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

Mariners sink

Keuchel quietly handcuffs Seattle in 8-3 win

Houston’s Carlos Correa celebrates his two-run home run in the fifth inning against the Mariners with teammate Jose Altuve. (Associated Press)
Bob Dutton Tacoma News Tribune

HOUSTON –  This Keuchel’s Korner coven at Minute Maid Park, at least on Monday, is a pale imitation of the real thing – the raucous noise of the King’s Court whenever Felix Hernandez takes the mound at Safeco Field.

But Dallas Keuchel himself? That’s another matter.

The Houston ace put a higher gloss on his Cy Young credentials by pitching seven dominating innings in an 8-3 victory over the Mariners. And it was typical Keuchel stuff: low key, little flash and thoroughly impressive.

An iron fist in a velvet glove.

“He makes his pitches and puts the ball where he wants,” Seattle second baseman Robinson Cano said. “Everything moves. And he doesn’t make mistakes.”

Keuchel improved 16-6 and lowered his ERA to 2.24 by holding the Mariners to one run and six hits in seven innings. He struck out eight, walked one and escaped his only jam without seeming to break a sweat.

That jam occurred in a decisive fourth inning.

It was 1-1 when the Mariners loaded the bases with no outs by sandwiching singles by Kyle Seager and Cano around a walk to Nelson Cruz.

The Mariners settled for squat.

Keuchel turned Franklin Gutierrez’s soft hopper into a pitcher-home-first double play, and then struck out Mark Trumbo.

“That’s tough,” manager Lloyd McClendon said. “It takes a lot out of you, particularly against a guy like Keuchel, who is very stingy.”

McClendon’s quote from last year, when he said Keuchel had “average stuff,” always gets a lot of play when the Mariners play the Astros. This time was no different.

“I’ve been misquoted on Keuchel a lot,” McClendon insisted. “Listen, he doesn’t have overpowering stuff, but he knows how to pitch. He uses his arsenal very well. He’s in and out, up and down. He changes speeds.

“He’s pretty good.”

And when Keuchel escaped that jam in the fourth, the game turned.

Jed Lowrie snapped an 0-for-28 streak with a one-out homer in the bottom of the inning. He sliced a drive to right that had just enough carry to clear the wall.

Hank Conger then rocked a two-out missile to left that had more than enough carry. The Astros led 3-1. Conger entered the game batting .149 against left-handed pitchers.

Houston pushed its lead to 5-1 in the fifth when Carlos Correa crushed a 1-1 fastball for a booming two-run homer to left.

All of that came against Mariners lefty Vidal Nuno, who is now winless in 20 straight starts over two seasons with three clubs. He fell to 0-2 with the Mariners after allowing five runs and seven hits in six innings.

“Just giving up those home runs killed me,” he said. “I was leaving my ball up. Not finding my fastball. My command was off a little bit.”

The Astros turned the game into a rout by scoring three times in the seventh against Rob Rasmussen, whose ERA now stands at 12.34 even after pitching a one-two-three eighth.

Will Harris and Oliver Perez closed out Keuchel’s victory, although Perez yielded Trumbo’s second homer of the game.

Houston nicked Nuno for one run in the first inning on a walk, a single and a Gattis sacrifice fly. The Mariners pulled even in the second on Trumbo’s two-out homer.

It was Trumbo’s third career homer against Keuchel in 13 at-bats. Trumbo’s homer was also notable in that it was the first yielded by Keuchel at Minute Maid in more than a year. The last was by Texas’ Adrian Beltre on Aug. 10, 2014.

In between, Keuchel made 17 home starts without yielding a homer in a homer-friendly park.