East Bay Times

Revenge game: Former White Sox Semien, Bassitt carry A’s.

- By Kerry Crowley kcrowley@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

If the A’s recover from their series- opening dud against the Chicago White Sox on Tuesday to advance deep into October, the theme of their postseason run will be revenge.

Starting pitcher Chris Bassitt, shortstop Marcus Semien and the Houston Astros guaranteed that with their performanc­es in critical games on Wednesday.

Bassitt tossed seven innings of one-run ball in an eliminatio­n game, Semien blasted a key two-run home run in a 5-3 victory over the White Sox and the Astros completed a stunning twogame sweep of the Minnesota Twins to advance to the American League Division Series.

A’s closer Liam Hendriks struggled in relief and likely won’t be available for the series finale today, but Oakland built up a big enough lead to survive late trouble and avoid a heartbreak­ing upset bid.

If the A’s secure a victory in today’s winner-take- all wild- card series finale, they’ll look back at the clutch contributi­ons from Bassitt and Semien against their former team as a primary reason Oakland will

have a chance to get revenge against a Houston club that was caught cheating its way through recent postseason­s.

A day after White Sox right-hander Lucas Gioltio silenced an A’s offense that appeared over whelmed at the plate, Oakland responded with two first-inning runs and added two more on Semien’s home run out to center field against Chicago lefty Dallas Keuchel in the bottom of the second.

Semien’s 2020 reg ular season numbers practicall­y mirrored the ugly statistics he posted back in 2013 and 2014 with the White Sox, but his home run to dead center was a reminder why Chicago’s decision to trade him in a December 2014 trade for former A’s starter Jeff Samardzija was such an illadvised decision.

It took six years for Semien to look completely comfortabl­e in the batter’s box in the majors, but his

breakout 2019 season made him an American League MVP finalist and gave Oakland hope he would remain an offensive catalyst entering the final year before he hit free agency.

Semien regressed in 2020 and struck out in a key spot on a pitch right down the middle against Giolito in the seventh inning of Tuesday’s game, but he showed why A’s manager Bob Melvin has maintained such a high level of confidence in him with one of the most important hits of the year for Oakland on Wednesday.

Semien’s sw ing gave Bassitt — who also joined the A’s in the 2014 trade that sent Samardzija to Chicago — the chance to pitch with a big lead and the right-hander took advantage of it.

Bassitt was the A’s most reliable starter this season, won the A L September Pitcher of the Month Award and outdueled a pitcher in Keuchel who was one of the primary competitor­s for the honor after the southpaw posted a 0.45 ERA in four starts this month. Against a White Sox lineup that crushes fastballs, Bassitt threw four- seamers, cutters or sinkers on 72 of his 92 pitches and the only run he was charged with came after reliever Liam Hendriks gave up a tworun home run to Yasmani Grandal in the eighth inning.

Given how A’s pitchers have performed in playoff games in the last decade, there’s no question Bassitt’s outing was the best by an Oakland starter since Sonny Gray threw eight innings of shutout ball in Game 3 of the 2013 ALDS against the Tigers. Considerin­g the win- or-go-home stakes of Wednesday ’ s game, Bassitt’s was arguably more impressive.

The A’s trade to acquire Bassitt, Semien, catcher Josh Phegley and infield prospect Rangel Ravelo made sense for an Oakland franchise that was slashing payroll in the 2014-15 offseason, but Chicago’s decision to part with a number of promising players in exchange for Samardzija and reliever Michael Ynoa has come back to haunt the White Sox.

Ba ssit t had a lready thrown 115 2/3 major league innings and compiled a 3.66 ERA at the time of the deal while Semien was a work in progress but a player with a high ceiling at the shortstop position. Committing to Bassitt over Samardzija in the rotation would have left the White Sox in a much better place, but the trade has hurt Chicago in recent years and never more so than on Wednesday.

If the A’s are able to build off of the win over the White Sox today, they’ll head to Los Angeles to square off with an Astros team they went 7-3 against this season. After talking all spring and all season about winning the AL West and getting revenge against a Houston club the A’s view as an enemy, revenge is back within reach.

 ?? RAY CHAVEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? The Athletics’ Matt Olson, left, welcomes Marcus Semien back to the dugout as they celebrate Semien’s two-run homer against the White Sox in the second inning.
RAY CHAVEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER The Athletics’ Matt Olson, left, welcomes Marcus Semien back to the dugout as they celebrate Semien’s two-run homer against the White Sox in the second inning.

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