18 augustus 2006

Mariners @ Angels : 2 - 5

The Los Angeles Angels played without their manager and two players, and were still too much for the slumping Seattle Mariners.

Kelvim Escobar pitched seven strong innings, Vladimir Guerrero hit a three-run double and the short-handed Angels beat Seattle 5-2 Thursday night to hand the Mariners their eighth straight loss.

The Angels played without second baseman Adam Kennedy and reliever Kevin Gregg as each began a four-game suspension for their roles Wednesday night's bench-clearing brawl at Texas. Brendan Donnelly appealed his four-game suspension but didn't pitch.

Seattle Mariners' Kenji Johjima, of Japan, hits an RBI double off Los Angeles Angels pitcher Scot Shields in the ninth inning of a baseball game in Anaheim, Calif., on Thursday, Aug. 17, 2006. The Angels won 5-2.


"If you saw us before the game, everybody was up and feeling good," said bench coach Ron Roenicke, who helped run the team with pitching coach Bud Black while manager Mike Scioscia started serving a three-game suspension. "You didn't see anybody walking around moping. It was a good atmosphere."

Escobar (9-10) won for the fourth time in five decisions after going 0-7 over his previous eight starts. The right-hander allowed a run and seven hits, struck out seven and walked one.

"One of the keys was trusting my stuff a little bit more. Sometimes, I tend to overthrow the ball," Escobar said.

Seattle's losing streak is its longest since a nine-game slide in July 2004. The Mariners are a season-worst 12 1/2 games out of first place, after being just three games out on July 26.

"You take the good with the bad," losing pitcher Jamie Moyer said. "I've been on the good side of this, but now we're on the down side and it's up to the people in this room to deal with it and get out of it. The season's not over. We've got 41 games left, and you play them all hard and with passion. Otherwise you shouldn't be here."

Moyer (6-12) was charged with three runs and seven hits over 6 2-3 innings in his third start of the season against Los Angeles. The 43-year-old left-hander fell to 18-16 against the Angels in his career.

"Your job as a pitcher is to go out and battle and try to make good pitches, repeat mechanics, repeat location, get ahead in the count, force contact, rely on your defense and rely on your offense," Moyer said. "A lot of good things have to happen -- and right now, they're not happening for us."

Seattle's Kenji Johjima hit an RBI double off Scot Shields in the ninth before Francisco Rodriguez got two outs for his 32nd save in 35 chances. Rodriguez threw a wild pitch that put runners on second and third, but came back to strike out pinch-hitter Chris Snelling and retire Ichiro Suzuki on a groundout.

The Angels built a 2-0 lead with sacrifice flies by Orlando Cabrera in the third inning and Howie Kendrick in the fourth. Kendrick's came after a triple by Garret Anderson.

The Mariners, who have given Moyer the worst run support in the league this season, finally broke through against Escobar in the seventh when Johjima led off with a double, took third on Yuniesky Betancourt's single to right and scored on a double-play grounder by Willie Bloomquist.

Chone Figgins chased Moyer in the bottom half with his third hit of the game, a two-out double. Rookie Mark Lowe hit Maicer Izturis with a pitch and walked Cabrera, loading the bases for Guerrero, who lined an 0-1 slider to right-center to clear the bases and give the Angels a 5-1 lead.

Lowe, who didn't retire any of the four batters he faced, had not allowed a run in 17 2-3 innings over his previous 13 appearances since his promotion from Double-A San Antonio on July 7 -- a franchise record for shutout innings from the start of a career.

"Every time I go out there, I have confidence in myself to do a good job," Lowe said. "Tonight the results were just a little bit different, and I didn't do my job. The streak was fun and enjoyable, and now it's time to start a new one."
Bron : AP

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