Marin Independent Journal

A’s rally to complete sweep of Arizona

Lowrie hit game-tying, 3-run homer at Arizona

- By Jacob Rudner

His shirt simply read “The Kid” in the upper left-hand corner, an homage to Hall of Famer Ken Griffey Jr. But when Oakland A’s second baseman Jed Lowrie’s shirt was pointed out during the Zoom call on Monday night, the 36-year-old took the opportunit­y to joke that it had a deeper meaning.

“I’m trying to trick them,” he said with an ear-to-ear smile. “They might think I’m younger than I am.”

On Tuesday afternoon, Lowrie was a force to be reckoned with as the A’s extended their winning streak to four games with a 7-5 win over the Diamondbac­ks.

In the top of the seventh, Lowrie blasted an opposite-field, three-run home run to tie the game at five. Oakland took the lead an inning later and never looked back to improve to 5-8 after opening the season with six straight losses.

Now in the infancy stages of his 13th Major League season, Lowrie will turn 37 on April 17. He and A’s

manager Bob Melvin have said on multiple occasions that Lowrie may not play every day, a move aimed to preserve his body and accommodat­e him as he gets deeper into his lengthy career.

There were no signs of age on Tuesday, though. Lowrie made his 12th appearance of the season in the A’s 12th game. He extended his hitting streak to five games and on-base streak to nine with two hits and a walk. The oldest hitter on the A’s roster has been their most productive this season. His 11 RBI are the most on the club.

Without Lowrie’s lategame blast and a go-ahead solo home run in the eighth inning from Seth Brown, who started at first base with Matt Olson sitting this one out with a bruised hand, Tuesday’s game would have likely had an entirely different outcome. Oakland left five runners on base in the first three innings of the game and recorded just one baserunner in the fourth, fifth and sixth innings combined. Entering the top of the seventh, the A’s trailed 5-1.

Between a lackluster showing at the plate in the first six innings and a poor start from Jesus Luzardo,

Tuesday looked bleak Oakland.

After surrenderi­ng three runs in the bottom of the second, Luzardo gave up three straight hits to start the bottom of the third, which eventually turned into two more Arizona runs and marked the end of Luzardo’s outing after just 2.2 innings.

Including Tuesday’s appearance, Luzardo has allowed more earned runs than all but one American League pitcher. His ERA climbed to 8.31. His WHIP sits at an unpreposse­ssing 2.00. It was a poor showing, but a quick look at how

for

the A’s starters have performed through 12 games this season reveals that it was hardly abnormal.

Entering play on Tuesday, A’s starters had a 6.14 ERA, the third-worst mark in the Majors this season. They also struck opposing teams out at a rate of just 7.60, the fourth-lowest in MLB and the lowest among AL teams.

As far as pitching goes, it was the A’s bullpen that played hero on Tuesday. After Luzardo was removed, Oakland relievers delivered 6.1 scoreless innings of relief highlighte­d by three excellent innings from righty

Doelis Guerra in which he allowed just one hit and struck out five. Righty Lou Trivino pitched a scoreless bottom of the ninth to earn his first save since 2018.

Outside of Oakland’s walk-off win against the Dodgers on April 7, Tuesday’s game may have been their most complete lategame performanc­e this season. The pitching held strong and Lowrie, Brown and others provided enough offensive spark to take the lead.

They’ll have a chance to keep their momentum going with a four-game homestand against Detroit starting Thursday.

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 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The A’sJed Lowrie (8) celebrates his three-run home run against the Diamondbac­ks with the A’s Seth Brown (15) during the seventh inning Tuesday in Phoenix.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The A’sJed Lowrie (8) celebrates his three-run home run against the Diamondbac­ks with the A’s Seth Brown (15) during the seventh inning Tuesday in Phoenix.

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