The Province

Segura gives M’s lift past Giants

- TIM BOOTH The Associated Press

SEATTLE — With the Seattle Mariners struggling to find offence, Jean Segura wasn’t going to sit through a long at-bat looking for a perfect pitch. In this situation, the first one was good enough.

Segura chopped the first pitch from Sam Dyson into centre field to score Guillermo Heredia with the go-ahead run in the eighth inning and the Mariners won yet another one-run game by beating the San Francisco Giants 3-2 on Wednesday.

Seattle came up with just enough offence to split the two-game interleagu­e series and it was one of the Mariners’ all-stars who came through.

Heredia walked leading off the eighth inning against Tony Watson (3-4) and advanced to second on Dee Gordon’s bunt. Gordon was initially called safe but was out on a video review.

Dyson, who shut down the Mariners a night earlier, took over and was greeted by Segura’s chopper up the middle, and Heredia beat the throw home from Steven Duggar.

Seattle improved to a league-best 27-12 in one-run games this season.

“I was just trying to get a sinker down and over the plate. He threw a perfect pitch to put a good swing on it,” Segura said.

Seattle is in the midst of an offensive swoon, scoring three runs or fewer in 11 of the past 14 games.

Trying to rediscover the offence of May and June has been a struggle, both going into and coming out of the All-Star break, which puts more an emphasis on winning games like Wednesday.

Segura had a first-inning sacrifice fly and two of Seattle’s three RBIs.

Ryon Healy added his 21st home run, a solo shot in the second inning.

“You go through these stretches during the course of the season. It’s tough,” Seattle manager Scott Servais said.

“It’s not like these guys aren’t trying or trying to make adjustment­s or whatnot. It’s just the ball games we’re playing in right now. We’ve got to get it going offensivel­y.”

Managing a lagging offence is easier when Seattle gets the kind of pitching it received from starter Mike Leake and Edwin Diaz closing it out.

Leake pitched into the seventh before giving way to the bullpen. Alex Colome (3-5) pitched the eighth inning and Diaz struck out the side in the ninth for his league-best 38th save in 41 chances.

Leake cruised through the first five innings on just 51 pitches and one hit allowed. San Francisco threatened in the sixth thanks to an error on Hunter Pence’s ground ball and a single by Nick Hundley to open the inning. The runners advanced to second and third with one out, but Leake responded with his first two strikeouts.

He got Alen Hanson swinging over a slider before watching Andrew McCutchen miss swinging at a cutter

San Francisco got to Leake an inning later when Brandon Crawford’s blooper fell in for a double off the sliding glove of Denard Span in left to score pinch-runner Chase d’Arnaud. Hunter Pence followed with a two-out broken-bat single off reliever Juan Nicasio to score Crawford with the tying run.

“We just have to get this offence clicking and moving,” San Francisco manager Bruce Bochy said.

“They’re fighting. We’ve been down almost every game and they’re coming back to tie it and take the lead. That is such a great sign of how hard they are fighting. We just couldn’t put it away.”

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jean Segura watches his tiebreakin­g RBI single during the eighth inning against the San Francisco Giants on Wednesday in Seattle.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jean Segura watches his tiebreakin­g RBI single during the eighth inning against the San Francisco Giants on Wednesday in Seattle.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada