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Seattle Mariners

Mariners produce biggest inning of the season to cruise past Rangers

By Bob Dutton Tacoma News Tribune

A seven-run seventh inning is a pretty good cure-all. Even for a struggling club with a disabled list that seems to grow geometrically on a daily basis.

The Mariners got two-run singles from Danny Valencia and Ben Gamel in breaking open a tie game Saturday night and rolling to an 8-2 victory over the visiting Texas Rangers at Safeco Field.

The only disappointment is that the inning – the biggest for the Mariners this season – came too late to reward rookie Chase De Jong for a sparkling performance after what has been a rough introduction to the big leagues.

“Tonight, I did my job,” De Jong said. “I went out and I competed. I just tried to go as long as they’d let me. It was a lot of fun to do. Pitching to contact, being aggressive, that’s what I know I’m capable of doing.”

Recall that it was De Jong whose debut ended in surrendering a walk-off homer in the 13th inning on April 5 in Houston. He also gave up nine runs in just 2 2/3 innings last Sunday in Cleveland in his first big-league start.

De Jong pushed that all aside Saturday in limiting the Rangers to one run and four hits in six innings before the Mariners went to their bullpen.

“To be able to go out there and help the team out,” he said, “I didn’t do that in my last outing. That’s where I failed. I know the front office, Scott (Servais) and Mel (Stottlemyre Jr.), they have all the faith in the world in me. They know I’m able to do that.

“But to finally be able to put together a body of work like that in front of fans and everybody, it’s very comforting to me to be able to say, ‘Look, I can get outs at this level.’ ”

De Jong was only at 75 pitches when the Mariners went to the bullpen.

“Couldn’t ask for more,” Servais said. “I know his pitch count was in very good shape. But going to the game, we were looking for five or six (innings) and to keep it tight. That’s where we were.

“So we went to the bullpen, and our offense stepped up.”

It was 1-1 in the seventh inning when the Mariners knocked out Texas starter Martin Perez (1-5) by putting their first two runners on base.

Gamel led off with a single up the middle, and Perez’s throw to first on Tuffy Gosewisch’s sacrifice bunt pulled second baseman Rougned Odor off the base for an error.

The Rangers replaced Perez with Keone Kela as the Mariners’ lineup rolled over and went into high gear.

First, shortstop Elvis Andrus couldn’t make a play on Jean Segura’s slow roller to the short-third hole. It turned into a single that loaded the bases with no outs.

Kela then forced in the go-ahead run by hitting Guillermo Heredia in the biceps with a first-pitch fastball.

Texas changed pitchers again, to Dario Alvarez for a left-on-left matchup against Robinson Cano. but Cano lofted a first-pitch fastball deep enough to center for a sacrifice fly that scored Gosewisch for a 3-1 lead.

After a walk to Nelson Cruz reloaded the bases, Alvarez retired Kyle Seager on a foul pop before the Mariners blew the game open.

Valencia grounded a two-run single up the middle, and Taylor Motter followed with an RBI double into the left-center gap. That got the game back to Gamel, who flicked a two-run single to center.

It was 8-1.

“We can really turn it over,” Gamel said. “When everybody is clicking, I wouldn’t want to be an opposing pitcher. You’ve got Nelson, Seager and Robby. Heredia has been swinging the bat great.

“Really, everyone top to bottom.”

The victory went to James Pazos, who struck out the side in the seventh inning after replacing De Jong. Tony Zych and just-recalled Dan Altavilla closed out the victory.

The Mariners opened the first with soft-serve singles by Segura and Heredia, and they moved to second and third on Cano’s grounder to first.

Cruz’s ground out to short scored Segura for a 1-0 lead.

Texas pulled even on Joey Gallo’s one-out homer in the second inning, a 428-foot boomer to right on a 2-2 fastball. It was his 10th homer of the season.