Imperial Valley Press

Giants beat Mariners again in road game playing at home

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The nomadic Mariners are taking their bats from the Bay Area to Southern California for three more “home games” on the road.

Wilmer Flores hit a go-ahead, two-run triple in the seventh inning of the Giants’ 6-4 win Thursday that sent Seattle to a second home defeat played in San Francisco’s ballpark because of dangerous air quality in Western Washington.

The series was moved because of smoke from all the West Coast wildfires. Now, the Mariners are altering their air travel reservatio­ns once more and headed to San Diego for a weekend series at Petco Park.

“It’s disappoint­ing, but its the world we’re living in in 2020,” Mariners starter Nick Margeviciu­s said. “There’s a lot of things we can’t control, a lot of things in the season, a lot of things in the world right now.”

Darin Ruf homered in the second inning to back Giants starter Tyler Anderson, who hurt his own cause when he was ejected in the bottom of the third by plate umpire Edwin Moscoso for emphatical­ly expressing his displeasur­e with a walk to Kyle Lewis.

“Tyler knows that that just can’t happen,” mangaer Gabe Kapler said. “It puts us in a really tough spot.”

Wandy Peralta followed Anderson and threw 49 pitches over a career-high three innings, and Rico Garcia (1-1) worked one inning for his first major league win. Sam Selman finished for his first career save, stranding two runners when Lewis lined out and Kyle Seager flied out.

“Peralta came up huge for us,” Kapler said. “As tough as that was it was equally rewarding and in some ways inspiring to

see him come out and give us the length that he did and battle. It gave us a chance to climb back into the game. I thought our guys continued to be resilient.”

JP Crawford hit a two-run single in the second following RBI singles by Tim Lopes and Phillip Ervin, but Seattle’s bullpen couldn’t hold a three-run lead.

Margeviciu­s was staked to an early lead but Kendall Graveman (0-3) couldn’t hold it. The Mariners capitalize­d in the second after Anderson hit Seager in the backside.

Seattle has fared better against San Diego this season after losing all four to

San Francisco. Manager Scott Servais had prepared himself for the possibilit­y his club might have to stay on the road a little longer.

“I think with our players and everybody else it was going to be a two-day trip. That’s what we were led to believe that everything was going to clear up in Seattle,” Servais said. “We can’t control the weather it’s bigger than all of us and with what’s going on there with the smoke. Certainly understand why we have to go but I don’t think anybody was really prepared for it.”

Brandon Crawford contribute­d a sacrifice fly and Evan Longoria and Alex Dickerson RBI singles for the Giants.

Austin Slater returned at designated hitter for San Francisco and went 0 for 2 with a walk as he works back from a painful right elbow. Luis Basabe singled in the sixth for his first career hit and also stole his first base.

“I didn’t think about it,” said Basabe, who will gift the special souvenir ball to his mother. “I was just happy to get the opportunit­y.”

SMOAK NOT SMOKE

Justin Smoak made his Giants home debut as a pinch hitter in the sixth facing his former club after he signed a minor league deal earlier this month following his release by the Brewers.

TOSSED

Anderson, who was trying to win consecutiv­e starts for the first time this season, received his second career ejection. The other was Aug. 13, 2016, while with Colorado.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Mariners: LF Dylan Moore was in the lineup and batted second a day after getting hit in the head by a pitch. He did some pregame work to make sure the Mariners didn’t need to make a last-minute change. Moore told Servais he wanted to play. “Personal experience I’ve had it happen to me. As a player you kind of think nothing can hurt you. It’s a mental thing you get in there, you battle, you go get up there ready to get your next hit,” Servais said. “That’s what you’re thinking. You kind of put it behind you and move forward.”

 ?? AP Photo/D. Ros Cameron ?? San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Tyler Anderson (31) delivers a pitch against the Seattle Mariners during the first inning of a baseball game, on Thursday in San Francisco.
AP Photo/D. Ros Cameron San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Tyler Anderson (31) delivers a pitch against the Seattle Mariners during the first inning of a baseball game, on Thursday in San Francisco.

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