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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

M’s lose late to Angels


Seattle's Ichiro Suzuki reacts after striking out in the ninth. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Kirby Arnold Everett Herald

SEATTLE – The season opener was falling just the way manager Mike Hargrove wanted it.

The Seattle Mariners had come back to tie the score with three runs in the fifth inning against Bartolo Colon. Pitcher Jamie Moyer found his touch to keep the Angels’ hitters off balance and off the scoreboard. And in the sixth inning the Mariners loaded the bases against Colon with nobody out.

That’s when the golden moments tarnished into another season-opening loss for the Mariners. They turned opportunity into a scoreless inning, and the bullpen gave up two runs in the ninth in a 5-4 loss Monday to the Angels at Safeco Field.

“We were in the ballgame the whole way and came back and tied it up,” Hargrove said. “If we play like that every day, we’re going to win a lot of ballgames. I really believe it.”

In lieu of victory, the Mariners will have to go with that.

They had their hitters and pitchers lined up to beat the Angels in the late innings, then couldn’t finish.

Adrian Beltre reached on an error to start the bottom of the sixth, Carl Everett singled, and Colon grazed Kenji Johjima with a pitch to load the bases with nobody out.

Having gifted the Mariners such an opportunity the Angels brought in left-handed reliever J.C. Romero and hoped to minimize the damage to a run.

Romero then unloaded his wicked sinker and silenced the Mariners.

He struck out Jeremy Reed, got Yuniesky Betancourt on a fly and Ichiro Suzuki on grounder, leaving the score tied 3-3.

“Romero is tough. His pitches have hard sink with a lot of action,” Reed said. “I was looking for the pitches I got and he beat me. He got me that time, but I’ll get him next time.”

The finish not only soiled the Mariners’ comeback against Colon, it reduced some impressive individual efforts to moments of encouragement.

Kenji Johjima, who made history by becoming the first Japanese catcher to play in the major leagues, hit a home run in the fifth inning for the Mariners’ first run.

Second baseman Jose Lopez, batting second because Reed was playing his first game in more than a week after spraining his right wrist, went 2 for 5 and drove in the Mariners’ second run in the fifth.

Betancourt also drove in a run in the fifth, when the Mariners tied the score 3-3 after having gone 31/3 innings without a baserunner against Colon.

“All aspects of our club played well,” Hargrove said. “We just had that one lapse when we left the bases loaded. We were in that game the whole way and a break here or there, we might win.”

The breaks included a strike zone by plate umpire Charlie Reliford that had both benches wincing during the game, but especially the Mariners during the crucial at-bats in the ninth.

Left-hander George Sherrill, who’d struck out Darrin Erstad to end the top of the eighth, appeared to have thrown strike three to Casey Kotchman but ended up walking him to start the ninth.

Later in the inning, with J.J. Putz pitching for the M’s and pinch-runner Maizer Izturis on second after a sacrifice bunt, Chone Figgins took a full-count slider Reliford said was too high.

“It could have gone either way,” Putz said. “From out there, everything looks like a pretty good pitch.”

Putz thought the same about another pitch – high and away – to Orlando Cabrera, who grounded it sharply to center for two runs and a 5-3 Angels lead.

“I thought he hit a pretty good pitch,” Putz said.

The Mariners made it a one-run game in the ninth when Roberto Petagine, pinch-hitting for Betancourt, homered with one out off Angels closer Francisco Rodriguez.

That ended a string of 10 straight Mariners at-bats without a baserunner.

Rodriguez then struck out Suzuki and got Lopez to ground out to end the game.

“Our bullpen stepped up in a big way,” Angels manager Mike Scioscia said.

Angels 5, Mariners 4

Los Angeles ABRHBIBBSOAvg.
Figgins 3b 411010.250
OCabrera ss 513200.600
GAnderson dh 500003.000
VGuerrero rf 412200.500
JRivera lf 401000.250
Erstad cf 411001.250
Kotchman 1b 301110.333
1-Izturis pr-2b 010000—-
JMolina c 302000.667
AKennedy 2b 200010.000
a-Salmon ph 100000.000
Quinlan 1b 000000—-
Totals 35511534
Seattle ABRHBIBBSOAvg.
ISuzuki rf 501002.200
JoLopez 2b 502101.400
Ibanez lf 301011.333
Sexson 1b 400001.000
Beltre 3b 400000.000
CEverett dh 401000.250
Johjima c 311100.333
Reed cf 411003.250
YBetancourt ss 311100.333
b-Petagine ph 1111001.000
Totals 3649418
Los Angeles 200100002—5111
Seattle 000030001—490

a-grounded out for Kennedy in the 9th. b-homered for Betancourt in the 9th. 1-ran for Kotchman in the 9th.

E—AKennedy (1). LOB—Los Angeles 7, Seattle 7. 2B—Erstad (1), JMolina (1), Reed (1). HR—Petagine (1), off FrRodriguez; Johjima (1), off Colon; VGuerrero (1), off Moyer. RBIs—OCabrera 2 (2), VGuerrero 2 (2), Kotchman (1), JoLopez (1), Johjima (1), YBetancourt (1), Petagine (1). SB—Figgins (1), OCabrera (1). S—JMolina. GIDP—JRivera. Runners left in scoring position—Los Angeles 4 (OCabrera 2, GAnderson, AKennedy); Seattle 4 (ISuzuki 2, Sexson, Beltre). Runners moved up—Salmon, Sexson. DP—Seattle 1 (YBetancourt, JoLopez and Sexson).

Los Angeles IPHRERBBSONPERA
Colon 583314945.40
Romero 1 2/3 00001210.00
Shields W, 1-0 1 1/3 00001140.00
FrRodriguez S, 1 111102189.00
Seattle IPHRERBBSONPERA
Moyer 6 2/3 93312804.05
RSoriano 110000210.00
Sherrill L, 0-1 2/3 011111513.50
Putz 2/3 111112213.50

Colon pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. Inherited runners-scored—Romero 3-0, RSoriano 2-0, Sherrill 1-0, Putz 1-1. HBP—by Colon (Johjima). WP—Colon, RSoriano. T—3:08. A—45,515 (47,447).