Santana's home run powers Mariners to 3rd straight win over Blue Jays
Seattle wins 7th straight, Toronto loses 8th game in last 9 outings
Carlos Santana provided the jolt to back up another terrific night of pitching and kept Seattle on the kind of roll not seen from the Mariners in nearly two decades.
Seattle won its seventh straight and has taken 15 of its past 18. The 15-3 run is the best 18-game stretch by the Mariners since May 16-June 5, 2003.Ā Toronto dropped its third straight game to Seattle and has lost eight of their last nine.
"When fans are there, when it's loud every single pitch, when everybody's hanging on every single pitch it's fun to play baseball," Seattle starter Robbie Ray said. "It's a lot of fun."
Santana's homer came in the seventh inning after Seattle had managed just one hit off Manoah through the first six. J.P. Crawford led off the seventh with a single and Santana ambushed a fastball in the middle of the plate for his fifth home of the season and his biggest hit to date with the Mariners.
Absolutely, positively CRUSHED. <a href="https://t.co/SFz8LlVobR">pic.twitter.com/SFz8LlVobR</a>
—@Mariners
"[Manoah]Ā was pitching great. We needed him to make a mistake, and we need to take advantage of it and we did," Seattle manager Scott Servais said.
Santana was acquired in late June from Kansas City for a pair of pitchers.
"The energy is great," Santana said. "We have to keep it up. It's a long season."
Ray faced his former team for the first time and threw six innings, allowing just three hits and one run on George Springer's 16th home run of the season leading off the sixth inning. Ray won the AL Cy Young Award last season with the Blue Jays, but did not travel to Toronto when the teams met in May due to border restrictions related to the COVID-19 vaccine.
Ray struck out six and pitched out of a major jam in the fifth inning when Toronto loaded the bases with no outs and failed to score. Over his past six starts, Ray has a 0.91 ERA with 11 walks and 46 strikeouts.
"That pitching staff over there, that bullpen and the way they're pitching, you got to give them credit too. They haven't allowed that many runs in the last 20 something games and they're hot," Toronto manager Charlie Montoyo said. "They're playing good baseball and they had Robbie Ray on the mound today. We've seen that before."
FIRED UP š„ <a href="https://t.co/edkGAAQy8p">pic.twitter.com/edkGAAQy8p</a>
—@Mariners
Matt Brash (2-3) struck out a pair as part of a perfect seventh inning, including a 13-pitch strikeout of Lordes Gurriel Jr. that included nine foul balls.
Pitching for the third straight day, Diego Castillo faced trouble in the ninth after one-out singles by Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Alejandro Kirk. Castillo got groundouts from Teoscar Hernandez and Matt Chapman for his fifth save.
Manoah struck out seven and walked four.
"It's a pleasure to manage him. I'm telling you because when you take the mound, he gave you all he had [and]Ā saved the bullpen for tomorrow," Montoyo said.
All of Toronto's offenceĀ came from the one swing by Springer. It was his 23rd career home run against Seattle. He's hit 13 of the 23 at T-Mobile Park.
A Seattle <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/SpringerDinger?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#SpringerDinger</a> š¤ <a href="https://t.co/ExkkII7nAH">pic.twitter.com/ExkkII7nAH</a>
—@BlueJays
With files from CBC Sports