Monday, May 7, 2012

Mariners Spoil Another Fister Start

It seemed like every time I saw Fister pitch last year, we ruined his great outing in some way.  Mostly it was from a lack of scoring, once it was that phantom walk (three pitch walk).  Well, we did it again. Only this time, it was for our benefit as we scored 3 in the 9th to spoil Fister's outstanding start for the Tigers.

Tigers (14-13)

Jackson CF
Dirks LF
Cabrera 3B
Fielder 1B
Young DH
Avila C
Peralta SS
Boesch RF
Raburn 2B

Fister (0-0, 0.00)

Mariners (13-17)

Ackley 2B
Ryan SS
Ichiro RF
Montero C
Seager 3B
Jaso DH
Smoak 1B
Carp LF
Saunders CF

Beavan (1-3, 4.45)

Fister was off the DL after hurting himself in his first start of the year, and he looked like the same old Fister.  I had mixed feelings, I love watching the man pitch but not at our expense.  We outlasted him, got to their Bullpen and were lucky enough to meet a very wild Dotel.

Beavan went out after the third inning after a strange 1-5-4-3 double play to end the third.  Cabrera absolutely smoked the ball straight up the middle and it ricocheted off Beavan's elbow.  Iwakuma came on in relief, only his third appearance of the season, and after a shaky 4th inning in which he allowed 1 run on three hits (sandwiching three strikeouts), he retired the order in the 5th and 6th innings.  Our relievers were outstanding tonight, keeping us in the game. 

The Tigers scored in the first inning on two doubles, the second by Fielder.  It wasn't hit very hard, but was a pop up that just managed to land right next to the foul line, far enough out of reach of Carp, Wells, and Seager.  Wells was roaming around Left Center so he had no chance, Ryan barely missed it.  I would call Fielder's RBI double a bloop one.  He had another softly hit bloop single against Iwakuma in the 4th, and came around to score on a broken bat single by Boesch.  So the Tigers weren't hitting us hard, I would say their hardest hit ball was the one that put Beavan out of the game.

Fister, in the meantime, went 7 strong innings, allowing only 4 hits in the 1st, 3rd, 6th, and 7th with 73 pitches.  He probably could have finished the game, but I'm glad he didn't!

In the 9th inning Ryan and Ichiro both drew walks.  Then, on the first pitch to Montero, Dotel threw a Wild Pitch advancing the runners to 2nd and 3rd with nobody out.  I looked at the remaining players to come up:  Seager, and Jaso, and was fully confident that we had just won the game.  I knew that Montero would either get a sac fly or a base hit to score the runs, and that Seager and Jaso would do something magical.  On his 2-0 pitch, Dotel threw wildly again, Avila couldn't handle it and it got past him to score Ryan and put Ichiro on third via the passed ball.  Montero then launched a fullcount bomb to deep center field.  On a warmer night it would have been gone, but it bounced off the the wall for an RBI double, and the ballgame was tied.  Montero absolutely crushed it.  Dotel was done, and Kawasaki came in to pinch run.  This meant that if we went to extra innings we probably would have lost our DH as Jaso would have switched to catcher.  But we had three outs still to play with, and like I said I was fully confident.

Sure enough, Seager, probably our most consistent hitter lately, immediately put down a sac bunt to advance Kawasaki to third.  And then, Mr. Clutch John Jaso came up to the plate.  He'd already won two games for us this year.  We had all the momentum... and sure enough after fouling back the first pitch Jaso hit a fly to right field, and Kawasaki beat the throw to score the winning run.  The team poured out and swarmed Jaso.  The fans went crazy, and everyone went home happy.  It was a great comeback win and nobody could ask for a better way to end a ballgame.

Can't pin down the player of the game, too many played such an important role.

The Mariners are now 4-5 when I attend and 1-2 in 1 run games
Attendance: 14,462
Time of Game: 2:31

No comments:

Post a Comment