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2024 Season | Series #1 | Guardians @ A's | March 28-31, 2024

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Also, anyone else think Fry would be a good pickup in fantasy especially for the catcher position?
He's a super duper utility guy so I'd imagine he can play C, 1B, DH and OF. Flexibility is king in fantasy so yea, id add him

*footnote: I haven't played MLB fantasy in 10 years
 
Game 2 preview:

RHP Ross Stripling goes against Logan Allen. Stripling is 34 and was 0-5 with a 5.38 ERA for the Giants last year in 89 innings split between 11 starts and 11 reliefs. His xFIP was 3.98 so maybe he didn't pitch as badly as his ERA suggests.

In 11 starts he went 49 innings with a 4.93 ERA. Opponents hit .276/.741 off him. He was better as a starter, but obviously not great as he averaged under 5 innings per start with an ERA just under 5.00.

The first time through the order as a starter opposing batters hit .262 against him, but that ballooned to .329 the second time through. Overall he was equally effective (or ineffective) against right- and left-handed hitters.

Current Guardians are hitting a combined .346/.909 against Stripling, but that's only for 26 at-bats since most of his career has been spent in the National League. Josh Naylor is 3-for-3 against him while Jose is 2-for-4.

Austin Hedges is 3-for-15 with 7 K's but I expect Bo Naylor to start tonight, so if you remove Hedges' numbers we're 6-for-11 against this guy. The only Guardians to bat against him, however, are Jose, Josh, Kwan and Gimenez.

Two years ago Stripling was 10-4 with a 3.01 ERA for Toronto in 134 innings so maybe last year he was injured. This is his 10th year in the majors; for his career he's 38-43 with a 3.96 ERA.

Current A's hitters have just 8 career at-bats against Logan Allen and they're 0-for-8.

The A's used a lefty starter and two lefty relievers last night. The only other lefty on their staff is J.P. Sears, who will start tomorrow, so I expect to see all right-handers tonight unless they want to use McFarland again. He threw 14 pitches last night.
 
The Guardians had 11 hits last night and although there were no home runs five of those hits went for extra bases. Not bad, especially against a pitcher they had not scored a single run on in 14 innings and were 5-for-30 lifetime.

It's just one game but I'm encouraged. Rocchio looked very relaxed and confident, drawing a walk in his first at-bat and hitting a double to drive in two runs in his second. He's coming off a great season in winter ball where he led his team to the Venezuela championship. So far, so good at shortstop.

The cool thing was scoring eight runs despite the top three hitters in our lineup going 2-for-14. One thing that was really noticeable was the lack of chasing pitches out of the zone. The Guardians were third worst in this category last year at 35.1%. Last night they were at 25% - a massive improvement.

Obviously a big part of that is not having Amed Rosario and Oscar Gonzalez in the lineup. But the boys definitely looked more relaxed and disciplined last night. I especially noticed Gimenez, who was one of the worst offenders last year, swinging at nearly 43% of pitches out of the zone. Last night he chased just 1 of 7.

In Gimenez's first at-bat he got ahead 3-0, taking two close pitches just off the edge. This was something new. In his second at-bat he took a ball that just missed, then singled with the bases loaded off a lefty. Nice.

It's just one game but I noticed that there was definately more plate discipline and the numbers backed it up. The Guardians had 11 hits, 3 walks, and 3 hit batters for a total of 17 base runners in 9 innings. If they keep that up they won't need a lot of home runs.

Finally, in 7 of the 9 innings they faced left-handed pitching, and the Guardians have left-hand dominant team, so the 17 baserunners is even more impressive.
 
East Bay Times story about the opener.

OAKLAND – One of the smallest Opening Day crowds in the Oakland A’s 57-year history showed Thursday night for possibly their final season debut at the Coliseum — an 8-0 shutout loss to the Cleveland Guardians.

While some fans bunkered in the parking lot to protest the A’s planned relocation to Las Vegas, there wasn’t much for the home fans to cheer amid the announced crowd of 13,522.

“I would have liked to seen all those guys inside the stadium tonight. But they’re fighting for something they believe in,” A’s starting pitcher Alex Wood said. “As long as they’re supporting us, whether it’s inside the stadium or watching the game outside, Oakland has such a rich history of baseball and you see how much it means to people.”

That was officially the seventh-smallest attendance in the A’s Opening Day history, although that includes debuts limited by the COVID pandemic in 2020 (no fans) and 2021 (10,436). Ironically, the A’s record for lowest attendance of a season opener came in 1996 when 7,294 showed in Las Vegas, where that series against Toronto got moved because of the Coliseum’s “Mt. Davis” construction for the Raiders.

Seven of the A’s first nine batters struck out, and Guardians’ starter Shane Bieber totaled 11 strikeouts while shutting out the A’s on four hits through six innings.

“We didn’t have an answer for Bieber tonight,” A’s manager Mark Kotsay said. “That was pretty good. We were swinging at the right pitches. Outside of JJ (Bleday, 2-for-4), he pretty much dominated tonight up and down the lineup. He has that ability and there’s a reason he won the Cy Young in ’20.”

Bieber’s exit allowed for some hope during the seventh-inning stretch, at which point the crowd also came alive trying to catch baseballs being thrown down to them by the A’s new television-broadcast crew of Dallas Braden and Jenny Cavnar.

Wood, formerly of the cross-bay Giants, threw a 1-2-3 first inning. A five-run rally in the fourth inning ended his debut, however, and the crowd was large enough to serenade Wood with boos after a two-run double by No. 9 hitter Brayan Rocchio, for a 6-0 deficit.


“It was one of those games you leave and feel your stuff was good and should have had a better result,” Wood said. “… It was super cool and it’s a big honor to take the ball on Opening Day. You wish you could win at home on Opening Day. But baseball’s back and I’m excited for the year.”

It was the A’s first Opening Day shutout loss since 2014, when Cleveland won 2-0 here. And this one made for a victorious debut for Guardians’ manager Stephen Vogt, who ended his playing career here two years ago with a home run for the A’s in his final at-bat.

“It was really a special night overall to be back in Oakland, to see people I care about and love and have been such a big part of my history,” said Vogt, who had about 30 friends and family in attendance from his native Visalia. “And then for our guys to come out and play the way they did, it was just a real special night.”

Chants of “Sell-The-Team” faintly followed in the fifth inning, just over an hour into the season. The occasional “Let’s-Go-A’s” chant proved just as futile. Some of those fans presumably ditched the outside gathering to fill pockets of seats around the Coliseum’s first and second decks.

“It was pretty awesome for what we were told was going on, to still see the Oakland faithful come out and support us inside the stadium,” first baseman Ryan Noda said, who further complemented the outfield fans who are “always going to show up and we love that from them.”

“Good for them. Good for them,” Noda added of those who left the boycott. “We just want the fans in the stadium cheering for us, pushing one way with us. That’s all we care about. Anything else is out of our control.”

The A’s anemic offense nearly broke through against Bieber in the middle innings, only to be denied. In the fifth, Lawrence Butler got tagged out at third when he slid past the bag on Nick Allen’s two-out single. In the sixth, Bleday reached on a two-out double, then designated hitter Brent Rooker flew out short of the centerfield warning track.

Back-to-back, second-inning doubles by David Fry and Tyler Freeman put the A’s in a 1-0 hole. The A’s sought to answer as J.D. Davis reached on a one-out, opposite-field single in the ex-Giants’ cross-bay debut; Bieber struck out the next two batters he faced, giving him six Ks through two frames.

No home runs were hit, but a ninth-inning, RBI triple by José Ramírez hit the right-field wall for a 7-0 deficit.

The night wasn’t without defensive highlights: Right fielder Seth Brown made a diving catch in the ninth for the Guardians’ final out; first baseman Ryan Noda made a sliding catch on Steven Kwan’s infield popup of Wood’s first pitch, and, second baseman Zack Gelof repeatedly flashed grace by cutting off a couple of grounders up the middle.
 
How was the game? Are you going to miss the Coliseum?

I watched from home. It's supposed to rain all weekend - I have doubts they play tonight - so I'm buying tickets if I'm confident the rain will hold off.

The A's relationship to their fanbase is just entertainment for me. I feel bad for younger fans who have that passion and don't know what to do with it. Lots of spite in the air.
 
Did anybody catch this post-game?
Austin Hedges on Bieber:
"Going into free agency, he's going to be the Big Dog. He's the ace among aces."
 
Did anybody catch this post-game?
Austin Hedges on Bieber:
"Going into free agency, he's going to be the Big Dog. He's the ace among aces."
So his new name is Captain Obvious? I hope Biebs has a huge year and gets a record breaking deal.
 
A perfect opening day victory! Watch the highlights here:

 
Favorite play of the game was the Jose Ramirez like double by Freeman hustling and turning a well hit long single into a double with pure grit.

100%.

Josey is my favorite player of all time and the best part is how much the reasons why I love him so much rubs off on others.

Ultimate follow the leader guy.
 
Favorite play of the game was the Jose Ramirez like double by Freeman hustling and turning a well hit long single into a double with pure grit.
My favorite play was Nails staying in the game after getting plunked in the hand.

I super cringed when l saw his initial pain response, and all the cumulative negative Cleveland sports memories flooded my brain....ah, FUCK. His fuckin wrist gets broken in the first game of the season?!?!

That, and the overall pitch quality of Biebs. Clearly the Driveline exposure is paying dividends for him physically and mentally. What a welcomed boost.
 
So his new name is Captain Obvious? I hope Biebs has a huge year and gets a record breaking deal.

Tons of posters in here were thinking of trading him before the season because "he ain't the old biebs".

Crazy how one start throws us all back on track.
 
Tons of posters in here were thinking of trading him before the season because "he ain't the old biebs".

Crazy how one start throws us all back on track.

More than a few posters wanted to trade Bieber but not for the reason you suggest..

A team like Cleveland is risk adverse. Bieber in a walk year with a rookie manager, it's seemed to me that Cleveland wouldn't risk losing Bieber to injury/not being able to trade him... I was wrong. That was my reason... Nothing to do with performance.
 

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