Oroville Mercury-Register

Playoff hopes hang by a thread, minus key players

Oakland will have to make due without Andrus and Lowrie

- By Shayna Rubin

Every big league team must manage impactful injuries and losses, but the Oakland A’s have endured some of the more brutal injuries (and suspension­s)

throwing way off kilter their postseason pursuit.

Shortstop Elvis Andrus’s fractured left fibula and Jed Lowrie’s sprained hand will eliminate them from the remainder of the season and add to a litany of momentum-shifting injuries. The A’s season began to fall off track with Mark Canha’s hip injury in June, then Ramón Laureano’s 80-game PED suspension and Chris Bassitt’s facial fracture after taking a line drive to the face.

With just a handful of games left and postseason hopes hanging by a thread, how will the A’s make up for the roster holes?

ELVIS ANDRUS’S ABSENCE; WHO FILLS IN? » Andrus fractured his left fibula while running home to score the game-winning run in Saturday’s win against the Houston Astros. He’s in crutches and a boot, and will return to his home in Dallas to see specialist Dr. Keith Meister.

An ironman of sorts, 33-yearold Andrus played strong defense for 146 games at shortstop

in his first year with the A’s. Though his bat took a few months to warm up, he had a spectacula­r September, batting .338 with a .405 OBP.

Oakland has enough depth to fill the Andrus-sized void. Manager Bob Melvin said Josh Harriosn — who can play infield and outfield — will slot in at shortstop

for most of the remainder of games. Harrison wasn’t in the A’s lineup to begin a three-game series against the Seattle Mariners on Monday, banged up after fouling few pitches off his leg in a 13-pitch at-bat against Houston on Friday and hurting his knee diving for a ball at shortstop on Sunday.

Recently-recalled Vimael Machin was slotted in the shortstop role. Chad Pinder could also play some shortstop, he has primarily played against left-handed pitching, but is warming up at the plate and is strong defensivel­y.

WHO WILL BE THE DESIGNATED HITTER? » Jed Lowrie went from sharing second baseman and designated hitter duties, to full time designated hitter to the injured list when a left

hand injury kept worsening. With Mitch Moreland, at one point the go-to designated hitter against right-handers, out for the regular season with left wrist tendinitis, the A’s will start to pull other players into the DH spot.

Against lefties, Khris Davis should be the go-to DH. Canha could be slotted in as designated hitter against righties — he DH’d against Astros righty Brandon Bielak on Friday.

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