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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Mike DiGiovanna

Angels need eighth-inning rally to beat Royals, 9-6

ANAHEIM, Calif. _ Home runs like the ones Justin Upton and Jefry Marte hit for the Los Angeles Angels on Monday night are great, and so are 112.6-mph line drives, like the one Mike Trout rocketed into center field for a run-scoring single in the sixth inning against the Kansas City Royals.

A few free passes and a little luck never hurt, too, as the Angels discovered during their quirky three-run eighth-inning rally that snapped a tie score and gave them a 9-6 victory before a crowd of 32,553 in Angel Stadium.

With the score tied, 6-6, Royals left-hander Tim Hill walked No. 8 hitter Martin Maldonado to open the eighth. Michael Hermosillo fouled off two sacrifice bunt attempts before drawing a walk, the No. 9 hitter reaching base when he was trying to make an out.

After Ian Kinsler struck out, Trout grounded a playable one-hopper that caromed off Hill's glove and into center field for a run-scoring single that scored pinch-runner Kaleb Cowart for a 7-6 lead. Justin Upton and Albert Pujols followed with RBI singles to make it 9-6, and Blake Parker threw a scoreless ninth for the save.

Philadelphia Phillies ace Jake Arrieta, who called his own team "the worst in the league with shifts" after Sunday's 6-1 loss to San Francisco, would not have liked two key Angels hits in the bottom of the sixth inning.

Trailing, 5-3, Marte, who had his second career four-hit game, drove a homer to left off Royals starter Danny Duffy. Pinch-hitter Shohei Ohtani, with one out, hit what would often be a routine ground ball to second. Instead, the ball slipped between two defenders in a shift for a single.

Kinsler walked, and Trout rifled an RBI single to center tie the score 5-5. Upton grounded into a fielder's choice for the second out, and Pujols, the slow-footed slugger, squibbed a grounder to the right of the mound.

An easy out for Kansas City? Nope. Second baseman Whit Merrifield was shifted behind the second-base bag, and the grounder reached the outfield grass for an RBI single and a 6-5 Angels lead.

The advantage lasted all of one pitch when Royals catcher Salvador Perez blasted reliever Noe Ramirez's first pitch of the seventh over the wall in left for his 10th homer to tie the score 6-6.

The Angels overcame a rare rocky start from right-hander Nick Tropeano, who allowed five runs and nine hits in 4 2/3 innings, striking out five and walking one.

Angels starting pitchers held opponents to three runs or less in 28 of the previous 32 games, with Tropeano allowing three runs or less in four of his previous five starts. It took the Royals only two innings to reach that threshold Monday night.

John Jay opened the game with a single, took second on Merrifield's fly to the wall in left and scored on Mike Moustakas' single to right. Singles by Trout and Upton, a walk to Pujols and Andrelton Simmons' sacrifice fly to center pulled the Angels even 1-1 in the bottom of the first.

Kansas City took a 3-1 lead in the second when Hunter Dozier doubled to left and scored on Alcides Escobar's single to center. Escobar stole second and scored on Jay's single to left-center.

The Angels pulled to within 3-2 in the second when Marte singled to left and scored when Maldonado's bloop single to shallow left-center skipped past left fielder Alex Gordon for an error that allowed Maldonado to take second.

Trout's two-out intentional walk and another walk to Upton loaded the bases. Pujols could not deliver a game-turning blow, flying to the warning track in left.

Tropeano escaped a second-and-third, no-outs jam in the third with the help of third baseman Zack Cozart, who back-handed Jorge Soler's grounder down the line and, noticing Moustakas hesitated at third, threw home. Moustakas was tagged out in a rundown, Gordon struck out and Dozier flied to left.

The right-hander could not slip out of a similar jam in the fifth, when Merrifield's leadoff double, a walk to Moustakas, a wild pitch and Jorge Soler's two-run double to left gave the Royals a 5-2 lead.

Upton got one run back in the bottom of the fifth when he led off with a homer to right, his 13th of the season and second in two games.

Jim Johnson relieved Tropeano in the fifth and threw a scoreless inning, left-hander Jose Alvarez got Moustakas to fly to right with two on to end the sixth, and Cam Bedrosian retired the side in order in the eighth.

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