Emerson Hancock had 70ish pitches to work with today and made them last for 3.2 innings – not as efficient as one would hope. He had to dance around some trouble right away, loading the bases in the first on three singles, but was able to work out of the trouble by striking out Reese McGuire, who chased after a high-and-away fastball at 96.5 mph, and getting Brock Wilken to ground into a forceout.
Brendan Donovan gave Hancock a little breathing room in the bottom of the inning with his first homer
of the spring, ambushing a first-pitch fastball, poorly located, from Brewers starter Carlos Rodriguez:
But Hancock gave that run right back in the second, giving up a hard-hit single followed by a double; the runner then scored on a sacrifice fly. Hancock’s velocity was slowly climbing in the inning, working up from 94 to 95 to 96 on both his four-seamer and sinker, and he polished off the inning by dismantling Brandon Lockridge on four pitches: three straight sweepers before getting him swinging after a four-seamer away.
The Mariners built a lead in the bottom of the third thanks to a Luke Raley three-run homer that scored Brendan Donovan, who had walked, and Josh Naylor, who had singled, although some of the credit for Raley’s blast belongs to Naylor, who was an absolute pest at first base, urging Donovan into a double steal and just generally wreaking havoc with the pitcher. Rodriguez then delivered Raley a 94.5 mph fastball right in the middle of the plate and Raley, having a good spring now that he’s finally healthy and enjoying frequent playing time with so many outfielders away for the WBC…did not miss it.
Hancock was on his way to a shutdown inning in the fourth, opening with back-to-back strikeouts, but then left a 94 mph fastball on the plate for Cooper Pratt, who singled and then promptly stole second. Another single on a slider that wound up in the middle of the plate moved him to third, and then both runners scored on a Tyler Black triple to shave the Mariners’ lead down to 4-3 and end Hancock’s day. It’s a shame because the triple was actually on a well-located sweeper at the bottom of the zone that Black just flicked into the wind and floated into the deepest corner of Peoria Stadium, and Hancock had made several good pitches in the at-bat, obviously emptying the tank with some 98 mph fastballs. Baseball! Wyatt Lunsford-Shenkmen, who has one of my favorite nicknames (“The Law Firm”) came in and got a groundout to end the threat there.
In the bottom of the fifth, it was Luke Raley again, this time with an RBI double as he ambushed a first pitch from former Mariner Easton McGee. He then scored on Randy Arozarena’s first homer of the spring, making the game 7-3 and helping deliver the Mariners another Cactus League win.
Spring training doesn’t matter, but having a complete team in spring training does matter if you want to win games, it seems.









