A’s rally to beat Royals 10-8

Matt Joyce’s bases-loaded double in the bottom of the eighth put Oakland ahead.|

OAKLAND - The A’s sent their fans on an emotional roller coaster featuring happiness, anger and ecstasy all in the span of one inning Tuesday.

After booing Santiago Casilla off the mound in the eighth inning for blowing Chris Smith’s shot at his first win since 2008 and first of his career, the crowd of 13,875 fans at the Coliseum was sent into a frenzy after the A’s completed another one one of their late-inning comebacks that have become very common at home this season in a 10-8 victory over the Kansas City Royals.

Matt Joyce was responsible for the madness. After the A’s had already began the inning with four straight hits to cut the deficit to 8-6, Joyce came up with the bases loaded and delivered the knockout punch, smashing a double off the left field wall that cleared the bases to put the A’s ahead 9-8.

It was a scene that was all too familiar for A’s starting pitcher Smith.

The 36-year-old veteran handed the ball to manager Bob Melvin after recording the first out of the fifth, leaving a potential victory in the hands of the A’s bullpen with just 11 outs to go. The A’s were more than halfway there, but then Santiago Casilla blew it all up.

Casilla entered the game in eighth inning and ruined Smith’s potential feel-good story by surrendering a two-run home run to Drew Butera, giving the Royals a 5-4 lead and crushing Smith’s hopes of earning the win.

Smith’s dream scenario quickly turned into a nightmare as the Royals opened the floodgates. Blake Treinen was summoned in relief of Casilla and surrendered a two-run home run to Eric Hosmer and a solo bomb to Mike Moustakas just two batters later to go from a 4-3 lead to an 8-4 deficit all in the same inning.

It was deja vu all over again for Smith, who was dealt a similar blow in July after pitching seven innings and exiting the game with the lead only to watch Casilla blow a save by surrendering a go-ahead home run in the ninth. Smith became the oldest player to make his first major league start earlier this season. He spent six years battling his way through the minors and independent leagues and even took a year off from baseball before finding his way back to the big leagues last year in the A’s bullpen.

After a rough first inning that saw him allow three runs after just four batters faced, Smith settled down to give the A’s 5 1/3 innings of work, allowing just the three runs and only one hit after the first.

Home runs have often been Smith’s downfall this season, but this time the long ball helped the 36-year-old veteran. A’s home runs in each of the first three innings provided Smith with just enough support to exit the game with the lead.

They certainly were the Swingin’ A’s early on in the game.

Joyce and Matt Olson led off the first and second with home runs, then Khris Davis smashed a two-run homer over the left field wall in the third to give the A’s a 4-3 lead over the Kansas City Royals.

Davis’ go-ahead blast was his 33rd of the season, tying him with Texas Rangers slugger Joey Gallo for third-most in the American League. Joyce, who hit his 17th of the season, is well on track to surpassing his career-high home run total of 19 set in 2011 as a member of the Tampa Bay Rays. It was the eighth time Joyce had led off a game with a home run and the fourth time this season.

For Olson, his eighth home run of the year continues what has been a hot streak since taking over the first base job. The rookie has now hit a home run in four of the past five games for the A’s.

NOTES

The A’s bullpen lost a bevy of experience with the departure of Ryan Madson and Sean Doolittle earlier this season, but they got some of the back on Tuesday.

Right-handed pitcher Chris Hatcher was acquired from the Los Angeles Dodgers in exchange for $500,000 in international signing money.

Hatcher began the season with the Los Angeles Dodgers, going 0-1 with a 4.66 ERA in 26 games before thoracic inflammation landed him on the disabled list on June 23. He previously played for the Miami Marlins from 2011-14.

Just reinstated from the disabled list by the Dodgers on Aug. 12, Hatcher made five rehab appearances in the minor leagues and went 0-0 with a 1.50.

A’s manager Bob Melvin was unsure where Hatcher, 32, would end up once arrives to Oakland but said the club is looking forward to adding a reliever with postseason experience.

Hatcher pitched in four games for the Dodgers in the 2015 NLDS, tossing 3? innings of scoreless relief with five strikeouts while allowing only one walk.

With a bullpen that is bunched up with pitchers that are auditioning for a spot on the 2018 roster, making the trade for Hatcher gives Melvin one more option to evaluate. Hatcher pitched more than one inning in 14 of his 26 appearances for the Dodgers this season.

“I think that’s why you’re looking at a Chris Hatcher. We’re looking for some guys that can pitch and pitch well for us,” Melvin said. “One of the things we’ve had a little difficulty with in years past is multiple innings guys so it’s nice to have guys that can pitch more than one inning too.”

Boog Powell has only been with the club for a few days, but so far Melvin likes what he has seen from the outfielder who has gone 2 for 9 with three runs scored while making a couple of impressive catches in center.

“He’s got good instincts and he gets good jumps on balls. He’s shown a good throwing arm so we’ve been impressed. It’s been a short period of time but I think he’s had enough work out there to where we’re real comfortable with him out there defensively,” Melvin said. “We haven’t seen him enough offensively yet even though he’s gotten on base a few times and got some hits but we’ve been real happy with the way he’s played center field.”

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