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RECAP
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BOX SCORE
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GAME LOG
BALTIMORE (Ticker) -- Hurricane Gordon seems to be following the
Oakland Athletics up the East Coast. In a game delayed twice for more than five hours, the Athletics
patiently waited out B.J. Ryan, drawing three consecutive walks
with the bases loaded in the top of the seventh inning to rally
for a 7-4 victory over the Baltimore Orioles in the first game
of a day-night doubleheader. Oakland, which has won four straight and eight of its last nine,
moved one-half game ahead of the Cleveland Indians in the
American League wild card race. The Indians lost to the Boston
Red Sox tonight in the opener of a five-game series.
The contest was held up for 2 hours, 43 minutes at the start due
to the remnants of the storm and again for 2 hours, 21 minutes
in the top of the eighth. Jason Isringhausen threw the final
pitch at 10:36 p.m. EDT, more than 9 1/2 hours after the
scheduled first pitch. The Players Association, American League and the commissioner's
office agreed to postpone the second game, resulting in another
day-night doubleheader on Wednesday. Game times are at 1:05
p.m. and 6:05 p.m. Despite the late hour, Oakland manager Art Howe was upset the
second game was not played. It was not raining when the
decision was made to postpone the contest and Howe felt the
field was still playable. Oakland will get little rest following Wednesday's doubleheader
as it heads to Seattle to begin a crucial four-game series on
Thursday. The Mariners lead the A's by 2 1/2 games in the AL
West. "I don't understand the decision-making process," Howe said. "I
don't know why we didn't play a second game. I was told it would
be clear from 2:50 p.m. on today. It will probably snow
tomorrow." Oakland already is facing the prospect of playing a makeup game
against the Tampa Bay Devil Rays the day after the regular
season ends. Sunday's series finale against the Devil Rays was
postponed due to the threat of Hurricane Gordon. "We wanted to play a second game," Oakland designated hitter
Matt Stairs said. "Now we have to be here at 11:30 (a.m. on
Wednesday). That is (garbage). As for the field, it was muddy,
but they can't say the field was bad. "We had no clue (the game was being postponed), none of us,"
Stairs continued. "We called over to the umpires to find out
what was going on." The delay at the start was the longest in Orioles' history,
surpassing the 2 hour, 42 minute wait on September 22, 1992
against the Toronto Blue Jays. "The decision was made to cancel the second game, but not by
us," said Tim Hudson, the A's player representative. "We wanted
to play. We wanted to play two. We can't do anything about it
now. The decision was made before we had any say. We were here
all day ready to play."
The A's trailed 4-2 entering the seventh, but erupted for five
runs on just three three hits in the inning. Ryan replaced
Jason Johnson (1-10) with the bases loaded and issued
consecutive walks to rookie Adam Piatt, Ramon Hernandez and
Terrence Long, giving Oakland a 5-4 lead. Randy Velarde provided insurance by reaching Buddy Groom for a
two-run single. The game itself took 3 hours, 57 minutes as five Baltimore
pitchers combined to walk 15, setting an Orioles' record. The
A's were 3-for-20 with runners in scoring position, stranding 16
runners. Afterwards, Oakland first baseman Jason Giambi seemed more
philosophical about the long day than his teammates. "It is no good (complaining) about it," he said. "No good
worrying about it. We just have to go out and play our game. We
need to win games, meaning these two here tomorrow. Scratch
what happened and go from there." Gil Heredia, who was geared up to pitch the nightcap, will now
have to wait until Wednesday. Oakland rookie Barry Zito will
face Chuck McElroy in the opener before Heredia takes on Jose
Mercedes in the second game. "I was wired to pitch the second game tonight," Heredia said.
"Now I have to do it all over again tomorrow. I was ready once.
I will be ready again, but it will be a new experience." Jim Mecir (9-3), the fourth of five Oakland pitchers, recorded
the victory with a scoreless eighth. Isringhausen got the final
three outs for his 29th save. The Orioles grabbed a 3-1 lead in the fifth on Brady Anderson's
sacrifice fly and an RBI single by Delino DeShields, but Oakland
got back a run in the sixth on Eric Chavez's leadoff homer. Baltimore made it 4-2 in the bottom half on Ryan Minor's RBI
single off Mike Magnante, who pitched out of a bases-loaded jam
by getting Jerry Hairston to ground into a forceout. The Orioles bullpen collapsed in the eighth as the A's loaded
the bases with one out. Johnson gave up a double to Matt Stairs
and a single to Miguel Tejada before walking Chavez. Ryan could
not find the plate, throwing just one strike to the next three
batters. "It is very uncharacteristic of B.J. Ryan to throw only one
strike in 13 pitches," Baltimore manager Mike Hargrove said.
"When it happens, it is not pretty."
Orioles shortstop Melvin Mora left in the second inning after
fouling a ball off his left foot. He was diagnosed with a
contusion of his left knee and is listed as day-to-day.
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