As Loss To Dodgers Still Left Fans With One Reason To Watch

Despite promising performances from rookies, the As slump continues with a third straight loss against a dominant Dodgers lineup.

The Athletics got a jolt from a rookie debut and a Colby Thomas homer Monday night, but the Los Angeles Dodgers had too much firepower in a 9-4 win at Sacramento.

That result pushed the A’s to 40-45, dropped them into a three-game skid, and guaranteed they’ll finish June with a losing record. They also slipped to fourth place in the AL West, now three games back.

Gage Jump got the start for the A’s, and the rookie left-hander was handed one of the toughest assignments around: trying to slow the best record in baseball. The Dodgers struck first in the second inning, stringing together four singles to grab a 2-0 lead.

The A’s answered right back in the bottom half.

Thomas opened the response with his third home run of the season, a solo shot that got the crowd going. Then the inning kept building.

Max Muncy and Alika Williams singled, and that brought up Joshua Kuroda-Grauer for his first major league at-bat. The highly regarded infielder wasted no time, lining a base hit the other way to bring home Muncy and tie the game at 2.

Henry Bolte kept the inning moving with a productive out, using his speed to avoid a double play and allowing the A’s to score again. Just like that, the A’s had a 3-2 lead.

It didn’t last.

The Dodgers came back in a big way, and their power eventually broke the game open. They hit a pair of home runs in the third, one solo and one a two-run shot, to take the lead back for good. Jump hung around into the fifth, but he couldn’t finish it, leaving after 4 2/3 innings and 91 pitches.

Gage Jump: 4 2/3 IP, 11 H, 5 ER, 0 BB, 5 K, 2 HR, 91 pitches

Jump’s ERA climbed to 2.93 after the rough outing. The Dodgers made him pay for mistakes the way they’ve done to plenty of pitchers before, and he’ll get a chance to reset next time out against the Miami Marlins this weekend.

From there, Los Angeles kept adding on. Matt Krook came out of the bullpen and was greeted by Shohei Ohtani, who blasted a three-run homer to blow the game wide open. Justin Stener covered an inning, and Kade Morris handled the cleanup work, throwing three innings and giving up just one insurance run in the eighth.

The A’s offense never found much after that second inning. They finished with 11 hits, and Kuroda-Grauer accounted for three of them in a debut he won’t forget. He became the first rookie to collect multiple hits in his big league debut since Mark Canha in 2015.

The only other run for the A’s came in the ninth, but by then the outcome was long settled.

Thomas’ homer provided one bright spot, but the lineup is still operating without Tyler Soderstrom, Wilson, Gelof, and Rooker. That absence showed once the Dodgers settled in, and the A’s were left with another loss and another reminder of how quickly things can tilt against an elite opponent.

The series continues Tuesday night. Jeffrey Springs will get the ball for the A’s, and he’ll try to stop the bleeding after a rough June that has left him with a 9.97 ERA this month.

He did show signs of life in his last outing, when he worked into the sixth and allowed three runs against the Giants in an A’s win. For the season, Springs owns a 5.52 ERA in 17 starts.

The Dodgers will counter with left-hander Justin Wrobleski. The 25-year-old has been excellent in his first extended run in the rotation, posting a 2.71 ERA and coming off back-to-back strong starts. The A’s, as they found out Monday, will have their hands full again.

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