Houston Astros. Here come the Los Angeles Angels, who are playing hard-nosed ball at the most critical time.
C.J. Cron hit a tiebreaking home run to lead off the eighth inning and the Angels beat the Houston Astros 3-2 Saturday night to tighten the American League West race.
"We're just trying to win," Cron said after Los Angeles reduced its deficit to 3 1/2 games with another series still to play with the Astros in two weeks at Houston. "We have plenty of games left against the guys ahead of us. It was good to get the first two, and now we've gotta come back tomorrow and try to sweep them."
Cron greeted Will Harris (5-3) with a drive to center field on a 1-1 pitch for his career-high 12th homer.
"I didn't think it was all that bad of a pitch to Cron. He put a good swing on it and won the game for his team," Harris said. "It was kind of a borderline strike-ball pitch. It was a fastball in, right where I wanted it, but the guy hit it out to center field. That's a pretty good piece of hitting."
Joe Smith (5-5) pitched a scoreless eighth and Huston Street worked a 1-2-3 ninth for his 35th save in 39 attempts.
Angels starter Hector Santiago allowed two runs and five hits through seven innings. He had a 2-0 lead and a three-hitter going through five innings, but the Astros tied it with Carlos Correa's 18th homer in the sixth and former Angel Hank Conger's 11th of the season in the seventh.
"Early on, I was kind of like still trying to get used to the mound," Santiago said. "But overall, it was exactly what I wanted to do. Keep us in the game, pitch deep into the game and get us a chance to win."
Correa cleared the double-decker bullpen in left field with a drive that was estimated to have traveled 469 feet. It came on a full count after a 12-pitch at-bat.
"I left my changeup right over the middle and he hit it," Santiago said. "
I think if you're going to give them up, might as well give them up for show. The ones that go right over the wall, I get aggravated about. But the bombs, I love `em."
Conger's homer cleared the tall trees behind the center-field fence, and was his first in 22 at-bats against the Angels' since he was traded to the Astros in November 2014 for catcher Carlos Perez and pitcher Nick Tropeano.
"It felt good, but I felt better about tying the ballgame up in that situation," Conger said. "I mean, anytime you get traded, you want to do extra well against the team that traded you. But treated me great over there."
Astros right-hander Lance McCullers allowed two runs and seven hits through five innings. He escaped a bases-loaded jam in the fifth and was pulled after 100 pitches.
McCullers' only victory in his last nine starts was a 6-3 decision over the Angels on July 29 at Minute Maid Park. He remained 0-5 with a 5.22 ERA in eight road starts since beating Detroit 3-2 on May 23.
McCullers, who has allowed just five home runs in 101 2/3 innings this season, more than held his own against a club that has gotten a combined 92 home runs by the first three players in the batting order -- Kole Calhoun (23), Mike Trout (34) and Albert Pujols (35).
The Angels grabbed the lead in the second when David Freese got an RBI single and Erick Aybar scored on a slow-bouncing grounder to third by Perez.
Freese is (14 for 36) with five RBI in 10 games since returning from the disabled list. He was batting .213 when a pitch by Minnesota's Mike Pelfrey fractured his right index finger on July 22 and sidelined him for 36 games.
The Angels threatened in the fifth with a one-out walk to Trout and a ground-rule double by Pujols, which edged him past Wade Boggs into 20th place on the career doubles list and put him within seven of Carl Yastrzemski on the all-time list for extra-base hits.
But McCullers escaped the jam, retiring David Murphy on a fly ball to shallow left field and Erick Aybar on another fly to left with the bases loaded after a walk to Cron.
Freese led off the sixth with a grounder to shortstop, but was safe when Correa's throw pulled Marwin Gonzalez off the bag for an error. Left fielder Jake Marisnick fell down going for Perez's line drive, but recovered in time to make a lunging grab over his shoulder. Taylor Featherston then grounded into a double play.
UP NEXT
Astros: RHP Mike Fiers (2-1) is making his third start since his no-hitter against the Dodgers on Aug. 21.
Angels: LHP Andrew Heaney (6-3) hasn't faced the Astros since his Angels debut on June 24, when he allowed one run over six innings in a no-decision at home.
ANAHEIM, Calif. -- Look out, C.J. Cron hit a tiebreaking home run to lead off the eighth inning and the Angels beat the Houston Astros 3-2 Saturday night to tighten the American League West race.
"We're just trying to win," Cron said after Los Angeles reduced its deficit to 3 1/2 games with another series still to play with the Astros in two weeks at Houston. "We have plenty of games left against the guys ahead of us. It was good to get the first two, and now we've gotta come back tomorrow and try to sweep them."
Cron greeted Will Harris (5-3) with a drive to center field on a 1-1 pitch for his career-high 12th homer.
"I didn't think it was all that bad of a pitch to Cron. He put a good swing on it and won the game for his team," Harris said. "It was kind of a borderline strike-ball pitch. It was a fastball in, right where I wanted it, but the guy hit it out to center field. That's a pretty good piece of hitting."
Joe Smith (5-5) pitched a scoreless eighth and Huston Street worked a 1-2-3 ninth for his 35th save in 39 attempts.
Angels starter Hector Santiago allowed two runs and five hits through seven innings. He had a 2-0 lead and a three-hitter going through five innings, but the Astros tied it with Carlos Correa's 18th homer in the sixth and former Angel Hank Conger's 11th of the season in the seventh.
"Early on, I was kind of like still trying to get used to the mound," Santiago said. "But overall, it was exactly what I wanted to do. Keep us in the game, pitch deep into the game and get us a chance to win."
Correa cleared the double-decker bullpen in left field with a drive that was estimated to have traveled 469 feet. It came on a full count after a 12-pitch at-bat.
"I left my changeup right over the middle and he hit it," Santiago said. "
I think if you're going to give them up, might as well give them up for show. The ones that go right over the wall, I get aggravated about. But the bombs, I love `em."
Conger's homer cleared the tall trees behind the center-field fence, and was his first in 22 at-bats against the Angels' since he was traded to the Astros in November 2014 for catcher Carlos Perez and pitcher Nick Tropeano.
"It felt good, but I felt better about tying the ballgame up in that situation," Conger said. "I mean, anytime you get traded, you want to do extra well against the team that traded you. But treated me great over there."
Astros right-hander Lance McCullers allowed two runs and seven hits through five innings. He escaped a bases-loaded jam in the fifth and was pulled after 100 pitches.
McCullers' only victory in his last nine starts was a 6-3 decision over the Angels on July 29 at Minute Maid Park. He remained 0-5 with a 5.22 ERA in eight road starts since beating Detroit 3-2 on May 23.
McCullers, who has allowed just five home runs in 101 2/3 innings this season, more than held his own against a club that has gotten a combined 92 home runs by the first three players in the batting order -- Kole Calhoun (23), Mike Trout (34) and Albert Pujols (35).
The Angels grabbed the lead in the second when David Freese got an RBI single and Erick Aybar scored on a slow-bouncing grounder to third by Perez.
Freese is (14 for 36) with five RBI in 10 games since returning from the disabled list. He was batting .213 when a pitch by Minnesota's Mike Pelfrey fractured his right index finger on July 22 and sidelined him for 36 games.
The Angels threatened in the fifth with a one-out walk to Trout and a ground-rule double by Pujols, which edged him past Wade Boggs into 20th place on the career doubles list and put him within seven of Carl Yastrzemski on the all-time list for extra-base hits.
But McCullers escaped the jam, retiring David Murphy on a fly ball to shallow left field and Erick Aybar on another fly to left with the bases loaded after a walk to Cron.
Freese led off the sixth with a grounder to shortstop, but was safe when Correa's throw pulled Marwin Gonzalez off the bag for an error. Left fielder Jake Marisnick fell down going for Perez's line drive, but recovered in time to make a lunging grab over his shoulder. Taylor Featherston then grounded into a double play.
UP NEXT
Astros: RHP Mike Fiers (2-1) is making his third start since his no-hitter against the Dodgers on Aug. 21.
Angels: LHP Andrew Heaney (6-3) hasn't faced the Astros since his Angels debut on June 24, when he allowed one run over six innings in a no-decision at home.
9:05PM,EDT,September 12,2015
Angel Stadium of Anaheim, Anaheim, California
Angel Stadium of Anaheim, Anaheim, California
View: Play-By-Play | Pitch-By-Pitch | Inning: All | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |
Houston Astros | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hitters | AB | R | H | RBI | BB | SO | #P | AVG | OBP | SLG |
Springer RF | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 13 | .257 | .358 | .434 |
Altuve 2B | 4 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | .312 | .352 | .429 |
Correa SS | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 26 | .275 | .343 | .507 |
Gómez CF | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 15 | .234 | .282 | .379 |
Lowrie 3B | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 10 | .231 | .322 | .434 |
Gattis DH | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 11 | .238 | .278 | .447 |
González 1B | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 15 | .278 | .315 | .434 |
Conger C | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 11 | .220 | .308 | .451 |
Marisnick LF | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 17 | .237 | .270 | .393 |
Totals | 32 | 2 | 6 | 2 | 2 | 6 | 123 | |||
BATTING 2B: Altuve (30, Smith) HR: Correa (18, 6th inning off Santiago 0 on, 1 Out); Conger (11, 7th inning off Santiago 0 on, 2 Out) RBI: Correa (52), Conger (32) 2-out RBI: Conger Astros RISP: 0-2 (Gómez 0-1, Correa 0-1) Team LOB: 5 | ||||||||||
BASERUNNING CS: Altuve (12, 2nd base by Santiago/Pérez) | ||||||||||
FIELDING E: Correa (9, throw) DP: 1 (Correa-Altuve-González). |
Game Information
Stadium | Angel Stadium of Anaheim, Anaheim, CA |
Attendance | 41,130 (90.4% full) - % is based on regular season capacity |
Game Time | 2:41 |
Weather | 90 degrees, partly cloudy |
Wind | 5 mph |
Umpires | Home Plate - Tom Hallion, First Base - Dan Bellino, Second Base - Bruce Dreckman, Third Base - Alfonso Marquez |
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