As Finally Gave Fans The Response They Needed Vs Dodgers

The Athletics snapped their losing streak with a decisive victory over the Dodgers, showcasing stellar pitching and power hitting to move closer to the top of the standings.

The Athletics finally found the kind of night they needed, rolling past the Dodgers 7-1 in Sacramento on Wednesday to stop a four-game skid and close out the series on a high note. It was the kind of win that starts with a starter taking control, gets fueled by timely power, and ends with a bullpen that doesn’t blink.

J.T. Ginn set the tone.

The 26-year-old right-hander worked through an early jam when the Dodgers loaded the bases, then escaped with a groundball to himself and settled in from there. The only real damage came on a solo homer by Freddie Freeman, but Ginn otherwise kept one of baseball’s deepest lineups in check and finished with a line that told the story: 6 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 5 BB, 4 K, 1 Hr, 104 pitches.

He walked a few too many, but he never let the night unravel, and the A’s handed him the lead he needed.

The offense did its part early and often. Jonah Heim got the scoring started by jumping on the first pitch he saw from Charlie Barnes and sending it out to center for a solo homer, his eighth of the year and seventh with the A’s. In the fourth, Heim drew a leadoff walk, Joshua Kuroda-Grauer followed with his second career double, and Lawrence Butler brought Heim home with a groundout before Bolte added an RBI single to make it 3-0.

The next inning brought more damage. Shea Langeliers launched a solo shot for his 20th of the season, and Nick Kurtz followed with a single before Colby Thomas drove him in with an RBI double.

Thomas finished 1-for-4, but the hit mattered, marking his third straight game with an RBI extra-base hit. Heim kept stacking quality at-bats too, adding an RBI single later in the inning to push the lead to 6-1.

He ended the night 2-for-3 with two runs scored, two RBI, and a walk.

Alika Williams put the finishing touch on it in the ninth with his second career home run, stretching the lead to 7-1.

The bullpen handled the rest. Luis Medina worked a clean seventh, Hogan Harris struck out the final batter of the eighth after some trouble, and Harris then finished the ninth to close it out. The Dodgers never found a way back into the game.

The A’s collected 12 hits, including three home runs, and improved to 41 wins on the season. They also gained a game in the standings after the Rangers’ loss earlier in the night, moving to within three games of first place.

Now comes an off-day before a weekend series with the Marlins. Miami has not announced its pitching plan yet, though Max Meyer’s next start lines up for tomorrow. The A’s are set to counter with Jack Perkins, who is coming off his best outing after throwing five innings of two-run ball against the Angels.

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