The Mercury News

Canha gives A’s 10-inning win over Angels

His sacrifice fly helps the Athletics go 5-0 in extra-inning games this season

- By Shayna Rubin srubin@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

Exhilarati­ng wins at home are typically met moments later with deafening silence. That’s just a new reality: there are no fans to revel in victory long after the team has departed the dugouts for the showers. All the Oakland A’s successes, and failures, are less shared experience. Wins, more than ever, feel more like a simple means to an end.

Once “Celebratio­n” by Kool & The Gang faded out following Mark Canha’s 10th inning sacrifice fly that handed the A’s a 5-4 win Sunday afternoon over the Los Angeles Angels, this team could marinate on what they have accomplish­ed half-way through this strange 2020 season.

They also might have had to drink a little extra water. They’d played an extra inning game in undesirabl­e air that registered at a 168 air quality index at first pitch.

But, with that, they’ve gone 5-0 in extra inning games.

They’ve won 20 games and lost just nine, that’s the best record in the American League and second only to the Los Angeles Dodgers (22-8) for best in baseball.

A 4.5 game cushion lies between them, in first place in the American League West, and the Houston Astros. It’s been two weeks since Oakland swept the Astros at the Coliseum, the A’s dominant closer crowned his team the new “Kings of the AL West.”

And, the A’s are done with the Los Angeles Angels. The A’s barely took the series, 6-4.

Halfway through this season, it’s clear this A’s

team has the means to get to the ends they desire. But, they know they can kick themselves into another gear.

“Honestly, we haven’t been playing the best that we are able to play,” Frankie Montas, Sunday’s starter, said after the win.

After this 3-1 home stand, the A’s will embark on their longest road trip of the season: a three-series jaunt to play the Texas Rangers, Astros and Seattle Mariners. What have they proven, and what can they prove on this daunting trip?

MONTAS AND A ROTATION LOOKING TO CONGEAL >> On paper, the A’s have one of the best rotations in the game. But -because of the time it took to ramp up some arms and a few injuries -- that hasn’t come to fruition in practice.

Montas took the mound Sunday looking to bounce back from his worst career start in Arizona against the Diamondbac­ks. He was out of sync after missing his turn in the rotation with some upper-back stiffness.

He at least fared better Sunday. He had better command of his splitter and slider, striking out five Angels. But his fastball command was iffy. He walked three batters and struggled to navigate traffic through 4 2/3 tough innings.

“Just, still trying to fight for that arm slot with the fastball,” manager Bob Melvin said. “But better.”

Montas has already flashed some of his brilliance. Before those back issues, he whittled his ERA down to a 1.57 with back-to-back seven-inning starts against the Astros and Mariners. The goods are there, but he has less time than ever to get back into a groove.

Sean Manaea and Mike Fiers are also struggling to pitch deep into games. Manaea hasn’t been able to throw a fastball above 90 mph with any regularity, which won’t play unless his secondary pitches are perfect. Fiers said he still didn’t have full feel for his stuff following his fifth start. Chris Bassitt and Jesús Luzardo have found their stride.

Success has been found in spots, but can it all sync? CAN THE BULLPEN KEEP THIS UP? >> Liam Henriks isn’t necessaril­y better than he was last year. But, guaranteed the closer role he earned to start this season off, he’s been utterly dominant. His nine saves leads the league, and he’s allowed just two earned runs with 21 strikeouts in 12 appearance­s.

He wasn’t supposed to go Sunday in extras, but he insisted he could take on the 10th inning. He’s become an expert at extinguish­ing the new ghost-runner threat. He retired the side with 11 pitches.

We could run down the list of relievers to explain the bullpen’s strengths, but one stat from this home stand tells the story of their consistenc­y. The A’s bullpen gave up one earned run over 18.2 relief innings. They’re scoreless over their last 17.

OFFENSIVE STRUGGLES AGAINST TOUGH PITCHING >> For an inning, it looked like the A’s had finally cracked Angels starter Dylan Bundy. The right-hander had faced the A’s twice this season already and held them to just one run over 13 2/3 innings.

They got a little help courtesy of an error by Angels rookie right fielder Jo Adell on Marcus Semien’s line drive in the first inning. For a few minutes, the A’s were one step ahead. The same devastatin­g slider that crippled the A’s in previous starts, Bundy hung to Matt Chapman, who knocked it into left-center for an RBI double. Mark Canha’s single scored Chapman.

Two unearned runs was the most they’d ever taken from Bundy.

But, he mowed through the A’s for four more innings and two outs into the sixth, with his pitch count ramping into the 90s with a comfortabl­e 4-2 lead.

Robbie Grossman caught Bundy on his 97th pitch, doubling into right field. Then Stephen Piscotty tacked on his 21st RBI of the month with a single up the middle. Against reliever Mike Mayers, Sean Murphy eked a seeing eye single over second base to tie things up.

 ?? BEN MARGOT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Athletics’ Mark Canha, right, is congratula­ted after hitting a winning sacrifice fly in the 10th against the Angels.
BEN MARGOT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Athletics’ Mark Canha, right, is congratula­ted after hitting a winning sacrifice fly in the 10th against the Angels.
 ?? BEN MARGOT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Athletics’ Franklin Barreto, left, scores the winning run past Los Angeles Angels catcher Jason Castro in the 10th inning.
BEN MARGOT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Athletics’ Franklin Barreto, left, scores the winning run past Los Angeles Angels catcher Jason Castro in the 10th inning.

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