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The Orange County Register
The Orange County Register
Sport
Jeff Fletcher

Angels blown out again as Mike Trout continues rough weekend

HOUSTON — For a moment in the Angels’ 9-1 loss to the Houston Astros on Saturday, they had a chance to get back into the game.

Although they trailed by four runs in the fifth inning, they had two on and Mike Trout coming to the plate, with Shohei Ohtani behind him.

Trout whiffed at two straight fastballs from José Urquidy, and then he took the third, which nicked the top of the strike zone, ending the Angels’ best threat.

It was the third of Trout’s four strikeouts in the game, a day after he struck out in all three of his plate appearances.

It was the first time in Trout’s career that he struck out at least three times in back-to-back games without reaching base in either game.

Trout has hit 23 homers and has a 1.010 OPS, numbers that still rank his overall performance among the best in the game. But within that he’s endured some uncharacteristic slumps. He had a career-worst 0-for-26 drought earlier this season. His 29.3 strikeout percentage is the highest of his career.

His performance Saturday was just one piece of another ugly performance for the Angels.

They managed just three hits and struck out 12 more times, adding to their major league-leading total. They had two hits and 16 strikeouts in an 8-1 loss Friday night.

Andrew Velazquez thought he struck out two pitches in a row. In the third inning, he had checked his swing on a two-strike pitch. Velazquez started walking back to the dugout, seemingly unaware that third-base umpire Bill Miller had ruled that he didn’t go around. Velazquez then was called out on strikes on the next pitch.

Angels starter Patrick Sandoval also had a tough day, allowing five runs in five innings.

Sandoval gave up a double to José Altuve to start the first inning. He recorded two outs without allowing a run, but then allowed an RBI single to Kyle Tucker, a walk to Yuli Gurriel and a two-run single to Jake Myers.

In the second, Sandoval gave up a first-pitch homer to Martin Maldonado. Altuve then doubled and scored on a two-out broken-bat hit by Alex Bregman, putting the Astros up 5-0.

Although Sandoval equaled his season-high in runs allowed, he managed to shut out the Astros over the next three innings to hold the game within reach and also keep the bullpen from being overextended.

Once the bullpen did come in, it got worse.

Andrew Wantz allowed homers to Maldonado and Altuve in the sixth, and Aaron Loup gave up a homers to Tucker and McCormick in the seventh.

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