The Oklahoman

Mariners ready to hit the road

- BY TIM BOOTH

The Associated Press

SEATTLE — Between the warm but mild temperatur­es and lack of precipitat­ion in the summer months, Seattle is a perfect setting for baseball in August.

This year, however, the Seattle Mariners will see very little of their hometown the next month.

Beginning with Monday night’s game in Texas, the Mariners will play 21 of 28 games away from home. Throw in a couple of days off and travel days the Mariners will spend roughly 3 ½ weeks on the road during the nicest time of the year in Seattle.

It’s a brutal stretch that includes road trips of nine and 12 games that span the country and will determine if the Mariners are legitimate wild-card contenders in the American League.

“That’s baseball. It’s what we signed up for. We can’t really make out our own schedule. If we did, we’d have an off day every week, I think,” Mariners outfielder Jarrod Dyson said. “It’s a grind. You’ve got to play them. Everybody knows when the schedule gets printed out, all the games must get played. You can’t sit around and think about it. You just prepare your mind to play.”

Seattle’s brutal month begins on Monday in Texas, followed by stops in Kansas City and Oakland on the first-half of the month. The Mariners return home for seven games against the Angels and Baltimore, but then head out on a 14-day trip that eats up the rest of the month that includes stops in Tampa Bay, Atlanta, New York to face the Yankees and finally Baltimore.

The entirety of the two road trips is 21 games, with 20 of those in the month of August tying the franchise record for most road games in one month.

Seattle played 20 road games in May 1977, the second month in club history, July 1979 and July 1994 when ceiling panels fell from the roof of the Kingdome and forced the Mariners to change their schedule in the strikeshor­tened season.

“You always want to have that advantage of playing at home as much as you can, but for some reason it worked out that way that we’re home for a week. It’s just crazy that we’re pretty much on the road for the whole month,” Seattle pitcher Yovani Gallardo said. “Once the schedule is set, there’s not much you can do about it. It’s just one of those things. At the end of the day, no matter whether it’s home or on the road, you’ve to get it done. You’ve got to win ballgames. Period. That’s what you’ve got to do.”

Seattle traditiona­lly has the most travel of any team in baseball because of its location in the Pacific Northwest and the closest team in proximity being in the Bay Area. Throw in that the Mariners are playing the NL East during interleagu­e this season and the travel distance was even more.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States