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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Sport
Ryan Divish

With trade deadline passed, Mariners rough up suddenly short-handed Rangers

ARLINGTON, Texas — The resumption of baseball and the fight to remain in contention for a wild-card spot resumed for the Mariners after an anxious off day and Friday morning where Major League Baseball went more trade crazy than a fantasy football party fueled by Red Bull and booze.

When the transaction-mania finally settled a few hours before first pitch, the Mariners had two more new teammates: lefty Tyler Anderson, who will make his first start on Saturday, and right-handed reliever Diego Castillo, who closed out Seattle’s businesslike 9-5 win Friday evening over the hapless Rangers team that is now without slugger Joey Gallo and top starting pitcher Kyle Gibson.

The Mariners scored seven runs off Rangers starter Kolby Allard in the first three innings, highlighted by Jarred Kelenic’s third-inning three-run homer, which was more than enough run support for starter Logan Gilbert and the Mariners’ bullpen to snap a two-game losing spell. Seattle improved to 56-48 on the season and has a 35-22 record since being swept by the Padres in a three-game series on May 21-23.

With a three-game series against the Rays looming on Monday, followed by four-game series at Yankee Stadium against a lineup that has added Gallo and first baseman Anthony Rizzo, it’s imperative that the Mariners take at least two of three if not sweep this series at Globe Life Field. They have now beaten Texas eight times in 11 meetings this season. The Rangers dropped to 36-67 on the season. They have the second worst record in baseball behind Arizona, who came into Friday at 32-71. The Orioles sit at 36-66 with their win over the Tigers on Friday.

Gilbert gave the Mariners a workable start, pitching 5 2/3 innings pitched, four runs allowed on six hits, including two solo homers, a walk and six strikeouts while improving to 5-2 on the season.

It was a bounceback outing for the rookie from his previous start where he lasted just 2 2/3 innings, allowing three runs on five hits with a walk and five strikeouts against the A’s. After losing games in his first two starts, Seattle has now picked up wins in his last 11 starts.

Gilbert appeared on his way to a dominant outing.

He struck out the side to start the game and only allowed one hit over the first three innings, adding two more strikeouts.

The Mariners provided all that early run support to make things even easier.

Seattle scored four runs off Allard in the second inning, showing a mature approach as his pitch count piled up. Seattle loaded the bases on the first of Abraham Toro’s three hits, a walk from Tom Murphy and a single from Kelenic. Dylan Moore worked a bases-loaded walk to score the first run and J.P. Crawford plated another on a groundball to short. Seattle picked up two more runs Isiah Kiner-Falefa threw wildly to home on Mitch Haniger’s groundball. Kelenic scored on the ball in play while Moore alertly hustled home on the overthrow, scoring from second base.

The Mariners turned the game into rout in the third inning when Kelenic, using his more upright set-up at the plate, sat on a 2-1 slider and launched it deep into the right field seats. The ball traveled 392 feet. It was Kelenic’s first homer since being called back up from Tacoma and third of the season. His last homer came on May 23 vs. the A’s.

But after three innings of dominance, Gilbert labored a little. He gave up a run in the fourth when Adolis Garcia doubled and Nathaniel Lowe followed with a single to center. Texas cut it to 7-2 in the fifth when Gilbert’s lone walk — a one-out pass to Curtis Terry — came around to score after a wild pitch and double to No. 9 hitter Jason Martin.

Hoping to get through six innings with a quality start (six-plus pitched, three or fewer runs allowed), Gilbert gave up a pair of solo blasts. He hung a slider that Garcia crushed into the upper deck in left field for his 23rd homer of the season. A misplaced change-up to Jonah Heim turned into a solo homer to right that ended Gilbert’s outing with two outs in the sixth. Anthony Misiewicz came on to get the final out.

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