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Sports May 6, 2008
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Millwood, Rangers fall at Seattle
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

TELL ME HE DIDN'T JUST MAKE THAT CALL - Texas' Brandon Boggs (right) reacts to striking out in the fifth inning of agame against the Seattle Mariners in Seattle on Monday night. Texas lost the game, 7-3, and has the worst record in Major League Baseball.
SEATTLE (AP) - John McLaren was being his usual, sunny self. The Seattle Mariners' manager was encouraging Jarrod Washburn, saying he'd been pitching far better than his record indicated.

"I'm 1-4, Mac. I'm 1-4!" the left-hander growled back at McLaren last week, without cracking a smile.

A smile appeared Monday night - for Washburn and his previously punchless offense.

Washburn (2-4) stifled Texas on just one hit through six innings before leaving with a calf injury, Wladimir Balentien and Richie Sexson homered to provide all the offense needed, and Seattle beat the Rangers 7-3 to end a five-game losing streak.

"It bothers me a lot. I hate losing," Washburn said about his bottom line, almost grunting after allowing three runs or fewer for the fifth time in seven starts. "Anytime you are 1-4 - no matter how well you pitch - it's still 1-4."

The left-hander doubled his win total by allowing four hits and three runs in six-plus innings against Texas. He struck out three and walked none.

Kevin Millwood (2-3) gave up nine hits and seven runs in three innings, his shortest start of the season, and lost his 10th consecutive road decision. That tied the Texas franchise record by Joe McClain of the Washington Senators from 1961-62.

Texas (13-20) has the worst record in the majors (13-20) and plays at Seattle tonight and tomorrow night, both beginning at 9 p.m. Central time.

At least Millwood is still on track for his next start Saturday against Oakland. McLain's brief career ended before he could stop his road losing streak.

"I didn't have an easy inning, period," Millwood said. "You miss over the plate all the time and that is what is going to happen."

Millwood has allowed 17 earned runs in his last 15 1/3 innings. He walked one and struck out two.

Texas was without Josh Hamilton, who was leading the major leagues with 33 RBIs while starting every game. The center fielder did not start in what manager Ron Washington called "a mental break."

"No one expected him to play the whole month of April," Washington said of Hamilton, who won a game at Seattle last month with a home run in the ninth inning off closer J.J. Putz.

As good as Hamilton has been, he probably couldn't have produced the touchdown that Texas needed against Washburn after six innings.

Washburn beat Texas for the first time in three years, a run of 10 starts. And it was his first home win in 11 months - one which kept the disappointing Mariners out of last place in the AL West they had planned on winning this season.

Washburn called the night, "a step in the right direction."

A painful step. Washburn had a 7-0 lead and had allowed just two baserunners entering the seventh despite feeling a familiar tug in his calf while warming up before the game. He bulled through, relying mostly on fastballs.

He advised pitching coach Mel Stottlemyre to watch that he wasn't changing his mechanics to compensate for the injury.

McLaren called the injury minor, adding trainers gave him belief that Washburn would make his next start.

After feeling what he called "a pop" on his last pitch of the sixth, Washburn gave up a single to Gerald Laird, a double to Michael Young and a two-run double to Milton Bradley in the seventh.

He left the game after a brief mound consultation between McLaren, Stottlemyre and an assistant trainer.

Washburn waved to the crowd just before disappearing into the dugout, the third time in two weeks a Mariners starter left a game because of injury.

Brandon Boggs drove in Bradley with a groundout against reliever Sean Green to make it 7-3.

Sexson hit a solo home run, his seventh of the season, and Balentien hit a three-run homer off Millwood in the third to put the Mariners up 7-0. Millwood's last road win was June 17, 2007, at Cincinnati - 13 road starts ago.

Seattle had one hit in 21 at-bats with runners in scoring position in its previous four games. An RBI single by Jose Lopez and an RBI double by Raul Ibanez in the first made the Mariners 2- for-2 in such situations three batters into the game.