Recaps
[Arizona Sports] Diamondbacks swept by Mariners as offense disappears – The Arizona Diamondbacks couldn’t get any offense going for the second straight day in their 3-2 10th-inning loss to the Mariners, getting swept for the third time this season.Arizona managed just three hits in the game, leaving starter Merrill Kelly without any support. Kelly pitched 5.1 innings and gave up two runs on eight hits with two strikeouts. On the other side, Bryce Miller and Luis Castillo each pitched five innings to get the Mariners through 10 innings of work. Miller threw five shutout innings, allowing just one hit and a walk, and Castillo gave up two runs (one earned) on two hits and two walks.
[AZ Central] Diamondbacks swept by Mariners, Dodgers series up next – “I thought we did a lot right,” Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo said. “But there were some very critical moments today, and in the other two games that we lost, where we didn’t execute at the high level that we’ve gotten used to. That’s the difference between wins and losses.” Several such moments occurred in the 10th inning on Sunday. First, the Diamondbacks were unable to cash in their automatic runner in the top of the inning. Then, shortstop Geraldo Perdomo couldn’t make a difficult play in the bottom of the inning, allowing the winning run to score. Carroll and Ketel Marte, the Diamondbacks’ explosive 1-2 punch, were largely held in check over the three games. Marte went 0 for 12 with three walks; Carroll was 3 for 14 with a double.
[roundtable.io] Diamondbacks Lose in Extra Innings to Mariners, Leave Seattle Getting Swept – The Arizona Diamondbacks had plenty of reasons to be sleepless in Seattle this weekend. But, Sunday’s 3-2, 10-inning loss to the Seattle Mariners might make them even more sleepless. With the victory, the Mariners finished off a series sweep over the Diamondbacks. If that wasn’t bad enough, Seattle has now won six straight games. Diamondbacks starter Merrill Kelly went 5.1 innings for manager Torey Lovullo. He gave up two earned runs, eight hits, walked two, struck out two, and surrendered two home runs. Kelly now has a 5.06 ERA this season.
Team news
[Dbacks.com] These guys will rebound’: D-backs can’t wallow with Dodgers up next – It will be Arizona’s second look at the Dodgers, but its first since the opening series of the season when the Diamondbacks were swept in three games in Los Angeles. “I don’t think anybody has any doubt that we’re still playing good ball, and we’re still a good team,” Kelly said. “It’ll be nice to be back home. For some reason, for me, I don’t know if everybody else, this road trip — even though it was only a week — felt long. But I think it’ll be good to get home and sleep in our own beds, and we’ve got to pick up right where we left off, and keep trying to keep grinding at-bats and keep going.”
[SI] Mariners Hit Diamondbacks with Worst Possible Reality Check – It’s no fault of Arizona for winning the game they had scheduled. Teams play who they play, and the Diamondbacks’ job was to win as many of those easy games as possible to stack wins for a tougher incoming scheduleBut when the harsh reality of a higher-quality opponent hit, the Diamondbacks could not find a way to even squeak out one game. That is a major concern, especially with four games against the Dodgers looming. The Mariners are a good team. The Diamondbacks losing a series after four straight series wins and a 31-24 record could be overlooked. To be completely held at bay and swept by a team that has had its own fair share of struggles this season is a bad omen for Arizona’s abilities in front of the more brutal opponents lying ahead.
[Sporting News] Diamondbacks have a huge Zac Gallen and Merrill Kelly problem – For as good as things are going overall, there are still some concerning issues with the team, as is the case for every team in Major League Baseball. But, for the Diamondbacks, the big issue with the team is a lot more concerning. Both of these pitchers returned to the Diamondbacks this offseason on free agent contracts, with Kelly signing for two years at $40 million total with a 2028 vesting option, and Gallen for one year at $16.2 million with deferrals to $22.025M total. Kelly has been better recently, posting a 3.51 ERA in his five starts this May, with two against the struggling San Francisco Giants, and one each against the Chicago Cubs, New York Mets, and Colorado Rockies. Through 12 starts this season, Gallen has a 5.16 ERA with -0.5 bWAR. Contrary to how Kelly has been great in May, Gallen has collapsed this month. In six outings, Gallen has a terrible 7.04 ERA with 24 runs allowed in 30.2 innings pitched.
And, elsewhere…
[ESPN] Meet the man behind the Savannah Bananas’ moves – Harrison deftly designs routines that emphasize charisma over technical precision and spotlight the teams’ natural showmen while camouflaging the players with two left feet. He also has the rare skill set — and patience — to teach dances to athletes who, not long ago, didn’t know an 8-count from a full count. Sometimes he has mere hours to choreograph and just as little time to teach his routines to the players. “The greatest thing about Maceo is that he waits for everybody to get on the same page,” says Chris Clarke, the Tailgaters’ 6-foot-7 right-hander who played five years in the Chicago Cubs’ minor league system. “If there’s a right kick, he’s waiting for everybody to make that move before he goes on to the next instruction. Just like any good kindergarten teacher, he leaves nobody behind.”
[MLB.com] ‘Misunderstanding’ from young fan leads to Sánchez’s early exit with wrist injury – Sánchez isn’t so eccentric that he actually intended to play catch with spectators during a mound visit amid Toronto’s 9-5 loss to the Orioles on Sunday afternoon at Camden Yards. Yet that’s how a pre-teen fan among the announced crowd of 34,476 on the Orioles’ Youth Sports Day interpreted the right fielder’s sixth-inning banter, launching a ball in his direction after he had turned back toward the infield. That set off one of the more unusual injury sequences in recent memory, ending with Sánchez leaving the field with a bruised right wrist.
[New York Post] Yankees rout A’s after erupting for wild 13-run third inning that lasts 43 minutes – Looking back, the most remarkable feat accomplished here Sunday afternoon may have been that across eight combined innings, the Athletics faced the minimum against the Yankees. That’s because for one inning in between — a 43-minute top of the third — they faced a Yankees parade. The Yankees began the third by having their first 12 batters reach base safely and scoring 10 runs before they made the first out. And their stupefying rally did not stop there.By the time the marathon inning was over, the Yankees had sent 18 men to the plate, with 15 of them reaching and 13 of them scoring — one shy of a franchise record that has stood since 1920. They racked up 11 hits — incredibly, none of them leaving the park — four walks and four steals, seeing 75 pitches from three pitchers.
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