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Seattle Mariners

Marco Gonzales bounces back with quality start in Mariners’ win over Angels

Seattle Mariners starting pitcher Marco Gonzales allowed two runs on three hits in five-plus innings against the Los Angeles Angels on Friday  in Anaheim, Calif. (Mark J. Terrill / AP)
By Ryan Divish Seattle Times

ANAHEIM, Calif. – Five days ago, Marco Gonzales stood in front of his locker seething about the outing he’d just delivered.

With pursed lips and an indignant tone, he derided his performance, labeling it “unacceptable.” He demanded accountability, starting with himself, while promising to pitch with conviction and aggressiveness.

Facing the team that sent him into that tirade for a second consecutive start, he made strong step toward a return to pitching to his expectations in the Mariners’ 6-2 win over the Angels on Friday night.

After getting rocked for 10 runs on nine hits in his previous outing that last just 4 2/3 innings, Gonzales grinded through 5 2/3 innings on Friday night, allowing just two runs on three hits with three walks and five strikeouts to even his record at 6-6. It was the Mariners’ first win in a start by Gonzales since April 25. They’d lost his previous seven.

His redemption was greatly aided by an offense that is starting a resurgence, bashing three homers – two from Domingo Santana and a big three-run blast from Tom Murphy – and scoring more than five runs for the fourth consecutive game.

The Angels grabbed a brief 1-0 lead in the second inning when Kole Calhoun stayed on a misplaced curveball from Gonzales, sending it into the shrubbery behind the wall in center field for a solo homer.

The Mariners answered in the fourth off Angels starter Andrew Heaney. Mac Williamson, who is replacing the injured Mitch Haniger in the lineup, dumped a soft two-out single to center to score Tim Beckham to tie the game at 1.

After giving up the homer, Gonzales retired 13 of the next 15 batters, issuing just two walks and not allowing a hit.

His teammates gave him a lead. Santana smashed a solo homer to deep right-center with two outs in the fifth inning to make it 2-1.

The lead ballooned against a tiring Heaney in the sixth, again with two outs. Murphy clubbed a towering homer into the Mariners’ bullpen to make it 5-1.

Gonzales couldn’t quite make it out of the sixth. A one-out walk to Mike Trout and a two-out bloop single from Albert Pujols forced him out of the game at 109 pitches. His replacement, Cory Gearrin, gave up RBI single to pinch-hitter Tommy LaStella that was charged to Gonzales but came back to retire Calhoun to end the inning.

Santana got that run back in the top of the seventh against reliever Luis Garcia, hammering another solo homer in almost the exact same spot as his first. It was his fifth multihomer game of his career. He has 13 homers and 47 RBI.

Austin Adams and Brandon Brennan were solid out of the bullpen each pitching scoreless innings.