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Harden outduels Cain as A's top Giants
OAKLAND 4, SAN FRANCISCO 0
 


By Ryan Leong
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

SAN FRANCISCO (Ticker) -- Rich Harden and Matt Cain got locked
in a pitchers' duel and strikeout contest. Cain had more
strikeouts, but Harden won the game.

Harden allowed just one hit and three baserunners and had nine
strikeouts in six innings for the Oakland Athletics, who posted
a 4-0 victory over the San Francisco Giants on Saturday night.

"I think coming off my last start I wasn't quite feeling 100
percent and I think that's the big reason why we didn't push it
today," Harden said. "I felt good but there's no sense in
really pushing it right now."

Harden posted his first win since he beat the Boston Red Sox on
May 23 and had three no decisions despite allowing three runs or
fewer while pitching at least six innings in those starts.

"I'd like to get my pitch count up a little more, but we have
some time to do that, so there's no sense doing it right now,"
Harden said. "I was fine with that. Last game, I had some high
intensity pitches and I think I was a little sore a few days
after."

Jack Cust had an RBI double, Daric Barton added a sacrifice fly
and Kurt Suzuki had three hits for the A's, who secured their
fifth straight win and sixth in their last seven in the "Bay
Bridge Series" against The Giants.

Cain (3-5) pitched seven solid innings, gave up just six hits
and three runs and struck out a season-high 11 but was the
hard-luck loser for San Francisco.

"Cain threw a great ballgame," Giants manager Bruce Bochy said.
"He gave us a chance, and we have just been shut down
offensively, but Matt Cain definitely did a great job, too.
Matt knows he did all he could.

"He understands how well the other guy pitched. He can't
control some things, and you get shut out, that is a tough break
for a starter."

The Giants continue to struggle at home, dropping to 13-21 at
AT&T Park - the worst home record in the major leagues.

"We've got to get that going at home," Cain said. "This is a
place we've got to take advantage of. It's a great place to
pitch for us.

"We like it here pitching, and I think its just a confidence
thing with us and our hitters. It's a great pitcher's park and
obviously you can see that. You see a lot of low runs, a lot of
low scores and our infield is not as fast as some other (parks)
and the outfield, right field and left field doesn't really give
you what a lot of other places do.

"It's a great place to pitch for us, and that can be a little
frustrating when guys go ahead and tee off on a ball, and it
doesn't really go anywhere so it's tough."

Ryan Sweeney singled to left with one out and scored on a double
to right by Cust to give the A's a 1-0 lead.

Oakland took advantage in the sixth, when Kurt Suzuki hit a line
drive to center. Aaron Rowand tried to make a diving catch.

Instead, he never got to the ball which went all the way to the
center-field wall as Suzuki ended up with his first career
triple. Barton came through with a sacrifice fly to
right-center - easily scoring Suzuki for a 2-0 cushion.

The Giants only managed a single to right from Randy Winn in the
bottom of the first. Harden racked up five strikeouts in a row
from the last out of the second inning to the first out in the
fourth.

His biggest concern had to be his pitch count, which was at 76
through five innings and 95 after six, when he was taken out for
pinch hitter Emil Brown.

"I just wanted to keep him right around 100 today so I didn't
want to push him too far," Athletics manager Bob Geren said.
"He's having a great year for us, and I just want it to remain
that way."

Cain was equally as impressive, striking out the side in the
second and third innings. He has not won a game during
interleague play since he beat the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
on June 19, 2006 - a span of six starts, during which he posted
a 0-5 mark with a 4.24 ERA.

"It's disappointing," Cain said. "I felt like I had great stuff
today and had some pitches that obviously came back to get me.
The first inning, the ball came back on Cust and kind of got a
little unlucky.

"The ball stayed down in the corner for Sweeney to score from
first, too. I made a couple of mistakes, too. I got a 0-2
pitch to Suzuki and the ball ended up being a triple. The ball
was pretty much down the middle."

The Giants had a golden opportunity in the seventh.

With two outs, Rowand reached base on a throwing error by third
baseman Eric Chavez. After an infield single to short by pinch
hitter Rich Aurilia to put runners at the corners, reliever Alan
Embree was summoned from the bullpen and struck out Jose
Castillo with a fastball on the outside corner to end the
inning.

The A's used that momentum to start another rally, starting the
eighth with a single to right by Mark Ellis - the last batter
Cain faced. Jack Taschner came in from the bullpen and Sweeney
reached on a bunt single, which Taschner tried to dive to snag.

Instead of letting the ball drop for a sacrifice bunt, runners
were at first and second with nobody out. Cust grounded into a
fielder's choice to put runners at the corners.

But Taschner uncorked a wild pitch that allowed Ellis to score.
He would pick off pinch runner Rajai Davis at second base and
got Chavez to fly out to left. But now the Giants were behind
by three runs.

The A's got another gift in the ninth with runners on second and
third, when Billy Sadler threw a wild pitch, allowing Carlos
Gonzalez to score.

Brad Ziegler, Embree, and Keith Foulke bridged the seventh and
eighth innings to Huston Street, who closed out the game in a
non-save situation.

 
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