Choker?!
Did someone beat me to it and actually merchandise an
A'S CHOKER?
MLB.com Store - Oakland Athletics: Women's: Oakland Athletics Womens Accessories : Gamewear Oakland Athletics Baseball Seam Necklace
A game-by-game record of the 2006 season from an unjaded A's fan
MLB.com Store - Oakland Athletics: Women's: Oakland Athletics Womens Accessories : Gamewear Oakland Athletics Baseball Seam Necklace


• Favorite memories of this game: chanting "Brad-ley" over and over each time Milton Bradley came to take his position in right field after hitting a home run in the previous inning. This happened twice, of course! The first time, Bradley punched his fist and we ate it up. I'm so glad he acknowledged the crowd. The next time, Bradley playfully put his hands up as if to say, "What can I do? I hit it out of the park!" I was not the only one who called out, "Bradley, we love you!"






Cool champagne showers must have been soothing to a red-hot Scutaro: The bases-loaded double in the seventh inning that assured that the Oakland Athletics would advance to the American League Championship Series is the one everyone will remember, but he also doubled in the first run in Game 2, and doubled in the second run in Game 1. But the moment that will stand for him as the zenith of his career was the RBI double in the second inning Friday, the one that sparked the Elephants' 8-3 win over Minnesota, and what led up to it. 'When I heard the people chanting my name,' he said, rivulets of champagne pouring from the end of his cap and nose. 'That was special for me. That's the one that meant the most. I remember saying to myself, 'Please don't strike out.' '
Oakland A's and San Francisco Giants spring training blog from ContraCostaTimes.com: No limit to the heroes for the A's, and that's what it generally takes to win one of these series. Barry Zito's Game 1 effort set the tone, as did the two-homer performance by Frank Thomas. The A's did all the fundamental things right in Game 2 (well, all these games really), then caught a break on Mark Kotsay's inside-the-park home run. Then in Game 3, they got contributions from Chavez, Scutaro, Nick Swisher (a great at-bat in drawing a bases-loaded walk immediately before Scutaro's double in the seventh; he fought back from a 1-2 count), Milton Bradley (a two-run homer that caromed off the back wall beyond the center-field fence), Dan Haren (six solid innings), Justin Duchscherer (two lights-out innings in relief), and Huston Street (closing it out in the ninth). Heck, D'Angelo Jimenez was excellent, too, handling all five chances, starting one double play and turning another.

Looking back, it seems like the biggest no-brainer of the winter: Thomas for $500,000, with a boatload of incentives tied directly to his being able to get on the field and stay there.
And if it was so obvious, you wonder why no one else thought of it first. Beane did, getting Thomas to come to Oakland when the Twins, among others, were courting him for their own roster. Now the results are so glowing -- and, for Thomas, enriching to the tune of millions -- that people have discussed a similarly structured contract for the likes of, say, Barry Bonds. (Bonds' reply: Uh, no.)
The great players in the game are the ones who execute the fundamentals consistently, and if we execute fundamentals, we’ll be as good as we’ve been all year.
THE LAST GAME OF THE REGULAR SEASON
• After three hours and 45 minutes, the A's win. The last game of the regular season and it's not even televised in the Bay Area for crying out loud.
• The A's face the Minnesota Twins on Tuesday at 10 AM PST. I didn't want it to be the Twins, but perhaps this is a hump we have to get over, now or never. Oops, I don't mean the "never" part.
• My devotion as a fan will be tested with the playoffs. I have a difficult time following day games when I'm at work. I know that's not the right thing to say, but it's true.

City of Oakland's A's banner, originally uploaded by gohlkus.
And finally, THANK YOU for reading this blog. While I knew I could keep a journal for the whole season, I didn't realize how difficult it would be at times. Thanks for being with me.
Many thanks to Tanner Boyle for covering for me when I went on vacation. Thanks also for generously inviting me to games with seats right behind the A's dugout.
Thanks to Al for being my editor behind the scenes. He and I had an arrangement where I could call him late at night when I needed a more experienced baseball fan to make sure I got my description of plays right. I should be so lucky to be as knowledgeable about baseball as he is.
Thanks to Joker/Gabe for teaching me some ins and outs of blogging. Thanks for the encouragement, the feedback, and the links to useful sites.
Thanks to No. 19, Celeste, and GeneralChiang for consistently commenting. Thanks for sharing your points of view. You don't know how much satisfaction it gives me to have your thoughts and memories of these games recorded with mine.
And thanks to everyone else who's read the Oakland Athletics Journal, whether you stayed for one blog post or more. While it was easier to pretend I was only sharing this with a small group of friends, that wasn't always the case. I appreciate that people visited (at all) and that some even came back.
Go A's!
(Game experience: KYCY 1550 AM)
A's record: 93-69 | streak: W-1 | well-A-meter: 4.75