San Diego Union-Tribune

BUMBLING ATHLETICS LOSE A NO-HITTER, THEN A GAME

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Oakland starter Frankie Montas took a no-hit bid into the eighth inning, then reliever A.J. Puk threw a pair of run-scoring wild pitches with two outs in the ninth that gave the Seattle Mariners a 2-1 win over the Athletics on Thursday.

The Mariners loaded the bases with three walks and rallied on Puk’s wayward tosses to complete a threegame sweep. Seattle won with two hits, both in the eighth.

“It’s not the best win, not the cleanest win. But it’s a win,” Mariners first baseman Ty France said.

Before the wild ninth, it seemed the 29-year-old Montas would be the story of the day.

Montas didn’t allow a hit until Adam Frazier lined a clean single to left field with two outs in the eighth. Montas gave up another hit and was pulled after the inning.

Montas struck out eight in a season-high eight innings, and exited with a 1-0 lead — he has received either one or zero runs of support in 11 of his 15 starts. He is expected to be among the starting pitchers available as the Aug. 2 trade deadline approaches.

With regular closer Dany Jimenez out with a shoulder injury, Zach Jackson (1-2) entered for the ninth and walked two before Puk entered with two outs and two on.

Puk walked pinch-hitter Kevin Padlo to load the bases before throwing wild pitches that allowed Dylan Moore and Jesse Winker to score.

“He came in and couldn’t find the zone,” Oakland manager Mark Kotsay said. “It’s uncharacte­ristic so far this year. He’s been throwing strikes. Unfortunat­ely today, he couldn’t find the fastball.”

Paul Sewald retired the A’s in order in the bottom of the ninth for his fifth save. The Mariners have won 11 of their past 12 at the Oakland Coliseum.

The A’s are 3-16 in June and have the AL’s worst record at 23-48.

Montas hit 98 mph with his fastball and said he had a good feel for his cutter, too. He did not second-guess Kotsay’s decision to pull him after the eighth at 102 pitches.

“I felt like I did my job (finishing) the eighth,” Montas said. “I had 102 pitches. That’s kind of a lot.”

France, enjoying an AllStar caliber first half of the season, left the game in the bottom of the fifth with an injured left elbow when he collided with Oakland’s Sheldon Neuse while taking a throw at the bag.

France’s left hand bent back and his glove came off as he made contact with Neuse, causing France to fall to the ground in pain. After the game, he said X-rays on his elbow came out clean and that he’s hoping to avoid the injured list.

Notable

The Mariners announced that C Tom Murphy (dislocated left shoulder) will have surgery and miss the rest of the season.

He’s been sidelined since getting injured May 7 on a play at the plate.

Athletics OF Stephen Piscotty (strained left calf) will play a third rehab game today for Triple-A Las Vegas. Kotsay said reports have been good but did not give a timetable for Piscotty’s return to the active roster.

The Giants acquired outfielder Willie Calhoun from the Rangers in a trade for outfielder Steven Duggar. Calhoun was the main return to the Rangers when they traded pitcher Yu Dar vish five years ago. San Francisco also receives cash in the deal.

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