OAKLAND, Calif. — The shortest outing of Erik Bedard’s 10-year career resulted in the Astros lefthander acknowledging he couldn’t throw strikes Monday and reliever Paul Clemens jawing with an ump, dislocating his right pinky finger and apologizing for taking the Lord’s name in vain. addCustomPlayer('1orety8mws6x71be754no7t8oc', '06c7c348-13be-4bf5-b1f0-8f1e92cfcb4c', '1td4bc5m3z4wk12kns82q7i6c6', 620, 429, 'perf1orety8mws6x71be754no7t8oc-1td4bc5m3z4wk12kns82q7i6c6', 'eplayer17'); It was that kind of night for the Astros, who fell 11-2 to the Athletics in an American League West matchup at the Coliseum. Bedard was bombed. He walked the first three batters he faced, gave up six earned runs on 35 pitches and turned the ball over to Clemens after just 1/3 of an inning’s worth of work. [...]