Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Four A’s standout after week one

Oakland Athletics spring training: Matt Olson, Ramón Laureano among early standouts

- By Shayna Rubin

Matt Olson, Ramón Laureano, Miguel Romero, and Parker Dunshee among early standouts.

The A’s are only a week into Cactus League games. Many players have just a handful of at bats and innings under their belts. Most have seen no game action. Let’s face it, players are just starting to rev their engines.

But even in these quick bursts, some players have already shown glimmers of good. Here are four A’s players that are off to solid starts this spring.

Matt Olson

The potency of the A’s offense will hinge on a few things — Matt Chapman’s re-emergence after surgery, infusion of new talent such as Elvis Andrus and Mitch Moreland, Sean Murphy’s developmen­t and, of course, Matt Olson’s quest to redeem himself after a troubling 2020 season.

Take with a grain of salt that this takeaway is based on seven spring training at bats, but Olson looks far more like his 2019 self at the plate. A tweak with his swing he worked on during the offseason is paying off immediatel­y. Sometimes the quicker the payoff, the better — confidence­wise. His two home runs and one double so far have been loud, and also off pitches in the inside zone he struggled with last year.

“I’ve gotten to a couple of pitches early I wasn’t handling well last year.” Olson said Saturday.

“The past few games I’ve had a few inside pitches, the double I hit at Salt River that were on the inside part of the plate that I was able to work my hands well to keep it fair. Yes, it’s early, but its the best I’ve felt in spring. Having results early is a part of it.”

From film last season — in which he hit .195 in 60 games — Olson noticed his bat was far too horizontal, which altered his bat path and made him roll over pitches inside. So Olson is encouraged that he’s able to barrel some inside pitches in spring with a more verticalit­y in his path.

“My bat was a little too flat, just to be able to get to the inside pitch, I had to work around my body, which, when I’m spinning I’m not doing well and I roll over balls to the right side and ground out,” Olson said. “That good vertical bat and clean path gives me a chance to work through the ball and be able to drive it instead of just on top of it.”

Olson is hitting the ball hard, too. His first home run clocked in at a 116 mph exit velocity. His double clocked in at 102 mph.

“It’s been good to be able to see it,” Olson said. “I feel like my timing and rhythm is in a good spot for this early on.”

Ramón Laureano

“Eyewash” is old baseball terminolog­y for “fake hustle.” You might hear the word most during spring training, when players are going through

the motions of going-allout — running out ground balls, spending extra hours in the cages —for the sake of keeping up appearance­s.

Ramón Laureano doesn’t do eyewash. He’s making the same hustle plays he would in a regular season game, and it’s all in ernest. Take, for example, a routine single on a ball up the middle that Laureano turned into a double in Friday’s game against the Los Angeles Angels. He’s done that before in a regular season game, saying he notices outfielder­s sleeping through the routine and makes a mid-run decision to challenge them. It’s paid off both times.

With Marcus Semien gone, Laureano is a leadoff batter candidate this year. He may not have the OBP and OPS that a Mark Canha holds, but he makes up for it with aggression on the base paths. Laureano is also off to a sneaky solid start this spring. Add a triple to that singleturn­ed-double, one walk and a hit-by-pitch.

Miguel Romero

The A’s are slow-rolling their starters and bullpen regulars into Cactus League play. So we’re getting a good look at some of the A’s prospects in the early go of it. Hard-throwing right-handed reliever Miguel Romero impressed in his inning of work this spring against the Milwaukee Brewers. He hit a batter, but struck out the side on his slider while incorporat­ing a new changeup he worked on over the offseason.

While the bullpen may be too crowded for someone like Romero, he could certainly be key depth as a back-end arm this year and, more clearly in future seasons.

Parker Dunshee

Dunshee is another pitcher that may be on the outside of the active roster looking in. But the A’s will get a good look at him as an arm on the cusp of his big league moment. In one two-inning outing against the Brewers, Dunshee showed he

might be onto some significan­t growth and developmen­t since a tough 2019, where he held a 4.36 ERA in 130 innings with Double-A Midland and Triple-A Las Vegas.

The high pitching prospect dealt two scoreless, hitless innings with one walk against a lineup of Brewers regulars such as former MVP Christian Yelich, Kolten Wong, Avisail Garcia, Orlando Arcia and Keston Hiura.

“It was pretty much their starting lineup, facing guys that are pretty establishe­d,” Dunshee said after his outing last Tuesday. “It was good to compete against those guys.”

Noticing some bad habits on film, Dunshee reworked his delivery during the shutdown. With a new arm path, he’s attacking the zone more aggressive­ly — his bread and butter.

“I got back to what makes me a successful pitcher, and that’s attacking the zone with any pitch at any time,” Dunshee, 26, said. “Attacking the zone at both sides of the plate.”

 ?? MATT YORK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Oakland Athletics’ Matt Olson greets Matt Chapman (26) after hitting a solo home run against the Los Angeles Angels during the third inning of a spring training baseball game, Friday in Mesa, Ariz.
MATT YORK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Oakland Athletics’ Matt Olson greets Matt Chapman (26) after hitting a solo home run against the Los Angeles Angels during the third inning of a spring training baseball game, Friday in Mesa, Ariz.

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