Athletics 9, Mariners 3

123456789 R H E
OAK (70-75) 050000004 9 13 1
SEA (75-67) 000000210 3 10 0

Final

 
W:J. Blanton (13-9)
L:H. Ramirez (8-6)
SV:H. Street (13)

Suzuki, Johnson each hit grand slams as A's beat up M's

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Regular Season Series
Seattle leads 14-5 (as of Mon 9/10)
Mon 4/2 @SEA 4, OAK 0 Recap
Tue 4/3 @SEA 8, OAK 4 Recap
Wed 4/4 OAK 9, @SEA 0 Recap
Wed 4/25 SEA 2, @OAK 0 Recap
Thu 4/26 SEA 4, @OAK 2 Recap
Thu 7/5 @OAK 3, SEA 2 Recap
Fri 7/6 SEA 7, @OAK 1 Recap
Sat 7/7 SEA 4, @OAK 0 Recap
Sun 7/8 SEA 7, @OAK 3 Recap
Thu 7/26 OAK 6, @SEA 2 Recap
Fri 7/27 @SEA 7, OAK 1 Recap
Sat 7/28 @SEA 4, OAK 3 Recap
Sun 7/29 @SEA 14, OAK 10 Recap
>Mon 9/10 OAK 9, @SEA 3 Box Score
Tue 9/11 OAK 7, @SEA 4 Recap
Wed 9/12 @SEA 6, OAK 5 Recap
Mon 9/17 SEA 4, @OAK 0 Recap
Tue 9/18 SEA 8, @OAK 7 Recap
Wed 9/19 SEA 9, @OAK 5 Recap
· Complete Schedule: Mariners | Athletics
Scoring Summary
OAKSEA
2ndJ Hannahan singled to left, M Ellis scored, D Johnson to second.10
2ndK Suzuki homered to left, D Johnson, J Hannahan and D Barton scored.50
7thK Johjima grounded out to second, B Broussard scored, J Vidro to third.51
7thJ Lopez grounded out to second, J Vidro scored.52
8thJ Guillen homered to center.53
9thD Johnson homered to right, M Scutaro, N Swisher and M Ellis scored.93
· View complete Play-By-Play
Game Information
StadiumSafeco Field, Seattle, WA
Attendance26,698 (55.8% full) - % is based on regular season capacity
Game Time2:44
Weather76 degrees, clear
Wind2 mph
UmpiresHome Plate - Bruce Dreckman, First Base - Chris Guccione, Second Base - Phil Cuzzi, Third Base - Tom Hallion

A CLOSER LOOK
• Summary: Kurt Suzuki and Dan Johnson each connected for grand slams, powering the A's past the sinking Mariners, who have lost 14 of 16.

Kurt Suzuki
Suzuki

• Figure this: The A's hit two grand slams in one game for the second time in franchise history. It was Suzuki's first career slam.

• Hunt for October: The Mariners are 5½ games behind the wild card-leading Yankees and 8½ behind the Los Angeles Angels in the AL West.

• Quotable: "We love home runs. Two of them for eight runs? You can't do much better than that." -- A's manager Bob Geren

-- ESPN.com news services

Athletics 9, Mariners 3

SEATTLE (AP) -- The Seattle Mariners' historical slide reached a new low -- permitting something that had happened only one other time in 106 years.

Kurt Suzuki hit his first career grand slam and Dan Johnson also hit one as the Oakland Athletics beat sinking Seattle 9-3 on Monday night.

It was the second time in their 106-year history the Athletics had two slams in one game. Oakland had only three in their first 144 games this season.

"We love home runs," said manager Bob Geren, whose team won for just the second time in six games on its road trip. "Two of them for eight runs? You can't do much better than that."

Mariners starter Horacio Ramirez allowed five runs in 1 2/3 innings as Seattle lost for the 14th time in 16 games, among the worst falls by a contending team in September over the last half-century.

The Mariners are 5½ games behind the wild card-leading New York Yankees and 8½ behind the Los Angeles Angels in the AL West with 20 games remaining. On Aug. 26, they were leading the wild-card race by two games and were just one game behind the Angels.

"As long as there is a possibility, you always work for the playoffs," All-Star Ichiro Suzuki said through an interpreter.

Asked what can be done that hasn't been tried, Suzuki said "nothing."

Rookie manager John McLaren stepped over ice cubes strewn across a carpeted hallway inside the silent Mariners clubhouse and then paused for a moment when asked what's left to do.

"Pitch a little better. Maybe hit a little better," McLaren said, glumly. "It's easy to get down, but the guys care. To a man, they're not happy right now."

Suzuki, who grounded into just his sixth double play in 640 plate appearances to end the third inning, was asked what is the difference from the Mariners of two weeks ago to now. The franchise cornerstone glared with his arms folded across his chest and said through an interpreter, "Look at the box scores."

This one showed Joe Blanton (13-9) allowing two runs and eight hits over seven innings. He won for the fifth time in six decisions -- but for the first time in four starts against Seattle.

Jose Guillen hit his 20th home run in the eighth off Alan Embree to bring Seattle within 5-3. Johnson hit his third career grand slam in the ninth off Ryan Rowland-Smith.

Huston Street got the final four outs for his 13th save in 17 chances. Rookie Daric Barton, a 21-year-old called up from Triple-A Sacramento by Oakland on Monday to start at first base for the rest of the season, walked twice, doubled in the sixth for his first major-league hit and singled in the eighth.

"A great debut from a guy we've all heard a lot about," Geren said of Barton, who dressed quickly and ran out to meet his waiting family.

Ramirez (7-6) was as bad as the Mariners needed him to be good -- which about summarizes his first season with them.

In the second, Ramirez gave up a single to Mark Ellis and walked Johnson -- who was batting .163 since July 3. Then Jack Hannahan, 3-for-16 (.188) on the road trip and a minor leaguer until last month, singled home Ellis.

Ramirez walked Barton on a full count to load the bases. Kurt Suzuki, the No. 9 hitter, drove Ramirez's second pitch off a cement wall deep in the A's bullpen. That put Oakland ahead 5-0.

"When I do get one, I'm not sure if it's gone," Suzuki said.

After an out and another single, McLaren walked briskly to the mound, stared past Ramirez into the bullpen and summoned rookie Ryan Feierabend. McLaren extended his left arm to get the ball from Ramirez without saying a word and without making eye contact. Ramirez trudged off to loud boos.

"I was walking off the mound. I wasn't noticing," a frustrated Ramirez said of McLaren's steely glare.

Feierabend pitched 5 1/3 scoreless innings, allowing four hits and striking out five. McLaren hinted he may have earned a start -- perhaps for Ramirez.

Ramirez's ERA climbed to 6.80 by allowing at least five runs for the seventh time in 19 starts. He has won just once in the last 30 days, a span of six starts. His wins are largely because his hitters were giving him an average of 7.19 runs per start -- the fourth-best support in the AL -- until they met Blanton on Monday.

Blanton's only trouble came when Ben Broussard singled and Jose Vidro doubled to begin the seventh. Kenji Johjima and Jose Lopez had consecutive RBI groundouts to make it 5-2.

Game notes
The A's pulled Barton, who was acquired from St. Louis in the trade of LHP Mark Mulder in December 2004, out of the PCL championship series so he could get a true test against contenders Seattle, Cleveland, Boston and the Angels over the last 18 games. Barton hit four home runs in a five-game playoff series with Sacramento that ended Sunday. ... Guillen was hit by a pitch in the fifth, his team-record 18th time this season.


Series At A Glance

Oakland leads 1-0 (as of 9/10)
Details [+]

MLB Scores

Monday, September 10th 2007
St. Louis 3 Final
Chi Cubs 12
Tampa Bay 1 Final
Boston 0
Toronto 4 Final
Detroit 5
Colorado 5 Final
Philadelphia 6 in 10
Milwaukee 0 Final
Pittsburgh 9
Washington 5 Final
Florida 4
Atlanta 2 Final
NY Mets 3
Minnesota 4 Final
Kansas City 2
Cleveland 6 Final
Chi White Sox 2
Oakland 9 Final
Seattle 3
Arizona 5 Final
San Francisco 3