THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
May 23, 2022 at 12:40 JST
Los Angeles Angels’ Shohei Ohtani, left, celebrates in the dugout with starting pitcher Patrick Sandoval after hitting a solo home run during the first inning of a baseball game against the Oakland Athletics on May 22 in Anaheim, Calif. (AP Photo)
ANAHEIM, Calif.--Patrick Sandoval dominated the Oakland Athletics for the second straight Sunday, mixing his formidable off-speed pitches with excellent fastball control in a performance that underlined his credentials as a rising star on the Angels’ staff.
The left-hander obviously finds his job a whole lot easier when Shohei Ohtani and Mike Trout are blasting homers to back him.
Ohtani hit a 443-foot leadoff home run and Trout added a solo shot while getting three hits and two RBIs in Los Angeles’ 4-1 victory.
Sandoval (3-1) struck out seven as he pitched four-hit ball into the eighth inning for the Angels, who won the final two games of the weekend series after a four-game skid. Sandoval’s ERA shrank to 1.79 after his longest start of the season, and he has yet to allow a home run or more than three runs in any start this year.
“That’s starting to be a typical performance for him,” Angels manager Joe Maddon said. “For my money, when he has fastball command, he should normally be pitching in the seventh, eighth, ninth inning. The way his stuff is, they don’t get good swings at it. Don’t get good looks at it.”
Ohtani hit his ninth home run on Cole Irvin’s second pitch, and Trout added an RBI single in the second and his 12th homer in the seventh. Trout, who also doubled in the first, struck out in the eighth to fall a triple short of the cycle for the second time in six days.
“Fireworks,” Sandoval said of his MVP-winning teammates. “It’s awesome to see them clicking and hitting the ball. It’s great.”
Just 12 days after Angels rookie Reid Detmers threw a no-hitter at the Big A, Sandoval took a perfect game into the fourth, a no-hitter into the fifth and a two-hitter into the eighth. He has beaten the A’s in back-to-back outings, pitching a combined 13 2/3 innings of eight-hit, two-run ball against Oakland.
Kevin Smith had two hits for the A’s, and he got credit for a leadoff double in the eighth when right fielder Tyler Wade lost his easy flyball in the sun. Smith scored Oakland’s only run moments later on Cristian Pache’s bloop single.
Ryan Tepera replaced Sandoval one batter later and recorded back-to-back strikeouts to strand two runners. Raisel Iglesias pitched the ninth for his 10th save.
Sandoval flung his glove in the dugout after getting pulled, but he was frustrated at himself for not escaping the jam. Maddon liked the lefty’s reaction because it confirmed Sandoval knows he can do even more.
“I never want to come out of a game,” he said. “When I’m not performing well, yeah, I understand. But there’s never a time I want to give the ball up. If we win, it doesn’t really matter.”
Irvin (2-2) yielded three runs on eight hits over six innings for Oakland, which has lost six of eight. The graduate of Anaheim’s Servite High School struck out four with two walks.
“He had better command today,” Oakland manager Mark Kotsay said. “He pounded the strike zone with all his pitches. Overall, you tip your cap to that performance.”
Ohtani came through early with a shot to dead center, clearing the ficus trees that grow behind the outfield fence. The homer was his ninth of the season and his second leading off a game.
Ohtani could have had another RBI in the second, but Kurt Suzuki didn’t try to tag up on Ohtani’s 294-foot fly to right with the bases loaded. Trout came through with a dribbling grounder against the shift that scored Suzuki anyway.
Trout walked and eventually scored his 1,001st career run on Brandon Marsh’s bloop single in the fifth.
NO SHUTOUT
The Angels fell just short of their eighth shutout victory in 43 games this season. That total would have led the majors and matched perpetually pitching-poor Los Angeles’ total from the three previous seasons combined.
NICE SNAG
Pache robbed Suzuki of a probable two-run homer with a leaping catch in center in the third.
“Pretty spectacular play,” Kotsay said. “Nothing he does shocks me out there.”
Here is a collection of first-hand accounts by “hibakusha” atomic bomb survivors.
A peek through the music industry’s curtain at the producers who harnessed social media to help their idols go global.
Cooking experts, chefs and others involved in the field of food introduce their special recipes intertwined with their paths in life.
A series based on diplomatic documents declassified by Japan’s Foreign Ministry
A series about Japanese-Americans and their memories of World War II