A’s Win a Second Series Beating the Texas Rangers In a Shutout 1-0; A’s Sears takes no hitter into 7th against defending champs

Oakland A’s starter JP Sears pitched no hit baseball into the seventh inning against the World Champion Texas Rangers and eventually the A’s won the ball game at Globe Life Field in Arlington on Thu Apr 11, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

There was little offense in Thursday’s game between the Oakland A’s (5-8) and the Texas Rangers (8-5). It was a pitchers dual and showcased some great pitching by the A’s. JP Sears went 6 innings and Lucas Erceg and closer Mason Miller were perfect in the eighth and ninth innings with Miller getting the save. The lone run was a home run from Seth Brown.

Game recap: This game turned out to be a defensive game without a whole lot of offense. Through eight innings the A’s only had three hits and the Rangers only managed one. It was a pitchers duel from the start.

Jon Gray got the start for the Rangers. Oakland starter, JP Sears went six innings allowing no hits, no runs with 5 strikeouts. The Rangers, Jon Gray went five innings allowing 3 hits, one run and 9 strikeouts. Gray threw that one pitch in the second inning that Oakland’s Brown crushed for a home run and a 1-0 lead that would persist into the ninth inning.

The A’s put two runners, Tyler Nevin and Brown, on first and second in the top of the ninth inning looking for an insurance run. Oakland was unable to bring runners home and it was up to closer Miller to get the job done. He would face the top of the Texas lineup so he had his work cut out for him.

Miller dismissed Marcus Semien, Cory Seager and Wyatt Langford in that order, three up, three down and the A’s had won their second series of the season 1-0. It all came to down to some excellent pitching by Oakland. Lucas Erceg had a three up, three down eighth inning. The past few A’s wins showcased some solid pitching.

Brown had two hits for Oakland, Abraham Toro and Kyle McCann had the other two Oakland hits. It was a quiet day for both offenses.

Game notes: Thursday afternoon the A’s took two out of three games against the Rangers in game-three of their series. The A’s won the first game of the series 4-3 and the Rangers came back in game two winning 6-2, the A’s shocked the baseball world taking game three from the Rangers on Thursday afternoon with surberb pitching by JP Sears for a 1-0 shutout.

Friday night the Oakland A’s will take on the Washington Nationals at the Coliseum in a three game series. First pitch for this game is scheduled for 6:40 PM. Oakland is favored in this game. Paul Blackburn will take the mound for Oakland with a 1-0 win/loss record. The Nationals will start Jake Irvin who has a 0-1 win/loss record and a 5.73 ERA.

San Francisco Giants Avoid The Series Sweep With 7-1 Win Over Washington Nationals at Oracle park

San Francisco Giants starter Jordan Hicks throws to the Washington Nationals in the top of the first inning at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Wed Apr 10, 2024 (AP News photo)

Wednesday, April 10th, 2024

By Troy Ewers

Nick Ahmed and Tyler Fitzgerald had three hits apiece and Jordan Hicks allowed one run in six innings as the San Francisco  Giants avoided a three-game series sweep with a 7-1 win over the Washington Nationals.

Hicks (2-0) has allowed one earned run or less in each of his first three starts this season after signing with San Francisco this offseason. The right-hander allowed four hits and had two strikeouts today.

“He’s talented, but what’s impressed me most is the mix of pitches he uses now,” said Manager Bob Melvin. “It was mostly fastball/slider [as a reliever], now he’s got a sweeper, a split. His velocity will go anywhere from 92-100 mph, which is very tough for a hitter to keep track of.”

Ahmed drove in two runs and scored three times, while Fitzgerald stole two bases and scored twice.

Melvin indicated that Fitzgerald could see more playing time.

What are we, 1-0 [in games] with three stolen bases?” Melvin joked. “Fitzy has got a lot to do with that. He’s got the best speed on our team, and he needs to play too. It’s good that he got a really good game under his belt.”

Fitzgerald also had a big day at the plate, as he went 3-for-3 with a double.

“It’d been a while since I last played,” said Fitzgerald. “I just had a lot built up, and I was ready to get after it and ready to play. I just got my opportunity, and I’m excited I finally took advantage of it.”

Fitzgerald’s performance also excited his teammates.

“That was sick,” said Hicks. “I’ve been waiting to see what he has in his game. He showed today he’s a baller.”

Joey Gallo homered for Washington, his third of the season.

San Francisco banged out 12 hits and went 6 for 8 with runners in scoring position after going 1 for 16 with runners in scoring position in the first two games of the series.

The Nationals stole two bases in the loss, giving them a MLB-best 25 this season.

Patrick Corbin (0-2) gave up 11 hits and seven runs with two strikeouts in 5 2/3 innings.

Despite the offensive outburst, San Francisco failed to homer for the sixth straight game.

Giants relievers Ryan Walker and Erik Miller pitched the final three innings, holding Washington hitless.

Nats CJ Abrams goes yard with 3 run homer beats Giants 5-3

Ildelmaro Vargas Washington Nationals second baseman (center) takes a leap to avoid the sliding San Francisco Giant Matt Chapman and to attempt completing a double play at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue Apr 9, 2024 (AP News photo)

Tuesday, April 9, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

Washington (5-6). 002 010 101. 5. 8. 1

San Francisco (4-8). 010 002 000 3 10 0

Time: 2:41

Attendance: 24,380

SAN FRANCISCO–In the snippet of time since the start of the 2024 season, the home field of your San Francisco Giant has looked more like Playland at the Beach as Oracle Park. It’s been a roller coaster. After splitting their opening series at San Diego, the Giants were swept by Dodgers in Chavez Ravine came home to win two exciting games out of the three they played against the visiting Padres here by the shores of McCovey Cove, which gave Melvin’s mob its first series win of the year.

The Giants were poised to get a significant boost from the mound work of last year’s Cy Young winner, Blake Snell, who, along with Matt Chapman, was a last minute addition to the team’s roster. Those signings took the sting out of what had been an unproductive off season.

But Snell’s debut against the rebuilding Washington Nationals was a debacle, San Francisco’s offense was nowhere in sight, and the fielding left much to be desired. Tuesday night Bob Melvin’s crew had to pick itself up, dust itself off, and start all over again.

They sent the promising left handed rookie Kyle Harrison (1-1,4.91 at game time). The youngster was making his third start, but the first at 24 Willie Mays Plaza, of the season. He was 1-0, 2.66 and had held opponents to a batting average of .195 here before tonight.

His performance in tonight’s exciting 5-3 loss was impressive, especially in the. early innings but faded top adequacy later on. He lasted six innings and threw 93 pitches, 62 of them qualifying as strikes. The three runs he yielded were earned lowered his ERA slightly, to 4.76, and he ended the night with a no decision. He struck out eight Nationals and didn’t walk any.

The Nats had announced Josiah Gray as their starting pitcher, but the all round nice guy and clubhouse leader was placed on the 15 day injured list, owing to a flexor strain in and around the elbow of his right, pitching, arm. His replacement, announced after the Giants had posted their lineup, was Joan Adon, a right handed converted reliever with a five pitch arsenal and a lifetime big league record of 3-18, 6.45 whom they recalled today from their AAA, Rochester Red Wings farm team, although he obviously had joined the team earlier.

The 25 year old Dominican acquitted himself well, holding the Giants to one run, which was earned, on three hits and a base on balls over four innings of work. He notched a pair of strikeouts and threw 72 pitches, 42 for strikes. He left the game, replaced by Roberto García, and was not involved in the decision. The contest became a bullpen game for the capital crew when Jordan Weems replaced García after a 1-2-3 bottom of the fifth.

A walk to Thairo Estrada, Mike Yastrzemski’s second hit of the season, a single in his 21st at bat, and Patrick Bailey’s sacrifice line drive to center put the home team ahead after two innings of play. That didn’t last long.

Harrison, who had retired the first eight Nats he had faced, seven by strikeout yielded a two out single to Jacob Young in the top of the second. He had Young picked off, but the speedy center fielder took off for second and slid beneath LaMonte Wade, Jr.’s throw to Nick Ahjed.

Young repeated his robbery on the next pitch and crossed the plate at a more leisurely pace when CJ Abrams sent a 423 foot blast over the right field fence for his third home run of the season and a 2-1 Washington advantage. Two frames later, Young singled to center and pilfered his third bag of the game and fourth of the season and then scored on Abrams ‘single to right.

San Francisco knotted the score in its half of the fifth. Chapman led off with a single and, after a called third to Estrada, which the video replay showed to have been erroneous, was forced out at second on a dazzling grab and behind the back toss from shortstop Abrams to second sacker Ildemaro Vargas. Bailey’s single to right moved Mike Yastrzemski into scoring position, and Ahmed’s single to right, combined with right fielder Lane Thomas’s errant throw, brought the tying runs in.

Ryan Walker, who relieved Harrison for the seventh, was the victim of bad luck. After issuing a lead off walk to Jesse Winker, he allowed a broken bat Texas League single to Riley Adams, Both runners advanced on an infield out, and Tracy Lipscomb’s sac fly to the right field warning track brought Winker in with the tie breaker, making it a 4-3 game.

Dylan Floro set the Giants down in order in the home seventh, and Taylor Rogers took over for them in the visitors’ eighth, retiring the first two batters he faced, hitting the third with a pitch, and passing the ball to his right handed brother Tyler the Submariner, who got the frame’s final out.

Hunter Harvey followed Flores in the eighth, retired Chapman and Estrada before being forced to leave the game when he was hit by a hard line drive off the bat of Yastrzemski. Kyle Finnegan replaced him, walked Bailey, and got Ahmed on a fly to left center.

Back to back DC doubles by Winker and Adams off Rogers to open the top of the ninth netted a run and seemed to put the game out of reach for SF. It did, but the Giants didn’t make it easy for them. Jung-Hoo-Lee, greeted by loud and premature chants of “MVP” led off with. a sharp single to left.

He moved up 90 feet on another single to left by Wilmer Flores, who had pinch run for Wade in the fifth and remained in the game to play first. Austin Slater then pinch ran for the erstwhile pinch runner. Finnegan got ahead of Soler, 0-2 before SF’s DH worked a full count and drew a bases loading walk.

That brought Conforto to the plate. He quickly fell behind, 0-2, fouled off two pitches, took a ball, and hit a nubber in front of the plate that Finnegan fielded and tossed to Adams for the force at home. It now was Finnegan vs. Chapman. Chapman swung and missed. And then bounced into a 6-4-3 game ending double play.

Weems (1-0, 1.89) was the winning pitcher; Finnegan got the save, his fourth. Walker was charged with the loss, He’s now 1-1, 2.70)

Tuesday, afternoon, at 12:45 the squads will go at it. again. Southpaw Patrick Corbin (0-1, 6.97) will be on the bump for Washington; right Jordan Hicks (1-0 0.75), for San Francisco. The Giants then will fly to St. Petersburg for a day of rest before the Tampa Bay Rays on Friday the 12th.

Washington Nationals Start Off Series Hot With 8-1 Win Over San Francisco Giants

San Francisco Giants starter Black Snell got touched up by the Washington Nationals at Oracle Park in San Francisco. Snell pitched three innings gave up three hits and three earned runs on Mon Apr 8, 2024 (AP News photo)

Monday, April 8th, 2024

By Troy Ewers

The San Francisco Giants (4-7) continue their opening homestand with a three game series against the Washington Nationals (4-6)… SF is coming off its first winning series of the year after taking two of the last three games from the Padres over the weekend. The Nationals got a seven run win on Monday night over the Giants at Oracle Park with a series opening 8-1 win.

Blake Snell started his first game on the hill for the Giants at Oracle Park and first batter up. Jacob Young and he sat down on strikes. Only allowing one hit, but no runs that first inning. “[I] have a lot to learn. Facing big league hitters for the first time, I was pretty pumped up. There’s a lot to break down…..[I was] trying to nitpick too much instead of getting [it] over the plate…..There’s a lot going through my head right now, but I was pretty amped up, and I was trying to nitpick too much, [which] made the bullen have to cover a lot of innings that they shouldn’t have had to cover.” Said Snell.

The Giants got the first run on the board. Lamonte Wade Jr. doubles on a flyball, Jung Hoo Lee scores, 1-0 SF. 

Snell had back to back walks in the second inning and it required two mound visits, but Trey Lipscomb captalized on the rattled Snell and hit a line drive that scored Keibert Ruiz, 1-1. The Nats would take the lead as Luis Garcia Jr. singled to first and was still safe while also scoring Ildemaro Vargas, 2-1 Nats. Lipscomb steals home and Washington goes up 3-1, but Snell would get out the inning and that would be the end of his night. “I’m excited where I’m at, [and] how the ball’s getting out. I’m always going to get better, [and my stuff’s] going to get more crisp, so my first game, [I’m] happy it’s out [of] the way. [I have] a lot to learn from it, and [I’m] really looking forward to what I’ll be able to do Sunday [versus] Tampa. Said Snell.

The Nationals would pack that lead with a Lane Thomas two run homer and at this point, it seemed like the Giants were going to have to dig deep. 5-1 Nats. Vargas would hit an RBI double and drive in Joey Gallo and the Nationals were up 6-1 with a nail clearly in the coffin. 

Lane Thomas would end up with a 3 RBI night with a single that scored Jacob Young, 7-1 Nats. Tayler Rogers would come in with the bases loaded and get a walk and Nats would insure themselves an 8-1 lead in the ninth inning.

Matt Barnes would come in to close for Washington and other than a single for Thairo Estrada he’d knock down the side and the Nats would win 8-1. 

Next game in the series is April 9th with Josiah Gray (0-2, 14.04) on the hill for the Nationals and Kyle Harrison (1-1, 4.91) for the Giants.

Oakland A’s relocation podcast with Daniel Dullum: A’s still need FAA approval regarding Las Vegas Airport; Vegas fans are not excited about A’s coming

The air traffic tower under construction at the Las Vegas Airport in this Aug 6, 2014 photo. The runways for take off and landings front where home plate will face at the Las Vegas ballpark and there are concerns if the stadium lights would be a distraction for pilots. The A’s and the Tropicana are waiting for FAA approval in that part of the venture. (AP News file photo)

On the Oakland A’s Relocation podcast with Daniel:

#1 Daniel, our talk show host Jimmy Price went on location at the Tropicana Casino and Hotel and did a close visual of the property and intersection. He confirmed that this will be a tight space for a retractable and the two towers at the Tropicana will need to be demoed and as of the end of December no renderings as of yet.

#2 Also Jimmy mentioned that some of the retail, businesses and people who work and live by the strip do not want the A’s to come to the Tropicana because it will create horrible congestion and a ballpark at Las Vegas Blvd and Tropicana will be more of hinderance. Don’t forget the FAA has to approve the stadium as well as home plate faces the landing and take off runway at Las Vegas Airport.

#3 The other point that was brought up was this thinking by the A’s that they’ll bring in attendance by depending on tourism and visiting teams fans will travel with the team like they do for the Raiders. In baseball it’s been brought up whose going to come on a Monday or Tuesday to see the Royals or Pittsburgh Pirates at Tropicana Field very few was the answer.

#4 The A’s ballpark in Las Vegas may not be a destination spot for visitors in Vegas because the product of the A’s just won’t attract visitors from coming. If the A’s were to rebrand themselves as say the Las Vegas Blackjacks or another name then promote themselves as such much in the same way the Washington Nationals did when they left Montreal that marketing strategy might work but using the A’s and their colors it’s not going to fool or excite too many fans.

#5 Once again the non existence of renderings have fans and Vegas residents wondering what is going to work at the park. The Texas Rangers it was said did a great job of their design at Globe Life Field with their luxury boxes and and stadium layout to attract fans in Arlington. The A’s trying to shoehorn a park in the Tropicana that will be tight fit it might not only be the smallest park in the Majors but it could turn into the biggest disaster development mistake in MLB.

Join Daniel for the Oakland A’s relocation podcasts Fridays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Dusty Did it His Way

Houston Astros manager Dusty Baker (right) greets Texas Rangers manager Bruce Bochy (left) before game 1 of the ALCS at Minute Maid Field in Houston on Sun Oct 15, 2023. Baker announced his retirement from baseball after game 7 of the ALCS on Mon Oct 23, 2023 (AP News photo)

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Dusty Baker announced he is retiring after concluding the seventh game of the American League Championship. His team lost in seven games to the now-American League Champion Texas Rangers.

As a player, Dusty had a stellar career as an outfielder during 19 seasons with the Atlanta Braves, Los Angeles Dodgers, San Francisco Giants, and Oakland Athletics; he hit 242 home runs with 1,981 hits with a .278 batting average. In 1986, he retired as a player with the Oakland A’s, the team that showcased the Rookie of the Year that season in José Canseco.

Dusty, a gracious man whom I would often interview in Spanish many times, was always thinking baseball, and It did not surprise me when he launched a managerial career. I never met a player that said anything that wasn’t complimentary about Dusty Baker, the ultimate player manager.

I had the privilege of covering and traveling with Dusty Baker’s San Francisco Giants, the first major league team he managed from 1993 to 2002. I remember many conversations we had and interviews pre and post-game, especially during the first years of his managing with the Giants. He told me that “minority managers want that first interview, the opportunity to show what they can do.”

He won the 2002 NL pennant and took the team to the World Series against the Anaheim Angels, who won it all that year. He would continue as skipper with stops in Chicago with the Cubs, Cincinnati with the Reds, Washington with the Nationals, and finally, the last four years (2020-2023) with the Houston Astros, culminating with a World Series title in 2002.

During this 2023 season, he took the Astros to game seven of the ALCS and lost to the streaky Texas Rangers. In one Spring Training with the Cincinnati Reds as manager, Dusty introduced me to a young pitcher from Cuba named Aroldis Chapman who was then throwing at a velocity of 105 mph.

Dusty was an “old school” manager; not many left these days. After announcing his retirement from managing just hours after the Rangers beat his Astros, he is now free from the grind of managing, and his baseball on-the-field duties are done during a successful Hall of Fame career. Dusty ended #7 on the list of all-time winning managers with a record 2,183-1,862.

Only Connie Mack, Tony LaRussa, John McGraw, Bobby Cox, Joe Torre, and Sparky Anderson ended ahead of Dusty Baker. All these managers ahead of Dusty are in the Hall of Fame. If elected to the HOF, as he should, Dusty Baker will be the first African-American manager in Cooperstown.

Johnnie B. “Dusty” Baker will not have to deal anymore with some 25 year-old in the front office telling him about the science of baseball, known now as Sabermetrics; the analysis of baseball through statistics. We might see Dusty talking baseball on television, maybe MLB Network and such, but I do believe he will not return to managing, he has a lot of life left to live with his family, after all Baseball was his life, but not all of life is Baseball.

Felicidades Dusty!

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

Cardinals beat A’s again 6-2 to extend A’s losing streak to five games

Oakland Athletics’ Lawrence Butler celebrates as he arrives home after hitting a two-run home run during the seventh inning against the St Louis Cardinals on Tue Aug 15, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s continued their losing ways as they lost for the fifth consecutive game in St. Louis. The A’s gave the start to 30-year-old Spenser Watkins. Watkins was pitching for his third team this year. Watkins started the season with the Baltimore Orioles.

The Orioles traded him to the Houston Astron on June twenty-third. Watkins’ stay with the Astros was short. The Astros designated him for assignment on August eighth, and the ‘s signed him a few days later. Watkins was filling in for Freddy Tarnok, who went on the IL a few days ago.

Unfortunately for Watkins, the Cardinals’ first three hitters put three runs on the board before Watkins retired a single Cardinal hitter. Watkins pitched better, but the A’s offense failed to support him. The Cardinals went on to beat the A’s 6-2.

The Cardinals’ leadoff hitter Lars Nootbar doubled to get things rolling for the Cardinals. The Redbirds’ big first baseman Paul Goldschmidt doubled to drive in Nootbar with the game’s first run. Third baseman Nolan Arenado sent a Watkins’ changeup into the left-field seats to give the Cardinals a 3-0 lead.

It was Arenado’s 25th home run of the season and the 324th of his storied career. Watkins retired the next two hitters. Rookie sensation Jordan Walker, the hero of Tuesday night’s game, blasted his 11th big fly of the 2023 campaign over the fence in right field. The Cardinals led 4-0 after one inning.

The Cardinals tacked on another run in the fourth. Watkins walked Jordan Walker leading off the inning. The Cardinals’ catcher Andrew Knizner, filling in for the injured Willson Conteras, doubled to left field. Walker scored to give St. Louis a 5-0 advantage.

The A’s plated two runs in the top of the seventh. The Cardinals’ starter Dakota Hudson had allowed the A’s just three hits in the game’s first six innings. With one out in the seventh, A’s catcher Tyler Soderstrom singled. Rookie centerfielder Lawrence Butler blasted his first Major League home run to make it a bit closer as they trailed the Cardinals 5-2 midway through the seventh. 

The Cardinals scored the game’s final run in the bottom of the eighth. Cardinal shortstop Tommy Edman homered to put the CArdinals in the driver’s seat. The A’s failed to score in the ninth. St. Louis wins 6-2.

Game Notes: With the loss, the A’s are now 33-87. The Cardinals improved to 54-66.

The line score for Oakland was two runs, six hits, and no errors. The line for St. Louis was six runs, 14 hits, and no errors.

Dakota Hudson was the winning pitcher. Spenser Watkins was the losing hurler.

The hitting stars for the Cardinals were Nolan Arenado, with a home run and three singles. Paul Goldschmidt had two doubles, and Andrew Knizner had a single and a double.

Lawrence Butler’s first Major League home run was the big hit for the A’s. 

The A’s end the six-game road trip Wednesday afternoon in St. Louis. The A’s Paul Blackburn (2-3 ERA 4.52) will be on the hill looking for his third win of the year. The Cardinals will send lefty Matthew Liberatore out to pitch. Liberatore is 2-4 and has an ERA of 5.72.

The game will start at 3:45 pm.

Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason: A’s try and put sweep in DC behind them, Open series in St Louis tonight at Busch

Oakland A’s hitter Zack Gelof thanks to the good Lord for slugging a top of the first inning home run against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park in DC on Sun Aug 13, 2023 (AP News photo)

On the Oakland A’s podcast with Barbara Mason:

#1 Barbara, the Washington Nationals picked up their their third sweep in as many as their last seven series. The Oakland A’s fell victim to the Nats on Sunday in a Washington come back game 8-7 in DC.

#2 The Nationals down five runs came back to score six runs in the bottom of the ninth to defeat the A’s. It was the first time since Sep 3, 2019 that the Nationals had come back from run deficit when the scored seven runs to beat the New York Mets 11-10.

#3 Nationals manager Dave Martinez said that the Nats are relentless they don’t their out of it playing hard for 27 outs and said their never out of it.

#4 The A’s simply fell apart in the ninth inning allowing six runs to score as reliever Trevor May allowed three earned runs and three hits and two walks. May was relieved by Kirby Snead who gave up a hit and a walk.

#5 The A’s open up a three game series in St Louis tonight at Busch Stadium in St Louis. Starting for the A’s JP Sears (2-9 ERA 4.23) for the Cardinals Mike Mikolas (6-8 ERA 4.20) first pitch 4:45 pm PT.

Join Barbara Mason for the A’s podcasts Mondays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Nationals edge A’s for three game sweep 8-7 at Nationals Park; Six run comeback in ninth gets Nats win

The Washington Nationals celebrate after Jeter Downs hit a walk-off single during the ninth inning to defeat the Oakland A’s at Nationals Park in DC on Sun Aug 13, 2023 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

Sunday afternoon the Oakland A’s (33-85) finished off their three game series with the Washington Nationals (53-66) getting swept in three games 8-7 at Nationals Park in DC. Washington won the first two games of this series and the A’s couldn’t avoid the sweep. In Saturday’s game, Oakland had the lead going into the eighth inning but an ninth inning home run gave Washington a walk off win 3-2.

Sunday game recap: The A’s got going in the first inning taking a 3-0 lead. Oakland’s Zach Gelof hit a solo home run followed by a two run homer from Seth Brown.

The Nationals had one run in the first inning but the A’s continued to score runs. They scored four more runs, one in the third, one in the fifth and a couple in the seventh inning extending their lead to 7-2. Going into the ninth inning, the A’s had ten hits.

Zach Gelof had his second home run of the game in the fifth inning. He had three hits in the game and both Seth Brown and Aledmys Diaz had a couple of hits. The Oakland offense was clicking on all cylinders in this game.

The A’s had the bases loaded in the ninth inning with one out. They came away empty leaving three runners stranded. They were three outs away from the win in the bottom of the ninth.

A’s pitcher Trevor May would try to close out this game. He got into deep trouble loading the bases with one out. The Nationals scored twice in the inning. Washington brought two runners home with two outs and May was have a rough time finishing this game. He loaded the bases once again and he was finished.

Kirby Snead would relieve May and try to get that final out. With the bases loaded Snead walked Domenic Smith and Keibert Ruiz scored. The Nationals were within two runs of a tie 7-5. That tie came to be when Nick Allen couldn’t stop an Alex Call bullet and two runners scored.

This was a crazy turn of events for Oakland. In an unbelievable comeback the Nationals celebrated a six run ninth for a second walkoff in a row. The final out was the elusive out for Oakland, it never came. This was a disastrous loss for the Green and Gold.

The turning point in this game was of course the ninth inning. The A’s had the bases loaded in the ninth inning and came away empty and that was another huge factor in this loss. The failure on the mound was glaring and a lot of credit goes to the Washington offense as well.

Monday the A’s will travel to St. Louis for a three game series with the Cardinals. JP Sears will take the mound for Oakland with a 2-9 win/loss record and a 4.23 ERA. For St. Louis Miles Mikolas will get the nod with a 6-8 win/loss record and a 4.20 ERA. First pitch is scheduled for 4:45 PM.

A’s Give Up Lead In the Ninth-Fall to the Nationals 3-2; Fourth loss in five games for Oakland

Oakland Athletics right fielder Lawrence Butler (22) warms up before the game against the Washington Nationals, Saturday, Aug. 12, 2023, in DC (AP News photo)

A’s Give Up Lead In the Ninth-Fall to the Nationals 3-2

By Barbara Mason

The Oakland A’s (33-84) couldn’t hold onto a ninth inning lead and once again fell to the Washington Nationals (52-66) 3-2 at Nationals Park in DC on Saturday.

The Nationals got the first run of the game in the second inning, a fielders choice to third allowing Ildemaro Vargas to score giving Washington the early 1-0 lead.

Oakland took the lead with a home run in the third and sixth innings. JJ Bleday homered to center a 432 feet shot for the 1-1 tie. In the sixth inning Brent Rooker gave Oakland the lead 2-1 hitting s home run to right center field. The A’s had an opportunity to extend their lead in the seventh inning with two runners on base but left them both stranded.

A’s starting pitcher Luis Medina went 4.0 innings allowing four hits but limiting the damage to one run.

Oakland held onto the lead into the eighth when it began to unravel. With no outs the Nationals loaded the bases. The A’s relief pitcher Angel Felipe walked two runners and Jake All bunted. Washington tied up the game 2-2 when Lane Thomas singled and Stone Garrett scored. Washington left two runners stranded to end the eighth inning.

It was a three up three out ninth inning for the A’s and the Nationals were looking for the walkoff. It was a very brief ninth inning. Keibert Ruiz knocked the ball out of the park, a 391 feet shot to right giving the Nationals the come from behind win.

It was a tough loss for Oakland who came so close but could not hang onto the lead. It all came apart in the eighth inning and the A’s weren’t able to produce badly needed defense in the eighth inning.

A’s post game notes: Friday night the Oakland A’s began a three -game series with the Washington Nationals. The game started out well for Oakland leading 2-0 going into the second inning. It all fell apart for the remainder of the game for the A’s. The Nationals tied up the game 2-2 in the second inning. They went on to score in four of the next six innings winning the game 8-2.

Sunday the A’s will be looking to avoid a sweep in game three. Ken Waldichuk will take the mound for Oakland with a 2-7 win/loss record, ERA 6.30. Trevor Williams (5-7 ERA 5.00) will get the nod for Washington. First pitch is scheduled for 10:35 AM.