The Province

There’s a first for everything

M’s set team record with five errors in opening frame against Yanks

- ADRY TORRES

NEW YORK — Masahiro Tanaka finally flourished under the sun, Starlin Castro had four hits and the New York Yankees took advantage of a record five errors by the Seattle Mariners in the first inning on the way to a 10-1 victory Sunday.

Mariners shortstop Jean Segura committed three early miscues — two on one play. Third baseman Kyle Seager and left-fielder Ben Gamel also botched balls as the Yankees scored six runs, one earned, in the first inning against Saskatchew­an’s Andrew Albers (2-1).

That made it an unusually easy afternoon for Tanaka (10-10), who entered 0-6 with an 11.81 ERA in seven starts during the day this season. He struck out 10 and walked one in his 100th major-league start. The right-hander has won both outings since a brief stint on the disabled list due to shoulder inflammati­on, pitching seven innings each time.

New York took two of three in the series and moved within 21/2 games of first-place Boston in the AL East after Baltimore completed a threegame sweep at Fenway Park with a 2-1 victory.

Tanaka, who gave up one run and six hits, improved to 6-0 in seven career starts against the Mariners. He is 9-4 with a 3.24 ERA in 17 games at night this season.

Seattle’s five errors were the most in an inning in club history. The previous major-league team to make five errors in one inning was the 1977 Chicago Cubs, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

The Mariners played clean defence the rest of the day, but still matched the season high for errors by a big-league team in one game this year. Boston made five errors Friday against Baltimore and Milwaukee did it July 7 at Yankee Stadium.

Seattle’s franchise record is seven errors against the Brewers on June 25, 1978, a game the Mariners won.

Aided by Aaron Hicks’ error in left field, the Mariners scored in the first on Nelson Cruz’s run-scoring double. With two runners in scoring position, Tanaka struck out Seager and retired Mitch Haniger to end the inning.

In the bottom half, a string of Seattle miscues let the Yankees keep racing around the bases.

Gamel began the embarrassi­ng sequence when he overcharge­d the ball on Gary Sanchez’s RBI single, allowing the all-star catcher to reach second.

After a walk to Aaron Judge, the Yankees loaded the bases when Segura was charged with his first error after failing to catch Didi Gregorius’ pop-up as three players converged in shallow left centre. Seager followed that with his own error, fumbling Chase Headley’s grounder as New York took a 2-1 lead.

Jacoby Ellsbury hit a two-run double and Segura made two more errors on the play, first when he mishandled Gamel’s throw, allowing Headley to score, and then when his errant throw to the plate skipped past catcher Mike Zunino, which sent Ellsbury to third.

Castro finished 4-for-4 and Ronald Torreyes added three of New York’s 15 hits. Pinch-hitter Greg Bird had a two-run single in the seventh.

Albers was charged with eight runs — three earned — and 11 hits in fiveplus innings.

You’re gone

Yankees manager Joe Girardi was ejected in the third by second base umpire Mike Everitt after arguing that Segura ran out of the base line and interfered with Headley’s throw from first.

Trainer’s room

Mariners 2B Robinson Cano (left hamstring) returned to the starting lineup after appearing as a pinch-hitter the previous two days.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? Seattle’s Jean Segura, centre, commits one of his three errors in the game Sunday against the New York Yankees as the host Bombers won 10-1 in the Bronx.
— GETTY IMAGES Seattle’s Jean Segura, centre, commits one of his three errors in the game Sunday against the New York Yankees as the host Bombers won 10-1 in the Bronx.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada