Boston second baseman Dustin Pedroia is having another solid season for the Red Sox, batting .270. / Wiki Commons

GAME: Red Sox (40-36, 3rd, AL East, – 6.5 GB) at Mariners (33-45, 4th, AL West, – 15.5 GB). GAME #: 79. SERIES: 2nd of 4 games. MEETING: 2nd (Mariners lead 1-0). WHEN: Friday, 7:10 p.m., Safeco Field. PROBABLE PITCHERS: RHP Aaron Cook (Boston, 1-1, 9.39) vs. RHP Hector Noesi (Seattle, 2-9, 5.50). STREAKS: Mariners W 1; Red Sox L 1. TV: ROOT Sports, MLB TV. RADIO: KIRO 710 (Seattle), Mariners Radio Network.

With Felix Hernandez pitching a 1-0 gem against the Red Sox Thursday, the Mariners pitching staff has now limited opponents to two runs or less in each of the last six games, the longest streak in the major leagues this season and tied for the second-longest streak in franchise history.

The Mariners Friday will task RHP Hector Noesi with matching the record, set May 16-22, 2011. Noesi will oppose Aaron Cook, who will make his second start in a row in place of the injured Clay Buchholz. Only three current Mariners have ever taken hacks against Cook. A closer look:

MARINERS: RHP Hector Noesi (2-9, 5.50 ERA, 1.30 WHIP)

Hector Noesi

The 25-year-old Noesi, in his second major league season and first with the Mariners, is making his 16th start and first against the Red Sox. Noesi, who has largely struggled for the past month and a half, is coming off a good, although losing, outing against San Diego June 24, when the Padres won 2-0.

A native of Esperanza, Valverde, Dominican Republic, the 6-3, 200-pound Noesi was signed as an amateur free agent by the New York Yankees in 2004.

Noesi made his major league debut May 18, 2011 for the Yankees against the Baltimore Orioles. The fifth Yankees reliever, he collected the win by working four innings, allowing four hits, no runs and fanning four.

Noesi became a Mariner Jan. 23 when he was traded by the Yankees, along with Jesus Montero, to Seattle for Jose Campos (minors) and Michael Pineda, an All-Star starter.

Noesi, who appeared in 30 games for the Yankees, making two starts, has a career record of 4-11, 5.10 ERA.

  • LAST START: June 24 at San Diego, lost 2-0; allowed two earned runs on seven hits in 6.0 innings; struck out six, walked three and threw 105 pitches, 63 strikes.
  • LAST VS. RED SOX: Aug. 6, 2011, pitching for New York, did not factor in the decision in a 4-2 loss to the Red Sox; allowed three earned runs on three hits in 1.0 innings; no strikeouts, two walks.
  • CAREER VS. RED SOX: 0-0, 6.43 ERA in two games, no starts, covering 7.0 innings; one strikeout to three walks; one home run.
  • AT SAFECO FIELD: 2-4, 3.02 ERA in seven games, including six starts, covering 41.2 innings; 25 strikeouts to 13 walks; 5.4 strikeouts per nine innings; five home runs.
  • LOVES/HATES TO FACE: Noesi has a limited record against Boston. Current members of the Red Sox are 4-for-17, .235 BA against Noesi and only Jacoby Ellsbury, 2-for-4, has more than one hit off Noesi.

Noesi / 2012

  • April 9 (L, 0-1): Shelled for seven earned runs in 3.0 innings in an 11-5 loss to the Rangers.
  • April 14 (W, 1-1): Collected his first win as a Mariner by working 8.0 IP, allowing five hits and no runs in a 4-0 win over Oakland; fanned six, issued one walk and recorded 17 fly-ball outs vs. five ground-ball outs; 100 pitches, 68 for strikes.
  • April 20 (L, 1-2): Didn’t make it past the second inning in a 7-3 loss to the White Sox at Safeco Field; allowed six earned runs on six hits; one home run.
  • April 26 (ND, 1-2): Gave up four runs on five hits over 5.0 innings and allowed one home run; threw 77 pitches, 49 for strikes.
  • May 1 (L, 1-3): Allowed three runs on three hits in 5.2 innings in a 3-1 loss to the Rays; struck out one and walked three, throwing 84 pitches, just 46 for strikes; one home run.
  • May 6 (W, 2-3): Defeated Nick Blackburn and the Twins 5-2 at Safeco Field; allowed one earned run in 7.0 innings; struck out five, walked three and one home run; threw 105 pitches, 73 for strikes.
  • May 12 (L, 2-4): Lost to the Yankees 6-2; five earned runs on six hits in 7.0 innings; struck out four and walked none; two home runs, including one to former Mariner Raul Ibanez.
  • May 17 (ND, 2-4): At Cleveland, received a no-decision in Seattle’s 6-5 loss; one run on five hits over 6.1 innings; struck out five and walked three; Mariners had a 4-0 lead in the seventh but lost in extra innings 6-5.
  • May 12 (L, 2-5): At Safeco Field, suffered a 3-1 loss to the Texas Rangers; three earned runs on three hits over 8.0 innings; struck out seven, walked two in a 102-pitch effort, 66 for strikes.
  • May 27 (L, 2-6): At Safeco Field, a 4-2 loss to the Angels; three earned runs on five hits over 8.0 innings; fourth quality start of the season; did not strike out a batter and issued two walks.
  • June 2 (ND, 2-6): At U.S. Celluar Field, took a no decision in Seattle’s 10-8 win over the White Sox; worked just 4.1 innings (68 pitches); six earned runs on seven hits; three home runs.
  • June 6 (ND, 2-6): At Angels Stadium, took a no-decision in Seattle’s 8-6 victory; allowed six earned runs on four hits 4.0 innings, second-shortest outing of the season; struck out one but walked five.
  • June 13 (L, 2-7): At Safeco Field, lost to the San Diego Padres 1-0; worked 7.0 innings and allowed one earned, but it was a home run that beat him; struck out five, walked three; threw 99 pitches, 60 for strikes.
  • June 18 (L, 2-8): At Arizona, lost to the Diamondbacks 7-1; allowed five earned runs on nine hits in 6.0 innings; struck out five, walked two; threw 96 pitches, 62 for strikes.
  • June 24 (L, 2-9): At San Diego, lost 2-0; allowed two earned runs on seven hits in 6.0 innings; struck out six, walked three and threw 105 pitches, 63 for strikes.

RED SOX: RHP Aaron Cook (1-1, 9.39 ERA, 1.95 WHIP)

Aaron Cook

The 33-year-old Cook, in his 11th major league season and first with the Red Sox, is making his third start and first against the Mariners. Cook, who has had half a dozen starts this season at AAA Pawtucket, is coming off a 9-4 victory over the Atlanta Braves June 24.

A native of Fort Campbell, KY., the 6-3, 215-pound Cook played prep baseball at Hamilton (OH.) High School. The Colorado Rockies selected him in the second round of the 1997 amateur draft.

Cook pitched in the Colorado system until Aug. 10, 2002, when he made his major league debut in a 15-1 loss to the Chicago Cubs. Cook allowed one run on two hits in two innings and did not factor in the decision.

Cook went 2-1 in 2002 and pitched for the Rockies through the 2011 season. He had his best year in 2008 when he won 16 games and made the National League All-Star team (pitched three scoreless innings). Cook went 72-68, 4.53 in his 10 years with the Rockies.

Following the 2011 season, the Rockies granted Cook free agency and he signed with the Red Sox Jan. 9 on a minor league deal. Recovering from shoulder and knee injuries that plagued him in 2010 and 2011, Cook began the 2012 season with Pawtucket.

  • 2012: He went 3-0 in six stars at Pawtucket, went on the disabled list and was activated June 24 to replace teammate Clay Buchholz, who was scratched from the rotation due to illness and later placed on the 15-day disabled list.
  • LAST START: June 24, defeated the Atlanta Braves 9-4,  pitching 5.0 innings without a strikeout or a walk; allowed two earned runs on three hits.
  • LAST VS. MARINERS: Never pitched.
  • CAREER VS. MARINERS: No record.
  • AT SAFECO FIELD: No record.
  • LOVES/HATES TO FACE: Cook faced just three members of the current Mariners: Brendan Ryan (1-for-3, .333 BA), Miguel Olivo (1-for-5, .250 BA), Chone Figgins (0-for-7, .000 BA).

LAST GAME

Mariners 1, Red Sox 0

AT SEATTLE (June 28): Felix Hernandez (6-5) matched his career high with 13 strikeouts in a complete-game five-hitter and John Jaso made sure Hernandez got the win by lacing a walk-off single in the ninth inning for a 1-0 win. Jason’s hit scored Casper Wells, who had doubled. “Tonight is as good as I’ve ever seen him,” Seattle manager Eric Wedge said. “Against a lot of veteran hitters, a lot of good hitters, and a 0-0 ballgame like that, you couldn’t ask for anything more.” Said Boston 2B Dustin Pedroia: “That’s the best we’ve seen. He was unreal. His stuff was moving all over the place. He kept the ball out of the middle of the plate. He was pretty special tonight.”

AL WEST STANDINGS

Team W L Pct. GB Home Road Last 10 Streak
Rangers 48 29 .623 25-14 23-15 8-2 Won 3
Angels 43 33 .566 4.5 22-17 21-16 8-2 Won 4
Athletics 37 40 .481 11.0 19-19 18-21 6-4 Lost 1
Mariners 33 45 .423 15.5 14-21 19-24 4-6 Won 1

MARINERS / STATS NOTES

  • CURRENT HOME STAND: Three vs. Oakland Athletics, four vs. Boston Red Sox Thursday-Sunday, three vs. Baltimore Orioles Monday-Wednesday.
  • MARINERS VS. RED SOX: Mariners are 159-215 all-time vs. the Red Sox, including 35-29 at Safeco Field. Mariners lost the 2011 series and haven’t won a season series from the Red Sox since 2009. Seattle has never swept the Red Sox in a four-game series, nor has Boston swept in one. The Mariners last took a three-game series from the Red Sox at Safeco in 2007.
  • HOME STAND PROMOTIONS: FRIDAY — Annual Grab-Bag fundraiser, benefiting Mariners Care. Wives of Mariners players, along with volunteers from Mariners Care, will sell mystery “grab-bags” containing a baseball signed by one of the 2012 Mariners; SUNDAY — Former Mariners pitcher Mark Langston will throw out the first pitch as part of the Mariners season-long 35th anniversary celebration; Viva Las Vargas Night – First 10,000 fans pick up the ultimate Viva Las Vargas accessory, a pair of Elvis-style sunglasses as the sights and sounds of Vegas envelop Safeco Field. Mariners Care Silent Auction; SUNDAY — Drawstring Backpack Day presented by MLB Network (first 20,000 fans). Kids Run the Bases (Following the game, all youngsters 14 and under); Senior Special Day – Fans 60 and over receive $5 off select View Level seats or $10 off select Main Level seats; MONDAYBECU Family Night; TUESDAY — King’s Court in session; Katie Flood, 2012 NCAA 1,500-meter champion from UW, ceremonial first pitch; Military Special Night (Military personnel receive $5 off select View Level seats or $10 off select Main Level seats); WEDNESDAYGrand Slam Family Package Day (ticket, hot dog and Pepsi for $15 per person for families of 4-12; Military Special Day; Senior Special Day.
  • LOG: The shutout by Felix Hernandez Thursday was the fifth of his career  (first since June 30, 2010 at NYY) and his 19th career game with 10 or more strikeouts. It was also the third time in his career that he struck out 13, the last time May 22, 2011 at San Diego . . . First time in Hernandez’s career that he has fanned 10+ in consecutive games . . . Casper Wells had a remarkable game in the field. He took away a hit from Mike Aviles with a sliding catch for the second out of the eighth inning. Moments later, Wells was racing toward the left-field corner and made an even better backhanded sliding catch while crashing into the padded wall for the final out . . . Franklin Gutierrez left after a single in the fourth inning when he was hit in the face on a pickoff attempt . . . With Wednesday’s loss, the Mariners have now dropped six consecutive series . . . Seattle’s first-round draft pick, Mike Zunino, won the Johnny Bench award on Thursday night as the top catcher in college baseball . . . Ichiro went 0-for-4 and saw his hitting streak end at nine games.
  • SEASON SUMMARY: Series Record: Won 10, Split 0, Lost 15 . . . Sweeps: 2; Swept: 4. . . . Longest Win Streak: 4 (April 24-27, May 18-21); Longest Losing Streak: 7 (April 28-May 4) . . . Vs. AL East: 3-10; vs. AL Central: 9-11; vs. AL West: 13-14; vs. LAA: 2-5; vs. Oak: 6-4; vs. Tex: 5-5; vs. NL West: 8-10; vs. Interleague: 8-10 . . . Biggest Lead: 1.0, April 7; Farthest Behind: 15.5, June 29 . . . Most Runs Scored: 21, May 30 at Texas (21-8); Most Runs Allowed: 11, April 9 at Texas . . . Walk-Off Wins: 3, May 7, first since Sept. 14, 2011 vs. New York, and first via a sacrifice fly (John Jaso) since Sept. 14, 2007 vs. Tampa Bay (Jose Guillen); June 17 vs. San Francisco (Justin Smoak ninth-inning single); June 28 vs. Boston (Jaso PH ninth-inning single) . . . Walk-Off Losses: 1, May 17, at Cleveland, Carlos Santana bases-loaded single off League in 11th . . . Times Opponent Shut out: 5; Times Shut out by Opponent: 9; Comeback Wins: 7; Largest Comeback: 3; Blown Leads: 21; Largest Comeback: 3.
  • BATTING: Mariners rank 11th (AL) in runs (312), 12th in hits (620), eighth in doubles (124), ninth in triples (11) and 10th in home runs (69) . . . Rank 12th in batting average (.235), 14th in on-base percentage (.298), 13th in slugging (.369) and 13th in OPS (.667) . . . batting 145-for-608 (.238) with runners in scoring position after going 1-for-4 Thursday . . . out-homered 90-69 . . . left 489 men on base, opponents 473 . . . scored 312 runs, opponents 331 . . . scored 160 of 312 runs in the first four innings . . . Mariners 26-11 when scoring 4+ runs . . . Batting Average: Ichiro, .272; Hits: Ichiro, 86; Runs: Dustin Ackley, 41; Home Runs: Justin Smoak, 11; RBIs: Kyle Seager, 46 . . . Mariners have homered in 36 of last 58 games . . batted around six times: April 7 at Oakland (4th inning), April 9 at Texas (1st), April 17 vs. Cleveland (4th), May 29 at Texas (8th), May 30 at Texas (2nd and 3rd).
  • BATTING EXTRA: Longest Hitting Streak: Dustin Ackley, 13 games, May 3-17 . . . Four-Hit Games: Ichiro, March 28 vs. Oakland; Justin Smoak, April 17 vs. Cleveland; Jesus Montero, May 1 at Tampa; Kyle Seager, May 30 at Texas; Michael Saunders, June 2, at Chicago; Ichiro, June 19 at Arizona; Franklin Gutierrez, June 22 at San Diego . . .  Grand Slams: Michael Saunders, April 27 at Toronto; Alex Liddi, May 23 vs. Texas . . . Back-To-Back Home Runs: Jesus Montero, Justin Smoak, 3rd inning, May 20, at Colorado . . . Notable: Kyle Seager’s single in the fourth inning April 17 marked the 50,000th hit in Mariners’ history; Brendan Ryan’s walk in the same frame scored Justin Smoak with the 25,000th run in franchise history . . . Montero’s 13 RBIs in April were the most by a Mariners’ rookie since 1986.
  • PITCHING: Mariners 10th in ERA (4.13), seventh in hits allowed (645), ninth in runs allowed (337), 12th in home runs allowed (90), eighth in walks (225) and sixth in strikeouts (576) . . . Games: Tom Wilhelmsen, 35; Starts: Jason Vargas 17; Wins: Vargas 7; ERA: Felix Hernandez 3.09; Complete Games: Kevin Milwood 1; Hernandez 1; Shutouts: Millwood 1; Hernandez 1; Saves: League 9 . . . Nominal closer Brandon League is 0-4 with nine saves and four blown saves . . . Mariners starters have recorded 10 games with at least 8.0 IP . . . Tom Wilhelmsen has not allowed a run in his last 15.2 innings over 13 appearances.
  • ICHIRO (0-for-4 Thursday) has 776 multi-hit games, which ranks fourth among active players, and No. 1 since his debut in 2001. Ichiro’s 48 games with four or more hits leads all active players . . . Three-hit game June 22 marked the 229th of his major league career . . . Ranks T94 on career hits list (2,513) with Jimmy Ryan (2,513) and needs one to tie No. 93 Buddy Bell (2,514) . . . Has 37 leadoff home runs, No. 6 all time; needs one to tie Jimmy Rollins for No. 5 . . . Has recorded 99 outfield assists. Only Jeff Francouer, with 100, has more . . . With 99 career home runs, needs one to become the 12th Mariner with 100. Breakdown: 97 as a leadoff hitter, one batting second, one batting third.
  • ODDS/ENDS: Mariners have one more bobblehead night: July 28 (Dan Wilson and Randy Johnson).
  • DEBUTS: Munenori Kawasaki (April 7), Lucas Luetge (April 7), Erasmo Ramirez (April 9), Hisashi Iwakuma (April 20), Stephen Pryor (June 2).
  • DISABLED LIST: George Sherrill (60-day, April 13, strained flexor bundle), Adam Moore (15-day, March 28, fractured wrist), Mike Carp (15-day, June 13, inflamed right elbow).
  • EX-MARINERS VS. CURRENT MARINERS: April 19Jack Hannahan, Indians, 2-run single in ninth off Brandon League in Tribe’s 2-1 win; April 28Brandon Morrow, Blue Jays, one earned run over 7.0 innings in 7-0 win; May 11, Raul Ibanez, Yankees, 3-run homer off Felix Hernandez in 6-2 win; May 12Raul Ibanez, Yankees, solo homer off Hector Noesi in 6-2 win; May 15, David Ortiz, Red Sox, solo homer off Blake Beaven in 5-0 Red Sox win; May 16, Shin-Soo Choo (3), Asdrubal Cabrera (2) and Jose Lopez (1) combined for 6 hits in 9-3 Cleveland win; May 17, Casey Kotchman (2), Cabrera (2), Jose Lopez (1), Choo (1) had six of Cleveland’s 10 hits, plus 5 RBIs, in a 6-5 win.

2012 RECORDS / MILESTONES

  • April 24: Catcher Miguel Olivo matched the franchise record  when he was charged with three passed balls in a 7-4 win at Detroit. Jerry Narron let three balls get by him Oct. 4, 1980, and Jeff Clement did likewise Aug. 10, 2008 (Clement was catching knuckleballer R.A. Dickey).
  • April 27: Michael Saunders joined Donnie Scott (April 29, 1985) and Jimmy Presley (April 8, 1986) as the only Mariners to hit two home runs in a game in the ninth inning or later (solo homer in the 9th, grand slam in the 10th).
  • April 30: When both Miguel Olivo and Jesus Montero homered, it marked the first time in franchise history that two players had homered in the same game as a catcher.
  • May 2: Ichiro set a club record for most putouts by a right fielder in a nine-inning game, registering 10 in a 5-4 loss at Tampa.
  • May 3: The Mariners featured a lineup at Tampa Bay that included seven left- handed hitters and two switch-hitters. It marked only the third time in club history that the Mariners used an all left-sided lineup. Others: Aug. 13, 1983 at California and Aug. 9, 1983 at Oakland.
  • May 5: Combined one-hitter by Felix Hernandez and Steve Delabar vs. Minnesota was the 13th in Mariners history. Ten have been thrown by one pitcher, three combined. Most recent combined: Michael Pineda, Jeff Gray and Brandon League vs. Tampa, July 30, 2011. Most recent by one pitcher: Jarrod Washburn, July 6, 2009.
  • May 9: When John Jaso batted leadoff against Detroit, it marked the first time since 1978 that a catcher had hit first for the Marines (Bob Stinson). Oddly, lefty Jaso led off against Tiger lefty Drew Smyly.
  • May 8: Kevin Millwood’s 2-0 shutout marked his first in nearly nine years. He did not surrender his first hit until there were two outs in the sixth. Millwood’s gem marked only the fourth time in 1,440 games at Coors Field that an opposing pitcher held the Rockies to two hits or less while shutting them out. Millwood’s complete game also was the first by a Mariner in 2012.
  • May 27: The pinch-hit grand slam allowed by Felix Hernandez to Alberto Callaspo marked just the sixth against the Mariners in 35 years, and the first since May 6, 1988 when Pat Sheridan of Detroit hit one off Mike Jackson.
  • May 30: Mariners defeated Texas 21-8, just the third time in franchise history they have scored 20 or more runs in a game. The Mariners, with 20 hits, became the first team since 1880 to score 20 runs in a game in the same season it also go perfect-oed.
  • June 8: Kevin Millwood and five relievers collaborated for the 10th combined no-hitter in major league history in a 1-0 win over the Dodgers at Safeco Field. Millwood (6.0), Charlie Furbush (0.2), Stephen Pryor (0.1), Lucas Luetge (0.1), Brandon League (0.2), and Tom Wilhelmsen (1.0) tied the MLB record for most pitchers used in a no-hitter (Houston vs. the Yankees June 11, 2003). It marked the third no-hitter in Mariners history.
  • June 18: Aaron Hill of Arizona hit for the cycle in the Diamondbacks’ 7-1 win over the Mariners. Hill singled in the first (Hector Noesi), tripled in the third (Noesi), doubled in the fifth (Noesi) and homered in the seventh (Shawn Kelley).
  • June 19: Ichiro reached 2,500 hits (first-inning single) in the fourth-fewest games in major league history during a 12-9 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks. His 2,500th hit came in his 1,817th game. Al Simmons had 2,500 hits in 1,784 games, Ty Cobb in 1,790 and George Sisler in 1,808 . . . When Kyle Seager and Brendan Ryan both hit three-run homers in the fifth inning, it marked the first time since July 30, 2003 vs. Detroit that the Mariners had a pair of three-run bombs in the same inning. In that July 30, 2003 game, John Olerud hit a three-run homer and Randy Winn a grand slam in the first inning.

MARINERS WON-LOSS BREAKDOWN

Rec. Home Road Day Night vs. RHP vs. LHP Hit HR No HR
33-45 14-21 19-24 8-15 24-32 22-33 11-12 22-21 9-24

MARINERS BATTING PROFILE

Avg. Home Road R HR OBP SLG OPS RISP
.235 .201 .259 312 69 .298 .369 .667 .238

MARINERS PITCHING PROFILE

Rec. ERA IP R ER HR BA OBP SLG
33-45 4.13 690.2 337 316 90 .248 .312 .405

PROBABLE PITCHERS

Date Day Opp. Probable Pitchers
6/29 Fri vs. Bos Hector Noesi (2-9, 9.50) vs. Aaron Cook (1-1, 9.39)
6/30 Sat vs. Bos Erasmo Ramirez (0-2, 4.18) vs. Josh Beckett (4-7, 4.17)
7/1 Sun vs. Bos Jason Vargas (7-7, 4.74) vs. Felix Doubront (8-4, 4.54)

MARINERS 2012 SCHEDULE/RESULTS

March (1-1)

Gm.# Date Opp. W/L Rec. Win / Loss
1 3/28 at Oak W, 3-1 1-0 W: Wilhelmsen (1-0); L: Carignan (0-1)
2 3/29 at Oak L, 4-1 1-1 W: Colon (1-0); L: Kelley (0-1)

April (10-12)

Gm. # Date Opp. W/L Rec. Win / Loss
3 4/6 at Oak W, 7-3 2-1 W: Vargas (1-0); L: McCarthy (0-1)
4 4/7 at Oak W, 8-7 3-1 W: Hernandez (1-0); L: Colon (1-1)
5 4/9 at Tex L, 11-5 3-2 W: Darvish (1-0); L: Noesi (0-1)
6 4/10 at Tex L, 1-0 3-3 W: Feliz (1-0); L: Beavan (0-1)
7 4/11 at Tex W, 4-3 4-3 W: Luetge (1-0); L: Nathan (0-2)
8 4/12 at Tex L, 5-3 4-4 W: Holland (1-0); L: Vargas (1-1
9 4/13 vs Oak L, 4-0 4-5 W: Colon (2-1); L: Hernandez (1-1)
10 4/14 vs. Oak W, 4-0 5-5 W: Noesi (1-1); L: Milone (1-1)
11 4/15 vs. Oak W, 5-3 6-5 W: Beavan (1-1); L: Godfrey (0-2)
12 4/17 vs. Cle L, 9-8 6-6 W: Perez (0-1); L: Furbush (0-1)
13 4/18 vs. Cle W, 4-1 7-6 W: Vargas (2-1); L: Lowe (2-1)
14 4/19 vs. Cle L, 2-1 7-7 W: Tomlin (1-1); L: League (0-1)
15 4/20 vs. CWS L, 7-3 7-8 W: Sale (2-1); L: Noesi (1-2)
16 4/21 vs. CWS L, 4-0 7-9 W: Humber (1-0); Beavan (1-2)
17 4/22 vs. CWS L, 7-4 7-10 W: Danks (2-2); L: Millwood (0-1)
18 4/24 at Det W, 7-4 8-10 W: Vargas (3-1); L: Scherzer (1-2)
19 4/25 at Det W, 9-1 9-10 W: Fernandez (2-1); L: Wilk (0-3)
20 4/26 at Det W, 5-4 10-10 W: Furbush (1-1); L: Porcello (1-2)
21 4/27 at Tor W, 9-5 11-10 W: Furbush (2-1); L: Perez (2-1)
22 4/28 at Tor L, 7-0 11-11 W: Morrow (2-1); L: Millwood (0-2)
23 4/29 at Tor L, 7-2 11-12 W: Alvarez (1-2); L: Vargas (3-2)
24 4/30 at TB L, 3-2 11-13 W: Howell (1-0); L: League (0-2)

May (12-17)

Gm. # Date Opp. W/L Rec. Win / Loss
25 5/1 at TB L, 3-1 11-14 W: Moore (1-1); L: Noesi (1-3)
26 5/2 at TB L, 5-4 11-15 W: Shields (5-0); L: Beavan (1-3)
27 5/3 at TB L, 4-3 11-16 W: Niemann (2-3); L: Millwood (0-3)
28 5/4 vs. Min L, 3-2 11-17 W: Pavano (2-2); L: Wilhelmsen (1-1)
29 5/5 vs. Min W, 7-0 12-17 W: Hernandez (3-1); L: Marquis (2-1)
30 5/6 vs. Min W, 5-2 13-17 W: Noesi (2-3): L: Blackburn (0-4)
31 5/7 vs. Det W, 3-2 14-17 W: Delabar (1-0); L: Dotel (1-1)
32 5/8 vs. Det L, 6-4 14-18 W: Verlander (3-1); L: Millwood (0-4)
33 5/9 vs. Det W, 2-1 15-18 W: Vargas (4-2); L: Putkoen (0-1)
34 5/11 at NYY L, 6-2 15-19 W: Kuroda (3-4); L: Hernandez (3-2)
35 5/12 at NYY L, 6-2 15-20 W: Hughes (3-4); L: Noesi (2-4)
36 5/13 at NYY W, 6-2 16-20 W: Millwood (1-4); L: Pettitte (0-1)
37 5/14 at Bos L, 6-1 16-21 L: Lester (2-3); L: Vargas (4-3)
38 5/15 at Bos L, 5-0 16-22 W: Beckett (3-4); L: Beavan (1-4)
39 5/16 at Cle L, 9-3 16-23 W: Jimenez (4-3): L: Hernandez (3-3)
40 5/17 at Cle L, 6-5 16-24 W: Smith (4-1); L: League (0-3)
41 5/18 at Col W, 4-0 17-24 W: Millwood (2-4); L: White (0-3)
42 5/19 at Col W, 10-3 18-24 W: Vargas (5-3); L: Friedrich (1-1)
43 5/20 at Col W, 6-4 19-24 W: Beavan (2-4); L: Guthrie (2-2)
44 5/21 vs. Tex W, 6-1 20-24 W: Hernandez (4-3); L: Darvish (6-2)
45 5/22 vs. Tex L, 3-1 20-25 W: Harrison (5-3): L: Noesi (2-5)
46 5/23 vs. Tex W, 5-3 21-25 W: Millwood (3-4); L: Feldman (0-2)
47 5/24 vs. LAA L, 3-0 21-26 W: Haren (2-5); L: Vargas (5-4)
48 5/25 vs. LAA L, 6-4 21-27 W: Isringhausen (1-0); L: League (0-4)
49 5/26 vs. LAA L, 5-3 21-28 W: Williams (5-2); L: Hernandez (4-4)
50 5/27 vs. LAA L, 4-2 21-29 W: Wilson (5-4); L: Noesi (2-6)
51 5/28 at Tex L, 4-2 21-30 W: Harrison (6-3); L: Delabar (1-1)
52 5/29 at Tex W, 10-3 22-30 W: Vargas (6-4); L: Feldman (0-3)
53 5/30 at Tex W, 21-8 23-30 W: Beaven (3-4); L: Holland (4-4)

June (10-15)

Gm. # Date Opp. W/L Rec. Win / Loss
54 6/1 at CWS L, 7-4 23-31 W: Jesse Crain (1-0); L: Shawn Kelly (0-2)
55 6/2 at CWS W, 10-8 24-31 W: Wilhelmsen (2-1); L: Reed (0-1)
56 6/3 at CWS L, 4-2 24-32 W: Sale (7-2); L: Millwood (3-5)
57 6/4 at LAA W, 8-6 25-32 W: Vargas (7-4); L: Santana (2-7)
58 6/5 at LAA L, 6-1 25-33 W: Richards (1-0); L: Beavan (3-5)
59 6/6 at LAA W, 8-6 26-33 W: Kelley (1-2); L: Williams (6-3)
60 6/8 vs. LAD W, 1-0 27-33 W: Pryor (1-0); L: Elbert (0-1)
61 6/9 vs. LAD L, 8-3 -27-34 W: Kershaw (5-3): L: Vargas (7-5)
62 6/10 vs. LAD L, 8-2 27-35 W: Billingsley (4-4); L: Beavan (3-6)
63 6/12 vs. SDP L, 5-4 27-36 W: Richard (3-7); L: Hernandez (4-5)
64 6/13 vs. SDP L, 1-0 27-37 W: Marquis (3-5); L: Noesi (2-7)
65 6/14 vs. SDP L, 6-2 27-38 W: Volquez (3-6); L: Ramirez (0-1)
66 6/15 vs. SF L, 4-2 27-39 W: Vogelsong (6-2); L: Vargas (7-6)
67 6/16 vs. SF W, 7-4 28-39 W: Iwakuma (1-0); L: Lincecum (2-8)
68 6/17 vs. SF W, 2-1 29-39 W: Wilhelmsen (3-1); L: Romo (2-1)
69 6/18 at AZ L, 7-1 29-40 W: Miley (8-3); L: Noesi (2-8)
70 6/19 at AZ W, 12-9 30-40 W: Furbush (3-1); L: Putz (1-4)
71 6/20 at AZ L, 14-10 30-41 W: Cahill (6-5): L: Vargas (7-7)
72 6/22 at SDP L, 9-5 30-42 W: Richard (5-7); L: Millwood (3-6)
73 6/23 at SDP W, 5-1 31-42 W: Fernandez (5-5); L: Marquis (3-7)
74 6/24 at SDP L, 2-0 31-43 W: Volquez (4-7); L: Noesi (2-9)
75 6/25 vs. Oak L, 1-0 31-44 W: Milone (8-5); L: Ramirez (0-2)
76 6/26 vs. Oak W, 3-2 32-44 W: Furbush (4-1); L: Miller (2-1)
77 6/27 vs. Oak L, 2-1 32-45 W: Parker (4-3); L: Iwakuma (1-1)
78 6/28 vs. Bos W, 1-0 33-45 W: Hernandez (6-5); L: Atchison (2-1)
79 6/29 vs. Bos
80 6/30 vs. Bos

July

Gm. # Date Opp. W/L Rec. Win / Loss
81 7/1 vs. Bos
82 7/2 vs. Bal
83 7/3 vs. Bal
84 7/6 at Oak
85 7/7 at Oak
86 7/8 at Oak
87 7/13 vs. Tex
88 7/14 vs. Tex
89 7/15 vs. Tex
90 7/16 at KC
91 7/17 at KC
92 7/18 at KC
93 7/19 at KC
94 7/20 at TB
95 7/21 at TB
96 7/22 at TB
97 7/23 vs. NYY
98 7/24 vs. NYY
99 7/25 vs. NYY
100 7/26 vs. KC
101 7/27 vs. KC
102 7/28 vs. KC
103 7/29 vs. KC
104 7/30 vs. Tor
105 7/31 vs. Tor
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