By Greg Beacham
The Associated Press
OAKLAND, Calif. - In the last three regular seasons, the Oakland Athletics' good pitching consistently beat good hitting - and in October, the formula failed.
This season, the A's again have plenty of good pitching with Tim Hudson, Barry Zito and Ted Lilly. But those standout starters are facing the Boston Red Sox - one of the most fearsome offensive teams in baseball history.
"It's an interesting contrast between the two teams," Oakland manager Ken Macha said. "They have a tremendous offense, and we're going to have to try to stop that offense. We probably have the pitching to do it ... but the first round of the playoffs is short. Anything can happen."
Of course, playoff failure is relative. The A's merely must look across the Coliseum field Wednesday night at the Red Sox - a talented team in its ninth decade without a championship.
Belief will be a large factor in the AL division series. While the A's must believe in their pitching, the Red Sox must mentally overcome generations of heartbreak.
"You think about history when you're a baseball player sometimes, and there's a little superstition involved, too," said Macha, who managed in the Boston organization for four years and nearly took over the Red Sox two years ago. "But it's not the main issue. We're focused on winning the opening game, and so are they."
The teams are connected by much more than their postseason struggles. For less than a day last winter, A's general manager Billy Beane accepted an offer to take the same job in Boston before changing his mind.
Under first-year general manager Theo Epstein, the Red Sox have begun to retool their organization as a high-budget version of the A's, with an emphasis on on-base percentage, strong pitching and a deep farm system.
Both teams will pitch their aces in the opener, with league ERA champion Pedro Martinez facing 16-game winner Hudson. The late start (10:06 p.m. EDT) should only add to the tension when Boston's league-best offense takes on the best of Oakland's top-notch pitching staff.
"That's very hard to handicap," Texas shortstop Alex Rodriguez said. "The game may be 1-0, and a solo home run or a bunt may be the difference. In order for Oakland to win, Game 1 is paramount. Oakland is the type of team ... the more they play, the better they get."
Martinez refused to speak to reporters Tuesday, keeping his focus squarely on the series.
"He's a stud. He's been one of the best pitchers in the American League every year since I've been here," Hudson said. "He has dominating stuff. He's a guy I always looked up to coming up. He has his reputation for a reason. He's going to be tough, but I like our chances anyway."
Perhaps that's because Hudson pitched a two-hitter when he faced Martinez in Oakland nearly two months ago. While Hudson dominated, the A's ratcheted up Martinez's pitch count, and the Boston ace pitched just five innings in a 4-0 loss.
"Thank God he won't do it every time, or he'd be 35-0," Boston's Kevin Millar said. "That was our first and only time we've seen him this year, and hopefully we learned something from it. ... We saw him at his best. The next few pitchers we saw were like a walk in the park."
Neither team set its postseason roster on Tuesday, but few major decisions remain. Macha plans to start outfielder Jose Guillen, who broke a bone in his hand on Sept. 14, while Boston still is evaluating injured outfielder Trot Nixon.
Oakland needs all the pop it can get from its lineup. The A's offensive production declined for the fourth straight year, finishing with just 768 runs and a .327 on-base percentage - 10th in the league in Beane's favorite statistical category.
The powerful Red Sox led baseball in runs, batting average, slugging percentage and on-base percentage. Eight players drove in at least 85 runs. Bill Mueller won the AL batting title at .326 and teammate Manny Ramirez finished second, a point behind.
But the A's earned their fourth straight playoff berth with their usual recipe of impressive starting pitching and timely hitting. Oakland lost left-handed ace Mark Mulder to a broken leg in August, but Lilly filled the spot in the A's Big Three with an outstanding stretch run.
Most experts believe Boston's combination of pitching and power will send Oakland to its fourth straight division series loss. After a strong finish propelled them past Seattle for the wild card berth, the Red Sox have begun to believe their talent could overcome Oakland's experience and Boston's decades of history.
"When you can put yourself and your team in this position, you've got to be pretty happy about that," Mueller said. "We've got a great group of people. Everybody here had a great year. I'm happy we're in this situation right now to go on."
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