The Angels’ Mike Trout (center) is greeted in the dugout after he scored on a single by Daniel Nava during the fourth inning of a game against the Mariners on Friday in Seattle.

The Angels’ Mike Trout (center) is greeted in the dugout after he scored on a single by Daniel Nava during the fourth inning of a game against the Mariners on Friday in Seattle.

Angels stun M’s 7-6 with late rally

The Seattle Mariners deserved this 7-6 loss Friday night to the Los Angeles Angels at Safeco Field.

Yep, they earned it after throwing away a four-run lead in the late innings, which came after squandering a boatload of opportunities to take a sizable lead.

“We’re not going to be perfect all year,” said reliever Joel Peralta, who allowed two runs in the eighth inning. “Definitely, we’re going to have to have a short memory.”

Blame it on Friday the 13th, maybe. The Mariners are historically bad when the calendar comes up with one: Now 9-26 in their history.

C.J. Cron delivered the game-winner on a two-run bloop single in the ninth inning against Steve Cishek after the Angels loaded the bases with one out on two singles and a walk.

“It’s tough to see that one fall in there,” said Nathan Karns, who gave up three runs in 6 1/3 innings. “If that’s how they beat us, that’s how they beat us.”

The Mariners built a 5-1 lead through six innings. But the Angels got two in the seventh against Karns, although it was relievers Vidal Nuno and Nick Vincent who each permitted an inherited runner to score.

After Chris Iannetta’s homer made it 6-3 later in the seventh, Joel Peralta gave up two runs in the eighth. That meant Cishek (2-2) had no margin for error in the ninth.

But it wasn’t just the bullpen.

The lineup, while it produced six runs, was 1-for-12 with runners in scoring position and stranded 12 runners. It came back to haunt them.

“We were in a good spot in that game,” manager Scott Servais said. “We let it slip away.”

Joe Smith (1-2) got the victory after stranding three runners in the eighth. Fernando Salas got his first save with a scoreless ninth.

It was just the eighth loss for the Mariners in 27 games, but it prevented them from padding their lead atop the American League West Division. They still lead second-place Texas by 1 1/2 games.

LA starter Nick Tropeano threw 104 pitches in five innings but limited the damage to two runs because the Mariners repeatedly let him off the hook.

Reliever Jose Alvarez didn’t have the same escapability in the sixth.

The Mariners loaded the bases with one out on singles by Iannetta and Leonys Martin. After Nori Aoki drew a walk, Ketel Marte lined a three-run triple past a diving Kole Calhoun in right field.

The lead was 5-1.

The Angels answered by knocking out Karns in the seventh when they loaded the bases with one out on three ground-ball singles, which also turned over the lineup.

Nuno replaced Karns and gave up a sacrifice fly to Calhoun before the Mariners again went to the bullpen — for Vincent to face Mike Trout, who blooped an RBI double into right.

That made it 5-3 and put runners on second and third for Albert Pujols, who struck out on three pitches.

Iannetta got one run back later in the inning with a two-out homer against Greg Mahle, but Cron trimmed the lead back to one run with a one-out homer in the eighth against Peralta.

The Angels made it 6-5 on successive two-out doubles by Johnny Giavotella and Jefry Marte against Peralta before he ended the inning by retiring Gregorio Petit on a grounder to first.

The Mariners loaded the bases with two outs in the second inning, but Martin grounded out to second. It was worse in the third inning when they squandered Aoki’s misplayed leadoff triple.

And then…two of the three players who botched Aoki’s triple combined to put the Angels on top in the fourth inning. Trout drew a one-out walk, stole second and scored on Daniel Nava’s two-out single.

Nava’s single was the Angels’ first hit.

The Mariners loaded the bases again for Martin in the fourth, this time with one out by sandwiching two walks around a single. Martin tied the game with a sacrifice fly to center.

Nelson Cruz’s two-out homer in the fifth inning — a 387-foot drive to right-center field — gave the Mariners a 2-1 lead. It was Cruz’s 31st career homer against the Angels, his highest total against any opponent.

Karns worked around a two-on, one-out jam in the sixth by retiring Nava and Cron on fly balls before Marte’s bases-clearing triple in the bottom of the inning provided breathing space.

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