28 mei 2006

Mariners @ Twins : 5 - 9

The Homer Dome might need a new nickname. Welcome to the Triple Play Dome. The Minnesota Twins turned the majors' second triple play in 13 days to end a serious threat in the eighth inning, and Michael Cuddyer and light-hitting shortstop Juan Castro homered during a 9-5 victory over the Seattle Mariners on Saturday night. The Metrodome has been home to both triple plays this season. The White Sox turned one in a 9-7 victory over the Twins on May 14.

With Seattle trailing 8-4 to start the eighth inning, Richie Sexson doubled, Carl Everett walked and Adrian Beltre singled to load the bases with no outs against Jesse Crain. Rincon entered the game to face Kenji Johjima, who hit a grounder to second base on the first pitch. Luis Castillo scooped up the ball and chased down Beltre to tag him out, then threw to first to get Johjima. First baseman Justin Morneau noticed Everett leaning the wrong way off third and fired a strike to Tony Batista at the bag. Batista tagged out Everett to complete the triple play and close the inning with the Twins leading 8-5. Sexson scored from third on the play.

It was the Twins' first triple play since July 17, 1990, at Boston, the night they turned two triple plays in one game, the only time in history that has been accomplished. Cuddyer's two-run shot in the third off Jamie Moyer (2-5) helped erase a 4-1 deficit and give rookie Boof Bonser his first career win. Raul Ibanez had a home run and three RBIs for the Mariners, who lost their third game in a row and continued to struggle to cash in on opportunities for big innings. The Mariners have loaded the bases with nobody out three times in the first two games of this series, but have managed just one run. The first came in the fifth inning on Friday night, but Francisco Liriano struck out Yuniesky Betancourt before getting a double play to end the inning.

Manager Mike Hargrove then watched his team load the bases to start the game on Saturday. But Bonser (1-0) struck out Sexson, Everett and Beltre to get out of the inning unscathed. After each strikeout, the Metrodome's big screen showed the hitter swinging, followed by a cartoonish "BOOF!" spinning onto the picture, a play on the fight scenes from the old "Batman" television series. Then came the triple play in the eighth, which doomed the Mariners to their third straight loss and ninth in 11 games at the Metrodome.

Bonser gave up four runs and eight hits in five innings, but needed 97 pitches in his second career start. The Mariners scored all four of their runs in the second on a broken-bat single by Willie Bloomquist and Ibanez's 460-foot home run that hit off the facing of the second deck for a 4-1 lead. Moyer, who entered the game 7-0 in games at the Metrodome for the Mariners, gave up eight runs -- seven earned -- and 11 hits in six-plus innings. The Twins reclaimed the lead with three runs in the third on a double by Hunter and Cuddyer's two-run homer that made it 5-4. He also had a double and three RBIs. Castro's first homer in 164 at-bats, dating to last Sept. 6, made it 6-4 in the sixth. Castillo had three hits to snap an 0-for-14 skid and Torii Hunter had two RBIs for the Twins, who were just happy to be on the good end of a triple play this time around. It was a little extra special for Castillo, whose popup bunt started the back-breaking triple play in the Twins' loss to the White Sox.

Seattle Mariners left fielder Raul Ibanez (28) leaps up the outfield wall but can't get to a two-run home run by Minnesota Twins' Michael Cuddyer during the third inning of a major league baseball game in Minneapolis, Saturday, May 27, 2006.

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