"Jack Cust took good-natured ribbing after the Oakland Athletics' slugger had quite a typical day.
This familiar Jack Cust effort featured a walk, a strikeout and a two-run homer.
"That's been my whole career for better or worse," Cust said Sunday after his eighth-inning home run helped give the A's a 5-3 victory over the Seattle Mariners. "Those are the three big things in my stat book."
Oakland completed a three-game sweep and sent the last-place Mariners to their 11th straight loss.
Seattle went 0-11 on its final road trip of the season, the third time in franchise history the Mariners have failed to win on a trip of at least 10 games. The Mariners have lost 13 straight on the road.
Aaron Cunningham's pinch-hit, two-run double against Miguel Batista (4-14) in the seventh tied it and the A's earned their fourth season-series win against the Mariners in five years. Bobby Crosby also drove in a run for the A's.
"You can never assume you're not going to play," Cunningham said. "I figured I might get an at-bat today so I stayed mostly prepared."
Brad Ziegler (3-0) pitched a perfect eighth, and Joey Devine worked the ninth for his first career save.
"The phone rang, they said my name and I came in," Devine said. "Whether it's the seventh, eighth or ninth you still need to get three outs."
A's manager Bob Geren liked Ziegler's matchups better in the eighth and had planned to use Devine in the ninth if it was a save situation. Both relief pitchers have an ERA under 1.00, making it difficult to question the maneuver.
"He's been as good as Zieg, and I had wanted to give him the ninth," Geren said. "The experience of closing was really just a byproduct."
Devine, a three-year closer at North Carolina State, would like another shot.
"We have several closers in the bullpen, and it's a good group, but it is something I'd love to do," Devine said. "I have an extreme desire to do so."
Seattle starter Brandon Morrow took a no-hitter into the sixth inning but took a no decision after allowing three runs and two hits over 6 1-3 innings. He walked five and struck out six.
"That's just in the learning process for Brandon," Seattle manager Jim Riggleman said. "He's been asked to go out and mix in some changeups and not just throw fastballs. He needs three pitches to be a starter. This was a good game for his development. He needs to build on this."
Morrow, who threw 7 2-3 no-hit innings in his first career start against the New York Yankees on Sept. 5, was lifted after tossing 113 pitches.
"Sometimes it's losing concentration at the end of an inning, but I'm going to walk guys," Morrow said. "It's definitely something I need to bring down. The walks hurt me in terms of pitch count. I need to keep them off base.""