José Soriano gave the Angels exactly what they needed for most of Tuesday night in Seattle, but one ugly sixth inning flipped the game and left Los Angeles staring at an 8-3 loss and a series defeat.
The right-hander looked sharp early, working through four scoreless innings while giving up just two hits and one walk. He struck out seven over that stretch, and his knuckle-curve was doing a lot of the damage, producing three of those punchouts.
For a while, Soriano was locked into a tight duel with Bryan Woo. The Mariners starter was just as tough, holding the Angels to four hits over 6.1 scoreless innings while allowing two earned runs and one walk and striking out five.
Then Seattle broke through in the bottom of the sixth.
Three straight hits brought home the Mariners’ first run and chased Soriano from the game. Chase Silseth came in with inherited runners on base and immediately gave up a single that scored another run, though that one went down as unearned. A wild pitch then slipped past Logan O’Hoppe before Weston Wilson followed with a two-run single to finish off a five-run inning and push Seattle ahead 5-0.
Even with that rough stretch, Soriano’s line still had some positives attached to it. He had lasted only three innings in his previous start against the Baltimore Orioles, when he allowed five earned runs. And after posting a 5.32 ERA across five starts in June, this was at least a step in the right direction as the calendar turns to July.
Soriano finished with five innings, six hits allowed, three earned runs, one walk and nine strikeouts. He threw 91 pitches, 62 for strikes, and took his fifth loss.
The Angels finally got on the board in the seventh. O’Hoppe knocked in their first run with an RBI single, Donovan Walton drew a walk, and Zach Neto followed with a two-run single to cut the margin to 5-3. That surge gave Los Angeles a brief opening, but it didn’t last long.
Seattle answered right away in the bottom of the inning. Colt Emerson delivered a two-run single off Brent Sutter, and Victor Robles added an RBI single to stretch the lead back out.
From there, the Angels couldn’t put together another push. They dropped the first two games of the three-game set, with an off day on Wednesday before Thursday’s finale. José Ureña, who is 5-6 with a 3.14 ERA, is scheduled to start against Bryce Miller, who is 3-2 with a 1.97 ERA.
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