Perhaps they should rename Comerica Park to Rogers Center after Jake Rogers’ pinch performance helped the Tigers beat the A’s 6-1.
The Tigers have been pretty good lately, 7-3 for their last 10 games, and as we know, performing well against teams with much better records than theirs. So naturally, against another fourth-place team, they’re going to potentially struggle. However, they did take the first game of the series against the A’s, so how this series will play out is anyone’s guess. The Tigers had
Troy Melton on the mound up against Jeffrey Springs for the A’s.
The A’s went 1-2-3 in the top of the first. The home half took considerably longer to work through. With one out, Dillon Dingler singled and was able to advance to second on a throwing error by the A’s third baseman. Kevin McGonigle walked, then Spencer Torkelson walked. Springs was having a heck of a time finding the zone, and that didn’t change when Riley Greene came up to bat, and both Greene and the catcher challenged pitches, both of them balls, before Greene singled to score Dingler and put the Tigers on the board first. Two outs followed, but they had certainly worn Springs down early.
After the first out of the second inning, there was a pause in play. A foul tip hit Dingler in his exposed hand, and while he stayed in through the top of the inning, he did ultimately leave the game. No current status updates. With two outs in the second, Lawrence Butler doubled. Then Joshua Kuroda-Grauer (a challenger for the Isiah Kiner-Falefa crown of making me struggle to spell their names right) singled. A final out ended the inning and the threat. In the bottom of the inning, Nick Kurtz was out of the game for the A’s after two, citing illness, so a rough game all around. Zach McKinstry got a one-out single. Then, with two outs and pinch-hitting for Dingler, Jake Rogers came in and hit a home run. Now that’s how you step in with style.
The A’s went 1-2-3 in the top of the third. The Tigers, likewise, went down in order in the bottom of the inning.
In the top of the fourth things got rough for Melton for the first time all game. Tyler Soderstrom got a one-out double. Jacob Wilson then reached on a fielding error by McKinstry, which allowed Soderstrom to score. With two outs, Kuroda-Grauer singled. Melton managed to get out of the jam, though, with only the one run scored. In the home half, the Tigers went down in order once again.
Melton struck out the side in the fifth, though Jeff McNeil really fought him for the final out of the inning, and then when he finally did strike out, he had a good scream at himself.
In the bottom of the inning, Rogers continued to have himself a heck of a game with a leadoff single, then hustled all the way to third when McGonigle singled. He was looking a little breathless after that, so Spencer Torkelson decided to give him a break and hit a three-run homer to clear the bases.
Riley Greene walked, which was the end of the game for Springs. He was replaced by Justin Sterner. Sterner came in and got the final two outs of the inning. The Tigers were up 6-1 after five innings.
In the top of the sixth, Soderstrom walked with one out. Melton’s day was done at that point with a final line of 5.1 IP, 4 H, 1 E, 0 ER, 1 BB, 9 K on 91 pitches. Keider Montero came in to replace him, and gave up a walk to Jacob Wilson. Two outs followed to get the Tigers out of the inning, no harm done. Mason Barnett was the new A’s pitcher in the home half. With one out, McKinstry walked. McKinstry was then eliminated by a force out off the bat of Matt Vierling. Rogers drew a walk, putting him on base for every one of his at-bats for the evening. The Tigers ultimately left their baserunners stranded, unfortunately.
Carlos Cortes got the A’s going in the seventh with a leadoff single. With two outs, McNeil singled, so maybe he can be a bit nicer to himself later. Montero got out of the inning, though. José Suarez came in to pitch for the A’s in the bottom of the inning. With one out, Greene singled. However, two outs followed to leave another baserunner stranded.
In the eighth, Montero was replaced by Tyler Holton, who got three outs in a row. The Tigers also went three-up, three-down. Now they just had to get the final outs of the game to lock it down.
Beau Brieske was the man the Tigers turned to for the ninth. Kuroda-Grauer singled to get things started. With two outs, he took second on defensive indifference. It was Rogers who caught the final out of the inning, a cherry on top of an incredible evening for him.













