Griffey Jr. hits 400th homer as Mariner, Ichiro gets slam
| WERE YOU THERE? |
Did you attend this game? If so, start chronicling your sports memories today with ESPN's Sports Passport. Enter the games you attend, upload your photos and share your memories! I was there »
|
| Regular Season Series |
| Los Angeles leads 10-9 (as of Wed 4/15) |
| Tue 4/14 |
@SEA 3, LAA 2 |
Recap |
| >Wed 4/15 |
@SEA 11, LAA 3 |
Box Score |
| Thu 4/16 |
LAA 5, @SEA 1 |
Recap |
| Fri 4/24 |
SEA 8, @LAA 3 |
Recap |
| Sat 4/25 |
SEA 9, @LAA 8 |
Recap |
| Sun 4/26 |
@LAA 8, SEA 0 |
Recap |
| Mon 5/18 |
LAA 10, @SEA 6 |
Recap |
| Tue 5/19 |
LAA 6, @SEA 5 |
Recap |
| Wed 5/20 |
@SEA 1, LAA 0 |
Recap |
| Thu 5/21 |
LAA 3, @SEA 0 |
Recap |
| Fri 5/29 |
SEA 5, @LAA 2 |
Recap |
| Sat 5/30 |
SEA 4, @LAA 3 |
Recap |
| Sun 5/31 |
@LAA 9, SEA 8 |
Recap |
| Mon 8/31 |
LAA 10, @SEA 0 |
Recap |
| Tue 9/1 |
@SEA 2, LAA 1 |
Recap |
| Wed 9/2 |
@SEA 3, LAA 0 |
Recap |
| Tue 9/8 |
@LAA 3, SEA 2 |
Recap |
| Wed 9/9 |
@LAA 6, SEA 3 |
Recap |
| Thu 9/10 |
@LAA 3, SEA 0 |
Recap |
| · Complete Schedule: Mariners | Angels |
| Scoring Summary |
| LAA | SEA |
 | 4th | K Johjima singled to center, R Branyan scored. | 0 | 1 |
 | 5th | T Hunter homered to left, V Guerrero scored. | 2 | 1 |
 | 5th | E Chavez homered to right. | 2 | 2 |
 | 5th | K Griffey Jr homered to right. | 2 | 3 |
 | 6th | F Gutierrez sacrificed to pitcher, R Johnson scored, Y Betancourt to second, F Gutierrez safe at first on error by pitcher J Weaver. | 2 | 4 |
 | 7th | J Rivera singled to right, T Hunter scored, K Morales to second. | 3 | 4 |
 | 7th | J Lopez hit sacrifice fly to center, K Griffey Jr scored, A Beltre to third, R Branyan to second. | 3 | 5 |
 | 7th | R Johnson singled to center, A Beltre and R Branyan scored. | 3 | 7 |
 | 7th | I Suzuki homered to right, R Johnson, Y Betancourt and F Gutierrez scored. | 3 | 11 |
| · View complete Play-By-Play |
| Game Information |
| Stadium | Safeco Field, Seattle, WA |
| Attendance | 18,516 (38.7% full) - % is based on regular season capacity |
| Game Time | 2:55 |
| Weather | 53 degrees, partly cloudy |
| Wind | 3 mph |
| Umpires | Home Plate - Wally Bell, First Base - Marty Foster, Second Base - Marvin Hudson, Third Base - Hank Himmanen |
Associated Press
SEATTLE -- Ken Griffey Jr. returned triumphantly to the team on which he became a superstar. Ichiro Suzuki's delayed season debut was a grand smash.
What's next for these rollicking Mariners,
Jay Buhner and
Edgar Martinez homering their ways out of retirement?
Fast Facts
• Ichiro Suzuki hit his fourth career grand slam, and first since 2005, as the Mariners won their sixth straight game.
• Ichiro had two hits in his season debut and tied the record for the most career hits by a Japanese player (Isao Harimoto -- 3,085 hits).
• Ken Griffey Jr. hit his first home run at home as a Mariner since Sept. 22, 1999. The homer is his 400th as a Mariner. He joins Chipper Jones (409 with Braves) as the only active players with 400-plus homers for his current team.
• Six Mariners had multi-hit games as the team got a season-high 15 hits.
-- ESPN Stats & Information
"What a phenomenal day," Seattle rookie manager Don Wakamatsu said.
That was after Griffey hit career home run No. 613 and his 400th as a Mariner on Wednesday night in his second home game of his return season in Seattle, Suzuki tied the Japanese record for hits with his first grand slam in six years, and the surprising Mariners beat the
Los Angeles Angels 11-3 for their sixth consecutive victory.
Griffey became the first player to hit 400 home runs with one team and 200 with another. Griffey hit 210 with Cincinnati from 2000 through the middle of last season, when he was traded to the
Chicago White Sox.
Suzuki had two hits while returning from his first career stint on the disabled list because of a bleeding ulcer. His dramatic slam came when he golfed a full-count pitch from
Jason Bulger into the right-field bleachers during a seven-run seventh inning. That tied Japanese League hero Isao Harimoto's record with hit No. 3,085.
"That's pretty much Ichiro -- the greatest of Ichiro," the 68-year-old Harimoto said through an interpreter while walking a stadium tunnel immediately after the game.
Showing how big a deal Suzuki tying the record is in Japan, a television network there flew Harimoto to Seattle so he could see the eight-time All-Star and Gold Glove outfielder do it.
"For Mr. Harimoto to make the trip all the way here from Japan for the game, it's probably the first and last time. That has special meaning to me," Suzuki said through his interpreter.
"Of course I definitely didn't think grand slam. ... That barely happens in any situation."
Jarrod Washburn (2-0) bulled through a bad cold for his 100th career victory. He allowed two runs in six steady innings against his former team. Seattle lost 101 games last season but is 7-2 now, off to its best start since 2001, its last playoff season.
After some prodding, Griffey said No. 400 with Seattle meant something.
"It means a lot. It's just, I don't worry about numbers," Griffey said. "You play long enough, you are going to rack up some numbers -- some are good, some are bad.
"I've been fortunate, that's the best way I can describe it."
Baseball's 39-year-old active home run leader turned sharply on a 2-1 fastball from Weaver for his second home run of the year. Griffey gave his vintage, no-doubt reaction to the solo shot: a dropped bat at his feet and long stare. He watched the ball land three rows into the bleachers beyond right-center field to give Seattle a 3-2 lead, three pitches after
Endy Chavez had tied the game with a solo home run.
Weaver (1-1) allowed 10 hits and four runs in five-plus innings. He walked two and struck out two.
The crowd of about 18,516 at Safeco Field -- dubbed the house that Junior built after Griffey's MVP heroics in the mid-1990s largely saved baseball in Seattle -- roared as he rounded the bases. The unending roaring prompted Griffey's first curtain call since returning. He emerged from the dugout to tip his batting helmet to the fans, many of whom were wearing his No. 24 jersey in either blue or white.
Griffey connected again back inside the dugout -- with a lunging kiss on the cheek of Trey, his teenage son.
"He didn't really like the kiss," Dad said, laughing. "I told him he'd have an easier time getting girlfriends if they saw him getting a kiss from dad, seeing his softer side."
Griffey's previous home run as a Mariner in Seattle came on Sept. 22, 1999, off Kansas City's
Jay Witasick in what was his 48th and final home run of that season. A few months later, the Mariners granted his wish and traded him to Cincinnati.
Torii Hunter hit a two-run homer in the fifth off Washburn to give Los Angeles a brief 2-1 lead in the fifth. It was Hunter's third home run in six at-bats.
Los Angeles dropped two games under .500 for the first time since April 20, 2007.
Immediately after the game, Weaver, manager Mike Scioscia, pitching coach Mike Butcher, Angels pitchers
John Lackey and
Dustin Moseley joined general manager Tony Reagins and team owner Arte Moreno on a flight to Maryland for a private ceremony Thursday honoring teammate
Nick Adenhart. Adenhart died last week in an automobile accident hours after a start.
Those Angels are due back in time for Thursday night's series finale in Seattle.
"We are still professional. We have to find it. It kind of knocked us down a little last week, the tragedy," Hunter said. "We're trying to find it now."
Game notes Angels RHP Rafael Rodriguez, selected from Triple-A Salt Lake late Tuesday, allowed one hit in one inning in his major league debut. ... Mariners C
Kenji Johjima left the game with a tight right hamstring. He will be evaluated by doctors Thursday.