers with Yusmeiro Petit. Petit retired the first hitter, Gave up a single to Neil Walker but was able to get the next two outs to the end the Yanks’ seventh.

The A’s bullpen continued to shine as Lou Trivino set the Yanks down in order in the eighth and Cory Gearrin closed the door on them in the ninth. The A’s won their 84th game of the year.

Game Notes: With the win, the A’s improve to 84-57 and remain 3.5 games behind the first-place Houston Astros. The Astros beat Minnesota again on Wednesday. The Astros travel to Boston for three with the Red Sox and, hopefully, Boston can help the A’s gain ground on the Astros.

The Yanks lead the A’s by 3.5 games in the race for the first Wild Card spot in the AL. The Yanks are off on Thursday and then finish the West Coast swing with a three-game series with the Mariners. Then they play three in Minnesota and three in Toronto. Their last 12 games of the year consist of six with Boston, three with Baltimore, and three with Tampa Bay. The A’s will need help from these teams if they hope to finish either first in the division or first in the Wild Card race.

Mike Fiers was the winning pitcher, and he is now 11-6 for 2018. The A’s are now 60-0 when leading after the seventh inning. The A’s are 50-21 since June 16th which is the best record in baseball.

A’s hitting stars were Khris Davis and Ramon Laureano with two doubles each. Jed Lowrie had two singles.

The A’s line score was 8 runs, 11 hits, and no errors.

The Yanks’ line was 2 runs, five hits, and no errors.

Time of game was two hours and 53 minutes, and there were 21,001 fans watching the A’s continue their magical ride.

Up Next: The A’s welcome the Rangers for a three-game series starting this Friday at 7:05 pm PDT.

Khris Davis is the other KD that people should be talking about

Photo credit: @athletics_fanly

By: Ana Kieu

OAKLAND, Calif. — I think it’s pretty obvious that Khris Davis is the other KD in the Bay Area that people should be talking about. But, just in case you need a couple of reasons on why Davis deserves a similar amount of praise like Golden State Warriors star Kevin Durant, I’ll give you a couple of reasons.

Davis, a Lakewood, Calif. native, has been piling up the hits and RBIs on the field as the A’s designated hitter. The Coliseum’s playing surface, Rickey Henderson Field, is a gorgeous reflection of the Green and Gold. But, as you may already know, Davis has a shot at becoming a big A’s star. The 30-year-old bats and throws right and recently has joined quality company alongside Jimmie Foxx and Mark McGwire with his third straight year with 40 or more home runs.

“It’s just miraculous [the kind of] numbers that he puts up,” A’s manager Bob Melvin told NBC Sports Bay Area. “We’ve had a long history of power hitters here, and to be with Jimmie Foxx in that kind of company and we’re still looking at close to a month left … He’s been as consistent a power hitter as anyone’s been in Oakland.”

Davis also joined Foxx as the second player in A’s history to go back-to-back with 40 homers. Davis needs eight more homers to pass Terry Steinbach for 15th place on the A’s all-time home runs list.

Davis has been dubbed as “the most consistent hitter in baseball history” by FiveThirtyEight.com. Davis’ batting average is consistent to the point where it’s scary.

Davis’ opposite is Washington Nationals star Bryce Harper, who’s currently tied as the third most volatile hitter over a five-year span. Harper’s batting average has taken quite the roller coaster ride, but it’s obvious that inconsistency doesn’t automatically mean that a hitter is subpar. Harper’s team, however, tends to fall apart in the postseason, thanks to the so-called Washington D.C. sports curse.

In my opinion, Davis’ other nickname could be “Mr. Reliable” since he provides a ray of consistency in the midst of random batting averages among MLB players.

Additionally, Davis’ actions off the field speak volumes that he’s not just a respectable DH, but also an all-around good guy. Last month, Davis asked a young male fan, Anthony Slocumb, from the Make-A-Wish Foundation to sign his jersey. Slocumb is a sixth grader from Oakland. Slocumb had been in remission from a rare cancer called Langerhans cell histiocytosis, but attended an A’s vs. Rangers game at the Coliseum with a group from the Make-A-Wish Foundation’s Greater Bay Area chapter.

Davis kept Slocumb in his memory while out and about on the field. Davis also slugged a homer for the A’s 9-0 shutout win over the Rangers that day.

“I thought about him around the bases. There’s not a better feeling than hitting a home run, so hopefully he got some excitement and joy from watching that,” Davis told ESPN. “They’re really the stars. … He was excited. I could tell that he was just happy to be here and wanted to have some fun. It was amazing, the look on his face.”

Davis never thought once about changing uniform shirts either.

Slocumb’s mother was pleased by Davis’ kind gesture, as it’s not everyday where an average person or group of persons crosses paths with a talented and kind-hearted MLB player.

With all that said, Davis may not become this year’s MVP, but he has been a large chunk of the A’s renaissance; and this why he’s the other KD that people should be talking about.