Santiago, Pujols lead Angels past Royals
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[July 26, 2016]
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Left-hander
Hector Santiago's name will have to be a short list for American
League pitcher of the month.
Santiago pitched splendidly into the sixth inning and Albert Pujols
had three hits and drove in four runs as the Los Angeles Angels
topped the Kansas City Royals 6-2 Monday.
Santiago is 6-0 in eight starts since a June 10 loss to Cleveland.
Santiago, who is 2-0 with a career 1.69 ERA at Kauffman Stadium,
went 5-0 in July with a 1.48 ERA.
"It's great to have a four-run lead, especially against a team like
that," Santiago said. "Those guys are grinders. You're not going to
have an easy at-bat. That's where my pitch count well up. I put
myself in good counts, but they battled and made me make some
pitches."
Santiago (9-4) limited the Royals to two runs on five hits over 5
1/3 innings.
"I thought early on that he had good command, had good life on his
fastball and was hitting spots," Angels manager Mike Scioscia said.
"He had a good change-up tonight. As the game went on I think he got
a little bit tired. He ran out of gas in the sixth. That's a tough
lineup to get through. He pitched a great game for us."
Pujols upped his RBI total to 76, including a big-league best 26 in
July. He lined a single to right in the seventh to score Mike Trout.
His ninth-inning single scored Johnny Giavotella to cap the Angels'
scoring.
After Santiago left, the Royals did not get a hit off Angels
relievers J.C. Ramirez, Fernando Salas, Cam Bedrosian and Huston
Street. Bedrosian struck out the side in the eighth.
The Angels batted around in a four-run first inning against Ian
Kennedy, who required 36 pitches in the inning. Yunel Escobar led
off with a single, and Kennedy proceeded to walk Kole Calhoun and
Trout on nine pitches to load the bases.
Pujols, who went to Fort Osage High about 15 miles from Kauffman
Stadium, hit a ground ball single up the middle to score Escobar and
Calhoun. Daniel Nava's sacrifice fly to center fielder Paulo Orlando
scored Trout. Pujols stopped at third on Ji-Man Choi's double and
scored on Carlos Perez's infield single.
"It just stinks," Kennedy said. "That was a big inning and put us
behind the eight ball right away. All I could tell myself to do, is
you can't do anything about it. I just hoped to keep us in the game
as long as possible and I wanted to go through six innings and hand
the ball off."
Salvador Perez, who was 3-for-21 with no RBIs on this homestand
before Monday, homered with Eric Hosmer aboard in the fourth,
cutting the Angels' lead to 4-2. Perez smacked a first-pitch
offering from Santiago into the Royals' bullpen, an estimated 387
feet. Hosmer reached base in an unusual matter for him -- a bunt.
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Angels starting pitcher Hector Santiago (53) delivers a pitch
against the Kansas City Royals in the first inning at Kauffman
Stadium. Mandatory Credit: John Rieger-USA TODAY Sports
"Command was off," Royals manager Ned Yost said of Kennedy's opening
inning. "He got through the first and then came back in and made
some adjustments and did a nice job of holding it right there,
giving us a chance to crawl back in. Salvy's big two-run homer was
nice, cut the deficit to two, but we just couldn't do anything after
that."
The Royals loaded the bases with two outs in the fifth against
Santiago, but came away empty. Alcides Escobar and Cheslor Cuthbert
had infield singles. Cuthbert was initially called out, but after a
Royals challenge it was overturned after a 66-second delay. Hosmer
walked to load the bases, but Santiago struck out Kendrys Morales on
three pitches to end the threat and inning.
Kennedy left after five innings and one batter, throwing 106
pitches. He was replaced by Peter Moylan after Choi reached on a
Cuthbert fielding error to start the sixth. Kennedy was charged with
four runs, all in the disastrous first, on six hits, four of those
in the first.
NOTES: On whether the Royals will be sellers or buyers before the
July 31 trading deadline, Royals general manager Dayton Moore said
before the game, "We've just got to keep it in perspective. There is
a lot of baseball left. There's been many a baseball team that have
entered September several games out making the playoffs." ... Angels
RHP Nick Tropeano went to New York for a second opinion from Dr.
David Altchek on a torn elbow ligament. ... Royals OF Lorenzo Cain,
who is on the disabled list with a strained left hamstring, will
begin a minor league rehab assignment Tuesday, joining Triple-A
Omaha. ... Angels SS Andrelton Simmons entered the game with a .404
batting average, 38-for-94, since June 23. ... LHP Tyler Skaggs, who
has not appeared in a big league game since July 31, 2014, and
undergoing Tommy John surgery, will start Tuesday for the Angels.
RHP Dillon Gee will make his sixth start for the Royals.
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