Forget Moneyball - 2013 Oakland A's The REAL Story
OAKLAND A'S Official On-field Caps and Tshirts and Playoff Souvenirs ON SALE NOW
Joe DiMaggio once worked with the Oakland A's and Charlie Finley in the 1970s/80s and would be proud of the current team, which plays much in the style of the old Yankee Clipper....good old, hard-nosed, no nonsense , smart baseball. There are no big name stars, just a lot of eager, aggressive, intelligent fun-loving 'lower paid' players who are playing for the love of the game as much as anything. There is also a manager, Bob Melvin, who has upset GM Billy Beane's old theory that the manager doesn't make a difference, who took over a team that revolted against it's previous manager - and the coaching staff is second to none. They've gotten the most out of their young team. No help from modern technology, ie PEDs, like the cross Bay team. This is good old, real Golden Era Baseball like when DiMaggio played.
FORGET MONEYBALL - WHAT MONEY? 'Low Paid' 2013 A's The Real Hollywood Story
by Mark Purdy, San Jose Mercury News
OAKLAND -- The Hollywood producers blew it. Completely.
Perhaps
you saw "Moneyball" a few years ago, the movie about the 2002 Oakland
Athletics team supposedly composed of inferior players that shocked the
baseball world with the killer combination of creative strategic
thinking and Brad Pitt's extremely evocative close-ups.
Mundane stuff, compared with 2013.
The
current A's team is the one that really deserves to have a film made
about it. Maybe that will happen if the month of October becomes a
rousing final reel. We'll see if that happens, beginning here Friday
when the A's face the Detroit Tigers in Game 1 of the American League
Division Series.
To be sure, the A's of 2002 were intriguing.
Oakland Athletics players and fans exult as the last out of the game is
made against the Minnesota Twins, Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013, at O.co
Coliseum in Oakland, Calif. (D. ROSS CAMERON)
They had
a 20-game win streak and did break ground when general manager Billy
Beane (portrayed by Pitt in the film) started using statistical data to
make personnel and lineup decisions.But come on. Those A's did
not feature a stadium that leaked raw sewage; or an uncertain future in
their home city; or a relief pitcher from Australia who screams a lot
and grew up playing rugby; or a right fielder nicknamed "Hillbilly
Jesus"; or a powerfully exotic slugger from Cuba who obliterated the
Home Run Derby at the All-Star Game. The A's of 2013 have given us all
of the above. And then some.
"We do have some interesting guys," A's manager Bob Melvin conceded this week.
Not that many casual sports fans in the Bay Area would know.
MORE
OAKLAND A'S PLAYOFFS CENTRAL
There were a lot of great months in the A's 2013 playoff run,
but none better than the month of September, that saw the A's overcome a
2-game deficit to eventually win the Division and finish the season
five games ahead of the Rangers, who were knocked out in the play-in
Wild Card game. The A's played strong when it counted, and as Texas
faded, they took complete advantage; even Texas' end-of-the-season
winning streak was too little too late to dethrone the 2-time defending
American League West Champions, and that's why the Oakland Athletics
will be playing tomorrow.
The A's started September by finishing a sweep of the Rays, obviously
catching them, too, at their weakest point of the season. A lot of the
A's success--winning the Division with a full week to spare--came by
playing Texas and Tampa Bay at exactly the right time. Had the AL West
and Wild Card gone down to the wire with the A's still in the mix, they
would have had to win out to keep pace with the other teams, who won
the remainder of
their last games to get into the playoffs, even
briefly. Before the penultimate showdown between the A's and the
Rangers, the A's first took out the Rays, in game #136.
Nico has the call: Joe
Maddon thought he would try as many different pitchers as possible,
so the A's decided to score in as many creative ways as they could and
the end result was a 5-1 victory, a sweep of Tampa Bay, and just 1
game between Oakland and Texas in the standings as the Rangers come to
town. This left the A's just one game back, as they geared up to face the Rangers.
Unlike previous experiences with the Rangers, the A's did not waste
this opportunity, fighting hard to take two out of three, and climbing
back on top of the AL West.
Game one was recapped by Lev Facher, who coaxed the A's to a tie:
A
solid five innings from Dan Straily, home runs from Coco Crisp and
Yoenis Cespedes, and scoreless relief work from Dan Otero, Brett
Anderson, Ryan Cook, and Grant Balfour have the A's back in a tie for
first place. In front of 23,495 frenzied fans on a sun-splashed day at
the Oakland Coliseum, a few costly mistakes on Texas' part and a
nerve-wracking yet effective four innings from the bullpen gave the A's a
4-2 win, and seemingly all of the momentum in the AL West race. There really wasn't anything "seemingly" about it. Aside from losing the following night,
the game also handled by Lev Facher:
Well, the A's are back in second place. An all-around uninspiring
evening from the green and gold has the A's a game behind the Rangers,
making the rubber match tomorrow afternoon almost a must-win with three
games in Arlington looming on the horizon. Bartolo Colon was both
mediocre and unlucky tonight, while the A's offense stalled repeatedly
with runners in scoring position. The bullpen wasn't great, either.
Heard this one before?, the A's would strap on their playoff
underoos and decimate the rest of the month, winning series after
series. They finished the Rangers' series with a win, as
baseballgirl tells us, the game also marking the return of Daric. Barton.
The
plucky A's, winners of eight of their last ten games, shook off
yesterday's loss like it didn't even matter, and continued their trend
of stomping all over ace pitchers as they dismantled Rangers' starter
Yu Darvish and gutted the rest of the Texas bullpen to the tune of
11-4. The big blows of the game were home runs off the bats of Moss,
Donaldson, and Coco. Oh, and also: Daric. Barton. This tied the A's and Rangers for first place, with barely 20 games to go in the season. Hold me.
While Texas faced off against Anaheim, the A's tried once again to
make Houston their September cushion. They lost the first game; however,
and it wasn't pretty.
Lev Facher tells us all about it:
The
A's are back in second place, looking up at the Texas Rangers, after a
3-2 loss to Houston tonight at the Coliseum. The Astros have now taken
three of the last four games in Oakland between the two clubs, and the
A's once-perfect record against them has now fallen 12-4. Back
went the seesaw, dumping the A's into second place, again. But luckily,
the A's remembered they are actually better than the Astros, and this
is an all-important 4-game series, so they pulled it all together.
Alan Torres called the game:
It was necessarily pretty, but the A’s got it done today after failing
to do so last night. A.J. Griffin was solid early, swerved around in
the 3rd and 4th, and finished with a bang. Josh Donaldson and Jed
Lowrie provided most of the offense, with Chris Young contributing both
some bad and good luck. With this, and the Angels finally taking a
game from the Rangers, the A’s finish out the day in sole possession of
first place in the AL West by a half-game. The third game saw another A's win--guaranteeing at least a series split--as
Nico handled the recap:
Now
one thing you need to know about the Houston Astros that they will
never rest until they have made as many outs on the bases as they
possibly can. Barnes broke for 2B against Doolittle on a pickoff throw
to 1B, but made it thanks to an offline one-hop throw by Daric Barton.
So then Barnes -- with 2 outs, mind you, and Villar at the plate --
broke for 3B as Doolittle kicked towards 2B. Doolittle calmly stepped
off the rubber, fired to 3B, Donaldson slapped the tag on one of
Barnes' 83 tattoos, and the inning ended. The A's had a chance to take 3 out of 4, and they would do just that.
Lev Facher describes the scene in detail:
Brandon
Moss picked up the first Oakland RBIs of the day with his double to
left field, which scored Eric Sogard and Stephen Vogt, both of whom
reached base on singles. Yoenis Cespedes ripped a single to left,
scoring Moss, and Alberto Callaspo drew a walk immediately thereafter.
Daric Barton hit yet another single to center field, scoring Cespedes
and bringing up Seth Smith with two on and two out. Smith, who's
struggled mightily since the All-Star Break, broke the game open with a
three-run home run to right field, giving the A's a 7-1 lead that would
be more than enough for a win. With Texas losing more than they
were winning at the time, this series would mark the very last time the
A's ever flirted with second place. Taking a 1.5 game lead on the
Rangers, the A's never looked back; not then, not now. It would just
take another couple of weeks to officially crown them with the AL West
title.
The A's flew out to Minnesota for their next series (the first time
they had seen the Twins all year), where they dropped the first game, as
Josh Willingham had his way with the Athletics,
says Lev Facher:
The
A's lead in the AL West could very easily have grown to three games
tonight. It also very easily could have been trimmed to just one.
Oakland blew a late-inning lead in Minnesota, while the Rangers almost
pulled off a huge comeback in the bottom of the 9th against Pittsburgh.
In the end, the A's lead in the division held at two games, and I, for
one, will take it. The A's rebounded in the next two games, and
would win the series. Game 2 involved a lot of runs--all of them green
and gold--as the A's scored a total of 18.
baseballgirl explains:
In
what would turn out to be a much-needed laugher in Minnesota tonight
(minus one very large injury scare), the A's had the perfect opportunity
to play their bench, rest their starters for the day game tomorrow,
and win the game with little effort after their 10-run fourth inning.
With the Rangers' loss in Arlington, the A's have opened up a 3-game
lead in the West as they steam towards the end of the season, looking
to represent the AL West in the playoffs. Do you remember July 28th of
this year; the very height of standings porn, where we checked the
scoreboard to find the A's a full six games up on the Rangers? Barely 10
days later, on August 7th, the lead was gone entirely; the Rangers had
tied the A's for the Division lead. They wouldn't stop there; by
August 23rd, the Rangers held a 3.5 game lead over the A's, and things
were looking grim for our heroes. But something funny happened on the
way to September; the A's took on the powerhouses of the American
League and clawed back, and tonight they suddenly find themselves with a
three-game lead in the AL West with one more to go in this series
before taking on the Rangers head-to-head this weekend. The series finale proved that the A's didn't use up all of their runs the day before, as
Alan Torres starts to see the finish line:
Behind
another big third inning, the A’s took a lead they would both add on
to and never relinquish. A.J. Griffin had an impressive outing – but
of course allowing a solo HR, his only blemish – over 7 one-run
innings. In winning two of three games in Minneapolis and now up 3.5
on the Rangers, the A’s are in prime position to really make it hard
for Texas to overtake them for the division lead. With the series
win, and the Rangers poor play, the A's had opened up a 3.5 game lead,
just in time for the final showdown between the two AL West candidates,
with Texas needing a sweep to upset the A's. Despite the benefit of
hindsight, the West was very much in question right up until this
series.
There was a sweep, all right, but it wasn't Texas. Our plucky little
Oakland A's, battered and bruised, underdogs to the core, stormed into
Arlington and swept the Texas Rangers, all but ending the Rangers' AL
West hopes, and grabbing the title for themselves. It wasn't easy. Or
stress-free. Let's start at the first game. The A's jumped out to a huge
lead, and they ended up winning by a single, tiny run.
baseballgirl with the Friday the 13th call:
There
wasn't one moment in the first seven innings that I didn't think the
A's nine runs were more than enough to win. How can you blow a 7-run
lead in six outs? Finding out cost me a refill of wine, large clumps of
hair, most of my fingernails, and I'm still not sure my heart or blood
pressure would register within normal limits. Although the offensive
heroes of the game will be listed as the red-hot Cespedes, Donaldson
(whose father saw him play for the first time tonight), and Moss, the
true hero of tonight's game was Sean Doolittle, and by extension a
ballsy Bob Melvin, who left Doolittle in to close the ninth, where he
struck out the side for the all-important save; the only member of our
vaunted trio of late-inning arms that we really wanted in the game when
the season was on the line. The second game was equally stressful, as the A's hung onto a 1-0 lead all the way to the end. Trust me when I say that
never happens in Texas.
Or trust Alex Hall, who recapped for us, and our ownership of Yu Darvish:
Yu
Darvish just can't catch a break against the Oakland Athletics. He's
tried being really good, and he's tried being really bad, but nothing
seems to work when he faces the A's. He's lost all four of his starts
against them this season, and today's game marked the second time this
year that Oakland has beaten him by a score of 1-0. If you're going to
own any pitcher in the league, I guess you couldn't pick a better one
than the ace of your biggest rival's rotation. The A's completed
the sweep in much less dramatic fashion, but it was the first
single-digit magic number, as we counted down from
8 on.
Nico made the call:
Jarrod Parker was supposed to be the starting pitcher but he got sick.
Yoenis Cespedes was supposed to start but nagging soreness in his
shoulder kept him out of the lineup. That meant there was space on the
mound for Tommy Milone and room in the OF for Chris Young and Josh
Reddick. So Milone tossed 5 IP of 1 run ball to earn his 11th win, while
Young and Reddick were instrumental in the A's scoring, and that depth
may be all you need to know about why the A's are now a robust 6.5
games up on the reeling Texas Rangers with 13 games to play. Oakland's
magic number to clinch the AL West is 8. With an almost insurmountable
6.5 game lead on the Rangers, the A's left Arlington to go back home to
face the Angels.
I've said it once; I'll say it again, I'm glad we matched up against
the Rangers and not the Angels, because despite the A's red-hot
September, they
still lost 2 series to the Angels. This was one of them.
Billy Frijoles recapped the start by flu-ridden Jarrod Parker:
Jarrod
Parker continued heaving from the mound as the Angels teed off and CJ
Wilson quieted the A's hot bats. But who cares? Magic number down to
7! The A's would win the second game, with pie!, as
Lev Facher takes the magic number down to
6.
Coco
didn't get the walk off, but he did work a walk after an epic,
10-pitch battle with Kohn. That left the bases loaded for none other
than Daric Barton, who was essentially tasked with getting the ball out
of the infield, as the Angels brought Cole Calhoun in from right field
to play first base and spread the four original infielders throughout
the rest of the diamond. After taking the first pitch up and in, Barton
proceeded to take two uncharacteristically huge cuts at pitches, took
another ball to push the count to 2-2, and then took another huge cut
on a 95mph four-seamer that he didn't come close to touching. Josh
Donaldson came close to suffering same fate after falling into an 0-2
hole, but in the end, he did what an All-Star and MVP-caliber player
does — he hit a line shot to the gap in right-center field that Mike
Trout had no prayer of getting to, allowing Jemile Weeks to trot home
for the game-winning run. The A's would drop the finale of the
series, but as it goes, they still dropped the magic number after a
Rays comeback against Joe Nathan and Texas (foreshadowing, perhaps?)
baseballgirl explains:
Just
another day at the ballpark, where everyone collectively says, "Thank
God this wasn't the playoffs!" Whatever, it's a loss. They happen to
good teams over the season. More concerning however, continues to be
the bullpen struggles of first Ryan Cook and now Grant Balfour, who
have pitched a full season, yet need to be a whole lot sharper than they
have been, and they need to do it in about 10 days. But with Texas' loss, it didn't matter; the A's magic number was down to
5!
The A's played the Twins again, en route to reducing their magic number even further, now to
4. They would win the first game, as
Alan Torres recaps:
It was a wild game, but the A’s ultimately emerged victorious on the
strength of their second-half power surge that they showed off in the
sixth and eighth innings. In the sixth, pinch-hitter Alberto Callaspo
tied the game, and Jed Lowrie would provide the big blow, a two-out
three-run homer that for a time appeared to be the difference maker.
However, after the bullpen wobbled too far, and some BABIP help, the
Twins would tie it before Coco Crisp provided the crowning blow in the
8th, a two-run shot to wrap up the scoring for the evening. They would also win the second game of the four-game series, as
baseballgirl tells us:
Who
would have thunk it? The A's end game #154 with a magic number of 2,
which means that they can clinch the AL West as early as tomorrow. Of
course, since the A's play during the day, and the Rangers at night,
selfishly for fans, it would probably be more fun with the clinch on
Sunday. But I know no one really cares; all we care about is clinching
the AL West, and you know what? With a 7 1/2 game lead--the A's biggest
since 2006--they are on the cusp of clinching the AL West. Just like that, the magic number was
2. The A's would win the next day as well,
says Alex Hall, as they won the series, and would look for the four-game series sweep, and the clinch.
The
Oakland Athletics are the hottest team in the American League, and
even Mother Nature couldn't steal their thunder on Saturday. She did her
best to rain on their parade, but, after a two-hour delay, the A's
improved their AL-best September record to 15-5 with a convincing 9-1
victory over the Twins. Things were looking cloudy at the end of August,
but Oakland now finds itself one win away from clinching its second
straight AL West title with a week left in the regular season. Magic Number
1! And with the four-game series sweep--well, technically with a Rangers' loss earlier that day, but this sounds better-
-the A's clinched the American League West and became back-to-back champs!
Nico called this one:
Thus,
Sonny Gray took a 6-1 lead to the 3rd, as Kansas City loaded the bases
with nobody out in the bottom of the 10th. But Mike Moustakas popped
up. And George Kottaras bounced into a force at home. Oh noes! No
clinchies yet. By the way, the Twins got a couple runners on base
against Gray, so anyway...KC's Justin Maxwell crushed a walk-off grand
slam to eliminate Texas from AL West contention -- and moments later
Gray served up a 3-run HR to Oswaldo Arcia to put the Twins right back
in the game, 6-4. And the fans were standing, cheering, celebrating,
because the A's had just clinched the AL West. Perhaps a bit
anti-climactic that Gray gave up the 3-run HR when he did, but let the
good times roll! There you have it: The 2013 American League West was won, by the Oakland Athletics!
More games were played to end the season, as the A's tried to
overtake the Boston Red Sox for the best record in the AL, which would
have matched them up against the red-hot Tampa Bay Rays instead of the
vaunted pitching staff of the Detroit Tigers. Pick your poison, I
guess. The A's
won the first against the Angels,
lost the second,
and the third. They clinched home-field advantage against the Tigers
on game #160, playing the Mariners, no small feat, and no small difference. They lost the second game, and
lost the overall record to Boston the next day, but they would
finish the season on a winning note.
And now, here we go! A's vs. Tigers, rematch of 2013. Tomorrow night. Hold on to your butts.
Continue
How The (2013 American League) West Was Won AN Style - In August , July , June, May and April - continued