Judge homers Yankees put A’s away 7-3

New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge rounds the bases after hitting a two run home run in the bottom of the first inning at Yankee Stadium against the Oakland A’s on Wed Apr 24, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Jessica Kwong

NEW YORK.—The Oakland Athletics allowed Aaron Judge to hit a two-run homer to start the third of the four-game series in the Bronx and fell to the New York Yankees 7-3 on Wednesday night.

The A’s dropped to 2-1 in the series and 1-5 in their current 10-game road trip.

In the first inning, Judge hit a home run on a fly ball to right field and Juan Soto scored, putting the Yankees up 2-0. With that, he surpassed former captain Derek Jeter to earn the ninth spot in the Yankees all-time home run list.

Judge seemed to take a third strike call and was walking back to the dugout when A’s starting pitcher Joe Boyle was charged with a balk. Judge proceeded to hit a fastball. A’s manager Mark Kotsay said it was an “umpire judgement call, it was close”.

“You don’t see that call that often and in that moment, it gives Judge another pitch and he capitalized on it,” said Kotsay. “So it’s definitely umpire discretion and you can’t argue box, so you have to kind of have to stick with that.”

Boyle laughed when asked what exactly happened.

“They called a balk,” he said. “So what I was doing, the clock was running down, probably should have stepped off but tried to squeeze a pitch in and I felt like I stopped, but obviously they saw it differently and I haven’t watched the video or anything yet so I don’t really know what it looks like.”

In the fourth inning, Anthony Volpe tripled on a sharp line drive to center fielder JJ Bleday that was deflected by right fielder Lawrence Butler and Austin Wells scored, expanding New York’s lead to 3-0. Then Soto went out on a sacrifice fly to center field and Volpe scored, boosting the Yankees up 4-0.

In the fifth inning, Anthony Rizzo homered on a fly ball to right center field and gave the Yankees a 5-0 lead.

The A’s would not go out without putting up a fight and in the sixth inning, Brent Rooker hit a home run on a line drive to left field and Ryan Noda and Tyler Nevin scored, cutting the Yankees’ lead to 5-3. In the same inning, Soto responded with a home run on a fly ball to center field and put the Yankees up 6-3.

In the seventh inning, Alex Verdugo went out on a sacrifice fly to left fielder Seth Brown and Giancarlo Stanton scored, giving New York a 7-3 lead.

Boyle allowed two runs and three hits, struck out six and walked four in three innings pitched. It was his fifth start in the season and his fourth loss – to right-handed pitcher Clarked Schmidt on Wednesday.

A’s second baseman Zack Gelof was a late scratch due to left abdominal soreness.

“Zack came in a little sore, went through his pregame. After ground ball routine we talked about it, decided to scratch him,” Kotsay said. “He did go for imaging. Zack does have a left oblique strain and most likely will be heading to the IL.”

The finale of the four-game series at Yankee Stadium takes place Thursday with A’s (9-16) left-handed pitcher Alex Wood matching up against Yankees (17-8) left-handed pitcher Nestor Cortes. First pitch is at 4:05 p.m. PT.

NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs podcast with Len Shapiro: Capitals in trouble down 0-2 against Rangers; Panthers go up 2-0 after OT win over Bolts; plus more news

Washington Capitals goaltender Charlie Lindgren (79) and Martin Fehervary (42) protect the net from New York Rangers’ Artemi Panarin (10) during the second period in Game 2 of an NHL hockey Stanley Cup first-round playoff series, Tuesday, April 23, 2024, in New York. (AP News photo)

On the NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs podcast with Len:

#1 In game two the New York Rangers (2-0) edged the Washington Capitals (0-2) 4-3 at Madison Square Garden. The Rangers Vincent Trocheck, Mika Zibanejad, Jack Roslovic, and K’Andre Miller each scored goals. Trocheck and Zibanejad each had an assist. The series goes back to Washington on Friday night at the Capital One Center at 4:00pm PDT.

#2 The Florida Panthers (2-0) Carter Verhaeghe scored at 2:59 into the overtime stanza to get the Panthers by the Tampa Bay Lightning 3-2 at Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise on Tuesday in game 2 of the playoffs. The Panthers and Lightning play game 3 Thursday in Tampa Bay giving the Lightning hope they can pick up a win on home ice.

#3 The Colorado Avalanche (1-1) defeated the Winnipeg Jets (1-1) convincingly 5-2 at Canada Life Center in Winnipeg. The Aves scored four times in the second period. Artturi Lehkonen scored a goal and got an assist. The Aves goaltender Alex Georgiev saved 28 out of 30 shots.

#4 The Nashville Predators (1-1) evened the series against the Vancouver Canucks (1-1) at Rogers Arena in Vancouver in game 2 with a three goal 4-1 win. Nashville scored three of the game’s first unanswered goals and Nashville goaltender Juuse Saros held off the Canucks to just 18 shots allowing just one goal.

#5 The San Jose Sharks announced today the firing of head coach David Quinn who in his second year as head coach lost the first 11 games of this season. The Sharks finished the season with a (19-54-9). They also failed to qualify for the post season for the fifth consecutive year. Sharks general manager Mike Grier said that Quinn was a good coach but even a better person. That Quinn and his staff worked hard over the last two seasons under difficult circumstances. The Sharks have not named a new head coach.

Len Shapiro does the NHL podcasts each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

#1

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: Sox poor attendance, threatening to move and poor record; Giants Snell heads to 15 day IL with adductor strain; plus more news

Guarantee Rate Field on the South Side of Chicago home of the White Sox. The White Sox have not drawn well all season and have the worst record in baseball so far in 2024. (AP File photo)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Amaury, lots of talk about the Chicago White Sox problems all around, lack of attendance, team doesn’t have enough hitters and pitching to win games, Sox have won only three games this season, they have won only one road game out 12 so far this season, and are in dead last place in the AL Central.

#2 Amaury, San Francisco Giants pitcher Blake Snell is out with a left strained adductor and on the 15 day IL. Snell was a scratch on Wednesday’s day game at Oracle Park and was replaced by starter Ryan Walker in a bullpen game. Snell has been rocked in his last two starts Apr 14th vs. Tampa Bay giving up six hits and seven runs and Apr 19 against the Arizona Diamondbacks giving up nine hits and five runs.

#2 After getting swept in Cleveland in three games the Oakland A’s came to New York and won the first game of the three game series at Yankee Stadium on Monday on a Zack Gelof ninth inning two run homer. There are just some games that the A’s pull a rabbit out of the hat.

#3 It’s not often you get to see the A’s throw a shutout on the road but A’s starter JP Sears pitched six inning of shut out ball giving up three hits and striking out seven batters. A’s relievers Lucas Erceg and closer Mason Miller also kept the shutout in tact.

#4 Amaury if you had to point to one thing where the A’s improved a little this season and have had some success over the last few weeks what one thing would it be, JP Sears pitching, Zack Gelof’s hitting or the return Esteury Ruiz?

#5 Amaury, the San Francisco Giants are fourth in the NL West with the Dodgers, Padres, and Diamondbacks in front of them in the standings that said the Giants are only two games out of first place.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play voice for 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

Sharks part ways with head coach Quinn head trainer Tufts

San Jose Sharks head coach David Quinn stands behind the bench during a game against the Pittsburgh Penguins at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh on Thu Mar 14, 2024. Quinn was fired by the Sharks on Wed Apr 24, 2024 (AP file photo)

By Mary Walsh

On Wednesday morning, the Sharks announced that Head Coach David Quinn and Head Athletic Trainer Ray Tufts would not be returning next season. In their press release, the Sharks said:

“After going through our end of the season process of internal meetings and evaluating where our team is at and where we want our group to go, we have made the difficult decision to make a change at the head coach position,” said Grier. “David is a good coach and an even better person. I would like to personally thank him for his hard work over these past two seasons. He and his staff did an admirable job under some difficult circumstances, and I sincerely appreciate how they handled the situation.”

The reasons for parting ways were not purely performance-related. That is evident from what Mike Grier said as recently as last Saturday at the end of season media availability:

“I think the staff up here did a good job communicating and motivating the players throughout the year. I don’t think they ever, you know, it would have been easy to just kind of throw your hands up and not put the effort in, to go through extra video sessions and talk with the players and try and get the players better. So I think they did a really good job with that kind of in this situation. I think it was something that was needed and that they should be proud of.”

On Saturday, Grier explained how the season was worse than he had expected, but did not put a finger on one specific problem, like coaching:

“Overall it was not what I expected, I’m sure what they expect in the room for various different reasons. I give the group credit, I told them they came in here, they were positive. They got along and the coaches deserve credit for that too., kind of keeping the guys on track, staying positive and motivating them. You know, you’ve seen situations, in not just hockey but all sports, where teams in this situation where it kind of goes off the rails and things get bad and you hear guys bickering and not getting along. But the guys came here and worked every day.”

Grier went so far as to say that this season was rock bottom:

“I hope so. If this isn’t I don’t know what is. I mean it was a difficult season. Like I kind of said earlier, it was worse than I expected coming into the season. I didn’t think we were a playoff team but I thought we’d be better than we were. From the start we had to the injuries everything just kind of snowballed. So yes I would hope this is rock bottom and we can kind of progress and take some steps forward next year.”

The Sharks also announced on Tuesday that long time Head Athletic Trainer Ray Tufts would not be returning:

“Ray spent more than two decades overseeing the care and well-being of our players,” said Grier. “We thank him for his service to the organization and our players and wish him and his family the best in the future.”

Mary Lisa is a San Jose Sharks beat writer for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Mets Lindor takes Giant pitching deep twice in 8-2 win at Oracle

New York Mets hitter Francisco Lindor slugs one of his two two run home runs in the top of the third inning against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Apr 24, 2024 (AP News photo)

Wednesday, April 24, 2024

New York (13-11). 021 300 002. 8 10 1

San Francisco (12-14). 000 000 101. 2. 8 1

Time:2:50

Attendance: 30,183

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–The Giants’ progress towards contention was proceeding at a Snell’s pace when the team announced that the pace setter, signed as a free agent late in spring training and today’s probable starter, had suffered a groin pull in his outing last Friday and been placed on the 15 day injured list, retroactive to the day of his injury. We should have suspected something like this when San Francisco bought the contract of the right handed reliever Mitch White on Saturday. Without adding him to the roster until yesterday.

The immediate result of this unfortunate turn of events was that this afternoon’s game between the heirs of the late New York Giants, which San Francisco lost, 8-2, was a bullpen game in which the home team failed in its bid to reach the .500 mark was thwarted.

Their opener was Ryan Waker, who hurled a 20 pitch scoreless first. He was followed by Sean Hjelle (2-2/3 innings, 3 runs, all earned, on three hits; Landen Loup (1-1/3 IP, three hiits, runs, and earned runs); Erik Miller (one inning, one. strikeout; Luke Jackson (one inning, one hit); Tyler Rogers (one inning, one hit); and new kid on the block, Mitch White (one inning, the ninth, two hits, and two runs, both of which came on Francisco Lindor’s second home run to right of the afternoon). Hjelle was the losing pitcher, and now is 0-1, 5.79.

The Mets entrusted their fortunes to a familiar figure on both sides of the bay, Sean Manaea,who was 1-1, 4.12 for his new team on Jamaica Bay. He held the Giants scoreless for 4-2/3 innings, but left two men on base for his successor, Reed Garrett.

Garrett got the out, and Manaea’s line for the day read no runs on four hits and four walks, with a half a dozen strike outs. He was not economical as shown by his 101 pitches, 58 of which were counted as strikes. He didn’t hurl enough innings to earn the win, but he did bring his ERA down to 3.33. Reed Garrett relieved him in the bottom of the fifth and was credited with the win, improving his season’s record to4-0, 0.71).

New York drew first blood in the top of the third on Brandon Nimmo’s one out walk and Francisco Lindor’s fourth home run of the season, a 382 shot over the right field wall, on an 0-2 knuckle curve by Hjelle. It came on an 0-2 count. The visitors’ stretched their lead in the fourth on Tyrone Taylor’s authoritative 406 foot blast off another of Hjelle’s knuckle curves. A fly out and an infield single later, and Hjelle was toast, replaced by Roupp.

Although Roupp stopped the bleeding in the fourth, the top of the fifth witnessed a hemorrhage of runs, starting with a two out walk to Pete Alonso, and followed by a hit batter, a walk, and a two run double by Tyrone Taylor, and Jeff McNeil’s single, and San Francisco was looking up at a six run New York lead.

The Giants finally managed to get someone to cross the plate when in their half of the seventh. Tyler Fitzgerald parked his first home run of the year, a 381 foot blast into the left center field bleachers off Garrett. who, after fanning Ahmed and Flores, surrendered a double to Conforto, and then was yanked in favor of Adam Ottavino, who caught Jorge Soler looking at a third strike.

After Lindor unloaded his ninth inning blast to make it 8-1, the Mets’ Edwin Díaz relieved Ottavino, who pitched a bizarre bottom of the ninth that featured Wilmer Flores getting thrown out at second trying to stretch a single with his team seven runs behind and Alonso’s overthrowing an soft to Díaz, covering first for what would have been the final out, which allowed LaMonte Wade, Jr., who had entered the game as a pinch hitter in the seventh and had eeked out an infield single in the ninth, to score the Giants’ second and final run.

The Giants have the day off Thursday and will start a three game series against Pittsburgh, here at Oracle Park on Friday the 26th at 7:15 in evening, with Kyle Harrison (2-1, 5.00) facing an as yet unnamed Pirate.

NBA Playoffs podcast with David Zizmor: Mavericks tie up series with Clippers at 1-1; Doncic and Irving turn up the offense for Dallas

The Dallas Mavericks forward Luka Doncic (77) takes a shot against the Los Angeles Clippers forward Paul George (13) in the first half at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles on Tue Apr 23, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the NBA Playoffs podcast with David:

#1 David, the Dallas Mavericks came back and tied the series with the Los Angeles Clippers in the NBA Playoffs on Tuesday night 96-93. As Mavericks forward PJ Washington said following the game “everybody was locked in.”

#2 Huge credit to high scorers Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving. Doncic scoring 32 points and Irving 23 points the Mavericks figured out the Clippers defense after losing to them 109-97 in game one at Crypto Arena in Los Angeles on Sunday.

#3 The Clippers Kawhi Leonard made returned to his first game since March 31st since having surgery for his inflamed right knee. Leonard said he felt good and despite the loss the Clippers have more time and more games to play. How important is it for Leonard to return to the Clippers line up?

Join David for the NBA Playoffs podcasts Wednesdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Webb extends scoreless streak to 19 innings in Giants 5-1 win over Mets at Oracle

San Francisco Giants pitcher Logan Webb has now extended his shutout streak to 19 innings against the New York Mets on Tue Apr 23, 2024 at Oracle Park in San Francisco (AP News photo)

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

New York (12-11). 000 000 002. 1. 9. 0

San Francisco (12-13). 000 003. 02x. 5. 8. 0

Time: 2:10

Attendance: 25,453

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Just before the start of the ninth inning of Monday night’s thriller between the Mets and the Giants, the lights went off in Oracle Park, and the fans were treated to a giant screen video extravaganza extolling the prowess of San Francisco’s closer, Camilo Doval.

It would have been a great advertisement for a time travel adventure film, taking us back to the days of the Roman Coliseum, where a decaying empire distracted the masses with bread and circuses. When the lighting returned and Doval made his real life entrance, his performance didn’t live up to the hype—what could?—although it was exciting.

But that was because Doval’s performance wasn’t very good. He got through the inning without allowing an earned run, but that was because the runner had reached base on a fielding error … by Camiilo Doval, who also unleashed a wild pitch and turned a 5-1 lead into a 5-2 win with the tying run at the plate.

In tonight’s 5-1 Giants triumph over the Met, Doval didn’t made his appearance until well into the top of the ninth .It was Tyler Rogers, who had pitched the eighth last night, who let the Mets narrow a 5-0 deficit to four runs with runners on the corners and only one down.

It was, unlike last night, a save situation for San Francisco’s closer. It took him all of five pitches to fan Joey Windel and get Omar Narváez to bounce out to Chapman, That earned Doval his third safe of the young season

Luis Severino, who started for the Mets, brought a 2-1, 2.14 record with him, which was a considerable improvement over his 4-8, 6.65 with the Yankees the previous year Indeed, the injury plagued Severino was at the tail end of a solid career with the Bronx Bombers, for whom he had been a two time all-star and compiled a record of 54-37, 3.79 over eight seasons.

This evening, he was in top form until the Giants got to him in the fifth inning. He ended up throwing six frames of five hit ball, allowing three runs, all earned, and striking out five. He didn’t issue any walks, and 91 pitches, 65 for strikes. He was the losing pitcher, and now has a record of 2-2, 2.67.

The Giants went with Logan Webb, their interim ace until Blake Snell finds his groove. He went into the game at 2-1, 2.93, and with this win went home at 3-1, 2.33. In his eight full innings of work, Webb shut New York out on six hits and a walk. He struck out four, and threw 106 pitches, 75 for strikes,

When Michael Conforto lofted a TexasLeague single to left to lead off the bottom of the fifth, he became San Francisco’s first base runner. Three Mets already had reached base safely, all on hits, but none had scored, partly because of some dazzling defense especialloy by Conforto and Thairo Estrada.

Matt Chapman, whose work at third would have stood out if it had hadn’t been eclipsed by Conforto and Estrada’s brilliance, shot a single to left that moved Conforto up to second.

After Patrick Bailey flew out to left, Estrada poked a single to left that scored Conforto and sent Chapman to third, allowing Etrada to advance to second on the throw. Mike Yastrzemski brought both of them home with his single to center, and just like that, San Francisco was up, 3-0.

Estrada continued to torment the visitors when he led off the home seventh with a triple off Drew Smith, who had come in to relieve Severino. He scored when Yaz, following him in the batting order, singled to right.

Two outs and a wild pitch later, LaMonte Wade, Jr. smacked a scorcher that bounced off Lindor’s glove at short and into left center field for an RBI double, giving the hosts a 5-0 lead. Jake Diekman replaced Smith and set the Giants down in order.

The score remained unchanged until the dramatic top of the ninth, when Tyler Rogers and Doval squelched New York’s efforts at a comeback.

Before the game, the Giants added right handed pitcher Mitch White to their roster. They had bought his contract from the Blue Jays n Saturday. To make room for him, Landen Roupe was optioned the AAA Sacramento River Cats/

The Giants will for a sweep of the series tomorrow, Wednesday afternoon, sending Blake Snell (0-3, 11.57) against the bay area favorite Sean Manaea, now 1-1, 4.12 for New York.

Yanks get all the four runs they need in first to edge A’s 4-3 on Saturday

The New York Yankees Anthony Rizzo (right) celebrates his home run with the Giancarlo Stanton (48) as Oakland A’s catcher Shea Langeliers stands in the background in the bottom of the first inning at Yankee Stadium on Tue Apr 23, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Jessica Kwong

NEW YORK.—The Oakland Athletics allowed four runs in the first inning by the New York Yankees and were unable to overcome that on Tuesday night, falling 4-3 in the second of the four-game series that is now tied in the Bronx.

Oakland was the first to score – Seth Brown doubled on a line drive to right fielder Juan Soto and Brent Rooker scored, putting them up 1-0.

But the Yankees’ Giancarlo Stanton responded by doubling on a sharp line drive to center fielder Esteury Ruiz and Soto and Aaron Judge scored, and New York was up 2-1. Then Anthony Rizzo hit a home run to right center field and Stanton scored, expanding the Yankees’ lead to 4-1.

A’s starting pitcher Paul Blackburn said he felt like he “made two bad pitches all night” and there were “two good hitters that made me pay for it”.

“I feel like we kind of settled in there and we were fighting back, we just kind of ran out of time. It was just one of those outings where you keep your team in it as long as you can,” said Blackburn. “Once you kind of give up four in the first, you’re just trying to go out there and put up as many zeros as you can.”

A’s manager Mark Kotsay felt that Blackburn performed well after the first inning.

“We did have our chances to get a big hit and you know, Paul’s job tonight after the first inning, I mean he put up zeros and gave us a chance to get back in it,” said Kotsay. “And so it was a nice night after that.”

In the second inning, Shea Langeliers answered back with a homer of his own on a fly ball to center field, to cut the Yankees’ lead to 4-2.

Then in the fourth inning, Lawrence Butler hit a home run on a line drive to right center field, putting the A’s within one run of the Yankees. Kotsay called it a “great, great sign”.

“He’s got power to hit it out and swung it the right one that time and it was nice to see a home run from him,” Kotsay said.

Blackburn took his first loss of the season after allowing four earned runs in six innings pitched. After starting their 10-game roadtrip getting swept by the Cleveland Guardians, the series against the Yankees standing at 1-1 is an improvement.

“It’s always nice to obviously win the first game of the series. And then coming in today, just the way that we fought – it was a good pitcher and a good bullpen they have over there – I think It just shows a lot about the guys here,” Blackburn said. “That we’re never going to quit no matter the situation or the score or anything like that.”

The A’s fell to 9-15 this season and are 7-15 in 22 games against the Yankees (16-8) since the beginning of the 2021 season.

Game three of the four-game series at Yankee Stadium continues on Wednesday. A’s right-handed pitcher Joe Boyle will match up against Yankees right-handed pitcher Clarke Schmidt. First pitch is at 4:05 p.m PT.

Tiger’s Treasure Trove: Topps 1972 Willie Mays

By Tony The Tiger Hayes

May 11, 1972 began as a vintage spring day in San Francisco 63 degrees clear skies reaching far above the just recently topped out Trans American Pyramid Building. But by early afternoon the mood in the City by the Bay had become decidedly gloomy.

Cable Car bell ringers had lost their rhythm. The Sea Lions at Fisherman Wharf stopped barking for handouts. Even the hippies in the Haight contemplated haircuts and giving up the whacky tobacco. Yes all hope had seemingly been lost as the bad news slowly crept across town like a foreboding wall of fog.

Number 24, Willie Mays the first ever big league superstar to represent a San Francisco big league team was traded by the Giants.

Though the aging long-time Giants captain, 41, had struggled at the plate to begin the ‘72 season, the trade was completed primarily to cut costs for the financially flailing Orange & Black.

An embarrassed Giants organization sent the pricy Mays, arguably the greatest player of all-time, to the New York Mets for a barely lukewarm right-handed pitching prospect named Charlie Williams and a suitcase full of rumpled $100 bills.

The previous night, in his last game as a Giant, at Park Jarre of Montreal of all places, Mays blistered a pinch-hit single off the Expos’ Mike Torrez in a 7-1 San Francisco defeat.

Suddenly, in the middle of his 22nd season as a Giant – including 15 in Bay City – Mays would no longer be representing the Orange & Black.

Though the distressing trade had been rumored for days, it still came as a gut punch to San Francisco fans and players.

“Damnit. Oh. No,” said Giants star outfielder Bobby Bonds, when informed the trade was official – no doubt speaking collectively for San Francisco players and fans alike.

The avuncular San Francisco Mayor Joe Alioto was a bit more pointedly in his comments. Alioto – a proud City native- directly blamed the Giants embattled team owner Horace Stoneham.

“There is no joy in Frisco,” Hizz Honor proclaimed with dramatic flair. “The Great Stoneham has struck out.”

Since 1958, Mays had been a San Francisco Giant when the franchise relocated from New York’s Polo Grounds.

As a west coast Giant, the Basket Catch devotee would hammer his 3,000th base hit – a baseball gold standard – and join the exclusive 500 and 600 home run clubs. He also led San Francisco to their first California National League Championship (1962) and western division crown (1971).

Mays was named 1965 NL MVP and presented with 10 consecutive Gold Glove Awards over that span (1958-68) and appeared in 14 consecutive All-Star Games for San Francisco.

The 1972 swap sent Mays back to his old stomping grounds of New York where in 1951 he was the unanimous Rookie of the Year for the New York Giants and made baseball’s signature outfield catch in the Giants World Series sweep of Cleveland in 1954 – among his other Big Apple highlights.

“I expect to play out my career in New York,” said Mays, 41, who at the time trailed only Yankees legend Babe Ruth on baseball’s all-time home run list by 68 round trippers.

The deal was announced in a joint press conference held in New York City that afternoon.

While expressing regret that Mays was leaving the club, an awkward Stoneham somberly intoned the trade was done with Mays’ best intentions in mind. The perennial All-Star was in the second-year of a $320,000 two-year contract and the Giants could no longer afford him.

“I’m sure Willie will be in good financial shape (going forward),” a forlorn Stoneham explained. “The basis on all this is on Willie’s future after he retires. I think this way is much better for Willie.”

The financially struggling Giants were at the time living a hand-to-mouth existence. Depressing Candlestick Park – just 12 years old at that point – was officially a colossal white elephant. With attendance at the chilly concrete bowl virtually nonexistent, the Giants were having trouble paying their current payroll, let alone concerning themselves with Willie’s post-playing financial interests.

The downsizing Giants – all-star pitcher Gaylord Perry and his significant contract had been shed months earlier – also had viable center field options in long-time Mays caddie Ken Henderson and promising rookie Garry Maddox.

New York – where Mays’ popularity had never waned – not only had a spot in the lineup for the aging icon, but had reserved a place for Mr. “24” as a coach and in team advertising and public relations operations when his playing days concluded.

“I think (Mays) will be very helpful this year and, years to come.” said New York executive M. Donald Grant, who assumed the balance of Mays $150,000 1972 salary. “We would like him to be out there on the field after his career is over.”

At that point in their relatively brief history, the Mets had made it a habit of adopting other New York teams former stars and stalwarts and presenting them as their own.

The 1962 expansion club’s first three managers: Casey Stengell (Yankees) Gil Hodges (Dodgers) and their current skipper Yogi Berra (Yankees) all had deep New York roots – now Mays was poised to be recycled into a Met by the Blue & Orange, who naturally nicked their color scheme from the Dodgers and Giants.

The difference was, in Mays, the Amazins’ had a legitimate on-field gate attraction or at least they prayed he was.

Following their astonishing 1969 World Series Championship three seasons earlier, the Mets had drifted into a sea of mediocrity. After two straight mid-division finishes, the 1972 Mets were more than ready to get back back in the good graces of New York’s unforgiving sports fans.

At the time of

the Mays transaction, the 1950s inspired musical “Grease” was getting boffo reviews and packing out the Broadhurst Theater on Broadway, the Mets figured if ‘50s nostalgia sold on the Great White Way it would for baseball as well.

In the charming Mays, New York would have a living and breathing- though occasionally limping – reminder of New York’s – albeit semi-mythical – Golden Age of baseball when New York ballplayers would return to their humble Brooklyn or Harlem apartments after games at the Polo Grounds or Ebbets Field and play stickball in the streets until after the street lights came on.

But the 41-year-old version of Mays the Mets were receiving would likely be more inclined to a sunset supper at the Russian Tea Room and an early turndown at his Essex House suite than breaking out a sawed off broom stick and a pink Spaldeen uptown with the kids.

After a solid – if unspectacular- season (.271, 18, 61) for upstart 1971 NL West champion Giants, the bat looked heavy in Mays hands to begin the 1972 season with San Francisco.

After a good spring camp in ‘72, Mays sat cold for two weeks before regular season games started as baseball endured it’s first ever player’s strike.

“I gained about five pounds during the strike,” Willie explained in his

final extensive press briefing as a Giant, held about a week before the trade. “I feel good in the field and on the bases, but not at the plate.”

Mays acknowledged, age was catching up with him, but he wasn’t quite ready to ride off into the sunset.

“I’ve adjusted to the fact that I’m not going to hit many home runs now. But there are

plenty of things I can do. When we have someone who is capable of going out there and doing better than I can, I’ll be the first to admit it,” Mays said, following a 2-for-3 day, in an 8-3 Candlestick Park loss, coincidentally, to the Mets (5/3/72).

The good day at the plate marked Willie’s first multi-hit game of the ‘72 campaign.

Though no one knew it at the time, the contest, played before only 4,123 fans on a wind-swept sunny Wednesday afternoon, also signaled Mays’ final home game in San Francisco.

“I think I had a pretty fair season last year,’ Mays said after the contest. “Let’s wait until this one is over before

before we evaluate. I haven’t thought about retirement yet. All I know is that will be one of the toughest decisions of my life to go into that locker and put that uniform in mothballs.”

Within days, that uniform, and the one Mays wore in Montreal were indeed put in “mothballs” and shipped to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y. by Giants assistant equipment manager Mike Murphy.

Willie didn’t have to wait long for a reunion with the Giants. Three days after the trade, Mays made his Mets debut- against, naturally, the Giants in New York.

Despite inclement weather, the Sunday afternoon Mothers Day crowd at Shea Stadium swelled to 35,505 – most there to lay out a Willie Welcome Matt for Mays.

Curiously Mets manager Berra positioned Mays at first base and placed him atop the New York lineup against Giants starter Sam McDowell.

Mays walked in his first at-bat (scoring on a Rusty Staub grand slam); he struck out in his second at-bat.

With the score knotted at 4-4, Mays led off the 5th vs. reliever Don Carrithers and drilled a screaming line drive over the Shea Stadium left field fence to give the Mets a 5-4 lead. The homer was the difference in the tilt.

The form wasn’t perfect – he practically stepped in bucket during the swing – but it was a no doubter. And as Willie ambled towards second base he looked up to see Giants infielder Tito Fuentes giving him a greeting.

Mays admitted after the 5-4 Mets win, that the momentous occasion left him conflicted.

“I didn’t know what the Giants were thinking. They traded me away, you know. Maybe they thought I couldn’t play anymore. (But) there was a little sentiment in my heart.

I wanted to win the ball game and yet in a way well, I had feeling for both sides, It was a strange feeling to bat against a team I played for 21 years,” Willie said. “You see the name Giants on their uniforms and you feel you should be out there with them. Look, you’ve gotta have some kinda feeling after being with one club that long.”

When Mays returned to San Francisco with the Mets in July for a Friday night contest, he was met with one of the Giants largest crowds of 1972.

Mays did not disappoint. He bopped a home run in that game as well.

Mays didn’t come close to reaching Ruth on the all-time home run list as a Met – falling 54 homers short. But he enjoyed two decent individual seasons with New York in 1972-73 and helped the Mets to the 1973 NL Championship. That club would lose the World Series in seven games to Oakland. Mays did not play particularly well in his fourth career Fall Classic – and retired as an active player after it’s conclusion at age 42.

Immediately, Willie joined the Mets coaching staff, serving under several Mets skippers through 1979.

His relationship with the Giants organization chilled during that time, but a detente’ was reached in 1983 when the Orange & Black held a day in his honor to officially retire Mays famous uniform No. 24.

By 1986, Mays was officially a Giant again when he signed a long-term personal services contract with his original team. He’s actively served in that role ever since.

This February, San Francisco officially honored the “Say Hey Kid” on 2/24/24.

Willie who lives about a 45 minute drive from the Giants current home at 24 Willie Mays Plaza will celebrate his 93rd birthday next month.

Where do you start with Mays baseball accomplishments? They are almost too unbelievable to, well, believe.

Mays, a native of Alabama, was a childhood prodigy, playing alongside his father in a men’s hardball league at age 13. By 16, Willie was an All-Star in the Negro Leagues. At age 20, in 1951, Mays made his big league debut with the Giants. After a slow start, Mays knocked a home run off the great Warren Spahn for his first hit. He finished with a .274 average, 20 long balls and ROY honors. The “Say Hey Kid”

was on deck when Bobby Thomson whacked his game-winning home run off the Dodgers Ralph Branca to send the Cinderella Giants to the ‘51 World Series.

After missing most of the next two seasons to a U.S. Army hitch, Mays returned for the 1954 season and dominated- stroking

41 home runs and 110 RBI and earning Most Valuable Player honors. The Giants swept the Indians in the ‘54 World Series and Mays made his signature over the shoulder catch of

Vic Wertz’ long drive into center field at the Polo Grounds in Game One.

The Great Giant was the first major leaguer to hit 50 home runs ind steal 20 or more bases in one season when he hit 5l homers and stole 21 bases in 1955.

The Wonderful Willie tied a major league record in 1961

when he hit four home runs in a single game at Milwaukee and on two other occasions belted three in a game.

In 1962, Mays won the NL home run crown (49) and led the Giants to their first west coast pennant, as the Orange & Black took the Yankees to a Game 7 before a heart breaking loss.

The future Hall of Famer also topped the senior circuit in long balls in 1964 (47) and 1965 (52) – winning his second MVP in the latter campaign.

He surpassed the 20-homer mark in 17 seasons -a major league mark – and at the time of the trade to New York he held records for lifetime NL home runs.

Mays’ All-Star accomplishments are fabled. He appeared 21 Mid-Summer Classics, compiling a .329 batting average in 70 at bats, winning MVP honors twice.

Mays also been a god send for sports memorabilia collectors. Some of the awesome mementos produced in his honor include signature fielder mitts, numerous bobblehead dolls and a unique statute produced by the Hartland Company in the 1950s that reproduced Willie making his signature “Basket Catch.”

Of course, there were bushels of Willie Mays baseball cards issued during and after his playing career.

Our favorite Mays related memorabilia piece happens to be the 1972 player card Topps issued for Willie.

It’s the last bubble gum card featuring Willie as an active Giants team member.

That season, Topps designed the colorful bubble gum card set in a memorable Peter Maxx inspired modern art motif with splashes of color and trippy three-dimensional fonts.

Willie’s card – no. 49 in a set of 787 – features a close-up portrait photo of Willie smiling as he stands in front of the Giants dugout at Candlestick with a bat resting on his right shoulder.

Most likely shot during the 1971 campaign when Willie would have been 40 years old – the intimate photo shows Mays’ resolve as a tried and true star ballplayer and team leader. But there is also a vulnerability etched on mature face as if he’s saying ‘hey, this isn’t as easy as it looks.”

But if anyone made it look easy … it was Willie Mays.

Giants score twice in 2nd and 3rd innings get 5-2 win over Mets

San Francisco Giants hitter Nick Amhed hits a two run single in front of New York Mets catcher Omar Narvaez in the bottom of the second inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Mon Apr 22, 2024 (AP News photo)

Monday, April 22, 2024

New York (12-9). 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1x 2 4 0

San Francisco (11-13) 0 2 2 0 01 0 0 x 5. 8. 1

Time: 2:25

Attendance: 24,138

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO–Tonight’s Giant 5-2 win over the visiting New York Mets was a contest between two teams struggling to re-establish their fairly recent dominance. The Amazin’s went 101-62 as recently as 2022, one year after the orange and black stunned the baseball world with a 107-55 mark.

Neither team has come close to reaching those marks since then. This year’s Mets, shorn of highly paid starters Max Scherzer, sent to Texas last year in a trading deadline deal, and Justin Verlander, dealt to Houston, also at the 2023 deadline, have improved on the dismal 75-87 dismal mark they posted when last year’s tumult and shouting had died down .

It was the first of a three game series between the Metropolitans and the Giants , whose fall from grace since ’22 is painfully well known to the readers of these dispatches. You might call it a Cain and Abel series between the two successors to the New York Giants. Ken Rosenthal has written an interesting column in today’s Athletic, in which he discusses both squads’ chances of being contenders this year.

The team from Queens sent the well travelled left handed veteran José Quitana to the mound. He brought with him a respectable 1-1, 3.05 mark for the year and a five pitch arsenal consisting of, in descending order of deployment, a sinker, four seam fastball, curve, change up, and slurve.

Opposing New York’s 35 year old southpaw was 26 year old right hander Keaton Winn, who was impressive in his hard luck loss to the Padres on April 6 and got the win in his next, and most recent start, on April 17 going six frames and yielding only four hits and a walk, for one run, earned, on a home run, against the Marlins in Miami. He throws, again in descending order of frequency, a split finger fastball, a four seamer, and a slider.

The Giants took an early lead in the bottom of the second. Jorge Soler led off with an infield single to the left side. An out later, Michael Conforto singled to left, moving Soler up to second. Thairo Estrada drew a walk to load the bases.

Tom Murphy took a called third striking,, drawing a chorus of boos. Nick Ahmed followed up with a long fly to left that the scoreboard announced as a double, but third base umpire Roberto Ortiz declared a loud strike. So Ahmed sent a hard shot that just got past Francisco Lindor and into center field for a two run single.

The home team doubled its lead in the next frame on a leadoff walk to Wilmer Flores followed by a single that Jung Hoo Lee lifted into right. After Soler went down swinging, Matt Chapman hit a two bagger that fell close to the left field corner to make the score 4-0, San Francisco.

Pete Alonso put the Mets on the board with a 382 foot blast into the left field bleachers to lead off the top of the fourth. It was his seventh dinger and 12th RBI of ’24 and came on an 0-1 split finger fastball,

Another lead off home run, Conforto’s splash hit on the first pitch of the home sixth, got that run back and sent Quinntana to the showers. It was the Giants’ left fielder’s fifth round tripper and 16th RBI of the year and came off a curve. San Francisco now led, 5-1.

Replaced by Jorge López, Quintana had lasted 5+ innings and allowed five runs, all earned, on seven hits and three walks, striking out four, and throwing 91 pitches, 53 for strikes. His ERA rose to 4.21,and he was charged with the loss, dropping his balance sheet to 1-2.

Winn didn’t last much longer. He issued a base on balls to Starling Marte to open the visit0rs’ seventh. Marte swiped second, which proved to be unnecessary because Winn walked Lindor on four pitches. That’s when Ryan Walker came to his rescue, replacing the SF starter after he’d worked 6+ innings and yielded four hits, including Marte’s homer, which accounted for the only run he allowed, The walk to Lindor was the only free pass he issued, Winn’s pitch count was 87, 60 of which were in the strike column. His record now stands at 2-3, 3.54.

Tyler, the submarining right handed Rogers relieved Walker and set the Mets down in order

Sean Reid-Foley took over mound duties for New York after the seventh inning stretch and held the Giants scoreless for an episode before giving way to southpaw Josh Walker, who turned in a 1,2,3 bottom of the eighth.

Camilo Doval was entrusted with the job of securing the win, his fourth save opportunity of the season. He had to face the top of the Mets’ batting order to do it. He reached a full count on Brandon Nimmo before walking him.

Marte broke his bat on a ground out to second that advanced Nimmo into scoring position. Lindor hit a bouncer that Doval fielded and then threw poorly to first for an error that put runners on the corners with Alonso at the plate.

Dovall then unleashed a wild pitch that let Nimmo cross the plate with the run that made it a 5-2 game. Alonso then grounded out, Chapman to Flores as Lindor moved on to third.. Doval walked on Brett Baty, and that made DJ Stewart, the Mets’. next batter, the potential tying run, Doval got him on a ground ball to second to get the ugly save and preserve the gratifying win.

The battle between the New York Giants’ two successors will continue Tuesday, at 6:45. The probable starters will be Luis Severino (2-1, 2.14) for the Mets and Logan Webb (2-1, 1.93). It promises to be a pitchers’ duel, so be prepared for a slug fest.