The
Oakland Athletics will play another day in this improbable season full of
remarkable rallies.
These A's
never count themselves out — down and doubted is their dogma.
Brett
Anderson outdueled fellow postseason first-timer Anibal Sanchez and the upstart
Athletics showed off stellar defense all over the diamond, avoiding another
playoff sweep by Detroit by beating the Tigers 2-0 Tuesday night in their AL
division series.
The A's
cut their deficit in the best-of-five matchup to 2-1.
Coco
Crisp, whose misplay dearly cost Oakland in Game 2, saved a likely home run by
Prince Fielder with a leaping catch at the top of the center-field wall in the
second inning.
''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.
''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.
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 of
those against the Tigers, too.
The Tigers
are trying to reach 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 longballs 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.
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