Three games, two wins
Today's a three-in-one, since I haven't posted since Thursday. On Thursday, Rich Harden went off and banged out seven innings worth of zeroes against the Mariners, powered by eight strikeouts. The bullpen was then good enough to overcome an error and make the three runs Oakland had scored early in the game stand up. The only black mark on Harden's day is that he had to be removed after the seventh, having thrown 119 pitches already. That's 17 pitches per inning and one would like to see him be a bit more efficient so that he can complete a game like he had on Thursday. The model should be Mark Mulder's 10-inning shutout of the Astros on Saturday when he used just 101 pitches. With that count, he probably could have gone one more inning had he needed to. That efficiency is why Mulder is one of my favorite pitchers (and was my favorite of the Big Three): there's something almost perverse about only throwing ten pitches per inning, and he seems to do just that with regularity. On Friday, Kirk Saarloos threw another mediocre game, giving up three runs in five and a third innings, but the A's bullpen, showing its muscle, held the Angels off long enough for Oakland to score twice in the top of the ninth against Francisco Rodriguez (no mean feat), giving the A's the lead that Octavio Dotel held on to in the bottom half. The A's banged out ten hits, earned five walks, had one batter hit with a pitch, and got helped out by two Anaheim errors, but still managed to push across just four runs. That's ugly, but a win is a win. And it's a good thing Oakland came back to win on Friday, because Saturday just turned ugly. Dan Haren had his first bad game as an Athletic, giving up eight runs in just four and two thirds innings. The most worrisome trouble the A's had in this game were the five stolen bases Anaheim had off of the Haren/Jason Kendall combination. In 2004, Haren allowed three stolen bases and had no one caught stealing, but there's not enough of a sample to make any statements about that. I've mentioned significant worries about Kendall's ability to stop the running game before, but I honestly didn't think it would get this bad. Sure, running is down everywhere, but if it gets around that people can run on Kendall, they will, and those few runs those teams pick up over the course of the season could spell the difference between first and second place between Oakland and Anaheim.


