The Ukiah Daily Journal

A's look to bounce back from homestand

- By Jerry Mcdonald

The Athletics believed they had an identity after their first road trip. Now they're faced with a reset.

On the road. Away from the Coliseum. That may or may not be a bad thing.

As the A's embark on an eight-game trip to Minnesota and Detroit, they'll need to put a historic 0-6 homestand in the rear-view mirror after breakdowns in virtually every area.

When the A's charter departed for Minnesota Wednesday, it was their first time leaving the Bay Area since April 17.

After an encouragin­g 5-5 trip to open the season against playoff contenders Philadelph­ia, Tampa Bay and Toronto, the A's touched down in California secure in the knowledge they wouldn't leave home for 17 days, including two games in San Francisco against the Giants.

After going 4-3 on the first leg of the homestand against Baltimore and Texas despite some offensive deficienci­es, the A's split two games with the Giants in San Francisco and then returned home for three-game sets against Cleveland and Tampa Bay. They lost all six games — the first time since the team moved from Kansas City it failed to win even once in a homestand of six games or more.

The result? A 5-10 record in a 15-game stretch where they'd hoped to establish themselves as something beyond a stripped-down team headed for between 90 and 100 losses.

Add it all up and the A's are 10-15 and playing whack-a-mole with starting pitching, the bullpen, hitting and team defense.

It did little to encourage a skeptical fan base soured by a payroll slash, trades of star players, ticket price increases and the threat of relocation if the waterfront stadium plan doesn't materializ­e. The A's averaged just 7,451 for the homestand and 3,380 for the Tampa Bay series.

“We have to continue to learn who we are as players,” veteran Jed Lowrie said. “We have a lot of guys getting everyday at-bats who haven't had that opportunit­y before. You just continue to grind through it, especially on the hitting side.”

Rookie manager Mark Kotsay hasn't felt the need to flip a food spread or gather everyone together for a stern talking-to based on what he's seen.

“If it was a lack of effort, lack of fight, then there'd be a message that needs to be sent,” Kotsay said. “These guys are battling. This is part of the grind through the season. You try to weather the storm.”

Among the areas Kotsay, as well as executive vice president Billy Beane and general manager David Forst will be watching closely:

Lack of offense

The A's have been held to one run or fewer in seven of their past 12 games. They're averaging 2.4 runs per game in their last 11 after scoring at a clip of 4.7 per game in their first 14.

The hope is Ramón Laureano can provide at least a spark. He is scheduled to come off a PED suspension Sunday and will go immediatel­y into the lineup, probably in right field.

But the Athletics also have to be concerned about Cristian Pache, the center fielder acquired as part of the Matt Olson deal.

Pache's defense has been top tier, but he was 1-for-18 on the homestand and his batting average has fallen to .177.

If Pache needs a tuneup in Las Vegas, Laureano goes back to center field instead of right.

Kotsay says he thinks if one player gets hot, others will follow suit.

“You get that one big hit and there's a big sigh of relief, and the momentum is contagious,” Kotsay said. “You see one guy take a good at-bat and it just seems to fall in line with the rest of the group.”

Starting pitching

Frankie Montas rebounded from a start against Cleveland in which he couldn't hold a 4-1 lead to toss seven shutout innings against Tampa Bay. Cole Irvin, who has been a solid No. 2 to Montas, had an MRI on his sore shoulder, and it's not known if he can take his turn today in Minnesota.

Paul Blackburn has yet to show he can go beyond five innings, although he's been a decent end-of-rotation starter.

James Kaprielian comes off a disastrous first start in which he lost sight of the strike zone, and Daulton Jefferies gave up 11 hits in five innings in his last outing.

Complicati­ng matters is a doublehead­er in Detroit on May 10, when the A's will need to call up an arm from Triple-a Las Vegas.

The only dominant arm in the rotation belongs to Montas, who was rumored to be in the trade mix prior to the season.

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