Piscotty drives in three runs, A's win ninth in row at home

Updated Aug. 22, 2020 1:22 a.m. ET
Associated Press

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — The Oakland Athletics love to swing their way to early leads, and then pile up more runs whenever they can.

Marcus Semien homered to give Mike Fiers a quick cushion, Stephen Piscotty drove in all three of his runs with two outs, and the AL-best A's beat the Los Angeles Angels 5-3 on Friday night to run their home winning streak to nine games.

The A’s (19-8) moved a season-best 11 games over .500 and have their best 27-game start since beginning 21-6 in 1990.

“Always good to get off to a good start,” Piscotty said, noting of two-out hits, “those are big at-bats. A lot of us, including myself, have usually struggled a little bit there but it was only a matter of time before that started to turn.”

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Fiers (3-1) allowed three runs and seven hits in 5 1/3 innings.

Semien notched his third career leadoff home run and second this season as Oakland jumped on Andrew Heaney from the start, also getting Stephen Piscotty's two-run double in the first. Matt Olson added an RBI double in the fifth to chase Heaney (1-2) before Piscotty's run-scoring single.

“I’ve pitched against this lineup and it’s not fun," Fiers said. “They burn you in so many ways.”

Angels star Mike Trout hit a broken-bat, two-run single in the sixth that glanced off first baseman Matt Olson's glove and then got past a lunging Chad Pinder.

Joakim Soria threw a 76 mph slider to retire Trout on a called third strike to end an eight-pitch at-bat and the eighth inning. Liam Hendriks finished for his ninth save.

Angels slugger Albert Pujols went 1 for 5 with a double and remained stuck at 659 home runs, one from tying Hall of Famer Willie Mays for fifth all-time.

Anthony Rendon had four more hits for an 11-game hitting streak for the Angels.

Heaney, who took a no-decision against the A’s on opening day, hasn’t beat Oakland since 2017.

Los Angeles lost its fourth straight and eighth in nine.

SIMMONS RETURNS

The Angels welcomed back Andrelton Simmons from a sprained left ankle nearly a month after he got hurt running out an infield single July 27 at Oakland.

Simmons singled to start the third only to have the A's defense turn a double play on David Fletcher's ensuing grounder.

“I'm going to move it around a little bit,” manager Joe Maddon said of the lineup. “I've just got to be mindful of Andrelton's ankle coming back. You just can't push it. That was nine innings tonight. I was watching it closely, he assured us that he felt fine and he was kind of guarding himself, which is smart.”

ALDRETE AWAY

Manager Bob Melvin said first base coach Mike Aldrete was away from the club for another day as his home near Monterey remains safe for now but is threatened by a nearby wildfire.

“He's close enough to where we all have our fingers crossed for him,” Melvin said. “This whole thing is so sad. It puts things into perspective when you're out on a baseball field playing baseball.”

The A's medical staff is monitoring the air quality with haze and smoke surrounding the ballpark.

TRAINER'S ROOM

Angels: C Max Stassi was out a day after leaving in the second inning at San Francisco when hit in the right knee by a foul ball. X-rays were negative. He suffered a bruise and a strain. "I would say it's going to be at least two, three weeks at the minimum," Maddon said. The Angels were already short-handed at catcher after Jason Castro exited Wednesday’s game following a five-game absence because of neck stiffness. Anthony Bemboom started behind the plate. ... DH Shohei Ohtani got a break to work on his swing and will play again Saturday. “It'll be very important for us to get him right,” Maddon said.

Athletics: LHP A.J. Puk was scheduled to throw another bullpen at the team's San Jose alternate site, then is likely to take two days off before throwing to hitters. Melvin figures he will need to face live hitting a few times before returning to the A's as a potential long reliever to fill a void after the A's lost Burch Smith last weekend to a strained forearm. “If we can get him up to three innings that would take care of that, even multiple innings. Our starters are going a little bit longer now,” Melvin said of Puk. “In theory you don't need four, five, six, something like that, so even two innings would be considered probably that role and my guess is we'll get him up to at least two innings before he's here.”

OUCH

T. Bear, a giant stuffed orange bear in the left-field seats, was OK and smiling with his head wrapped ,. The bear, unavailable for interviews for 48 hours after a concussion per the team, cradled the souvenir ball.

UP NEXT

RHP Chris Bassitt (2-0, 2.93 ERA) pitches the middle game of the series for the A's opposite RHP Griffin Canning (0-3, 4.70 ERA).

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