Seattle, WA
Buxton homers vs Seattle again, Twins top Mariners 3-2 – Austin Daily Herald
SEATTLE — Byron Buxton belted his 18th residence run, Chris Archer delivered one other regular pitching efficiency and the Minnesota Twins defeated the Seattle Mariners 3-2 on Monday night time.
“It’s undoubtedly the best way you need to begin a highway journey popping out to the West Coast,” Twins supervisor Rocco Baldelli stated.
Buxton, recent off an American League participant of the week award, hit a two-run shot to right-center discipline off Chris Flexen within the first inning. It was his fourth residence run in 5 video games in opposition to Seattle this season. In his final eight video games versus the Mariners, Buxton is 15 for 32 with six homers.
“I haven’t missed too many. I couldn’t say this a couple of week and a half in the past,” Buxton stated. “You could possibly have threw me an entire basketball and I used to be going to overlook it.”
Buxton added a gentle single to left within the seventh and scored on Max Kepler’s single to make it 3-1.
Taylor Trammell homered for the Mariners, and Ty France knocked in a run with an infield single.
“Not an entire lot going our method proper now,” Seattle supervisor Scott Servais stated. “It has been a wrestle right here the final couple of days to get a lot going offensively.”
Making his twelfth begin of the yr, Archer went 4 innings and allowed solely an unearned run. He gave up 4 hits, struck out three and was lifted after 67 pitches.
In his final three begins, the right-hander has permitted simply two runs over 14 innings.
Archer handled a string of accidents from 2019-21, so Minnesota has restricted his workload. He hasn’t gone greater than 5 innings in a recreation this season, and his highest pitch rely was 79 on April 30.
“Issues went nice,” Archer stated. “Bullpen did an important job, (catcher) Gary (Sánchez) did an important job. Scored sufficient runs, our protection performed nice — so it was general an important recreation.”
Caleb Thielbar (2-0), the primary of six Twins relievers, struck out two in a hitless inning. Emilio Pagán labored the ninth, fanning Jesse Winker with a runner on second for his ninth save.
After the early blow by Buxton, Flexen (2-8) didn’t permit a run over the following 4 innings and bought himself out of jams within the second and fifth. The correct-hander pitched 5 innings, yielding two runs and 7 hits whereas hanging out 5.
PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Buxton batted .333 with 5 homers, seven RBIs and eight runs scored final week. He homered in three straight video games from Wednesday to Friday. It’s the second time Buxton has been chosen AL participant of the week. The opposite time was in August 2017.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Twins: Transferred RHP Cody Stashak to the 60-day injured record to clear a spot on the 40-man roster. Stashak is scheduled to bear shoulder surgical procedure this week. … INF Jorge Polanco didn’t begin as a consequence of again soreness. He’ll get a day or two off after which be evaluated, based on Baldelli.
Mariners: Rookie OF Julio Rodriguez obtained a scheduled relaxation. He pinch-hit for Trammell within the ninth and struck out.
ROSTER MOVES
Minnesota chosen the contract of INF Elliot Soto from Triple-A St. Paul and optioned RHP Cole Sands to its high farm membership. Soto was hitting .213 with two homers and 19 RBIs in 41 video games for St. Paul. Sands began Sunday for the Twins, throwing 4 2/3 innings and permitting 5 runs within the loss to Tampa Bay.
UP NEXT
Twins: RHP Joe Ryan (5-2, 2.28 ERA) returns to the mound Tuesday after testing optimistic for COVID-19 on Could 25.
Mariners: RHP Logan Gilbert (6-2, 2.41 ERA) makes his thirteenth begin of the season. Final trip at Houston, he allowed three runs and 7 hits in six innings to choose up the win.
Seattle, WA
State ferries: A better idea from Nordic countries
Seattle, WA
Manhunt underway for Mason County shooting suspect
MASON COUNTY, Wash. – The Mason County Sheriff’s Office is currently searching for a convicted felon wanted in a recent shooting.
The sheriff’s office says Michael Allen Beyer is wanted for first-degree assault and first-degree unlawful possession of a firearm.
Deputies believe Beyer was involved in a shooting that happened in Belfair on January 6.
Beyer is considered armed and dangerous. If you see him, do not approach him and call 911 immediately.
Anyone with information regarding Beyer’s whereabouts is asked to call Detective Helser at 360-427-9670 x657, or Crime Stoppers of Puget Sound at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477).
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Seattle, WA
Two more Seattle restaurants close due to minimum wage hike
Two more Seattle restaurants are calling it quits thanks to the untenable minimum wage hike.
At the same time that the Seattle minimum wage rose from $19.97 an hour to $20.76 an hour, the city ended the tip credit of $2.72. Under the previous rules, restaurants were able to pay $17.25 hourly wage if their staff earned at least $2.72 in tips per hour. But as cost of business continues to skyrocket in Seattle, a minimum wage hike without a tip credit is simply untenable for many small businesses.
Jackson’s Catfish Corner in Seattle’s Central District closed its doors in this new year. In an interview with Converge Media, owner Terrell Jackson argued Seattle is too expensive to operate in.
“I know that the minimum wages went up to 20 bucks an hour … I know that’s hard for my business as a small Black business,” Jackson said. “I’m not Amazon or Walgreens or Walmart who can pay their employees that much.”
Jackson isn’t alone in his complaints.
More from Jason Rantz: Panic as Seattle restaurants may not survive massive minimum wage shift
A second West Seattle eatery closes, citing the minimum wage hike
Bel Gatto, a bakery and café, became the second West Seattle eatery to close its doors over the Seattle minimum wage hike. The owner posted a sign to the front door to thank supporters but said she can’t afford to stay open anymore.
“Our revenues, unfortunately, are not able to cover the close to 20% increase in mandated wages, salaries and payroll taxes put into effect by the Seattle City Council effective 1/1/25. This ruling has made the continuation of our bakery operations untenable,” the sign read.
The owner, Peter Levy, explained to the West Seattle Blog that, “we were approaching close to a break even status in the last quarter of 2024, but the requirement to absorb another $4,000 per month in payroll expenses with the new mandate by the city put a break even further from our grasp which is what led to the closure.”
Last week, a video by Corina Luckenbach, owner of Bebop Waffle Shop in West Seattle, went viral as she said the minimum wage hike was forcing her to close after 11 years. She said she didn’t have an extra $32,000 a year to pay her staff what the city mandates.
More from Jason Rantz: Democrats blame Los Angeles fires on climate change to deflect from their own complicity
Will more restaurants close?
Ahead of the minimum wage hike, restauranteurs offered many warnings over what’s to come.
Ethan Stowell operates a number of Seattle’s top restaurants, including How to Cook a Wolf, Staple and Fancy, and Tavolata. He warned this change would be exceptionally costly for businesses in an industry notorious for razor-thin margins. And restaurants can’t merely raise menu prices again.
“I know everybody wants to say, ‘Just raise things (on the menu) a dollar or two,’ and that’s what it’ll be. That’s very simplified math. I wish it was that easy, but it’s not. This is a large increase that’s probably large enough to be equal to or close to what most restaurants in Seattle profit,” Stowell told “The Jason Rantz Show” on KTTH.
Portage Bay Cafe co-owner Amy Fair Gunnar noted the minimum wage change will cost her about $45,000 more a month. She said restaurants will have to “seriously change what they’re doing or they’re going to close their doors.”
More from Jason Rantz: Here’s why Seattle residents vow to stop tipping in new year
Ignoring the warnings, mocking the business people
The warnings from restaurant owners were mostly ignored or mocked.
Efforts by the Seattle City Council to address the forthcoming crisis fell apart after activists said they didn’t want restaurants to get an exception. Council president Sara Nelson told “The Jason Rantz Show” they will take up the issue again this year but there’s no specific idea yet to forward for legislation. The Mayor of Seattle, Bruce Harrell, has been almost completely absent from the issue.
Left-wing voices, meanwhile, claim to not care. That if businesses “can’t afford to pay a living wage,” then they shouldn’t be in business.
One reporter with The Stranger mocked one of the closures, quipping on X, “Has anyone ever eaten at bebop waffle lol.” Left-wing Seattleites condemned the business for “creating a right wing media darling to complain about paying people a living wage.”
KING 5 reporter Maddie White helped elevate this talking point by citing the National Low Income Housing Coalition, claiming “the average renter needs to make upwards of $40 an hour to afford rent.” But she’s quoting a stat for two-bedrooms. Minimum wage jobs aren’t meant to cover the cost of a single person renting a two-bedroom home or apartment.
Ironically, as activists dismiss the concerns of small business owners, they fail to acknowledge the inevitable consequence: when those businesses shut down, people lose jobs. A $20.76 hourly minimum wage — even with a $2.72 tip credit — means nothing if you’re unemployed.
Listen to The Jason Rantz Show on weekday afternoons from 3-7 p.m. on KTTH 770 AM (HD Radio 97.3 FM HD-Channel 3). Subscribe to the podcast here. Follow Jason Rantz on X, Instagram, YouTube and Facebook.
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