Boston Herald

A’s bullpen gets Familia

- By MICHAEL WAGAMAN

OAKLAND, Calif. — After three years of missing the playoffs and dealing away fan favorites like Yoenis Cespedes, Josh Donaldson and Sonny Gray, the Oakland Athletics are trying to steer themselves in the opposite direction.

They certainly took a significan­t step yesterday by acquiring New York Mets reliever Jeurys Familia to bolster a bullpen that includes All-Star closer Blake Treinen.

“You always want to be in this position where you’re potentiall­y adding,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said. “We’ve had three years where it’s been just the opposite. Three weeks ago maybe this isn’t a conversati­on but the way the team’s played in the last month put us in a position to be able to do something like this.”

Traditiona­lly sellers at the deadline, the A’s overcame a slow start and are in the midst of the wild card picture in the American League. They went into last night’s game against the San Francisco Giants having won 21-of-28 since June 16, tied with the Red Sox for the best record in the majors during that stretch.

An All-Star in 2016, Familia was 4-4 with a 2.88 ERA and 17 saves in 21 chances with the Mets this season. The 28-year-old right-hander struck out 43 and walked 14 in 40 appearance­s covering 402⁄3 innings.

Although the right-hander can become a free agent after this season, the A’s didn’t shy away from making the move in hopes of enhancing their playoff prospects this year.

There were reports that the two sides were close to a deal late Friday. Familia was at Yankee Stadium yesterday morning but left before the start of the Mets’ 7-6 loss.

“We thought he was the best guy out there,” Oakland general manager David Forst said. “Adding a reliever right now was the best option and we thought Jeurys was the best guy. We’ve been talking to the Mets for a while, and we’re happy that it came together.”

The move is a distinct change from what the A’s have done in recent years.

In the midst of a playoff run in 2014, Beane stunned A’s fans when he shipped the popular Cespedes to the Red Sox in exchange for pitcher Jon Lester. It was a move meant to strengthen Oakland’s rotation but had mixed results: The A’s made it to the playoffs but lost in the wild card round while Lester had mixed results and signed with the Chicago Cubs as a free agent in the offseason.

Four months after dealing Cespedes away, the A’s further angered their fan base when they shipped Donaldson to Toronto.

Last year Gray was dealt to the Yankees at the deadline, two weeks after relievers Sean Doolittle and Ryan Madson were sent to Washington. The trade with the Nationals netted Treinen.

Now the A’s are back in contention — they trailed Seattle by four games for the second wild card spot heading into yesterday — and looking to add rather than reduce.

“For already having a good bullpen, to be able to bring in an arm like this, man, it’s pretty significan­t,” Melvin said. “I’ll certainly talk to him before I say how this is going to be deployed as far as what innings for who. But this is a real significan­t pickup for us. You can’t ask for much more.”

New York gets right-hander Bobby Wahl, infielder Will Toffey and $1 million in internatio­nal signing bonus pool allotment for its closer.

“This trade hits three major areas,” Mets assistant general manager John Ricco said in a statement. “We got a major league-ready reliever our scouts recommende­d, a position player who was a high selection from the 2017 draft and strong prospect in the A’s system as well as receiving internatio­nal bonus pool money to help in the future.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? BIG PIECE: The next game Jeurys Familia finishes will be his 200th in the majors and his first not for the Mets after being traded to Oakland. The closer saved 51 games for New York in 2016.
AP PHOTO BIG PIECE: The next game Jeurys Familia finishes will be his 200th in the majors and his first not for the Mets after being traded to Oakland. The closer saved 51 games for New York in 2016.

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