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Athletics' pitching puts Pirates on lockdown to open homestand

Jerry Mcdonald, The Mercury News on

Published in Baseball

OAKLAND — Joe Boyle and two relievers shut down the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Athletics played a fundamentally efficient game on offense Monday night in a 5-1 win at the Coliseum to kick off a 10-game homestand.

The paid attendance was 3,528, the fourth time in 14 home dates the A’s have drawn fewer than 4,000 fans.

Tyler Nevin hit a solo home run for the A’s in the first inning, his third of the season.

The A’s improved to 13-17. They didn’t win their 13th game in 2023 until June 6, when they were 13-50. Pittsburgh fell to 14-16.

Boyle (2-4) was effectively wild through five innings with four walks and four strikeouts, throwing 91 pitches, fewer than half of which (45) were strikes. Boyle had two wild pitches in the first inning alone and threw one ball to the backstop with no runners aboard.

Yet the only run the Pirates scored came in a 26-pitch first inning that included a pair of walks and leadoff batter Ke’Bryan Hayes scoring on a wild pitch. Hayes had the only hit Boyle surrendered on a ground single to right to open the game.

Pittsburgh would get just one more hit the rest of the night, with Dany Jimenez putting up zeroes in the sixth and seventh innings and Michael Kelly in the eighth and the ninth. Oneil Cruz singled with one out in the ninth against Kelly, but the A’s ended things with a ground ball double play.

 

Pittsburgh starter Bailey Falter (2-2) was done after five innings in favor of Roansy Contreras, giving up five earned runs on six hits with no walks and five strikeouts. The hardest hit ball was by Nevin, whose homer to left center in the first carried 404 feet at 102.8 miles per hour.

The Athletics took a 3-1 lead against Falter in the fourth with an inning that would warm the heart of any execution-minded batting coach.

Brent Rooker led off with a line single to center and was doubled to third by Abraham Toro, who found open spaces in right center.

Shea Langeliers was next, and he flied deep enough to center to score Rooker, and Max Schuemann hit a liner to left that brought home Toro.

It continued in the bottom of the fifth when Darell Hernaiz singled and was sacrificed to second base by Nick Allen. That put him in position to score on a double against the left field fence by Esteury Ruiz. After Ruiz stole third, Nevin hit the A’s third sacrifice fly in two innings for a 5-1 lead against Falter.

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