That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Dodgers still looking for a second ring after a decade of winning; plus more news

Los Angeles Dodgers’ Mookie Betts watches his three-run home run during the eighth inning of the team’s baseball game against the San Francisco Giants on Thursday, July 21, 2022, in Los Angeles. (AP News photo)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Amaury, can the San Diego Padres catch the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Dodgers who have won the National League title every year for the last decade and won one ring during that time are trying to secure a better position to win another ring and this year might be their best chance.

#2 The Dodgers with Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman, Max Muncy, and Will Smith all healthy and should be ready to battle. With this line up of key players do the Dodgers chances to win a World Series vastly improve.

#3 Amaury, Philadelphia Phillies JT Realmuto was ejected on Monday for moving his glove when the umpire went to put a new ball in his glove and ended up having the ball thrown away. Realmuto wanted to know why he was ejected and umpire Randy Rosenberg said he was retaliating for the previous pitch that he called on Phillie pitcher Craig Kimbrel.

#4 Amaury, opening day Thursday night you and Manolo calling all the play by play for the Oakland A’s 71 home games. You and Manolo don’t travel and we know you have pointed out that the Los Angeles Angels and Toronto Blue Jays are not traveling their broadcasters do you think this will be a regular trend in baseball not traveling their broadcasters?

#5 The New York Mets Kodai Senga struck out nine batters in five innings of work, the Mets Tommy Pham in the same game hit a two RBI double and Mets second baseman Luis Guillorme hit an RBI double. The Mets have some talent and Senga can keep hitters off balance.

Join Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the Oakland A’s lead play by play announcer on the A’s Spanish radio network at 1010 KIQI San Francisco and 990 KATD PIttsburg and read That’s Amaury News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

A’s do damage in early and middle innings defeat Giants 12-6 in spring finale

Hard to say goodbye San Francisco Giants pitcher Sergio Romo (54) is emotional after exiting his last game in his MLB career retiring to the applause of the Giants fans and players in a exhibition game against the Oakland A’s’ at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Mon Mar 27, 2023 (@SFGiants photo)

Oakland. 2 2. 0. 0. 3. 4. 1. 0. 0. – 12. 15. 1

San Francisco. 1. 0. 1. 0. 0. 0 4. 0. 0 – 6. 7. 0

Time: 2:58

Attendance: 30,254

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–This evening’s closing pre-season game for both the A’s and the Giants was to have honored a player who was an important part of each team’s bullpen at various times over his 15 year MLB career, Sergio Romo. Romo’s having pitched on both sides of the bay mirrored his frontier background.

He was born in Brawley, but came from a baseball -playing Mexicali family. I once read an article in the Mexicali press (I wish I could locate it) that reported that when Romo was in Brawley, he was treated like a Mexican and that when he was in Mexicali, he was treated like an American.

In neither place did that mean he was treated like an honored guest. Maybe that explains why his walk up song, Préndeme el mechón (more or less, “Light My Fire”) celebrates always moving somewhere else.

I particularly remember one incident from Romo’s stint in Oakland. After a night game, a pair of youngsters, about 10 years old, were waiting in the cold by the exit to the players’ parking lot. Car after car zoomed past them, but none stopped or even slowed down.

Then a pick up (or maybe it was an SUV) whizzed by with the driver’s window open. One of the kids shouted out, “Romo!” The vehicle stopped abruptly, backed up, and two young fans were the proud owners of a Sergio Romo autograph.

The Giants honored Romo by signing him to a minor league contract and announcing they would plan to let him make a farewell performance sometime during this evening’s contest.

The A’s also added another veteran reliever to their roster, but this signing was less ceremonial. They agreed with Jeurys Familia on the terms of a a one-year contract shortly before yesterday’s ugly but, in a weird way hopeful, 9-5 defeat by the Giants.

Oakland placed left-handed pitcher Kirby Sneadon the injured list to make room for Familia on their roster. The familiar face pitched an inning, surrendering an unearned run on two hits while chalking up a pair of Ks. 16 of his 22 pitches qualified as strikes.

Ross Stripling, the Giants’ starter tonight, began the evening with a record that perfectly matched his team’s could-go-any-way condition. He has a lifetime major league record of 38-38, 3.78 with the Dodgers and Blue Jays and had gone 1-1, 5.00 in the Cactus League for San Francisco this spring.

The 33 year old righty got off to a rocky start, surrendering a first inning two run homer to Jesús Aguilar that travelled just over the glove of a leaping Bryce Johnson 399 feet in to center field gardens at the 391 foot sign. The just good enough blast came off an 89 mph four seamer.

Things didn’t get better for Stripling. He ended up pitching five innings, in which he surrendered nine runs, all of them earned, on 11 hits, three of them for the distance, and a walk. He also was charged with the loss.

Stripling’s mound rival, also throwing from the starboard side was James Kaprielian, who brought a big league balance sheet of 13-14, 2.40 and a spring training mark of 1-1, 2.53, with him. Last year he went 5-9 with a 4.23 ERA and .735 opponents OPS in 26 starts.

Kaprielian began his evening’s labor by coughing up half of the two run lead he’d been given. He hit LaMonte Wade, Jr., the Giants’ leadoff hitter. Wade advanced to second what was first considered an infield single by Michael Conforto. Oakland appealed first base umpire Bill Miller’s call, which was reversed upon review.

Joc Pedereson’s single to left drove Wade home. But he improved after that and ended up with a line of 5-1/3 innings pitched, two runs allowed, both earned, on five hits, two walks, and a hit batter, with six strike outs. He was the winning pitcher.

Undaunted, the green and gold tacked on two more tallies in the second on Ryan Noda’s single to left, a triple to right center by Shea Langeloiers, and Estury Ruíz’s sac fly to right center made it 4-1 in favor of the visitors. The orange and black countered with a run in their half of the third, Brandon Crawford’s single to right plating David Villar.

In the top of the fifth, Ramón Laureano got ahold of an 82 mph change up and turned it into a 392 foot home run to left, his first round tripper of the pre-se soon, giving Oakland a 7-2 lead, which became 9-2 in the next inning a two run 396 foot blast to left center that ended Stripling’s stint on the mound.

Although the crowd chanted “Romo, Romo,” it was Tyler Rogers who entered the fray. Just to shake things up a bit, the two run homer he gave up to Brown went to right field. Believe it or not, the rag tag bunch from the east bay was leading, 11-2.

After the A’s finally were retired in the sixth and Zach Jackson had disposed of the Giants in their half of inning. Romo made his entry to the thunderous applause of the 30,254 fans whip were watching.

Although left as he had arrived, to thunderous applause, it was the A’s batters who supplied most of the thunder to his brief mound activity. He didn’t retire a single man he faced but gave up a run on a pair of hits and a walk. Oakland led 12-2 at his departure, and Mauricio Rivera kept it that way.

The Giants staged a modest uprising in the home seventh, but like Oakland’s ninth inning flare up, it fell short. Trevor May was tagged for four runs on four hits and four walks before minor leaguer Rico García for Oakland put an end to the threat. Tyler Rogers’ brother Taylor pitched a scoreless top of the eighth for the Giants.

Domingo Acevedo struck out the side in the home half of the inning, and Camino Duval set the A’s down in order in the top of the ninth. Calvin Coker, an extra like García, from the minor league camp,

The A’s season starts this Thursday, the 30th, at the Coliseum. The promising Kyler Muller will try to strut his stuff against the Angels, who will send Shoei Ohtani to the mound in what promises to be a–shall we call it “interesting”–match up. The an action is scheduled to start at 7:07, and we’ll be there. Meanwhile, Giants will fly to New York to test their mettle against the Yankees. Logan Webb will start for San Francisco, and Gerritt Cole will take the mound for the Yanks at Yankee Stadium a 10:05 AM first pitch.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: MLB Average time of Games shorter

Since the installation of pitch clock MLB games have been shorter at average of 25 minutes faster. Spring Training games have been a little longer at times because of all the substitutions but look for the average time to run two and half hours during the regular season (AP News file photo)

MLB Average time of Games shorter

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

The use of the clock in major league baseball is noticeable during this Spring Training and it has made a difference. During the 2022 regular season, an average nine-inning game lasted three hours and three minutes. While in the minor leagues last year they experimented with the new rules, the games were shorter by 25 minutes, with stolen base attempts increasing by 26 %.

Spring Training in Arizona and Florida ended this week and, with just a handful of games remaining prior to the opening of the season, like regional rivalries like A’s vs. Giants, Mets vs. Yankees, Dodgers vs. Angels, Cubs vs. White Sox and so on, the average length of a game during this Spring Training was 2 hours and 30 minutes, this average was taken among all games and all 30 teams.

Is the Commissioner ready for a ‘victory lap’? Not yet. We must have in mind that a Spring Training game is basically that, training, little strategy here, just play. During the regular season that is about to begin in hours, the game will have all the strategy necessary, because those games count, this is what you play for and at the end baseball is a game of strategy.

But even with this “sample” of Spring Training 2023, there is enough to dissect and agree that the clock (especially on pitchers) is making the difference on the total reduction of length of a game-time from first pitch to the 27th out.

As somebody that is old school and like the game, the way it was designed to be, we must admit that we must also be receptive to changes. In 1968 pitching was dominant and after the season the powers-to-be in the game lowered the strike zone and lowered the mount.

The game has continued changing, from the Designated Hitter, the relief pitching specializing to various pitchers culminating with a closer, plus other changes. What I mostly like with this new system (not only there is no perennial shift for every hitter) the action seems to happen more often, there is less time waiting around and the game moves with a rhythm. A little less “mind game’ between the hitter and the pitcher, the pace is quicker. Like it or not, that is a fact.

Regardless of all the changes, baseball still a fascinating game with emphasis in strategy and execution. With social media, where everybody can watch a game live on their cell phones and other revolutionary innovations from Silicon Valley to the Valley of the Sun, the new season is upon us.

For me, only Christmas is a happier time than the start of the season. A game I was introduced in the mid 1950’s by my father in Cuba and a game that I have learned to love more and love through out the years.

What did Albert Einstein say about baseball? Walking out of the stadium, Einstein might well have thought: “God does not play dice with the world … but He does play baseball.” speed or location of the ball as it arrives at the plate can result in a huge difference in where it goes. PLAY BALL!

Recommend: “Goodbye Oakland”, a book by Andy Dolich and Dave Newhouse, available on Amazon April 11, 2023. An excellent read of Oakland’s sports history.

Join Amaury Pi Gonzalez and Manolo Hernandez Douen for all the play by play action on the Oakland A’s Spanish radio network at 1010 KIQI San Francisco and 990 KATD Pittsburg and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

A’s Improved? Not in 9-5 exhibition loss to the Giants at the Coliseum

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND–Ken Waldichuk’s like a number of his Oakland teammates: his time is now whether he’s ready or not ready to shine.

After seven starts last season and Sunday’s rough outing against the Giants, Waldichuk appears to have a spot in the A’s starting rotation despite a 10.54 ERA this spring and five runs allowed in three plus innings work on Sunday.

Good thing manager Mark Kotsay is back for another round after 102 losses in 2022. He’s the unrepentant optimist.

“It wasn’t a successful year by any measure outside of the fact that there were some young players that got their opportunities,” Kotsay said. “Our expectation this year is we’re going to go compete and find ourselves in a position to hopefully add at the break and surprise people.

“There are players to be talked about that can establish themselves and have long careers as Oakland Athletics,” Kotsay said. “I think there’s some excitement.”

If Waldichuk is one of them, he’s going to have to establish pitch command. Hopefully, that’s sooner rather than later.

“I release the ball too far back and that’s when it starts spraying around,” Waldichuk said after surrendering a three-run homer to David Villar and walking four others.

The A’s got some similar love from Giants’ starter Alex Wood, who walked Esteury Ruiz and Seth Brown ahead of Tony Kemp’s game-tying double in the second inning. But the A’s offense went quiet after that; the Giants scored six, unanswered runs to lead 9-3 before the A’s got two solo shots in the ninth to gain respectability on the scoreboard.

The A’s scored just 568 runs in 2022, the second-fewest in the American League. In the off-season their roster needed a jolt. Instead they dealt offensive leader Sean Murphy and his 57 extra-base hits to Atlanta.

That means even more new faces in the A’s everyday lineup in 2023. Shea Langeliers is the headliner, and he should do well. Pablo Reyes and Carlos Perez, who’s hit 11 homers in limited time across four big-league seasons, might struggle. Reyes and Perez homered in the ninth inning Sunday, but they combined to hit just one other home run this spring.

Kemp, Seth Brown and shortstop Nick Allen return but that trio might not be enough to anchor a credible offense. Again, Kotsay preaches optimism.

“We’d love the opportunity to fill this place up,” Kotsay said. “There’s no better place to play in front of a full stadium than the Oakland Coliseum. I know that. I’ve experienced that.”

A’s Improved? Not in 9-5 exhibition loss to the Giants at the Coliseum

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND–Ken Waldichuk’s like a number of his Oakland teammates: his time is now whether he’s ready or not ready to shine.

After seven starts last season and Sunday’s rough outing against the Giants, Waldichuk appears to have a spot in the A’s starting rotation despite a 10.54 ERA this spring and five runs allowed in three plus innings work on Sunday.

Good thing manager Mark Kotsay is back for another round after 102 losses in 2022. He’s the unrepentant optimist.

“It wasn’t a successful year by any measure outside of the fact that there were some young players that got their opportunities,” Kotsay said. “Our expectation this year is we’re going to go compete and find ourselves in a position to hopefully add at the break and surprise people.

“There are players to be talked about that can establish themselves and have long careers as Oakland Athletics,” Kotsay said. “I think there’s some excitement.”

If Waldichuk is one of them, he’s going to have to establish pitch command. Hopefully, that’s sooner rather than later.

“I release the ball too far back and that’s when it starts spraying around,” Waldichuk said after surrendering a three-run homer to David Villar and walking four others.

The A’s got some similar love from Giants’ starter Alex Wood, who walked Esteury Ruiz and Seth Brown ahead of Tony Kemp’s game-tying double in the second inning. But the A’s offense went quiet after that; the Giants scored six, unanswered runs to lead 9-3 before the A’s got two solo shots in the ninth to gain respectability on the scoreboard.

The A’s scored just 568 runs in 2022, the second-fewest in the American League. In the off-season their roster needed a jolt. Instead they dealt offensive leader Sean Murphy and his 57 extra-base hits to Atlanta.

That means even more new faces in the A’s everyday lineup in 2023. Shea Langeliers is the headliner, and he should do well. Pablo Reyes and Carlos Perez, who’s hit 11 homers in limited time across four big-league seasons, might struggle. Reyes and Perez homered in the ninth inning Sunday, but they combined to hit just one other home run this spring.

Kemp, Seth Brown and shortstop Nick Allen return but that trio might not be enough to anchor a credible offense. Again, Kotsay preaches optimism.

“We’d love the opportunity to fill this place up,” Kotsay said. “There’s no better place to play in front of a full stadium than the Oakland Coliseum. I know that. I’ve experienced that.”

Giants get after A’s Waldichuk in early going for 9-5 win in Bay Series

Oakland A’s left fielder Seth Brown (15) sets up in the batters’ box against San Francisco Giants catcher Joey Bart (21) at the Oakland Coliseum in pre season action on Sun Mar 26, 2023 (@Athletics photo)

San Francisco. 0 3 0 2 2 0 1 1 0. – 9. 8 2

Oakland 0 3 0 00 0 0 0 2 – 5 7 1

Time: 3:0-1

Attendance: 11,325

Oakland March 26

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–It hasn’t been a pleasant spring training for the Athletics this year. Returning to the bay area, their win and loss record of 10-16, with three ties, was the worst in the Cactus League and third worst among all major leagues teams for the spring. Of course, these figures aren’t of overwhelming significance.

It’s often said that escaping major injuries is the most important task a team can accomplish in the Cactus or Grapefruit League. Oakland–if that still is the proper adjective to modify “Athletics”–didn’t fare particularly well in that endeavour either.

A torn fingernail has kept Paul Blackburn from throwing a pitch in anger since March 10. He’s expected to return to action some time in April, but the right handed starter already has missed over two weeks of full preparation.

Tightness in his left hamstring has kept Drew Rucinsk, another righty expected to figure in the A’s starting rotation, out of action since the 14th. Like Blackburn, he’s expected to be available next month, but he’ll be on the on the injured list until then.

Manny Piña underwent surgery on his left wrist last May, and the wrist has been inflamed for the last two weeks. No one knows when or what to expect from the back up catcher. He’s likely to be on the opening day IL.

Number nine prospect Freddy Tarnok hasn’t pitched since March 8 and is undergoing diagnostic testing to see what’s been causing the tingling sensation in the thumb of his right, pitching, hand. The date of his return, and where he’ll be assigned are unknown.

Southpaw hurler Kirby Snead has been shut down until further notice. He won’t start throwing again until he’s free from the discomfort caused by the shoulder strain he suffered a month ago.

It wasn’t a festive Sunday afternoon for the A’s and their fans when they fell, 9-5 to the enigmatic Giants, who had come to play with a Cactus League record of 13-14 in the first of a two game, home and home exhibition series just before the season starts on Thursday, the 30th. Our two local teams had split the games they played earlier this month in Arizona.

Portsider Ken Waldichuk stood at 0-3, 9.58 (!) for the spring when he toed the rubber for the home team. Fellow lefty Alex Wood was 1-1, 3.72 when he went to the mound for the visitors in the bottom of the first. The Athletics’ started lasted 3-1/3 innings, in which he surrendered five runs, all earned, on four hits, an equal number of free passes, and a wild pitch. He threw 80 pitches,, 42 of which were considered strikes. Wood’s outing was more successful and more complicated.

The Giants got to Waldichuk early. He walked two men in the first and allowed a single and a walk and unleashed his wild pitch in the second before David Villar, in his second at bat, jumped on a 91 mph four seamer and sent it flying 403’ onto the stairs separating the main grandstand from structure housing Mt. Davis, putting the visitors up, 3-0.

Oakland came roaring back in their half of the frame thanks to some sloppy San Francisco fielding and some speedy base running by Seth Brown and Nick Allen, and Estreury Ruîz and some opportune hitting by Tony Kemp. With one down, Brown drew a full count walk. Allen hit a grounder to the mound that Wood threw into center field, putting runners on the corners.

Kemp followed with a fly to deep center that eluded Brett Wisely’s outstretched glove on the warning track as the runners raced home to erase the Giants’ advantage Esteury Ruíz walked, and Kemp doubled to the center field warning track, advancing and to third when short stop Casey Schmidt mishandled the relay. Manager Gabe Kapler pulled Wood in favor of Ryan Walker, who got Ramón Laureano to ground out, ending the inning.

This being spring training, Wood returned to pitch the bottom of the third and strike out the side. When he finally exited for good, his line stood at 5-1/3 innings pitched; three runs, two earned; three hits and three walks; ten strike outs

The tie was short lived, as Bryce Johnson led off the top of the fourth with a walk and went to third on Brett Auberbach’s one out two bagger to left. Both scored on Wisely’s single tonight center. That’s when Chad Smith relieved Waldichuk. Smith stifled the Giants for the rest of the inning, giving way to Adam Oller at the start of the fifth

The Giants picked cup two more tallies in the fifth, thanks to Brett Auberbach’s two out single and the three walks Oller allowed in the frame.

Sam Moll joined the party with one out and no one on in the sixth, to hold the score at 7-3, Giants, before turning pitching duties over to Juerys Familia in the top of the seventh, when the spring training avalanche of late inning substitutes played havoc with my score sheet. He allowed an unearned run, courtesy of a lead off throwing error by Jace Peterson, who had just entered the game at third, that was driven in by Brett Auberbach’s single.

Although by the top of the eighth, the game had lost interest for anyone who didn’t enjoy farce, it’s worth noting that Joc Peterson, who’d taken over at first base in the fifth frame, slamed a humongous solo home run, 414 feet deep into the center field seats. It came off Dany Jiménez.

At long last, with two out in the bottom of the ninth, Pablo Reyes took John Brebbia 390 feet deep to left center, and Carlos Perez followed a 374 foot blast to left, and the score was 9-5. When Ryan Nona singled to right, it almost seemed as if the A’s had a chance. They didn’t; Kyle McCann took a third strike, and that was that.

Wood got the win; Waldiichuk, the loss.

Monday’s encounter will take place across the bridge in Oracle Park. The Giants will be honoring Sergio Romo, who pitched for both of the teams in his 15 year big league career and will retire after the afternoon’s tribute to him. His one day contract grants him membership in an exclusive club whose members range from the sublime Satchel Paige to the trivial Eddie Gaedel, whose lifetime on base percentage never will be surpassed.

MLB podcast with Charlie O and Jerry Feitelberg: Yanks Severino out with lat strain could miss opening week; Phils Hoskins carted off field tore ACL; plus more news

New York Yankees pitcher Luis Severino delivers to the Detroit Tigers during the first inning of a spring training baseball game Tuesday, March 21, 2023, in Tampa, Fla. Severino would later suffer a lat strain and could miss turn during the opening week of the season. (AP News photo)

On the MLB podcast with Charlie O:

#1 Charlie, how much will the absence of New York Yankees starter Luis Severino impact the Yankees. Severino will miss a spring start due to lat strain. Manager Aaron Boone says it’s likely Severino could miss the start of the regular season.

#2 Philadelphia Phillies first baseman Rhys Hoskins was carted off the field on Sunday after suffering from a torn ACL and will require surgery. Hoskins went to field a Detroit Tigers Austin Meadows ground ball that skidded off Hoskins glove and went to chase down the ball as he pivoted to start the pursuit Hoskins fell to the ground grabbing his left knee.

#3 MLB withdrew an trademark application intent on having the right to use the city name of three of it’s MLB teams. One of them being the Boston Red Sox. MLB said there was a misunderstanding they didn’t want to have exclusive rights to a city name they just wanted protect the city name in association with apparel not copyrighted use of the city name.

#4 On the Howard Stern Radio Show former New York Yankees star Reggie Jackson says he cheated a lot during his playing days off the field saying he was a serial cheater. He wasn’t just Mr. October in the month of October but Reggie said he did it all the time. In the segment Stern asked Jackson if it was hard for him to open his heart to a woman with Jackson replying ““It wasn’t hard for me to open my heart, but it was hard for me to be loyal,” Jackson said. “As a man, I cheated a lot.”

#5 Charlie wanted to talk to you about a guy you covered for many years former Oakland Athletic Jed Lowrie who played three different times for the A’s and in baseball for 14 years, nine with the A’s. Lowrie said of all the teams he played for the A’s were the most special. Lowrie said the A’s let him be himself. Lowrie broke in the big leagues 2008, hit a career .257, scored 590 runs, 121 home runs, and knocked in 594 RBIs.

Join Charlie O for the MLB podcasts each Sunday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast with Daniel Dullum: Will A’s leaving a large TV market for Vegas prove to be huge mistake?

Las Vegas Ballpark home of the Las Vegas Aviators the A’s minor league club beverages at the ready in the bleachers. If the A’s and the city of Las Vegas make it official to move the A’s could the A’s start playing their games at the minor league ballpark while the new stadium goes under construction? (photo from thelvballpark.com)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Daniel:

#1 Daniel, just wanted to start the podcast discussing the elephant in the room it’s been weeks since we heard anything from the city of Oakland in their efforts to try and keep the Oakland A’s in Oakland those hopes are fading fast as A’s management in the last few months have been seeking a site for a new Las Vegas ballpark.

#2 Daniel, the average income in Vegas is $35,000 to $51,000 and a much smaller population than the Bay Area that said are the A’s looking at the successes of other sports teams who are in Vegas and they can sell games near capacity or is this just one big roll of the dice for the A’s going to a smaller 40th size TV market and hope to sell out most of their 81 home dates?

#3 The city of Oakland did not get federal financing of $182.9 million back in January from the US Department of Transportation. The City of Oakland’s Transportation manager Fred Kelly said that the city will seek other streams of income to finance the Howard Terminal Ballpark so far nothing.

#4 Daniel, back out on the field the talk of the town is Japanese pitcher Shintaro Fujinami who will bet the start against the Shohei Othani and the Los Angeles Angels on Thu Mar 30th at the Oakland Coliseum. Fujinami was 4-4 with an ERA 4.26 in spring training and he’s expected to be a key starter for the A’s this season.

#5 The A’s will open up their season against the Angels on Thu Mar 30 and have a rare Friday off on the 31st before getting back to the Coliseum on Fri Arp 1st against the Angels. One of the top concerns at the start of this season is how will the hitters and pitchers adjust to the time clock.

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

A’s bats come alive in 7-2 Cactus League win over Giants

The Oakland A’s get the pitching and the hitting past the San Francisco Giants at Hohokam Park in Mesa AZ on Fri Mar 17, 2023 (@Athletics photo)

By Daniel Dullum
Friday, March 17, 2023

MESA, Ariz. – Oakland hammered San Francisco pitching for 14 hits on Friday, as the Athletics defeated the Giants 7-2 in Cactus League play before an enthusiastic St. Patrick’s Day crowd at Hohokam Stadium.

Thus far in spring training, both Bay Area teams are having similar success. The A’s improved to 8-11-2 while the Giants are 7-12-1.

A’s starter James Kaprielian (1-0) worked four innings, giving up an eanred run on five hits and no walks while striking out four. He was followed by Trevor May, Domingo Acevedo and Chad Smith, who combined for four strikeouts over three scoreless innings. Drew Steckenrider surrendered a run in the eighth.

“Last year, we did a lot of matching up and tried to give the guys in the bullpen their best chance for success,” A’s manager Mark Kotsay said about the Athletics’ bullpen plans. “We haven’t determined roles, per se, but our philosophy is that the bullpen is all about getting outs.”

Ross Stripling went five innings in his second start of the spring for San Francisco, giving up four earned runs on 10 hits with three strikeouts and no walks. Stripling has a Cactus League ERA of 6.75. Scott Alexander and Tyler Rogers each threw a scoreless inning.

Oakland opened the scoring in the bottom of the first when Seth Brown singled to right-center, driving in Aledmys Diaz. Brown, who was thrown out trying to stretch the hit into a double, is batting .304 this spring after getting off to a slow start.

The Athletics made it 3-0 in the bottom of the second on a two-RBI single to left-center by Cristian Pache, driving in Conner Capel and Jace Peterson. Pache was hitting .423 in his last 15 games going into Friday. He’s tied for the CL lead in triples with two.

Joc Pederson’s single to center drove in Bryce Johnson to put the Giants on the board. Pederson is going through the process of learning first base after spending his career as an outfielder and designated hitter. He played centerfield for Team Israel in the World Baseball Classic.

Tony Kemp’s run-scoring single to right-center in the bottom of the fourth plated Ramon Laureano, giving the A’s a 4-1 lead. Kemp had been struggling with a .100 average, but also has a .367 on-base percentage, thanks to eight walks and a hit-by-pitch.

The Giants cut the Oakland lead to 4-2 in the eighth on Brett Auerbach’s RBI single to center, scoring Johnson, who reached on a fielder’s choice, stole second and advanced to third on a throwing error by Oakland catcher Kyle McCann. Auerbach, originally a Colorado Rockies 40th round draft choice, is hitting .250 with four runs batted in.

Oakland tacked on three more runs in the bottom of the eighth – two on RBI singles by Brent Rooker and Ryan Noda off Giants reliever Mauricio Llovera, and a groundout by Denzel Clarke after Melvin Adon replaced Llovera.

CACTUS LEAGUE NOTES: The Athletics’ average time of game this spring has been 2:47, compared to 3:07 a year ago. Across MLB, the average time of game has been 2:36, compared to 3:03 last spring. … Oakland has stolen 22 bases, second in the Cactus League behind Cincinnati (28). … This was the second of four spring training meetings between the Giants and A’s – the last two are March 26 in Oakland and March 27 in San Francisco. … Attendance for the St. Patrick’s Day contest was 10,190.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: The Clock is Ticking toward New Baseball Season

Oakland A’s infielder Jace Peterson (6) tosses bubble gum out of the A’s dugout in Hohokam Stadium in Mesa AZ during an A’s photo shoot at spring training (Oakland A’s Facebook photos)

The Clock is Ticking toward New Baseball Season

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

OAKLAND–2023 is The Year of the Clock, and the clock is ticking towards a new baseball season as the Oakland A’s will punch the clock and go to work on Thursday March 30 at 7:07 at the Oakland Coliseum against the Los Angeles Angels. It will be the 55th season for the A’s at their historic Oakland Coliseum.

The same place where the A’s hoisted four World Championship flags. This place had survived many great and not-so-great moments, crazy games and one of the four World Series championships played in the middle of an earthquake in 1989, but for some of us who were there, it didn’t get any crazier than that.

This 2023 Oakland A’s team has players that you have seen like Tony Kemp, Nick Allen, Seth Brown, Christian Pache, and Ramón Laureano (among others), and many that you have seen but with another team, like Jesús Aguilar, Aledmys Díaz, Esteury Ruíz, or never seen at all, like the most interesting addition to this ball club, Japanese pitcher Shintaro Fujinami, who although he pitched for 10 years in Japan, will be a rookie in the majors.

An assortment of players will keep manager Mark Kotsay and his staff busy all summer long, looking for that ‘winning combination’ and will try to play as a unit and bring some positive results and fun moments to the A’s fans. One young A’s player that will become a star this year and take charge is catcher Shea Langeliers.

A’s No.1 prospect (# 39 MLB) Tyler Soderstrom, catcher, and first baseman survived the last cut and is still in Spring Training with two weeks until Opening Day. Will he make the roster? There is always a surprise or two in Spring Training.

To predict how the A’s will do this year is not that difficult, because nobody is expecting them to contend. Even the staunchest A’s fan will tell you that to play .500 all year will be the biggest goal for a team with these many moving pieces, but even that is unrealistic.

Any A’s fan should be happy to see the 2023 A’s version ending with 81 wins, which can also be said of many other teams that are not considered contenders. I know this 2023 year will be key for one A’s player; Ramón Laureano, trying to capture that 2019 season magic, his best for the A’s when he hit .288 with 24 home runs and 67 runs batted in.

His defense has always been there and owns one of the best arms from the outfield in the game. During the off-season rumors had Ramón leaving for the Yankees, the Phillies, and even the Marlins.

Ramón needs to stay healthy for the A’s. The team lost 102 games last season, positive minds believe 2023 should be a better year. Among my own survey, I ended with an average of a season for the A’s, this 2023 with a 76-86 record.

In 2022 (among all 30 teams) A’s last in combined average .216, #28 in home runs with 137, and #29 in RBI with 537. Their pitching had a 4.52 era which ranks #23 in all MLB. The Coliseum holds the distinction of containing the largest foul territory of any ballpark in the Major Leagues and this always helps their pitchers.

2023 is another rebuilding year for the A’s but could be also a year where this franchise announces a change of “geographic” direction to another State or maybe a change of address from the Oakland Ring Central to just six miles north on highway 1-80 by the Port of Oakland, a place called Howard Terminal.

I have friends on both sides, those that believe the A’s can’t leave Oakland but that they need a miracle for that to happen, and others who are gamblers and you know what they are thinking.

The disparity in baseball. Are you kidding? In 2022 there were four 100-win teams and four 100-lost teams, both tying the all-time record.

Famous winner and great baseball philosopher catcher Yogi Berra holds the MLB record for the most World Series rings, with ten, and was quoted as saying when it came to baseball knowledge; “In baseball, you don’t know nothing”.

Happy Weekend everybody!

Join Amaury Pi Gonzalez for all the play by play of Oakland A’s baseball on the A’s Spanish radio network 1010 KIQI San Francisco and 990 KATD Pittsburg and News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com