Emarson Hancock, Meriners’ goal is to win a series against Padress

In opening a three-game series and 10-game road trips on Friday night with a 5–1 win over San Diego Padress, Seattle Meriners got a good start from the Stayed Pitcher Logan Evans.
They will ask Emeron Hancock to walk in the shoes of Evans on Saturday, when they try to win a series in SSN Diego.
Hancock (1-2, 6.91 ERA) is facing 11–5 defeat against New York Yankis at home, which rose him for seven runs on eight hits in five innings. Hancock scored four runs and came out of five, but was eventually except for three homes, two of them during the fifth innings of six runs.
Hancock has dealt with a lot of traffic in its 28 2/3 innings this year. His whip (innings divided by Walk Plus Hits) is an ugly 1.71.
“Necklace (smell) and this is part of it,” Hancock said on Monday night. “And for me, I didn’t feel like I had done my work. I have made some mistakes and they paid me for them. But at the end of the day, you want to go after them.”
Hancock has once faced San Diego, on August 9, 2023, a 6–1 victory has given three walks in three walks and three in five innings in five innings in five innings. He is a little better at the beginning against the National League opponents during his brief MLB career, pitching in 4.11 ERA in seven outings.
Seattle entered the series from 1-5 homestand. But on Friday night, it looked like a team that signed two of the three and pound two out of three before winning the series before winning the series. Getting homers from JP Crooford, Rowdy Tellez and Cal Rale, its crime excluded 10 hits.
Meriners figure to withstand a difficult challenge in Nick Pivata (5–2, 3.05), which is coming from a rare poor performance. In Colorado, in losing on 9-3 Sundays, Pivata exploded in four innings in six runs and seven hits, exiting two and five.
“It’s just one closed and forget it,” they said after that beginning. “Just flush it and go to the next one.”
But Pivata has been almost invincible at home this year, going 4–0 and allows just four runs in 25 1/3 innings. He also picked well against Seattle at the beginning of five career, with a record of 2–2 with 3.23 ERA and killed 40 batsmen in 31 1/3 innings. But he has allowed six homer and Meriners have placed 59 long balls on the wall this year, which is good for the seventh in MLB.
Pivetta and Padres would expect more crime than arising on Friday night, when they managed to get out just one run on eight hits. None of those hits came out of Machao’s bat, ending the second longest hitting streak of his career in 14 matches.
It was 180 out of the last six matches of San Diego, which on an average saw around nine runs per game, which was exposed by a 21 -run blast in Colorado on 10 May.
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