San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

PADRES WIN 8TH STRAIGHT

- BY KEVIN ACEE

The Padres won their eighth straight game, took over the best record in baseball, and — at least as importantl­y at this point in the season —worked a pitching piggyback again in the interest of preserving a couple of important arms.

Ryan Weathers started and Dinelson Lamet pitched in relief, this time with Craig Stammen between them to get the Padres most of the way through a 6-4 victory over the Mariners on Saturday night at Petco Park.

Weathers allowed one run in four innings, Stammen threw yet another scoreless inning and Lamet allowed an unearned run in three innings.

With the Dodgers’ victory over the Giants earlier Saturday, the Padres stand alone with the best record in the major leagues at 28-17. The Giants and Dodgers are 28-18.

“It’s May,” manager Jayce Tingler said. “It’s more important the way we’re playing.”

Catcher Austin Nola was unaware of the Padres’ standing.

“I haven’t looked around the league,” he said. “I just know we have to do our job every day. We can’t focus on the record right now.”

Playing without Manny Machado for a second straight game because of an ailing shoulder and with

center fielder Trent Grisham also watching from the dugout while resting a bruised heel, the Padres continued to score runs at a rate that was seemingly unimaginab­le a couple of weeks ago.

In winning 11 of their past 12 games, they are averaging 6.9 runs a game. Saturday was the sixth time in that span they scored at least six runs. In their first 34 games, they averaged 3.8 runs and scored six or more runs just 10 times.

A five-run fifth inning began with Jorge Mateo’s single up the middle and a sacrifice bunt by Joe Musgrove. Mateo then stole third and jogged home when catcher Tom Murphy’s throw went wide and skipped down the left-field line in foul territory.

Tommy Pham drew the second of his career-high four walks and went to third on Jurickson Profar’s single. After Jake Cronenwort­h struck out, Fernando Tatis Jr. was intentiona­lly walked to load the bases.

Eric Hosmer went the other way to line a single into left field. Third base coach Bobby Dickerson waved Profar home, and left fielder Jarred Kelenic’s hurried throw went wide of the plate and got past Murphy, who chased down the ball and threw to pitcher Justus Sheffield covering the plate. It appeared Tatis beat the throw anyway, but his feetfirst slide knocked the ball from Sheffield’s glove for good measure.

Nola followed with a single that scored Hosmer.

The Mariners’ first run came on Mitch Haniger’s homer leading off the third against Weathers.

The rookie left-hander would have had to be extraordin­arily economical with his pitches to extend the Padres’ season-high streak of quality starts beyond four games.

After a 20-pitch first inning was followed by a 20pitch second inning, it was more a question of whether he would make it through the fourth.

He did. He was at 59 pitches after three innings but took just eight to get through his final inning.

In all, he allowed six hits and stranded four runners in scoring position.

“I wish I could have some pitches back,” Weathers said. “I was proud of limited damage. Obviously, I had a lot of runners on. I was out there in survival mode.”

Stammen ran his scoreless streak to 13 innings (over 11 games) before Lamet came in and worked beyond two innings for the first time in five appearance­s this season.

As significan­t as anything, Lamet was hitting 9697 mph with his fastball in the sixth and was still at 9495 and even touched 96 in the eighth. The run he allowed came in the eighth when a long drive by Kyle Seager went off Mateo’s glove in center field and Seager advanced to third on a passed ball and scored on a sacrifice fly.

“For him to maintain his stuff tonight and stay sharp and he came out feeling really good — very, very positive outing,” Tingler said.

Austin Adams got one out but also allowed a run and hit a batter in the ninth before Mark Melancon came in to earn his Mlb-leading 16th save. Melancon’s throwing error allowed the final run to score.

This was the third game Weathers and Lamet combined for a majority of the innings in a game, with one or the other of them starting and the other pitching in relief.

Lamet is building up innings after missing the postseason in 2020 and starting the season late this year because of an elbow issue; the 21-year-old Weathers likely has about 70 innings left this season.

The arrangemen­t could now be altered for a time.

Saturday was the second of 20 games without a scheduled day off, and contingent on how Weathers and Lamet feel in the coming days the Padres appear to be leaning toward going with six starters for a turn or two through the rotation.

kevin.acee@sduniontri­bune.com

 ?? DENIS POROY GETTY IMAGES ?? Eric Hosmer hits a two-run single during the fifth inning Saturday against the Mariners.
DENIS POROY GETTY IMAGES Eric Hosmer hits a two-run single during the fifth inning Saturday against the Mariners.
 ?? DENIS POROY GETTY IMAGES ?? Fernando Tatis Jr. scores from first on Eric Hosmer’s single and an error by the Mariners in the fifth inning.
DENIS POROY GETTY IMAGES Fernando Tatis Jr. scores from first on Eric Hosmer’s single and an error by the Mariners in the fifth inning.

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