Cameron Maybin trotted to first base after what he believed was a walk in what turned out to be a 1-0 victory for the Padres over the Mariners. The problem was that Maybin had taken just three balls from Seattle's Doug Fister. "I thought it was a full count, like everybody else in the park. Turned out to be a big play," Maybin said. "It was a crazy play. I've never been a part of something like that. It worked out in our advantage, so we'll take it." Maybin walked after just three balls were thrown by Fister and came around to score the only run of the game on Alberto Gonzalez's single in the fifth inning. A video review of the at-bat by official scorer Dan Peterson confirmed the count should have been 3-2 when Maybin walked. No argument was made by anyone on the field and the stadium scoreboard showed a three-ball count before Fister delivered the pitch. After the game, the umpiring crew huddled, reviewed the tape and agreed Maybin should not have walked. Crew chief Tom Hallion said the hand indicator had the count at 2-2, but he noted the stadium scoreboard read 3-2 before Fister's pitch missed high. "My plate umpire thought his count was wrong. The scoreboard had 3-2 and he thought he was wrong because when Maybin took off for first, nobody said anything," Hallion said. "The catcher didn't react, the dugout didn't react so he thought he had the wrong count. "Do we feel bad? Absolutely. We count the pitches and it was just one of those things that gets away with you with the scoreboard having the 3-2 count up there and then nothing being said by anybody, he thought he had the wrong count."