
Arteta: If you lose a match, they destroy you - you have to enjoy it
Mikel Arteta tells Arsenal players to love the pressure of the title race.
The Seattle Mariners lost to the Kansas City Royals 7-6, with Bryan Woo struggling again on the mound, allowing six runs over six innings. Despite a brief recovery, Woo's performance raised concerns about his pitching consistency.
Was Woo bad or do we just shake it off? Letâs be real here, four home runs is a lot. And he was genuinely missing middle-middle pretty regularlyâthis wasnât some Chicago wind storm or something. But on the other hand, you canât get too worked up about an off day from a guy whoâs had so much consistency that he literally holds the franchise record for most consecutive 6 inning games to open a season. All I know for sure is that, for today, pulling him after three innings was the correct move. Itâs a lot harder to shake off a second outing like this. Facing the other Missouri team tonight, Woo at least made it through six this time, but surrendered six runs on 11 hard-hit balls while striking out just two. The trouble was mostly contained to his first and last innings. The Royals ambushed him in the first with a pair of leadoff singles setting up a ball off âs glove and a line drive. Before you could blink, the score was 3-0 with a runner in scoring position and nobody out. Woo took a beat and mostly settled down from there. That runner scored, but it was on a water balloon into shallow left that couldnât track down while wasnât even in the camera shot. Woo then got through four clean innings in a row, but allowed more hard-hit balls than whiffs over that stretch. And in his last frame, he gave up two more runs on solo shots from KCâs Ferrari and Lamborghini, Vincent Pasquantino and . So what happened? Woo blew it off, saying of his first-inning struggles, âThe only one that Iâd probably like to have back is the sinker to Salvy. But I thought the rest of the pitches were not bad by any means.â I respectfully disagree. Two culprits jump out tonight. First, he had the same problem that got him into trouble on Saturday: leaking over the plate. Iâm going to let a picture tell a thousand words here. That big empty circle in the strike-side of the shadow zone? Thatâs generally where one wants to throw the ball. The other issue might be more serious: the sinker. Itâs marginal, but this season heâs lost both run and rise on his two-seamer, and those marginal differences can compound, especially when heâs leaving it belt high rather than sending it to the bottom rail. Itâs no surprise that guys are having a much easier time squaring it up and keeping it off the ground this year. The Mariners, or at least , seem to agree this is an issue. Woo threw seven in his first two innings, but just three over the entire rest of his outing. But I worry about this as a long-term solution. Arsenals are complementary. Iâm just not sure his four-seamer will play as strongly without his most-used secondary. So two bad outings in a row, but with no sign of injury or velo drop. Do we shake it off? I still vote yes, but the concern meter has risen from 0 to 2. And, despite his putting on a confident front through most of his post-game press conference, Woo signaled that heâs concerned too. âMy process might have been alright, but I still got my ass kicked. Thereâs a balance to it, try to take the good and learn from the bad. But. You know. It sucks.â Wooâs final words before leaving the podium were: âI donât know. Itâs â. I got not a ton of answers.â If that makes you want to have his back after all heâs done for this team, youâre not alone. said, âI feel like Woo has come through so many times for us and has pitched so many huge games for us.â In his last outing, the Mariners offense was able to pick up Wooâs bad start by scoring 11 and eventually winning the game. And there were moments when it felt like that might happen again tonight, beginning with the first inning when they struck back after falling behind 4-0. drew a leadoff walk and, the calendar having flipped from April to May, Julio went to the upper tank. And the Mariners kept chipping away, with and Randy Arozarena hitting solo shots in the fifth and sixth. Julio even tied it up in the seventh inning and earned his first of the season, with his second home run of the game, this time going to the deep part of the park. But, this being a Royals-Mariners game, the Royals struck back, scoring again in the seventh after Salvador Perezâs second double of the game. After that, the only hopeful note for Seattle was (the only hoppeful note?), who struck out the side against three batters who each have a career strikeout rate under 18%. Tune in early tomorrow for Randy Johnsonâs number retirement ceremony, which Mariners TV will air starting at 6:00.
Bryan Woo pitched six innings, giving up six runs on 11 hits while striking out two batters.
The Mariners scored six runs but ultimately lost the game 7-6, with notable contributions from players like Julio RodrĂguez.
Woo struggled with pitch placement, particularly leaking balls over the plate and losing effectiveness on his sinker.
Woo acknowledged his struggles, stating, 'I still got my ass kicked' and expressed a desire to learn from the experience.

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