Latest Athletics Stories
Posted: Nov 16th 2009 2:01PM ET by Jeff Fletcher (RSS feed)
Filed under: Athletics, MLB Awards

For the second time in five years, an A's closer has won the American League Rookie of the Year, but this one came as a bit of a surprise.
Andrew Bailey, who was a longshot to even make the team out of spring training, followed 2005 winner
Huston Street in taking the award. Bailey had 26 saves and a 1.84 ERA for the A's, earning an All-Star berth along the way. Despite those numbers, he was considered by many to be behind Texas shortstop
Elvis Andrus and Tigers pitcher
Rick Porcello in the race.
Bailey earned 13 first-place votes among the 28 ballots cast, from two writers in each of the 14 American League cities. Based on a 5-3-1 voting system, Bailey totaled 88 points. Andrus came in second with eight first-place votes and 65 points, followed by Porcello, with seven and 64.
Posted: Sep 27th 2009 6:00AM ET by Jeff Fletcher (RSS feed)
Filed under: Athletics, Braves, Cardinals, Dodgers, Nationals, Red Sox, Yankees, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ... That
Jim Thome picked a good time to finally make his first significant contribution since the Dodgers got him to be their star pinch-hitter. Thome's two-run pinch-hit single keyed a four-run inning in a come-from-behind 8-4 victory over the Pirates that locked up a playoff spot for Los Angeles.
Thome had been 2-for-11 pinch-hitting for the Dodgers, with no RBI. He came up just after the Dodgers had taken a 5-4 lead and delivered a two-run single. Just a day earlier, Thome had an injection in a sore foot that has hampered him for a couple weeks.
After the Dodgers won, they had a subdued champagne toast -- no dumping or spraying -- to celebrate the team's third postseason appearance in the past four years. They are holding off on the big party until they close out the Rockies. Their magic number to win the NL West is two. They could do it as soon as Sunday.
Posted: Sep 22nd 2009 10:00AM ET by Jeff Fletcher (RSS feed)
Filed under: Athletics

OAKLAND -- The A's rebuilding plan may appear to be progressing quickly with the team's hot streak, but don't expect GM
Billy Beane to make any big splashes on marquee players this winter to fill out the picture.
He tried that last winter. Didn't work.
Only after the A's got rid of
Matt Holliday,
Jason Giambi and
Orlando Cabrera, essentially handing the wheel to the young players, did the team start to win. So the youth movement will continue.
"We'd look to add some guys, but we're going to be very disciplined," Beane told FanHouse. "We're trying to build something. We're not going to go crazy in the offseason."
Posted: Sep 15th 2009 6:00AM ET by Andrew Johnson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Astros, Angels, Athletics, Marlins, Rangers, Rays, Red Sox, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ...That you can add the
Marlins to the list of fringe contenders fading away with three weeks to go in the season.
Florida wasted an opportunity to gain on wild-card leading Colorado, which lost in San Francisco, in an 11-6 loss to the
Cardinals. The Marlins fell behind 4-0 in the first, but managed to take a 6-4 lead by the fourth inning, only to squander that lead in large part due to
Ricky Nolasco's five-inning, seven-run outing.
Poor starting pitching has been a big reason why Florida hasn't been able to make a run.
Posted: Sep 13th 2009 10:00AM ET by Ed Price (RSS feed)
Filed under: Angels, Athletics, Cardinals, Cubs, Diamondbacks, Dodgers, Marlins, Mets, Nationals, Orioles, Rays, Royals, Tigers, Twins, Yankees, MLB Awards, MLB Biz, MLB Inside Scoop, Baseball Brunch
Every Sunday, MLB FanHouse empties out its notebook in Baseball Brunch.
Cody Ross blames his mom.
"My dad was a really good athlete (Kenny Ross, who played safety at New Mexico in the late 1960s)," said Ross, the
Marlins' right fielder. "My dad was all right[-handed]. My mom's a lefty, so maybe I got that gene from her."
Ross and St. Louis'
Ryan Ludwick are the only two active position players who throw left and bat right. Just 14 such players in
baseball history have gotten as many as 1,000 at-bats -- and that list now includes a Hall of Famer, Rickey Henderson.
"He kind of put us on the map," Ross said.
Posted: Sep 6th 2009 10:00AM ET by Ed Price (RSS feed)
Filed under: Angels, Athletics, Cardinals, Diamondbacks, Dodgers, Giants, Padres, Rangers, Red Sox, Rockies, Tigers, Twins, Yankees, MLB Inside Scoop, Baseball Brunch
Every Sunday, MLB FanHouse empties out its notebook in Baseball Brunch.
Ahhh, the National League -- where pitchers can play out their golden years without a care in the world.
Think of the NL as
baseball's rest home.
Just in the past few weeks,
Brad Penny and
John Smoltz have reached the legendary fountain of youth that Ponce de Sabathia discovered last year in the wilds of Wisconsin.
"In reality, it's a little tougher to pitch in the American League than it is the National League," said
Cubs manager
Lou Piniella, who formerly managed in Seattle and Tampa Bay.
At least he admits it.
Posted: Aug 30th 2009 4:06PM ET by Jeff Fletcher (RSS feed)
Filed under: Athletics

SAN FRANCISCO -- At least one of
Miguel Tejada's former teammates doesn't believe that he tipped opponents off to pitches while playing for the A's in 2001, as reported this weekend
by the New York Times.
"He's not that kind of player, I don't think,"
Barry Zito told
FanHouse on Sunday morning. "I don't think he's the kind of player who would take his Latin pride over his teammates."
Zito, who played with Tejada in Oakland from 2000 to 2003, said he did not even remember the reported meeting in which the A's discussed their suspicions of Tejada. Zito suggested that he might not have been involved in the meeting if the was the starting pitcher that day.
Posted: Aug 26th 2009 1:56PM ET by Jeff Fletcher (RSS feed)
Filed under: Athletics

Remember
Bobby Crosby? Guy won the Rookie of the Year in 2004. Looked like a star in the making. Frankly, it was his presence that pushed the A's toward letting
Miguel Tejada go and instead signing
Eric Chavez to a long-term deal.
Now that Crosby is finishing out the final year of his five-year, $12.75-million deal, his father, Ed, has unloaded on the organization that employs his son and used to employ him. A former A's scout, Ed Crosby told the Long Beach Press-Telegram that the A's, specifically general manager Billy Beane, have
treated his son unfairly.
Posted: Aug 22nd 2009 6:00AM ET by Andrew Johnson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Athletics, Marlins, Mets, Rangers, Rays, Red Sox, Yankees, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ...That now it's the Red Sox who can't get out of their own way against the Yankees, as opposed to the other way around.
After going 8-0 against New York to start the season, Boston has now lost five straight to its rivals following a 20-11 drubbing at Fenway Park.
Hideki Matsui was the standout offensive star among many on Friday night, homering twice and driving in seven runs to pace the Yankee attack. Matsui and his teammates have made it very obvious that whatever hurdle there was to playing the Red Sox early in the year has now been cleared.
Posted: Aug 11th 2009 6:00AM ET by Ed Price (RSS feed)
Filed under: Astros, Angels, Athletics, Marlins, Orioles, Rockies, MLB Injuries, MLB Milestones, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action, with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ...That Colorado has cycled back to the top of the NL wild-card standings.
Troy Tulowitzki hit for the cycle Tuesday as the Rockies
bashed the Cubs, 11-5. By taking three of four in the series, Colorado moved a game ahead of San Francisco.
According to STATS LLC, Tulowitzki joined John Valentin as the only players ever to hit for the cycle and turn an unassisted triple play.
Tulowitzki ended up 5-for-5 with a career-best seven RBI, and he nearly had a two-homer cycle but replay upheld a foul ball ruling.