The San Diego Padres are rolling, and their momentum shows no signs of slowing down. On Thursday night at Petco Park, they extended their winning streak to six games with a methodical 4-1 victory over the Seattle Mariners in a classic pitcher's duel that ultimately swung in the home team's favor.
With Michael King on the mound for San Diego and Bryan Woo starting for Seattle, a low-scoring affair was anticipated. Both aces lived up to the billing early, trading zeros and keeping hitters off balance. The Mariners struck first with a run in the top of the second, but the Padres' response in the third inning proved decisive.
Trailing 1-0, the San Diego offense ignited. Ramon Laureano sparked the rally with a one-out triple, and Fernando Tatis Jr. immediately drove him home with a sharp single up the middle to tie the game. After a Jackson Merrill single and a stolen base, Xander Bogaerts delivered the clutch blow—a two-run single to center that scored both Tatis and Merrill, giving the Padres a 3-1 lead they would never surrender.
From there, the Padres' formula was textbook. King battled through six strong innings before handing the ball to a lockdown bullpen. Adrian Morejon, Jason Adam, and closer Mason Miller each delivered a scoreless frame, suffocating any hope of a Seattle comeback. San Diego added a final insurance run in the eighth when Bogaerts, continuing his stellar night, drove in Merrill with another key hit.
This win underscores the Padres' current strength: timely hitting and dominant pitching. As they continue to build momentum in the heart of the season, their confidence—and their place in the standings—only grows stronger.
