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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Jeff Miller

Red Sox keep Angels reeling with 4-2 win

BOSTON _ If it seems as though the Angels were thumped historically by the Boston Red Sox this season, that's only because they were.

By losing at Fenway Park again Thursday _ this time 4-2 _ the Angels became the first team to be swept by Boston in a season series of at least six games in 100-plus years.

Evidently, when going back further than a century, the records become a little sketchy.

The latest defeat also was the Angels' season-high sixth in a row overall and dropped them to 41-41. They haven't been below .500 since losing on opening day.

"These guys are all playing hard," manager Mike Scioscia said. "Everybody in that room is nicked up ... We will get through this, for sure. We will play better baseball. We really believe that."

The Angels finished 0-6 against the Red Sox, and that's without having faced Chris Sale. No Angels team ever had played an entire season without beating Boston at least once.

They were outscored in the season series 49-12 and, entering Thursday, had given up in the first five meetings _ chronologically _ 10, nine, eight, nine and nine runs.

Rookie Jaime Barria finally put a stop to the chaos by limiting Boston to only a Rafael Devers solo homer through five innings.

At that point, the score was 1-1, and the Angels already had enjoyed the one-swing windfall that was Andrelton Simmons' fourth-inning solo home run.

Simmons' shot was the first time the Angels led Boston this season, a stretch that extended for 48 innings.

It also was their first lead over anyone since June 22, when they beat Toronto at home, 49 innings earlier.

But the good fortune didn't last. After the Devers home run, Boston broke the tie in the sixth on a bases-loaded walk by reliever Jose Alvarez. The run _ like the loss _ was charged to Barria, who walked J.D. Martinez before being lifted.

"Jose's definitely a strike thrower," Scioscia said. "He just missed with one."

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