San Francisco 49ers podcast David Zizmor: 49ers no longer in the mood waive Moody; Kittle out six weeks, Purdy might sit out week 2

San Francisco 49ers place-kicker Jake Moody (4) kicks a field goal attempt that was blocked by Seattle Seahawks during the second half of an NFL football game Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025, in Seattle.AP

SF 49ers podcast David Zizmor:

#1 The SF 49ers tight end and third stringer Jake Tonges’ fourth quarter game winning catch set the tone for what’s to come for the 49ers season?

#2 Despite the win the 49ers waived kicker Jake Moody and 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan said after Sunday’s game “Obviously, I was disappointed we missed two field goals,” Shanahan said. “Missed one, which is a big miss … the next one, (Julian) Love made a hell of a move … We got to clean up the operation. That one wasn’t Jake, that’s the whole operation. We got to do better.”

#3 Tight End George Kittle is out with a hamstring for a few weeks and quarterback Brock Purdy has a toe and shoulder injury. Shanahan said he was more concerned with the Purdy toe injury than the shoulder injury. Purdy could be possibly shelfed for the game in New Orleans Sunday.

Daivd Zizmor does the 49ers podcasts each Wednesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Top 10 All Time San Francisco Giants September Call Ups

Former San Francisco Giant Gary Thomasson is featured in the Top 10 All Time SF Giants September Call Ups. (1974 Topps Baseball Chewing Gum Card)

Top 10 All Time San Francisco Giants September Call Ups

By Tony The Tiger Hayes

Top 10 San Francisco Giants September Call—Ups 

Part One 

Buster Posey was an all-time great catcher, MVP, three-time World Series Champion and likely first ballot baseball Hall of Famer.

But Buster wasn’t particularly good at first impressions – at least when it came to his first exposure to Major League pitching. 

Despite MLB.com’s recent assertion that Posey is the Giants “best September call-up” of all-time, that is hardly the case. 

Not even close. 

While Posey historically may have been the finest Giants player to ever RECEIVE a “September Call-Up” – he hardly broke out of the gates like a winning thoroughbred – batting just 2-for-17 (.118) in seven 2009 September contests. 

Of course Posey more than made up for those pedestrian numbers when he returned to the big league roster to stay in mid-2010, batting .305, 18, 67 to win Rookie the Year honors and leading the Giants to their first ever west coast World Series title. Two more title rings and trophies galore would follow in the next decade. 

But put all that aside for now.  Today we are focusing on baseball’s September call —up tradition. 

The topic is especially pertinent today – it is September after all – and the Giants currently are weighing the pluses and minuses  with the question of whether or not to add hot shot prospect Bryce Eldridge to the major league roster to the final days of the regular season for a tantalizingly look see. 

September Call-Ups are a baseball tradition that dates back generations. Though the bylaws have been altered in recent years the roster expanding rule allowing  major league clubs to expand their roster in the final month of the regular season still exists. 

For years clubs were allowed the opportunity to increase their active talent pool from 25 to up to 40 players for the final month of the regular season. 

The rule – unique to baseball in pro sports – gave second division teams a chance to view up and coming prospects at the big league level in low pressure situations and, dually, allowing opportunity for contending clubs  to bolster their rosters for the pennant race. 

Many all-time greats, including Jose Canseco, Greg Maddux, Stan Musial, Alan Trammell and Randy Johnson all broke in to the big leagues via the September Call-Up rule before achieving baseball stardom in future campaigns. 

The uncommon rule also gave fringe players the opportunity to play in the majors that they would normally not receive. Case in point one Mark Dempsey, a career journeyman minor league pitcher who a surging San Francisco team recalled to the Major League roster in September of 1982. The right-hander appeared in three games for the Orange & Black that month and never appeared in another big league tilt after that. 

Currently the September Call-Up bylaws allow for clubs to expand their daily rosters to 28 players from the standard 26, but it can edited from day-to -day with clubs essentially carrying on demand “taxi squads.”

For the Giants first dozen or so seasons in San Francisco the club did not have much use for the September Call-Up rule. The club was typically in contention in those days and featured a set lineup of perennial all-stars. No untested rookie was going to come along and force Willie Mays or Willie McCovey to the sidelines, even in the waning days of a season. 

If a youngster was to gain any traction with the club all inroads would have to be made during spring training or as a mid-season addition to the club as outfielders Ollie Brown and Bobby Bonds did respectively in 1967 and 1968. 

But by the early 1970s the team went through a major transformation both in terms of on field performance and financial standing. 

Basically the team was growing old, plummeting in the standings and headed towards bankruptcy. 

1972 was the turning point as the club stumbled out of the gate and Mays was traded. 

Suddenly for the first time in years San Francisco tuned to its minor league prospects to take a leading role at the big league level. 

Young outfielders Dave Kingman and Garry Maddox took on more responsibilities to help holdovers McCovey, Chris Speier and Tito Fuentes in the starting lineup and later in September the Orange & Black would promote more players – one – a exciting young hitter from Southern California  would produced like no other September Call-Up in west coast Giants history. 

(We’ll tease him for Part Two.)

Though out the Giants remaining years at Candlestick Park and after the club relocated to their beautiful new digs along McCovey Cove, the Giants would continually turn to the September Call-Up to heat up their roster just as San Francisco’s inevitable Indian Summer starts toasting the City itself. 

The San Francisco Giants Top 10 September Call – Ups: 

Gary Thomasson – OF – 1972

After winning the NL West in exciting fashion in 1971, the wheels suddenly flew off the the Giants go cart in 1972 and the club tumbled from the top of Nob Hill all the way down Mason street to the foot of Market Street. 

For starters, the Giants made the fool-hearty decision to trade future Hall of Famer Gaylord Perry in the off-season before fellow living legend Juan Marichal developed a wonky elbow in Spring Training. 

 Then the season came to an abrupt stop before it even started with the first ever players strike.   

When opening day did roll around in mid-April, the club was rusty and some of players, especially the veterans such as Willie Mays got off to painfully slow starts to their seasons. 

Meanwhile, the club, now in its 13th season at dismal Candlestick Park was drawing horribly. With financial problems mounting and the club sinking quickly behind other teams in the NL West, Giants owner Horace Stoneham made the painful decision to trade the great Mays. 

Arguably the only silver lining of the club’s sudden downturn – San Francisco was never in the pennant race and fisher an unimaginable 26.5 games behind the Cincinnati Reds. 

Catcher  Rader had a wonderful first season in the majors, batting .259 in 141 games to capture ‘72 Rookie of the Year honors. Fellow rookie Maddox, who took over for the traded Mays in CF showed flashes of his future brilliant outfield play and second year slugger Kingman blasted 29 homers. Steady rookie right-hander Randy Moffitt – also began a 10-year shutdown residency out of the Orange & Black bullpen. 

When September finally arrived the Giants dipped further into the farm system to call-up a number of impressive youngsters including Thomasson, a 21-year OF/1B out of Oceanside, CA. 

Originally selected as a high-schooler in the 7th round of the 1969 amateur draft, Thomasson advanced quickly through the lower ranks of the farm system. 

Just 17 when he broke in with Rookie Class Great Falls in 1969, Thomasson blistered Pioneer League pitching to the tune of a .359 average in 49 games. Thomasson continued to consistently bat in the .280 range, with moderate home run power as he moved up a rank each of the next three seasons prior to his September call-up in 1972. 

Gary swatted a pinch – -hit triple to left field off Jack Billingham for his first big league hit in a 5-4 road loss to the Reds (9/19/72). 

Later, in a Friday night home game vs. the Braves, Gary had his first multi-hit game batting 3-for-5, with a RBI in a 14-3 walloping of Atlanta (9/29/72). 

Thomasson finished September batting .333 (9-for-27). 

Thomasson would proceed to spend the next five seasons on the Giants Major League roster – serving generally as a fourth outfielder and backup first baseman. 

He had his best season in 1977, playing in a career high 145 and peppering 17 homers. Alas, it would be his last campaign for the Orange & Black. 

During spring training of 1978, Thomasson was one of eight Giants shipped to Oakland in exchange for ace LHP Vida Blue. 

Thomasson later played with the Dodgers and Yankees before concluding his career with the Giants – make that, the Tokyo Giants. 

Despite being an undrafted free agent out of Louisiana State University, the pocket sized Rios made it all the way to the Giants major league roster after just four seasons,  and quickly became an Orange & Black fan favorite by cracking back – to – back pinch hit home runs on successive days at Dodger Stadium no less. 

After fanning in his first big league at bat vs. the Expos, Rios was called on to pinch hit vs. the Dodgers (9/4/98) and smoked a two-run home run for his first major league hit into the Dodger Stadium pavilion off Darren Dreifort in what would be a 8-5 loss. 

The following night Armando was called off the pine in a similar situation by manager Dusty Baker and again Rios cleared the outfield fences with a solo poke. 

Unfortunately the Giants also dropped this contest as well, 6-3.

Emboldened by Rios success, Baker called upon Rios in several pinch hit scenarios the rest of the campaign and Rios did not disappoint, batting a lusty .571, 4-for- 7 in the pinch the Giants. 

Rios impressive debut was enough to earn himself a back up role in 1999 and an even larger piece to the playing time pie in 2000, when Rios appeared in a career best 115 games, batting .266, 10, 50. 

Rios was dealt to Pittsburgh in 2001 in the deal that netted long-time Giants ace Jason Schmidt. 

Bob Knepper, LHP, 1976

A Northern California kid from the Napa Valley, Knepper was a second round selection of San Francisco in 1972 out of Calistoga High School where he lettered in both football and baseball. 

The Giants went hard after the high schooler, assigning no less than Hall of Famer and fellow southpaw Carl Hubbell to scout and track Knepper’s progress.

Knepper was a quick minor league study, breezing through the lower ranks of the Giants minor league ranks like a hot knife through butter. 

Despite winning 20 games (!) at Single-A Fresno in 1974, San Francisco was cautious with the youngster, allowing him two more full seasons of minor league seasoning in 1975-76 at Triple-A Phoenix before promoting him to Fog City. 

In September of 1976, Knepper finally got the call to Candlestick Park and never looked back. 

Wizened Giants skipper Bill Rigney wasted little time testing the kid’s meddle, handing Knepper the ball to face the defending World Champion Cincinnati Reds at Candlestick Park (9/10/76). 

The very first batter Knepper faced was future Hit King Pete Rose and the rookie got the all time great to ground out to third baseman Kenny Reitz. 

Knepper pitched well through seven complete innings, allowing just a pair of runs. He received a no decision in the eventual 4-1 loss to the Big Red Machine who would repeat as

World Champs in ‘76. 

The night before teammate John Montefusco hurled his signature no -hitter at Atlanta, Knepper notched the first of his 146 career wins, allowing five hits and a single run over six frames in the 4-1 win over the Braves (9/28/76). 

Knepper would be a mainstay in the Giants rotation through 1980. 

Known for a bat missing sweeping curveball, Knep’s best season came in 1978 when he went 17-11, with a career topping 2.63 ERA. His six shutouts led the senior circuit. 

After spending several successful seasons with Houston, Knepper returned to the Giants in mid-1989 and helped the Orange & Black win its first NL Pennant since 1962. 

Rob Deer, OF, 1984

After coming up through the Giants farm system with  “all or nothing” scouting reports pinned to him  Deer promptly lived up to that reputation upon reaching the Giants. 

A  hulking 6’3, 210 pounder with flowing flaming  red hair, Deer was only 17 and a recent graduate of Anaheim’s Canyon High School when the Giants nabbed him with a 4th round pick in the 1978 amateur draft. 

It took awhile for muscle-bound hitter to get untracked in the minors, but when he did, boy, did he provide a fireworks show. 

At Single-A Fresno in 1981 Deer topped the California League with 33 home runs. He followed that up with 27 and 35 long ball seasons  at Double-A Shreveport in 1982 and 1983 respectively. 

In 1984, the middle linebacker sized bruiser followed up by bashing 35 taters for Triple-A Phoenix to top the Pacific Coast League. On the downside however, Deer also led the league in strikeouts – fanning a whopping 175 times. 

Still,  San Francisco was licking their chops at the opportunity of adding a budding Dave Kingman-style slugger to the major league lineup.

When the calendar flipped to September, Deer was on his way to Candlestick Park. 

After going 0-for-5 to start his big league career, Deer collected his first hit on a sunny Sunday afternoon at the ‘Stick.

Naturally Deer’s  first knock was a towering home run. After Bob Brenly led off the bottom of the 4th with a single, Deer turned on a fastball from Atlanta’s Rick Camp and sent a soaring drive deep into the left field scrum.  The Giants hung on to win 6-4. (9/9/84). 

Deer would go on to collect three more hits the rest of September – two of them, naturally,  home runs against the Dodgers. 

Deer began 1985 with another moon shot vs. Los Angeles – a two-run pinch hit blast off Carlos Diaz in a 8-4  victory at Dodger Stadium (4/14/84). 

Deer would spend all of ‘85 with San Francisco as a backup in the outfield and first base. But it was an overall miserable season for the Orange & Black, as it saw the club lose 100 games. On a personal level, Deer soared 8 homers, – but batted just .185. He struck out 71 times in 162 at-bats. 

The following offseason, new team president Al Rosen, looking to shake-up the roster traded Deer to Milwaukee for a pair of pitchers, neither of whom would appear  in games with the Giants. 

The move to the American League however paid off for Deer. He still struck out a ton – leading the junior circuit four times in whiffs – but he also clobbered a lot of long balls -ending his career in 1996 with 230 major league round trippers. 

Salomon Torres, RHP, 1993

Those who only remember Torres’ infamous mound meltdown on the final day of the 1993 season, have most likely already incredulously opined  ‘what’s this bum doing on a Top 10’ list? 

But in spite of his forgettable performance that day (three earned runs over 3.1 innings in a 12-1 flogging defeat at Dodger Stadium that assured Atlanta winning the NL west) Torres pitched well in the waning days of the memorable ‘93 campaign. 

Though not officially a “September Call-Up” (he debuted August 29) we’re including him in our survey. 

In Barry Bonds’ first year as a Giant – coincidentally Will Clark’s last – the Giants played like a well-oiled machine throughout 1993. At the All-Star break in mid-July the club was a baseball best 59-30 (.663) and led the NL West by 9 games. 

But by mid-August that well-oiled machine noticeably began leaking, ahem, oil. 

After a demoralizing three game sweep by Atlanta at Candlestick Park (Aug. 23-25) the Giants seemingly insurmountable lead over the Braves had shrunk to 4.5 games. 

The offense was in good shape with Bonds and Clark leading the charge with brawny support by stalwarts Matt Williams and Robby Thompson in the heart of the lineup . But the pitching staff was waning. 

The top of starting staff was more than solid with two, count ‘em two, 20 game winners in RHP John Burkett and Bill Swift. 

Fellow right-hander Buddy Black was solid when available, but a tender elbow set him to the D.L. three times in ‘93, and did not pitch after August 4. 

The rest of the starting staff was a revolving door with untested young RHPs Trevor Wilson, Greg Brummett and Bryan Hickerson sharing time with mid-season journeymen pickups Scott Sanderson and Jim Deshaies. The club got so desperate for starting pitching,  for a spell they transitioned valuable relief pitchers Dave Burba and Jeff Brantley into starters.

The wildcard was hotshot young Dominican right-hander Torres and when the Giants should promote him to the major league roster.

 Originally signed by San Francisco at age 17 in 1989, the phenom had been talked about as a future Bay City ace since 1991 when he dominated minor league batters going 16-5, with a 1.41 ERA at Single-A Clinton of the Midwest League. 

In 1993, Torres was also cruising through the Pacific Coast League. Not wanting to risk turning to him too early should he be not ready for savvy big league hitters, the Giants brass waited for the Phoenix Scorpions season to conclude before promoting the 21-year-old to San Francisco. 

The calculated Giants brass purposely promoted Torres just prior to the calendar flipped to September to make him eligible for postseason play. 

Advertised as the Orange & Black best home grown Latino-born pitcher to make his Giants debut since the great Juan Marichal some three decades earlier, Torres was handed the ball for his first major league assignment on a sweltering Sunday afternoon in Miami to face the expansion Florida Marlins. 

Torres proved to be the bolt of adrenaline the Giants needed. 

Losers of their four previous games – including a demoralizing three game sweep by the Braves in Atlanta- the Giants still maintained a 4.5 game lead in the NL West, but the Tomahawk Choppers were charging fast when the slight Giants rookie with the big are took the mound (8/29/93). 

Torres walked Marlins lead off man Chuck Carr to start the game, but he kept the Teal Fish off the scoreboard until fellow rookie Darrell Whitmore led off the third with a home run. Torres allowed earned solo runs in the fourth and sixth frames, but overall was solid, pitching seven complete innings striking out five and walking two to earn the victory in a 9-3 Giants cakewalk. 

Using his four-seam fastball, splitter and curveball  to perfection,  Torres was even sharper in his next start, as he allowed just one earned run over eight brilliant frames at St. Louis in a San Francisco 3-1 win,

Pitching to contact, Torres did not register a strikeout in this game, and only walked two. 

Torres registered a loss in his next three outings, but pitched well in two of the tilts. 

He followed up with another win at home vs. the Padres, pitching eight innings of shutout ball in the 3-1 victory (9/25/93). 

Despite playing respectable ball, Giants had unfortunately slipped behind the rampaging Braves in the standings. 

Torres’ win was the Giants fourth straight and kept the Orange & Black just 1.5 games back but well  within striking distance. The club would register wins in their next three contests leading up to Salomon’s next start at Candlestick Park vs. the expansion Colorado Rockies. 

What happened next is when Torres rookie season began going sideways. 

 What turned out to be the final home game of the ‘93 season, nearly 40,000 fans skipped work or schoo on a Wednesday afternoon to see Torres throw (9/29/93).

The pressure may have cracked the youngster. 

The power-laden Rockies jumped on the rookie with slight-hitting infielder Nelson Liriano leading off the game with a home run, outfielder Daryl Boston also went deep with a solo poke and Torres was gone after 2.2 innings and the Giants in an insurmountable 4-1 hole. 

The 5-3 loss kept San Francisco one game behind the idle Braves with four games remaining on the schedule in Los Angeles vs. the rival Dodgers. 

The unrelenting Giants would proceed to rip off three straight win at Los Angeles. 

On the morning of the final scheduled day of 1993 regular season (10/1/93),  the Braves and Giants sat at a a flat-foot tie for first place in a the NL West with equal 103-58 records. 

The Braves went with All-Star Tom Glavine at home vs. the Rockies and Atlanta jumped off to a 4-0 lead, easily rolling to a 5-3 win. 

The Giants meanwhile turned to the shellshocked Torres instead of experienced veterans Deshaies or Sanderson. 

Los Angeles was kept off the scoreboard for the first two innings, before erupting for three runs in the third and fourth off Torres to knock him from the game. The Dodgers then proceeded to open the  floodgates rolling to a 12-1 win to end the Giants season in embarrassing fashion. 

Torres took the brunt of the criticism and never recovered his confidence as a Giant – pitching parts of the next two seasons between the big leagues and Tripe -A. 

In mid-1995 Torres was dealt in a trade to Seattle that netted LHP Shawn Estes. 

He bounced around the sport for the next couple of seasons before going off the radar in 1997. 

Miraculously, Torres returned to MLB with Pittsburgh in 2002 and found late career success with the Pirates and Brewers. 

Oakland Ballers Weekly Report By Lewis Rubman

Oakland Ballers Millikan Cements has a good shot at being the Pioneer League Pitcher of the Year (photo by the Oakland Ballers)

Oakland Ballers Weekly Report

Monday, September 8, 2025

By Lewis Rubman

What’s as rare as a day in June? A complete game in the Pioneer Baseball League is one possible answer. And the past week in Raimondi Park gave us some pretty rare pitching, including one or two complete games, depending on how you look at it, several stretches that cast doubt on the PBL’s fame as a hitter’s league, and a pitch for AI.

The Ballers opened their last home stand of the season last Tuesday, September 2nd, and in the process broke the PBL record for most wins in a season with 70. But it wasn’t Gabe Tanner, who notched his ninth victory against no defeats, who tossed the rarity.

That distinction went to Great Falls’ Brandon Moody, whose record fell to 2-5 after holding the B’s to two runs, both earned, on six hits on to two walks and a wild pitch, over the the eight innings in which they went to bat.

One of those hits was Davis Drewek’s two run blast over the center field fence with Esai Santos, who had walked, with one down in the top of the first. Tanner pitched six excellent innings, surrendering the Voyagers’ lone tally, which came on Emilio Corona’s solo shot into left field night.

James Colyer and Conner Richardson hit the visitors scoreless in the seventh and eighth, respectively, setting the scene for Connor Sullivan’s 19th save, which tied the league’s record in that category. It also was Aaron Miles’ 100th win as the Ballers’ manager.

The Voyagers got even on Wednesday evening, defeating their hosts, 6-3. The contest again featured some excellent mound work by the visitors.

Danny Galvan, their starter, gave up all of the Ballers’ runs in the first episode. TJ McKenzie led off with a walk, stole second, and scored on Cam Bufford’s one out single to right. Then Christian Amanza went yard to the opposite field. The B’s would not score again that night.

Galvan would get an out in the bottom of the sixth, followed by shutout frames by Mitchell Grannan (1-2/3 IP) and Nolan Pender, whose inning of work earned him his seventh save of the year. Thursday the fourth saw Noah Millikan hurl six shutout frames, which brought his streak of consecutive goose eggs up to 22.

It also improved his won-lost balance sheet to 7-1 and lowered his ERA to a most non PBL like 2.12. Bufford’s full count seventh inning four bagger made the speedy and versatile rookie the B’s sole member of the 20-20 club. Oh, and by the way, Oakland won, 7-2.

The week’s parade of powerful pitching proceeded apace on Friday the fifth. The Ballers’ pitching was powerful, but the game was called due to a power outage after six innings. Luke Short had held the Voyagers scoreless on three hits and a walk in that period, and Caleb Franzen was about to relieve him in top of the seventh, but I don’t think anyone saw him actually throw a pitch.

I know I didn’t, and the box score doesn’t show him as having done so. That leaves the question of whether or not Short should be credited with a complete game. In any case, it keeps pitching in the spotlight. Which is more than stanchions could do.

Oakland was ahead, 5-0, on homers by Lou Helmig and irrepressible Amanza and an RBI single by the multi-faceted Bufford, and that was the final score. No one I saw seemed unhappy with the result, especially since the night was turning cold.

Monday’s San Francisco Chronicle finally gave the Ballers some coverage when it printed, below the fold, a piece by Shayna Rubin, with the headline, “Manager Milles let AI take his job for the night.” Res ipsa loquitur.

The game itself was a squeaker which—you guessed it—was notable for the pitchers’ performances.Sam Lavin threw 119 pitches for Great Falls over seven innings and allowed the B’s only one run. It came in his last inning on the bump and was the result of a round tripper to left center by—yes, indeed—Cam Bufford.

Cam Cowan gave up an unearned run in the eighth, and Robert Kelley shut the B’s out in the ninth. The 161 pitches the Voyagers threw was hardly an elegant job, but they held powerful B’s to two runs over nine innings.

Reed Butz held Great Falls to four hits and a walk over seven scoreless frames. James Colyer gave up a hit and a walk in two thirds of an inning, and Connor Sullivan blew the lead by coughing up two earned runs on two hits, one of which was Kyle Schack’s homer with AJ Fritz, who had singled, on board.

That hardly seems like a vindication of the advice AI gave manager Miles. Rubin reported that he said that he would have used Sullivan to attempt the four out save if making the decision on his own. But do we need machines to tell us to make the mistakes we would have made without them?

Oakland won the game in the first knockout round. Bufford—who else—hit two home runs, which was all it took. It’s nice they won, but should games be decided by a crap shoot?

And that takes us to Sunday’s season finale. Would you believe a scoreless tie for eight innings, ending in a 2-1 Great Falls win? You’d better believe it, because that’s what happened. The Voyagers’ Nick Marshall went into the ninth without having let a single Baller cross the plate.

Seven Oakland hurlers had blanked Great Falls over eight innings before a sacrifice fly by Fritz and an RBI single by Corona off Zach St. Pierre, who had been lights out in the eighth, put the home town champions down, 2-0.

Dillon Tatum greeted Marshall by going yard to left, and that was it for the Voyagers’ starter, who had thrown 134 pitches and allowed only six hitters, including Tatum’s near equalizer, four free passes, and a hit batter. Wyatt Cameron fanned the three batters he faced to earn his eighth save.

The semi-final round of the playoffs will begin at Raimondi Park at 6:35 this coming Thursday evening, when the Ballers will face the Ogden Raptors in the first of a best two out of three game series. The two teams will meet again in West Oakland on Friday, and, if a third game is necessary, tickets will go on sale immediately after the game ends, for the winner take all shot at advancing to the championship round. That game would be played on Saturday, also at 20th and Wood.

And that was the week that was.

Las Vegas Raiders podcast Tony Renteria: Raiders were in command of Patriots from the start

The Las Vegas Raiders defensive end Tyree Wilson (9) sacks the New England Patriot quarterback Drake Wilson (10) in the second half at Gillette Stadium in Foxboro on Sun Aug 7, 2025 (AP News photo)

Las Vegas Raiders podcast Tony Renteria:

#1 Las Vegas Raiders wide receiver Amari Cooper who announced his retirement on Saturday before the Raiders game in New England how much did that catch the organization by surprise?

#2 Rich the Las Vegas Raiders win week 1 to kick off the season and it looks like from both sides of the football Raiders head coach Pete Carroll got the game plan working to pick up his first win as a Raiders head coach.

#3 Lots of confidence from the offensive side of the football the Raiders scoring in the first quarter on a Tre Tucker reception for 26 yards from a quarterback Geno Smith pass to get on the scoreboard first.

# 4 Third quarter the Raiders scored on a running back Ashton Jeanty three yard carry and took a 17-10 lead going into the fourth quarter.

#5 Fourth quarter the Raiders defense held the New England Patriots to just a field goal narrowing the score to a seven point Raider win 20-13.

#6 Raiders quarterback Geno Smith had an afternoon under center throwing 23-25 for 366 yards, and one touchdown and one interception.

#7 Up next for the Raiders the Los Angeles Chargers on Monday Night Football Sep 15th at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas for week 2 and the Raiders home opener. The Chargers are coming off a Friday Night Football in victory against the Kansas City Chiefs to kick off their season in Brazil with a six point 27-21 win. How do you see these two teams match up for Monday Night Football next week?

Join Tony Renteria on the Las Vegas Raiders podcasts Tuesdays after each home and away game at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Red Sox Blank A’s 7-0 Behind Crochet’s Gem

Luis Morales #58 of the Athletics pitches in the top of the first inning against the Boston Red Sox at Sutter Health Park on September 08, 2025 in Sacramento, California. (Mandatory Photo Credit: Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images)

By Jeremiah Salmonson

WEST SACRAMENTO — The Red Sox made a statement early on Monday as they defeated the Athletics 7-0 in front of 10,073 fans at Sutter Health Park.

Athletics starter Luis Morales gave up a run in the first inning to the Red Sox on a Trevor Story home run and it didn’t stop at that.

Morales, who had pitched really well in his last few starts for the A’s, gave up five runs on seven hits on Monday as he couldn’t keep the Red Sox in check. Luis tossed four and two thirds innings while giving up two home runs on the night and only striking out two batters.

“Morales today, the sweeper wasn’t really working great early in the game,” A’s manager Mark Kotsay said after the game. “He made some mistakes. The story of the fastball was supposed to be out a third and it leaked back to the middle. Overall, I think that this stuff probably wasn’t as sharp tonight. The mistakes just got hit.”

Brady Basso relieved Morales and pitched two and a third very good innings. Basso recorded the final out of the fifth inning by way of the strikeout and went on to toss two more scoreless innings in the sixth and seventh. Basso gave up only one hit while walking no one en route to four strikeouts in his appearance.

Scott McGough came on to pitch the eighth and ninth innings for the A’s. McGough wasn’t sharp and was hit around in the eighth inning as he gave up four hits and two runs in the inning. However, the ninth was a different story as he retired the side in order and struck out Jarren Duran in the process.

Mark Kotsay spoke on the bullpen after the game praising the outing from Brady Basso.

“…those guys, those back end guys, Basso threw the ball really well. It was a great outing for Brady two and a third and to get out of that inning showed a lot of poise and maturity for him.”

The A’s offense really struggled all night long. The A’s managed to only tally three hits all night as they were blanked by Garrett Crochet and the Red Sox bullpen. Crochet went seven strong innings giving up three hits all night while striking out 10. The Red Sox bullpen tossed hitless eighth and ninth innings to send the A’s out to pasture quietly.

One bright spot on Monday was the defensive play from Max Schuemann at third base. Schuemann made a number of tough backhanded plays deep at third base look routine during the game. Mark Kotsay praised his efforts after the loss.

“Yeah, coming off a couple of balls in Anaheim, Max is a good defender and he has been for us all season,” Kotsay said postgame. “So tonight he showed how he can play third base, he played really well. A few nice back hands, he did a nice job.”

Up Next

The A’s will take on the Red Sox in game two of the three game series on Tuesday at 7:05 p.m. PST at Sutter Health Park. Jeffrey Springs (10-10, 4.13 ERA) is slated to start for the A’s Tuesday and will be countered by the Red Sox and Dustin May (7-11, 4.96 ERA).

Whether you’re pre-gaming with the Kings or celebrating an A’s win, Cyprus Grille at the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena is your downtown go-to.

⚡Craft cocktails? Check.
🔥Game-day bites? Oh yeah.
🏟️Steps from Golden 1 Center? You bet.

Open daily, Cyprus Grille is serving up local flavor with a front-row seat to the action. Stop by before or after the game—or make it your new downtown hangout.

Cyprus Grille—where fans fuel up.

📍Located inside the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena @ 300 J Street

Happy Hour – 4pm-6pm

Show your ticket for additional discounts when dining in.

Spirited Giants blast five homers in 11-5 win over Arizona to find themselves three games out of the Wild Card

San Francisco Giants’ Willy Adames (2) celebrates with Heliot Ramos, middle, and Jung Hoo Lee after a baseball game against the Arizona Diamondbacks in San Francisco, Monday, Sept. 8, 2025 (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

By Lincoln Juarez

SAN FRANCISCO–The Giants blasted five home runs Monday night and crushed 11-5 the Arizona Diamondbacks and took advantage of a Mets loss in Philadelphia to climb a game closer in the Wild Card standings now just three games back. Logan Webb hit the 200 strikeout mark on the season for the first time in his career and the energetic Giants bounced right back after dropping two close ones over the weekend in St. Louis. 

The Wild Card race was on Monday night at Oracle Park as the Giants took to the field against Arizona a few minutes after the Mets lost in Philadelphia, giving the Giants a chance to inch to three games back in the Wild Card standings. After losing the final two games of the series in St. Louis over the weekend, it became crucial for San Francisco to take advantage of the Mets loss. 

Logan Webb was the man the Giants sent to the mound to increase their odds at a win. Webb, who ranks first in the National League in innings pitched (178.2), also ranks fourth in strikeouts (194). Entering Monday night, he was 13-9 with a 3.17 era with a career 7-4 record against the Diamondbacks. He also entered Monday’s game six strikeouts away from what would be a career high in season strikeouts at 200. 

Webb threw a clean first inning setting the D-Backs down in order and the only offense that came in the first inning was a two-out double by Willy Adames in the bottom half. 

The scoring got started in the second inning when Arizona left fielder JJ McCarthy stepped up to face Webb with the bases loaded. He sat on a changeup and smothered it into Triple’s Alley clearing the bases for a three-run triple. Had it not taken a straight bounce off the wall in right-center field, the speedy McCarthy may have turned it into an inside-the-park grand slam. 

Trailing by three in the bottom of the second, the Giants rallied for a few runs of their own. Jung Hoo Lee hit his eighth home run of the season putting the Giants within one early on. The Giants keep showing their resilience and answer when they have to to keep themselves in ballgames. 

With two out and two men on in the top of the third, Blaze Alexander singled to right scoring Ketel Marte and the D-Backs had a two run lead, 4-2. 

Once again the Giants answered in the home third, starting with a leadoff walk to Devers followed by a Dom Smith home run to right two batters later. Nothing more than a 4-4 tie came from the third. 

Webb shut down the Arizona lineup in the fourth, fifth, and sixth including his 200th strikeout on the season, which ended the fifth inning, that earned him a standing ovation from the Oracle Park crowd. “I told Patty before the game I’m only six away but I’m not counting”, said Webb when asked if he knew that he hit 200 to end the fifth inning, but described hitting that mark as “really cool”. 

Still tied 4-4 into the home sixth, the Giants offense finally took control. With nobody out and the bases loaded Christian Koss lined a double down the right field line and all the way into the corner. Chapman and Matos both scored to make it 6-4 Giants.

The next batter Patrick Bailey hit a sacrifice-fly to left that brought home Jung Hoo Lee… 7-4 Giants. A batter later Heliot Ramos launched a ball deep into the left field bleachers to score him and Koss and put the Giants ahead by 5, 9-4. 

The Giants weren’t done yet as Matt Chapman stamped one into the bleachers in left in the seventh inning, adding to the lead. It was Chapman’s 21st of the year that extended the lead to six runs. 

Gabriel Moreno added one for the D-Backs in the eighth inning on a solo home run but Arizona was put down in order after that. 

In the home eighth, Patrick Bailey skied a fly ball to right that got over the arcade for another home run, the Giants fifth of the night, making it the most they have hit in a single game since July 31, 2021 vs. Houston when they also hit five. 

Tristan Beck tossed a scoreless ninth inning and the Giants found themselves three games out of a Wild Card spot with 18 games to play. 

Logan Webb was a workhorse again Monday evening, throwing 110 pitches in his 6 innings of work, giving up one earned and striking out seven. 

Giants fans will be keeping a close eye on the Mets game Tuesday before the Giants take on the Diamondbacks in game two of the series. 

RHP Zac Gallen (11-13, 4.77) vs. LHP Robbie Ray (10-6, 3.31) in game two at Oracle Park. 

First pitch at 6:45pm.

Sacramento A’s podcast Jeremiah Salmonson: Sox score five runs off A’s Morales in series opener

Aug 10, 2025; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Athletics pitcher Luis Morales (58) throws during the first inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images / Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images

Sacramento A’s podcast Jeremiah Salmonson

#1 Sunday was a tough one for the Sacramento A’s as they not only couldn’t get the sweep against the Los Angeles Angels but lost in a close one to the Angels 4-3 at Angels Stadium.

#2 The Angels Jo Adell hit his 35th home run for the season, Travis d’Arnaud hit an RBI double that broke a tie ball game and the Angels who looked as if they were going to get swept avoided it Sunday with a strong four run eighth inning.

#3 The A’s also faced some good pitching from the Angels relievers Luis Garcia, Reid Detmers, and Kenly Jansen combined held the A’s to one earned run in the last three innings of the game.

#4 The Boston Red Sox come into Sacramento Monday night. The Sox are just three games out of first place in the AL East and have won five of their last ten games. The A’s are battling to climb out of the AL West cellar before it’s over and the Sox are battling to move up in the standings for a better playoff spot.

#5 Starting pitchers for Monday night for Boston RHP Garrett Crochet (14-5 ERA 2.67) for Sacramento RHP Luis Morales (3-0 ERA 1.59) first pitch 7:05pm PT.

Jeremiah Salmonson does the A’s podcasts each Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Whether you’re pre-gaming with the Kings or celebrating an A’s win, Cyprus Grille at the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena is your downtown go-to.

⚡Craft cocktails? Check.
🔥Game-day bites? Oh yeah.
🏟️Steps from Golden 1 Center? You bet.

Open daily, Cyprus Grille is serving up local flavor with a front-row seat to the action. Stop by before or after the game—or make it your new downtown hangout.

Cyprus Grille—where fans fuel up.

📍Located inside the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena @ 300 J Street

Happy Hour – 4pm-6pm

Show your ticket for additional discounts when dining in. 

San Francisco Giants podcast Marko Ukalovic: Webb makes the start Monday against Diamondbacks at Oracle as the Wild Card chase is on

San Francisco Giants pitcher Logan Webb makes to the start against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Mon Sep 8, 2025 at Oracle Park in San Francisco ( AP file photo)

San Francisco Giants podcast Marko Ukalovic:

#1 Marko in spite of the Giants losing the last two games to the St Louis Cardinals on Saturday and Sunday they still remain four games out for the last Wild Card spot.

#2 The last two loses were tough losing each game by one run.

#3 On Sunday the Giants did get a pitching performance from Kei Wei Teng going four innings, allowing three hits, four earned runs, five walks, and eight strike outs.

#4 Ironically the Giants got all three of their runs in the top of the top of the sixth inning and the Cardinals got all four of their runs earlier in the bottom of the fifth inning as the Giants fell a run short.

#5 The Giants turn the page Monday night facing the Arizona Diamondbacks at Oracle Park in San Francisco. Starting pitcher for the Diamondbacks RHP Nabil Crismatt(2-0 ERA 2.14) for the Giants RHP Logan Webb (13-9 ERA 3.17) first pitch 6:45pm PT.

Join Marko for the Giants each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Sacramento A’s podcast Barbara Mason: A’s open up against BoSox for 3 game set at Sutter Health

Right hand pitcher Luis Morales gets the start for the Sacramento A’s against the Boston Red Sox on Mon Sep 8, 2025 at Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento (AP file photo)

Sacramento A’s podcast Barbara Mason:

#1 Sunday was a tough one for the Sacramento A’s as they not only couldn’t get the sweep against the Los Angeles Angels but lost in a close one to the Angels 4-3 at Angels Stadium.

#2 The Angels Jo Adell hit his 35th home run for the season, Travis d’Arnaud hit an RBI double that broke a tie ball game and the Angels who looked as if they were going to get swept avoided it Sunday with a strong four run eighth inning.

#3 The A’s also faced some good pitching from the Angels relievers Luis Garcia, Reid Detmers, and Kenly Jansen combined held the A’s to one earned run in the last three innings of the game.

#4 The Boston Red Sox come into Sacramento Monday night. The Sox are just three games out of first place in the AL East and have won five of their last ten games. The A’s are battling to climb out of the AL West cellar before it’s over and the Sox are battling to move up in the standings for a better playoff spot.

#5 Starting pitchers for Monday night for Boston RHP Garrett Crochet (14-5 ERA 2.67) for Sacramento RHP Luis Morales (3-0 ERA 1.59) first pitch 7:05pm PT.

Barbara Mason does the A’s podcasts each Monday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Whether you’re pre-gaming with the Kings or celebrating an A’s win, Cyprus Grille at the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena is your downtown go-to.

⚡Craft cocktails? Check.
🔥Game-day bites? Oh yeah.
🏟️Steps from Golden 1 Center? You bet.

Open daily, Cyprus Grille is serving up local flavor with a front-row seat to the action. Stop by before or after the game—or make it your new downtown hangout.

Cyprus Grille—where fans fuel up.

📍Located inside the Holiday Inn Sacramento Downtown – Arena @ 300 J Street

Happy Hour – 4pm-6pm

Show your ticket for additional discounts when dining in. 

Aces Finish Off Sky Winning #14 80-66 – Secure Playoff Berth

Las Vegas Aces center A’Ja Wilson (22) catches the ball after blocking a pass from Chicago Sky center Elizabeth Williams (1) during the first half at Michelob ULTRA Arena in Las Vegas on Sun Sep 7, 2025 (AP News photo)

By Rich Perez

The Las Vegas Aces (28-14) continued their wild run winning their 14th straight game beating the Chicago Sky (10-32) 80-66 securing a berth in the playoffs Sunday. They have come miles when you look back to the start they had in the 2025 season. It has been a beautiful thing with every player on this team a huge part of their playoff push. A’Ja Wilson finished the game with 31 points in her incredible run.

Game recap: The opening quarter was all Las Vegas. The Aces took an 11-0 lead before the Sky even got up on the scoreboard. After the first ten minutes of play the Aces had taken a 24-15 lead. A’Ja Wilson scored eight points in the first quarter and she was just getting started..

The second quarter was a lot closer than the opener although the Aces did outscore Chicago 19-15. At the half Las Vegas had taken a 43-30 lead. Wilson continued to hit shot after shot and going into the third quarter had 15 points and after three quarters had scored 27 points. Jackie Young was having a solid game with 17 points and the scrappy Chelsea Gray shot for 13 points.

This game went into the fourth quarter and it was clear that the Sky were being outplayed by the Las Vegas Aces. Both teams had shot 85% from the line. The Sky had out-rebounded the Aces significantly 37 to 25; they just were unable to hit shots taken.

The turnovers mid-way through the fourth quarter were horrendous for Chicago with 19 to the Aces eight. Fast break points were clearly in favor of the Aces with 24 points to the Sky’s five. The Sky conceded 22 points off turnovers while the Aces conceded only ten points.

The largest lead of the game for the Aces was 25 points. A’Ja Wilson so far has had five games with 30 or more points. She was on a roll as were her teammates and she raises the bar with every game.

With three minutes left in the game the Aces had kept up a double digit lead in the second half. As this season has worn on head coach Becky Hammon has been able to lean on the bench with Jewel Loyd and Dana Evans having great success.

The run they are currently having right now is a total team effort with everyone contributing. The final was 80-66 and Las Vegas had won their 14th game in a row. They have now won 16 of their last 17 games.

The Sky played well enough with every starter scoring double digits. Rachel Banham and Michaela Onyenwere each scoring 12 points. The remainder of the starters each had 10 points. They just could not handle the experienced Las Vegas squad.

Game notes: Sunday afternoon WNBA fans got another chance to watch the Aces reach their 14th straight win beating the Chicago Sky. Their streak has been amazing after a slow start on the season but now playing like gangbusters beating the very best in the league.

They have been consistent and focused taking each game one at a time playing the best brand of basketball that they can. Everyone of these ladies have been playing lights out and as a unit show no signs of letting down.

Sunday night they faced a Chicago team that played the first half without their ace Angel Reese. She had been suspended for making critical comments about not only her teammates but also the organization more than likely spurred by the horrible season the team is having.

She now has to deal with the repercussions of her comments sitting out the first half of Sunday night’s game but also facing a team meeting in regards to her actions. Reese told the media regarding her teammates,  “settling for the same sh-t we did this year.” “We have to get good players. We have to get great players. That’s a non-negotiable for me.

Unfortunately it may be some time before her comments fade and both Reese and the team can move on. She was eligible to play the second half but a coach’s decision had her sit the second half out.

The Las Vegas Aces have now secured a nice spot in the playoffs with two more games left in the season. Las Vegas will face the Sky one more time next Tuesday, this game also being played at T-Mobile Arena. The Aces will finish off the season down in Los Angeles at Crypto.com Arena. Tuesday’s game with the Sky will tip-off at 7:00 PM as Las Vegas will be in search of number 15.