Suzuki gets Seattle started in 9-3 victory

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SEATTLE (AP)—That soft bubble in the schedule the Seattle Mariners took advantage of during the last month to climb back above the .500 mark is done.

Now comes the real challenge to see how long this surprise team can stick around in the AL West race.

Ichiro(notes) Suzuki lined the 29th leadoff homer of his career into the right-field seats and finished a triple short of the cycle, and the Mariners gave starter Jarrod Washburn(notes) his first win in more than two months, 9-3 over the San Diego Padres on Thursday.

The win came as the Mariners headed out of town on a brutal nine-game road trip at the Dodgers, Yankees and Red Sox that may determine Seattle’s course for the rest of the season. Seattle took two of three from San Diego and spent the previous month taking series from the likes of Baltimore, Arizona and a pair from the Padres, winning seven of its last eight series after dipping to a season-low of 21-26 on May 26.

“It is for sure that we have made progress,” Suzuki said through an interpreter.

At two games above .500 at 37-35, the Mariners sound ready for their road test.

“We’re going to be playing three of the best teams in baseball the next week and a half. Hopefully we’ll play good ball and it’ll put us in position around the All-Star break to be buyers, not sellers,” said Mike Sweeney(notes), who recorded his first four-hit day in nearly three years. “We’re playing good baseball.”

Suzuki hit the third pitch from San Diego starter Wade LeBlanc(notes) (0-1) for his sixth homer of the season. He added a double in the second and single in the fourth, but grounded out and reached on an infield hit in his final two at-bats. It was his third four-hit game of the season.

Rob Johnson(notes) added a three-run double in Seattle’s four-run first, Wladimir Balentien(notes) hit a solo homer in the fifth and Sweeney capped his day with a two-run single as the Mariners finally gave Washburn (4-5) some run support.

This was an offensive outburst Washburn isn’t use to. Averaging just 4.27 runs of support in his Mariners career—lowest among AL starters—Washburn worked liberally. He gave up hits and allowed runners in scoring position in four of his six innings, but kept the Padres scoreless until Chase Headley’s(notes) two-run homer in the sixth.

Washburn allowed six hits and struck out six, winning for the first time since April 21. He was 0-2 in his previous five starts, despite a 2.25 ERA.

“I told (Johnson) as soon as he got that hit I said to myself, ‘Game over,”’ Washburn said. “I just had to go out and make pitches. For the most part I did that.”

Seattle headed for the road after taking full advantage of LeBlanc, making just his second start this season.

Suzuki got the offense started, followed by Adrian Beltre’s(notes) single and Sweeney’s double. After Franklin Gutierrez(notes), who has four homers this season against San Diego, was intentionally walked, Johnson came through. The young catcher was just 1 for 13 on the homestand, but drove the first pitch from LeBlanc to the wall in left-center easily scoring all three runners.

Seattle added another run in the fifth when Ronny Cedeno(notes) executed a perfect squeeze bunt to score Gutierrez from third and Balentien followed with his towering homer into the second deck in left field. Sweeney then drove home a pair in the eighth.

Edgar Gonzalez added a solo homer in the seventh for San Diego, who loaded the bases with two outs but Kevin Kouzmanoff(notes) flew out to Suzuki to end the threat.

“We had the go-ahead run at the plate in a game that looked like it could get away from us real early,” said San Diego manager Bud Black, who watched most of the game from the clubhouse after getting ejected.

San Diego outfielder Scott Hairston(notes) and Black both were ejected in the first inning by plate umpire Marvin Hudson. Hairston started toward first after a 3-2 pitch from Washburn appeared high and outside. But Hudson emphatically punched out Hairston, triggering a few choice words from the Padres’ No. 3 hitter. It didn’t take many before Hairston was tossed, and Black’s ejection was moments later when he started arguing with Hudson as well. ^Notes: Suzuki is now tied with Kenny Lofton(notes) for 11th all-time in leadoff homers. … Padres DH Adrian Gonzalez(notes) walked in the seventh inning, breaking the franchise record for walks in June. He has been given 28 free passes this month. … Seattle placed SS Yuniesky Betancourt(notes) on the 15-day DL with a strained hamstring. He could be out until after the All-Star break.

Updated Jun 25, 8:54 pm EDT
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14 Comments

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  1. mgb
    14. Posted by mgb Fri Jun 26 1:44am EDT

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    Hey Les I say you just proved you're less knowledgeable than Rick Rizzs..................How can you say that was a bad trade (Bedard) then go and knock the main piece we gave up? You prove my point..................Why don't we just make *YOU* the GM?
  2. lLes
    13. Posted by lLes Fri Jun 26 1:23am EDT

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    hmmm mgb sure had alot of babble going on in there,....Jones was and is a JERK and wont make it long in a decent clubhouse.....am glad he is not here to ruin any kind of chemistry we have here now...get over the fact Bavasi made some bad trades now lets see what the new guy can do...my take is its on him that we have guys here now that should not be here still...and maybe even some of that rests with the manager but who knows the inner makings of the team... each individual has a role on the team...when you have a TEAM that is...I know Griffey has not produced as well at the plate as we had hoped (not expected) but his presence back in a Mariner uniform has been insurmountable... the things he does for a clubhouse are enormous and I think he should stay...Beltre seems to be finally getting that bat in place again....and as far as Balentein goes I think thats dead weight that can be moved back to tacoma and bring back Morse whom did well here
  3. disgruntled
    12. Posted by disgruntled Fri Jun 26 12:11am EDT

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    MingT you obviously AREN"T a mariners fan. The only reasons they are above .500 right now is because of the pitching. The starters are pitching lights out with VERY little run support. That's why they have very good ERA's and terrible records. They also have the best team ERA in the american league. So how does your comment about their pitching make sense? Gtweezy was right. They started winning more when they started hitting.
  4. Gary
    11. Posted by Gary Thu Jun 25 10:24pm EDT

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    Can't believe Ichiro still needs a interpreter after all these years........
  5. MichaelR
    10. Posted by MichaelR Thu Jun 25 9:23pm EDT

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    Trading for prospects doesn't always work. Last year Oakland had a decent start but then had a fire sale because they thought they couldn't compete. This year they don't have a lot to sell, and no hope.
  6. <i>leetrevis</i>
    9. Posted by leetrevis Thu Jun 25 9:03pm EDT

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    go M s
  7. Michael
    8. Posted by Michael Thu Jun 25 8:47pm EDT

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    Go Branyan, he is on my fantasy team! Yeah!!!!!
  8. mgb
    7. Posted by mgb Thu Jun 25 8:36pm EDT

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    Oh great, here we go. That's now seven series wins in eight, eight in ten, and nine of twelve and yet here come the armchair managers who invented baseball and know everything that ever happened in the last 125 years, who KNOW what the M's can and can't do. Self-anointed expert on Lookout Landing/USS Mariner perhaps? If so, may I ask if you've ever had a date with a real person?

    Here's an idea, let's wait until they actually come home 2-7 from the road trip, and then follow it up with a 2-5 homestand, all the while averaging 3.4 runs per game before anything else before we say yes or no. We're three years removed from an 83 win world champ for cryin out loud!

    And as far as all the whining about the trade that won't die, let's see:

    Jones: Hmmmm, seems there a more Jones fans than there was when he WAS CALLED UP. Let's see if Balentein can flourish in a more regular spot. Go figure, the one week he actually gets some regular ABs and his OPS is back up near 700.

    Sherrill: Ummm, Aardsma anybody? Point is closers, now that Rivera isn't God anymore, are interchangeable.

    Tillman, Mick, Butler: Sure, hyped young pitching prospects. Anyone seen Bobby Livingston, Clint Nageotte, Rett Johnson, Greg Wooten, or Chris Mears dominating lately? Point is, prospects are, as Dusty Baker (who everyone wanted to hire in 2007) once said, suspects? How about Lou's record with prospects if you want to go there?

    No one's saying trade the future for a weak shot now (of course when it was Lou/Gillick everyone was screaming for it), but 37-35 is no reason to have a fire sale either.
  9. Scott
    6. Posted by Scott Thu Jun 25 8:24pm EDT

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    Ming T, you must not be paying attention. Although I agree they will not compete for the division, I think around .500 is a reasonable goal. Not that things cant change, but it is the Mariner's offense that is the biggest issue this year. The Mariner's currently have the best ERA in the league, and third overall. David Aardsma is seventh in the league in saves and the bullpen over the last 30 days has been the best in the majors. Washburn, Hernandez and Bedard are all three in the top 12 in the American Leaugue for starting pitching ERA. The problem is the offense which is 10th in the American League in average and last in runs. Not to say that the pitching is going to break down, Bedard has already been shelved due to his shoulder, but this teams issue is hitting. They should make trades where they get a good return, with a much smarter GM and not Bevasi.
  10. <i>ionjohnny</i>
    5. Posted by ionjohnny Thu Jun 25 8:14pm EDT

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    yeah, we have ichiro signed to a fantastic and very special contract. he's a mariner for awhile, probably life. i'm wondering if dealing any of the pieces we have would bring anything more valuable than the compensatory picks we get if they leave as FAs. i doubt it.
  11. lLes
    4. Posted by lLes Thu Jun 25 8:07pm EDT

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    Ming T dunno what your smoking but as long as Nintendo owns the Mariners Ichiro is NOT going anywhere. This is not our year either, sadly enough. I have seen to many managing mistakes already...the handling of Morrow is not a good thing either...I say yes get rid of Bedard thats a money thing and lets just cry about that trade already(the one that brought him here).....Silva should be in the trash can not the Dl oh and toss Batista in there with him....clean the clubhouse out and start letting the talent in the minors come up and do something or at least see if they can....was sad to see Betancourt get hurt as I dont wish that on anyone but we will be better without him and his lackadaisical play....
  12. Ming T
    3. Posted by Ming T Thu Jun 25 8:01pm EDT

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    You sound like a Mariners fan, Gtweezy.... but to be honest, you know they can't compete over the long haul, and don't you think the franchise might be better off in the long run by moving some of their valuable pieces (i.e. Bedard and even Ichiro)?

    Their starting pitching is just not good enough for long term success, and the bullpen has been shaky all year as well. Beltre needs surgery, Branyan's hitting over his head, and Sweeney's the cleanup hitter... all reasons that they will not be at .500 for much longer.
  13. J W
    2. Posted by J W Thu Jun 25 8:01pm EDT

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    Yep, THE road trip of the season will be a great test and still playing .500 ball after it would be great!

    I wonder how much the coaching changes has impacted the turn around from last year.
  14. Gtweezy
    1. Posted by Gtweezy Thu Jun 25 6:56pm EDT

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    The Mariners are finally hitting, watch out now. Ichiro has been amazing since day one in 2001, and he will be the only player in baseball history with 9+ 200 hit seasons after this season, and he even missed the first couple weeks and is leading baseball with over 100 hits which no one else has. Not only does he have over 3,000 hits in his professional career, but by the end of his career he will be mr. 3,000 for his MLB Career. This 9 game road trip to the LA Dodges, NY Yanks, and Red Sox will be a huge test. If the mariners are still above .500 after those three series, I will be very pleased.
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