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The Oakland Athletics, still seeking a temporary home as they await their move to Las Vegas, met with officials from the city of Oakland and Alameda County on Thursday to discuss the possibility of extending their lease at the Oakland Coliseum for three seasons beginning in 2025.

The current Coliseum lease expires after the upcoming season. Owner John Fisher and team officials have toured minor-league facilities in Salt Lake City and Sacramento in their quest to find a home for the team before their Las Vegas stadium is completed, which the team expects to be in time for the 2028 season. They have also floated the idea of playing at the home of their Triple-A team in Summerlin, Nevada, or sharing Oracle Park with the San Francisco Giants.

“We’re glad to be in direct communication with the A’s,” said Leigh Hanson, Oakland’s chief of staff, who represented the city along with city council member Rebecca Kaplan and county supervisor David Haubert. “The meeting was very direct and very honest. I don’t think anyone was posturing or trying to overstate things.”

The A’s reiterated at the meeting that a decision on a temporary site will need to be finalized in the next few months. The Coliseum has long been considered the most logical choice for the A’s, despite the animosity created by their decision to abandon their stadium project along the Oakland waterfront and move to Vegas. The team stands to lose a large percentage of its $70 million annual contract for local television rights if it leaves the Bay Area, and any relocation to a minor-league facility will need the approval of the Major League Baseball Players’ Association.

“We had a positive meeting with the City and County,” the A’s said in a statement released to KGO-TV. “We look forward to further discussions regarding a lease extension at the Coliseum for the interim period before the Vegas ballpark opens.”

It was the first time the sides had discussed the team’s situation since the A’s secured $380 million in public funding from the state of Nevada and were granted unanimous approval to move in a vote of MLB owners. Neither Fisher nor Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao, whose mother died this week, attended the meeting, which was held at the team’s offices in Jack London Square. A’s president Dave Kaval and chief of staff Miguel Duarte represented the A’s.

Thao has made it clear the city will expect assurances from Major League Baseball that a lease extension be coupled with an assurance that an MLB team — whether the A’s or an expansion team — makes its home in Oakland.

“Whether it’s the A’s under the current ownership, the A’s under a new owner or the A’s brand in expansion, Oakland A’s fans are voters in the City of Oakland, and they want a major-league team,” Hanson said. “It’s our obligation to negotiate on their behalf. This is a major-league city, and if we extend the lease three years without a significant long-term commitment, we will have failed at our task. [The lease extension] is much more in the A’s interest than ours at this point.”

The two sides agreed to meet again soon, although no firm date was set. Hanson said the city and county’s demands for a major league team will eventually require future negotiations to include commissioner Rob Manfred and other MLB owners.

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Jays put Santander on IL with shoulder injury

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Jays put Santander on IL with shoulder injury

TORONTO — The Blue Jays put slugger Anthony Santander on the 10-day injured list Friday because of left shoulder inflammation and recalled outfielder Alan Roden from Triple-A Buffalo.

Santander is batting .179 with six home runs and 18 RBI in 50 games. The veteran switch hitter has missed a handful of games because of left hip and left shoulder soreness over the past three weeks.

Santander signed a $92.5 million, five-year contract with Toronto in January after eight seasons with Baltimore. He hit a career-best 44 home runs for the Orioles last season.

The outfielder had an MRI after Thursday’s 12-0 win over the Athletics, when he was 0 for 2 with two strikeouts and two walks, Blue Jays manager John Schneider said. The team was still determining whether the next steps would include a cortisone injection or rehabilitation, the manager said.

“I think it just got to the point to where it was bothering him,” Schneider said before Friday’s game against the Athletics. “You can’t really put the work that you want to put in volume-wise, and we just think it’s best for him right now.”

Roden rejoins the Blue Jays after batting .178 with one home run and five RBI in 28 games for Toronto earlier this season, his first in the majors. Roden hit .361 with three homers and 12 RBI in 18 games at Buffalo after being sent down May 7.

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Twins reinstate Buxton after 11-game absence

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Twins reinstate Buxton after 11-game absence

SEATTLE — The Minnesota Twins reinstated center fielder Byron Buxton from the seven-day concussion injured list Friday before beginning a three-game series in Seattle, two weeks after he collided with shortstop Carlos Correa in pursuit of a shallow fly ball.

Buxton missed 11 games after the collision, which also sent Correa into the concussion protocol. Correa needed only the minimum seven-day stay on the injured list and missed five games.

To make room for Buxton, outfielder Carson McCusker was sent back to Triple-A St. Paul. Buxton was batting .261 with an .834 OPS and 18 extra-base hits, including 10 homers, before he was hurt. He also had 33 runs, 27 RBIs and 8 steals in his first 41 games.

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Tigers place pitcher Jobe (elbow) on 15-day IL

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Tigers place pitcher Jobe (elbow) on 15-day IL

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Detroit Tigers placed pitcher Jackson Jobe on the 15-day injured list Friday because of a right elbow injury.

Jobe, a rookie right-hander, mentioned discomfort after leaving his last start, against San Francisco on Wednesday. The injury was described as a Grade 1 right flexor strain, and the move was retroactive to Thursday.

“He reported that he had a little bit of soreness,” Detroit manager AJ Hinch said before the MLB-leading Tigers opened a three-game series in Kansas City. “So we took him immediately to get evaluated. When the test came back and the doctors read it, they discovered this flexor strain.

“I try not to rush to any judgment until we see how his rest goes, and see how his rehab goes. We’ll listen to the doctors and the pitching coaches on that.”

The 22-year-old Jobe is 4-1 with a 4.22 ERA in 10 starts this season. He has 39 strikeouts and 27 walks in 49 innings.

Right-handed pitcher Dylan Smith was selected from Triple-A Toledo and will make his major league debut with the Tigers. To make room for Smith on the 40-man roster, right-hander Alex Cobb has been transferred to the 60-day injured list.

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