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Mariners take sole possession of AL West lead on Raleigh's historic day

Ryan Divish, The Seattle Times on

Published in Baseball

SEATTLE — The only fitting way for the Seattle Mariners to take over first place alone atop the American League West was to have the man that carried them through the first half of the season check off another historical mark on his résumé for the American League Most Valuable Player award.

On the final day of a seven-game homestand where the Mariners didn’t lose, but the leading home run hitter in baseball hadn’t put one over the fence, Cal Raleigh gave the crowd of 42,513 what it wanted to see while setting the tone immediately Sunday in what would be an 11-2 pasting of the Los Angeles Angels for their ninth consecutive win.

Facing veteran right-hander Kyle Hendricks with Randy Arozarena on first base in the first inning, Raleigh ambushed a first-pitch sinker that was about three inches off the outside corner of the plate, lashing a low-screaming line drive to left-center that kept carrying and rising over the wall for his 54th homer of the season.

The blast, which had an exit velocity of 109-mph and traveled 409 feet tied Mickey Mantle’s record for most homers in a season by a switch-hitter. But it also broke Javy Lopez’s record of 42 homers in a season while catching in a game.

With the Astros (81-69) losing in Atlanta, the Mariners (82-68), who have Monday off before opening a three-game series in Kansas City on Tuesday, will sit alone atop the division standings for at least two days. Meanwhile, the Rangers (79-71) lost on a walk-off homer to the Mets to drop another game back of Seattle.

And that matters more to Raleigh than his individual achievements.

“We’re playing meaningful games at this time of year, which is a lot of fun,” Raleigh said. “We’re chasing something bigger. I can go out there and just compete. I’m not trying to go out there and trying to hit a homer or trying to break a certain record. I’m just trying to help the team out in any way I can. And that’s usually the best course of action anyway.”

The early two-run lead provided by Raleigh would balloon to 11-0 by the fourth inning as the Mariners’ offense unleashed a run-scoring fiesta in the third and fourth innings to turn the game into a rout. Seattle banged out 16 hits, including seven doubles in the game.

“Cal hitting that two-run homer to set the stage was kind of a statement,” said manager Dan Wilson. “That ball was crushed the opposite way, it was just a great piece of hitting right there. And the rest of the offense able to take over from there.”

Raleigh started the third inning with an infield single, hustling out a soft ground-ball to third and beating the throw from Yoan Moncada. Julio Rodríguez followed with a low line drive to the left-center gap that scored Raleigh from first base.

“Julio had a couple of tee shots today,” Wilson said. “It was just great at-bats up and down the lineup, creating a lot of traffic and getting the runners in.”

Rodríguez stole third base and scored on Josh Naylor’s lineout to center to make it 4-0. With two outs, Jorge Polanco, who had already doubled in the first inning to give him seven straight games with a two bagger, hit his second double of the game. He would later score on Dom Canzone’s single to right to make it 5-0.

The Mariners knocked Hendricks out of the game with out in the fourth inning, J.P. Crawford looped a leadoff single to right field, Raleigh took a one-out walk much to the displeasure of the home crowd and Rodríguez followed with his second double of the game to make it 6-0. Naylor drove home Raleigh and Rodríguez with a single to right field that ended Hendricks’ outing.

But Seattle wasn’t done.

Polanco greeted Hendricks’ replacement — Connor Brogdon — with a double to put runners on second and third. Canzone followed with a single to center that scored both runners and make it 10-0. In his second plate appearance of the inning. J.P. Crawford capped off the inning with a crisp double to left to score Canzone to make it 11-0.

 

The run support was plenty for starter George Kirby, who delivered a much-needed bounce back outing, pitching 6 1/3 innings, allowing two runs on three hits with no walks and a career-high 14 strikeouts.

“i just felt really in control today,” he said.

It was a completely different feeling during his previous two starts. He lasted only two innings in Tampa, giving up eight runs on 10 hits. In his previous start on the homestand, he made it through only four innings, allowing three runs on seven hits and walking two batters.

“A lot of stuff going on this week just trying to figure out how to get back to my game, and not worrying about stuff,” Kirby said. “Just having the confidence to go out there and compete and stay in control.”

He leaned on mental skills coach Adam Bernaro, his fellow pitchers in the rotation, family, friends and anybody that would listen.

“I reached out to everyone possible to help me get some confidence back,” he said. “Today, I felt really locked in. I was taking a breath before every pitch and really had a lot of conviction on everything I was throwing today.”

Kirby retired the first 13 batters he faced, striking out nine of them, before Christian Moore hit a solo homer to left-center that trimmed the Mariners’ lead to 11-1.

The other run allowed came on a solo homer to Oswald Peraza in the sixth inning.

With Emerson Hancock warming up in the bullpen in the sixth, it looked Kirby’s day was done. But a miscommunication in the dugout before the start of the seventh led to Kirby running out to the mound and Hancock coming in from the dugout.

“He wasn’t supposed to go back out,” Wilson said.

Once Kirby was on the field, he had to pitch to at least one batter. He struck out Jo Adell looking for his 14th of the game. He exited to a standing ovation.

“I wish I tipped my cap or did something cool,” Kirby said. “The fans this last home standing, and always, their energy has been awesome. Anytime you go out there and compete and have a good game, it’s awesome to see the fans in it and they show you some respect too, and that’s cool.”

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©2025 The Seattle Times. Visit seattletimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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