Fixtures

MLB Exhibition 03/22 20:05 1 ЧИК Къбс vs ОКЛ Атлетикс - View
MLB Exhibition 03/24 01:05 1 ТЕК Рейнджърс vs ОКЛ Атлетикс - View
MLB Exhibition 03/24 20:05 1 ОКЛ Атлетикс vs ЧИК Уайт Сокс - View
MLB Exhibition 03/25 01:40 1 СИА Маринърс vs ОКЛ Атлетикс - View
MLB Exhibition 03/25 19:05 1 ОКЛ Атлетикс vs МИЛ Брюърс - View
MLB Exhibition 03/26 20:07 - ОКЛ Атлетикс vs СФ Джайънтс - View

Results

MLB Exhibition 03/21 20:10 1 ЛА Енджълс v ОКЛ Атлетикс W 5-6
MLB Exhibition 03/19 20:05 1 [12] ОКЛ Атлетикс v ЛА Доджърс [1] W 6-3
MLB Exhibition 03/18 20:05 1 [5] СИН Редс v ОКЛ Атлетикс [12] L 7-1
MLB Exhibition 03/17 20:05 1 [12] СФ Джайънтс v ОКЛ Атлетикс [12] W 2-7
MLB Exhibition 03/16 20:05 1 ОКЛ Атлетикс v КС Роялс L 0-2
MLB Exhibition 03/15 20:05 1 СИА Маринърс v ОКЛ Атлетикс - PPT.
MLB Exhibition 03/14 20:05 1 ОКЛ Атлетикс v ЧИК Уайт Сокс L 4-5
MLB Exhibition 03/13 20:10 1 ОКЛ Атлетикс v КОЛ Рокис W 8-7
MLB Exhibition 03/12 20:05 1 ОКЛ Атлетикс v СД Падрес W 8-6
MLB Exhibition 03/12 20:05 1 СФ Джайънтс v ОКЛ Атлетикс L 4-3
MLB Exhibition 03/11 20:05 1 ОКЛ Атлетикс v КЛИ Гардиънс L 2-4
MLB Exhibition 03/10 20:05 1 [9] СФ Джайънтс v ОКЛ Атлетикс [15] W 11-12

Wikipedia - Oakland Athletics

The Oakland Athletics (often referred to as the Oakland A's) are an American professional baseball team based in Oakland, California. The Athletics compete in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member club of the American League (AL) West division. The team plays its home games at the Oakland Coliseum. Throughout their history, the Athletics have won nine World Series championships.

One of the American League's eight charter franchises, the team was founded in Philadelphia in 1901 as the Philadelphia Athletics. They won three World Series championships in 1910, 1911, and 1913, and back-to-back titles in 1929 and 1930. The team's owner and manager for its first 50 years was Connie Mack and Hall of Fame players included Chief Bender, Frank "Home Run" Baker, Jimmie Foxx, and Lefty Grove. The team left Philadelphia for Kansas City in 1955 and became the Kansas City Athletics before moving to Oakland in 1968. Nicknamed the "Swingin' A's", they won three consecutive World Series in 1972, 1973, and 1974, led by players including Vida Blue, Catfish Hunter, Reggie Jackson, Rollie Fingers, and owner Charlie O. Finley. After being sold by Finley to Walter A. Haas Jr., the team won three consecutive pennants and the 1989 World Series behind the "Bash Brothers", Jose Canseco and Mark McGwire, as well as Hall of Famers Dennis Eckersley, Rickey Henderson and manager Tony La Russa. In 2002, the Athletics set the record for most consecutive wins in a single season with twenty, an event that would go on to be the pioneering step in the application of sabermetrics in baseball. After the Golden State Warriors moved across the Bay to San Francisco in 2019, and the Raiders to Las Vegas in 2020, the Athletics were left as the only Oakland franchise among the five major American professional sports leagues with teams in the San Francisco Bay area.

From 1901 to 2021, the Athletics' overall win–loss record was 9,150–9,552 (.489).

History

The history of the Athletics Major League Baseball franchise spans from 1901 to the present day, having begun in Philadelphia before moving to Kansas City in 1955 and then to its current home in Oakland, California, in 1968. The A's made their Bay Area debut on Wednesday, April 17, 1968, with a 4–1 loss to the Baltimore Orioles at the Coliseum, in front of an opening-night crowd of 50,164.

Team name and "A" logo

The Athletics' name originated in the term "Athletic Club" for local gentlemen's clubs—dates to 1860 when an amateur team, the Athletic (Club) of Philadelphia, was formed. The team later turned professional through 1875, becoming a charter member of the National League in 1876, but were expelled from the N.L. after one season. A later version of the Athletics played in the American Association from 1882 to 1891.[]

The familiar blackletter "A" is one of the oldest sports logos still in use. An image in Harper's Weekly with the rival Brooklyn Atlantics shows that the "A" appeared on the original Athletics' uniform as early as 1866.

Elephant mascot

After New York Giants manager John McGraw told reporters that Philadelphia manufacturer Benjamin Shibe, who owned the controlling interest in the new team, had a "white elephant on his hands", team manager Connie Mack defiantly adopted the white elephant as the team mascot, and presented McGraw with a stuffed toy elephant at the start of the 1905 World Series. McGraw and Mack had known each other for years, and McGraw accepted it graciously. By 1909, the A's were wearing an elephant logo on their sweaters, and in 1918 it turned up on the regular uniform jersey for the first time.

In 1963, when the A's were located in Kansas City, then-owner Charlie Finley changed the team mascot from an elephant to a mule, the state animal of Missouri. This is rumored to have been done by Finley in order to appeal to fans from the region who were predominantly Democrats at the time. (The traditional Republican Party symbol is an elephant, while the Democratic Party's symbol is a donkey.) Since 1988, the Athletics' 21st season in Oakland, an illustration of an elephant has adorned the left sleeve of the A's home and road uniforms. Beginning in the mid 1980s, the on-field costumed incarnation of the A's elephant mascot went by the name Harry Elephante, a play on the name of singer Harry Belafonte. In 1997, he took his current form, Stomper, debuting Opening Night on April 2.