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

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

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

By Lewis Rubman

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Ballers rally for six runs in eighth to beat High Wheelers 11-8 at Raimondi

Oakland Ballers are a happy group after getting the win over the Yuba Sutter High Wheelers at Raimondi Park in Oakland on Wed Aug 6, 2025 (Oakland Ballers X photo)

Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Yuba-Sutter High ‘Wheelers (2nd half:28-11,season 37-38) 012 032 000 8 13 3

Oakland Ballerss (2nd half:16-5;,season 51-16) 040 100 06x 11 10 4

Time: 3:11

Attendance: 2,288

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–You can always expect the unexpected at an Oakland Ballers ball game. This Wednesday night’s wild and wooly 11-8win over their arch rivals from Marysville, the Yuba-Sutter High Wheelers, was an especially surreal example of that paradox.

It began with your usual see-saw (or is it teeter totter) ups and downs with the visitors rising first when Evan Berkey smacked a lead off round tripper to left center off the B’s starter Zach St. Pierre.

The weight on the fulcrum quickly shifted in the bottom of the inning; the High Wheelers plopped down and the Ballers rose with four runs after the visitors’ Jonah Jacobs Jake Allgeyer, whose walk off single had won Tuesday’s come from behind thriller, grounded out to Berkey at second, followed by Cam Bufford’s double to l, weft, a walk to Lou Helmig, and Tyler Lozano, loading the bases. Davis Drewek unloaded them with a grand slam over the right field fence.

The tenor of the game underwent a qualitative change in the top of the fifth. Allgeyer’s error at the hot corner allowed Bobby Lada to reach first safely, and when Lou Helmig mishandled the ball, Lada kept on going to second. (Both teams solidified the PBL’s reputation for shaky defense.

All in all, they would commit seven errors, a wild pitch, a passed ball,and a balk. The combined pitching staff would hit four batters). Gio Brusa’s single moved Lada up another 90 feet, setting the stage for Berky’s second home run of the game.

St. Pierre then hit Mike Campagna on what seemed to be his back ankle. The High Wheeler’s catcher took umbrage at having to pay the piper for Berky’s blast and expressed his displeasure to St. Pierre. Before we knew it, the benchwarming Kirkland Banks and Cooper Hext, along with coach Billy Horton— who declares on his Linked In page, he ” I embrace the opportunity to be an example to others….”—were ejected. There was no announcement of the ejection or the reason for it. We could have strong suspicions. There must have been plenty of sound and fury on the field, but in the stands that signified nothing.

The fandom grew restless and raucous, but not , however, rowdy. Still, it had passed from having a good time while watching a ball game to having a good time at a ballgame. The crowd’s mood did not improve when Christian Almanza’s fielding error put Connor Denning on base and the Oakland first sacker’s subsequent errant backhand toss to St. Pierre allowed the aggrieved Campagne to hussle on to third.

At this point, manager Aaron Miles gave St. Pierre the gate and called on James Colyer to stop the hemorrhaging. St. Pierre had thrown 96 pitches over 4-1/3 innings, in which he had allowed six runs, five earned, on eight hits, including three dingers, a balk, and a hit batter.

Colyer closed out the fifth without suffering any damage, but he was less effective in the visitors’ half of the sixth . River Orsak drew a walk and quickly moved on to second on a passed ball, adding a new dimension to the chant, “Oh, Tyler Lozano.”‘ Singles by Brusa and Cuba Bss upped Yuba-Sutter’s lead to 8-5.

The B’s offense barely stirred against Cole Cressend in the fifth and sixth, or against Scott Ellis in the seventh, and the crowd was getting restless. It began to focus back on the game after Bufford and Helmig hit back to back singles to open the episode against Jack Martin, who had just taken over for Ellis.

Sam Drumheller, who would suffer his third defeat without a win, took over and didn’t give up an earned run. He did however, allow his two inherited runs to score, and he coughed up two more runs to batters for whom he was responsible. But those two tallies were unearned.

Lozano’s productive out on a grounder to second put the two runners in scoring position. Davis Drewek’s sacrifice fly to right plated Bufford and Randy Flores’s error allowed Helmig to take third and Drewek reach first. After Cobb drove Helmig in and advanced Drevek to third.

With the B’s now trailing by only one run, they, and their assembled supporters, were back in the game. Dillon Tattum pinch hit for Esai Santos and received an intentional walk. Esai Santos pinch ran for him. Almanza’s single tied the score by bringing Drewek home and putting Santos into scoring position with the potential tie breaker.

Danny Harris provided the crescendo, at three run wallop, and it was all over but the shouting.

Diylan Massuoka, who had replaced Colyer in the seventh and hadn’t allowing anything more threatening than a hit batter ceded mound duties to Connor Sullivan, who faced four High Wheelers and allowed only a walk, followed by a wild pitch, to earned his 13th save. Maetsuoka got the win and now is 5-1.

Before Friday night game, the B’s will host a Filipino block party with all sorts of musical and culinary treats. That will start at 5:00pm. On top of that, the first 200 fans through the gates will receive a free celebratory t-shirt. First pitch is scheduled for 6:35pm PT.

Oakland Ballers game wrap: Ballers rally for 4 runs to walk off with 7-6 win at Raimondi Park Tuesday

Oakland Ballers Jake Allgeyer’s walk off hit wins it in the bottom of the ninth inning at Raimondi Park in Oakland against the Yuba Sutter High Wheelers on Tue Aug 5, 2025 (Oakland Ballers photo)

Yuba-Sutter (2nd 1/2:8-11;2025:37-30) 000 006 000 6 10 2

Oakland (2nd half:14-5,2025: 51-16) 020 100 004 7 7 2

Time: 2:57

Attendance: 2,603

Tuesday, August 5, 2025

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–Your Oakland Ballers returned this evening for the second part of their back to back, home and home series against their arch rivals, the Yuba-Sutter High Wheelers. The local nine had taken the measure of last year’s Pioneer Baseball League champs, who had been based in Davis for the ’24 campaign, by defeating them in five of the six contests in Marysville.

The B’s won, 7-6, with a stunning four run outburst in the bottom of the ninth that wiped out the effects of their excruciating sixth inning meltdown. That unfortunate interlude had let the visitors turn a 3-0 Oakland lead into a seemingly impregnable 6-3 High Wheeler advantage

The Ballers held the upper hand for the first five frames of the contest. Their starter, Noah Millikan. kept the HIgh Wheelers off the basepaths until the third inning, when Connor Denning reached on a single. But he was removed in a double play liner to third. Millikan seemed to be tiring in the fourth, but all he surrendered was a single to River Osak.

The High Wheelers started to race around the bases in their next turn at the plate. Kirkland Banks led off with a walk. A sparkling double play provided a brief respite; Randy Flores hit a hard line drive that Tyler Best corralled in left, threw to cutoff man Tremayne Cobb who snapped a bullet to Christian Almanza at first to retire Flores.

Evan Berkey then homered to left, and Gia Brusa doubled to right, and that was it for Millikan. His replacement, Adam Bogosian never had any steam to run out of. He didn’t retire any of the five batters he faced. One of them walked, and the other four got hits, one of them an RBI double by Orak. The Baller defence contributed to the debacle, committing two chargeable errors, not to mention sins of omission.

That’s the way things stood, with Yuba-Sutter ahead, 6-3, until the Ballers bounced back like a Spalding (pronounced Spall-DEEN) in their last turn at bat.

The resurgence of the killer B’s came out of nowhere. The High Wheelers’ starting pitcher, Brett Woznik had held them to three runs on five hits and a couple of walks over seven innings, excellent work by Pioneer League standards. Mason Bryant had set the hosts down in order in the eighth and seemed ready to cruise to an easy save.

He began the inning by walking Cam Bufford, who at two for three, seemed to be coming out of his recent slump. Then he walked Dillon Tatum, who had gone hitless in three at bats. Esai Santos, a vital cog in several Baller late inning comebacks, pinch hit for Tyler Best and singled to center.

Both runners wisely refrained from trying to advance more than 90 feet. With the bases FOB (full of Ballers), Davis Drewek was called out on strikes. Two outs were all that separated Yuba-Sutter from a series tying win.

The powerful Lou Helmig pinch hit for Darryll Buggs. Bryant walked him, and Oakland trailed 6-4, the bases remained loaded, but Oakland was running out of outs, and Bryant was out of the game. Ethan Bates (listed as Joe in the box score) walked Cobb.

Now it was 6-5 as Oakland kept the line moving. Jake Allgeyer came to the plate, one for four so far. The count went to 1-1. Allgeyer singled to center. Buggs and Santos raced home, and, as the saying goes, the crowd roared.

Like every Wednesday when the Ballers are in town, is a Winning Wednesday at Raimondi. The first 500 fans to arrive will receive a commemorative cup and a poster. Everyone will have the chance to enter ano-cost raffle to a custom Green Day x Ballers bike designed by Billie Joe Armstrong. Game time is scheduled for 6:35pm PT

Oakland Ballers game wrap: Ballers KO Sky Sox 6-5 after 5-5 draw at Raimondi

The next homestand on Aug 5th for the Oakland Ballers will be against the Yuba City High Wheelers and it’ll be Bruce Lee night a tribute to the former Green Hornet TV star first pitch 6:30pm at Raimondi Park in West Oakland (Oakland Ballers image)

Colorado Sky Sox (2nd half:6-6,2025:15-44) 000 021 101 5 8 1

Oakland Ballers (2nd half:7-5,2025:45-15) 020 002 100 5 7 1 (Oakland wins in KO inning, 3-2)

Sunday, July 27, 2025

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–This sunny Sunday afternoon’s finale of the six game (aren’t they all?) series between the Colorado Springs Sky Sox and your Oakland Ballers felt like a return to normality. Sure, the B’s had to resort to a knock out inning before they could defeat the Sockin’ Sox , 6-5, but at least that side show, which has as much validity as a measure of a team’s performance as flipping trading cards, which, appropriately enough, were today’s giveaway, was an improvement over what we’d experienced earlier in the week.

Oakland’s Cam Bufford out homered Colorado Springs’ Christian Hall, 3-2. The game counts in the standings, but the official box score shows a 5-5 tie. So, how is this post game crap shoot different from Tuesday’s dreadful duel?

Time, for one thing. We had to wait for about an hour after the two teams had made 27 outs before we knew who won. Today’s wait took about ten minutes. And then there’s the matter of the happy ending, but that’s beside the point.

Today we were spared the bathos of sustained failure. Austin Coleman started for the Sky Sox on Tuesday.when he hung around for 5-1/3 innings, throwing 112 pitches, and all he had to show for it was 12 runs, all earned, on ten hits, half of which cleared the fence.

He started again today. His performance wasn’t stellar, but it was within the limits of an ordinary bad outing, especially in the Pioneer Baseball League, which makes the Pacific Coast League look like a pitchers’ paradise. Coleman went six innings today, threw 88 pitches, allowed four runs, again all earned, on seven hits, only one of which went yard,

And there was some sparkling defensive play on both sides today. The one that immediately comes to mind,—maybe because it’s the most recent and kept the B’s in the game— occurred in the top of the ninth. Matt Fabian had led off with a walk.

A pinch hitting Evan Sleight forced him out at second and advanced to third on Brett Robert’s double to left and scored the tying run when Quintt Landis doubled to left. Robert raced toward home and looked like a sure bet to score the run that would have put the Sox ahead. But he was thrown out by a clockwork 7-6-2 relay, Drewek to Cobb to Lozano. I don’t care what the PBL’s nominal level is, that play was major league.

The victory gave the Ballers their seventh consecutive series win. Bufford, whose post game batting practice exhibition put the game in the win column for them, and Jake Allgeyer were the only two Oakland batters to have multi hit games. Helmig, Bufford, and Allgeyer hit doubles, and Nick Leehey was the only Baller to go yard.

Oakland used five pitchers. Starter Gabe Tanner was mediocre, but the Pioneer League is no place to look for sustained pitching excellence. He went six innings and yielded three runs, earned, on five hits, one long.

He struck out four Sky Sox, walked five, and committed a balk. Dylan Delvecchio and Conner Richardson were effective in relief, neither allowing a base runner in his one inning of relief. James Collyer and Connor Sullivan weren’t.

The former faced two foes, one of whom walked, and the other, Robert, homered. Sullivan gave up the game tying run in the visitors’ ninth and would have yielded at least one more if it weren’t for sparkling work of the Drewek, Cobb, and Lozano trio.

The Ballers will be out of town for the next week, playing the Yuba-Sutter High Wheelers in Marysville. They’ll return home on Tuesday, August 5, to reciprocate the High Wheelers’s hospitality for another six games. The Tuesday game, with the usual 6:35 first pitch, will be Bruce Lee night.

Colorado Springs Sky Sox 5 (6-6)

Player AB R H RBI BB SO PO A LOB

Brett Robert cf 5 2 3 3 0 0 2 0 0

Quintt Landis lf 4 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0

Kamau Neighbors ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0

Christian Hall 1b 4 0 1 0 1 0 7 2 1

Zane Denton 3b 3 0 0 0 1 1 1 3 1

T.J. McKenzie rf 3 1 0 0 1 1 3 0 2

Kai Moody 2b 4 0 2 1 0 1 1 2 0

Omar Veloz c 4 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 1

Matt Fabian dh 1 1 1 0 3 0 0 0 0

Edwin Martinez Pagani ss 2 0 0 0 0 1 5 1 2

Evan Sleight lf 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Austyn Coleman p 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 0

Michael Byrne p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Adam Wibert p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0

Ethan Ross p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Totals 31 5 8 5 7 5 27 13 7

Oakland Ballers 5 (8-4)

Player AB R H RBI BB SO PO A LOB

Tremayne Cobb Jr. ss 4 0 1 0 1 0 4 4 3

Davis Drewek lf 3 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 3

Nick Leehey 2b 4 1 1 1 1 0 2 2 0

Christian Almanza 1b 2 1 0 0 2 0 10 2 0

Esai Santos pr 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Lou Helmig rf 5 1 1 1 0 0 2 0 0

Cam Bufford dh 4 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1

Jake Allgeyer 3b 4 0 2 2 0 1 0 5 0

Tyler Lozano c 4 0 0 1 0 0 6 1 0

Darryl Buggs cf 2 0 0 0 2 1 3 0 1

Gabe Tanner p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

James Colyer p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Dylan Delvecchio p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Conner Richardson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Connor Sullivan p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Totals 32 5 7 5 7 2 27 15 8

Colorado Springs Sky: E – Zane Denton. 2B – Quintt Landis; Kai Moody. HR – Brett Robert 2. RBI – Brett Robert 3; Quintt Landis; Kai Moody. Oakland Ballers: E – Christian Almanza. 2B – Lou Helmig; Cam Bufford; Jake Allgeyer. HR – Nick Leehey.RBI – Nick Leehey; Lou Helmig; Jake Allgeyer 2; Tyler Lozano. SB – Davis Drewek; Darryl Buggs. CS – Cam Bufford. (Source: oaklandballersbaseball.com) Umpires – HP: Bill Shortridge , 1B: Tony Prater , 3B: Jim Richins