Guardians' Steven Kwan heads to first base after he singled home Brayan Rocchio during the fourth inning Saturday in a 12-3 win over the A's at Oakland Coliseum.AP
GUARDIANS
Guardians, hitting on all cylinders, sprint to 3-0 under Stephen Vogt with 12-3 win over A’s
Updated: Mar. 31, 2024, 9:43 a.m.|Published: Mar. 30, 2024, 7:10 p.m.
By Paul Hoynes, cleveland.com
OAKLAND - Tanner Bibee didn’t have it Saturday afternoon, but everyone else wearing a Guardians uniform did.
The Guardians thumped Oakland, 12-3, at the Coliseum to give manager Stephen Vogt his third straight win as manager. The only other manager to start his career in Cleveland by winning his first three games was Hall of Famer Al Lopez in 1951.
The Guardians proved to be handful for the A’s. They reached double figures in runs for the first time this season behind 15 hits and six steals. Four of the stolen bases came on double steals.
Offensively, the only disappointment came when José Ramírez was robbed of his second first-inning homer in as many days on a great catch by center fielder J.J. Bleday. That was the highlight of the game for the A’s.
Oakland actually held a 3-2 lead after three innings, but couldn’t hold it. The Guardians took the lead for good with three runs in the fourth.
“Our guys punch back when they get behind,” said Vogt. “It showed the grit and the way they battled. We had good at-bats up and down the lineup.”
Steven Kwan, David Fry, Gabriel Arias and Austin Hedges had two RBI each. Kwan led the offense with three hits, including his first homer of the season.
Ramon Laureano, Fry, Andrés Giménez, Arias, Will Brennan and Tyler Freeman stole bases. After going 2 for 4 in steals Friday, the Guardians went 6 for 6 on Saturday. Two of the steals turned into runs.
The double steals were pulled off by Laureano and Fry in the third and Brennan and Freeman in the sixth.
The last time the Guardians had six steals in one game within three games of the season opener was April 4, 1984 against the Royals.
“It’s been a lot of fun the last three games,” said Kwan, awarded the team’s championship belt after the game. “We want everyone to do well. Everything is clicking. We’re playing Guardians baseball, taking extra bases and stealing bags.”
Giménez, who tripled home the Guardians’ first run in the second inning, started the fourth by getting hit with a pitch. He stole second and scored on Arias’ single off lefty J.P. Sears (0-1, 12.27). Arias, who had two hits and two RBI off Sears, batted .083 against lefties last year.
Arias stole second and took third on a throwing error by catcher Kyle McCann. Austin Hedges’ sacrifice fly gave Cleveland a 4-3 lead.
Brayan Rocchio kept the inning going with a double. Kwan delivered him with a single for a 5-3 lead. It was the first of three straight hits by Kwan.
Kwan, playing in front of family and friends, didn’t remember much about the home run.
“It’s the same thing, I black out every time,” said Kwan. “I’m just floating. That’s why I sprint around the bags. I don’t even feel myself running.”
The Guardians made it 7-3 with two more runs in the fifth. Fry started the inning and came around to score on an error by shortstop Nick Allen. Hedges doubled home Arias, who reached on the error.
The A’s committed three errors in the game. They’ve been charged with six in the first three games of the season.
Bibee allowed three runs on six hits in four innings. He struck out four and walked five on 88 pitches.
“I need to throw more strikes,” said Bibee. “Walking five guys isn’t going to get the job done.”
It was even a good day for Cleveland’s new replay team. When Oakland’s Zack Gelof reached on an apparent triple in the first inning, the Guardians challenged the play. They said when a ball gets lodged in the outfield padding, it’s a ground-rule double.
The umpires agreed, and Gelof retreated to second. He stayed there as the next two A’s went down on strikeouts.
“I didn’t even think about it,” said Vogt. “Kai (Correa, major league field coordinator) was saying, ‘Hey, we can challenge that if it’s lodged in the padding. Check it, check it.’ To me that was huge.”
For new replay coordinator Gunnar Wilhelmy, it was his first successful challenge.
Relievers Nick Sandlin, Cade Smith and Tyler Beede closed the game. Smith, making his big league debut, threw two scoreless innings with five strikeouts. The 6-foot-5 Canadian hit 98 mph.
The five strikeouts set a club record for a debut of fewer than two innings.
Last weekend the Guardians told Smith that he had made the 26-man roster, but they couldn’t make it official until the roster was set on Thursday morning because they might add another reliever.
Smith’s family, including his wife and parents, were in the stands watching. They had come from British Columbia.
“It was super awesome to be out there on a ballfield,” said Smith.
Cleveland’s offense was relentless.
They added two more runs in the sixth, one in the seventh and two in the ninth. In the first three games of this series, they’ve scored 26 runs on 34 hits.
When spring training started, Rocchio and Arias were competing for the shortstop job. The job went to Rocchio, but Arias made the club as well. On Saturday they went 4 for 10 with four runs, two doubles and two RBI.
“Both those guys can play, and they’re going to play,” said Vogt.
The Guardians are 14-2 against the A’s in the last three years. They extended their winning streak against the A’s to seven games.
Next: RHP Carlos Carrasco (3-8, 6.80) vs. RHP Paul Blackburn (4-7, 4.43) Sunday at 4:07 p.m. ET. Bally Sports Great Lakes, WTAM and the Guardians radio network will carry the game. Pitchers records are from 2023.
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