C.J. Wilson (10-3) allowed one run over seven innings and struck out seven in shutting down an inept Mariners lineup.
The winning streak is the longest in the majors this season. For the Mariners, it was their season-high eighth consecutive loss.
Kinsler hit his fifth leadoff home run of the season off Hernandez (8-8) as the Rangers jumped on top early.
Wilson allowed just one hit and a walk to the floundering Mariners offense over the first 42/3 innings pushing the Mariners scoreless inning streak to a franchise-record 30 straight innings without a run.
HISTORIC 2001 MARINERS REUNITE
Over the history of the Seattle Mariners, 2001 was the best of times, it was the worst of times – a year in which the team won a remarkable 116 games but failed to reach the World Series.
As the Mariners brought most of that team to Safeco Field on Saturday for an anniversary celebration, it was clear the chemistry that helped make 2001 special remained in place.
More than 20 players and coaches – plus general manager Pat Gillick and manager Lou Piniella – exchanged man-hugs with one another hours before their on-field appearance.
“I spent five years with a close-knit team in St. Louis,” pitcher Ryan Franklin said. “We were a close-knit team, but nothing like this.”
Said utilityman Mark McLemore, “That was one of the things that made our team so special. We didn’t have cliques. Everyone got along with everybody. Everybody spent time with everybody. It was just a lot of fun.”
Of the players on that 2001 roster, a handful are still playing – Ichiro Suzuki, Mike Cameron, Carlos Guillen, Joel Piñeiro, Brian Fuentes, Arthur Rhodes – and Franklin and Jamie Moyer intend to pitch again.
“I’m throwing a ball 120 feet, and next month I’ll be up on a mound again,” said Moyer, trying to come back from Tommy John elbow surgery at age 48.
Plenty of other Mariners from 2001 remain involved in baseball:
• Piniella consults with the San Francisco Giants, often watching DVDs on players the team sends him to review. Any interest in returning to managing? “No, no, I’m through with that,” Piniella said.
• Dan Wilson, Jay Buhner, McLemore, Jeff Nelson and Moyer all do some broadcasting
• John McLaren scouts for the Nationals, John Moses is a coach in the Astros minor league system, Aaron Sele is a coach in the Dodgers organization and Paul Abbott is a pitching coach in the Red Sox system.
“It’s hard to turn your back on baseball when it’s been what you’ve done your whole life,” Abbott said.
What about other 2001 players?
John Olerud and his wife help run the Jordan Foundation, named for their daughter who was born with a rare genetic disorder. Al Martin helps run the BSMART Foundation in Arizona, founded after his son Brandon died of an accidental drug overdose in 2009.
“He was at a party, someone apparently put something in his drink, and he never woke up,” Martin said. “I live with that every morning when I wake up.”
Norm Charlton runs a one-man fishing-guide business in Corpus Christi, Texas. And lives with his dogs.
Bret Boone is a soccer dad, but in typical Boone fashion, said he was the “Soccer Dad of the Year” in San Diego.
Edgar Martinez sold his embroidery company and is now working with a tequila/mezcal maker, El Zacatecano.
Coach Matt Sinatro and John Halama are in retirement and considering new directions. Outfielder Charles Gipson went back to college after his playing career, and is a behavioral specialist at a Texas high school.
Tom Lampkin, a Blanchet High graduate, is a construction contractor who coaches baseball at Union High in Camas.
Desi Relaford wasn’t on the 2001 team – he played for the Mariners in 2002 - but hitched a ride to the celebration with good friend Gipson. He’s now a Florida nutritionist.
Like most of the returning Mariners, Relaford looked in great shape, and someone asked him how quickly he could get to first base.
“Before or after my hammy blew out?” he said.
Similarly, Martinez was asked if he could serve as an honorary designated hitter Saturday night.
“I can’t see the pitch any more,” he said. “My eyes are really bad.”
Abbott, who coaches rookies, said he occasionally gets frustrated trying to explain something to a youngster, so he will grab a baseball, hop up on the bullpen mound and show what he’s talking about.
“I can throw four or five pitches,” Abbott said. “But then I’m done for 15 days. My elbow is gone.”
When did Piniella know Gillick had put together a team capable of greatness?
“There was a game (Aug. 5) in Cleveland we led (12-0) and then I started to manage and we lost, (15-14 in 11 innings),” Piniella said. “On the walk back to the hotel, I worried how they might respond to that. The next day, we beat the Indians and I told my coaches, ‘Stay out of the way, these guys can play.’ ”
The Yankees brought a surprising end to the Mariners’ season with a 4-1 victory in the American League Championship Series to advance to the World Series.
“I think we didn’t play well,” second baseman Bret Boone said. “I didn’t think they played well. They played a little bit better than us and we didn’t have too many series, playoffs or regular season, that year where we didn’t play well.”
“Maybe it was a letdown because there was so much emphasis on are you going to set the record,” Boone said. “’Are you going to set the record?’ And then all of the sudden we do, and OK now let’s relax, well now we have to go to the postseason and play for what really matters, the ring.”
ON TAP
Seattle completes its series with Texas with a 1:10 p.m. game on Root Sports. Probable starting pitchers: Texas’ Matt Harrison (7-7, 3.04 ERA) vs. Blake Beavan (1-0, 2.03).
Staff writer Larry Larue contributed to this report.

