Brent Rooker hits 2 home runs in 1 inning, .500 A’s beat Marlins

OAKLAND — First came the rain, followed by the thunder.

Flexing their offensive muscle for the first time this season, the Athletics exploded for 10 runs in the third inning in a 20-4 win over the Miami Marlins Saturday at the Coliseum following a rain delay of nearly three and a half hours. Their sixth consecutive win evened the A’s record at 17-17, nine games better than the 8-26 record they held after 34 games a year ago.

Brent Rooker had two home runs — his seventh and eighth of the season — and five RBIs in the third inning as the A’s sent 14 men to the plate in the inning. JJ Bleday added a three-run shot, his fourth, as a paid crowd of 7,809 enjoyed the show.

Brett Harris, called up from Triple-A Friday, had his first career hit with a solo shot to lead off the fourth inning and then added a two-run homer against Darren McCaughan in the sixth.

Catcher Shea Langeliers got in on the action with a three-run home run in the eighth as the A’s scored four runs against Emmanuel Rivera that inning. It was Langeliers’ seventh home run. The A’s finished with 21 hits including the six home runs.

Miami, which fell to 9-26, appears doomed to the type of season the A’s had a year ago when they lost 112 games. Trevor Rogers (0-5) was the losing pitcher, giving up eight earned runs with three walks and a strikeout in 2 1/3 innings.

Nick Fortes hit a solo home run for Miami, his first, in the sixth inning against winning pitcher Paul Blackburn (3-1), and Bryan De La Cruz hit his sixth home run in the eighth against reliever Dany Jimenez.

Blackburn gave up four hits and one earned run in seven innings with a walk and three strikeouts, throwing 105 pitches, including 64 for strikes. He was coming off his shortest outing of the season, when he went four innings in Baltimore and gave up seven hits and six earned runs.

After a 1-7 start when it appeared the A’s were headed toward another downward spiral, they’ve gone 16-10 since April 6.

Rooker’s third-inning outburst was a welcome sight for a team that hadn’t scored more than seven runs in a game this season. He is the first A’s player to homer twice in the same inning since Mark McGwire on Sept. 22, 1996.

McGwire’s two home runs — one solo and a three-run shot — came in a 13-11 win over Seattle in the fifth inning.

Throw in Bleday’s three-run blast and a two-run single by Abraham Toro and the A’s had built a 12-0 lead.

It was the third home run in two days for Rooker, the A’s lone All-Star a year ago. Since being reinstated from the injured list on April 19, Rooker has six home runs and 15 RBIs. He also added a single in the seventh.

Rooker’s first home run was a soaring drive that carried 447 feet and left the park at 110.6 miles per hour. The second was a line drive down the left field line that departed at 110.5 and carried 380.

Bleday’s blast was no cheapie either, carrying 410 feet to right-center with an exit velocity of 107.1 miles per hour.

The Athletics got two runs in the second against Rogers on run-scoring singles from Darell Hernaiz and Esteury Ruiz, and they could have inflicted more damage.

Shea Langeliers opened the inning with a triple that Jazz Chisolm Jr. couldn’t chase down in right-center field. With the infield in, Hernaiz poked a single through the right side to bring in Langeliers, with Bleday drawing a walk and Harris reaching on an infield error to load the bases.



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