The Deal

One ticket to an Oakland A’s game

Where: O.co Coliseum

Door time: 90 minutes before opening pitch

Click here to view the seating chart.

Games and Seating Options

Against the Texas Rangers on Wednesday, April 8, at 7:05 p.m.

$22 for one Field Reserved seat ($34 value)

$16 for one Field Level seat ($30 value)

Against the Seattle Mariners on Friday, April 10, at 7:05 p.m.

There will be a Sonny Gray jersey giveaway for 15,000 fans that enter the ballpark at this game.

$22 for one Field Reserved seat ($39 value)

$14 for one Plaza Outfield seat ($24 value)

Against Houston Astros on Sunday, April 26, at 1:05 p.m.

$22 for one Field Reserved seat ($34 value)

$14 for one Plaza Outfield seat ($24 value)

When you click “Buy,” you’ll be redirected to athletics.com to complete your transaction. You’ll get the same percentage off the convenience charge, but you’ll still need to pay the full Oakland Athletics processing fee and tax. Ain’t no discounts on tax.

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The Scouting Report

After a long winter of practicing and receiving couples’ massages alongside their mitts, the Oakland A’s return to O.co Coliseum to begin the 2015 season against a trio of West Division rivals. Last year, the A’s made their third-straight postseason appearance behind one of the best pitching staffs in baseball. The team’s offense was dynamic, too: it scored 729 runs, which was the fourth-best in the big leagues. An offseason shakeup provided the A’s with a revamped lineup that has the potential to be even more potent, with second baseman Ben Zobrist, designated hitter Billy Butler, and third baseman Brett Lawrie joining returning fan-favorites like Coco Crisp, Josh Reddick, and Sonny Gray.

Oakland A’s

In 1902, while the team now in Oakland was still the Philly Athletics, a rival manager scoffed, casting the fledgling franchise off as a herd of “white elephants.” In response, manager Connie Mack adopted the elephant as the team’s official insignia—a legacy that lives on with the current mascot, Stomper—before the A’s stampeded to the American League pennant.

Since that first defiant victory, the team has won nine World Series championships, moving to Kansas City in 1955, then Oakland in 1968. Over more than a century, the club has fostered 11 league MVPs and eight Rookies of the Year. Today, the A’s dazzle fans at the 35,067-capacity Coliseum, which features a lush natural-bluegrass surface and a spacious foul territory—technically still a 19th-century Mexican province—that baits pop-up outs, making it one of the most pitcher-friendly parks in Major League Baseball.