Marysville Appeal-Democrat

A’s beat Indians for 6th straight win

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OAKLAND (TNS) – It served as a snapshot in time of an A’s team on a roll, helping to ignite a 7-2 win Saturday over the Cleveland Indians.

Down 2-0 in the sixth inning and with Cleveland starter Adam Plutko doing a paint job on the corners, Josh Phegley came to the plate with no outs and Franklin Barreto on second base.

Phegley hit a twisting foul pop-up, with Indians catcher Yan Gomes getting in position to make the catch to the left of the Cleveland dugout.

The ball, however, struck a television camera, which protruded slightly on to the field of play. Gomes gave the camera a light slap in frustratio­n, not knowing that fate had intervened in favor of an A’s team which has won a season-high six games in a row.

Plutko (4-2) worked the count to 1-2, and Phegley’s focus was to simply hit a ground ball to the right and get Barreto to third. But the A’s backup catcher will gladly take what happened instead – a tworun home run to left field, his second of the season, which tied the game 2-2.

From that point on, it was all A’s. They added a third run that inning on an RBI double from Mark Canha, then broke it open with a four-run eighth inning

Bay Area News Group/tns Edwin Jackson gave up two runs over 62/3 innings in his second strong start since joining the A’s on Saturday as Oakland beat the Cleveland Indians, 7-2, for its sixth straight victory.

that included home runs from Dustin Fowler and Matt Olson.

“Right now it feels like everything is going our way,” Fowler said. “It’s fun. We do something special every day.”

Edwin Jackson, the well-traveled 34-year-old starting pitcher making his second start, gave up a pair of solo home runs in the fourth inning to Francisco Lindor and Jose Ramirez but nothing else to get his first win with his 13th big league team.

Ryan Buchter, Emilo Pagan, Santiago Casilla and finally Lou Trivino finished things up, with Trevino cleaning up a bases-loaded situation inherited from Casilla to get his third save.

The A’s are 46-38 and have won 12 of their last

14 games. While manager Bob Melvin thinks it is way too early to invoke thoughts of 2012 and a 94win season that won the American League West, he conceded the 2018 club has a different feel to it.

“It’s a little bit more of a group feeling than when you’re having placeholde­rs here for a year, looking for their next contract,” Melvin said. “It’s the way we had to handle it. We were looking for this group to get here.”

That home grown group does not include Jackson, whose career M.O. has been as a journeyman with good stuff and control issues. He once threw a no-hitter for the Arizona Diamondbac­ks and had eight walks.

In two starts with the A’s, Jackson has pitched 122/3 innings with no walks and 13 strikeouts.

“The times I’ve had success in my career and the times I haven’t, the walk differenti­al has been huge,” Jackson said. “It’s been ‘walk, walk, big hit.’ Those solo home runs are not two- and three-run home runs that change the game. I just want to come in and attack the zone.”

Jackson threw fastballs that ranged from 91 miles an hour to 97 on a couple of elevated pitches. He threw change-ups, sliders and kept the Indians offbalance.

“It’s like he’s got three different fastballs,” Melvin said. “One cuts a little bit, one sinks a little bit. A fourseamer that pulls out 96 when he wants it. Enough sliders and change-ups. A better change-up even than last time. It’s a really good look.”

Jackson, picked up on a $1.5 million contract and pitching in Triple-a Nashville until his start in Detroit on June 25, is enjoying the ride.

“I definitely feel like this is a special group,” Jackson said. “I feel like this team is underrated, it can do a lot of special things, and with the attitude these guys have, it’s not a surprise to anyone in this clubhouse what they can do. I’m just happy to be a part of it. I want to join the fun.”

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