A’s Come Back In Extras, Beat Angels 6-5

ANAHEIM, CA – MAY 20: Athletics left fielder Tyler Soderstrom (21) hits a single and drives in two runs during an MLB baseball game against the Los Angeles Angels played on May 20, 2026 at Angel Stadium in Anaheim, CA. (Photo by John Cordes/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The A’s were on the ropes tonight, down to their final three outs. A late home run tied this game up for the A’s and sent it to extras, where the Athletics managed to pull ahead and hang on for the win, putting them back over the .500 mark and remain alone atop the AL West.

Lots of early offense

It didn’t take long for the scoring bonanza to get going tonight. A HBP, a walk, and a single quickly loaded the bases for the A’s and left fielder Tyler Soderstrom cashed two of those runs in with an RBI base knock to center field, giving the squad an early 2-0 lead:

It’s been a tough season for the lefty slugger and we’re all waiting for him to heat up. Fingers crossed this was the thing that’ll spark his coming hot streak. That earlier walk also came from Nick Kurtz, which extended his on-base streak to 43 games. Closing in on McGuire.

Staked to a lead before even throwing a pitch, it was Aaron Civale’s turn to shut down the Angels’ bats and provide a shutdown inning. Instead, with two down Civale hung a curveball to Los Angeles DH Jorge Soler and he punished him for it with a game-tying two-run homer.

Looking to retake the lead the A’s kept it up in the second. Center fielder Henry Bolte worked a five-pitch walk and then promptly stole second base, his second already in seven games. I mean, look at this:

Speed on the base paths has been an element of the Athletics’ offense that has been ignored, lacking, and nonexistent. Bolte fixes that and puts a different kind of pressure on the opposing pitcher when he’s on base. He’s only got two but that’s good enough for fourth-most on the team and he’ll certainly lead everyone by season’s end. Gotta love diversifying the offense a bit!

A walk flipped the lineup and brought up leadoff man Carlos Cortes and he delivered his own RBI hit, a single to bring home Bolte and retake the lead for the A’s.

Given another chance to get a shutdown inning, Civale continued to look shaky. His first pitch of the second was deposited over the left field wall for a solo shot off the bat of Jo Adell, and that was soon followed by a two-run homer from Josh Lowe, the second two-run shot that Civale allowed in as many innings. After two innings of work tonight his season ERA rose from 2.70 entering tonight to a 3.51 mark.

Considering the early struggles one would have imagined that Civale wasn’t long for this game. But Jacob Lopez’s short start yesterday forced a lot of the ‘pen into action and the team needed more frames from the veteran right-hander tonight. Though he allowed leadoff doubles in each of the third and fourth, the righty bent but didn’t break the rest of the night, providing three more innings of scoreless pitching to keep the A’s in the game and give the bullpen some rest.

  • Aaron Civale: 5 IP, 5 H, 5 ER, 2 BB,. 2 K, 3 HR, 61 pitches

And frankly considering his low pitch count the team could have probably squeezed one more inning out of Civale before turning things over to the bullpen. It was a tough night for him though and Kotsay decided it was time. Tonight was not a great outing as he finished with a 3.31 season ERA after this one, over half a run more than what he entered the contest with. This was only the third outing this season he’s allowed more than three runs. He’ll hope to right the ship next time out at home against the Seattle Mariners.

A’s claw back

As for the A’s offense, they went dormant after the first two innings. From the third through the sixth they were retired in order, failing to work even a walk against Angels starting pitcher Jack Kochanowicz. The right-hander had those early struggles but once staked to a lead he went into cruise control against the A’s offense and they couldn’t force him out of this game soon enough.

Finally in the seventh the Angels pulled their starter and turned things over to their bottom-ranked bullpen. The A’s immediately had a scoring opportunity once Kochanowicz was out of the game. They had some help with two hit batsmen but when you’re down two runs you’ll take what you can get. Nick Kurtz cashed one of those runs in with a huge two-out RBI single to cut the Los Angeles lead to one…

… but Cortes was caught getting greedy trying to get to third and was thrown out, ending the rally right there. What’s the old baseball saying? Never make the last out of the inning at third. Big owch.

Righty Luis Medina replaced Civale and provided two scoreless innings to get this game to the eighth. Mark Leiter Jr. was next and he pitched a 1-2-3 bottom of the eighth to set the A’s up for a potential ninth-inning comeback.

It was the bottom of the order though and the Angels had Kirby Yates looking to shut the door on the A’s. Didn’t matter to Jeff McNeil, who golfed the fifth pitch of the at-bat over the short wall in the right field corner for a massive game-tying solo home run:

Huge, huge hit and one the A’s desperately needed. That was just his second homer of the season but it couldn’t have come at a better time. The A’s continued to rally but Kurtz grounded out with a runner at second to end the threat and send this one to the bottom of the ninth. Scott Barlow handled it and didn’t allow a baserunner. This game would have to be decided in extra innings.

Kurtz started the top of the 10th on second base and after a strikeout it was Soderstrom up to bat again. And for the second time tonight, Sodey had a massive hit, a one-out RBI single to give the A’s their first lead since the second inning:

He made it to third thanks to the ball getting by the outfielders but was ultimately stranded and with two chances it felt like the A’s left some meat on the bone there.

Still, either way you slice it the A’s had the lead. Lefty Hogan Harris was tasked with locking down the Angels and stranding the ghost runner at second. It got a little tense there at the end. He got the strikeout on a failed bunt attempt for the first out, a weak grounder to short for the second out, then an intentional walk to Mike Trout and another walk loaded the bases for Soler. With the game on the line Harris needed his best pitch of the night. He delivered it and got Soler to ground out to second base, securing the save for himself (#4) and the win for the team.

What a win! Always love to see the team never give up the fight. The A’s only managed six hits but that ended up being just enough. Civale wasn’t on his game tonight but he did well to battle through it and provide five full innings of work. That really helps the bullpen for the rest of this road trip, which still has four games left. Kurtz’s on-base streak lives, Soderstrom finally had a couple big hits, and the bullpen provided five shutout innings en route to the come from behind victory. The A’s are now 25-24 and remain in sole possession of first place in the AL West, and now they’ll have a chance for the series victory in the finale.

It all wraps up tomorrow evening, same time same place. It’ll be a battle of each team’s Opening Day starters as Luis Severino will take on Jose Soriano. Severino was on a roll recently but got roughed up in his most recent outing so he’ll be looking for a bounce back performance tomorrow evening. Soriano meanwhile is having a fantastic year overall but has also gotten hit hard in a couple of his most recent outings. Is the league figuring him out after one month of dominance? The A’s will hope that’s the case.

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