AnibalSanchez
| SEASON | CAREER |
| W9 | 48 |
| L13 | 51 |
| G31 | 145 |
| IP195.2 | 869.0 |
| BB48 | 320 |
| SO167 | 733 |
BrettAnderson
| SEASON | CAREER |
| W4 | 25 |
| L2 | 25 |
| G6 | 68 |
| IP35.0 | 406.0 |
| BB7 | 99 |
| SO25 | 311 |
| SEASON | CAREER |
| W9 | 48 |
| L13 | 51 |
| G31 | 145 |
| IP195.2 | 869.0 |
| BB48 | 320 |
| SO167 | 733 |
| SEASON | CAREER |
| W4 | 25 |
| L2 | 25 |
| G6 | 68 |
| IP35.0 | 406.0 |
| BB7 | 99 |
| SO25 | 311 |
Just as Detroit's Justin Verlander and Coco Crisp of Oakland did on the field for Monday's workout day ahead of their teams' Game 3 in the AL division series Tuesday. The Tigers lead 2-0 and are one win from advancing to a second straight AL championship series.
Leyland insists reliever Al Alburquerque meant no ill will toward the Athletics when he fielded Yoenis Cespedes ' ninth-inning comebacker and quickly kissed the ball before throwing to first. Yet the manager disagreed with the display.
"Everybody always says I'm from the old school, so I'd have probably hugged it first," Leyland joked. "I don't think it was the right thing to do. I will sit here today and I will not try to defend it. I will say that I can assure everybody, including the Oakland A's, Al Alburquerque did nothing intentionally to offend the Oakland A's. A lot of emotion is shown in different ways in the game anymore. You see a lot of different variations of personal celebrations as well as team celebrations. "It wasn't a smart thing to do, but I can honestly tell you that there is no way that Al Alburquerque or any members of the Detroit Tigers would ever do anything intentionally to offend another team. It just would not happen," Leyland said.As upstart Oakland returned home hoping to pull off another improbable sweep like the one against Texas last week to capture the AL West crown, that controversial smooch was still plenty talked about in both clubhouses.
Alburquerque said he did speak to his teammates, and that they knew his gesture was "within the emotion of the game.""I respect Cespedes and I didn't do it out of disrespect," the pitcher said. "I was just excited to get the out."Still, that didn't mean the Tigers weren't surprised by it.
"I said, `Did I see what I just saw?"' catcher Gerald Laird said. Cespedes was eager to get to his baseball work Monday, saying: "That's his problem. It doesn't bother me. It was his turn to win. Someday it will be my turn."Even though everybody realized full well they should be focused on the game itself.
"I know him, so I know he didn't mean much by it," injured A's third baseman and former Tiger Brandon Inge said. "But I'm sure he's going to regret it. Honestly, this is something that's going to be blown out of proportion because it's a unique story and it's something that doesn't happen much. For us, our ultimate retaliation or comeback would be to win three. We're not concerned with the actions of one person. On their side, I'm sure he didn't really want to stir up a hornet's nest over here either."Right-hander Anibal Sanchez (4-6), a midseason acquisition from Miami who was steady down the stretch, will try to pitch the Tigers to another postseason sweep of Oakland.
Triple Crown winner Miguel Cabrera is still looking for his first RBI of the series, but is hitting .375 (3 for 8) with two doubles, no strikeouts and a walk.
Lefty Brett Anderson (4-2) gets the ball in his postseason debut as the A's try to prolong their season for one more day. Anderson, who looked strong in six starts after a 14-month absence recovering from elbow ligament-replacement surgery, is coming back from a right oblique injury he sustained falling awkwardly off the mound in a start at Detroit on Sept. 19. He hopes to work deep without a pitch count, though pitching coach Curt Young said he'd likely be around 80.
"It's going to be fun," he said. "I don't think I'll have to dial it down. ... A postseason game in Oakland, there hasn't been one for a while."The Tigers swept Oakland out of its last playoff series - in four games of the 2006 AL championship series. None of the current A's were on the team then, and only two were even in the organization.
The task is daunting: win three straight at home. Yet this A's team has accomplished unheard of feats in a season full of walkoffs and victories celebrated with whipped-cream pies.
And, just last week they took three in a row from the two-time reigning AL champion Rangers to stun Texas for the AL West crown in Game No. 162 last Wednesday.
That late-season surge erased a five-game deficit, and the A's became the first time in major league history to do so over the final 10 games to win a division or pennant. They trailed Texas by 13 games on June 30.
"Nobody knew we were good until the end," Oakland's Jonny Gomes said. "We had Major League Baseball right where we wanted them: We tricked them into playing 162 games."Now, Oakland will attempt to become the first playoff team in franchise history to come back from down 2-0. In six of the previous seven series when the A's lost the first two games, the wound up getting swept.
Oakland will try to get its offense going after striking out 23 times in the first two games, including 14 in Saturday's 3-1 loss in Game 1. The A's hit a majors-leading 112 home runs after the All-Star break.
A's manager Bob Melvin isn't worried about the K-fest, and neither are his players. Josh Reddick has six of the strikeouts after hitting a team-best 32 home runs during the regular season.
"If you're going to be aggressive, you're going to swing hard," Gomes said. "If you're going to hit home runs, you're going to swing hard."Yet Melvin knows firsthand how good Sanchez can be. The 28-year-old Venezuelan pitched a no-hitter for Florida during his rookie season of 2006 against Melvin's Arizona Diamondbacks . Oakland shortstop Stephen Drew also was on that Arizona team, while Cabrera played for the Marlins.
Leyland has experience with this year's playoff format, featuring the higher seed opening on the road for the first two games.
Facing the favored San Francisco Giants , Florida won the first two games at home, then completed a three-game sweep of the NL division series at Candlestick Park on the way to the title - Leyland's lone championship in 21 years as a manager.
These Tigers sure seem primed for another special October run.
First, they'll have to deal with a loud Coliseum crowd that has come alive over the past month as the A's emerged as a surprise contender, then clinched the club's first playoff berth in six years.
For Melvin, whatever happened Sunday is now in the past. He has bigger concerns at the moment.
"I respect Jim Leyland about as much as I respect anyone," Melvin said. "I think there are varying degrees of all that stuff, showmanship. ... I don't think there's one right or wrong way. Emotionally after a game when something like that happens you're always going to hear something from somebody. But you move on. It's not a big deal for me."| HITTERS | AB | AVG | H | HR | RBI | BB | SO | OBP | OPS | SLG |
| Miguel Cabrera | 7 | .429 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | .500 | 1.071 | .571 |
| Austin Jackson | 3 | .333 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | .333 | .666 | .333 |
| Gerald Laird | 5 | .000 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | .167 | .167 | .000 |
| Jhonny Peralta | 5 | .000 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | .000 | .000 | .000 |
| Ryan Raburn | 7 | .143 | 1 | 1 | 5 | 0 | 2 | .143 | .714 | .571 |
| Delmon Young | 9 | .444 | 4 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | .444 | 1.000 | .556 |
| HITTERS | AB | AVG | H | HR | RBI | BB | SO | OBP | OPS | SLG |
| Coco Crisp | 3 | .000 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 | .000 | .000 |
| Jonny Gomes | 4 | .250 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .400 | .900 | .500 |
| Tommy Milone | 1 | .000 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .000 | .000 | .000 |
| Seth Smith | 11 | .455 | 5 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 2 | .455 | 1.273 | .818 |
Detroit Tigers |
|||
| Date | Player | Status | Injury |
| September 28, 2012 | Octavio Dotel | Day-to-Day | Left game - sore right biceps |
| September 27, 2012 | Max Scherzer | Day-to-Day | Right deltoid strain |
| September 18, 2012 | Max Scherzer | Day-to-Day | Left game - right shoulder fatigue |
| September 16, 2012 | Austin Jackson | Day-to-Day | Sore left ankle |
| September 11, 2012 | Ryan Raburn | 15-Day DL | Strained right quadriceps |
| August 23, 2012 | Doug Fister | Day-to-Day | Tightness in right groin |
Oakland Athletics |
|||
| Date | Player | Status | Injury |
| September 25, 2012 | Coco Crisp | Day-to-Day | Eye infections |
| September 19, 2012 | Brett Anderson | Day-to-Day | Left game - strained right oblique |
| September 05, 2012 | Brandon McCarthy | Day-to-Day | Left game - head injury |
| September 02, 2012 | Brandon Inge | Day-to-Day | Dislocated right shoulder |
| September 02, 2012 | Brandon Inge | 60-Day DL | Strained right shoulder |
| August 18, 2012 | Jordan Norberto | 15-Day DL | Left shoulder tendinitis |
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -- Coco Crisp saved a likely home run, and Oakland's season for at least one more game.
If the center fielder had any lingering frustration about that two-run error that dearly cost Oakland in Game 2, this might have erased it.
Crisp made a spectacular leaping catch at the top of the center-field wall to rob Prince Fielder , and that was just one in a handful of defensive gems by the Athletics to back Brett Anderson in a 2-0 victory over the Detroit Tigers on Tuesday night.
The A's cut their deficit in the best-of-five AL division series to 2-1.
Anderson outdueled fellow postseason first-timer Anibal Sanchez and the upstart A's showed off stellar defense all over the diamond to avoid another playoff sweep by Detroit.
"Robbed home runs are good," Anderson posted on Twitter late Tuesday.
"You see him hit it and you just kind of put your head down a little bit because you think you just gave up a homer," Anderson said. "Then you see him plow through there and catch the ball and it kind of kick starts you to go out there and make pitches."
Yoenis Cespedes hit an RBI single in the first inning and Seth Smith homered in the fifth. That was plenty on a night Triple Crown winner Miguel Cabrera , Fielder and the Tigers' high-priced offense were shut down by the low-budget A's.
Tigers 16-game winner Max Scherzer will try to close out the series in Game 4 Wednesday night against A's rookie A.J. Griffin. Detroit swept the A's in the 2006 AL championship series.
Fielder was the biggest victim of Oakland's spot-on defense, robbed three times. First by Crisp, Oakland's most experienced player whose blunder on Cabrera's fly allowed two runs to score in a 5-4 loss Sunday in Detroit.
"Not to be all over-confident or anything, I think I'm going to catch everything out there," Crisp said. "Obviously it doesn't happen that way - duh Detroit, right?"
Crisp let out a big "Whoo!" after raising his arm to signal he'd made the grab.
"I thought I had a hit," Fielder offered afterward.
"Coco's catch, the ball was out of the ballpark and it came back," Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. "The key to that play was he was playing deep and that enabled him to get into a spot to get up and make the catch. And it was a great catch, no doubt about it."
A's shortstop Stephen Drew made a tough play running to his left to stop Fielder's grounder in the fourth and then threw to first while still off balance and in motion.
Then, in the seventh, Cespedes cut over to make a diving catch on Fielder's liner to left field.
That delighted the yellow towel-waving sellout crowd of 37,090 in this blue-collar city.
"It's frustrating. But it's a good team you're playing," Fielder said. "They're going to make those plays, that's why they're here."
After Cabrera singled with one out in the ninth, Fielder grounded into a game-ending double play. Fielder is now batting .172 (11 for 64) in his postseason career - .083 (1 for 12) this year.
The A's own the lowest payroll in baseball at $59.5 million. Fielder is getting big money in Motown: $214 million over nine years.
Anderson, back on the mound for the first time since straining a muscle in his right side Sept. 19 at Detroit, worked quickly and showed no signs of a layoff or jitters in his first postseason start.
That's just not the way the A's have operated this year.
Last week, Oakland entered its final three-game series of the regular season needing to sweep the two-time reigning AL champion Rangers to capture the AL West - and the A's did it, sending a stunned Texas team to the one-game wild card, which it lost to Baltimore.
A club with a majors-best 14 walkoff wins and countless whipped cream pie celebrations snapped the longest postseason skid in franchise history at six games, all losses to Detroit.
The Tigers are trying to reach a second straight AL championship series after losing last year's ALCS in six games to the Rangers.
Detroit captured the AL Central in Oakland last year and is hoping for another clinching party as soon as possible.
Anderson did his job to delay it.
He insisted he was healthy and ready to go - and manager Bob Melvin took his pitcher at his word and gave him a shot in his biggest start yet. Anderson had shown plenty when he returned in August following a 14-month absence recovering from elbow-ligament replacement surgery and made six impressive starts.
Not feeling quite 100 percent, he allowed two hits, struck out six and walked two in six innings. He was on a pitch count of 80 and was done at exactly that, though was never told about it beforehand.
"I don't know how you could expect more than we got out of him tonight," Melvin said.
Next, the reliable bullpen took over.
Ryan Cook pitched the seventh, Sean Doolittle struck out the side in order in the eighth and closer Grant Balfour finished the four-hitter for a save. The A's staff pitched the 11th postseason shutout by the franchise, while the Tigers were blanked for the 13th time in the postseason.
The A's had lost five straight while facing elimination in the postseason, one shy of the longest active streak by the Twins.
But this group has defied expectations ever since the first full workout at spring training back in February when the A's lost third baseman Scott Sizemore to a season-ending knee injury. Opening day starter Brandon McCarthy took a line drive to the head Sept. 5 and needed brain surgery. Starter Bartolo Colon was suspended for 50 games in August for a positive testosterone test.
Oakland became the first team in major league history to win the division or pennant after trailing by five or more games with fewer than 10 to go. The A's were five back of the Rangers with nine left, then won their final six, all at home with sweeps of Seattle and Texas.
Smith hit a towering drive to the deepest part of center field in the fifth for yet another timely home run for the A's, whose 112 homers after the All-Star break led the majors.
"That's how you win postseason baseball games, with pitching and defense and timely hitting," Smith said. "We had that. We got two runs and that's all we needed. Anderson was great and our defense was, too."
Sanchez gave up five hits and two runs in 6 1-3 innings, struck out three and walked two.
NOTES: Smith hit his first postseason homer and third lifetime against Sanchez in 15 at-bats. ... At 24 years, 251 days, Anderson became the fifth-youngest pitcher in Oakland history to make his first career postseason start. ... Both Bay Area teams avoided elimination after the NL West champion San Francisco Giants won at Cincinnati earlier in the night. ... Oakland sold out for the eighth time this year and second straight - the regular-season finale vs. Texas drew 36,067 - including 1,000 standing-room only tickets and extra suite sales. It was the biggest crowd at the Coliseum since drawing 43,974 against the Yankees on Sept. 4, 2005, before the upper decks were tarped.