24 mei 2006

Mariners vs Orioles : 4 - 14

Ramon Hernandez is paying off handsomely for the Baltimore Orioles. Hernandez, signed to a $27.5 million, four-year contract last winter, hit a three-run homer and a grand slam Tuesday night -- the latter in a nine-run ninth inning that finished off the Seattle Mariners in a 14-4 victory. Hernandez matched his career high with seven RBIs, accomplished twice before, in leading the Orioles to their second win in 10 road games. It was his fourth career two-homer game. Corey Patterson reached safely six times while homering and doubling twice, ending Seattle's season-high four-game winning streak.

Hernandez, a career .262 hitter in seven previous seasons with San Diego and Oakland, is batting .316 with 36 RBIs in his first 42 games with the Orioles. The catcher is apparently so dedicated to his new team, he was away lifting weights 45 minutes after the game after all of his teammates had changed and filed out of the clubhouse for the night. Hernandez hit a three-run shot over the Orioles' bullpen bench far beyond left field in the first off starter Joel Pineiro. Hernandez's grand slam off Jake Woods capped Baltimore's big ninth. It was Hernandez's fourth career slam and first since Sept. 27, 2005, with the Padres against San Francisco. He had seven RBIs in that game and on Aug. 9, 2003, with the Athletics at the Chicago White Sox.

Patterson's two doubles and a long home run in the fifth inning all came off Pineiro (4-5), who allowed 10 hits and five earned runs in another poor outing. Pineiro has allowed at least five earned runs in each of his last three starts and five times overall. Patterson is hitting .344 (33-for-96) since going 1-for-15 to begin the season. Orioles emergency starter John Halama didn't. The 34-year-old lefty, filling in after rookie Hayden Penn had an appendectomy Monday night, allowed four hits and two runs over five innings in his first start since Sept. 7. Halama (3-1), a former Mariner, earned his first win as a starter since Oct. 3, 2004, with Tampa Bay at Detroit. He hadn't thrown more than 50 pitches in any game this season before firing 67 effective ones at his former team.

Before the game, Perlozzo said Adam Loewen, who made a brief major league debut Tuesday after being called up from Double-A Bowie, was the likely starter on Sunday at the Los Angeles Angels. But that was before Halama's crafty work. Loewen, who arrived from a game in Altoona, Pa., eight hours before Tuesday's first pitch, relieved Halama to begin the sixth. His first major league pitch skidded to the backstop. But he rallied to freeze cleanup batter Richie Sexson as strike three crossed the inside corner. But then Loewen walked Carl Everett and hit Adrian Beltre with a pitch. Kenji Johjima followed with a single that pulled Seattle to 5-3. LaTroy Hawkins entered in the eighth and gave up an RBI triple to Adrian Beltre that made it 5-4. But Johjima and pinch-hitter Roberto Petagine popped out before Chris Ray fanned pinch-hitter Jeremy Reed to end the threat.

Baltimore then scored nine times off J.J. Putz and Woods. Rookie Nick Markakis had his third hit and second RBI, a run-scoring double. Kevin Millar, Brandon Fahey and Javy Lopez had RBI singles. Then came Hernandez's grand ending. Ray got four outs for his 11th save in 11 chances. He laughed and said he's never had a 10-run save.

Seattle Mariners catcher Kenji Johjima dives for a ball as Baltimore Orioles' Luis Matos, not shown, scores in the ninth inning of an MLB baseball game Tuesday, May 23, 2006, at Safeco Field in Seattle.

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