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The A's Last Game in Oakland: Live Updates

Follow live coverage from KQED reporters and photographers of the A's final game at the Oakland Coliseum.

Pinned Update

After A’s historic win, fans aren’t ready to say goodbye

As tens of thousands of fans made their way back to the parking lot and BART station, many stayed behind to take in one last moment at the Coliseum after the A’s historic win in their final home game. 

With tears in his eyes, Gilbert Bañuelos III recalled being an Oakland sports fan his entire life. 

“It’s a lot of emotions right now because I was fortunate to be here for the last Raiders game at the Coliseum, and now I’m here for the last Oakland A’s game,” Bañuelos said. “It just sucks, you know, this is it for here. I could travel to go see them, but this is home. And now it’s just a memory and a legend, a legacy that will never be forgotten.”

Gilbert Bañuelos III cries at the close of the A’s last game at the Oakland Coliseum. (Martin do Nascimento/KQED)

For Bañuelos and other fans clinging to the final hour, ties to the A’s are about much more than home runs and strikeouts, but a family and a community of friends. 

“My uncle was a huge A’s fan. He’s the one that really got me attached to them,” Bañuelos said. “I want to make a big shout out to my uncle Sal, may he rest in peace. I wish you were here. I’m just glad I had the opportunity to see it. This one’s for you, uncle — they won.”

A fan cheers during the A’s final home game at the Oakland Coliseum. (Gina Castro/KQED)

Jim and Gayle Burleigh were lingering after the game to savor the last time at the stadium also. 

“It’s very emotional, it’s very sad. We took our boys here as they grew up,” Jim said. 

“The characters that made this team and made our memories, I am gutted right now,” Gayle mustered through tears. “I wish we could have figured out a way to have them stay.”

Jenneane Rocha cries at the close of the A’s last game at the Coliseum. (Martin do Nascimento/KQED)

Jenneane Rocha, 44, remembers coming to games at the Coliseum as young as age 6. 

“I came here with my dad all the time and he passed away, so I went with a friend and her dad, and he also passed away,” she said of her emotional ties to the team. “If you just want to see good baseball, Oakland fans are the kindest and the sweetest.”

Krazy George Henderson helps give the Coliseum its final wave 

The Oakland Coliseum is packed with history — including laying claim to the origin of “The Wave,” where members of a crowd stand up and raise their arms in unison across a stadium.

Krazy George Henderson, 80, is credited for inventing The Wave in 1979. The diehard fan worked as a professional cheerleader for 57 years and started cheering for the A’s in 1978. 

Since then, The Wave has not only become common at sports arenas around the world, but it’s also become a particular point of tension among some Bay Area baseball fans. As the move grew popular, fans of other teams picked it up, like the Dodgers — a longtime rival of the San Francisco Giants. To this day, The Wave will rarely take off at Giants games. 

Krazy George Henderson, 80, the professional cheerleader who invented The Wave in 1979, walks around the Oakland Coliseum during the A’s final home game. Henderson has worked as a professional cheerleader for 57 years. (Gina Castro/KQED)

While there is some dispute about where The Wave really started, Henderson stands by his affiliation. 

“I say, ‘I don’t claim to have invented the wave. I DID INVENT THE WAVE,’” he told KQED’s Bay Curious in 2017

Henderson paid tribute to his team by leading cheers — including a go-round of The Wave — during the final home game at the Coliseum on Thursday. 

Oakland A's beat Texas Rangers to win their final home game

The Oakland A’s clinched a 3–2 win against the Texas Rangers to win their final homestand series at their final home game at the Coliseum in Oakland. 

The Oakland A’s pose for a group photo on the mound after winning 3-2 against the Texas Rangers in their final home game at the Oakland Coliseum. (Gina Castro/KQED)

Players took to the field to wave at fans at the sold-out stadium as Athletics manager Mark Kotsay addressed the crowd: 

“Thank you for your lifelong support of the Oakland A’s,” Kotsay said.

“We’ve played our asses off this year. We still got three left, gentlemen. I think we all should pay homage to this amazing stadium that we have had the privilege to enjoy for the last 57 years. And I ask you for one more time to start the greatest cheer in baseball. Let’s Go, Oakland!”

Disruptors charge the field

Two people who ran onto the field during the top of the ninth inning were taken away by security. A smoke bomb was also thrown onto the field and removed.

Security guards remove colored smoke bombs from the field late in the A’s final home game. (Gina Castro/KQED)

Tensions and emotions are running high as the end of the game draws closer. The Oakland A’s lead the Texas Rangers 3–2.

At the 7th inning stretch, A's still in the lead

The A’s 57-year run at the Oakland Coliseum is coming to a close with just two innings left in the game, which the Mercury News reports is being watched by the largest crowd for a final home game in Major League Baseball history, with 46,889 fans cheering on their Athletics one last time.

Packed stands at the Oakland Coliseum for the A’s last home game on Thursday. (Martin do Nascimento/KQED)

After the A’s powered up to a 3–0 lead in the fifth inning, the Texas Rangers clamored back with two runs to close out the sixth inning 3–2. JJ Bleday helps the A’s hold onto their lead at the top of the seventh with a diving catch in the outfield. After the seventh-inning stretch and one last rendition of “Take Me Out to the Ball Game,” chants of “Sell the Team” and profanity-laced chants directed at A’s owner John Fisher filled the stadium.

As is his wont, KQED’s Dan Brekke has been keeping score, by hand. (Dan Brekke/KQED)

‘A battle and a funeral’ — piping for the A’s

Saddled with a green and gold bagpipe, Andrew Johnstone played an ode to his favorite baseball team with “Take Me Out To the Ball Game” at a parking lot tailgate at the Coliseum. 

“We always play the bagpipes going into battle and at funerals, and it’s a bit of a battle and a funeral today, you know?” said Johnstone, who moved to the Bay Area more than 30 years ago. 

The Scottish-born A’s fan shared how his family’s tartan colors are green and gold, “perfect for the A’s,” he said. Cheers and tears erupted as he asked fans around him to sing along for another round. 

As for the rest of his plans for the day? “Enjoy the game and try to stay sober,” Johnstone laughed. “Let’s get in there and win this bloody thing.”

Fit check: A’s fandom fashion hits a home run(way)

The Coliseum’s famous Brutalist facade became the backdrop for the A’s fashion-obsessed early Thursday before the team’s final game in Oakland. Crocheted hats, hand-made jewelry, autographed sneakers and more made the stadium sparkle with only-in-Oakland flair. 

“My whole wardrobe is green and gold. I don’t know what to do!” lifelong A’s fan Jules Hanson said. “This has been such a huge part of my life. I’ve met lifelong friends, and we’ve been through so much together.” 

Here’s a peek at what we saw:

Sahra Ghafari, A’s fan since 1989, wears a beanie of Stomper the elephant, the A’s official mascot. The beanies are hand-crocheted by Kim Jackson, an A’s fan of over three decades. (Gina Castro/KQED)
Michelle Leon, of the Oakland 68’s, wears A’s earrings that she made this morning for the A’s final home game. (Gina Castro/KQED)
Stacy Miller, A’s ticket holder of over 20 years, wears green and yellow eyeshadow for the A’s final home game on Thursday. (Gina Castro/KQED)
Val Bolden wears an A’s hat full of A’s pins to the team’s final game in Oakland. (Gina Castro/KQED)
Mila Shank shows off an A’s tattoo she got a few days ago. Shank has been coming to A’s games since 1982. (Gina Castro/KQED)
Ellen Ellery shows off her autographed sneakers, signed by A’s legend Rickey Henderson and current player Tyler Soderstrom. Ellery has been a ticket holder for 49 years. (Gina Castro/KQED)
Jesus Hernandez wears a vest full of A’s pins during the team’s final game at the Oakland Coliseum. Hernandez said he has been coming to the games since he was in his mother’s womb. (Gina Castro/KQED)

A's fans finally get their flowers — from the mayor of the Oakland Coliseum

Dressed to the nines in a yellow suit, Todd Schwenk handed out yellow roses to his fellow A’s fans before entering the Coliseum on Thursday morning. It’s a regular tradition for Schwenk, who said he’s handed out more than 500 roses at A’s home games this week alone. 

“I give them out for free smiles and friends I make on the way,” Schwenk said, noting that the flowers to him represent “love, The Town love, A’s love. And I’m a Deadhead, so the roses go with the music.”

He’s been an A’s fan since 1972 and has been dubbed by some of the stadium ushers as the ‘mayor’ of the Coliseum, where he’s known to wander around throughout games spreading the A’s gospel.

“I feel like a walking history book of the Coliseum, and I just love that,” Schwenk said. “I work the room. It’s full of love.”

Todd Schwenk, a longtime A’s fan also known as the ‘mayor’ of the Coliseum, poses for a photo before the A’s final home game. Schwenke hands out yellow roses to fans and stadium staff, which he says is a ‘sign of life.’ (Gina Castro/KQED)

The team is slated to move to Sacramento next year before a permanent move to a proposed ballpark in Las Vegas. But those plans are still in the works. The Mayor of the Coliseum hasn’t given up hope that the A’s could one day play in Oakland again, like at a proposed stadium at Howard Terminal near the waterfront. 

“I’ve gone through all the shock, disbelief and I haven’t given up. Vegas is a mirage, and I don’t think MLB will let Sacramento happen. And we keep doing the infrastructure at Howard Terminal,” Schwenk said. “We just need a new owner. We need a new owner more than we need a new stadium. Straight up.”

Today, there is crying in baseball

With the A’s about to play their last game at the Oakland Coliseum, the sold-out ballpark is filled with emotions of all kinds.

Many thousands packing into the old – and beloved – concrete stadium for one last ‘take me out to the ballgame’ likely faced a lot of hurdles just to be here: Higher ticket prices from the A’s, which led to increased resale costs; limited parking or crowded BART trains and platforms; and a first pitch time scheduled during a weekday afternoon, amid many people’s workdays. The stadium parking gates also opened earlier today than normal, anticipating the heavy crowds arriving in the early AM hours. 

Fans wait in line for the last A’s home game at the Oakland Coliseum on Thursday. (Martin do Nascimento/KQED)

With all those barriers, it’s likely that not everyone who wanted to be here for the last home game made it. Many fans have been attending what have been their own last games at the Coliseum, soaking in one last chance to tailgate, eating a hot dog and drinking a beer and taking in nine innings. Posts all over social media are filled with people sharing photos of themselves at the stadium with friends, family, children and other die-hards, all talking about their memories.

Daniel Viilalobos (center) and Messiah Garcia wait in line for the last A’s home game at the Oakland Coliseum on Thursday. (Martin do Nascimento/KQED)

Even as the Yankees swept the A’s in three straight games over the weekend, the focus for many was not about the play on the field but on what will be lost when today’s final out is recorded. There will be no “next season” to look forward to. 

I know that I’m not alone in feeling sad, hurt, upset and a range of other things in response to this loss. I know there are untold thousands feeling similarly. 

So, we reached out to experts in grief, psychology and sports fandom to explore how and why fans might be hurting and to offer some helpful tips on how you might consider processing the waves of feelings resulting from the A’s being ripped away from Oakland.

For one last time: Let’s Go Oakland!

How the A's played spoilers on their final night in Kansas City

The 13 seasons the Athletics spent in Kansas City were not happy ones. This team was a perennial loser and was mocked as a mere farm club of the New York Yankees as it traded away promising young players to Gotham in exchange for mediocrities. 

That changed when insurance magnate Charlie Finley bought the team in 1960. He infuriated the locals with his open desire to move the team elsewhere and made no secret of his intention to relocate the franchise after the 1967 season. 

Jim Gentile of the Kansas City Athletics bats during a game in 1964. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)

Among Finley’s redeeming qualities was his dedication to developing young talent. By 1967, some of the team’s future stars had begun to emerge, including pitcher Catfish Hunter, shortstop Bert Campaneris, second baseman Dick Green, third baseman Sal Bando and outfielder Joe Rudi. 

That talent was on display the night of Sept. 27, 1967, when the A’s played a doubleheader against the Chicago White Sox in their final games in Kansas City. 

The White Sox were amid a tight pennant race, and a sweep of the last-place A’s would give them the league lead with just three games to go. Instead, the A’s swept the Sox and knocked them out of contention, with Hunter pitching a three-hit shutout in the nightcap. Attendance for this historic event: 5,325

That last chilly Midwest night stands in contrast to this week’s finale in Oakland. Well — the evenings have been chilly enough, true. But the A’s are drawing big crowds for this farewell series, and just like their Kansas City counterparts, they’re looking for a series win to close their Oakland era. 

A's fans descend on the Coliseum from all over

Fans lined up at the break of dawn for the Oakland Coliseum gates to open, and for some, it was a long journey back to the Bay. 

A’s fan Lester Hernandez brought his son and two daughters from Miami for the final home game. They arrived at the stadium Thursday at 5:30 a.m., waiting nearly four hours for the stadium’s gates to open at 9:37 a.m.

“I’ve been a fan of the Oakland Athletics for more than 50 years, you know, since they got the championships in 1972, 1973 and 1974,” Hernandez told KQED while waiting in line.

Lester Hernandez and his son Lester Hernandez Jr. wait in line for the last A’s home game at the Oakland Coliseum on Thursday. (Martin do Nascimento/KQED)

His family made the trip not only to see one of Hernandez’s favorite teams play but also as part of the family’s effort to visit all 30 MLB stadiums. 

“I gotta make sure I knock this one off the list,” Hernandez’s son, Lester Hernandez Jr., said. “We came all the way from Miami just to witness this. I’m a big baseball fan, and I feel for the A’s fans, they’re losing a big part of their city.”

Erin Marquez has been an A’s fan her entire life and drove up to Oakland from the Central Valley to salute her favorite team one last time.

Erin Marquez from Visalia waits in line for the last A’s home game at the Oakland Coliseum on Thursday. (Martin do Nascimento/KQED)

“My dad is a big A’s fan and a Raiders fan, so this is actually really heartbreaking because we lost the Raiders, and now we’re losing the Oakland A’s,” Marquez, who said she was born into A’s fandom, told KQED. “We have a lot of A’s fans in Visalia.”

Debra Piper from Auburn started driving at 3 a.m. to get to the stadium early on Thursday morning. 

Debra Piper (left) and Carla McCliean wait in line for the last A’s home game at the Oakland Coliseum. (Martin do Nascimento/KQED)

“We’re going to miss them. No matter where they go, they’re still Oakland to me,” Piper said. “I’m going to really start to tear up now. There is so much history, love and support for the community and the players and this stadium. It doesn’t matter how many times you come to see them play; when you go out and see the stadium and smell the grass, it’s just that ‘ahh’ feeling. It’s tingly. And now we don’t have that. There’s nothing like baseball to bring people together.”