Friday, July 10, 2009

Rangers Drop A Heartbreaker Late In Seattle

When you make your way from one side of a 162-game schedule to the other, it's guranteed you're going to have your ups and downs. The very best teams in baseball this season will still manage to lose roughly 35% of their games. With that said, some loses sting a little more than others.

In a game with plenty of quality pitching, it was a pitching mistake that ended up costing the Rangers a win Thursday night in Seattle.

Seattle starter Felix Hernandez was electric, throwing 8 innings, allowing only one earned run (which scored on a wild pitch) and striking out seven. Hernandez allowed just five baserunners the entire game.

"[Hernandez] showed why he's an All-Star," Mariners manager Don Wakamatsu said. "His sinker was absolutely unhittable at times. The one miscue, where he got two quick outs and then a walk and hit ... we'll take that any day of the week."

Rangers starter Tommy Hunter was also very effective, pitching six innings of shutout baseball before giving way to Darren O'Day, who also manage a scoreless inning.

Then the wheels came off.

In the bottom of the 8th and with C.J. Wilson on the mound, Ichiro worked a 2-strike double to lead off the inning. From there, C.J. recorded 2 quick outs, setting up a confrontation with Ken Griffey Jr., Wilson's boyhood hero. But after an 8-pitch battle which saw the count run full, Griffey worked a walk out of Wilson, putting the go-ahead run on base.

"I thought I had him on the last pitch, but it just was a little bit outside," Wilson said. "I thought maybe he was going to swing at it. I threw the ball where I wanted to throw it, within a couple inches, it just wasn't right where I wanted to throw it. It's pretty simple."

Franklin Gutierrez hit a game-winning homerun for Seattle Thursday night.

Unfortunately for both C.J. and the Rangers, Griffey was the out they needed as the next hitter, Franklin Gutierrez stepped to the plate and drilled a Wilson sinker over the left-center-field wall, giving the Mariners a 3-1 lead they would not give back.

"One hundred and ninety nine times out of 200, that's a ground-ball out," Wilson said. "First time I've made a mistake with that pitch all season. I've thrown 500 of those things, and it's the first time I've made a mistake."

"My hat is off to those guys," Rangers manager Ron Washington said. "They won that game tonight. We didn't give it to them."

The loss was the first in five meetings this season against the Mariners.

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