Shohei Ohtani drives in a run, pitches Angels past Mariners
SEATTLE — Shohei Ohtani held Seattle to one run in six innings and drove in a run at the plate, leading the Angels to a 4-3 victory over the Mariners on Wednesday.
Ohtani (1-0) kept the Mariners scoreless after giving up a run in a bumpy first inning, finishing his day having given up three hits and striking out eight.
Ohtani drove in Taylor Ward with a single in the top of the seventh against Mariners reliever Andrés Muñoz to put the Angels ahead 4-1.
Ohtani walked four and hit two batters, but his contributions both on the mound and at the plate were plenty good enough to lead the Angels to victory.
“He just didn’t have the command that he normally does,” Angels manager Phil Nevin said. “I’m sure he’ll tell you the same, but when he’s not on his game and pitches like that, we’ll take that every day against a good lineup.”
After struggling to find his command early, Ohtani settled down in his final three innings, giving up only one hit and striking out five batters.
The dawn of the pitch-clock era has fundamentally changed the game for pitchers and catchers, especially when things go haywire on the mound.
“The biggest thing for me was I couldn’t command my fastball,” Ohtani said. “That was the biggest issue I was seeing throughout the game.”
Ohtani struck out the side in the sixth, finishing his day by whiffing AJ Pollock with his 111th and final pitch.
“He’s a special talent, and he makes adjustments as well as anybody I’ve seen,” Nevin said. “That’s why he’s at where he’s at.”
After Julio Rodríguez scored in the bottom of the first to give Seattle the early lead, Logan O’Hoppe hit a two-run homer against Mariners starter Chris Flexen (0-1) to put the Angels on top 2-1.
Ohtani and Mike Trout both drove in runs off Muñoz in the seventh, but the Mariners pulled to within one run in the bottom half of the inning as Ty France and Eugenio Suarez drove in runs.
The Mariners brought the potential winning run to the plate in the ninth inning, but France struck out against José Quijada to end the game. Quijada picked up his first save.
“Offensively, I thought we did a really nice job against Ohtani,” Mariners manager Scott Servais said. “That was the plan going in kind of grind through at-bats, get the pitch count up there. I think the thing that hurt us today a little bit, we made a couple outs on the bases and took us out of possibly some bigger innings there, when we did have a chance to score runs.”
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