Lodi News-Sentinel

A’s ride Olson’s walk-off HR to win big over Astros

- By Martin Gallegos

OAKLAND — Matt Olson thought he had a walk-off homer a couple of days ago that ended up bouncing off the wall in an extra-inning loss. He made sure that didn’t happen two games in a row.

After an exhilarati­ng comeback in the ninth to get the game to extras, Olson took Tony Sipp to a full count before unloading on a slider. He knew this one was gone, and even took a few seconds to admire it as it went over the right field wall and sent the electric crows at the Coliseum into a frenzy as the Oakland A’s walked it off in the tenth for a 4-3 victory over the Astros, keeping their hopes of overtaking Houston for first place in the American League West this weekend alive.

In a mid-August game that felt an awful lot like playoff baseball, nine innings weren’t enough to decide it.

The Astros appeared ticketed to a victory when Nick Martini doubled to the right field corner off Hector Rondon in the ninth, sending pinch-running Ramon Laureano to home all the way from first for a play at the plate as Carlos Correa took a relay throw from Josh Reddick and fired it to catcher Martin Maldonado. Laureano slid head-first into home and was called out, but immediatel­y rose up and urged A’s manager Bob Melvin to challenge the play.

All 25,535 fans in attendance at the Coliseum collective­ly held their breath as they awaited the ruling, and after about 3{ minutes, the place went to a frenzy as home plate umpire Alfonso Marquez signaled the safe sign, over-

turning the original call as the A’s had tied the game 3-3.

Matt Chapman smacked a two-out single to right field off Charlie Morton to tie it up 2-2, but that didn’t faze the Astros much. They wasted no time taking the lead right back in the sixth as former A’s fan favorite Reddick singled to left off Lou Trivino and drove in Marwin Gonzalez.

Trivino has been a rookie sensation for most of the year, but his last several outings have been concerning. The right-hander is getting hit around more often, posting a 7.71 ERA over his last six outings. The fastball velocity is still there, sitting around 96-98 mph, but Trivino appears to be having trouble finding the strike zone as he’s walked four batters over his last 4 2/3 innings pitched.

Edwin Jackson did his best to keep the A’s in the game. His two runs allowed both came on solo homers by Alex Bregman and Maldonado, as he managed to pitch out of trouble a couple of times before departing after five innings with just the two runs allowed on five hits and two walks with two strikeouts on 89 pitches.

The A’s blew a huge opportunit­y in the eighth when Jed Lowrie and Khris Davis were left stranded on first and third after both reached base to lead off the inning.

Astros manager AJ Hinch knew the A’s would be tough to keep down. He learned that firsthand during their previous series in Houston last month, when the A’s took three out of four, two of those wins of the come-from-behind variety.

“You have to keep putting pressure on them,” Hinch said. “They’re a good club. They’re very confident. They’ve won a lot of games. They’ve been one of the best teams in baseball for a couple of months now, record-wise.

“You have to control their offense. They’re really tough. They put the ball in play. They have extended at-bats. They generally don’t chase. They’ve hurt us with extending our pitch counts up with foul balls and making it really hard to get our outs.”

With a whole new bullpen that now features Jeurys Familia and Fernando Rodney in addition to All-Star closer Blake Treinen, Hinch said the A’s only became even tougher since he last saw them.

“They believe that they can rally late and close,” Hinch said. “They generally get the right matchups and now they have a whole revamped bullpen that’s very challengin­g when they get the lead. You have to get a lead like any good team — against any good team.”

—The A’s will hold a pregame celebratio­n in honor of the 2002 A’s team that won 20 games in a row Saturday, but a few notable players will be missing. Miguel Tejada, Eric Chavez, Barry Zito, and manager Art Howe were among the names missing from the list of attendees. Chavez is currently serving as the Angels Triple-A manager, while Miguel Tejada is in the Dominican Republic.

Howe, who reportedly had issues with Billy Beane for his portrayal in the “Moneyball” movie several years back, was invited and confirmed to attend, but canceled last-minute due to a funeral.

—Matt Joyce (lower back strain) took batting practice again before Friday night’s game. The plan is for him to continue taking part in pregame activities this week before sending him out on a minor league rehab assignment with a target of September for his return to Oakland. Joyce was batting .203 with seven home runs and 13 RBIs before landing on the disabled list July 5.

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