That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: Roberto Clemente, A Man for All Seasons

MLB players will be wearing #21 to honor Hall of Fame legend and former Pittsburgh Pirate great Roberto Clemente during Wednesday’s games (AP News file photo)

Roberto Clemente, A Man for All Seasons

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

MLB is honoring Roberto Clemente today, on Roberto Clemente Day. All players born in Puerto Rico can wear Clemente’s famous Number 21 during the game today. For the Oakland A’S Vimael Machín the rookie shortstop will be wearing #21 during tonight’s game at 6:10PM against the Houston Astros at the Oakland Coliseum.

It was on September 30, 1972 at Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh when Clemente was hitting .311 and playing the New York Mets, that he got his 3,000 hit. I was against lefty Mets hurler Jon Matlack, who won the National League rookie of the year. That day, the last of the regular season, Clemente joined only three (at that time) who reached 3,000. They were Hank Aaron, Willie Mays and Stan Musial.

Roberto Clemente was the first Latin-American player to reach the magical number, one that basically guarantees induction to the Hall of Fame, which he was after his tragic death on December 31, 1972 as he chartered DC-3 plane filled with help to the suffering people of the Managua, Nicaragua earthquake disappeared north of San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Clemente, a world-renowned humanitarian, lives forever in the minds of the people of Puerto Rico and all Latin-American baseball countries to this day. Many of Roberto’s artifacts are on exhibit at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Last time I visited in 2009, my favorite was the scouting report of Roberto, prior to his signing in the major leagues.

The narration of his 3,00 hit is also in Cooperstown, in the voice of my mentor and Hall of Fame announcer Rafael(Felo)Ramírez, with whom it was a dream come true to work with during a few Postseasons in thr 1990’s for radio networks in the US and Latinamerica.

In an exclusive interview with Clemente’s teammate, catcher Manny Sanguillen (published on this website) he told me about his friendship with Roberto and how much he still misses him, 48 years ago.

Roberto Clemente was a proud man with God-given talents and a kind man to all who knew him. Roberto was inducted in The Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum and Hall of Fame, founded in San Francisco in 1998. He still is the inspiration to every young Puerto Rican boy that hopes to make it to the major leagues.

Just like MLB retired Jackie Robinson’s #42; someday they will also retire Roberto Clemente’s #21. It would only be fair, especially on a sport where the largest minorities in MLB, around 30-percent of the players are Hispanic. Roberto Clemente is a man for all seasons.

Stay well and stay tune.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is vice president of the Major League Baseball Hispanic Heritage Museum and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

 

Three home runs give Giants the 6-5 win

Darin Ruf hits one of the three home runs that the San Francisco Giants had to help edge the Seattle Mariners at Oracle Park in San Francisco Tuesday night coming in the seventh inning (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

SAN FRANCISCO-There is one thing that you do not do with the 2020 San Francisco Giants and that is count them out of a game.

Darin Ruf hit a pinch-hit home run off of Anthony Misiewicz in the bottom of the seventh inning, helping the Giants come back from a 5-1 deficit to defeat the Seattle Mariners 6-5 on a brisk night at Oracle Park.

It was the fourth career pinch-hit home run for Ruf and his first since October 1, 2016 when he was with the Philadelphia Phillies and it came off of Fernando Salas of the New York Mets in the bottom of the seventh inning at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia.

Ruf, who was pinch hitting for Alex Dickerson hit the third home run of the night after Dickerson hit onto The Portwalk in the bottom of the third inning, where a fan walking made a nifty snag before it went into San Francisco Bay.

Dickerson was considered to be day-to-day, one day after he hit a ball off of his right knee and was forced to leave Monday nights victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks with a bruised knee.

Wilmer Flores tied up the game with a two-run home run in the bottom of the fourth inning, as he hit a 3-2 pitch and launched one into the left field bleachers.

Logan Webb went the first five innings for the Giants, as he allowed five runs on six hits, walking three and striking out five and he did not fare in the decision.

Mariners starter Ljay Newsome was knocked out of the game with one out in the bottom of the second inning, as he took a batted ball off the bat of Brandon Crawford, the ricocheted off of Newsome right into the glove of third baseman Kyle Seager, the brother of Los Angeles Dodgers Corey Seager.

Brady Lail replaced Newsome on the mound, and went 2.2 innings, allowing four runs on five hits, walking one and striking out two.

The Mariners got to Webb early, as J.P. Crawford walked and then Dylan Moore was hit by a Webb pitch. After Kyle Lewis grounded out to advance both Crawford and Moore an additional 90 feet, Seagar drove in Crawford, when he grounded to Crawford at shortstop.

That lead would not long, as Donovan Solano tripled with two outs in the bottom of the first inning and then Solano scored on a Brandon Belt.

Crawford gave the Mariners a three-run cushion in the top of the second inning, as he doubled to left field to score Evan White, Luis Torrens and Shed Long, Jr. Crawford was thrown out at third base, as he tried to advance an additional 90 feet by Joey Bart after the relay from Dickerson to Crawford to Bart just missed getting Long, Jr. at the plate.

The Mariners tacked on their fifth and final run of the game in the top of the third inning, as Ty France tripled on a play where it looked like Mike Yastrzemski misplayed the ball and then Jose Marmolejos singled in France.

Things were looking for the Mariners until the Giants began to chip away at the lead in the bottom of the third inning, as Dickerson hit a home run, then Donovan Solano, who finished the night a home run shy of the cycle doubled to left field and then Brandon Belt singled in Solano.

Flores tied up the game in the bottom of the fourth inning, as he slammed a two-run home run into the left field bleachers. Just before the Flores home run, Bart singled to center field to bring Flores to the plate as the tying run.

That would be the score when Ruf broke the tie and gave the Giants their fourth straight victory after opening the home stand with a loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks on Friday night.

Once again, the Giants bullpen was solid, as the quartet of Caleb Baragar, Tyler Rogers, Jarlin Garcia and Tony Watson pitched the final four innings, allowing zero runs on four hits, walking just one and striking out four.

Rogers pitched the seventh inning, where he gave up a hit, a walk and a strikeout; however, the pinch hit by Ruf was the difference in the game and it gave Rogers his second win of the season against three losses.

Despite allowing a base hit in the top of the ninth inning, Watson picked up his second save in four games and the Giants are now a game over .500 at 22-21.

NOTES: With the six runs tonight against the Mariners, the Giants have now scored 4+ runs in 10 consecutive games…according to Stats, LLC, since 1958, the Giants have scored 4+ runs in 10-or-more consecutive games just 11 times and have not had a double-digit game streak of 4+ runs since 2007 (10 straight from April 28 May 7).

By hitting three more home runs tonight, the Giants have now hit 59 home runs on the season and 33 at Oracle Park, which seems like a hitters park after the first 19 years of being known as a pitchers park.

Luis Basabe was promoted from the alternate site in Sacramento and was inserted into the game in the top of the eighth inning after Ruf hit his tie-breaking home run, and Basabe made a nice running catch off the bat of Philip Ervin to end the inning.
To make room for Basabe on the roster, the team sent Daniel Robertson back to the alternate site.

UP NEXT: Tyler Anderson (1-3, 5.18) will head to the mound for the Giants in the series and home stand finale, while the Mariners will LHP Nick Margevicius (1-2, 3.86) to the mound.

Oakland A’s 2nd game wrap: Astros take night cap 5-4 for split

The Houston Astros avoided a sweep of Tuesday’s doubleheader and a sweep of the series with a one run 5-4 win over the A’s at the Oakland Coliseum. Both teams have two more games left in the series Wednesday and Thursday. (@astros image)

Houston 5 6 0

Oakland 4 8 1

Seven innings (second game)

Tue Sep 8, 2020

A’s home team

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Neither of the starting pitchers in tonight’s set to brought an enviable record for 2020 to the mound with him. Chase de Jong, Houston’s right handed hurler had pitched a mere two-thirds of an inning this year and managed to give up two earned runs that period.

That’s a pretty small sample size but a pretty ugly sample. For the first two frames, it looked like a misleading sample. De Jong looked sharp and struck out three of the seven A’s he faced. But in the third, he lost his touch. Vimael Machín led off with a solid single to left center and advanced to third on Tony La Stella’s one out single to center.

Three pitches later, Machín cossed the plate on Tony Kemp’s sac fly to right. Matt Olson’s 11th homer of the year drove in both baserunners and gave Oakland a 4-0 lead. De Jong stumbled through the next two batters to end the inning, his last.

Mike Minor’s numbers were not preposessing either. He had gone 0-5, 5.60 for Texas and entered the game 0-0, 18.00 for the A’s. He, too, started the game well, breezing through his first three innings, giving up only one hit, a single, and a walk. But he surrendered singles to Myleas Straw and Michael Brantley to open the fourth. He got Yuli Gurriel out on a fly to center, but Laureano caught it at the wall.

Minor then walked Kyle Tucker and hit Carlos Correa to load them bases. That ended his hard day’s night. Yusmeiro Petit got the second out when Aledmys Díaz lined out to center. But the usually reliable Petit walked Abraham Toro and Dustin Garneau, bringing in two runs that were charged to Minor, as was the tying run, which Correa scored on George Springer’s infielde single Petit finallly got the third out when Straw skied to center..

The A’s threatened in the sixth when, with two down, they loaded the bases on a walk to Canha, a single by Machín, who went three for three, with a double, and another walk to Jonah Heim, But La Stella’s fly to left ended that.

JB Wendelken was on the mound in the top of the seventh when Pinder, playing third, and Machín, at short, got in each other’s way on a ground ball from the bat of Springer. It was charged as an error to Machín. An infield single, a walk, and Gurriel’s sac fly to center was all the ‘stros needed to push the winning run across, thus earning a split in the day-night double header.

The winners used four pitchers in addition to De Jong, ex-Athletic Brad Peacock, Brooks Raley, Enoli Paredes, who got the win, and Ryan Pressly, who was credited with his eighth save. Paredes now is 2-2, 3.45.

The A’s also used five hurlers, Minor, Petit, TJ McFarland, Lou Trivino, and Wendelken, who took the loss in spite of having turned in the best performance of the quintet.

The two teams will face each other again tomorrow, Roberto Clemente Day, at 6:10. The probable starters are Jesús Luzardo (2-2,4.23) for Oakland and Luis García for Houston.

Oakland A’s game wrap: A’s take first game of double header 4-2; Khris Davis hits second HR of season

The Oakland A’s Khris Davis swings for an RBI double in the sixth inning against the Houston Astros on Tuesday in the first game of a doubleheader at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News Photo)

Oakland 4 8 0

Houston 2 7 0

Astros home team

Seven Innings (First Game)

September 8, 2020

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Perhaps the most consequential development arising from the opening game of this afternoon’s double header between the battered division leading Oakland Athletics (24-14 at game time) and their closest competitor in the AL West, the Houston Astros (21-20), was the return of Marcus Semien to the A’s lineup after 10 days on the injured list.

He started the first game, playing short and batting second. Actually, he batted second and then played short because that game was a make up for the one postponed in Houston on August 30, so Oakland played the afternoon contest at the Coliseum as the visitors. Nonetheless, the team wore its home whites.

MLB’s pandemic protocols also mandate that twin bills be seven inning affairs and allow the teams participating in them to add an extra player to their rosters for the occasion. The A’s chose James Kaprielian, who they’d acquired three years ago as part of the Sonny Gray trade with the Yankees

The. Astros also were able to reactivate an outstanding infielder. Alex Bregman came off the IL to play third and, like Semien, bat second. Both teams still are without the services of one other outstanding infielder. José Altuve still is on Houston’s injured list, and Matt Chapman, while in uniform, wasn’t on the field.

The mighty Zach Greinke (3-0, 2.91) kept the A’s off balance with his assortment of hesitation offerings for the first two innings. Then Khris Davis unloaded on a 90 mph four seamer for a lead off home run to right center field that put the Athletics up, 1-0. It was the struggling slugger’s second round tripper of the season.

Chad Pinder followed up on Davis’s blast with a hard single to the left side of the infield that neither Bregman nor Carlos Correa could handle. After Sean Murphy struck out and Tommy La Stella walked, the A’s second baseman advanced to second on a ground out by Semien and scored on Ramón Laureano’s single to left.

Montás wasn’t dominating, but he was effective. He allowed at least one hit in each of the five innings he pitched, but he always shut the door on the ‘stros until he finally wavered in the fifth. He struck out Jack Mayfield to open frame but then allowed a single to left by George Springer.

The A’s starter almost escaped this time,too, but Michael Brantley, who had doubled down. the right field line in the second and sliced another to left in the third, knocked a 96mph fast ball over the fence in right to knot the score at two,

The A’s came roaring back against Greinke in the sixth. Laureano doubled to right and advanced to second on Olson’s ground out to second. Robbie Grossman’s dying quail to center fell in for a hit,and the A’s were back on top, 3-2.

After Mark Canha flew out to left, Davis came through again, this time with an RBI double to right center. The A’s almost added to their lead in the top of the seventh against Humberto Castellanos, but a sparkling pick up of and throw home by Carlos Correa cut Murphy down at plate.

Montás evened his record a 3-3 and lowered his ERA to 5.73 with five innings of six hit ball. He walked one and struck out three. His pitch count was 79 with 50 strikes. Jake Diekman pitched an inning of hitless relief, and Liam Hendricks earned his eleventh save with a one hit ninth.

Greinke was charged with his first loss of the season and now is 3-1, 3.27.

Game two will start at 6:10. Chase De Jong will go for Houston, and Mark Minor will have his first start for the A’s.

Headline Sports podcast with Barbara Mason: Lakers make comeback in game 2; Giannis absence keeps Bucks fighting win game 4 ; plus more

The Milwaukee Bucks key player Giannis Antetokounmpo injures his ankle during the first half of the Eastern Conference Semi Final with the Miami Bucks on Sun Sep 6th at Lake Buena Vista Florida (AP News photo)

On Headline Sports podcast with Barbara:

#1 How does the Lakers survive blowing a 21 point lead to beat the Houston Rockets 117-109 in Game 2 is that the sign that the Lakers played a good team or they are faltering and have to regroup just to get back into the game? The series is tied 1-1 with game 3 Tuesday night.

#2 The Milwaukee Bucks Giannis Antetokounmpo was out for most of game 4 but the Bucks had to come back from behind and got an overtime win over the Miami Heat 118-115. The Heat do lead in the series 3-1. Antetokounmpo will not play in game 5.

#3 Turning to baseball former St Louis Cardinal and Hall of Famer Lou Brock passed away on Sunday at the age of 81 Brock held the all time base stealing record at 118 in 1974 until the Oakland A’s Rickey Henderson broke the record with 130 in 1982.

#4 The San Francisco Giants are pushing to get a playoff birth. After promoting their starting catcher from the minor leagues in August Joey Bart things started clicking for SF they went on a six game win streak and strung some key wins together. They have this month of September to try and catch up for a wild card birth.

#5 The Oakland A’s get a big win over the Houston Astros to keep the win streak going in the Houston series at two with a 4-2 win in the first game of the doubleheader. The A’s Khris Davis hit his second home run of the season, Davis is hitting .155.

Join Barbara Mason every Tuesday night for Headline Sports at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: Nats GM tossed from game in luxury box; This past Labor Day could bring spike in virus; plus more

The Washington Nationals general manager Mike Rizzo was thrown out of Sunday’s game vs the Baltimore Orioles for yelling out of the luxury box at the umpires. Here is Rizzo in the luxury box the day before on Sat Sep 5th (AP News photo)

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Amaury the talk during Labor Day weekend the fear was that the spike would go up and put face masks, gloves and social distancing aside during the scorching heat.

#2 Baseball is planning to have bubbles for the post season in Texas and Los Angeles for the playoffs and World Series do you see it working the same way it worked for the NHL and NBA.

#3 Washington Nationals general manager Mike Rizzo was ejected for yelling at umpires from the luxury boxes on Monday telling umpire Joe West and his crew they were brutal. With the stadium empty everything can hear everything that anyone is saying.

#4 The Los Angeles Angels TV announcer Victor Rojas said that a home run hit by the Angels in the top of the seventh was a walk off three run home run by Anthony Rendon. Which in some ways is understandable because the Angels were playing a make up doubleheader as the visiting team in Angels Stadium in their home uniforms. Rojas quickly walked back the walk off and said the Angels took the lead.

#5 On Wed Sep 9th at PNC Park the Pittsburgh Pirates will be wearing #21 in dedication to Roberto Clemente a tribute to one of the greatest Pirates ever who died trying to deliver relief to Nicaragua Dec 31st 1972.  Clemente got his 3000th major league hit to end the 1972 season on Sep 30th and it would be his final MLB game.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the Oakland A’s Spanish radio play by play announcer on 1010 KIQI San Francisco and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

Oakland A’s game wrap: Bassitt leads A’s pitchers in 6-0 shutout over Astros

The Oakland A’s Chris Bassitt who went seven innings of seven hit shutout ball against the Houston Astros on Mon Sep 7th at the Oakland Coliseum (AP News photo)

Houston 0 7 0

Oakland 6 8 0

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Labor Day, the traditional end of summer, when men put away their straw hats and women stopped wearing white, when 16 teams in two leagues, stretching east to west from Boston to St. Louis and north to south from the hub to the nation’s capital, having survived the dog days of April, expanded their rosters and settled down for one last month of their 154 game season.

We lived in a baseball-centric country, and those who didn’t go to a game either listened to one on their portable radios or were playing softball at a Labor Day picnic.

That was then, or at least an idealized picture of what it was like then. This is now. We’re in a record-breaking heat wave, and those of us lucky enough not to have been displaced by the wild fires that accompany it have to shelter in place, our noses itching and our eyes teary. from the acrid air we breathe.

Major league baseball is playing the last month of its 60 game schedule in front of empty houses, and the two teams locked in a tight duel for its American League Western Division pennant are the Houston Astros and the Oakland Athletics. Indeed, they are the only two teams in the AL West with winning records, with the 23-14 A’s leading the 21-19 ‘strop by three and a half games as they entered their five game in four days series at 6:20 this evening.

Although the day’s oppressive heat had given way to a pleasant breeze by game time, the rivalry between tonight’s antagonists remained heated. The A’s are one of the many teams who feel they were cheated out of a deserved championship by Houston’s sign stealing abuse of modern technology.

The Astros resent the A’s Mike Fiers’ violation of baseball’s unwritten law against revealing team secrets. Tension between the teams reached a climax during the A’s last trip to Houston when the Astro coach Alex Cintrón goaded Ramón Laureano from the dugout to charge him, precipitating a near brawl that violated all sorts of anti-covid protocols and resulted in Laureano’s four game suspension that, tacked on to the contest postponed because of Daniel Mengden’s positive lab results, is one of the reasons for Oakland’s recent lack luster performance.

Adding to the tenuousness of the team’s grip on first place are injuries to Marcus Semien, who has been out of action since the first games of the double header in Houston on August 22 with with a sore left side, wasn’t sufficiently recovered to start tonight’s contest, and his companion on the left side of the infield, platinum glover Matt Chapman, mired in a hitting slump, strained his right hip in yesterday’s loss to San Diego, and is out of combat, at least for tonight Vimael Machín and La Stella, respectively, started in their at their positions, with Tony Kemp at second.

Houston’s infield has its own problems after being swept by the Angels in a four game series in Anaheim. Some of those problems are health related. José Altuve, the stellar second sacker (who was discovered by A’s third base coach Al Pedrique). Alex Bregman, Chapman’s closest competitor for golden glover at the hot corner, and pitcher Lance McCullers, Jr., still are on the injured list. And ex-Oakland fan favorite Josh Reddick, nursing a sore elbow, was considered day-to-day but was in tonight’s line up as designated hitter.

The A’s took an early lead against the Astros’ Cristián Javier (4-1, 3.35) when Robbie Grossman led off the bottom of the second with a single to left, stole second, and, after Stephen Piscotty struck out, scored on Kemp’s double to right center. Kemp tried to pilfer third and was called out on a close play, a decision that the A’s appealled.

He looked safe to me but not to the umpire crew viewing replays in New York. Sean Murphy didn’t let that keep him from blasting a 93 mph four seamer from Javier 404 feet overthe dead center field fence to give Oakland a 2-0 lead.

That was all the A´s managed to score against Javier, who left after finishing the fifth. Those three hits and two runs in the second were the only ones he allowed, although he did surrender three walks and hit Ramón Laureano with a pitch. Of the 94 of those he threw, 50 for strikes.

Oakland tacked on a tally against Andre Scrubb in the sixth on Murphy’s walk,La Stella’s single to right that advanced him to third, and Laureano’s foul sacrifice fly to right.

Chris Bassitt, the A’s starting pitcher, has had his good days and his bad days this season. He had a very good one in Houston on August 7, when he held the Astros to one earned run in seven innings as the A’s won 3-2. He showing against them in the Coliseium on the 29th wasn’t as effective. The A’s lost 4-2, and Bassitt surrendered four earned runs in six frames.

Tonight, he pitched himself in and out of trouble, leaving two men on base in the each of the first and third and one on in the second and sixth. Astro batters reached deep into the warning track in the fourth and six innings and twice in the seventh.

But no one scored on him in his seven innings of work, over whih he scattered as many hits, struck out four and gave up no walk, bringing his ERA down to a respectable 3.12. He threw 89 pitches, 58 for strikes . Bassitt also helped his own cause with a nifty bit of fielding in the fifth, going to his right to grab George Springer’s bouncer and throw off balance to nab the speedy Springer at first.

The A’s stretched their lead once more in the eighth. Cy Sneed walked Matt Olson, who advanced a base on Grossman’s grounder to second and scored on Piscotty’s single to left center. Chad Pinder, who had replaced Kemp when Cionel Pérez replaced Javier in the sixth, doubled to left, sending Piscotty to third. Murphy came thorugh again, singling both men home, and the A´s were ahead 6-o.

Jake Diekman shut down the ‘stros with the help of a double play, and it took Lou Trivino all of three pitches, two of which Houston’s Kyle Tucker and Carlos Correa drove to the warning track, to shut down the visitors in the ninth.

Bassitt got the well earned win and is now 3-2. Javier took the tough loss, and his record standsat 4-2 (3.38).

The two rivals will go at it again tomorrow in a day-night make up double header. Each game is scheduled for seven innings, with Oakland, as the visitors, sending Frankie Montás (2-3,6.06) to the mound against Zach Greinke (3-0,2.91) at 3:10. Three hours later, with Oakland as the home team, it’ll be Mike Minor (0-5, 5.94 overall; 0-0, 18.00 with the A’s) making his Oakland starting debut against 2B Announced.

 

Giants break through against Gallen, reach .500 with 4-2 win over Arizona

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–Zac Gallen was dealing. Then he wasn’t.

The Giants lengthy climb back to .500 appeared stalled Monday evening as Gallen, Arizona’s 25-year old starter with the major league’s fourth lowest ERA, breezed through the first five innings allowing just one hit.

No stranger to the Giants, Gallen was making his third start against them since August 22, having allowed one run in each of the two previous outings, winning the first. His notoriety carried weight as well, having completed the first 23 starts of his career without allowing more than three runs in any of them, an ongoing major league record.

This time Gallen looked even more formidable–using cutters and curveballs to set up his 93 mph fastball–by breezing through five having thrown just 59 pitches, and leading 1-0.

In the sixth, things fell apart, with Gallen allowing four hits, two walks without recording an out. Just that fast, the Giants were on their way to a 4-2 win, and Gallen felt as if he saw it coming.

“Even those first five innings, it seemed like I was rolling but I feel like I kind of got away with some pitches that weren’t my best stuff,” he said. “In that sixth inning, I wasn’t making pitches.”

“He was making pitches early and then I think he just made some mistakes out over the plate and they took advantage of it,” manager Torey Lovullo said of Gallen.

The win brought the Giants back to .500 for the first time since August 2 when they were 5-5. With the regular season only 60 games, the quest took more than half the season to achieve. With 18 games remaining, the Giants are competing for one the final playoff spots in the National League. Can they hang?

Manager Gabe Kapler likes what he’s seen.

“The character of this team is continuing to shine through,” Kapler said. “Long way to go, lot of work left to do but certainly gratifying to get back to the .500 mark.”

Kevin Gausman picked up the win, pitching six innings, allowing just one run while striking out nine. Gausman’s name kept coming up at the trade deadline for all the right reasons as multiple clubs felt the right-hander could help them with their playoff aspirations. Throughout, Gausman stated he wanted to stay with the Giants. In the end, he got his wish.

“I was definitely happy to be back here” he said. “More than anything, I just feel confident in our team.”

The Giants next have a home-and-home set with the Mariners wrapped around a four-game set at Petco Park against the Padres. Then they return to the Bay Area for the final 10 games of the season, with the first three of those in Oakland.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

MLB podcast with Larry Crino: Is Bumgarner’s back preventing him from being his old self? MadBum now 0-4

The Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Madison Bumgarner watches the San Francisco Giants Evan Longoria last Saturday round the bases, one of two homers Bumgarner gave up in his first time back since leaving the Giants (AP News photo)

On the MLB podcast with Larry:

We open with a tribute to the passing of Hall of Famers Lou Brock and Tom Seaver

#1 Larry what was it like for Arizona pitcher Madison Bumgarner to come back and pitch against his former team the San Francisco Giants on Saturday night only to give up back to back home runs and lose a close game 4-3.

#2 Bum has been struggling now and is 0-4 has had a bad back. Did the Giants see issues of Bumgarner’s motion or something different in his pitching where they decided to let him go after last season?

#3 Bumgarner pitched in three World Series Championships during five seasons winning them all. There’s very little doubt for Bumgarner coming back to San Francisco had to be something special in spite of his losing Saturday’s game.

#4 In Bumgarner’s return on Saturday he gave up back to back home runs, pitched four innings, gave up two runs, three hits, and struck out two hitters, it’s not quite the line he wanted facing his old teammates.

#5 On other thing people will remember about Bumgarner in San Francisco that he also was a pretty good hitting pitcher. It doesn’t do him very good right now with the universal DH in the National League.

Join Larry every Monday for the MLB podcast at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Cal Bears podcast with Morris Phillips: Will the Pac 12 really be back?

Pac 12 game between Arizona State and Kent State at the ASU campus at Tempe Arizona from Aug 29, 2019. The Pac 12 is reconsidering returning by November or December talks are still continuing. (AP News photo)

Morris on Cal Bears football podcast:

#1 Morris how serious how committed is the Pac 12 in 2020.

#2 The Pac 12 is taking information that the Coronavirus is either under control or it’s safe to return to contact football do you still see this as a risk to return for the players?

#3 The Pac 12 commissioner Larry Scott said that the partnership with Quidel a rapid Covid-19 test lab would have test results back and that should be a resolution for returning if the team knows whose negative or not.

#4 Morris, Scott told ESPN he is highly confident that the Pac 12 will start no later than Jan 1st. The players will have time to prepare for the season this month September as Scott said that the season can start as early as November and December.

#5 One thing the Pac 12 is confident about is that test results from Quidel could come back on game day to see if anyone is asymptomatic and prevent them from taking the field

Morris Phillips is a Cal Bears beat reporter at http://www.sportsradioservice.com