OAKLAND, Calif.—George Kirby struck out nine in five innings en route to his first win in nearly a month as the Seattle Mariners beat the Oakland Athletics 4–3 on Tuesday night.
Josh Rojas had three hits, Luke Raley added two hits and an RBI, and Ty France drove in two runs to keep the American League West-leading Mariners rolling on Manager Scott Servais’ 57th birthday.
Coming off a 6–1 homestand, Seattle has won four straight games and eight of its past nine.
“I feel like we’re starting to hit a stride, but we still got so much room to do better,” Kirby said. “We’re pitching well. We’re hitting well. We’ve got a good team. It’s about time.”
Abraham Toro had an RBI single and JJ Bleday singled twice for Oakland. The A’s have lost five of their past six games.
The game drew another low crowd, this one 5,624, to the Coliseum. Not far away, the Oakland Ballers attracted a sellout crowd of more than 4,200 for their inaugural game. The Ballers are an independent minor-league club in the Pioneer League that was formed in response to the A’s announced intention to relocate to Las Vegas.
Kirby (5–5), who had two losses and a no-decision in his previous three starts, was mostly sharp against the A’s. He allowed six hits and two runs, with just one walk.
The Mariners right-hander has been one of baseball’s most efficient strike throwers this season. The walk was only the seventh in 73 1/3 innings that Kirby has allowed.
“I thought George’s stuff was really good,” Mr. Servais said. “There were just no easy outs. They were fouling balls off, created some traffic against him. He made some huge pitches to get out of it.”
Three Mariners relievers each pitched a scoreless inning after Kirby left. Andrés Muñoz allowed a run in the ninth on a wild pitch before leaving with back soreness. Tayler Saucedo retired Brent Rooker on a comebacker for the final out, recording his second save.
“Their pitching staff is one of the better pitching staffs in the league,” A’s Manager Mark Kotsay said. “I thought we did a pretty darn good job against Kirby. But at the end of the day, we couldn’t get the big hit.”
The Mariners got to A’s starter Mitch Spence (4–3) for four doubles and three runs in the third inning. France drove in two runs, then scored on Raley’s double.
After the A’s reached Kirby for a run in the bottom of the inning—the first run allowed by a Mariners starter in four games—Rojas beat out a two-out infield single to drive in Dylan Moore.
“I do think our offense is starting to roll a little bit,” Mr. Servais said. “On road trips, no matter where you’re at, you need multiple guys to contribute. That’s what’s going on right now.”
Spence allowed nine hits and four runs in six innings.