Weaver, Angels take care of banged-up Pirates
Send a link to a friend
[June 04, 2016]
PITTSBURGH -- The Los Angeles
Angels' swings and misses of early this season are transforming into
hits -- a lot of them -- and possibly the potential for a
turnaround.
Kole Calhoun homered and drove in two runs and Johnny Giavotella's
two-run single keyed a three-run first that started the Angels on
their latest offensive outburst, a 9-2 victory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates on Friday.
Yunel Escobar, returning after sitting out three games with a sore
left wrist, had two of the Angels' 15 hits, including a two-run
single in the seventh. Every starter in the Angels lineup had at
least one hit, except starting pitcher Jered Weaver.
"We swung the bats well and gave ourselves a cushion," manager Mike
Scioscia said. "We've been seeing some upside. We're not going to
score nine runs every night, but it's more along the lines of what
we were seeing coming out of spring training."
The Angels, near the bottom of the AL West all season, are averaging
5.7 runs over their last 21 games, scoring seven or more 11 times.
In April, they had nine games of two runs or fewer.
"The boys came out and swung the bats," Weaver said.
In a matchup of veteran starting pitchers coming off four uneven
starts apiece, Weaver (5-4) easily outpitched Francisco Liriano
(4-5), with the Angels right-hander giving up successive homers to
Starling Marte and Jung Ho Kang in the second but no other scoring
over six innings.
Weaver, starting against the Pirates for only the second time in his
career, improved to 17-9 in 36 career interleague games, striking
out five and walking one after being touched for 17 earned runs in
his four most recent starts.
"(It was) nice to get an early lead, (it) took the pressure off,"
Weaver said. "A couple of bad pitches, but I felt OK for the most
part. You can be more aggressive (with a lead) and (you) don't have
to be as fine with pitches."
Weaver is pitching through neck tightness and still isn't 100
percent, but said: "You'll know when I'm feeling better. When you're
33 years old and have pitched a lot of innings, you're not going to
feel 100 percent."
Liriano was in trouble from the start, giving up 10 hits and six
earned runs in 3 1/3 innings while allowing at least one run in each
of the four innings he started. The left-hander has yielded 11
earned runs in his last two starts and 22 earned runs in 26 2/3
innings over his last five.
"Good pitching's going to beat good hitting. That's never going to
change. They have good hitters. We have good hitters. If you make
mistakes, you pay," Pirates manager Clint Hurdle said.
One night after four different Pirates position players were lifted
with injuries during a 3-2, 12-inning loss in Miami, only center
fielder Andrew McCutchen was back in the lineup as Pittsburgh lost
its fourth in a row.
Liriano came in with some conflicting numbers -- a 3-1 record and
1.42 ERA in his four home starts this season, but 16 earned runs
allowed over his previous four turns.
""I'm going through a tough time right now. I'm not executing the
pitch and getting behind in the count," he said. "Like I said, I'm
going through a tough time right now and I have to keep working,
keep fighting and find a way to get better."
[to top of second column] |
Angels starting pitcher Jered Weaver (36) delivers a pitch against
the Pittsburgh Pirates during the first inning at PNC Park.
Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports
The Angels didn't have any trouble adjusting to what he was throwing
as he struggled with his command, allowing three hits and walking
two as the first five Los Angeles batters reached base. Mike Trout
delivered an RBI single and Johnny Giavotella followed with a
two-run single.
Los Angeles made it 3-0 in the second on Kole Calhoun's run-scoring
groundout.
The Angels added two more runs in the fourth on Gregorio Petit's RBI
double and No. 9 hitter Shane Robinson's run-scoring single.
Liriano was chased in the fourth after allowing three straight hits,
started by Calhoun's drive into the seats in right-center -- so long
that the Pirates outfielders didn't even turn to watch. Calhoun's
fifth homer was his second off a left-hander this season.
NOTES: So many Pirates are fighting through injury issues, manager
Clint Hurdle didn't finalize his lineup until about 30 minutes
before game time while awaiting various medical reports. Before
that, he issued a fake lineup that included himself, pitching coach
Ray Searage and other staff members. ... Pirates RF Gregory Polanco,
out for two games after fouling a ball off his left foot Tuesday was
back in the lineup. CF Andrew McCutchen (right thumb) also started
after leaving in the sixth inning of the Thursday night game in
Miami. SS Jordy Mercer didn't start after getting hit in the right
elbow by a fastball on Thursday, and neither did C Francisco
Cervelli, who was hit in the right foot by a pitch in the same game.
... There was no injury update on 3B David Freese, who was hit on
the right hand by a fastball in the eighth inning. ... Newly signed
RHP Tim Lincecum was expected to start Tuesday night in New York
against the Yankees, but he is saying he will make one more start in
Triple-A ball. Lincecum, who could join the Angels by June 12,
pitched five innings for Triple-A Salt Lake on Thursday, giving up
three runs and three hits while throwing 88 pitches against Tacoma.
... Angeles LHP Tyler Skaggs (shoulder), out for more than a month,
is scheduled to begin pitching in extended spring training games.
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|