Mariners 'see' their way to daytime victory

There wasn't much offense but the sun helped the home team, while allowing fans to attend a game without their parkas.

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Mike Henderson

There wasn't much offense but the sun helped the home team, while allowing fans to attend a game without their parkas.

The sun won a game in Seattle? Seattle . . . Washington?

Yes, and the phrase “seeing is believing” isn’t quite appropriate. “Not seeing” makes more sense in this context.

In the bottom of the ninth Thursday afternoon (May 19), with the  game knotted at one and the Mariners with two outs and a runner on  third, recent call-up Carlos Peguero lofted a routine fly to center,  precisely the play that had almost resulted in a dropped ball by M’s  center-fielder Michael Saunders half an inning earlier.

This time the Los Angeles Angels’ Torii Hunter lost  the ball in the cloud-less afternoon glare. Jack Cust walked home with  the winning run to the delight of 18,374, none, from what I could see,  wearing a parka.

“Believe me,” said L.A. manager Mike Scioscia later in defense  of his defense, “if [Hunter] could have seen it he would have caught  it.”

For everyone, well, everybody but Hunter, it was perfect  baseball weather, which didn’t necessarily beget perfect baseball. But  the Mariners were at least something like “un-imperfect.”

Yes, they waited until the fifth inning of a fly-by two-hour  game to get an initial hit and score for a 1-1 tie. Yes, they had no  errors except the pitch the otherwise stingy starter Doug Fister  evidently gift-wrapped in Flubber for Howie Kendrick, who drove it over  the left-field wall in the fourth.

But the locals made up for a light, five-hit offense with dependable fielding and pitching to win three of the brief four-game home stand and raise their record to 19-24.

Fans were bidding adieu for a week while the M’s catch a blessed  break in a tough upcoming schedule. At San Diego and Minnesota through  May 25 they play two of the worst big-league contingents before engaging  better clubs until late June. Three at home with the Yankees starting  May 27 lead to a four-game set with Tampa Bay ending June 5; it’s the  longest home stand of the season.

Few would suggest pennant-contention for the M’s. They still  don’t offer any reason to believe their offense can prevail in the AL  West. Eking out minimal wins by a run or two makes great spectator  baseball but it would be much more fan-friendly if a few six-run  blowouts were mixed in.

Thursday, the club managed just four singles and a double.  Perhaps the top news as far as offense was that the hit-challenged  Saunders happened to slip through a single, raising his average to .178.  Club officials plan to keep him with the big-league team instead of  sending him to Tacoma to see if he could feast on AAA pitching and get  his confidence back.

Meanwhile, even though close wins count as much as any, they  scarcely assuage losing, by 2-1, Tuesday’s game with the Twins and  depriving Felix Hernandez of another win he richly deserved.

Maybe in the absence of run support King Felix at least could be  crowned with mound royalties on (rare) days this season when the M’s  don’t just play during the day but also are under a glaring sun. After  Thursday’s experience, Ol’ Sol could be “seen” as something of the  team’s 10th man.