NEW YORK _ So far the Angels are doing a nice job of proving that they are more than just Mike Trout.
Getting production from all corners of their lineup, the Angels beat the New York Yankees, 8-3, on Tuesday night, snapping a nine-game Yankee Stadium losing streak that dated to 2014.
The Angels are now 11-10 without Trout, a stretch in which they've averaged 4.95 runs per game.
Cameron Maybin, who hit the tie-breaking homer in the seventh, and Kole Calhoun have been two of the keys to the Angels productivity, minus Trout.
Maybin has been a spark plug at the top of the lineup for more than a month, except for his own brief stay on the disabled list. He's now hitting .400 (36 for 90) since the Angels moved him to the leadoff spot on May 16.
Calhoun, who had two hits and a walk on Tuesday, has rebounded from a difficult first two months, largely because of hitting the ball more to the opposite field. Calhoun is hitting .368 in June.
The Angels also got two hits and a hard-hit flyout to the warning track from Albert Pujols and two hits apiece from Yunel Escobar, Luis Valbuena and Martin Maldonado. Valbuena hit a homer.
After the Angels took a 3-0 lead in the second inning, their offense took a few innings off while the Yankees came back with single runs in the fourth, fifth and sixth to tie.
But Maybin then led off the seventh with his fifth homer of the season, snapping a 3-3 tie.
Calhoun then yanked a double into right-center. He went to third on Pujols' fly ball to the warning track in center.
Escobar then barely missed a homer, the ball hitting the top of the wall and the glove of leaping Brett Gardner. After the ball popped out of Gardner's glove, Escobar hustled to third with a triple. Valbuena then pulled a grounder through the drawn-in infield to make it 6-3.
That lead held, as Angels relievers Cam Bedrosian, Keynan Middleton and David Hernandez collaborated on the final nine outs.
Parker Bridwell, who got the start in place of injured Matt Shoemaker, gave up two runs in five innings.
Bridwell needed 95 pitches to get through the outing, in part because he walked five batters. He didn't give up a hit until the fourth, which he followed with a walk to set up the Yankees' first run, on a sacrifice fly.
In the fifth, Yankees slugger Aaron Judge muscled a long fly ball over the fence in right-center, his major league-leading 24th homer.
Bridwell then turned a 3-2 lead over to the bullpen. Blake Parker gave up a sixth-inning homer to Gary Sanchez. It was the first homer that Parker had allowed all season, after leading the majors with 321/3 innings without any homers.