
| Mariners Place Jack Wilson On 15-Day DL, Activate… | |
By Danny Kelly – Contributor
The Seattle Mariners placed shortstop Jack Wilson on the 15-day disabled list Friday with a severely bruised left heel, and activated Brendan Ryan from the DL to take his spot. Wilson hurt his heel after landing awkwardly on first base during a game against the Blue Jays on Wednesday. Follow , and Like SB Nation Seattle on Facebook. Aug 19, 2011 – The Seattle Mariners placed shortstop Jack Wilson on the 15-day disabled list Friday with a severely bruised left heel, and activated Brendan Ryan from the DL to take his spot. Wilson hurt his heel after landing awkwardly on first base during a game against the Blue Jays on Wednesday. Brendan Ryan will look to get back on track after spending the last couple of weeks out of action. I’m hoping by now he has re-grown his mustache and the bravado that goes along with it because he’s going to need a lot of infield triples going forward to make much of a difference with this Mariners ballclub. In other Mariners’ news, LHP Aaron Laffey has been claimed by the New York Yankees off of waivers. He’ll join his new team on Saturday. The Mariners travel to Tampa Bay this weekend to face a Rays team that has been playing some good baseball as of late. They’re 7-3 in their last 10, ten games over .500, and sit 9.0 games out of the lead in the AL East. Felix Hernandez takes the hill for the Mariners tonight to try to end the Rays two-game win streak. For more on the Mariners’ upcoming series against the Rays, make sure you go check out Lookout Landing. Read More: Felix Hernandez (P – SEA), Jack Wilson (2B – SEA), Brendan Ryan (SS – SEA), Aaron Laffey (P – NYY), New York Yankees, Tampa Bay Rays, Toronto Blue Jays, Seattle Mariners Follow , and Like SB Nation Seattle on Facebook. Do you like this story?
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| Grading the Mariners: A midseason report | |
The Seattle Mariners brought in a new manager, new hitting coach, other new faces and impossibly, constructed an offense worse than that of 2010. Finish 30th among 30 teams in batting average, runs, home runs – the Seattle Mariners did that last year and understandably thought there was nowhere to go but up. So the team brought in a new manager, new hitting coach, new faces such as Jack Cust, Miguel Olivo, Adam Kennedy, Luis Rodriguez, Brendan Ryan and impossibly, constructed an offense worse than that of 2010. The Mariners hit .236 last season. They’re batting .224 this year. The Mariners hit 101 home runs last season. They’re on pace to hit 98 this year. The Mariners scored 513 runs last season – the worst since the designated hitter was introduced in 1973. They are on pace to score 535 runs this season – the second lowest team total in the DH era. “There’s no secret about our offense and the way we struggle to score runs,” manager Eric Wedge said. “The way we win games is with pitching and defense and trying to scratch out just enough runs.” The Mariners have been shut out six times. In 16 other losses, they scored once. That’s 22 of 48 losses when the only chance the Mariners had to win was to pitch a shutout. In 12 other losses, Seattle scored twice. “Our pitching has been ridiculous,” Kennedy said. “Most of the losses we’ve had, they gave us the chance to win in our final at-bat.” For the second consecutive season, the Mariners trail all big-league teams in the key offensive areas, ranking 30th in runs, average, on-base percentage and slugging percentage. A playoff push, even in the mediocre division that is the American League West, seemed possible until the final days before the All-Star break when the Mariners lost five consecutive games to fall 71/2 games behind the first-place Texas Rangers. But as good as the pitching has been, the Mariners can’t contend without more offense. In 2010, general manager Jack Zduriencik said his team had underachieved – and fired two managers and a pair of hitting coaches. This season, Zduriencik hasn’t said much, and neither Wedge nor his batting coach, Chris Chambliss, are thought to be in any immediate danger. “One of the reasons I wanted Chris is I knew he was tough, and that he was going to have to be, trying to turn this around,” Wedge said. Third baseman Chone Figgins has become the poster boy for Mariners offensive failures. A year ago, after batting .235 at the All-Star break, Figgins inched his first-year numbers in Seattle to .259 – the worst full season of his career. Now in the second season of a four-year, $36 million contract, Figgins is batting .183 and has lost his job, first to Kennedy, now to rookie Kyle Seager. Similarly, free agent designated hitter Cust has lost his job, having batted .211 with three home runs. Worse, Ichiro, the face of the franchise and the spark to Seattle’s offense since 2001, is batting 61 points below his .331 career average. There have been other failures at the plate – Milton Bradley and Michael Saunders opened the season playing in left and center field. Neither is still on the roster. Franklin Gutierrez got to the All-Star break batting .187, Miguel Olivo .223, Justin Smoak .229. Small wonder the Mariners turned to their farm system quickly and often. “We’re finding out who can play, what roles they can fill, how well they adjust,” Wedge said of his young players. “We want to win games, first and foremost, but we have to develop a team, too.” The 2011 rookie class has included Dustin Ackley, Mike Wilson, All-Star Michael Pineda, Josh Lueke, Dan Cortes, Greg Halman, Carlos Peguero, Seager, Blake Beaven and Tom Wilhelmsen. Pineda won eight games before the break, Ackley batted .304 in his first 20 games, Halman .305 in his first 24. Peguero has shown power – six home runs – but struck out 52 times in 141 at-bats. Seager has played four games, walked once and singled. With 71 games remaining, the Mariners’ youth movement will continue. Players such as Mike Carp and Mike Wilson will likely get second looks. Rookies such as Alex Liddi and Matt Mangini will be up in September, if not sooner. “These young guys are the future, and some of them could be the keys to the future,” Ryan said. “With our pitching, if we improve our offense just a little, we win more games. If we improve it a lot, there’s no telling how many more games we’ll win.” What the Mariners are searching for is a young nucleus to a team that hasn’t held its age well. At the moment, they have seen promise but precious little on-field production. With players such as Smoak and Ackley, the team has offensive pieces. With most of the other rookies, they have question marks. The issues Seattle faces go beyond who’s coming – among the largest is what to do with those already here. Are the down seasons by veterans a signal that the end is near? Ichiro is 37, and has looked it in 2011. He is signed through 2012. Figgins is 33, owed 21/2 more years under his contract. Cust is 32, and most would be surprised if he’s still in a Mariners uniform by mid-August. Then there’s infielder Jack Wilson, 33. The Mariners will continue trying to move him, but given his status – he’s peared in only 47 games – and a .226 batting average, asking much in return seems pointless. Gutierrez, 28, remains a brilliant center fielder, but with a career average of .260 and a contract through 2013, the Mariners see him as a bottom of the lineup hitter. One thing the Mariners don’t want to do is, for instance, move Figgins in a deal in which they pay most of his remaining salary, then watch him flourish with another team on their dime. As they try to retool an offense, however, Figgins doesn’t seem to fit any more than Wilson or Cust. A team whose hitting is historically bad is trying to add through its farm system, but may well need to move veteran deadwood just as badly. It’s hard to imagine anyone on this team the Mariners couldn’t hit .224 without. larry.larue@thenewstribune.com blog.thenewstribune.com/mariners
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| Twins Bullpen Falls art In 8-7 Loss To Seattle | |
Read More: twins baseball, minnesota twins baseball, mariners baseball, seattle mariners baseball, twins mariners rec, Jack Cust (DH – SEA), Franklin Gutierrez (CF – SEA), Jamey Wright (P – SEA), Jim Thome (DH – MIN), Matt Cps (P – MIN), Jack Wilson (2B – SEA), Miguel Olivo (C – SEA), Delmon Young (LF – MIN), Carl Pavano (P – MIN), Chone Figgins (3B – SEA), Luis Rodriguez (SS – SEA), Joe Nathan (P – MIN), Brendan Ryan (SS – SEA), Adam Kennedy (2B – SEA), Brandon League (P – SEA), Aaron Laffey (P – SEA), Jason Repko (RF – MIN), Nick Blackburn (P – MIN), Denard Span (CF – MIN), Anthony Swarzak (P – MIN), Trevor Plouffe (SS – MIN), Carlos Peguero (LF – SEA), Michael Saunders (CF – SEA), Justin Smoak (1B – SEA), Doug Fister (P – SEA), Minnesota Twins, Seattle Mariners, Seattle Mariners at Minnesota Twins, May 23, 2011 7:10 PM CDT The Minnesota Twins took a 7-4 lead into the top of the eighth inning on Monday night against the Seattle Mariners, and it looked as though the team was about to get back on the winning track. The Minnesota bullpen once again fell art when it mattered, and the Twins wound up giving one away to the Mariners, losing 8-7 in ten innings. The Mariners got on the board right away in the top of the first inning, thanks to Jack Cust’s two-run homer off of Carl Pavano. The blast snped a 40-game homerless drought for Cust, the longer of his career. In the bottom of the inning, however, the Twins answered back as Denard Span hit his first ever Target Field home run to lead off the bottom of the first, slicing the lead to 2-1. Seattle added single runs in the top of the second and in the top of the third to extend their lead to 4-1. However, the Twins came all the way back in the bottom of the fourth by putting up three runs, the first two coming courtesy of Jim Thome’s two-run blast to right off of Seattle starter Jason Vargas. Span added a second RBI for himself with a single, bringing Delmon Young home to tie the score at four. The Twins took a 5-4 lead in the bottom of the fifth on Young’s RBI single, and extended their lead to 7-4 in the bottom of the seventh when Thome took Mariners’ reliever Aaron Laffey to the opposite field for a two-run homer. Then, Ron Gardenhire pulled starter Carl Pavano prior to the top of the eighth and replaced him with Joe Nathan. Nathan got the first out of the top of the eighth by striking out Carlos Peguero. Brendan Ryan then singled, and advanced to second on a wild pitch by Nathan. Jack Wilson then reached first on an error by shortstop Trevor Plouffe, and came home to score on a single by pinch-hitter Adam Kennedy, with Wilson advancing to third. Nathan then gave way to closer Matt Cps, who came in to face Ichiro. Ichiro hit a floater behind second base that Plouffe probably could have fielded, but wasn’t aggressive enough in getting to the ball, allowing it to land and letting Wilson score from third on what turned into a fielder’s choice. The Twins failed to score in the bottom of the eighth, and took their 7-6 lead to the top of the ninth. Justin Smoak led off the inning with a single for the Mariners, and pinch-runner Michael Saunders stole second base when Cust struck out. Cps then got Franklin Gutierrez to ground back to him for the second out, but just couldn’t close the deal as Peguero singled to bring in Saunders and tie the game at seven. The Twins had a chance in the bottom of the ninth, as they put runners on first and second, but Jason Repko grounded out to short to end the inning. Anthony Swarzak came in to pitch the tenth, and gave up back-to-back singles to Jack Wilson and Miguel Olivo. Ichiro then sacrificed the runners to second and third, and Chone Figgins was intentionally walked to load the bases. Former Twin Luis Rodriguez then lifted a fly ball to center deep enough to score Wilson from third, and the Mariners took an 8-7 lead. The Twins went down 1-2-3 in the bottom of the tenth, and wound up with their fourth consecutive loss. Jamey Wright got the win for the Mariners after pitching the ninth inning, a victory that evens his record at 1-1. Brandon League got the save for the Mariners, his eleventh of the year. Swarzak took the loss for the Twins, dropping him to 0-2 on the year. The same two teams will get together again at Target Field tomorrow night, with the first pitch scheduled for 7:10 PM. The Mariners will send right-hander Doug Fister (2-4, 2.93 ERA) to the mound, and the Twins will turn to Nick Blackburn (3-4, 3.40 ERA) to try to halt their latest losing streak. Gotta run!. Posted in mariners-news | Comments Off
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| Twins Bullpen Falls art In 8-7 Loss To Seattle | |
Read More: twins baseball, minnesota twins baseball, mariners baseball, seattle mariners baseball, twins mariners rec, Jack Cust (DH – SEA), Franklin Gutierrez (CF – SEA), Jamey Wright (P – SEA), Jim Thome (DH – MIN), Matt Cps (P – MIN), Jack Wilson (2B – SEA), Miguel Olivo (C – SEA), Delmon Young (LF – MIN), Carl Pavano (P – MIN), Chone Figgins (3B – SEA), Luis Rodriguez (SS – SEA), Joe Nathan (P – MIN), Brendan Ryan (SS – SEA), Adam Kennedy (2B – SEA), Brandon League (P – SEA), Aaron Laffey (P – SEA), Jason Repko (RF – MIN), Nick Blackburn (P – MIN), Denard Span (CF – MIN), Anthony Swarzak (P – MIN), Trevor Plouffe (SS – MIN), Carlos Peguero (LF – SEA), Michael Saunders (CF – SEA), Justin Smoak (1B – SEA), Doug Fister (P – SEA), Minnesota Twins, Seattle Mariners, Seattle Mariners at Minnesota Twins, May 23, 2011 7:10 PM CDT The Minnesota Twins took a 7-4 lead into the top of the eighth inning on Monday night against the Seattle Mariners, and it looked as though the team was about to get back on the winning track. The Minnesota bullpen once again fell art when it mattered, and the Twins wound up giving one away to the Mariners, losing 8-7 in ten innings. The Mariners got on the board right away in the top of the first inning, thanks to Jack Cust’s two-run homer off of Carl Pavano. The blast snped a 40-game homerless drought for Cust, the longer of his career. In the bottom of the inning, however, the Twins answered back as Denard Span hit his first ever Target Field home run to lead off the bottom of the first, slicing the lead to 2-1. Seattle added single runs in the top of the second and in the top of the third to extend their lead to 4-1. However, the Twins came all the way back in the bottom of the fourth by putting up three runs, the first two coming courtesy of Jim Thome’s two-run blast to right off of Seattle starter Jason Vargas. Span added a second RBI for himself with a single, bringing Delmon Young home to tie the score at four. The Twins took a 5-4 lead in the bottom of the fifth on Young’s RBI single, and extended their lead to 7-4 in the bottom of the seventh when Thome took Mariners’ reliever Aaron Laffey to the opposite field for a two-run homer. Then, Ron Gardenhire pulled starter Carl Pavano prior to the top of the eighth and replaced him with Joe Nathan. Nathan got the first out of the top of the eighth by striking out Carlos Peguero. Brendan Ryan then singled, and advanced to second on a wild pitch by Nathan. Jack Wilson then reached first on an error by shortstop Trevor Plouffe, and came home to score on a single by pinch-hitter Adam Kennedy, with Wilson advancing to third. Nathan then gave way to closer Matt Cps, who came in to face Ichiro. Ichiro hit a floater behind second base that Plouffe probably could have fielded, but wasn’t aggressive enough in getting to the ball, allowing it to land and letting Wilson score from third on what turned into a fielder’s choice. The Twins failed to score in the bottom of the eighth, and took their 7-6 lead to the top of the ninth. Justin Smoak led off the inning with a single for the Mariners, and pinch-runner Michael Saunders stole second base when Cust struck out. Cps then got Franklin Gutierrez to ground back to him for the second out, but just couldn’t close the deal as Peguero singled to bring in Saunders and tie the game at seven. The Twins had a chance in the bottom of the ninth, as they put runners on first and second, but Jason Repko grounded out to short to end the inning. Anthony Swarzak came in to pitch the tenth, and gave up back-to-back singles to Jack Wilson and Miguel Olivo. Ichiro then sacrificed the runners to second and third, and Chone Figgins was intentionally walked to load the bases. Former Twin Luis Rodriguez then lifted a fly ball to center deep enough to score Wilson from third, and the Mariners took an 8-7 lead. The Twins went down 1-2-3 in the bottom of the tenth, and wound up with their fourth consecutive loss. Jamey Wright got the win for the Mariners after pitching the ninth inning, a victory that evens his record at 1-1. Brandon League got the save for the Mariners, his eleventh of the year. Swarzak took the loss for the Twins, dropping him to 0-2 on the year. The same two teams will get together again at Target Field tomorrow night, with the first pitch scheduled for 7:10 PM. The Mariners will send right-hander Doug Fister (2-4, 2.93 ERA) to the mound, and the Twins will turn to Nick Blackburn (3-4, 3.40 ERA) to try to halt their latest losing streak. Feel free to leave your comments below. Posted in mariners-news | Comments Off
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| Twins Bullpen Falls art In 8-7 Loss To Seattle | |
Read More: twins baseball, minnesota twins baseball, mariners baseball, seattle mariners baseball, twins mariners rec, Jack Cust (DH – SEA), Franklin Gutierrez (CF – SEA), Jamey Wright (P – SEA), Jim Thome (DH – MIN), Matt Cps (P – MIN), Jack Wilson (2B – SEA), Miguel Olivo (C – SEA), Delmon Young (LF – MIN), Carl Pavano (P – MIN), Chone Figgins (3B – SEA), Luis Rodriguez (SS – SEA), Joe Nathan (P – MIN), Brendan Ryan (SS – SEA), Adam Kennedy (2B – SEA), Brandon League (P – SEA), Aaron Laffey (P – SEA), Jason Repko (RF – MIN), Nick Blackburn (P – MIN), Denard Span (CF – MIN), Anthony Swarzak (P – MIN), Trevor Plouffe (SS – MIN), Carlos Peguero (LF – SEA), Michael Saunders (CF – SEA), Justin Smoak (1B – SEA), Doug Fister (P – SEA), Minnesota Twins, Seattle Mariners, Seattle Mariners at Minnesota Twins, May 23, 2011 7:10 PM CDT The Minnesota Twins took a 7-4 lead into the top of the eighth inning on Monday night against the Seattle Mariners, and it looked as though the team was about to get back on the winning track. The Minnesota bullpen once again fell art when it mattered, and the Twins wound up giving one away to the Mariners, losing 8-7 in ten innings. The Mariners got on the board right away in the top of the first inning, thanks to Jack Cust’s two-run homer off of Carl Pavano. The blast snped a 40-game homerless drought for Cust, the longer of his career. In the bottom of the inning, however, the Twins answered back as Denard Span hit his first ever Target Field home run to lead off the bottom of the first, slicing the lead to 2-1. Seattle added single runs in the top of the second and in the top of the third to extend their lead to 4-1. However, the Twins came all the way back in the bottom of the fourth by putting up three runs, the first two coming courtesy of Jim Thome’s two-run blast to right off of Seattle starter Jason Vargas. Span added a second RBI for himself with a single, bringing Delmon Young home to tie the score at four. The Twins took a 5-4 lead in the bottom of the fifth on Young’s RBI single, and extended their lead to 7-4 in the bottom of the seventh when Thome took Mariners’ reliever Aaron Laffey to the opposite field for a two-run homer. Then, Ron Gardenhire pulled starter Carl Pavano prior to the top of the eighth and replaced him with Joe Nathan. Nathan got the first out of the top of the eighth by striking out Carlos Peguero. Brendan Ryan then singled, and advanced to second on a wild pitch by Nathan. Jack Wilson then reached first on an error by shortstop Trevor Plouffe, and came home to score on a single by pinch-hitter Adam Kennedy, with Wilson advancing to third. Nathan then gave way to closer Matt Cps, who came in to face Ichiro. Ichiro hit a floater behind second base that Plouffe probably could have fielded, but wasn’t aggressive enough in getting to the ball, allowing it to land and letting Wilson score from third on what turned into a fielder’s choice. The Twins failed to score in the bottom of the eighth, and took their 7-6 lead to the top of the ninth. Justin Smoak led off the inning with a single for the Mariners, and pinch-runner Michael Saunders stole second base when Cust struck out. Cps then got Franklin Gutierrez to ground back to him for the second out, but just couldn’t close the deal as Peguero singled to bring in Saunders and tie the game at seven. The Twins had a chance in the bottom of the ninth, as they put runners on first and second, but Jason Repko grounded out to short to end the inning. Anthony Swarzak came in to pitch the tenth, and gave up back-to-back singles to Jack Wilson and Miguel Olivo. Ichiro then sacrificed the runners to second and third, and Chone Figgins was intentionally walked to load the bases. Former Twin Luis Rodriguez then lifted a fly ball to center deep enough to score Wilson from third, and the Mariners took an 8-7 lead. The Twins went down 1-2-3 in the bottom of the tenth, and wound up with their fourth consecutive loss. Jamey Wright got the win for the Mariners after pitching the ninth inning, a victory that evens his record at 1-1. Brandon League got the save for the Mariners, his eleventh of the year. Swarzak took the loss for the Twins, dropping him to 0-2 on the year. The same two teams will get together again at Target Field tomorrow night, with the first pitch scheduled for 7:10 PM. The Mariners will send right-hander Doug Fister (2-4, 2.93 ERA) to the mound, and the Twins will turn to Nick Blackburn (3-4, 3.40 ERA) to try to halt their latest losing streak. Leave your comments on the news below. Posted in mariners-news | Comments Off
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| Twins Bullpen Falls art In 8-7 Loss To Seattle | |
Read More: twins baseball, minnesota twins baseball, mariners baseball, seattle mariners baseball, twins mariners rec, Jack Cust (DH – SEA), Franklin Gutierrez (CF – SEA), Jamey Wright (P – SEA), Jim Thome (DH – MIN), Matt Cps (P – MIN), Jack Wilson (2B – SEA), Miguel Olivo (C – SEA), Delmon Young (LF – MIN), Carl Pavano (P – MIN), Chone Figgins (3B – SEA), Luis Rodriguez (SS – SEA), Joe Nathan (P – MIN), Brendan Ryan (SS – SEA), Adam Kennedy (2B – SEA), Brandon League (P – SEA), Aaron Laffey (P – SEA), Jason Repko (RF – MIN), Nick Blackburn (P – MIN), Denard Span (CF – MIN), Anthony Swarzak (P – MIN), Trevor Plouffe (SS – MIN), Carlos Peguero (LF – SEA), Michael Saunders (CF – SEA), Justin Smoak (1B – SEA), Doug Fister (P – SEA), Minnesota Twins, Seattle Mariners, Seattle Mariners at Minnesota Twins, May 23, 2011 7:10 PM CDT The Minnesota Twins took a 7-4 lead into the top of the eighth inning on Monday night against the Seattle Mariners, and it looked as though the team was about to get back on the winning track. The Minnesota bullpen once again fell art when it mattered, and the Twins wound up giving one away to the Mariners, losing 8-7 in ten innings. The Mariners got on the board right away in the top of the first inning, thanks to Jack Cust’s two-run homer off of Carl Pavano. The blast snped a 40-game homerless drought for Cust, the longer of his career. In the bottom of the inning, however, the Twins answered back as Denard Span hit his first ever Target Field home run to lead off the bottom of the first, slicing the lead to 2-1. Seattle added single runs in the top of the second and in the top of the third to extend their lead to 4-1. However, the Twins came all the way back in the bottom of the fourth by putting up three runs, the first two coming courtesy of Jim Thome’s two-run blast to right off of Seattle starter Jason Vargas. Span added a second RBI for himself with a single, bringing Delmon Young home to tie the score at four. The Twins took a 5-4 lead in the bottom of the fifth on Young’s RBI single, and extended their lead to 7-4 in the bottom of the seventh when Thome took Mariners’ reliever Aaron Laffey to the opposite field for a two-run homer. Then, Ron Gardenhire pulled starter Carl Pavano prior to the top of the eighth and replaced him with Joe Nathan. Nathan got the first out of the top of the eighth by striking out Carlos Peguero. Brendan Ryan then singled, and advanced to second on a wild pitch by Nathan. Jack Wilson then reached first on an error by shortstop Trevor Plouffe, and came home to score on a single by pinch-hitter Adam Kennedy, with Wilson advancing to third. Nathan then gave way to closer Matt Cps, who came in to face Ichiro. Ichiro hit a floater behind second base that Plouffe probably could have fielded, but wasn’t aggressive enough in getting to the ball, allowing it to land and letting Wilson score from third on what turned into a fielder’s choice. The Twins failed to score in the bottom of the eighth, and took their 7-6 lead to the top of the ninth. Justin Smoak led off the inning with a single for the Mariners, and pinch-runner Michael Saunders stole second base when Cust struck out. Cps then got Franklin Gutierrez to ground back to him for the second out, but just couldn’t close the deal as Peguero singled to bring in Saunders and tie the game at seven. The Twins had a chance in the bottom of the ninth, as they put runners on first and second, but Jason Repko grounded out to short to end the inning. Anthony Swarzak came in to pitch the tenth, and gave up back-to-back singles to Jack Wilson and Miguel Olivo. Ichiro then sacrificed the runners to second and third, and Chone Figgins was intentionally walked to load the bases. Former Twin Luis Rodriguez then lifted a fly ball to center deep enough to score Wilson from third, and the Mariners took an 8-7 lead. The Twins went down 1-2-3 in the bottom of the tenth, and wound up with their fourth consecutive loss. Jamey Wright got the win for the Mariners after pitching the ninth inning, a victory that evens his record at 1-1. Brandon League got the save for the Mariners, his eleventh of the year. Swarzak took the loss for the Twins, dropping him to 0-2 on the year. The same two teams will get together again at Target Field tomorrow night, with the first pitch scheduled for 7:10 PM. The Mariners will send right-hander Doug Fister (2-4, 2.93 ERA) to the mound, and the Twins will turn to Nick Blackburn (3-4, 3.40 ERA) to try to halt their latest losing streak. What do you guys think about this. Posted in mariners-news | Comments Off
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