East Bay Times

Kurtenbach: It’s a bitter pill as A’s fans know this team won’t stay together.

Too many pending free agents, not enough will to spend the money. That’s why

- Dieter Kurtenbach COLUMNIST

The A’s season, short and impressive as it was, is over.

The Houston Astros’ relentless hitting finished off Oakland on Thursday in Game 4 of the best- of-five American League Division Series. And typically at the end of the season, I’m keen to write a “they’ll-get-’em-nextyear” column — the promise of a brighter future.

But I can’t write something like that for A’s fans because yearover-year continuity is not a thing that Oakland does under team owner John Fisher.

And that’s what makes this playoff loss in 2020 so disappoint­ing, so heartbreak­ing, so unfair.

This was supposed to be the A’s season. This was the year the team had been building toward for half a decade. The 2020 A’s were supposed to be the exact right blend of young and old, experience and upside. And when they went out and absolutely dominated the American

League West this year, they hinted that things were, in fact, different with this team.

For A’s fans, all that hope got them were a few extra playoff games. They didn’t come close to sniffing the World Series. And adding salt to this fresh wound, their loss to the archrival Astros — who outscored Oak

land by 12 runs over four games — was comprehens­ive. The A’s weren’t done in by bad luck or a few fleeting missed opportunit­ies. No, they were simply smacked around by a team that consistent­ly contends for championsh­ips.

A team, it should be noted, that paid three players — including their Game 4 starter Zack Greinke — roughly the same amount as the A’s paid everyone on their roster.

If these A’s could run this roster back in 2021, they’d again be expected to make the playoffs and perhaps even take a step forward in their quest to win the World Series for the first time since 1989. The talent is there to expect further improvemen­t — maybe even a big jump.

But even with young, cheap and downright outstandin­g players on the books, the A’s are not a team that “runs it back.” Yes, they’ll have stars in third baseman Matt Chapman, first baseman Matt Olson and starting pitcher Jesus Luzardo on next year’s team, but you need other good, reliable everyday players around those tentpole stars to win it all.

And those are exactly the kind of players the A’s could lose this offseason.

Two starting infielders — including Marcus Semien, the thirdplace finisher for American League MVP in 2019 — will be free agents at the end of this year. Arguably their best offensive player (Robbie Grossman) this season will join them there. Two starting pitchers and three relievers — including perhaps the best closer in baseball (Liam Hendriks) — are now out of a contract as well with the season ending.

In theory, the A’s could re-sign all of this talent. But anyone who follows this team knows that will not happen. The truth is that the A’s will be lucky to keep a few of their pending free-agent players in green and gold for another year.

Does Fisher have the money to sign Semien, Hendriks, Grossman or even Tommy La Stella — or at the least sign players of a similar price?

Probably, yes. Even with no ticket revenue this season and the collapse of his family company, The Gap, the money is somewhere. Check the couch cushions — there’s probably enough money in there to keep a player or two around.

But will Fisher spend

the money necessary to give this team one more shot at winning a title? Probably not. There’s simply no reason to believe that the A’s ownership won’t play it cheap again — for the umpteenth time in a row — this offseason.

If Semien and Hendriks and Grossman — all top25 free agents this upcoming offseason — leave for bigger paydays, the A’s front office, led by Billy Beane, will do its best to try to replace that talent by tapping into their farm system and bargain-hunting expertise. But no one could reasonably expect those players to be better than the ones the A’s are losing. There are only a few teams in baseball that could argue that they do more with less than Oakland, but this is probably a bridge too far.

Yes, this season ending prematurel­y is disappoint­ing, but A’s fans deserved the opportunit­y to be optimistic about this team going into next season — to at least trick themselves into thinking that the progressio­n toward a title will continue in 2021.

Instead, they’ll have to wonder if this season was as good as it will get, knowing that it was nowhere near good enough.

 ?? ASHLEY LANDIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A’s pitcher Frankie Montas, center, hands the ball to pitching coach Scott Emerson as he is relieved during the fourth inning of Game 4 of the American League Division Series against the Houston Astros in Los Angeles on Thursday.
ASHLEY LANDIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A’s pitcher Frankie Montas, center, hands the ball to pitching coach Scott Emerson as he is relieved during the fourth inning of Game 4 of the American League Division Series against the Houston Astros in Los Angeles on Thursday.
 ?? HARRY HOW — GETTY IMAGES ?? Dejected members of the A’s look on during the ninth inning as the Astros beat the A’s 11-6, knocking them out of the playoffs.
HARRY HOW — GETTY IMAGES Dejected members of the A’s look on during the ninth inning as the Astros beat the A’s 11-6, knocking them out of the playoffs.
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 ?? KEVORK DJANSEZIAN — GETTY IMAGES ?? The A’s Matt Olson drops his helmet and gloves after striking out against the Astros’ Cristian Javier during the sixth inning Thursday.
KEVORK DJANSEZIAN — GETTY IMAGES The A’s Matt Olson drops his helmet and gloves after striking out against the Astros’ Cristian Javier during the sixth inning Thursday.

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