Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Curtis Zupke

Angels drop sixth straight and are swept by the Astros 3-1

ANAHEIM, Calif. _ The revenge story dissipated while new numbers materialized to measure the Los Angeles Angels' season.

Neither were good developments.

They matched a season high with their sixth straight loss Sunday and fell a season-high 17 { games behind the first-place Houston Astros. Not that they're watching the standings anymore, but a 3-1 loss at Angel Stadium was telling.

They couldn't take advantage of another good outing by Felix Pena and managed four hits in a series sweep by Houston. They got Shohei Ohtani to pinch hit with a runner on with two outs in the ninth inning, but Ohtani struck out against Roberto Osuna, a day after Ohtani was hit by an Osuna pitch.

The Angels were in that position, after their other stars _ Mike Trout, Albert Pujols and Andrelton Simmons � went a combined 1-for-11.

"We hit some balls hard, but for the most part, though, we didn't pressure them on the offensive side the way we needed them to," manager Mike Scioscia said.

The Angels have not led since Aug.19, a streak of 48 innings. Pena can attest to that, having received just 11 runs in support in his last nine starts.

He was the losing pitcher but could only be faulted for a third-inning hiccup in a season-high 97-pitch appearance that showed his potential for a bigger role.

At the end of the game, Pena said he asked pitching coach Charles Nagy how many pitches he threw because he didn't feel tired. Nagy worked with Pena on having better starts to games in what Scioscia referred to as "staggered warmups."

In his first start since a 12-strikeout performance against Arizona, Pena retired the first six batters on 25 pitches.

"That was the difference today," Pena said through an interpreter. "Basically I tried to emulate the warmup."

Relievers Cam Bedrosian, Blake Parker and Hansel Robles picked up from Pena and gave the Angels a chance. Their lone run came on Kole Calhoun's fielder's choice.

Houston's Framber Valdez made his first major league start and kept the Angels quiet with one run allowed on two hits in five innings. He struck out Trout with a 95-mph fastball in the fourth inning.

David Fletcher singled with two outs in the eighth to get Trout to the plate, and Trout struck out on a pitch outside the strike zone from Hector Rondon.

The day might have been summed up by Eric Young Jr.'s third-inning at-bat. He appeared to foul off a pitch that bounced behind the plate, but Houston catcher Max Stassi grabbed it and turned it into a double play.

"It looked like the catcher picked it up and carried it into the field of play," Scioscia said. "It doesn't matter where the ball bounces, it's where it touches the fielder."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.