The white-hot Detroit Tigers went for the home sweep of a three-game weeknight series against the Homeless A’s on Thursday evening, after winning the first two games in fun fashion. They made it eight wins in the past nine games with a 4-1 win to complete the sweep.
It was Framber Valdez’s turn in the rotation, and to say his season to date has been a mixed bag is one heck of an understatement. His previous two starts saw him give up four runs in six innings at home against his former Astros teammates,
and six runs in five innings in Texas. His stock-in-trade is ground balls, and when he’s on he gets a lot of ‘em: for example, his June 16 start in Houston saw him get a dozen ground balls and half that many fly balls, and he gave up one unearned run in six innings.
José Suarez took the mound for the A’s as an opener. He made his debut in 2019 with the Angels, but he’s had eventful few months lately: waived by Atlanta and picked up by Baltimore in mid-January, then waived by Baltimore and picked back up by Atlanta at the end of January. He was waived again by Atlanta in early May, was picked up by the Mariners, made one relief appearance for them, and had his contract purchased by the A’s less than two weeks later. This guy gets more Frequent Flyer miles than George Clooney’s character in Up in the Air. That was a solid movie.
Valdez struck out the side in the first and got a pair of ground balls in the second, so he looked to be on-track early. Suarez stuck around for the first four outs and departed in favour of Jack Perkins, whose past few starts haven’t gone so well, so why not try an opener? He got the next two outs so the early returns looked promising for Sacramento.
That changed with one out in the third, though: Jake Rogers, starting for the injured-but-not-on-the-IL Dillon Dingler, hit his second home run in as many days, putting the Tigers up 1-0.
Meanwhile, Valdez continued looking good, retiring the first eleven batters he faced. He hit the twelfth, Shea Langeliers, but recovered to strike out Jonah Heim, his sixth strikeout in the first four innings.
The A’s got their first hit leading off the fifth, a single by Jacob Wilson. Lawrence Butler then got hit, putting two runners on; a flyout pushed Wilson up to third, and a groundout scored him to even the game at 1-1.
Hao-Yu Lee got robbed of an extra-base hit by speedy rookie Henry Bolte leading off the bottom of the fifth.
Tip your cap to Bolte on that one; being the fastest runner in the Major Leagues helps sometimes, apparently! Kerry Carpenter followed with a walk, and Zach McKinstry followed up with a two-run homer to put the Tigers ahead 3-1.
Perkins by that time was getting pretty wild; he followed the home run with a walk to Rogers and that was the end of his day.
With two outs in the top of the sixth Valdez allowed a pair of hard-hit singles to put two on, but he struck out Wilson on a beautiful curveball to end the inning. At that point Valdez’s pitch count was a tidy 76, so he came back out for the seventh and promptly went strikeout, groundout, strikeout.
Eduardo Valencia, who was brought up from Toledo today and thus made his major-league debut, pinch-hit for Carpenter leading off the bottom of the seventh. He crushed the fourth big-league pitch he ever saw 425 feet over the centrefield fence for a 4-1 lead. Welcome to the Tall Buildings, kid!
After McKinstry struck out Rogers walked, his sixth consecutive plate appearance reaching base. With two out Kevin McGonigle singled to push Rogers up to third, but Matt Vierling struck out for the third out.
Valdez was done after seven sensational innings: 7 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 0 BB, 9 K, all swinging strikeouts, and that was the kind of start we were hoping to get more of from him. Also of note: nine ground-ball outs, one fly-ball out. They say good starting pitching is contagious, and Valdez finally joined the party! Kyle Finnegan came on for the eighth and gave up a leadoff single but then got a double play and a strikeout.
In the bottom of the eighth Lee singled with two out, bringing Valencia to the plate again — but instead of getting a hit, he got hit. (At this point, though, he can accurately say that he’s never not been on base in the major leagues.) With two on base McKinstry struck out, and it was on to the ninth.
Kenley Jansen was summoned for the ninth and he promptly walked the leadoff batter. After a strikeout, Wilson singled on a tough cutter to put runners on the corners and the tying run at the plate. Lawrence Butler smoked a line drive but it was right at McKinstry for the second out; some solid A’s baserunning kept that from being a double play. Tyler Soderstron then hit another line drive right at an infielder, this time to Torkelson for the third out and the victory — not to mention the sweep. YOU COULD’VE MADE THIS EASIER, KENLEY.
Numbers and Commemorations
- Dillon Dingler, who is fortunately not going to the Injured List, has had quite a year. His batting average (and OPS) by month: April .247 (.800), May .206 (.743), June .333 (1.011). Each of those full months saw about 110 plate appearances, give-or-take a few. No wonder he’s All-Star Game bound.
- Kids, keep your non-throwing hand behind you if you’re catching. I saw Johnny Bench mention this on TV when I was a kid, and as a some-time catcher, I took this advice to heart and never got nailed on my right hand by a foul ball.
- Do you like the All-Star Game? Could you not care less? I like watching a couple of innings but get a little disinterested when they bring in a parade of fire-breathing relievers starting in about the fifth.
- Earlier today when it was announced that the Tigers brought up Eduardo Valencia, someone on our BYB Slack discussion said, and I quote, “Who the hell is Eduardo Valencia?” The prompt response from someone else was, “Your new daddy,” and how bang-on was that?!
- On this day in 1850, US president Zachary Taylor died. See, on July 4th, he ate a whole mess of cherries and “iced milk” at a big party at the under-construction Washington Monument, and afterwards he had quite the bellyache. It kept getting worse and worse, he got a fever, and died. Medicine back then really sucked.













