Calgary Herald

No deficit is too big for A’s to overcome

Surging Oakland has 31 comeback wins and is now challengin­g for AL West lead

- JANIE MCCAULEY

OAKLAND, CALIF. By now, most everyone in baseball realizes the Oakland Athletics are rarely out of it. Almost no deficit is too daunting for a rallying cry, which could be led by any number of sluggers in a loaded lineup.

Never before in his managerial career has Bob Melvin been around a club with such a knack for comebacks, for winning the close ones in the late innings despite what might seem insurmount­able odds.

Lately, other teams in contention have added to their rosters to try to do the same down the stretch.

During a recent trip in Texas, the A’s rallied from an eight-run deficit to beat the Rangers 13-10 by scoring 11 runs over the final four innings and getting a three-run homer by Khris Davis in the 10th. They have earned a reputation around baseball for their ability to keep swinging for the fences and pitch when trailing at any stage of a game.

“I think it’s a momentum aspect,” Davis said. “You’ve just got to keep playing the game the right way, what we expect of each other. We’re just looking to do our jobs and luckily we’re having a great time doing it right now.”

Oakland is right on the heels of reigning World Series champion Houston in the AL West, the A’s trailing the Astros by five games going into their day off Thursday. The small-budget franchise hasn’t reached the playoffs since losing the AL wild-card game in 2014, finishing last in the division the last three seasons.

“It’s a fantastic team. We certainly have the ability to be a playoff team,” second baseman Jed Lowrie said. “At this point it’s got to be a narrow focus. Keep the eye on the prize, but narrow the focus.”

The A’s didn’t get their 60th win until Sept. 8 last year, but reached that mark this year on July 25.

They were 27-7 since June 16 before being swept in a three-game weekend series at Colorado from July 27-29, then swept the Blue Jays and Tigers in back-to-back series.

New Oakland reliever Shawn Kelley was playing in Washington and went to bed before the A’s were done most days, but still had heard plenty about their penchant for finding a way to win late.

“Winning close games and not winning games late, I think all that mindset, that mentality kind of manifests itself,” said Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, on the losing end of a one-run game Wednesday at Oakland. “These guys, with their bullpen, you look at these arms that they ’re running out, they have four or five guys deep that are lockdown guys in the pen, so if and when they do get a lead early it’s tough to beat these guys late. And because they can all slug, that they’re a two- or three-run home run away from tying or taking the lead. It’s a tough group and it’s a fun group to watch, it really is. They ’re a dangerous team.”

Melvin has a deep bullpen that allows him flexibilit­y to mix and match at any point in a game.

“I don’t know if I’ve had this many quality arms in a bullpen ever since I’ve been managing,” he said.

Oakland’s late-inning numbers are phenomenal.

The A’s have 31 comeback wins and are the only team in baseball not to lose when leading after seven innings — 46-0 — and have a 61-game winning streak in such contests.

Oakland is 55-0 when leading after eight innings, while Seattle

Once you’ve done it, you know you can do it and you can do it again and you start feeling it. You believe it.

(57-0) is the only other team not to lose when ahead after eight.

The A’s are best in the majors scoring runs in the seventh inning or after with 217 and the eighth inning at 87. They also lead the majors with 10 comeback wins trailing after seven innings. At 22-9 in one-run games, that is also the best record in the majors.

Some managers believe it can become contagious.

“Once you’ve done it, you know you can do it and you can do it again and you start feeling it,” Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. “You believe it. Without question, I think having success in close games just breeds more success, especially the way you play and handle the pressure of playing in those tight ball games.”

The A’s have a noticeable swagger having won so many games in dramatic fashion.

“It just gives you that extra confidence when you get behind; you don’t worry about it,” Detroit manager Ron Gardenhire said.

It’s pretty simple in Melvin’s mind: stick with it, play every out.

Though he knows that means making the right moves with the pressure on to pull off some lategame magic.

“If you keep it close ... all it takes is a walk or a hit or a couple of hits in a row and you’re back in the game,” Melvin said. “That’s why you play 27 outs.”

 ?? JEFF CHIU/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Oakland A’s didn’t get their 60th win until Sept. 8 last year, but reached that mark this season on July 25.
JEFF CHIU/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Oakland A’s didn’t get their 60th win until Sept. 8 last year, but reached that mark this season on July 25.

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