The Oakland A's fell 3-0 to the New York Yankees on July 27, 2025, as Will Warren dominated. Can the A's break their historic offensive slump?
StatPro MLB Beat Reporter
Another day, another shutout. The Oakland Athletics' bats went cold for the second straight game, falling 3-0 to the New York Yankees in the Bronx. The loss marks a new low point in a brutal offensive slump that has seen the team plate just two runs over their last 27 innings of baseball.
Two runs scored in the last 27 innings. The A's have been shut out in back-to-back games and are batting just .198 over the past week.
The story of Sunday's game was the A's inability to generate any offense against a tough Yankees pitching staff. New York starter Will Warren was masterful, carving through the Oakland lineup for six shutout innings while racking up nine strikeouts. The A's managed just four hits all day, with Nick Kurtz's infield single being one of the few notable moments. The team struck out 12 times, rarely threatening to score. On the other side, the Yankees did just enough, getting a solo homer from Jazz Chisholm Jr. in the 2nd, an RBI single from Cody Bellinger in the 3rd, and another run driven in by DJ LeMahieu to secure the 3-0 victory.
One game is just one game, but this loss is part of a deeply concerning trend. The Athletics are mired in an offensive funk, batting a paltry .198 as a team over the last week with an on-base percentage of just .261. The back-to-back shutouts are a grim statistic, highlighting a lineup that is struggling to find any sort of spark. Frustratingly, the pitching staff has held its own, posting a respectable 3.82 ERA during this same stretch, but they're getting zero run support. As outfielder Lawrence Butler tweeted after the game, 'Tough one tonight. We'll regroup and come back stronger,' but the team needs to find answers at the plate, and fast.
Compounding the on-field struggles is a new blow to the roster. The A's officially placed center fielder Denzel Clarke on the 10-day injured list with a right adductor strain. Clarke has been a key piece in the outfield, and his absence creates another significant hole in the lineup that manager Mark Kotsay must now fill. This move comes just a day after the team designated first baseman Logan Davidson for assignment and optioned pitcher Hogan Harris to Triple-A, signaling a period of significant roster churn as the front office tries to shake things up.
With the offense sputtering and a key player now on the shelf, the A's are facing a critical stretch. The team needs to dig deep and find a way to manufacture runs, providing some much-needed support for a pitching staff that has been battling hard. The pressure is on to break this slump before it sinks their season further in the AL West standings. All eyes will be on the lineup card for the next game to see what adjustments manager Mark Kotsay and his staff make to reignite this offense.