Major League Baseball
Randy Johnson to kick off Mariners' home season
Major League Baseball

Randy Johnson to kick off Mariners' home season

Published Apr. 12, 2010 5:17 a.m. ET

Recently retired Mariners star Randy Johnson is throwing out the ceremonial first pitch Monday before Seattle's home opener.

The way this season has gone so far, the M's may ask The Big Unit to stay on the mound for the game.

The Mariners fell to 2-5 when fill-in No. 2 starter Ian Snell allowed five runs in the first two innings of a 9-2 loss at Texas on Sunday. Seattle has yet to win without Felix Hernandez starting. Co-ace Cliff Lee remains out with an abdominal strain, though he did take another step to a return perhaps by month's end with a successful bullpen session Sunday.

Ryan Rowland-Smith starts the Mariners' 34th home opener, against the same Oakland Athletics who had eight hits and four runs off him in five innings last week.

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And no matter who has been pitching, Seattle's biggest preseason fear - that no one will be able to consistently bring home Ichiro Suzuki and Chone Figgins once they get on base atop the order - has already been realized. The Mariners scored just 15 runs in their first five games, four of them losses.

``We're trying to figure out how to score some runs,'' one of the only productive hitters, Franklin Gutierrez, said before he replaced the 1-for-21 Milton Bradley as the cleanup hitter for Sunday's road-trip finale at Texas. ``We're having a tough time right now.''

Yes, it's been a rocky start. The trendy pick to win the AL West has already had a four-game losing streak before playing its first home game.

``I think with a new ballclub you have several new pieces out there. It's not easy to get the club playing on all cylinders,'' second-year manager Don Wakamatsu said, referring in part to an all-new infield and the jumbled rotation. ``It's early. We're going to continue to work on things and we'll be fine.

``Some of these guys haven't seen our ballpark yet. That's how early it is.''

One final sling from the giant, 46-year-old Johnson's left arm in front of a chilled, packed house Monday will bring back memories of the Mariners' first two playoff series that he led them into in 1995 and '97. And will rekindle the belief that 2010 will bring Seattle its first postseason berth in nine years.

Johnson is making his first return to Seattle since he retired in January - after 22 seasons, 303 wins, 4,875 strikeouts and one World Series co-MVP while playing for the Expos, Mariners, Astros, Diamondbacks, Yankees and Giants. The 6-foot-10 menace scowled his way to the 1995 AL Cy Young Award with the Mariners, the wondrous season which helped revive baseball in Seattle with an unlikely rally into the franchise's first postseason.

Seattleites still display pictures around town of Johnson pointing triumphantly to the old Kingdome's concrete roof and catcher Dan Wilson leaping into his arms following the final out of Johnson's complete-game win over the Angels in a one-game tiebreaker that decided the AL West in '95.

Five of Johnson's 10 All-Star selections came with the Mariners. Johnson was 130-74 in 10 years with Seattle - his most wins among any of his six teams - before he was traded to Houston midway through 1998 because of a contract dispute.

The ill will from that spat has obviously dissipated with time. Soon after Johnson announced his retirement in January, longtime Mariners president Chuck Armstrong was on the phone inviting Johnson to Monday's opener. Johnson eagerly accepted.

He still holds nine individual pitching records for a game or a season. He is Seattle's career leader in shutouts (19), strikeouts (2,162) and walks (884). He is second to Jamie Moyer in wins (130), starts (266) and innings (1,838 1-3).

Oakland has its own pitching story unfolding Monday. Justin Duchscherer is making his second start since Aug. 18, 2008. The 32-year-old right-hander missed all of last season because of back problems, elbow surgery and a bout with clinical depression. Duchscherer allowed five runs and seven hits in 5 2-3 innings last week in Oakland in a game that ended with the A's beating Seattle late.

This is the sixth time in Seattle history that the A's are the opponent in the home opener, and second time since Safeco Field opened in 1999. The Mariners have won four of their five previous home openers against Oakland.

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Associated Press Writer David Jimenez in Arlington, Texas, contributed to this report.

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