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Mariners, Bryce Miller fall in Texas, 5-1, as Rangers break out on offense

Ryan Divish, The Seattle Times on

Published in Baseball

ARLINGTON, Texas — They weren’t going to be held down for the entire series. The hard contact was going to yield not just hits, but homers. And they were eventually going to score runs. Their lineup features too many proven hitters to be stymied for an entire series.

A night after being shut out by the Mariners, the Texas Rangers ended a stretch of 13 consecutive scoreless innings, blasting a pair of solo homers in the fourth inning off Mariners starter Bryce Miller and tacking on more runs in what would eventually be a 5-1 victory.

While the Mariners believe in the overall success of their pitching staff, they also knew that the Rangers were going to score runs eventually.

They needed to just limit the runs with clean play in the field, while also scoring runs at a similar rate to keep the game close.

They did neither.

Looking for a little redemption in native Texas against a team that tormented him last season, Miller hoped the addition of a split-finger fastball and better command of a two-seam fastball might help combat against the Rangers’ slew of left-handed and switch hitters.

As a rookie, Miller made two starts against Texas and gave up a combined 13 runs on 14 hits in 6 2/3 innings pitched, including five doubles and three homers.

From a statistical and potential aspect, this outing was better.

Miller’s final line: four innings pitched, two runs allowed on four hits with four walks and five strikeouts.

He actually pitched into the fifth inning but didn’t record an out, walking Marcus Semien, the first and only batter he faced.

 

But the four-plus innings were a grind of long counts, runners on base and hard contact.

Miller allowed a runner to reach base in every inning.

His teammates gave him a 1-0 lead in the top of the first, forcing Texas starter Jon Gray to throw 31 pitches in the first frame.

When J.P. Crawford was scratched from the starting lineup about an hour before first pitch due to right oblique soreness, Josh Rojas was moved up to the leadoff spot.

He responded by starting the game with a triple to center field on Gray’s fourth pitch of the game. Rojas would later score on Mitch Haniger’s fielder’s choice to first base.

But the first inning wasn’t much easier for Miller. He needed 28 pitches to get three outs. He struck out Semien, then issued back-to-back, one-out walks to Corey Seager and Nathaniel Lowe and came back to strikeout Adolis Garcia and Evan Carter.

The Rangers put 10 balls in play off Miller in his outing. All but two had exit velocities of more than 100 mph.

Garcia blasted a two-seamer over the wall in center to tie the game. Carter took advantage of a splitter left up in the zone, launching it into the seats in right-center to put the Rangers up 2-1 in the fourth inning.

Texas added three more runs against the Mariners’ bullpen, taking advantage of two errors.


©2024 The Seattle Times. Visit seattletimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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