A’s go right back to losing ways
Oakland drops first road game, now moves to 1-7
After taking a brief respite on Wednesday, the Oakland A’s went right back to their losing ways in a 6-2 loss to the Houston Astros on Thursday in front of a half-packed house at Minute Maid Park.
The A’s move to 1-7 on the season, tacking their first road loss onto their worst home stand of more than three games since they went 1-8 in the first home stand of the 2001 season. It may provide some solitude to know, then, that that 2001 team that featured the Big Three, Miguel Tejada,
Eric Chavez and Jason Giambi went on to win 102 games that season. That 2001 team went 2-10 to start the year.
Like this 2021 A’s team, the 2001 club had a somewhat difficult schedule to start the season that included six games within the first two weeks against a Seattle Mariners team that would go on to win 116 games. The current A’s team has struggled mightily, now facing their division foe for a fifth time in eight games along with the defending World Series
champion Los Angeles Dodgers for three.
A road trip didn’t change the A’s losing pattern. And the ugly numbers will only start to build as taller hurdles the A’s will need to clear if they want to repeat as division champions. If they continue to play like this — the team is adamant they’re playing nowhere near their standards — that quest will only grow dimmer. Especially after handing five wins to their strongest division rival.
Left-handed starter Cole Irvin held his own against one of the league’s toughest lineups, allowing two runs through the first five innings. Carlos Correa hit an opposite field home run in the second inning and struck again in his next at-bat, firing an RBI double.