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SAN FRANCISCO, CA – SEPT. 26: San Diego Padres catcher Austin Nola (22) congratulates San Diego Padres pitcher Trevor Rosenthal (47) after striking out San Francisco Giants’ Joey Bart (21) in the ninth inning of their game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Sept. 26, 2020. The San Diego Padres defeated the San Francisco Giants 6-2. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
SAN FRANCISCO, CA – SEPT. 26: San Diego Padres catcher Austin Nola (22) congratulates San Diego Padres pitcher Trevor Rosenthal (47) after striking out San Francisco Giants’ Joey Bart (21) in the ninth inning of their game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Calif., on Saturday, Sept. 26, 2020. The San Diego Padres defeated the San Francisco Giants 6-2. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)
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The A’s got rocked in Surprise, losing to the Kansas City Royals 10-3 on Monday afternoon. Most of Oakland’s regulars stayed back for the Spring Training game, with a good chunk of young players vying for roster spots and playing time making the trek 30 miles Northwest of Mesa to face the Royals’ A-squad.

Here are some takeaways.

Trevor Rosenthal out

Rosenthal, the A’s prized prospective closer, was slated to pitch in Monday’s game. But was held back due to a slight groin strain, manager Bob Melvin said after the loss.

The 30-year-old pitcher has been out of commission for two days with no timetable to start throwing again. But Melvin said shutting down Rosenthal was as a precaution.

Rosenthal has yet to pitch in a spring game, but his timetable is important as the clear-cut option to be the A’s closer this year.

He had a 1.90 ERA in 23.2 innings, including 11 saves in 2020 with the San Diego Padres and Royals in 2020. That was a far cry from his 2019 season, post Tommy John surgery, where he had a 13.50 ERA in 15.1 innings with the Detroit Tigers and Washington Nationals.

Parker Dunshee has a tough go of it

Dunshee followed up a clean debut his first time out against the Milwaukee Brewers last week with a rough outing against some of the Royals’ best.

The right-hander allowed five runs and six hits in three innings. One of the two home runs he allowed was a three-run home run to Carlos Santana in the first inning.

“Just kind of from the start I wasn’t locating as well as I needed to and they took advantage,” he said.

Dunshee, the A’s 26-year-old prospect, found success last week by attacking the zone, his bread and butter. But he couldn’t find his command on Monday.

“Just not his best command today,” Melvin said. “For him to be good, he’s got to be on the corners, he’s got to be ahead in the count, throwing strikes, which he typically does. Today was not that day for him.”

Yusmeiro Petit has a rough outing, too

There’s no reason to make too much of one spring outing for 36-year-old Yusmeiro Petit. He did give up five runs on five hits while recording just two outs in his spring debut. He gave up two home runs, including one to Royals’ top prospect Bobby Witt Jr.

“First time out, some (pitches) up, he might’ve gotten squeezed on a couple pitches. Just move on,” Melvin said.

Injury updates

Jed Lowrie, who is returning to action following knee operation this October, will play second base on Tuesday, Melvin said. Lowrie ran the bases on Sunday, one final hurdle in his recovery, and all went well.

Sean Murphy, who was late to camp after surgery to repair a collapsed lung, is ramping up now and scheduled to take batting practice off coaches this week. If there are no setbacks, the team can start to set a timetable for Murphy’s return.

Rule 5 outfielder Ka’ai Tom (oblique injury) will take batting practice with coaches this week, too, and could be in games for the latter half of Cactus League.

Outfield prospect Skye Bolt returned from a shoulder injury and made his Cactus League debut on Monday, going 0-for-1 in the seven-inning game after taking over for Ramón Laureano in centerfield.