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Mitch Haniger and Jarred Kelenic headline the Mariners' season, which saw the club win 90 games in a close postseason race. Zach DeLoach crushes a three-run home run in the top of the 6th inning against the Rafters in the Arizona Fall League.
SeaUsRise pic. Mariners manager Scott Servais and president of baseball ops Jerry Dipoto discuss the club's season and bright future. Take a look at the best highlights from Ty France's second half of the season with the Mariners. Take a look at the best highlights from Mitch Haniger's second half of the season with the Mariners. Kyle Seager exits the game in tears in the top of the 9th inning to a standing ovation from the Mariners' crowd. Mariners skipper Scott Servais discusses the loss to the Angels, the team's future being bright, the fans showing up to the game and more.
Kyle Seager's son Crue throws out the first pitch to his dad prior to the Mariners' last game of the season. Jarred Kelenic lines an RBI single to right field, cutting the Mariners' deficit to in the bottom of the 2nd inning. Good for the road team. It was a workmanlike 1st period. The hard work made up for a handful of sloppy D-zone turnovers.
Again, more of the same. The crowd was sitting on its hands for the most part, a great situation for a road team in Chicago. On what was somewhat of a make-up call for earlier near-infractions by the Canucks, Jason Dickinson went off for hitting Debrincat, who embellished along the corner boards just enough to get a call.
Boarding at Vancouver killed it. A mildly unattractive period for the paying customers. Just six shots between the two teams nearing the mid-point of the period when the Canucks had an effective forechecking effort that led to the go ahead goal. What a difference a Hughes makes. He backpedalled along the blueline and sent a wrist shot towards Tanner Pearson in front who tipped it home.
Hughes picked up his th career point, the fastest Canucks D-man in history to reach that mark. The Blackhawks cycled effectively for a two-minute stretch with five minutes left but only generated one Grade-A scoring chance.
Dylan Strome took a hooking penalty with left in the 2nd to put the Canucks on their second power play. Brock Boeser roofed his own rebound to give the Canucks a lead with a-minute-and-a-half remaining on the second penalty. Clogged neutral zone. Good sticks. Through the first TV time-out, yes. In fact, as play continued, the Canucks actually had the better chances. Vancouver, Hughes actually, earned a power play at of the period as Dominik Kubalik dumped him as Hughes rushed along the left wing boards.
Hughes rang one off the post, and that was the closest the Canucks came on the man advantage. Two things: confidence, and a lead, contributed to good decision making and measured play in all three zones holding the lead. The Blackhawks finally put a little surge together with under eight-minutes to play. Demko and the Canucks withstood it, no damage until Conor Garland went off for upending Seth Jones as he tried to cruise into the slot with the puck.
The call came with remaining. The Blackhawks, down two goals, pulled the goalie to start the power play 6-on-4 with the O-zone draw. Tucker Poolman blocked a shot, helped win a puck battle in the corner, and found Garland coming out of the penalty box for an empty netter. The Mariners were held hitless in their three innings against White Sox starter Lance Lynn, who struck out four.
Dallas Keuchel is scheduled to start the Sunday game for the White Sox. There was speculation that Lucas Giolito, who is scheduled to start for Sox on Monday against Minnesota, could also be used on Sunday. He last pitched on Tuesday, so he would be on regular rest.
The opinions expressed in reader comments are those of the author only and do not reflect the opinions of The Seattle Times. Show caption. By Bob Condotta. But you should savor the present Larry Stone Mariners approaching halfway point exceeding expectations, but numbers shed doubts on if they can maintain it More.
Bob Condotta: or bcondotta seattletimes. Bob Condotta covers the Seahawks for the Seattle Times. He provides daily coverage of the team throughout the year.
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