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Seattle Mariners

Mariners inch closer in wild-card chase, top D’backs 5-4

By Tim Booth Associated Press

SEATTLE – Tom Murphy hit a two-run home run in the second inning and added a solo shot in the sixth, and the Seattle Mariners beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-4 on Friday night for their eighth win in 11 games.

Seattle continued to inch closer in the AL wild-card race, pulling within one game of New York for the second spot in the logjammed standings.

“I think the biggest thing we’ve done is mitigate those down stretches really to find a way to win somehow to break up the monotony of losing two, three, four games in a row,” Murphy said. “This is the best team I’ve ever been on when it comes to that. It’s incredible how much morale we have and how much we don’t allow what happened yesterday to affect us today.”

Murphy’s fifth career multihomer game was the catalyst on a night a couple of defensive mistakes handed Arizona three runs. Murphy’s two-run shot in the second gave Seattle a 3-2 lead, and his solo blast in the sixth just cleared the fence in deep left-center field. Both homers came off Arizona starter Madison Bumgarner.

“He’s been probably one of our most consistent at-bats here over the last week or so, just grinding through it,” Seattle manager Scott Servais said of Murphy. “Obviously, his niche is killing the lefties. He usually stays right on left-handed pitching, and he was right there again tonight.”

J.P. Crawford led off the game with a solo homer for Seattle, and Ty France had a key two-out, two-strike single in the fifth inning that scored Dylan Moore and snapped a 3-3 tie.

Bumgarner (7-10) pitched six innings, but the three home runs allowed were a season high.

“It was a lot better than the previous three (starts), but result wise was pretty much the same,” Bumgarner said. “That can be frustrating.”

Marco Gonzales (8-5) threw six innings, scattered four hits and allowed three unearned runs. France’s two-out error in the second kept the inning going and Henry Ramos followed with a two-run homer, the first of his career after 916 minor league games.

An inning later, Gonzales’ throwing error on a pick-off attempt advanced Ketel Marte to third, and he scored on Carson Kelly’s sacrifice fly. But that was all Arizona got off Gonzales, who retired 11 of the final 12 he faced and felt his fastball got better as the game went on.

“Facing these guys literally last week, that was the game plan,” Gonzales said. “I was proud of us. We executed, we were stubborn, didn’t come off that plan and it worked out for us.”

Arizona pulled within 5-4 when prospect Seth Beer hit a solo homer off Diego Castillo in the eighth inning in his first major league at-bat. Beer was called up from Triple-A Reno earlier in the day and was the fourth player in Diamondbacks history to homer in his first at-bat. The last was John Hester in 2009.

“Kudos to him for being prepped and ready in that situation,” Arizona manager Torey Lovullo said. “He dropped the barrel on the ball. It was a beautiful swing.”

Castillo escaped the eighth, and Drew Steckenrider struck out the side in the ninth for his eighth save.