OAKLAND — There were a trio of occasions on Friday night where the Marlins seemed poised to scratch across, at the minimum, a run or two against JP Sears. All three times, Sears, with a little help from his defense, slammed the door en route to turning in one of his finer starts of the year.
On a relatively lively evening at the Oakland Coliseum, Sears tossed 6 1/3 shutout innings, Brent Rooker hit his sixth home run, Lucas Erceg recorded his second save and the Athletics (16-17) bested the Marlins, 3-1, to win their fifth straight game.
The outing was a bounceback for Sears, who allowed seven earned runs, tied for the most he’s surrendered in a single start, to the Orioles across 6 1/3 innings in his last appearance.
If there was a theme for Sears on Friday night, it was his ability to get into and out of trouble. Thrice, the Marlins put a runner in scoring position against Sears. In each instance, Sears escaped without allowing a run.
Sears’ first act came in the second inning when Jazz Chisholm Jr. hit a one-out triple to center field with the help of Esteury Ruiz misplaying the hop. Despite the potential first run of the game sitting 90 feet away, Sears got out of trouble by striking out Emmanuel Rivera and getting Otto Lopez to ground out.
The southpaw worked out of an even trickier jam in the following inning. The Marlins put runners at the corners with one out after Vidal Bruján doubled, then stole third as Myers drew a walk. With men at first and third, Sears induced a tailor-made 6-4-3 double play off the bat of Bryan De La Cruz to end another threat.
After tossing a perfect fourth, Sears wiggled his way out of more danger in the fifth. Bruján, again, put himself in scoring position by roping a two-out single and swiping second base. Nick Fortes slapped a line drive that appeared destined for the left-field grass, but Darrell Hernaiz perfectly timed his leap to snag Fortes’ screamer and keep the Marlins out of the run column. In total, the Marlins were hitless in five at-bats against Sears with a runner in scoring position.
Sears wasn’t the only pitcher donning the green and gold to strand Marlins on base. In the eighth inning with two outs and two on, Lucas Erceg was called upon to keep the Marlins off the scoreboard. Erceg had a dubious beginning, plunking Josh Bell to load the bases, then starting his at-bat against Tim Anderson with a pair of pitches outside the zone.
With the bases full and Anderson, a former batting champion, sitting on a 2-0 count, Erceg responded with three straight strikes to end the inning, freezing Anderson on a slider to punch him out looking.
As far as the scoring, Rooker put the A’s on the scoreboard with a no-doubt, 440-foot two-run shot — his sixth homer of the year — that flirted with landing in the skyboxes, providing a 2-0 lead in the bottom of the fourth inning. Oakland tacked on another run in the fifth inning as Esteury Ruiz legged out a two-out infield single hit to the six hole, expanding the lead to 3-0.
Roughly five minutes prior to first pitch, ESPN’s Jeff Passan reported that two-time All-Star Luis Arraez, the Marlins’ original leadoff hitter, had been traded to the Padres as part of a blockbuster deal. Sears’ first batter of the game, then, became Dane Myers, who he struck out on five pitches to begin the game.
Brett Harris, Oakland’s No. 9 prospect per MLB Pipeline who was called up prior to Friday’s game, went hitless in three at-bats with two strikeouts in his debut.