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Everyone knows how electric it is when a club tips its cap to its legends. At Seattle’s T-Mobile Park, the stage was set to salute two former big leaguers with the ceremonial first pitch—fresh Hall of Fame inductee Ichiro Suzuki toeing the rubber and “The Big Unit” Randy Johnson squatting behind the dish to catch it. Both are part of a storied lineage of studs who’ve donned the threads of a franchise still chasing its first World Series ring. The tribute lit a spark, and in the bottom of the first, the M’s hung a four-spot on the board, fueled by a clutch knock from Venezuelan slugger Eugenio “Geno” Suárez who split the gap between center and left to plate a pair and cap the rally. That early cushion held firm as Seattle cruised to a 6-3 dub, completing the sweep over the Tampa Bay Rays. Now just half a game back of Houston (and a streak of 7 games won), the Mariners are breathing down the neck of the AL West lead.
---  Screenshot from [video](https://www.mlb.com/es/gameday/rays-vs-mariners/2025/08/10/776791/final/video) #  #
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The Brew Crew’s riding high, snagging their ninth straight win and putting six games of daylight between them and the Cubs, thanks to their backstop William Contreras. The younger Contreras brother turned into Milwaukee’s rally engine, going yard twice and flipping the script. In his second AB, with the bags empty and the Mets up 5-zip, he uncorked a solo shot to left that lit the fuse. That blast sparked a three-run frame to cut the deficit. Then in the bottom of the fifth, with the Mets still clinging to a 6-3 lead, William got a man aboard and this time went oppo taco, smoking a liner to right for a two-run jack that made it 6-5. The place went bonkers when the Brewers knotted it up in the eighth and walked it off with a golden bomb from Isaac Collins. Fired up? You bet.
---  Screenshot from [Video](https://www.mlb.com/es/gameday/mets-vs-brewers/2025/08/10/776799/final/video) # 
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Over at Petco Park in San Diego, the Friars took care of business against the BoSox, locking down the weekend set. Boston’s bats got muzzled by ace Dylan Cease, who shoved for six frames, giving up just two runs on four knocks while punching out seven. The holy sticks backed him up big time. Bottom three, Luis Arráez stepped in with ducks on the pond at first and second. Being a lefty played right into his hands, with the infield shifted heavy to the pull side. But Luis ain’t some rookie with the lumber—he’s a wizard at placing the pill where it hurts. He smoked a missile into the left-center alley, splashing it over the center fielder’s head and cashing in the first two runs of the night. The Padres kept the line moving and cruised to a 6-2 dub, now just two games back of the Dodgers. Yeah, they’re feeling it.
---  Screenshot from [video](https://www.mlb.com/es/gameday/red-sox-vs-padres/2025/08/10/776789/final/video) # 
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Yankee Stadium was the stage yesterday where a locked-in José Altuve helped seal the series win over the Bombers in what turned out to be a milestone night for him. Unfazed by the Bronx boos, “Tuve” led off the game and clapped back at the heckling crowd with a towering shot over the left-field wall. That nuke marked career homer No. 250, punching his ticket into an elite club of second basemen who’ve made their name swinging for the fences. Only 11 dudes on the planet have hit that mark, and among the legends on that list are Rogers Hornsby, Joe Gordon, Joe Morgan, and Ryne Sandberg. That’s some serious company. The bomb came off New York’s ace Max Fried, handing him his fifth L of the season after racking up twelve Ws. Houston’s still barely hanging onto the top spot in the AL West, clinging to a half-game lead over the Mariners. Stay tuned.
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