Toucher: Oakland Athletics owner is worst in all of sports
On Friday’s edition of the Toucher & Hardy radio program, Fred sounded off on the Oakland Athletics’ owner temporarily moving the team to Sacramento.
Oakland Athletics Moving?
Parts of conversation abbreviated for clarity.
Toucher: The Triple-A park, they’ll play there for not one, not two, but three years, and not even this year.
Major League Baseball, as an entity, will now have a stadium that will get knocked down after the season. So there is going to be no basic sanitary things being done. Nothing to upkeep, nothing. There’s no incentive to do anything because no one’s going to the games. The team is awful. So Major League Baseball has that blight.
Major League Baseball has got a team playing in F’ing Sacramento, for one thing. Not to mention, they are playing in a Triple-A ballpark. If you’re an owner of a team, there’s almost nothing you can do to lose the power of running that team. The owners don’t want that.
The owners don’t want to set a precedent where you can get rid of their owners. They just won’t do it. So guys like Dan Snyder can go around for decades just acting like complete lunatics until they’re kindly asked, “Could you please sell the team for billions of profit?”
So this is the jackass owner of the Oakland A’s, John Fisher, the worst owner in all of sports. And you would think if you had the money and were sitting on that kind of money, you would want people to, at least, not hate you.
You have more money than you could ever do with. Right? You would hope that the guy likes baseball, is competitive with the team, and that you want people to not hate you.
The team is a public trust, like it’s an investment, but it’s a part of the community. It existed before you. It’s going to exist after you. It’s a part of the community.
Segment Audio
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Mazz: The Red Sox new pitching philosophy failed Brayan Bello
Pitching coach Andrew Bailey and the Red Sox’ new pitching philosophy is being celebrated. Last night, it failed Brayan Bello.
In case you missed it, Bailey was the prettiest girl at the dance following the Red Sox season-opening series at Seattle – and then again after Tanner Houck and the Red Sox defeated Oakland by a 9-0 score on Monday. Bailey and the Red Sox’ new pitching philosophy were getting a great deal of love for how they pitched in the first five games with a new strategy that Bailey nicely summed up.
“I think if you look at the history of baseball, fastballs for the longest time, get hit the hardest,” Bailey told the media before the opener in Oakland. “They have the most damage attached to them, year in and year out. It doesn’t matter who you are. Obviously, there’s some unicorn fastballs out there, but we just want our guys to stick to their strengths and know that every pitch we make you’re making a bet on trying to limit damage and induce swing and miss or weak contact. Generally, your softer options have that more attached to them.”
But that doesn’t mean the softer options are always the best ones, something Bailey, Bello and the Red Sox learned last night.
After allowing a two-run home run in the series opener – on a team-seam fastball to Seattle’s Mitch Haniger – Bello gave up two more last night to the Oakland A’s in the Red Sox’ eventual 5-4, extra-inning win. The difference this time is that both home run came on off-speed pitches, raining as questions about both pitch selection and execution, not to mention the overall philosophy.
Before we get into the details, the two home runs Bellow allowed last night can be seen here:
Ryan Beaton is a producer and content creator for 98.5 The Sports Hub. Ryan was born in Weymouth, Massachusetts. He graduated from the University of Massachusetts in 2021, studying Broadcast Journalism. Ryan started his radio career in college as a play-by-play announcer/producer for WMUA 91.1 FM. He produces multiple weekend shows, including: 98.5 Over/Under, Hockey Show, and Sunday Kickoff. He is also a part of the Celtics, Bruins, and Patriots Radio Network. His favorite sports are Mixed Martial Arts, Football, and Basketball. Ryan enjoys playing golf but is NOT good at it. Ryan writes about all New England sports from Patriots football to Boston Celtics and Boston Bruins.