Posts Tagged ‘Score’
Can this M’s offense score more than three runs today?
Less than four weeks to go in the season and we’re running out of milestones and events to discuss.
Felix Hernandez and Cy Young bid? Check.
Mariners trying to avoid 100 losses? Check.
M’s trying to avoid worst ever offensive output in a season? Check.
But here we are, more than five months into a season of futility, and yet another dubious milestone has popped into the equation. Yes, while the team has won games at a slightly improved pace the past month to maybe put the 100-loss thing in doubt (we’ll know a lot more about that the next week now that patsies like the Indians are off the radar) there is still a new offensive low the M’s are threatening.
Seattle has gone 10 straight games without scoring more than three runs. That’s just two off the franchise record set back in 1988.
Good thing they’re on the road to try to snap this thing today because at home, where home run balls turn into fly ball outs at Safeco Field, the M’s have gone 15 straight without scoring more than three. How bad is that? Well, not since the 1954 Baltimore Orioles has a team been that bad at scoring on its home turf.
No, those O’s did not win the World Series. Neither will these M’s.
Read more…
View full post on The Seattle Times: Mariners Blog
Mariners – Indians Sunday box score
Mariners – Indians Sunday box score
Mariners 3, Indians 0
Read more on The Kansas City Star
Mariners 3, Angels 1: M’s score three in eighth, but too late for Felix Hernandez
Just as manager Daren Brown planned it, no doubt: get Felix Hernandez out of there after 103 pitches through seven innings, then let the offense score three in the eighth to overcome a 1-0 deficit and win.
The M’s stranded 10 runners tonight, but got enough home in the eighth on a Michael Saunders sac fly and singles by Adam Moore and Josh Wilson. Hey, they’ll take it.
It’s too late to help Hernandez boost his 10-10 record. Hernandez fanned eight, hitting the 10-mark to tie for the league lead. His ERA is down to 2.38 and firmly ensconced in second place in the AL.
His innings pitched are at a runaway 211 1/3 for the league lead.
Yes, he’s a Cy Young contender. Anyone who disagrees has not been paying attention.
View full post on The Seattle Times: Mariners Blog