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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Sport
Jerry McDonald

A's fall victim to Astros ace Justin Verlander's stellar start and Martin Maldonado's grand slam

Pit the most anemic offensive team in baseball against a future Hall of Famer and the end result is what happened to the Athletics Saturday in a 5-0 road loss to the Houston Astros.

The A’s spotted Justin Verlander a 4-0 lead in the second inning on grand slam by Martin Maldonado against starting pitcher Jared Koenig and the 39-year-old right-hander took care of the rest with relief help from Phil Maton, Hector Neris and Bryan Abreu for one inning each.

Verlander gave up six hits in six innings, throwing 106 pitches — 73 of them strikes — while improving to 12-3 and lowering his earned run average to 1.89. He struck out 10, leapfrogging Curt Schilling (3,116) and Bob Gibson (3,117) and moving into 14th on the all-time major league list with 3,121 and improved his record to 238-132.

Houston, the division leaders, improved to 59-31, with the Athletics at the other end of the A.L. West standings at 31-61.

In the sixth, Verlander finished with a flourish, striking out the side. In all, the A’s swung and missed 19 times. Every A’s hitter struck out at least once except leadoff batter Vimael Machin.

Koenig, 1-3, had a 10-pitch first inning with a pair of strikeouts then got the first two hitters of the second before disaster struck.

Suddenly unable to keep pitches from being up in the zone, Koenig gave up sharp singles to left center to both Yuli Gurriel and Jake Meyers before walking Chas McCormick.

Maldonado, the No. 9 hitter, was next, and he hit a 1-0 pitch well over the left-center-field fence. The drive left the park at 106.1 miles per hour and carried 416 feet. It was Maldonado’s ninth home run of the season.

The Astros added a run in the fourth against Koenig with the help of a leadoff walk to Aledmys Diaz, who eventually scored on a sacrifice fly by McCormick.

Recalled from Triple-A Las Vegas on Tuesday, Koenig had his best major league start despite the obvious second-inning mistake. He pitched seven innings before giving way to Kirby Snead after having never gone more than 5 2/3 in five previous starts and threw an efficient 86 pitches with 59 strikes with two walks and three strikeouts.

For the Athletics, it was the 33rd time in 91 games they scored one run or fewer including 10 shutout losses. In all, the A’s struck out 16 times and drew one walk (with two out in the ninth) against Verlander and the three relievers.

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