Seager lifts Mariners past Royals

Seager’s home run boosts Mariners past Royals

KANSAS CITY — Kyle Seager has heard the complaints about his slow starts to the season. He’s lamented them, dissected them, analyzed them and tried to come up for solutions to reverse them.

In the simplest of terms, here’s how he plans to do it: Don’t think about it, don’t talk about it, just hit.

“You can’t really control what happens once you hit it, you can only control the swing you make,” he said. “And if I’m making better swings, the results in theory should be better.”

While he isn’t having quite the torrid first 10 games that some of his teammate are, Seager has looked much better at the plate these first weeks compared to seasons past. And he’s starting to get those results. It culminated in the eighth inning of the Mariners’ 4-2 win over the Royals on Wednesday.

Following a gritty two-out plate appearance from Mitch Haniger, who worked a seven-pitch walk after falling behind 0-2 in the count, Seager stepped to the plate and smashed a two-run homer over the wall in right field to break a 2-2 tie.

Royals’ reliever Justin Grimm left a curveball over the middle of the plate on a 1-1 count. Perhaps in past years, Seager hits it hard but pulls the ball foul, or even second guesses himself and lets it go by. Not this time. He’s not searching for a swing to take advantage of that pitch. He’s got one that feels comfortable and right. So he jumped all over the pitch, sending a high fly ball that carried over the wall.

“That was a huge home run,” manager Scott Servais said. “That ball was up in the air forever.”

Seager had driven a ball to the warning track in the first inning for a sacrifice fly, but he felt he had better contact. Still, when Royals rightfielder Jorge Soler started tracking it, there was some doubt.

“When I hit it, I thought I got it,” Seager said. “But the way he was kind of going back there, I was actually pretty worried he was going to catch it.”

It was Seager’s 11th career go-ahead homer in the eighth inning or later. Since 2013, only Chris Davis (15) and Justin Upton (14) have more.

Mariners closer Edwin Diaz notched his fourth save of the season, working around an error by Jean Segura that allowed the leadoff batter to reach in the bottom of the ninth. Diaz coolly retired the next three hitters, striking out Jon Jay to end the game.

With the win, Seattle finished the road trip with a 4-3 record and improved to 6-4 on the season. It’s a solid accomplishment considering they have been without Ben Gamel and Mike Zunino for all 10 of those games and Nelson Cruz for eight of them.

“I love the way we are competing,” Seager said. “I’m sure (Servais) would love to have some of these guys back here, but the way we are competing and getting the job done, we’ve found ways to win. That’s what we need to do.”

The hope is that all three of those players could return at some point on the upcoming homestand, which starts with a three-game series vs. the A’s on Friday. Getting close to full strength in the lineup would be useful since the Mariners face the Astros in a four-game series to close it out.

“I like where the club is at and we aren’t even at full strength yet,” Servais said. “We are in a good spot. We are a little under the radar and we are okay with that.”

It looked as though the Mariners were in for another run-scoring party. They scored two runs off of Royals’ starter Danny Duffy, who was all over the place with his pitches. The Mariners wisely made Duffy work, drawing three walks in the inning. Seager drove in Dee Gordon with a sacrifice fly while Robinson Cano scored on a wild pitch. When Duffy got the final out in the first, he’d thrown 36 pitches, which loomed large.

Like most established big league starters, Duffy made an adjustment and started throwing strikes. He retired 12 batters in a row at one point before exiting with two outs in the sixth inning with the scored tied at 2-2.

“We didn’t much going after Duffy settled in,” Servais said. “He got the changeup and the curveball going and he was tough to hit. Fortunately, we got his pitch count up and got him out of the game early.”

The Mariners got a solid outing from starter James Paxton, who battled some shaky command early in the game. The big lefty worked six innings, giving up two runs on two hits with a walk and 10 strikeouts, which tied a career high.

“I fell behind a few more counts than I wanted to,” he said. “I need to get in the strikezone early and keep that pitch count down. I’d like to get deeper in the game.”