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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Sport
Ryan Divish

Mariners lose game to Angels, and possibly Eugenio Suarez to injury

ANAHEIM, Calif. — A defeat with the potential for a greater loss.

About six hours before the Seattle Mariners’ hopes of a yet another improbably late-inning victory ended with their 27th out — J.P. Crawford’s hard lineout to right field — and an 8-7 loss to the Angels, manager Scott Servais talked about the importance of keeping his team healthy in the final 20 games of the regular season, knowing a key injury could hinder or sidetrack the magic of this season.

So when the Seattle Mariners most durable player, third baseman Eugenio Suarez, walked off the field between the top and bottom of the fifth inning because of an injury, the ashen look on Servais’ face was palpable.

The injury occurred in the top of the fifth with Suarez at the plate. With two outs and Ty France on first, Suarez winced on a swing and miss on a first pitch slider. Later with he swung at a 2-1 slider, hitting a fly ball to right field. Upon making contact with the ball, Suarez grabbed his right wrist/hand and grimaced in obvious pain.

Suarez went out to his position in between innings and tried to warm up, but was in clear pain when trying to throw to first base.

Suarez has been one of the hottest hitters in baseball. He’s hit six homers over his past six games and leads the Mariners with 31 homers for the season. Since Aug 1, a span of 39 games, Suarez has posted a .977 OPS, batting .250 with 25 runs, four doubles, a triple, 15 home runs, 32 RBI and 19 walks. The 15 homers are tied with New York’s Aaron Judge for most in that span.

The game started off with potential, hope and a Julio homer.

Julio Rodriguez continued his torment of opposing pitchers facing their first hitter of the game. Angels starter Michael Lorenzen left a 1-1 slider out of the plate and Rodriguez turned it into a leadoff homer just over the wall in left field. It was fifth leadoff homer of the season. It was Rodriguez’s 27th homer of the season.

Mike Trout, the only rookie to ever hit 30 homers and steal 30 bases in a season, stood in center field and watched the Mariners young star, who is now three homers and five steals away from matching his feat.

But things turned ugly almost immediately for starter Robbie Ray, who didn’t have particularly pinpoint command and got minimal help from his defense.

Luis Rengifo led off the game with a ground ball up the middle that hit off the second base bag just as Adam Frazier was about to field it. The ball skipped into the outfield and got past Julio Rodriguez for an error that allowed Rengifo to move to third.

Ray came back to get Trout on a pop out to right, but left fielder Jesse Winker lost Shohei Ohtani’s high pop fly to shallow left field in the gloaming and it dropped in for a double.

Taylor Ward took advantage to a 3-0 count and ripped a single into left field to score both runners for a 2-1 lead.

The Angels added two more runs to their lead in the fourth inning. Rengifo led off the inning with a solo homer to left field. With two outs, Ward doubled over Winker’s head in left field and scored on Matt Duffy’s single to center.

As they’ve done so often this season, Seattle fought their way back into the game. Suarez worked a leadoff walk and Carlos Santana smashed his 16th homer of the season — a laser over the wall in right field to cut the lead to 4-3.

But Trout, who didn’t play in the previous series vs. Seattle at T-Mobile Park because of a back injury, offered an unnecessary reminder of his dominance against the Mariners. Trout smoked a leadoff homer to start the fifth. It was his 54th career homer vs. Seattle. Ray would make it through the fifth inning, but his night was done at 90 pitches. He allowed five runs on eight hits with a walk and five strikeouts.

The Angels pushed the lead to 8-4 in the sixth inning. Matt Festa, who replaced Ray, walked the first batter of the inning, allowed a one-out single and served up a three-run bomb to Rengifo that made it 8-3.

Believers in their capability of manufacturing impossible comebacks, the Mariners chipped away at the lead against the beleaguered Angels bullpen.

Sam Haggerty delivered a pinch-hit RBI single in the sixth inning and Ty France launched a two-run homer in the seventh. But a big scoring opportunity was negated later in the seventh inning. Seattle loaded the bases with one out, but the Angels were able to turn a very quick 5-4-3 double play on the ultra speedy Haggerty to end the inning.

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