Porterville Recorder

A’s beat White Sox 7-4 to move Melvin closer to milestone

- By MICHAEL WAGAMAN

OAKLAND — An improving change-up that repeatedly fooled the White Sox hitters was more than enough to offset the stomach illness that bothered Athletics pitcher Sonny Gray most of the afternoon.

Another three-hit game from Jed Lowrie and four stolen bases by Rajai Davis definitely helped Gray feel a lot better, too.

Gray pitched six mostly sharp innings to beat Chicago for the second time in two weeks and Oakland defeated the White Sox 7-4 on Wednesday.

“He was sick all day today and to get six out of him like we did . he stepped up because he was not feeling too good before the game and he’s not feeling great right now,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said. “He’s back to looking like he has in the past, and a lot of it had to do with health. Now he’s back doing his thing like we’ve expected him to do.”

Jed Lowrie added three hits and two RBIS, Bruce Maxwell doubled in two runs and Jaycob Brugman homered to help the A’s to their second straight home win following eight consecutiv­e losses at the Coliseum.

The win was manager Bob Melvin’s 499th with the A’s and the 992nd of his career.

Gray (4-4) surrendere­d a two-run home run to Matt Davidson in the fifth, the only blemish during an otherwise strong outing. Gray gave up two runs on three hits with five strikeouts, and has allowed four runs over his last 21 innings — a 1.71 ERA.

“I think I’ve just gotten into a little bit of a groove, a little bit of a rhythm,” Gray said. “When I’m at my best I’m not necessaril­y going to strike a lot of people out but I’m going to get a lot of groundball­s, and I’ve been getting that a lot lately. I just feel like I’m able to do what I want.”

Todd Frazier also homered for the White Sox, a two-run blast off reliever Sean Doolittle in the ninth.

Lowrie singled in the first and in the third before breaking the game open with a two-run single in the fourth. It’s Lowrie’s eighth three-hit game of the season. Davidson’s homer was his 18th.

White Sox starter Mike Pelfrey (3-7) retired 10 batters and allowed four runs to fall to 0-6 in six career starts in Oakland. It’s the 10th time in 14 starts that the righthande­r has pitched five innings or fewer.

“I obviously killed the bullpen,” Pelfrey said. “We obviously didn’t give up, we kept fighting and I didn’t do my part especially going up against somebody like Sonny Gray on the other side.”

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