Oakland Ballers weekly report By Lewis Rubman Tue Sep 2, 2025

The Oakland Ballers just edged the Yuba Sutter High Wheelers 5-4 on Sun Aug 31, 2025 at Raimondi Field in West Oakland (photo by the Oakland Ballers)

Oakland Ballers weekly report by Lewis Rubman Tue Sep 2, 2025

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Fats Waller was right. There’s been a change in the weather, a change in the sea, from now on there’s gonna be a change in me. For the rest of the Pioneer Baseball League season and its playoffs, instead of reporting daily on all the Ballers’ home games, I’ll be writing a weekly column on the team’s constant contradictions, its state of protean stasis.

Sandymount Strand has nothing on the base paths of Raimondi Field. Indeed, the coexistence of change and permanence and the related theme of cyclical repetition are prominent in many of my favorite writers, among whom are Joyce, Borges, José Emilio Pacheco, Rolfe Humphreys, the author of “Polo Grounds,” —which I consider the best baseball poem fever written — and translator of Heraclitus ‘s De rerum naturæ, which he democratically renders as The Way Things Are.

The Argos, whose crew, the Argonauts, searched the known world in search of the golden fleece, was destroyed and rebuilt over and over again. The debate over whether or not it was one ship or many, has repeated itself over the centuries and, as you read this, continues to this day.

Were the Oakland Athletics one team or 54? Or were they a new team with each passing day? Borges slyly signaled the practical futility of such nagging doubts when he called one of his essays, “A New Refutation of Time.”

This change in my schedule is not, however, a matter of high philosophical interest, however much fun it might be to play with such a conceit. It is a practical demonstration that time is always with us, that it lives in us and we live in it.

Since suffering a series of falls a month or two ago, I ‘ve needed a walker, or at least a cane to get around, and my energy levels fluctuate unpredictably. In short, as I approach my 85th birthday, I can’t meet the exigencies that have done in many a younger reporter.

My new way of doing things will, I hope, offer both you and me several advantages. I’ll be able to attend games without having to carefully follow the action on the field and simultaneously write coherently and accurately about it. I also should have time and perspective to notice trends and follow ongoing stories.

The new time frame will allow me to reflect a bit on what I’m about to say instead of putting my fingers to the keyboard helter skelter and turning out numerous typos, incoherences, lacunæ, and plain old fashioned factual errors.

I had played with the idea of doing podcasts, but, when I’m on my game, I write better than I speak. And, I’m proud and humbled to say, that several readers have complimented me on my recaps, warts and all.

I’ll write occasional pieces during the off season and plan on returning to the weekly column in May.

Fans and other followers of the fortunes of the Oakland Ballers shouldn’t have trouble handling the change. The team’s motto seems to be, “plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.” The winningest team in professional baseball manages to to blow leads with alarming frequency, often against vastly inferior opponents.

The B’s clinched the first half pennant on a walk off pinch hit single by Esai Santos against the Boise Hawks on August 24. Two days later, they opened the second half in Marysville by jumping to a 5-1 lead against the rapidly fading Yuba-Sutter High Wheelers.

Yuba-Sutter reacted by scoring nine runs in the bottom of the fifth and went on to deflate the high flying Ballers, 12-8. All of the High Wheeler’s runs came against the then recent additions to the Ballers’ roster, Dylan Delveccho and Malik Binns.

New acquisitions are a frequent feature of Oakland’s lineup. TJ McKenzie had been a standout as a franchise player for the Colorado Springs Sky Sox (née Northern Colorado Owlz) over the first half of the season. His OPS was a staggering .917 and he had stolen 32 bases in 36 attempts.

The August 26 loss to Yuba-Sutter marked his first appearance in a Ballers uniform. The expression “franchise player” has a specific—and probably unique—meaning in the PBL. Each team is allowed one, and he

  • must have played at least two years in the league • must have finished the previous season with the team that designates him as a franchise player • cannot spend more than one season as a franchise player.

Being a franchise player exempts position players from the requirement that they have no more than two years’ professional experience as of January 1 of the season’s year. (There are more details about what constitutes a professional season, but you get the idea).

The Ballers don’t have to lose a game to turn a laugher into a nail biter. On August 17, they were leading the Rocky Mountain Vibes 12-1 at the half-way mark. The game went into the eighth tied at 13 before Oakland eked out a 14-13 win.

Following last Tuesday’s loss, the B’s came back to plaster the High Wheelers, 14-3 and 14-0 in their next two encounters.They squeezed out a 7-6 win on Friday night before falling to them 11-5 on Saturday and then pulling out a 5-4 series-ending win with ninth inning RBI singles by Michael O’Hara and the clutch hitting Santos.

The weekend games presented an interesting and infuriating problem for East Bay based Ballers fans. 960 AM, which bills itself breathlessly as “The Answer,” chose to air the San José State football game on Saturday. 1220 AM, of Palo Alto, transmitted a barely audible narration, in which play by play announcer Nevada Cullen, with no one to back him up and suffering from cold symptoms, got so fed up that he complained about the post game home run derby, which he called one of the most stupid innovations, along with the uncaught third strike rule, of the PBL. He then said that he had just received notice that he had been fired for insulting the league. I suspected a joke, and I was right. Cullen was back on the job on Sunday, still suffering from what sounded like a URI.

This week’s six game series against the Great Falls Voyagers will be a tune up for the playoffs. If the hometown heroes gain at least a split against the Voyagers, they will break the PBL’s record for games won in the regular season. They have announced that the first two playoff games will be played in West Oakland, on September 11th and12th and that tickets for them have gone on sale.

The B’s also announced that Two $hort won’t be able to perform at this coming Saturday’s block party, but that the other plans for the party and Fan Appreciation Day still are in place. Hot dogs will go for $2 up until the first pitch is thrown, and you can get anything (or nothing) served in a plastic helmet for $2 a helmet.

The first 200 fans through the gates will get free Scrappy the Rally Possum bobbleheads. They originally had been scheduled to be given away early in the season, but supply chain problems put the kibosh on that.

The fans who would have received the bobbleheads got vouchers that were redeemable a week or so ago, but those of us who missed out on that have this one last chance (for this season, at least) to obtain this backhanded tribute to the Oakland Coliseum, which Peter Gammons once called—correctly—the best in the major leagues.

Game times will be 6:35 on Tuesday through Friday, 4:35 on Saturday, and, in a slight variation from the usual, 4:35 on Sunday as well.

I’ll write occasional pieces during the off season and plan on returning to the weekly column in May.

My future coverage of the Giants is, at this point, undecided. I’ve been working on ways of getting to and from Oracle Park safely. I’m very confident that I can arrange to be dropped off and picked up for day games next year, but scheduling for the few remaining ones in 2025 make a trial run problematic.

Oakland Ballers game wrap: Ballers take control of Vibes in 9-3 win at Raimondi

The Oakland Ballers

Rocky Mountain Vibes (22-24) 000 000 300 3 5 1

Oakland Ballers (36-11) 120 040 02x 9 13 1

Time: 2:50

Attendance: 2,703

Saturday, July 12, 2025

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–This clear and breezy afternoon at Raimondi Park was the scene of a repeat performance of Friday’s 9-0 shellacking of the visiting Rocky Mountain Vibes by your Oakland Ballers. The Vibes hail from Colorado Springs, from which you can see Pikes Peak, and the Ballers certainly busted the Vibes on both occasions. Saturday’s Baller win was by an ample 6-3 margin.

Once again, the B’s starting pitcher—Saturday he was Luke short— held his opponents scoreless over six innings of play. He made short work of them, allowing but two hits and a pair of walks, and uncorking a wild pitch, all on a total of 54 pitches. He earned his sixth win of the season against one loss.

Oakland’s bullpen wasn’t as effective in Saturday’s sunlight as it had been under Friday night’s artificial illumination. Conner Richardson, Short’s successor, coughed up the Vibes’ three runs four batters after taking over mound duties in the top of the seventh.

Ex-Baller Stephen Wilmer and Will Butcher hit back to back singles. Aleck Davis fanned and then catcher Otto Jones sent Richardson’s 0-2 delivery over the left field fence for his first professional home run. The game no longer was as one sided as its predecessor. Richardson set down his next two mountaineers to end the inning. Carson Lambert and Connor Sullivan pitched a shutout frame apiece, and that was it for the Vibes.

There were no sustained anomalies comparable with Friday’s six players in the seventh slot phenomenon, but the game’s final out was a doozie. Sully issued a one out walk to Adams to bring Jones to the plate. He lifted a popup to second for the out number two. But Adams, who most likely had forgotten that there had been only one down, hadn’t reversed his advance towards second, and Harris tagged him for an easy no brainer game ending unassisted double play.

Although Lou Helmig went hitless in four at bats, the B’s continued to have a potent offense. Indeed, Helmig was the only starter not to get at least a single. Davis Drewek, back from the injured list, went two for four with a walk and an RBI. Christian Almanza, Dillon Tatum, Nick Leehey, and Esai Santos each contributed a double. Leehey drove in three runs; Dillon Tatum, two, and Cobb, Drewek, and Ryan Pierce, one apiece.

The only unscored upon Rocky Mountain pitcher was Thomas Peltier, who surrendered a double in the seventh, the only inning he worked.

The teams will close out the first half Sunday. Game time is 1:05. I won’t be covering that contest, so why don’t you drop by at 18th and Wood. You’ll probable enjoy the vibes (note the lower case, although the ones with a capital V provide some pretty entertaining counterpoint to your Oakland Ballers),

Ballers continue to roll shutout Vibes 9-0

The Pioneer League first half champions Oakland Ballers continue to roll with a win over the Rocky Mountain Vibes 9-0 on Fri Jul 11, 2025 (Oakland Ballers x photo)

Rocky Mountain Vibes (22-23) 000 000 000 0 5 1

Oakland Ballers (35-11) 015 020 10x 9 12 3

Time: 2:47

Attendance:2,872

Friday, July 11, 2025

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Who says a baseball game has to be close, or even significant, to be interesting? Certainly not the first half champion Oakland Ballers and the Rocky Mountain Vibes, the team they defeated on Thursday the 10th to clinch the championship and who fell to the champs this Friday the 11th by the overwhelming score of 9-0 in an anti-climactic game that featured, as the result indicates, excellent offense and defence by the home team and a series of of out of the ordinary events that kept the crowd of 2,872 entertained but by no means on edge of their seats.

Here’s a partial list of those happenings: Cam Bufford, usually a DH or third baseman, played first base for the entire nine innings. Six different players occupied the seventh slot in the batting order; five of them were pitchers, and three of them actually threw at least one pitch in anger.

The two more were pinch hitters, and one, Zach St. Pierre (who else?) was a pinch runner. Lou Helmig, whose sixth inning opposite field single drove in the tie breaking run in Thursday’s tense victory, drove in three runs in tonight’s laugher, two of them on a fifth inning round tripper.

The B’s scored their first run in the second frame. Their first hit came in the third, a two out homer by Bufford that ignited a five run outburst that sealed the Vibes’ doom The visitors showed some slight signs of life in their last turns at the plate.

Ryan Pierce, making a rare start at the hot corner for Oakland, committed three errors in the game. Two of them enabled Rocky Mountain’s first two ninth inning batters to reach base. This didn’t faze Adam Bogasian, one of the half dozen seventh slotters, who promptly fanned Will Butcher, and got Stephen Wilmer, the ex-Baller who had homered the night before, to hit into a 1-3 DP.

Bogasian seemed to pick the ball that had been shot to him right out of his hip pocket Noah Millikan earned the win with six innings of four hit shutout ball.

That’s the Pioneer League equivalent of a complete game. Calem Franzin, along with Bogasian one of the pair of seventh slotters who didn’t make a plate appearance, gave up one hit and struck out four in his two innings. Bogasian mopped up the mess in the top of the ninth.

Nick Leehey, giving Tremayne Cobb a day off from playing short, and Esai Santos, filling in for second sacker Danny Harris, were the only Baller starters to go hitless. Helmig led the team in hits, with three. Tyler Losano had gone one for one when what could have been a damaged hamstring pulled him out of action and precipitated the overcrowding of the seventh spot in the order.

The fun and games will resume Saturday, afternoon at 4:35, followed by the last game of the first half of the season on Sunday the 13th at 1:35.

Ballers edge Vibes 6-5 with key eighth inning run

Oakland Ballers celebrate their win over the Rocky Mountain Vibes at Raimondi Park in Oakland on Thu Jul 10, 2025 (Oakland Ballers photo)

Rocky Mountain Vibes (22-22) 121 010 000 5 9 1

Oakland Ballers (34-11) 002 201 01x 6 6 0

Time: 2:18

Attendance: 2,008

Thursday, July 10, 2025

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–After being thwarted late Wednesday afternoon by a lost challenge on what would have been a game ending strike out followed by crushing defeat in the knockout round crap shoot the Pioneer League uses to decide tie games, the Ballers had to wait until 8:53 this Thursday evening to break the tie for first place with a 6-5 triumph over the Rocky Mountain Vibes and— thanks to the Ogden Raptors’ defeat of the Missooula Paddleheads a bit before that— gain not just a playoff spot, but home field advantage against whomever they face in the full season tournament scheduled for early September to determine the league’s champion.

They did it in stirring fashion, overcoming a poor start by Dylan Matsuoka, who surrendered four runs, all earned, in as many innings. Half of the six hits he yielded went yard. The Rocky Mountain Vibes, the team that had stymied the B’s a day earlier, took the lead on a mighty blast over the center field fence by Sam Linscott, the second Vibe batter, tacked on two runs in the second on a two run round tripper by ex-Baller Steven Wilmer (batting .218 at the time), and Gary Lora’s leadoff four bagger in the third.

Oakland got on the board in the third plating two tallies on Tremayne Cobb’s double to right and Christian Almanaza’s opposite field homer to left and tied things up an inning later Nick Leehey’s two run homer to left. The Vibes came back with Carter Booth’s solo shot, a line drive over the left field fence off Gabe Tanner, who had relieved Matsuoka.

The home team caught up in their half of the sixth, notching a run after Danny Harris led off with a single and advanced 90 feet on each of two consecutive balks before Rocky Mountains’ starter, Malik Binns, was able to throw a pitch. Lou Helmig’s opposite field single to left through a partially drawn in infield brought in the tying run. a walk to Nick Leehay, and Binns was on his way to the showers, replaced by Wyatt Tucker.

James Colyer set the Vibes down in order in the seventh.

Oakland finally, and definitively, took the lead in their half of the eighth. Hunter Bryn took the rubber to relieve Tucker at the start of the inning. He walked Harris, who was erased when Cam Bufford’s grounder to third forced Harris out at second. But the speedy Bufford beat the throw to first and then stole second. Another single by Helmig, this time to right, drove in Bufford with what proved to be the winning run.

Carson Lambert, probably the league’s best reliever, didn’t allow a baserunner in the two innings he hurled, fanning five of the six batters he faced on the way to earning his second win against no losses.

Friday’s encounter with the Vibes will start at 6:35. It may be anti-climactic, but you can be sure it’ll be celebratory.