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The A’s wrapped up their three-game series against the Cubs at Sutter Health Park, and, well, it wasn’t pretty. Chicago completed the sweep with a dominant 10-2 win, outscoring Oakland 35-9 over the series—setting a franchise record for most runs allowed in the first three home games of a season. Seiya Suzuki absolutely torched A’s pitching, launching two home runs and driving in five runs by himself. Brent Rooker provided the only real highlight with a two-run homer, but beyond that, the A’s lineup looked lifeless once again. The pitching struggled, the defense was sloppy, and the offense couldn’t capitalize on rare opportunities. It’s hard to sugarcoat this one—the A’s were completely outclassed.
But the disaster on the field wasn’t the only storyline. A’s owner John Fisher made a rare public appearance, speaking to reporters from atop the team’s temporary clubhouse. His message? That playing in a 14,000-seat minor league park is a “positive, intimate” experience and that slapping a Las Vegas patch on the jerseys while refusing to acknowledge Sacramento’s name somehow makes sense. Spoiler: It doesn’t. Fisher’s attempt at optimism fell flat as the team’s uncertain future continues to alienate fans. Attendance numbers dropped sharply after Opening Day, and if the product on the field doesn’t improve, it’s hard to see how this “temporary” situation doesn’t become an even bigger embarrassment. Fisher insists this is all about building long-term success, but right now? It feels like the A’s are stuck in quicksand—with no lifeline in sight.
4.5
8080 ratings
The A’s wrapped up their three-game series against the Cubs at Sutter Health Park, and, well, it wasn’t pretty. Chicago completed the sweep with a dominant 10-2 win, outscoring Oakland 35-9 over the series—setting a franchise record for most runs allowed in the first three home games of a season. Seiya Suzuki absolutely torched A’s pitching, launching two home runs and driving in five runs by himself. Brent Rooker provided the only real highlight with a two-run homer, but beyond that, the A’s lineup looked lifeless once again. The pitching struggled, the defense was sloppy, and the offense couldn’t capitalize on rare opportunities. It’s hard to sugarcoat this one—the A’s were completely outclassed.
But the disaster on the field wasn’t the only storyline. A’s owner John Fisher made a rare public appearance, speaking to reporters from atop the team’s temporary clubhouse. His message? That playing in a 14,000-seat minor league park is a “positive, intimate” experience and that slapping a Las Vegas patch on the jerseys while refusing to acknowledge Sacramento’s name somehow makes sense. Spoiler: It doesn’t. Fisher’s attempt at optimism fell flat as the team’s uncertain future continues to alienate fans. Attendance numbers dropped sharply after Opening Day, and if the product on the field doesn’t improve, it’s hard to see how this “temporary” situation doesn’t become an even bigger embarrassment. Fisher insists this is all about building long-term success, but right now? It feels like the A’s are stuck in quicksand—with no lifeline in sight.
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