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Gordon, Haniger homer in Mariners' 5-4 win over Indians

by Associated Press
| April 2, 2018 1:00 AM

SEATTLE (AP) — Dee Gordon isn’t known for hitting home runs, and before this year he’d never played the outfield. But on Sunday, his power and his glove in center field led the Seattle Mariners to a 5-4 win against the Cleveland Indians.

Gordon, who has never hit more than four homers in a season, led off the seventh inning with a tiebreaking shot to right off Dan Otero (0-1). Gordon clearly knew he’d hit it well — after making contact, he watched the ball and walked out of the batter’s box.

“It was a 2-2 game in the bottom of the seventh inning and it put us ahead, so I was excited,” he said.

After he rounded the bases, Gordon leapt high for a celebratory high-five with teammate Jean Segura in the on-deck circle.

“The scariest thing for me in the game was after Dee hit the home run and crossed the plate,” Seattle manager Scott Servais said. “The high-five he gave, I’ve never seen anybody jump that high after a home run.”

Gordon, an All-Star second baseman before the Mariners acquired him from Miami last offseason and moved him to center field, also made a sliding catch in the third after racing to deep left-center on a drive by Jason Kipnis.

“That slide catch was pretty cool,” Gordon said. “That was my first-ever slide catch.”

Along with Gordon’s big contributions, Mitch Haniger homered and Mike Leake pitched seven strong innings for Seattle.

Edwin Encarnacion went deep twice for the Indians, his 29th career multihomer game

Leake (1-0) gave up two runs and five hits. He has allowed three runs or fewer in all six starts since joining the Mariners late last season.

Gordon’s homer broke a 2-all tie and, a few batters later, Haniger added a two-run drive off reliever Tyler Olson to give Seattle a 5-2 lead.

They were the first runs Olson has allowed with Cleveland — last year he threw 20 scoreless innings in 30 appearances for the Indians.

Encarnacion cut the lead to one with his second homer in the eighth, a two-run shot.

“It’s only three games and I feel great at the plate,” Encarnacion said. “I’m seeing the ball good and I want to continue to be that consistent.”

Edwin Diaz struck out all three batters in the ninth for his second save.

Cleveland starter Trevor Bauer allowed two runs and five hits in five innings, striking out seven and walking three.