Are the Athletics once again the Amazing A’s?
The Amazing A’s, what the Oakland Athletics were called in the 1980s, when they were winning World Series championships in rapid order.
Yet, in a way, the A’s of 2024 seemed no less amazing. Until the last few days, when the Texas Rangers and reality ganged up to ruin a good story and perhaps a good record.
Baseball is a sport of relative balance. The best team still loses 60 times. The worst team still wins 60 times. Unless it is the Athletics of 2023, who had a jarring 50-112 mark.
Hapless. Hopeless. But not surprising.
In baseball, just as with autos and wine, you get what you pay for. Want a Mercedes or a bottle of Domaine Romanee Conti? It’s going to cost you. The same goes for players such as Shohei Ohtani or Bryce Harper. What management was paying for was a lot of players who weren’t ready for the bigs (and might never be).
That was last year. And the year before. Now the roster is respectable, and the A’s play has been even more so. They had a six-game win streak. Which would also be a tenth of the victory total the previous year.
So we were only a month into the schedule? Don’t rain on our parade. Enjoy the present. A’s manager Mark Kotsay deserves a smile or two. It’s not his fault he doesn’t have the same people as the Yankees.
As we know, the A’s are based somewhere between the devil and the deep blue Lake Mead. Talk about instability. They’re called the Oakland A’s, someday they will be moving up Interstate 80 to Sacramento and then, sadly, pulling up stakes and settling down forever in Las Vegas.
That’s the current plan arranged by people who have no heart and less compassion for the maligned folks in Alameda County.
Small wonder attendance for the A’s-Rangers game Monday night at — oh yeah, Oakland — was announced at 3,965. Tell the fans you’re high-tailing it to another town or another state and they’ll be no-shows. Then again, Monday night has never been worth much for baseball by the Bay. When the Giants were at old, cold Candlestick, they had numerous crowds under 10,000.
But the issue here is not who goes to the ballpark (or doesn’t go) but rather how the home club again, the Athletics, is doing on the field.
Better than most of us believe — hey, a six-game win streak would make most teams envious — and some way to keep people interested.
The Athletics should escape the ignominy of being the worst team in baseball. One small step for man is one amazing move for the A’s.