I went to the second game of the Mariners-Jays series. The Mariners ran out another underpowered lineup. Luckily they were facing Marc Rzepczynski, the Jays rookie pitcher.
Speaking of rookies, the Mariners are playing Mike Saunders in left field. Defensively, he made an eye-popping catch in the first inning at the wall and looked smooth out there. He is tall (6’4″) and can cover a lot of ground with relative ease. At the plate though, he continued to look overmatched. Time will whether he is able to make the adjustment.
In the ninth inning, the Mariners were rallying. Scott Downs, the Jays closer who has been struggling mightily in recent times opened the door for the Mariners. With the game tied, the bases loaded, and no outs, the Mariners pitch-hit for Saunders with Jose Lopez. Lopezz was sitting out with a stiff back and was not swinging freely. One out. Then came Roger Cedeno. Two out one three straight pitches. We’re approaching Betancourt-levels of frustration. The last hope was Ichiro. Two straight strikes (and one was a REALLY ugly swing). The third pitch was nearly in the dirt and Ichiro went down and blooped it into shallow center field. Game over. Ichiro’s bat control is simply amazing. ESPN had an interesting insight from closer David Aardsma:
“That second pitch made him look horrible,” Seattle closer David Aardsma said. “I turned to [Jason] Vargas and said, ‘He’s just setting him up right here, getting him to throw another curveball.’ Then he did the patented Ichiro drop the bat swing and it fell in there perfect.”
Jarrod Washburn pitched efficiently. He has added to his pitching repetoire and what a difference it makes! Washburn has never had a strong fastball and last year he was ranging between 83 and 88. That’s just not enough separation and hittters punished him for it. This year, he’s added a slow 69mph change and it keeps batters off balance. Maybe Washburn is headed for a Moyer-type of approach of throwing slow and slower. As long as there’s a range of speeds, he will have a chance to get hitters out. Who knows how many more he can pitch now that he’s got a soft-throwing strategy that works.