The Mariners ran into a game Wednesday that had all the energy of a half-empty ballpark at dusk and came away with a 2-0 loss to the Marlins.
George Kirby gave them exactly the kind of start he’s been known for: efficient, composed, and good enough to keep things close. He worked six innings, struck out seven, generated 12 whiffs, walked none, and didn’t lean heavily on ground balls. It was the sort of outing that looked a lot like the strong version of Kirby, even if it stopped short of becoming the kind of performance that grabs headlines.
Seattle’s offense, meanwhile, never found a pulse. The Mariners finished with five hits, two walks, and one hit by pitch, but they never put together anything that felt threatening.
They had a baserunner in each of the first four innings, then went quiet until Josh Naylor singled with one out in the ninth. For most of the night, it looked like they were waiting for a breakthrough that never came.
The strangest offensive moment came in the sixth, when Naylor swung and missed so hard at an 0-1 pitch that he fell over and needed a few moments to collect himself. That was as close as Seattle came to a memorable swing.
Miami scored first on Kyle Stowers’ solo homer to open the second inning. The Marlins added more damage in the third after Javier Sanoja led off with a double.
Luke Raley then made a diving catch and threw to second for a double play, but the inning kept going. A single and a triple followed, and the Marlins had a 2-0 lead.
The defense behind Kirby was one of the few bright spots for Seattle. In the fourth, Heriberto Hernández doubled, and Jakob Marsee followed with a hard grounder toward short that nearly hit Hernández. Trying to avoid the ball, Hernández drifted too far off second, and Colt Emerson raced him back and tagged him out with a dive.
In the fifth, Otto Lopez doubled with two outs, and Xavier Edwards followed with a single that nearly brought in another run. Victor Robles charged in and fired home to Cal Raleigh, who made a strong catch-and-tag play to end the inning.
That kind of defense was about the only thing keeping the night from becoming a total slog. If Seattle had won, it would have been easy to call it a solid, necessary, rugged kind of game. Instead, the Mariners were left with a 2-0 loss and a ninth inning that ended with Naylor on third and Cole Young taking strike three on a pitch well outside.
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