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Originally published Monday, July 6, 2009 at 12:00 AM

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Mariners denied sweep in Boston as bullpen implodes

The Red Sox rallied with five runs in the seventh inning to beat Seattle 8-4, denying the Mariners their first series sweep at Fenway Park.

Seattle Times staff reporter

Monday

Orioles @ Mariners, 7:10 p.m., FSN

Mariners' next five games

Today | vs. Baltimore, 7:10 p.m., FSN |

Washburn (4-6, 3.36) vs. Bergesen (5-2, 3.53)

Tuesday | vs. Baltimore, 7:10 p.m., FSN |

Bedard (5-2, 2.47) vs. Guthrie (6-8, 5.20)

Wednesday | vs. Baltimore, 1:40 p.m., FSN |

Vargas (3-3, 4.14) vs. Hernandez (2-2, 4.15)

Thursday | vs. Texas, 7:10 p.m., FSN |

Hernandez (8-3, 2.62) vs. Holland (2-5, 6.18)

Friday | vs. Texas, 7:10 p.m., FSN |

Morrow (0-3, 5.06) vs. Feldman (7-2, 3.91)

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BOSTON — A frustrated Miguel Batista was upset with himself for denying the Mariners a shot at their first series sweep at Fenway Park in their 32 years.

Batista spoke over and over again about "going against my own scouting report" with a pitch he threw to Dustin Pedroia of the Boston Red Sox that caused the seventh inning of Sunday afternoon's game to unravel. Pedroia lined a single to put two men on, David Ortiz hit a tying single and the command-challenged Mariners went on to give up five runs in the inning in an 8-4 loss.

Batista and Mark Lowe struggled to find the strike zone in an inning that saw the Mariners issue four walks, putting a damper on the end of an otherwise strong trip against some of baseball's top teams.

"I just went against my scouting report and that's what caused me to be out of the game early," Batista said. "One pitch. It wasn't the walk, it wasn't David [Ortiz] either... it was two or three hitters before that, when I went against my scouting report and they got an extra runner."

Batista was referring to how he challenged Pedroia with a 1-1 pitch.

"You never want to challenge a good hitter if you don't have to," Batista said.

Lowe didn't challenge the hitters enough, throwing eight of his first nine pitches for balls after replacing Batista and walking in the go-ahead run. He then served up a two-run single to Mark Kotsay. The Red Sox salvaged the finale in front of 37,691 fans by scoring all five runs with two out.

The bullpen was key to the Mariners finishing this trip with a 5-4 record. But signs of overuse popped up multiple times the final few days and finally caught up to the Mariners on Sunday.

Batista threw four innings and 57 pitches in the series against the Dodgers in Los Angeles, then another 30 pitches over two outings against the Yankees in New York before being trotted out Sunday as one of Seattle's few relatively "fresh" bullpen arms. Lowe was working for the third time in four days.

Sean White came on after Lowe and fired a pitch that got past catcher Kenji Johjima for a passed ball and the final Boston run.

Seattle played arguably its worst game of the weekend, yet had a 4-3 lead going into the seventh. Starter Brandon Morrow gave up solo home runs to Pedroia and Ortiz in the first inning, then another to Jacoby Ellsbury in the sixth that cut the Mariners' lead to a run.

But he also escaped a fifth-inning jam, striking out Ortiz with two men on before handing his bullpen the lead after six.

"I've been throwing my changeup real well. I think it's gotten better every outing," said Morrow, who worked in more off-speed stuff after a 22-pitch first inning.

Morrow used an 89 mph changeup to get a swinging strike on Ortiz with two on and two out and a 2-1 count in the fifth. Ortiz later fouled off an 86 mph slider before Morrow froze him with a 97 mph fastball for a called third strike.

The Mariners used a little luck to score all their runs in the fourth and fifth innings.

They notched three in the fourth off Red Sox starter Jon Lester on a two-strike, bases-loaded Ronny Cedeno triple off the end of his bat. It landed just inside the right-field line and eluded a sliding J.D. Drew.

That came right after the Red Sox botched a potential inning-ending double-play grounder by Kenji Johjima.

Seattle got lucky again in the fifth when Franklin Gutierrez, in a 10-pitch at-bat, chopped an infield hit that stopped dead on the grass and loaded the bases with one out. Ryan Langerhans followed with a sacrifice fly.

But the Mariners failed to record a hit after that, allowing Lester to make it through 6-2/3 frames with nine strikeouts. Then, the Seattle bullpen couldn't finish the job.

"Obviously, with Batista and Lowe, these are two guys who have been awfully big for us on this road trip," Mariners manager Don Wakamatsu said. "I think ... the command of both of them just left them today. It was a tough outing for both of them, but again, we wouldn't be in this position, going 5-4 on a tough, tough road trip without those guys."

Geoff Baker: 206-464-8286 or gbaker@seattletimes.com

For the record

W-L W PCT
42-39 .519

Streak: L1

Home: 21-15

Road: 21-24

v. AL West: 13-14

vs. L.A.: 7-6

vs. Oakland: 6-3

vs. Texas: 0-5

vs. AL East: 11-7

vs. AL Cent.: 7-11

vs. NL: 11-7

vs. LHP: 14-11

vs. RHP: 28-28

Day: 16-12

Night: 26-27

One-run: 21-13

Extra inn.: 5-4

Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company

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