Marin Independent Journal

Things come together for Montas in final start

- By Shayna Rubin

The postseason picture clarifiedw­ithin a fewminutes Sunday afternoon.

First thing’s first: TheA’s beat the Seattle Mariners, 6-2, to finish off their regular season with a 36-24 record and, for a half-hour, wereun-tethered to a postseason seed.

With the help of Minnesota Twins loss, the A’s clinched the American League’s second seed and ameetingwi­th the Chicago White Sox in the wild card round, a three-game series to be hosted at theOakland Coliseum.

We at least have an idea of who will start for the A’s; Chris Bassitt will get to pitch against the team that traded him — along with Marcus Semien and catcher Josh Phegley — for Jeff Samardzija in 2014. Bassitt has said he relishes pitching against theWhite Sox.

In what game Bassitt may pitch in is unclear. Manager Bob Melvin won’t announce the series starters until Monday, he said. Jesús Luzardo and either Sean Manaea or Mike Fiers are set up to start, or at least appear in, the series.

Because he started Sunday’s game, we know there’s little chance that Frankie Montas will start a game in thewild card series. The performanc­e he delivered Sunday, though, could have solidified a spot for him in a seven-game series. Should the A’s advance.

“If we’re lucky enoughto move on, boy that puts him in a pretty good spot as far as the rotation goes,” manager Bob Melvin said after the A’s final game.

Yes, Montas’ performanc­e Sunday was that inspiring.

Even over the short span of 60 games, Montas managed to reach the deepest valleys and highest peaks. He started with a 1.57 ERA, then succumbed to

the pains of a back injury that threw his mechanics off kilter and sunk his confidence at the worst time.

In the final game of the regular season, Montas found himself again. Big time. He struck out a career-high 13 Seattle Mariners and allowed two runs, both unearned, in six innings of work.

Whentoilin­g inhisdeepe­st valleys, Montas struggled with his mechanics and his confidence. To turn things around, Montas regained his confidence first and the mechanical excellence seemed to follow.

“I just went out there and pitched. I didn’t care about what happened,” Montas said. “I’m going to do my best and throw my best pitches today.”

That took some manipulati­on.

“It just looked tome like the first couple innings he got upset and said, ‘Heck with it,” Melvin said. “A lot of times you get caught up inmechanic­s and pitch selection and there’s a lot of clutter. And I think he just pitched with some anger.”

With 97 pitches under his belt after a clean fifth, Montas looked cleared for a clean departure. But with Joakim Soria and Liam Hendriks unavailabl­e, Melvin wondered if Montas could squeeze another inning in. Montas beat him to the punch.

“Onemore inningwoul­d have helped, but the came in and, before I could say anything, said ‘I want one more,’” Melvin said.

Montas struck out the side in the sixth inning, leaving the game with 113 pitches thrown. It was his best performanc­e since he threw seven scoreless innings in back- to- back starts back in early August.

emotional

 ?? JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Oakland Athletics’ FrankieMon­tas pitches against the SeattleMar­iners during the first inning in Oakland on Sunday.
JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Oakland Athletics’ FrankieMon­tas pitches against the SeattleMar­iners during the first inning in Oakland on Sunday.

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