Gio Gonzalez may not handle a 6-0 lead very well, but honestly the best solution to this concern is not to give up 3-run HRs in the first inning. That’s what Gio did in his major league debut and it’s what he did again tonight. Following a walk and what was ruled an error when Aaron Cunningham slipped on the wet warning track and dropped a long fly ball, Billy Butler launched a 3-run bomb, the first of three hits that produced four RBI. Butler came in with a .984 OPS against LHP (.614 against RHP).
Meanwhile, the A’s not only continue to make a lot of outs, they also continue to fail at making the right ones at the right time. Trailing 3-1 in the 2nd inning with Barton at third and one out, Jack Hannahan struck out. Trailing 4-2 in the 5th inning with runners at second and third and one out, Rajai Davis bounced to third. I don’t like the notion of “manufacturing runs” so much as I favor the notion of “finding runs” – throughout the course of a game a team will usually find itself with some scoring opportunities and the trick is to carpe the diem when those chances present themselves. It’s better not to make outs at all, sure, but when you’re a lousy hitting team sometimes you have to set your goals realistically – if the A’s are going to be last in the league in hitting, and are not going to be big power threats either, at least they could get really good at scoring the runs that can be scored on outs.
On the pitching side, what can you say when your pitcher is Jack Cust: a lot of walks and HRs? This has been a problem for Greg Smith and it’s an issue for Gio Gonzalez as well. Gio threw 95 pitches in four innings, surrendering 3 walks and two HRs. Not so good – even though the HRs were the only two hits Gio allowed. On the plus side, lefty Josh Outman made his major league debut and tossed two scoreless innings, showing a fastball that sounded about 94-96 MPH.
Finally, it must be September because Daric Barton looked like a batting champion tonight, pounding a HR, triple, and single and driving home both A’s runs. I’ve heard of “second-half players” but this is ridiculous – at least give us August too, pool boy!
0 recs | 48 comments
Wow
Flashfire - September 2, 2008
+1
They shoulda charged that error to the grounds crew
Technotofu - September 2, 2008
I thought you meant, "Wow, high scoring game - the Tigers' bullpen really sucks!"
Which it does.
Nico - September 2, 2008
My reaction was
Wow, “Cunningham” looks a lot longer on the uniform than I would have thought.
nevermoor - September 2, 2008
Rajai is very, very small
monkeyball - September 3, 2008
Holy cow.
Yeah, that shouldn’t be allowed.
whiteshoes40 - September 2, 2008
I didn't know we signed Michael Phelps!
FreeSeatUpgrade - September 2, 2008
"Finally, it must be September because Daric Barton looked like a batting champion tonight"
QOTM for September Nico………..
Everyone loves the pool boy on a hot day, right?
mrod - September 2, 2008
He can still salvage what has been a disappointing season
with a great September. Before tonight’s game his OPS was .629. If he can get it above .700 by the end of the year, I’ll be very happy (not overall, but with the way he turned things around this month).
thejd44 - September 2, 2008
Someone tell Daric, "No diving on the warning track!"
Nico - September 2, 2008
I think the warning track in KC tonight was deeper than the pool he dove into
thejd44 - September 2, 2008
So was the s*** Gio was in by the fourth batter
Nico - September 2, 2008
Thoughts on Gio so far?
After, what… 6 starts?
Called up too soon? Bad luck? Still learning, but ok?
???
UncleLeo - September 2, 2008
Called up too soon
Still learning of course.
Sure wish the fastball had more zip on it.
Hope he rebounds because he has had quite a few less than adequate outings in a row.
As long as it doesn’t damage his confidence, then hopefully he will be OK. I didn’t watch much tonight but he seems to be in deep do do when he falls behind because of his average fastball.
Outman had a good OUTing so that was good.
Trainman - September 2, 2008
He's struggled early on at every level he's tackled recently
I doubt he’ll suddenly “snap out of it” and be fine, but I’d expect gradual improvement.
PaulThomas - September 2, 2008
The only real concern at this point is that getting beaten a few times will somehow hurt him
But, like you said, he’s struggled like this in the past and survived. It’s not like this is his first time failing at a higher level.
thejd44 - September 2, 2008
So you're saying
He won’t suffer a case of the Bartons?
nevermoor - September 2, 2008
Well, I'm not sure Barton's problem is confidence
I think he’s trying to tinker too much and getting away from what made him successful. There’s a fine line between necessary adjustments and too much changing what makes you a good player and I think Barton crossed it.
thejd44 - September 2, 2008
I meant more
“first time failing at a higher level”
But I agree that the problem isn’t necessarily confidence.
nevermoor - September 2, 2008
I haven't seen anything to suggest a shaken confidence, but...
that is my biggest fear for him.
UncleLeo - September 3, 2008
I agree Nico ...
this team is horrible at bringing in runners from third with less than two outs.
The disturbing thing is, it seems as if this is a problem for us every year. I will never understand how the A’s make something that ought to be so routine, so difficult.
Vacafan - September 2, 2008
I think it's two different problems
In years past, the A’s got a lot of guys on base, and more guys on base means more left on base. This is espeically try when a team walks a lot. A team can have a runner on third with 1 out, have two straight successful at bats (walks), a double play grounder, and nobody scores. It sucks, but it’s not necessarily that the entire team doesn’t know how to bat w/RISP or something.
This year, a lot of the guys just sorta suck at playing major league baseball.
thejd44 - September 2, 2008
This comment (and the original gripe in the thread) is as wrong now as it was the last time it was made
I know there have been at least two prior game threads in which someone or other claimed that the A’s were uniquely bad with runners on third and less than 2 outs. It was preposterous then, as 2 minutes’ research at baseball-reference could tell you. It is still preposterous now.
This topic should be a conversational non-starter at this point. I mean, there are enough things to complain about with this team. It’s hardly necessary to invent more of them.
Teams have bad games with RISP. It is going to happen in a long season. Considering the parlous state of their offense, the A’s have had FEWER of those games than one would expect.
PaulThomas - September 2, 2008
But I saw it today
Therefore it has been a problem for over a decade.
nevermoor - September 2, 2008
This projection is not about issues
This projection is about a composite view of what people take away from these ballplayers.
monkeyball - September 3, 2008
Theoretically
The A’s get me on base via walks, not hits, and it’s hits that drive in runs.
But in point of fact
-didn’t the A’s enjoy a great RISP average early in the season?And
-at the Minnesota game last week, looking at the Twins’ batting averages vs. the A’s, I noticed that there was exactly one guy in the A’s line-up, Kurt Suzuki, with an average higher than the guy on the Twins with the lowest average.The A’s can’t hit. Got nothing to do with RISP.
richwol1 - September 2, 2008
wow...
this place is like a dead zone. Both on the wraps and the
diariesfanposts. I wonder why that is? Prolly, just a crappy A’s team.FoolshGame22 - September 3, 2008
{tarps off top third of AN}
monkeyball - September 3, 2008
+1
rec’d
flipgatey3 - September 3, 2008
bad idea to encourage me
“AN’s servers are simply inadequate for a Major League blog. Really, they’re awful. We have leased the right to state-of-the-art servers that we will migrate the blog to … in 4-5 years. Those servers will also dispense frogurt. Hey, where’d everybody go?”
monkeyball - September 3, 2008
and then the rebuild starts
and blez is traded for six high schoolers from LL
flipgatey3 - September 3, 2008
qotm
oakinboston - September 3, 2008
The thing to worry about .....
at this point, I think, is Gio’s head. I was at the game last night, and between pitches he seemed like he was really dejected and actually WANTED to be taken out. He certainly didn’t seem willing to bear down and take hitters on. If he doesn’t have a good game soon, his confidence may be shot to the point he never comes back.
Post379 - September 3, 2008
If that's the case, then major league pitching is not for him
Nico - September 3, 2008
Chances of a game today: 40%
Chances of me getting pneumonia from sitting outside last night in shorts and flip-flops: 80%
Dale Staplehead is awesome…. I almost forgot about Ryan Sweeney, that’s how awesome Dale is.
Jennifer - September 3, 2008
"I almost forgot about Ryan Sweeney"
Blasphemy!
whiteshoes40 - September 3, 2008
Seriously.
I wanted to knock Dale over the head and take him home with me.
Jennifer - September 3, 2008
Just set out a kiddie pool with a bit of water in it.
He’ll knock himself out and then you can take him home.
whiteshoes40 - September 3, 2008
*just* shorts and flip-flops?
They let you into the stadium like that?
monkeyball - September 3, 2008
Yes.
It was topless night at the K.
Jennifer - September 3, 2008
The ONE time I don't make it to a game.
:(
mikev - September 3, 2008
{snerk}
“flip-flops”
monkeyball - September 3, 2008
While I didn't get the opportunity
to see the pool boy perform last night, I still can’t help but be a little bitter that we could never get this kind of hitting in a September or October that mattered.
alox - September 3, 2008
Surprise, surprise
Well, not really. Anyone not see this coming for Gio?
black beane - September 3, 2008
Not really
I figured he be taking his lumps early on but I’m not sure what’s going on with him.
You think Curt Young would have already bent him over his knee yelling, “Bad Gio! No pancakes for you tonight!”, while spanking him with a block of Wisconsin’s finest queso. Yeesh!
mrod - September 3, 2008
disagree with "the A’s not only continue to make a lot of outs"
The A’s makes 27 outs per game (in most cases) just like all the other teams. We just do it more efficiently.
asfansince1989 - September 3, 2008
The outs are not spaced out as much as we would like.
UncleLeo - September 3, 2008
Some of the hitters look pretty spaced out to me
Nico - September 3, 2008
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