The A's followed my advice from yesterday,
taking advantage of the fact that Seattle lost again to Tampa Bay to increase
their West lead to two games by beating Baltimore 6-4. You say you want updated
playoff
odds? How does 78.9% (compared to Seattle's 52.2%) sound? It's getting
better with each passing day.
What won this game for Oakland? A little pitching, a little defense, a little
hitting, apparently. A note on the defense, first. The AP game story had this
to say for one of the reasons the A's won the game: "Fine defense from a club
not known for its glove work." If they're not known for their defense, it's
because people don't pay attention. Eric Chavez, Miguel Tejada, Mark Ellis, and
Scott Hatteberg make up one of the best infields in baseball, especially on the
left side, and running Chris Singleton, Terrence Long, and Jose Guillen (or
Jermaine Dye, back when he was healthy) out to the outfield every day will cut
down a lot of fly balls. Even Ramon Hernandez is well regarded behind the
plate. In other words, if you pay attention to who the players are instead of
Oakland's reputation, you won't be surprised that the A's Defensive
Efficiency is higher than anybody else's in the major leagues.
The pitching was mediocre by Oakland standards, as Chad Harville had a bad day,
giving up a run on two hits and a walk and throwing a wild pitch while not
getting an out and Keith Foulke gave up a solo homer to Larry Bigbie in the
ninth on his way to the save. Then again, Ricardo Rincon pitched the A's out of
the seventh inning mess, Jim Mecir got his one batter out on two pitches, and
John Halama allowed just two runs in six and two thirds innings to earn the win.
Halama didn't strike out anybody, and he walked two (which isn't bad, but it's
not great, either), but the key to his success looks to me to be the 14 ground
balls he got, compared to just six fly ball outs.
The A's bit players did me proud today, as Hatteberg led off the game with a
home run and was later hit by a pitch, Adam Melhuse hit a three-run bomb later
in the first inning, Long had a pair of hits (and guess where he was in the
batting order. Yep, seventh), and Ellis hit an RBI triple. Erubiel Durazo
appears to be slumping at the wrong time, as he had another 0-4 with a
strikeout, but Chavez and Tejada ahead of him got on base a combined four times,
so it wasn't as bad as it could have been. Tejada, it should be noted, walked
twice, giving him 40 on the year, which sets him up to have his highest walk
total since 2000. Chavez walked once, too. By pitches per plate appearance,
he's having the most patient year of his career. He's actually walking right
around the magical 1-in-10 ratio, with 53 walks in (by my addition) 537 plate
appearances. Take out his nine intentional walks and he drops to 44 in 528,
though, which isn't excellent, but isn't really hacktastic, either.
Baltimore and Tampa Bay switch places next, with the Rays coming to town for the
weekend and the Orioles going to Seattle. Then, after getting Monday off, the
A's go to Baltimore while Seattle goes to Tampa, then they switch places.
Oakland and Seattle's schedules down the stretch are completely mirrors of each
other, which is neat, and it also means that it really will be whichever team
plays best that wins. I think Baltimore can take one of the three games from
Seattle, if they're lucky, but I don't think the A's will sweep Tampa, either,
so I'd expect the travel day to come around with Oakland still on top by two
games.
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