Madden strikes out seven in Tigers' 9-1 win over A's

OAKLAND -- Trey Sweeney had four hits, including a home run, Ty Madden struck out seven and the Detroit Tigers beat the Oakland Athletics 9-1 on Sunday.

The Tigers, looking to make a late rally in the AL Wild Card race, took two out of three in Oakland and are two games above .500.

The A's, who will play their home games in Sacramento next season ahead of a planned move to Las Vegas in 2028, drew 11,250 fans.

Madden (1-0) and Beau Brieske combined to take a no-hit bid into the fifth, with Madden recording his first career win after Brieske served as an opener in the first. The 24-year-old struck out seven in five innings and held the A's to one run in his third major league appearance.

Lawrence Butler's fifth-inning single was the A's first hit, and it also extended his career-best hit streak to 18 games. Zack Gelof drove in Oakland's lone run with a sixth inning single.

Sweeney, who went 4 for 4 with a walk, hit a leadoff homer in the third off A's starter J.T. Ginn (0-1). Kerry Carpenter drove in Jace Jung later in the inning to give the Tigers a 2-0 lead. In the fourth, Sweeney singled home Spencer Torkelson. Detroit tacked on six runs in the eighth charged to Ross Stripling, who gave up four consecutive RBI hits.

The A's have six games remaining at the Coliseum after wrapping up the final game of their second-to-last homestand.

"The closer it gets, the more it comes to realization," A's manager Mark Kotsay said, adding that the last homestand — from Sept. 20 to 26 — will be "tough."

Tigers manager A.J. Hinch, who made his big league debut with the A's in 1998, walked up to Mt. Davis — the tarped-off third deck — before the game and called his final moments managing at the Coliseum "bittersweet." There are no plans so far to open up Mt. Davis for the last game, which is sold out.

"There's a lot of energy in this ballpark," Hinch said. "There's a lot of pride in this ballpark. There's a lot of history with or without me, but it's a special place because it was the first time I ever called myself a big leaguer. And there's only one place that I'll ever feel that way."

TRAINER'S ROOM

Tigers: Shortstop Javier Báez, who underwent season-ending hip surgery last week, will rehab in Detroit but plans to spend time around the team the remainder of the season.

UP NEXT

Athletics: RHP Osvaldo Bido (5-3, 3.41 ERA) is scheduled to start the first game of a three-game series at Houston.

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