A's sweep Tampa Bay by Jason Wojciechowski Monday, September 01, 2003, 04:13 PM
Oakland swept the Devil Rays by winning a couple of close games yesterday and
the day before. Seattle was busy beating up on Baltimore, so it was important
to beat a team they were supposed to beat.
On Saturday, Ted Lilly's pitching led the A's to a 4-2 win. Lilly threw six and
two thirds innings, giving up just three hits and a walk for one run while
getting seven strikeouts and ten ground balls. Chad Bradford, Ricardo Rincon,
Jim Mecir, and Keith Foulke finished things off, with Foulke getting his 37th
save of the year.
Bradford struck out Toby Hall to finish the seventh, but gave up a home run to
Marlon Anderson to start the eighth. When Al Martin pinch-hit for Antonio Perez
next, Ken Macha countered with Rincon, so Lou Piniella brought in Damian Rolls
instead, who knocked a single. Rincon struck out Carl Crawford, though,
bringing up Julio Lugo. Macha called Mecir from the bullpen, whereupon Rolls
was caught stealing. Good thing, too, because Mecir then walked Lugo.
Fortunately, he struck out Rocco Baldelli to end the inning.
Foulke's ninth inning was as uneventful as usual: he threw a five-pitch walk to
Aubrey Huff (showing that he's even economical when he's walking guys), struck
out Adam Piatt on three pitches, got a first-pitch foul-out from Travis Lee and
a second pitch fly out from Toby Hall. In other words, eleven pitches to get
out of the inning, even though he started things with a walk. That's
impressive.
The offense was back to its usual unremarkable self, with only Eric Chavez' two
doubles and a Scott Hatteberg homer to note. Terrence Long showed that the
eighth spot isn't the same as the seventh, as he went 0-3.
The A's pulled out a close one last night, apparently with the help of the
umpires. In the fifth inning, the A's scored three of their four runs. Erubiel
Durazo started things off with a walk. Ramon Hernandez came up, then, and
appeared to strike out when he attempted to check his swing, but the first-base
umpire ruled that he didn't go around. Hernandez eventually walked, and a few
singles, a sacrifice fly, and a double later, the A's took the lead for good.
Obviously, I didn't see the play in question, but when all of one time is
protesting as vigorously as the Devil Rays are, I'd be inclined to believe that
the A's got extremely lucky to pull out their ninth victory in a row here.
On the not-luck side, Rich Harden struck out ten and gave up three runs in his
seven innings, regaining the form he showed earlier in the half. Then again, it
was back to pitching against a bad team, so who knows what we can take from it.
Once he pitches well against a team like Seattle or Texas or Boston, I'll start
to be convinced that he can be something special. For now, he's a pretty decent
fourth or fifth starter.
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