DiscoverThe Las Vegas A’s Podcast — part of the House Always Wins Media Network
The Las Vegas A’s Podcast — part of the House Always Wins Media Network
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The Las Vegas A’s Podcast — part of the House Always Wins Media Network

Author: Booney

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The Las Vegas A’s Podcast — part of the House Always Wins Media Network — is a daily, multi-show podcast platform built for fans who want more than surface-level baseball talk. Hosted by Booney, a lifelong A’s fan known for his passionate, unfiltered voice, the network was created with one goal: give the A’s story the space it deserves. This franchise isn’t just about box scores anymore. It’s about roster construction, prospect development, stadium politics, relocation economics, franchise history, and the passionate community that surrounds the green and gold. Instead of cramming all of that into one rushed daily show, the House Always Wins network breaks it into focused lanes—each show built to dive deeper into the conversations that matter most.


With 10 shows already launched and more on the way, the network delivers layered coverage every single day. Fans get morning shows that set the table for the day in A’s baseball, pregame breakdowns that explain matchups in plain English, and postgame shows that actually unpack what decided the game instead of yelling about one inning. Beyond the diamond, the network explores the full ecosystem surrounding the franchise—prospect pipelines from Stockton to Las Vegas, deep dives into stadium financing and relocation news, historical re-watch broadcasts that overlay modern analytics onto classic A’s games, and dedicated shows that cut through misinformation with facts and context.


The House Always Wins isn’t designed as a single voice dominating the conversation. It’s built as a house with many rooms, where passionate hosts bring different perspectives and expertise to the microphone. Some shows lean analytical, breaking down player performance and roster strategy. Others focus on the business side of baseball, explaining complex topics like stadium funding or ownership decisions in clear language. There are shows dedicated to prospects, community impact, and even causes tied to the A’s organization, ensuring stories that deserve attention actually get the spotlight they deserve.


This network is also built on the belief that great voices deserve opportunities. The House Always Wins Media Network actively creates lanes for talented storytellers, analysts, and broadcasters who love the A’s and want to contribute to the conversation. Instead of one microphone trying to carry the entire narrative of the franchise, the network creates a media ecosystem where every show has a purpose, every host has a voice, and every fan can find the lane that fits how they follow baseball.


If you’re an A’s fan who wants deeper conversations, smarter analysis, and passionate coverage that refuses to treat the franchise like an afterthought, you’re in the right place. This is independent, community-driven media built by fans who care about the future of the team and the culture around it.


Subscribe, follow, and join the movement—because in this house, the conversation never stops… and the house always wins.

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Eighth Inning Collapse

Eighth Inning Collapse

2026-04-0841:07

This one felt like a road win the A’s had already wrapped and tagged for carry-on — until the eighth inning ripped it right out of their hands. The A’s built a 3–1 lead behind Aaron Civale’s steady five innings and a clutch third inning sparked by Nick Kurtz’s two-run double and Tyler Soderstrom’s RBI knock. The pitching held, the defense mostly held, and the Yankees were sleepwalking — 0-for-12 with runners on base and looking completely stuck in neutral. Everything was lined up for a gritty statement win in the Bronx. Then came the turning point. A misstep in the infield opened the door, Giancarlo Stanton punched an RBI single through it, and one pitch later the night flipped. Amed Rosario jumped a splitter from Mark Leiter Jr. and launched a three-run shot that turned a 3–2 lead into a 5–3 gut punch. Just like that, the air left the A’s dugout, the Yankees slammed the door, and another winnable game slipped away. It’s the kind of loss that sticks — strong start, timely offense, and one inning that ruins everything.
Tim Byrnes returns with another episode of The Habit Hunter, and this one starts with something A’s fans haven’t felt much lately — waking up smiling. After a brutal start to the season, the A’s finally take a series and show flashes of the offense everyone expected. Tim breaks down the explosive opener fueled by Jeffrey Springs’ dominance, Lawrence Butler’s big night, and Max Muncy’s eye-opening bat speed. The real story, though, isn’t just the runs — it’s the approach. Fewer early-count chases, more patience, and hitters forcing pitchers into mistakes. For the first time, the lineup looked like it had a plan instead of swinging blindfolded. But The Habit Hunter isn’t about celebrating without context. Saturday’s meltdown exposed the ugly habits still hanging around — wild pitching, early-count strikeouts, and innings that snowball out of control. Then came the Sunday rollercoaster, capped by Brent Rooker’s walk-off blast and a lineup that suddenly remembered how to grind at-bats. Tim tracks the trends: Kurtz heating up, Muncy raking, patience returning, and a pitching staff still living dangerously. The takeaway is simple — the good habits are forming, the bad ones aren’t gone, and this team is walking a tightrope between chaos and momentum.
Sammy and Quinlan return with another episode of Budget Baseball, and the tone flips from frustration to cautious optimism. After opening the season ice-cold, the A’s clawed back with a 3-2 stretch fueled by timely hitting, Jeffrey Springs setting the tone, and Brent Rooker bringing clubhouse fire after a lifeless blowout. The guys break down the Braves leftovers, the Astros coin-flip series, and the rollercoaster pitching performances — from dominant ride-fastball success to Luis Morales’ nightmare outing that featured more balls than strikes and almost zero swing-and-miss. It’s the kind of week that defines a young team: flashes of upside buried under inconsistency. Then the conversation turns to the real story — approach. Sammy and Quinlan dig into chase rates, count leverage, and why this lineup looks dangerous when ahead and helpless when behind. They highlight who’s trending up, who’s hurting the defense, and why patience might unlock the offense. The episode closes with a look ahead to the road trip, the Yankees test, and whether this team is actually learning — or just surviving. Budget Baseball isn’t about stars. It’s about margins. And right now, every pitch, every swing, and every count is the difference between chaos and contention.
Welcome back to "Where Stats Meet Instinct"! Host Sam breaks down the age-old saying about winning, losing, and the crucial "other third" of games that define a baseball season. This episode dives into the Athletic's recent series against the Houston Astros, highlighting how the A's finally started winning that defining portion of their games. We get into the raw statistics of their performance and what it means for their future. 🔥⚾
The A’s take two of three from Houston, and suddenly the mood flips from panic to cautious optimism. The offense explodes, Brent Rooker is smashing baseballs and furniture, and the lineup starts to look like the dangerous group everyone talked about all spring. But underneath the celebration is a team still searching for an identity. The bullpen feels like a name pulled from a hat every night, the rotation behind Jeffrey Springs is shaky, and Luis Morales looks like a young pitcher trying to convince himself he belongs. Winning covered the cracks — but they’re still there. Now comes the real test: New York. This road trip isn’t just another early-season series — it’s a personality check. Are the A’s the explosive offense that can slug with anyone, or a team surviving on chaos and adrenaline? Severino returns to Yankee Stadium, Springs tries to stay hot, and the bullpen’s unpredictability looms over everything. The next six games don’t just count in the standings — they reveal who this team actually is. The identity question isn’t philosophical anymore. It’s about to be answered in the Bronx.
Episode 2 of Lugnuts Weekly opens with immediate fireworks as Rodney Green Jr. launches two home runs and reminds everyone why his raw power might be the loudest tool in Lansing. The conversation quickly shifts from Opening Day energy to real prospect analysis — Dylan Fien emerging as a legitimate breakout candidate, Steven Echeverria showing maturity on the mound, and the coaching staff pushing hitters to attack their pitch instead of guessing. The early takeaway is simple: this isn’t just a fun start… this roster is loaded with players who are forcing their way into the A’s long-term conversation. The second half dives deeper into pitching intrigue, where Zane Taylor flashes four-pitch command and looks like a potential steal of the draft. Jared Sprague-Lott shows surprising pop, Devin Taylor hits rockets despite bad luck, and the catching future becomes a real storyline with Fien's development. By the end, the discussion turns toward the upcoming Fort Wayne series and another wave of arms — including 6'6" Kyle Robinson bringing mid-90s heat. The message is clear: this Lugnuts roster isn’t just developing… it's starting to separate itself as one of the most interesting prospect groups in the system. Lugnuts Weekly, Lansing Lugnuts, Jesse Goldberg Strassler, A's prospects, A's farm system, Rodney Green Jr, Dylan Feene, Zane Taylor pitcher, Steven Echeverria, Jared Sprague Lott, Devin Taylor prospect, A's minor league prospects, Lansing Lugnuts highlights, A's future prospects, minor league baseball podcast, A's player development, Midwest League prospects, A's draft picks, A's catching prospects, A's pitching prospects, Kyle Robinson pitcher, Lugnuts Opening Day, Lansing Lugnuts 2026, A's prospect breakdown, minor league baseball analysis, baseball prospects podcast, A's pipeline, A's young players, high A prospects, Lansing Lugnuts roster
LET ROOK COOK

LET ROOK COOK

2026-04-0651:08

The A’s didn’t just win — they ripped the steering wheel out of chaos and drove straight through it. Down late, tied, trailing again in extras… none of it mattered because Brent Rooker turned Sunday into his personal fireworks show. Two homers, six RBI, and a walk-off three-run blast in the 10th that detonated West Sacramento. This wasn’t a quiet bounce-back after Saturday’s embarrassment — it was loud, reckless, and unforgettable. Tyler Soderstrom added a bases-loaded triple, the offense piled up 16 hits, and the A’s erased multiple momentum swings in a 12-10 slugfest that felt more like a heavyweight fight than a baseball game. This game had everything: blown leads, clutch swings, extra-inning drama, and a statement finish. The Astros kept punching — homers, doubles, a go-ahead run in the 10th — and every time the A’s answered back like they refused to lose a second straight game. That’s the difference between a flat team and one learning how to win. The A’s didn’t just take the series — they flipped the emotional script of the entire weekend. One night after getting steamrolled, they walked it off, slammed the door, and headed into the Yankees series riding adrenaline instead of doubt. This is the kind of win that changes the temperature of a clubhouse. 🔥⚾
WHAT'S YOUR GOAL?

WHAT'S YOUR GOAL?

2026-04-0553:49

The scoreboard said 11–0, but the real story lives in the expectations. If your goal as an A’s fan is 162 wins, days like this feel like a gut punch. If your goal is growth, identity, and proof this thing is building toward something real, then blowouts become checkpoints instead of catastrophes. Christian Walker launching one, Jeremy Peña stacking milestone hits, and Houston piling on like a heavyweight sparring partner — that’s the measuring stick. The A’s scraped five hits, never threatened, and watched the Astros control the game from the first inning. It wasn’t pretty. It wasn’t competitive. But it was honest. And honest baseball tells you exactly where a team stands. Expectations control everything. If you expect dominance, you’ll call this embarrassing. If you expect progress, you’ll call this information. The goal isn’t pretending losses don’t matter — it’s understanding what they mean. Young teams take punches. Developing pitching gets exposed. Lineups go silent. The question isn’t “How did they lose?” It’s “What are you expecting right now?” Because if the goal is long-term traction, nights like this are part of the construction zone. If the goal is instant gratification, you’re going to live and die with every scoreboard. Tonight isn’t about panic — it’s about perspective. And that’s exactly what we’re dragging into LAST CALL: real talk, no spin, no sugarcoating. 🎙️🔥
The show opens with a betting autopsy. Wednesday wasn’t just a bad day — it was a financial crime scene. A 5-9 record, blown lock, busted parlay, and a four-digit drop left Billy buried under bad vibes and colder than a stadium hot dog in April. After stepping away to reset, the crew returns with a full MLB slate and one mission: stop the bleeding. The card leans into bounce-back logic, fading overreactions, riding home dogs, and calling for offensive explosions — especially in Sacramento where shaky pitching and warm weather scream runs. The picks come fast and loose: Cardinals with the run line, Royals in a doubleheader sweep, Blue Jays bounce-back, Reds over Rocker, Twins at home, and Dodgers run line in what’s described as a full-blown mismatch. Totals take center stage, including a projected slugfest for the A’s game that earns lock of the day status on the over. The two-team parlay pairs Cincinnati with the Dodgers run line, a high-risk, high-confidence combo meant to yank the record back toward respectability. After a brutal slide, this episode is all about aggression, redemption, and betting like the last loss never happened.
One year ago, the A’s walked into Sutter Health Park like a team entering a haunted house. Everything felt strange — the mound, the sightlines, the rhythm — and the result was a three-game nightmare. Fast forward to now, and the same park suddenly looks like a launching pad. The A’s exploded for 11 runs against Houston, every hitter reached base, and the offense that had been quiet for six games finally looked like the preseason wrecking crew everyone expected. The fourth inning turned into a demolition derby — two outs, a popup miscue, then Lawrence Butler detonated a three-run shot and Max Muncy followed with another blast. That wasn’t momentum… that was an avalanche. This game wasn’t just about the bats either. Jeffrey Springs carved through Houston with six strong innings, and the sold-out Sacramento crowd brought playoff energy in early April. The A’s hit rockets all night, stacking hard contact and proving this ballpark fits their identity perfectly — score fast, score loud, and bury teams before they can blink. After a sluggish 1–5 start, this felt like the moment the switch flipped. The offense showed up, the crowd brought electricity, and suddenly Sutter Health Park doesn’t look temporary… it looks like a weapon.
The very first episode of The Weekend Walkoff wastes no time setting the tone — and David “Casper” Casper comes in with emotion, history, and a lifelong connection to the green and gold. From childhood trips to his grandfather’s house watching Jose Canseco and Mark McGwire, to the chills of walking into the Coliseum for the first time and seeing Rickey Henderson go deep, Casper lays out how the A’s became part of his DNA. He opens up about the fear, frustration, and eventual acceptance surrounding the move to Las Vegas, while explaining why he never considered abandoning the team — because when this team wins, it lifts you up, and when it loses, you feel it in your gut. That’s the foundation of The Weekend Walkoff: raw fandom, honest reactions, and the emotional ride that defines a baseball week. Then Casper pivots to the present, breaking down a rough 1–5 start, lineup confusion, and early-season growing pains without hitting the panic button. He hands out his first Player of the Week honors to Shea Langeliers after a monster opening stretch, calls out early disappointments, and tips the cap to Denzel Clark for another jaw-dropping home run robbery. The episode wraps with a look ahead to the weekend series, bold predictions, and a promise that this show will be less about spreadsheets and more about the fan experience — the pacing in your living room, the radio in the car, and the group chat blowing up during big moments. The Weekend Walkoff isn’t just a recap — it’s the Friday ritual for fans who live every pitch.
The Habit Hunter is back — and the early-season trends are already screaming. A rough 1–5 start has exposed a lineup stuck in bad habits, chasing sliders, falling behind in counts, and relying almost entirely on one hot bat to carry the offense. The Braves series showed flashes of improvement — better pitch selection from key hitters, more disciplined at-bats, and a few encouraging outings from the bullpen — but the bigger picture remains clear: this offense isn’t just slumping, it’s repeating the same mistakes. When the same problems show up game after game, that’s not bad luck… that’s a habit. On the mound, there were encouraging signs. Solid outings from the bullpen, improved efficiency, and moments where the staff limited damage despite shaky command. But the offense continues to dig early holes, forcing pitchers to work with zero margin for error. The Habit Hunter dives into who’s trending up, who’s stuck in destructive patterns, and the uncomfortable conversation about whether defensive brilliance is enough if the bat never shows up. This episode is all about identifying habits — because the good ones win seasons, and the bad ones bury teams fast.
A quiet revolution is happening right now, and if you blinked, you missed it. The A’s have fundamentally changed how they pitch — ditching traditional four-seam fastballs and replacing them with cutters, sinkers, and movement-heavy attacks designed to avoid damage. The numbers from the first six games reveal a dramatic shift across the entire staff, from starters to relievers, and even in how the organization targets pitchers. This isn’t a tweak — it’s a full organizational pivot built for pitching in hitter-friendly environments like Sacramento now and Las Vegas in the future. This episode breaks down the data, the reasoning, and the risk. Why avoid four-seamers? Because that’s the pitch hitters crush the most. Why cutters and sinkers? Because movement creates weak contact instead of three-run homers. But there’s a catch — command becomes harder, pitch counts rise, and early growing pains are inevitable. The A’s are betting analytics, development, and long-term planning will outweigh those risks. This is the biggest strategic change of the season… and it could define the next era of A’s baseball.
The bats never showed up and the A’s ran headfirst into a vintage Chris Sale performance. Six innings, one hit, total control. The only crack in the wall came from Shea Langeliers, who continued his scorching start with another towering home run — the lone bright spot in a 5–1 loss. Drake Baldwin delivered the damage with two clutch two-out hits that drove in four runs, while Luis Severino struggled to find the zone, issuing five walks and digging an early hole the A’s never climbed out of. When the dust settled, the story was simple: one team executed, the other team watched. This episode of Last Call: A’s Postgame dives straight into the frustration, the positives, and the bigger picture as the offense goes quiet again. Lifelong A’s fan Aaron Cameron joins the show to bring the fan perspective — raw, honest, and emotional — as we break down Langeliers’ red-hot start, the lack of lineup production, Severino’s command issues, and what this slow start really means. No spin, no sugarcoating — just real reaction immediately after the final out.
The first road trip of the season didn’t just test the A’s — it exposed them. Episode six of All on Green dives into a 1–5 start defined by cold bats, bullpen roulette, and a lineup leaning heavily on one scorching hitter while everyone else searches for timing. Rob and Stud break down the Atlanta series, where the pitching was good enough to win but the offense never showed up. The conversation centers on a closer-by-committee bullpen that creates nightly chaos, early struggles from key bats, and a team that looks like it’s still shaking off spring training while the season already counts. The show also turns forward, previewing the home opener and identifying what must change immediately: more contact, smarter situational hitting, and someone stepping up to spark the lineup. There’s cautious optimism mixed with real concern — the classic early-season tension. The episode sets the stage for a full night of coverage, with All on Green at 7:00 followed by Last Call: A’s Postgame at 9:00, where Booney joins special guest Aaron Cameron to continue the conversation and react to the first road trip fallout. SUPPORT ALL ON GREEN Welcome to your #1 source for officially licensed MLB, NFL, NBA, NHL, MLS, Premier League, College, and National Team fan gear! Rep your favorite teams and players with our team apparel. USE THE FOLLOWING LINK TO GET ALL YOUR A'S GEAR ONLY FROM FOCO: www.foco.com/checkouts/athletics
In the debut episode of Lugnuts Weekly, Jesse Goldberg-Strassler—voice of the Lansing Lugnuts—dives into the excitement surrounding Opening Day and the rising talent in the A’s farm system. Fresh off media day and spring training broadcasts, Jesse shares firsthand insight into the development process that defines minor league baseball. From the electric Lansing outfield featuring names like Devin Taylor and Rodney Green to intriguing infield and catching battles, this episode captures the heartbeat of High-A baseball and why it matters more than ever. The conversation also highlights the philosophy of player development—why struggles don’t define prospects and how growth happens in real time. Jesse breaks down standout names like Tommy White, Leo De Vries, and Zane Taylor, while giving fans a deeper understanding of how players evolve from raw talent into major league contributors. Whether you’re a diehard A’s fan or just love baseball’s future stars, Episode 1 sets the tone for a season full of insight, storytelling, and insider perspective from the front lines of the game.
Billy walks into Wednesday bruised but dangerous. The full card went sideways — a 6-8 day and another dent in the bankroll — but the one thing that matters in betting land stayed scorching: the lock of the day. Three straight winners. That’s the lifeline. And now the strategy shifts. Instead of chasing every edge, the focus tightens — pick spots, trust the reads, and ride the hot hand. The slate opens early with a heavyweight pitching matchup, and Billy immediately targets value, calling for the A’s to push runs against Chris Sale while backing Paul Skenes to rebound and steady the Pirates. From there, it’s a full-board march through chaos: Phillies run line, Blue Jays hammer, Tigers behind the best arm in baseball, Mariners bounce-back, and a handful of gritty unders where offense looks allergic to scoring. The two-team parlay ties Pirates moneyline to the A’s over, but the headline remains simple — the lock is the Blue Jays run line. Billy isn’t trying to be cute. He’s trying to stack wins, shrink the deficit, and keep the hottest thing on the show alive. Three straight locks… and the degenerates are leaning in for number four.
The A’s flipped the script early and never looked back, riding a four-run ambush in the second inning to a clean, businesslike 5–2 win. After falling behind on a first-inning blast, the offense punched back immediately — walks piled up, pressure mounted, and a Jacob Wilson two-run ground-rule double cracked the game open. RBI knocks from the Andy Ibanez kept the line moving in the fourth, then a solo shot by Shea Langeliers in the fifth added insurance and sucked the air out of Atlanta’s comeback hopes. On the mound, Civale worked like a veteran traffic cop — bend, don’t break — scattering four hits across five innings and keeping the Braves mostly quiet outside of a couple of isolated swings. The bullpen slammed the door from there, and Leiter Jr. handled ninth-inning traffic without flinching, stranding two to lock down the save. Five runs, timely hitting, controlled pitching — not flashy, just efficient… the kind of win that feels like a team settling into its identity.
Billy is heating up, and Full Count Degenerates is here to ride the streak! Today, he cashed his lock for the second straight day and delivered on a two-team parlay that had fans cheering. From early game breakdowns to sharp insights into matchups and betting trends, Billy’s picks are showing why hot hands are no joke in the MLB betting world. Join us live as we break down today’s MLB slate, discuss where the value lies, and analyze which teams have the edge. Whether you’re a casual fan or a full-time degenerates, this episode gives you the edge you need to stay ahead. Don’t miss Billy’s hot streak in action—it’s time to watch the action unfold live and see if the streak continues!
The Climb pulls back the curtain on the physical and mental war behind professional baseball, with Nick Conte breaking down what fans never see — the fatigue, the dead arm, the silent drop in velocity that signals something deeper. The conversation moves beyond radar guns and mechanics into the reality of a 162-game marathon, where players are constantly compensating, adjusting, and sometimes surviving. Conte explains why velocity dips aren’t always mechanical failures, how fatigue reshapes delivery, and why the modern “throw harder” mentality may be pushing players toward shorter careers. The episode also dives into how analytics, power training, and velocity obsession are reshaping the sport — and not always for the better. The group debates whether baseball is losing its chess-match strategy, why bulking up doesn’t always translate to performance, and how confidence — not just talent — can define a career. From dead arm stories to the disappearance of finesse pitchers, this episode explores baseball’s evolving identity and the human element that still decides who actually makes it to the top.
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