Wilson, Sweeney lead Mariners over Royals

Summary

Fill-in Josh Wilson had his first three-RBI game in more than two years, and former Royals All-Star Mike Sweeney burned his old team with a hustle play to score one of his two runs in the Seattle Mariners' 6-3 victory over Kansas City on Friday night.

Story Published: Aug 29, 2009 at 8:11 AM PST

Story Updated: Aug 29, 2009 at 8:11 AM PST

Wilson, Sweeney lead Mariners over Royals

Seattle Mariners' Mike Sweeney singles in the second inning of a MLB baseball game against the Kansas City Royals, Friday, Aug. 28, 2009, at Safeco Field in Seattle. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

SEATTLE (AP) - Fill-in Josh Wilson had his first three-RBI game in more than two years, and former Royals All-Star Mike Sweeney burned his old team with a hustle play to score one of his two runs in the Seattle Mariners' 6-3 victory over Kansas City on Friday night.

Mariners ace Felix Hernandez was far from sharp, throwing first-pitch strikes to only 11 of the 27 batters he faced in seven so-so innings.

Yet Hernandez (13-5) allowed the lowly Royals just five hits and three runs. He walked one and struck out six in his first win since Aug. 1, following three no-decisions and a loss.

Sean White pitched a perfect eighth. David Aardsma allowed a leadoff single in the ninth before finiQshing for his 31st save in 35 chances to keep Seattle 7½ games behind front-running Boston in the AL wild-card race.

Mariners slugger Russell Branyan left the game before the fifth inning. The team announced Branyan felt a "tweak" in his back while checking his swing during his second and final at-bat, a strikeout in the third inning. He will be re-evaluated Saturday.

Wilson, giving recently gimpy shortstop Jack Wilson the night off, and Kansas City's defense hurt Royals starter Brian Bannister (7-11). Branyan dropped a tricky bunt single down the third-base line in the second inning to beat a shift, and Sweeney singled. They both advanced on a wild pitch by Bannister, who crossed up catcher Miguel Olivo on a catchable pitch in the dirt. Bill Hall and Wilson then had consecutive RBI groundouts.

Wilson got help on his. Sweeney, the 36-year-old designated hitter against a right-hander because Ken Griffey Jr.'s 39-year-old knee might be more sore than anyone's letting on, took off after Bannister threw to first on Wilson's tapper back to the mound. Sweeney belly flopped past Olivo's tag and then popped up so excitedly his batting helmet flew off. He yelled and pumped both fists as he ran into a Mariners dugout that was roaring over the old man's guts and gusto.

An error by third baseman Mark Teahen, who let Jose Lopez's chopper go under his glove, allowed Franklin Gutierrez to score with two outs in the third to put Seattle up 3-1.

After a single by Sweeney and double by Hall began the bottom of the fourth, Wilson singled to make it 5-1.

David DeJesus doubled home Kansas City's first run in the third. Then, after the Royals' leadoff batter survived almost getting run over by a four-wheeler driven by the Mariner Moose mascot between innings, DeJesus doubled in the fifth. Rookie Mitch Maier then hit a 2-2 slider from Hernandez into the right-field seats for his second career home run.

Maier had zero homers in his first 345 plate appearances this season. He has two home runs in the last four days.

It was the fifth homer in two games for Kansas City, which entered the series Thursday next-to-last in the AL in homers.

Bannister, the son of 1982 Mariners All-Star Floyd Bannister, lost his fourth consecutive decision. He allowed seven hits and six runs - five earned - in 6 2-3 innings, leaving with the bases loaded.

Kyle Farnsworth walked Sweeney to force in Jack Hannahan and give Seattle its 6-3 lead in the seventh.

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