East Bay Times

Melvin: ‘We just have to win ...’ today and two more to take series

- Dy whayna uubin srubin@bayareanew­sgroup.com A'S >> PAGE 3

The Oakland A’s are in trouble. With a 5-2 loss to the Houston Astros on Tuesday afternoon at Dodger Stadium, they trail the best- of-five American League Division Series two games to none.

To survive and advance, the AL West champions must win three in a row against an opponent that has yet to lose in the postseason. Only eight Major League Baseball teams have overcome a 2- 0 deficit to win a best-of-five playoff series, most recently the New York Yankees in 2017.

The A’s blew 2- 0 leads against the Yankees in 2001 and Red Sox in 2003. When Astros manager Dusty Baker was the Reds’ skipper in 2012, his team lost a 2- 0 lead to the Giants.

The task is arduous, but not impossible.

“We just have to win,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said. “We put all our efforts into tomorrow. And just think about tomorrow. Anything further than that is a distractio­n. All we have to do is win a game. Hopefully, that’s tomorrow.”

Baby steps, that’s what the

A’s hope to take. With their backs firmly against the wall, their goal to overtake Houston will need a narrower approach. Winning games requires winning individual battles, and the A’s have fallen short in nearly every facet in the first two games.

“We knew coming in this would be a dogfight,” third baseman Chad Pinder said. “They have great talent, they’re not going to just roll over. We’ve got to find a way to pull ourselves out of this. One big hit, one big inning. We have to find it somehow within us to do that.”

The big inning has eluded Oakland’s hitters. The same team that notched 16 comeback wins — and prides themselves on an ability to take cracks at opposing bullpens and erase late deficits — has been missing in action in Los Angeles.

Down three runs, the A’s had only one batter reach base in the final five innings — Marcus Semien’s leadoff single in the ninth inning that went for naught with Pinder’s game-ending double play.

Though their roster is built with the right-handers capable of challengin­g any left-handed pitcher, the A’s couldn’t consistent­ly drive

the ball against Houston starter Framber Valdez.

Davis got a hold of one of his few hanging curveballs, sending it over the fence in right field for his third home run of the postseason and second of the series. He hit two home runs over 30 games in the regular season.

Pinder, hitting third, hit another tape-measure home run for the A’s second run.

Valdez had his biting curveball working from the first inning. Along with his sinker and a changeup, the A’s rolled over most of his offerings.

“Early on our bats were better,” Melvin said. “Typically good starters get better as the game went along. You could see he was getting confidence as the game went along. He ended up going seven innings. I didn’t think at the beginning he would be able to do that, but he did.”

Valdez had 103 pitches over seven innings. He retired the last 10 batters he faced and allowed just the two runs.

The A’s pitching staff couldn’t keep pace.

Sean Manaea got the start on 12 days of rest, hoping for redemption following a disappoint­ing performanc­e in a wild- card loss to the Tampa Bay Rays last season.

The Astros found one more big swing than the A’s.

Two came against Manaea.

George Springer answered the A’s 1- 0 lead quickly in the top of the third. Sizzling hot all postseason and 6 for 9 in this series, Springer pulled a hanging curveball into the

left-field seats, the two-run blast putting the Astros on top 2-1.

The Astros hit Manaea hard in the fourth inning. In a slew of contact registerin­g three figures in exit velocity (105, 109, 107, 100), the Astros put traffic on the

basepaths, but fortunatel­y for Oakland came away with just one run.

Manaea came back to face the bottom of Houston’s order in the fifth, and Martín Maldonado chased him out of the game with a solo home run that made it 4-2.

In came Yusmeiro Petit, and Springer hit the reliever’s first pitch over the left-field wall for his second home run of the afternoon and a 5-2 Houston lead. With a confident Valdez on the mound, Houston could just coast from there.

“It came down to a few long balls,” Melvin said.

Both sides have shown the ability to hit the ball out of the park — with a little help from the hot afternoon air at Dodger Stadium. The separator is the Astros have had runners on base when they hit theirs.

Timelier hits are finding the more experience­d postseason team. Their young starter outlasted Oakland’s more seasoned one. Everything that worked in the A’s favor as they dominated Houston in the regular season just isn’t happening. In these two games, a division rival that has owned the A’s and blocked their postseason path the past few seasons had all that magic in spades.

The A’s broke through last week, winning two eliminatio­n games against

the Chicago White Sox to reach the ALDS.

Now, Oakland will have to stave off eliminatio­n three times in three days to keep this season alive.

 ?? ASHLEY LANDIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Houston’s Jose Altuve, center, celebrates with Carlos Correa in front of the Athletics’ Marcus Semien after the Astros defeated the Athletics in Game 2 of the ALDS.
ASHLEY LANDIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Houston’s Jose Altuve, center, celebrates with Carlos Correa in front of the Athletics’ Marcus Semien after the Astros defeated the Athletics in Game 2 of the ALDS.

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