SEATTLE – What, don't the Mariners read the newspaper?
Martin Perez made his 20th career start against Seattle on Friday, the most he's faced any team, but it was the new Martin Perez. The one with the cutter that makes righthanded hitters lunge, the one with the changeup that makes lefties flinch. The one who keeps making news, apparently unnoticed by the Mariners, by turning his career around, not the one his opponents are comfortable facing.
"I changed everything," Perez said, and now the Mariners know it, too: Baseball's top home-run-hitting team scratched out just five hits, none of them out of the park, and handed Perez his sixth victory, 7-1 at T-Mobile Park.
The Twins' fourth consecutive victory widened their lead over Cleveland in the AL Central to a season-high 5½ games, and Perez, now 6-1, is a big reason why.
"He's made so many adjustments just since spring training. He looks like a different pitcher than what I've seen from him in the past," Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said of the Twins' lone lefthanded starter. "He can do so many things. He commands the ball very well, which allows him to kind of add these new tricks to his arsenal."
Tricks that must have come as a surprise to the Mariners, right Martin?
"I think so," Perez said after joining Jose Berrios and Jake Odorizzi as six-game winners, a spectacular start for the Twins' rotation just 44 games into the season. "How I been pitching the last three years, I mean, [I] throw more strikes, and try to hit the glove. You see tonight, they [ask] the umpire for time out."
The Twins' own power-surge offense took a timeout, too, for the most part. But it didn't matter, because it appears they don't have to hit home runs to show off their explosiveness.