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  Thursday, Sep. 28 3:35pm ET
A's suffer just second loss in nine games
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME LOG

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -- Art Howe wasn't sure why the Oakland Athletics picked such a terrible time to stop hitting.

Kevin Appier
Kevin Appier kept the A's in the game with eight good innings, but allowed two home runs to Scott Spezio.

Troy Glaus led off the 14th inning with his AL-leading 45th homer as the Anaheim Angels beat Oakland 6-3 Thursday, what could be a key defeat in the A's quest for the playoffs.

The Athletics' potent offense, which scored 26 runs in the previous three games against Anaheim, managed just one extra-base hit in 14 tiring innings. What's more, the extra innings forced the Athletics to use seven pitchers -- 14 over their last two games -- with a critical weekend series against Texas looming.

"We just couldn't cash in any time we had opportunities," Oakland manager Art Howe said. "Sometimes at this time of the year, you just have to reach down deep and pull out that extra effort. We're going to need that this weekend."

Oakland (88-70) lost for just the second time in nine games, but Seattle's 13-6 loss to Texas kept the A's a half-game behind the Mariners (89-70) in the West. Oakland's lead in the wild card race also stayed at 1½ games over Cleveland (87-72), which lost 4-3 to the Twins in 10 innings.

Glaus, who hit 44 of his homers as a third baseman, broke the AL record for homers by a third baseman set by Al Rosen in 1953. His drive off reliever Scott Service (1-2) was the Angels' first run since the fifth inning and the first homer off an Oakland reliever since Aug. 20.

"It's nice to get a win, but 4:42 is a long time," said Glaus, referring to the time it took to play the game. "It's nice to have a say as far as the playoff race goes. We wish we were in their position, battling for it, but it's still nice to have this chance."

Four batters after Glaus' homer, Orlando Palmeiro added a two-run double as the Angels avoided a four-game sweep. Mike Holtz (3-3) pitched a perfect 13th inning, and Troy Percival struck out the side in the 14th for his 32nd save in 42 chances.

"This was a 14-inning game that isn't going to help us, and the guys were playing as hard as they did in spring training," Anaheim manager Mike Scioscia said. "That's tremendous. The passion that these guys have for the game is unbelievable."

Scott Spiezio homered twice to give Anaheim a 3-0 lead, but the Angels gave up two unearned runs in the fifth and an RBI single by Miguel Tejada in the eighth.

Neither team could get a runner past first in the extra innings until the 13th, when the Angels got three walks to load the bases but couldn't score.

The A's scored 53 runs in their previous eight games, but starter Scott Karl set the tone for Anaheim's pitching staff with five strong innings. Karl allowed only the two unearned runs when he mishandled Mo Vaughn's toss while covering first.

Spiezio, dumped by the A's in the offseason and signed by Anaheim as a free agent, hit a solo shot in the first and a two-run homer in the fifth, his second multihomer game this season and the third of his career.

After reliever Shigetoshi Hasegawa pitched out of a bases-loaded jam in the seventh, he walked two starting the eighth. Tejada then drove in Porter with the tying run.

The run came at a price, however. The Athletics lost Jason Giambi's bat when Porter replaced him as a pinch-runner. Giambi is hitting .382 with 11 homers and 28 RBI in September.

"It was tough to sit there and watch, but I was cheering and rooting us on," Giambi said. "We couldn't push anything across, but we didn't give in. We need to take the same approach that we applied to these guys and put it in play against Texas."

Kevin Appier kept the Athletics in the game, allowing just seven hits in eight innings. After an inconsistent season, Appier has been strong in his last four starts, going 3-0 with a 2.86 ERA.

Howe, who said he was screaming at the television screen while watching Seattle play earlier this week, wasn't watching the Mariners on Thursday night.

"I'm just going to try to get a good night's rest," Howe said.

Game notes
Garret Anderson had three hits and Darin Erstad two for Anaheim. Erstad, who had his 76th multihit game, increased his major league-leading hits total to 236. ... Scioscia came to the dugout step to argue balls and strikes with home plate umpire Bruce Froemming shortly before Tejada's eighth-inning hit. Hasegawa walked four in 1 2-3 innings. "I guess he was just missing," Scioscia deadpanned. ... Playoff fever still isn't exactly gripping Oakland. Just 12,523 fans watched the game. ... The Athletics played their usual overloaded infield against Vaughn, moving Tejada to the other side of second base even when the Angels had two runners on in the third inning. Vaughn, who hit 1-for-18 in the series, obliged with two grounders to Velarde standing halfway between first and second.

 


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Yanks, A's may play make up games on Monday


RECAPS
Anaheim 6
Oakland 3

Texas 13
Seattle 6

Baltimore 23
Toronto 1

Minnesota 4
Cleveland 3

Tampa Bay 11
NY Yankees 3

Boston 7
Chi. White Sox 6

Kansas City 8
Detroit 5

Florida 7
Montreal 4

Philadelphia 4
Chicago Cubs 2

Arizona 12
Colorado 3

Cincinnati 8
Milwaukee 1

St. Louis 7
San Diego 6

Pittsburgh 3
Houston 2

NY Mets 8
Atlanta 2

San Francisco 5
Los Angeles 3

AUDIO/VIDEO
audio
 For Art Howe, Thursday's loss was a hard one to take.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6

 Jason Isringhausen knows that his team is still in a good place.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6

 Troy Glaus is happy to have an affect on the postseason.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6