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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Pirates’ Gomez tames Mariners

Harang bright spot for Seattle in loss

Pittsburgh’s Andrew McCutchen strokes a third-inning single off Seattle’s Aaron Harang, one of his four hits on the day. (Associated Press)
Will Graves Associated Press

PITTSBURGH – The start to Aaron Harang’s 12th season in the majors didn’t exactly go as planned.

Getting traded twice in the first three weeks of the year will do that.

Finally settled in Seattle, Harang appears ready to return to form. Two days shy of his 35th birthday, he allowed two runs in six strong innings of a 4-1 loss to Pittsburgh on Tuesday, proof his nomadic April is firmly behind him.

Harang (1-4) surrendered five hits, struck out six and dropped his ERA from 8.58 to 7.30, his second straight solid start. He picked up his first win of the season last week against Baltimore and may have been even better against the surprising Pirates.

“I had three weeks off at the beginning of the season,” said Harang, who was shipped from the Dodgers to Colorado to Seattle in April. “I was trying to keep myself in a rhythm. … We’ve done our work trying to figure things out and I’ve been where I need to be in these last two starts.”

Still, it wasn’t quite enough to keep the Mariners from continuing their recent surge after a slow start. Seattle came in 7-3 in its last 10 games, but couldn’t get a handle on Pittsburgh spot starter Jeanmar Gomez, who was thrust into the lineup when James McDonald was placed on the disabled list with tightness in his right shoulder just hours before the game.

While Gomez crammed for the Mariners, Seattle did the same, with miserable results. Gomez (2-0) limited the Mariners to just two hits over five innings before Pittsburgh’s bullpen took care of the rest.

“We didn’t have much time to prepare for him and everybody scrambled to do the best they could to get ready,” Seattle manager Eric Wedge said. “Be that as it may, the kid pitched a good ballgame.”

Andrew McCutchen went 4 for 4 with an RBI-double and Garrett Jones hit a two-run homer in the eighth to pad Pittsburgh’s lead. Jason Grilli pitched the ninth for his major league-leading 13th save.

Raul Ibanez provided a pinch-hit RBI-double in the seventh to pull the Mariners within a run, but Seattle couldn’t keep Pittsburgh from improving to 14-0 when leading after seven innings this season.

The Mariners offered little resistance during Gomez’s five innings, their only real push coming with a brief two-out rally in the third when Michael Saunders singled and former Pirates All-Star Jason Bay walked. Kyle Seager lined out to left to end the threat.

The Pirates gave Gomez all the offense he would need in the first inning. Starling Marte led off with a bunt single off Harang then scored on Travis Snider’s RBI-double. McCutchen followed with a double to left-center and the Pirates were up 2-0 and never looked back.