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Seattle Mariners

Franklin Gutierrez’ 10th inning homer gives M’s 6-5 walk-off win over Blue Jays

Franklin Gutierrez swats a walk-off home run in the 10th inning to give Seattle 6-5 win over Toronto. (Associated Press)
Christian Caple Tacoma News Tribune

SEATTLE – There was a time this year, Franklin Gutierrez concedes, when he didn’t know if he’d be able to play baseball again, let alone resume his place as an outfielder on the Seattle Mariners’ big-league roster.

Seattle signed him to a minor-league contract last offseason, a move that felt something like a courtesy to a player who once hauled in brilliant catches and wielded a productive bat, but was robbed of consistent good health by an arthritic condition that threatened to ruin his career.

He hadn’t played in a game since 2013, and when he reported to spring training, Gutierrez said, “I wasn’t expecting anything. I just wanted to know if I was able to play again. As soon as spring training went and the season (came), I knew that I was feeling better and better and better, so here we are again in the big leagues, and I’m doing the job.”

Good work if you can get it.

Gutierrez’s improbable comeback continued in gratifying fashion on Sunday afternoon at Safeco Field, where the 32-year-old ended a 10-inning game against the Toronto Blue Jays with a piercing solo home run over the fence in left-center field, lifting the Mariners to a 6-5 victory before a crowd of 35,159.

It was Gutierrez’s third home run since being selected from Triple-A Tacoma on June 24, and it came just five days after his pinch-hit grand slam in Seattle’s 11-9 win over Detroit.

And it saved the Mariners from further taxing their already thin bullpen. Three pitchers (Carson Smith, Vidal Nuno and Tom Wilhelmsen) were off-limits after heavy duty in days prior, and though Sunday starter Taijuan Walker gamely lasted six innings despite allowing four runs in the first two, the Mariners still had to deploy in relief David Rollins, Mark Lowe and Joe Beimel (whom manager Lloyd McClendon would have preferred to rest).

By the end, embattled right-hander Fernando Rodney was the only remaining available reliever, and McClendon didn’t really want to use him, either.

So it was that Gutierrez smacked Aaron Loup’s 0-2 fastball over the fence with one out in the bottom of the 10th.

“I didn’t even know that we had anymore pitchers in the bullpen,” Gutierrez said.

McClendon commended Walker for shaking off a rocky start in which he allowed a long home run to Josh Donaldson in the first inning, and watched Toronto plate three more on three hits and an error in the second.

“I commented after the game that I thought he grew up a little bit more under very, very adverse conditions, with not his best stuff,” McClendon said. “(He) gave us six innings and I think he knew how important it was, as well, to save the bullpen as much as he could.”

Said Walker: “I knew I needed to give the team some innings, and I tried to go out there and grind it out and battle.”

It helped that with Toronto runners on first and third and nobody out in the fourth inning – the Mariners trailed 4-3 – second baseman Ryan Goins hit into a bizarre, 3-6-2-2 triple play that was the result of some awful Blue Jays baserunning.

“It was a big momentum change,” catcher Mike Zunino said.

“It really helped Taijuan’s pitch count and allowed him to go a couple more innings.”

The Blue Jays took a 5-3 lead on Carrera’s solo homer off Rollins in the seventh, but the Mariners tied the score when Nelson Cruz launched his 25th homer of the season into the upper deck in left field in the bottom half of the inning.

Lowe and Beimel combined to keep Toronto off the board until Gutierrez’s crowd-pleasing blast, which brought his teammates out of the dugout.

They surrounded him at home plate, and mobbed him once he crossed.

Then, they receded.

That’s when Gutierrez heard: “Don’t hurt him, don’t hurt him!”

It was a moment to savor for Gutierrez, who surprised many by even making it back here.

“I just kept going,” he said, “and this is the reward for me.”

Smith rests

After Carson Smith allowed the Blue Jays to score two runs in the ninth inning of their 8-6 Saturday victory over the Mariners, McClendon concluded that Smith’s faltering was due to overuse.

McClendon said Sunday morning that he figured pitching three consecutive days was going to be difficult for the 25-year-old rookie, who had allowed only eight runs in 40 2/3 innings this season prior to Saturday’s loss.

“You try to build them,” McClendon said. “The only way you do it is to test the waters from time to time. It wasn’t too good yesterday. We’ll keep building. He’ll continue to get better at it. It’s going to take time. It’s not going to happen overnight.”

Smith has converted nine of 10 save opportunities since assuming the club’s closer role, though he showed signs of fatigue on Saturday – his fourth appearance in a five-game span.

McClendon said he thinks Smith can pitch 60 or 65 innings this season.

Overuse, the manager said, “was one of the dangers of putting him in that role at such a young age. He’s getting better at it. He’s going to be just fine.”