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Baseball

Mariners muscle back into race

By Associated Press
Published September 21, 2003

OAKLAND, Calif. - Ben Davis saw the plate and nothing else. He charged home, knocked down the catcher and umpire and scored for Seattle.

The Mariners are set on making the AL West interesting until the very end, even if they have to run over people to do it.

Ichiro Suzuki had four hits and drove in a career-high five and Bret Boone added three hits and two RBIs Saturday as Seattle beat the first-place Athletics for the second straight day, 9-3.

"This is a great opportunity for us to jump up, stand up and be heard," Seattle's Mike Cameron said.

Oakland's lead dropped to three over Seattle, and the A's magic number to win their second straight division title remained at five.

"We're desperate," Davis said. "It's a good time to be greedy. No one wants to go home at the end of the season."

The Mariners scored both sixth-inning runs with hard home-plate collisions that made it tough for the A's to make a play. Mike Wood threw a wild pitch that allowed Cameron to come home from third, and Seattle's centerfielder ran into the pitcher at the plate after Wood failed to control an errant throw from catcher Ramon Hernandez.

Davis then leveled Hernandez and knocked the ball from his hands to score minutes later. Even umpire Joe West fell over on that one.

Hernandez left the game two innings later with a bruised right elbow, but manager Ken Macha believed he would play today in the series finale.

Cameron and pitcher Joel Pineiro fought to be the first ones to reach Davis and offer their congratulations for making such a clutch play. "That's big Ben," Suzuki said. "That type of play proved we are into the game and it gives us more enthusiasm."

"Ben Davis, hats off to him," Cameron said. "That's like my ultimate dream, to erupt the crowd. That was nice."

The 6-foot-4, 225-pound Davis said he was trying to lower his body to avoid getting injured, and he didn't see West in his way.

"I just tried to get a little lower ... and go for the brunt," Davis said. "It's not my intent to hurt anybody. I was just zoning everything out to try to score runs.

"That symbolizes what we were doing early in the year: playing good, hard, aggressive baseball."

Pineiro calmly worked out of jams to win for the second time in nine starts. After giving up a leadoff walk to Eric Byrnes in the fifth, Pineiro retired the next nine.

Suzuki's two-run single in the fourth gave him 200 hits for the third straight season, and his other three hits were doubles.

The Mariners, who had been struggling on offense lately, were impressive with their bats again. Seattle entered the series 38-for-141 (.270) in their past four games. They had 14 hits Friday and 17 Saturday.

[Last modified September 21, 2003, 02:03:13]


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