Headline Sports podcast with Charlie O: Chiefs Kelce fined for unsportsmanshiplike conduct; If Chiefs win no parade in downtown KC; plus more news

(left) Buffalo Bills defensive tackle Jordan Phillips (97) headbutts Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce (87) after Kelce got in the face of the Bills Damar Hamlin (right) (photo stills from You Tube)

Headline Sports podcast with Charlie O:

#1 Kansas City Chiefs Travis Kelce was fined $11,255 during the AFC Championship game against the Buffalo Bills for unsportsmanshiplike conduct in their win against the Buffalo Bills. Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes who scored on a one yard touchdown in the second quarter. Kelce got in Bills safety Damar Hamlin’s grill after Hamlin tackled Mahomes in the end zone. Kelce was responding to Hamlin’s end zone tackle and Bills defensive tackle Jordan Phillips ended up head butting Kelce. Phillips was fined 6,722 for the headbutt.

#2 Kansas City has announced that if the Chiefs win the Super Bowl there will be no parade celebration. If the Chiefs win they will gather their players, family members, friends, Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe and Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas. The parade will be televised along the parade route. The parade was called off due to a shooting at Union Station near a garage that injured 22 and killed Lisa Lopez Galvan.

#3 Baltimore Ravens kicker Justin Tucker is facing more allegations of sexually inappropriate behavior with three massage therapists who have accused him of misconduct. There a total of nine massage therapists that have accused Tucker of inappropriate behavior. The timeline of these accusations were from 2012-2016.

#4 Charlie, talk about Tom Brady’s role in the Las Vegas Raiders hiring of head coach Pete Carroll and general manager John Spytek. Raiders owner Mark Davis depended on Brady’s knowledge and experience in making these choices.

#5 Luka Doncic traded to the Los Angeles Lakers from the Dallas Mavericks was this because of Doncic’s challenges with weight and were there internal problems in Dallas?

#5 On Saturday the Sacramento Athletics held a celebration of life for the late Rickey Henderson who died five days before his 66th birthday on Dec 20, 2024. The a star studded dais included former MLB stars, Shooty Babbitt, Dave Stewart, Dave Winfield, Bip Roberts, Frank Big Hurt Thomas, Dennis Eckersley, Ken Griffey Jr, Carney Lansford, Jose Canseco, Tony LaRussa, NBA star Gary Payton, (MC) Renel, best friend of Rickey Fred Atkins, former A’s exec Sandy Alderson, and MC Hammer.

Charlie O does Headline Sports podcasts each Sunday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Life Celebration of Rickey Henderson brings out baseball greats and stars to pay tribute

Someone who knows about wearing the number 24 former Seattle Mariner Ken Griffey Jr pays tribute to former Oakland A’s great the late Rickey Henderson at the Oakland Arena on Sat Feb 1, 2025 (AP News photo)

Saturday, February 1, 2025

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–There were many Rickey Henderson’s. Setting aside his various personae before he reached the major leagues, there was as a different Rickey each time he ping ponged between the Oakland Athletics, for whom he played in 1979-84, 1989-93, 1994-95), and 1998), and the New York Yankees (1985-89), Toronto Blue Jays (1993 until his mid-season return to the A’s in ’94), San Diego Padres (1996-97 and 2001), Anaheim Angels (1997), New York Mets (1999-2000), Seattle Mariners ((2000), Boston Red Sox (2002), and Los Angeles Dodgers (2023).

This afternoon, a crowd that filled at least 95% of the Oakland Arena, across Championship Plaza from what had been Rickey Henderson Field. met to celebrate the life and honor of the multifarious Rickey Henderson That geographic irony didn’t go unmentioned by the long list of speakers who eulogized the different Rickeys.

The raw 20 year old 1979, morphed into the superstar of 1980-84 who first broke the major league record for stolen bases in 1982 and kept on breaking it with each bag he pilfered until he retired with 1,406, a record that still stands.

A lead off hitter who still managed to blast 297 lifetime home runs and drive in 1,115 runs., The Man of Steal, patented the Rickey Run, and left the game having come home safely 2,295 times. Rickey also was the retired major leaguer who wouldn’t quit, the one time hot dog who doggedly kept playing into his mid forties in the independent Atlantic and Golden Leagues and became a respected mentor of the generations of A’s who followed him.

There also was Rickey Henderson who cared more about having his worth recognized more than he cared about the riches that recognition brought with it.. Rather than cash his million dollar bonus check for the 1983 season, he framed it and kept it hanging on the wall until the A’s business office phoned him to ask if he’d ever received the document

There was the Rickey who, upon setting a new record in 1982 for career stolen bases infamously said, Lou Brock was a great base stealer but today I am the greatest.” His critics (I was one until I learned more) conveniently overlooked Rickey qualifying introductory phrase. Then there was the Rickey who closed his Hall of Fame speech by declaring “I am now in the class of the greatest players of all time. And at this moment, I am very, very humble.”

The assembled multitude was greeted by Shooty Babbit, an old teammate who served as the principal master of ceremonies. The commentator and scout lost no time in declaring Henderson the “greatest of all time” before introducing Bip Roberts, who remembered The Man of Steal as his “high school hero.” He recounted when, as an adolescent, he asked his hero for an autograph and the answer he got, “There’s a time and a place for everything.” As time went by, Bip Roberts came to think of Rickey as his ‘big brother who never spoke about how great he was.”

Next came Bishop Gregory Bernard Payton of the Greater St. John’s Missionary Baptist Church, who ended his prayer by thanking God “for lending us Rickey this short time.” Bishop Payton’s son, NBA hall of famer and a friend of Rickey since childhood, emphasized at the close of his eulogy that Henderson had made his mark “here, in Oakland, California.”

Dave Winfield, a teammate on the Yankees, remembered telling Rickey, then still a prospect ,that he’d been tearing them up in the minors, to which Rickey replied, “I’m gonna tear ’em up here, too.” Winfield added, “Every day he came to work with joy.” It’s also been told, although Winfield didn’t mention it, that when Henderson was living in New York, he praised the view from his condo, which had a great view of “The Entire State Building.”

Sandy Alderson declared, “I don’t like to be known as the guy who traded Rickey Henderson [pause] twice. I’d like to be called the guy who brought him back.” The ex GM of the A’s got in a sly dig at the current ownership by adding as he closed, “in 1990, he was the highest paid player in baseball. Imagine that [another, more dramatic, pause] in Oakland.”

Ken Griffey, Jr. confided in his 20 some odd close friends of the afternoon, “Rickey was my brother, my older brother. Sometimes I think he was my , . . father,” concluding that he “changed baseball forever.”

Dave Stewart, recently returned to the Athletics’ fold as a special assistant for player development, commented, “Rickey had a way of making life more fun” and exhorted us to “Love him. live your life fully, because that’s what Rickey did.”

It was difficult to follow the long, emphatic memories of Rickey’s oldest friend, Fred Atkins, who shouted, sometimes into the microphone, sometimes moving out of its range. I was able to catch his declaration, “Rickey was a star on Broadway, in Oakland.”

The crowd booed when Renel Brooks-Moon, the one-time Giants public address announcer, who shared M.C.duties, reading the Henderson family’s thank you letter to the Athletics for organizing and hosting the afternoon’s commemoration, read “John Fisher. Brooks-Moon immediately shot back, “Not today! Not today! This is Rickey’s!” A class act that quieted the crowd and was, in itself, a tribute to Rickey Henderson and a rebuke to John Fisher.”

The festivities ended with the gospel singing of Charlie Finley’s protegge M.C. Hammer and his wife, Stephanie.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Tribute to Rickey Henderson and his many achievements

Former Oakland A’s player Rickey Henderson checks on the game between the Texas Rangers and Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Wed Sep 25, 2024 (AP file photo)

On That’s Amaury podcast:

#1 The passing of Rickey Henderson at age 65 comes as a shock. Rickey looked like a picture of health the last time he made two public appearances. The first one was at the A’s last home game ever in Oakland on Sep 26, 2024 and at the Reggie Jackson Classic one month later on Oct 27, 2024 all at the Coliseum.

#2 Rickey’s family made the sad announcement confirming Rickey’s former teammate Dave Winfield’s X tweet that announced Rickey’s passing on Friday night.

#3 Amaury, Rickey’s playing days he had that swagger once he came on the scene. Rickey even waved his glove at the fans in leftfield during his playing days in games.

#4 Rickey’s most famous moment came when he stole his 939th stolen base that broke Lou Brock’s stolen base record in 1991. Rickey holds the record for stolen bases in season at 130 and holds the record for the most bases stolen of all time at 1406.

#5 Amaury, I have to ask you in closing you had the opportunity to interview Rickey numerous times during his tenure with the A’s in Oakland. How special was that and what was that relationship like?

Amaury Pi Gonzalez does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Rickey Henderson editorial: Thank you Rickey

photo by Mauricio Segura

Thank you, Rickey

by Mauricio Segura

It’s been 24 hours since I got the news of Rickey’s passing. In that time, I’ve tried to unpack my thoughts and feelings, but they’re still a mess of nondescript silence and swirling emotion. Rickey Henderson was, no, he IS my baseball hero. He’s the reason I discovered and fell in love with the beautiful game at the age of 10. He’s the reason I pursued a career in baseball. He’s the reason I am now a sports journalist. Rickey…IS…baseball to me. Losing the A’s from Oakland this year already tore my heart to pieces, but losing Rickey—my baseball hero—is a feeling I can’t even begin to describe. At least I know I’m not the only one feeling it.

SEVEN! Seven is the number of one-on-one conversations we shared (according to my journal). Sure, I saw him more than that, so many more times, but those other encounters were just a handshake, a fist bump, or a simple hello.

A former pitcher and all-around nice guy I respect immensely, Gio Gonzalez, introduced me to Rickey for the first time in 2011. I don’t remember that initial conversation very well because, even though I was keeping my cool on the outside, my 12-year-old self was totally freaking out on the inside. It took all my energy not to let it show. I mean, I went to hundreds of games between 1984 and 2003 just to see this legend play. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I’d actually meet him, let alone have multiple one-on-one conversations. Yet, there I was, standing no more than five feet from him and he was talking to me. For the next 13 years after that, we’d have six more one on one interactions. Only one lasted for more than 10 minutes, but they were each memorable.

I doubt he ever remembered my name, even though I reminded him each time. But that didn’t matter, he always treated me like someone he’d known for years. He’d joke, talk smack, and show genuine interest in what I had to say. I think he treated everyone that way; it’s just who he was. We all knew we were in the presence of baseball greatness, but in ten seconds, he brought you in, and for that moment, you were equals—buddies.

The most memorable and longest conversation we ever had was in the player parking lot after a game in 2019. We both happened to walk out of the tunnel at the same time, and he noticed I was limping. He asked if I was okay; I told him I’d rolled my ankle. Somehow, that led to us chatting by his car for thirty minutes. I picked his brain about what it was like to be Rickey: his days in the minors, the highs and lows of fame, his strategies for stealing and hitting, Billy Martin vs. Tony La Russa, and even what might have happened if he’d been allowed to play both NFL and MLB, and much more. Everything I’d ever wondered about, I asked with the rapid fire of a machine gun, and he answered everything! And it wasn’t some formal interview—just a really cool conversation. He even asked about my life at one point, which blew my mind. I’m forever grateful he gave me that moment. I’m not a betting man, but I’m pretty sure he enjoyed it as well.

I was 12 years old when my dad and uncle took me to my first baseball game: June 24, 1984, A’s vs. Rangers. We sat in field-level section 130, left field. I watched Rickey like a hawk – how he got ready between pitches, how he snagged flies like a magician. It was the first time I saw him make one of his signature snatch catches, pure perfection. And his batting stance? To me, it always looked like an F-117 Stealth Bomber at takeoff: sleek, low, powerful, and fast. Unfortunately, he didn’t get on base that day and didn’t steal any bags, but he came up in the 9th, tied 2-2 with a man on second, and took a 1-2 pitch high and deep over the left-field fence for a walk-off home run. Right then, I wanted to be a ballplayer and roam center field next to him. It’s funny how life works. I never made it to the show as a player, but I did make it there as a journalist, and I stood right next to him on that same field many times.

On May 1, 1991, I skipped school to sit in the upper deck behind first base and watch him steal #939. I’ll never forget that day. It was well worth the Saturday detention!

Baseball changed when Rickey retired. The magic I felt since I was 12 years old just wasn’t the same. I still loved the game, and I always will, but it never again felt quite like it did when he was on the field. I didn’t attend a single MLB game from 2004 to 2010. I finally went back as a sports writer in 2011. I met Rickey, and although he was no longer a player, he was there, and that was cool. Now he’s gone…and, well…

I last spoke to him prior to the A’s vs Yankees game on September 20th. He was on the field with his daughter who threw out the first pitch. I walked by him, he saw me and smiled, we shook hands. “How ya feeling?” I asked. “Amazing!” he replied. Then prior to the A’s last game at the Coliseum ( a somber day in itself) on the 26th, I was walking towards the dugout, he was walking towards me to the clubhouse. We exchanged a look, no words, a smile, a fist bump, and we kept walking.

What can I say. I’m beyond sad that I will never see him again. But I find comfort in the fact that I met my baseball hero and had multiple memorable interactions. What more could I really ask for?

Rest easy, Rickey. Thank you.

Photo, taken Mauricio Segura- 2015

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: The Ultimate Game Changer

Oakland A’s Rickey Henderson gestures toward the stands after hitting a first inning home run off San Francisco Giants’ starting pitcher Don Robinson during the fourth game of the World Series at Candlestick Park in San Francisco, Oct. 28, 1989. (AP Photo/Leonard Ignelzi)

The Ultimate Game Changer

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

There are so many stats in today’s game that when I read them before broadcasting a game, they might make you dizzy. There are stats for everything baseball; some are silly, like when a guy hits a home run inside a dome stadium compared to when he hits a home run in an open-air stadium. Yes, they keep track of that, of course. But who cares? For me, the only difference in a Homerun is an ‘inside the park”; everything else is bla bla bla, but it gives the PR departments something to write about, and that is fine. By-the-way, TV loves that.

Rickey Henderson is number one in the game’s history in stolen bases with 1,406; he is also number one in scoring runs with a total of 2,295; Ty Cobb ranked second. If you take a minute to digest those numbers, you realize those are two of the most important stats in baseball. Rickey Henderson was a threat from the undeck circle. Everybody knew what he was going to do, and he did it. Pitchers were always concerned when Rickey Henderson reached first base. In Major League Baseball today (MLB), pitchers are limited to two pick-off attempts or step-offs per plate appearance. Before this new rule, a pitcher could throw 10 or more times to first base to keep a runner close to the base, and when Rickey Henderson got on first base via hit or walk, pitchers were on notice. Pitchers “could not stop Rickey” once he reached base, and they knew it.

Rickey Henderson was not just a singles hitter or stolen bases specialist. In his 25 years (consecutive years) playing in the MLB, he also hit 297 home runs. Rickey would let a pitch come right through the heart of the plate for a strike; he would not complain. He was the most selective hitter, working pitchers to thousands of 3 and 2 counts until he succeeded. Once he got on base, the “cat-and-mouse “game began. Everybody knew he was going; he did and stole the base. He mixed all that talent with excellent style, the joy of playing the game, and a million-dollar smile.

The Rickey Run. This was when the A’s were on a collective offensive slump. Rickey would walk, steal second, and then score with a base hit, or he would get on, then steal second, and then steal third, and then a sacrifice fly, and A’s had a Rickey Run! Dave Stewart would go 7 or 8 innings, and the bullpen with closer Dennis Eckersley and the A’s would win by one run. Why one run? Credit Rickey Henderson, the Man of Steal.

I believe that Willie Mays was the greatest player of all time, but Rickey Henderson is on that Mount Rushmore of players, a man who could do it all, with class, with that fabulous physique and the joy that you could see on that big smile.

I feel proud and privileged to have seen and covered Rickey Henderson when he first came to the A’s as a rookie in 1979 to play left field. I remember that excellent outfield of Rickey Henderson in left, Dwayne Murphy in center, and Tony Armas in right field. I will never forget Rickey Henderson as one of the greatest baseball players I have ever seen. All of Rickey’s accomplishments you can find were contained in the sports section. The only time he made the front page of a paper was his passing on Friday. Never a scandal, lived through the steroids era, never betting issues, nothing negative (even playing for the Yankees’ #1 market and most controversial media in the world). Rickey Henderson was a family man who loved what he did in his profession.

What is a game changer? “Game changer” is frequently used because it’s a concise and impactful phrase that effectively conveys the idea of something significant altering the status quo or introducing a major new development. That was Rickey Henderson.

For most baseball fans, people who covered and knew Rickey Henderson, the media, and the players, it was like everybody expected him to live forever, and we were all right because he will live forever in our minds. Oakland has been mostly in the negative column during the past few years, the team’s relocation to Las Vegas with a stop in Sacramento, the strife in City Hall, and many social issues. God gave us Rickey, and he left us way too early. One of the best things the team ever did was name the Coliseum playing field Rickey Henderson Field. My wife suggested that ‘the powers to be’ now name Hegenberger Road, Ricky Henderson Boulevard. This would make Oakland proud; this city needs a makeover, and they need to change their image.

Quote: “If you walked him, it’s like giving up a triple” -Pitcher Charlie Hough.

Headline Sports podcast with Charlie O: Rickey’s passing comes as a shock to sports world

Rickey Henderson of the Oakland A’s waves to the crowd at the Oakland Coliseum after he stole third base to break Ty Cobb’s stolen base record in the seventh inning at the Oakland Coliseum May 30, 1990 (AP file photo)

Headline Sports podcast with Charlie O:

#1 The passing of Rickey Henderson at age 65 comes as a shock. Rickey looked like a picture of health the last time he made two public appearances. The first one was at the A’s last home game ever in Oakland on Sep 26, 2024 and at the Reggie Jackson Classic one month later on Oct 27, 2024 all at the Coliseum.

#2 Rickey’s family made the sad announcement confirming Rickey’s former teammate Dave Winfield’s X tweet that announced Rickey’s passing on Friday night.

#3 Charlie, Rickey’s playing days he had that swagger once he came on the scene. Rickey even waved his glove at the fans in leftfield during his playing days.

#4 Rickey’s most famous moment came when he stole his 939th stolen base that broke Lou Brock’s stolen base record in 1991. Rickey holds the record for stolen bases in season at 130 and holds the record for the most bases stolen of all time at 1406.

#5 Charlie, I have to ask you in closing you and coachie had the opportunity to interview Rickey numerous times during his tenure with the A’s in Oakland. How special was that and what was that relationship like?

Charlie O does Headline Sports Sundays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Rickey Henderson, Oakland A’s and MLB Hall of Fame, dead at 65

Rickey Henderson (left) poses with the author Amaury Pi Gonzalez (right) at the Oakland Coliseum (photo from Amaury Pi Gonzalez)

Rickey Henderson, Oakland A’s and MLB Hall of Fame, dead at 65

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Rickey Henderson began his Hall of Fame career with the Oakland Athletics in 1979 and died today of pneumonia, just six days short of his 66th birthday, December 25. I have covered Rickey Henderson since he arrived in Oakland in 1979 as a rookie.

He played for 25 years and holds the Major League Baseball record for career stolen bases with 1,406. One of the best leadoff hitters in baseball, Rickey always had a smile on his face, played with a lot of ‘gusto’, and enjoyed every minute.

The last time I spoke with Rickey, we discussed today’s game, where hitters’ average is in the low .200s, and nobody is close to challenging his record of stolen bases. He always called me “Chief. A broad smile and a physique were given to him by God.

In my opinion, he was the best player ever to wear an Oakland A’s uniform, which he wore four times throughout his career. He played for 25 years in the major leagues for nine (9) different teams from1979 to 2003; Athletics, Yankees, Blue Jays, Padres, Angels, Mets, Mariners, Red Sox and Dodgers.

Rickey Henderson was one-of-a-kind. Although he played for a quarter of a century with different teams in the American and National Leagues, he will always have a special place for Oakland A’s fans. Rest in Peace, Rickey.

Rickey Henderson Awards – From Baseball Reference:

1981 Gold Glove Award (American League Outfielder) 1981 The Silver Slugger Award (American League) 1982 Joe Cronin Award (Outstanding Achievement in an AL Season) 1985 MLB Player of the Month Award 1985 The Silver Slugger Award (American League) 1989 A.L.C.S. Most Valuable Player Award 1990 Most Valuable Player Award (BBWAA) 1990 The Silver Slugger Award (American League) 1999 The Sporting News Comeback Player of the Year Award 2002 Commissioner’s Historic Achievement Award 2009 National Baseball Hall of Fame

Amaury Pi Gonzalez called most of Rickey Henderson’s games through his career and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s relocation podcast with Daniel Dullum: Will players union, Scott Boras sign off to play on artificial turf in Sacramento?

Sutter Health Field in Sacramento the future interim home of the Athletics for the next three seasons 2025-27

On the Oakland A’s relocation podcast with Daniel Dullum:

#1 Daniel, this is the last week at the Oakland Coliseum for the A’s as they embark for Sacramento after the regular season. It’s been a reunion of sorts with lots of reporters, employees, front office, former players coming to bid the fans and each other a farewell.

#2 Rickey Henderson came out on Saturday to watch his daughter throw out the first ball as the A’s played the New York Yankees. It was a huge treat for fans watching on the field that was named after Rickey.

#3 Some reporters believe the move to Sacramento is a done deal because MLB has approved the move and Sacramento Rivercats are renovating the ball park.

#4 There are those who believe there is that very small chance that the A’s deal in Sacramento will fall apart because of the artificial turf the players do not want to play on. The Players union sill has not signed off on it yet.

#5 On the other side of the coin A’s owner John Fisher, A’s team president David Kaval and MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred look very much forward to getting things started and getting the A’s out of Oakland. They do realize that that last step of getting the union to sign off on Sacramento might not be as easy as they think.

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

Oakland A’s commentary: My Farewell to the Green and Gold

Former great Oakland A’s catcher the late Ray Fosse looking upwards smile on face with catcher’s glove is one of the people the author will remember and be thankful for in covering A’s baseball over the years (file photo Athletic Nation)

My Farewell to the Green & Gold

By Mauricio Segura

As a lifelong fan of the Oakland A’s, who used to dream (like many) of donning a green and gold jersey, #21, playing centerfield, and hitting home runs into the ivy behind the bleachers (before Mt. Davis ruined that), writing these words feels like carving out a piece of my soul.

The ever-approaching finality of the A’s leaving Oakland is not just the loss of a team—it’s the tearing apart of decades of memories, a community, and the beating heart of baseball in the East Bay. For those who’ve been there since the beginning, watching games in the windy chill of the Coliseum, there’s an indescribable ache that settles in knowing this chapter is closing.

It feels like losing a loved one, something irreplaceable, where nothing will ever refill the void. It is with tears streaming down my face that I write these words—my farewell and tribute to an old friend.

The A’s have always been a team of movement—born in Philadelphia in 1901, where they first made history as one of the original American League franchises. Winning five world championships under the legendary Connie Mack, the A’s became a powerhouse of early Major League Baseball.

After a rocky tenure in Kansas City (1955-1967), they landed in Oakland in 1968. We welcomed them with open arms, and what a ride it’s been. The 1970s became the Golden Age of the A’s, with owner Charlie Finley turning the team into champions—and not just any champions, but a team that captured the imaginations of baseball fans everywhere.

Finley was a showman. He brought in oddities that left people shaking their heads and laughing, like the introduction of “The Mechanical Rabbit” that delivered new baseballs to umpires, or his insistence that the team wear white cleats—a move that was mocked at first but ended up setting a fashion trend that teams followed for decades.

It wasn’t just gimmicks that made those A’s teams legendary, though. On the field, they were a force of nature. Between 1972 and 1974, they won three consecutive World Series titles, with Hall of Famers like Catfish Hunter and Rollie Fingers delivering one clutch performance after another.

Who could forget the cannon arm of Reggie Jackson, “Mr. October” himself, or the speed of Bert Campaneris flying around the bases? These players didn’t just play the game; they electrified it, turning it into something bigger than a sport—a cultural moment.

Side note, did you know that Debbi Fields of Mrs. Fields Cookie’s fame was one of the original Oakland A’s ball girls? She was! And Stanely Kirk Burrel, who you know better as MC Hammer was a ballboy.

By the 1980s, the A’s reinvented themselves again under the fiery and relentless Billy Martin. The term “Billy Ball” became synonymous with aggressive, no-holds-barred baseball. Billy Martin was a manager with a spark, and he brought that spark to Oakland in full force.

Players like Rickey Henderson, who would go on to become the all-time stolen base leader, were at the forefront of this era. Henderson wasn’t just fast; he was a magician on the base paths, stealing more bases in a single season (130) than any other team in the league, then years later finishing his career as the king of steals with 1,406—a Major League Baseball record that may never be broken. Alongside him, players like Dwayne Murphy, Tony Phillips, and pitcher Steve McCatty embodied the hustle, grit, and toughness that came to define this period.

Then came the LaRussa years and the rise of the Bash Brothers—Mark McGwire and Jose Canseco. The late ’80s were a time of thunderous home runs, and the team was crowned champions again in 1989, winning the World Series in the aftermath of the Loma Prieta earthquake.

That series against our Bay Area rivals, the San Francisco Giants, became known as the “Earthquake Series,” a poignant and surreal moment in sports history that transcended baseball. The image of Dave Stewart staring down batters with a look of a tiger eyeing its prey or Dennis Eckersley pumping his fist after each pivotal strikeout is etched in our memories. And who can forget the heartwarming, gap-toothed smile of Dave “Hendu” Henderson? Every time he smiled, you knew something good was afoot.

In the 2000s, the A’s were ahead of their time with the Moneyball era. Billy Beane, the architect behind it all, revolutionized baseball with a strategy that turned conventional wisdom on its head. While teams like the Yankees spent hundreds of millions, the A’s thrived by analyzing data and exploiting inefficiencies. Players like Tim Hudson, Barry Zito, Eric Chavez, and Scott Hatteberg became household names, not for their superstar status, but for their incredible contributions to a team that embraced innovation and defied the odds.

And even now, with a team expected by everyone in the league to be thrown out with the morning trash, a special shoutout goes to players like Brent Rooker, Lawrence Butler, and Zack Gelof, who, despite the chaos swirling around them, continue to play their hearts out and win games for us. Their perseverance, despite resistance, has shown the utmost dedication and loyalty to their craft.

Through it all, something else stands out—the unwavering loyalty of the fans. The Oakland Coliseum, often called a “dump” by outsiders, was home for us. Sure, the plumbing was bad, and the seats were outdated, but it was our dump—where we witnessed moonshots and forearm bashes.

Our dump where, in May of 1991, Rickey Henderson proudly declared, “Today, I am the greatest of all time.” Our dump where Catfish Hunter and Dallas Braden achieved perfection on the mound almost 42 years apart. It will always be our dump, and we’re damn proud of it!

The stadium has reverberated with the chants of the fans who packed the bleachers, beating drums, blowing horns, and throwing themselves behind this team. Even as attendance waned in later years due to poor ownership decisions and the looming threat of relocation, Oakland fans refused to go quietly.

Who could forget the reverse boycott of 2023, when fans donned “Sell” shirts in protest of ownership—a movement so significant that one such shirt ended up in the Hall of Fame! That was more than a protest—it was a love letter to the team, a declaration that we wouldn’t go down without a fight.

Yet here we are, at the end of that fight. The A’s are leaving, and it’s hard to fathom a future without them in Oakland. But they leave behind a legacy, one that can never be erased. This city, with its rich and complicated history, has been the backdrop for some of the most incredible moments in the history of this beautiful game.

Even as the team moves to Sacramento, Las Vegas—or wherever the winds of ownership take them—those of us who lived and breathed Oakland baseball will carry these memories forever.

As the final out is recorded next Thursday afternoon, and the team leaves the Coliseum for the last time, our hearts will remain torn. But the memories we made—of championships, rivalries, legends, and wild innovations—will never die. We can only hope that somewhere, in the heart of Las Vegas or wherever the A’s land, they carry a piece of Oakland with them. Because no matter where they go, the spirit of the Oakland A’s will always belong to us.

In my ten years covering this final chapter of A’s baseball from the Coliseum press box, I want to give a thankful shoutout to three people who have made it so much more memorable: Amaury Pi-Gonzalez, the Spanish Voice of the Oakland A’s since 1977 and my mentor; Lee Leonard for countless hours of stories and laughs between innings… and during; and the late great Ray Fosse, who was always available for questions and advice. Thank you!

Mauricio Segura Golden Bay Times Die-hard Green and Gold since 1983

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: 2024: The Final Season of the A’s at the Coliseum–(Part V) – Rickey’s 939

Rickey Henderson of the Oakland A’s hoists his 939th career stolen base for the Oakland Coliseum crowd to see. Rickey is the subject of That’s Amaury News and Commentary. (photo from ebay)

2024: The Final Season of the A’s at the Coliseum (Part V) – Rickey’s 939 —

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Since 2024 is the last year that the A’s will play at the Coliseum, I have highlighted the great moments that took place there in this series of articles. Over the decades, I have given my opinion on who is the best player ever to have worn an Oakland Athletics jersey, and I have spoken about it and written about it in two languages.

That guy is Rickey Henderson. On May 1, 1991, during a warm and muggy afternoon at the Coliseum, Rickey made history as he broke Lou Brock’s 938 stolen base record. The A’s were facing the New York Yankees. Rickey tried to steal second base in the first inning, but Yankee catcher Matt Nokes made a perfect throw, and Rickey was out.

In the fourth, Henderson made another try. It was a different outcome. He reached base on an error and took second on a Dave Henderson single. Rickey took off, and he had stolen third base, no doubt about it, with his typical head-first slide. That was his 939 stolen base, breaking Lou Brock’s record.

Rickey stood up and lifted the base over his head, and seconds later, he said, “I am the greatest of all time”. A’s equipment manager, Frank Ciensczyk, brought out a replacement base. Rickey and his mother, Bobbie and Lou Brock all join the recently crowned stolen base king on the field around third base. They all share hugs with Rickey.

Then Rickey talked to the crowd (36,139). “It took a long time, huh?” and finished by saying, “Lou Brock was a great base stealer, but today I am the greatest of all time.” The first thing that surprised me was that Rickey has shown no humility. It sounded like what the great Muhamad Ali (in Boxing) used to say: that he was the greatest of all time. However, Rickey was saying a statement of fact; it just happened.

He just became the King of Steal; Rickey also personally thanked Lou Brock, who has been in the Bay Area for a while, following Rickey Henderson each at-bat, when he got on base, and especially when he went for a steal. Lou Brock was a class act; he passed in 2020. He was patient while waiting for baseball history to be made, and he witnessed Rickey Henderson’s outstanding achievement.

I covered that game and will remember it forever. Rickey Henderson went on to play for another 12 years, with various teams amassing 467 more steals. Today, Rickey Henderson remains the undisputed King of Steal in the history of Major League Baseball, with 1,406 stolen bags.

Note: Today, the active player with the most stolen bases is Starling Marte on the New York Mets, who in his 13-year career has 350 steals. Marte, born in the Dominican Republic, is 25 years old. Quote: “I’d walk through hell in a gasoline suit to play baseball. -Rickey Henderson..

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play voice 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